Sword and Scale - Episode 336
Episode Date: January 27, 2026Rebekah Gould was young, beautiful, and murdered in a quiet Arkansas town. Her case haunted the internet for years—until a confession surfaced. But instead of answers, it raised a far darker questio...n: what if the truth is still being hidden?Get instant access to all episodes, including premium unreleased episodes, commercial-free at swordandscale.com
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Sword and Scale contains adult themes and violence and is not intended for all audiences.
Listener discretion is advised.
Listen, you know, I'm telling you, you know, I'm confessing to you.
I'm telling you that I did it.
Would you arrest me?
Welcome to Season 13, Episode 336 of Sword and Scale, a show that reveals that the worst monsters are real.
You know, the show gets a lot better when you stop complaining and just enjoy it.
I'm not going to start talking like you do in, I don't know, Northern Michigan or West Appalachia or, God, Foraken Ohio.
You're not going to be able to get me to talk exactly how you talk in your little specific local town.
So just stop.
You can't control everything.
Just stop trying to control everything.
You're probably saying it wrong anyway.
It's usually a word that comes from a different language and shit.
Y'all saying it in Ohio.
In a small newsroom in Batesville, Arkansas, George Jared was a brand new 20-something-year-old journalist.
It was September of 2004.
He was still learning the rhythm of leads, stories, and deadlines.
Most reporters expect stories to come and go.
That's the nature of the job.
Research it, write about it, and move on.
Maybe go get a peppermint latte from Starbucks before they take them off the menu.
But every so often, a case doesn't let go.
Or maybe there's just something about a certain personality type that just can't let it go.
For George, that case arrived just as his career began.
I'd been there maybe seven months.
I was just out of college.
And, you know, most of the stuff I would cover being like school board meetings and, you know, city council stuff.
And, you know, I'd get to do features at local schools and whatnot.
And then one, I remember very vividly, it was a Wednesday morning.
Phone rings at my desk, pick it up.
And a woman was on the phone and she said, my niece is missing and we can't find her.
And I said, really?
George jumped in his car and drove straight to where the woman said she was calling from,
the Isard County Sheriff's Office.
And then I walked over to some family members.
And Rebecca's mother handed me a missing poster that I still have to this day.
It's sitting in the other room.
The missing girl was 22-year-old Rebecca Gould.
And so immediately I start talking to Rebecca's mother and one of her sisters,
and I just flipped the missing poster over on its other side,
and I put it up against the building,
and I just started taking notes on the back, and those notes are still there.
And then I walked over to her father, Dr. Larry Gould,
and he was standing with another one of his daughters,
and that's how I first met him.
And I just, I was out with them the whole week.
that she was missing. That's how it started.
Apparently, Rebecca had arrived in the small town of Melbourne, Arkansas, on Saturday,
September 18th to visit her boyfriend, Casey McCullough.
She was on break from college, but it wasn't unusual for her to take a few days off to see friends.
Rebecca's mother told George she'd talked with her daughter on the phone just the day before.
But during their call, Rebecca realized she was about to run out of minutes.
So she told her mom she'd call back.
That call never came.
When police searched Casey's house, everything looked fairly normal until they reached the back bedroom,
the room Casey and Rebecca would sleep in.
Inside, they found a blood-soaked mattress that had been stripped and propped up against the wall.
The box springs remained, and it too was stained red.
The bedclothes were spinning around in the washing room.
machine, wet fabric mixed with bleach and blood.
Interestingly, any fingerprints on the washing machine had been wiped away, probably with the
brand new cleaning supplies that sat on the kitchen counter.
Back in the bedroom again, sections of carpeting had to be cut up and taken in for evidence.
The amount of blood was so extreme and had seeped into the subfloor.
At this point, detectives knew they'd be searching for a dead body.
body, not an alive Rebecca.
And, you know, Monday morning came one week later on September 27, 2004.
I was at the office probably five or six o'clock in the morning.
I got there really early.
And I just decided, for some reason, I felt like I needed to go back to Melbourne because
my office was about 25 or so miles away.
And so I drove down there.
There were some ladies walking around the courthouse, you know, kind of a southern
thing to walk around, you know, the courthouse in the morning. And I overheard, as I was walking
past them, I was going to go talk to the county judge, and I was going to see where they were
coordinating their search efforts that day, because the county is big, and it's very rural,
and it's very mountainous. And so it's hard. And I overheard a lady say, hey, they're out
searching over by my house, my property or my house, something like that. And I said, where do you
live? And she said that she lived down Highway 9, which is a thoroughfare that connects Melbourne
to Mountain View, which is Rebecca's hometown.
It's very treacherous.
20 years ago, George still had that restless new reporter energy.
This case had already begun to dig its claws into him.
He knew he had to go help with the search efforts.
And so I drove down there.
I saw a line of cars on the side of the road,
just pulled in behind him, got out.
It was very steep, you know, lots of trees and bushes.
I saw a searcher, and I asked him, I said,
You guys out here looking for Rebecca, and he says she's right there.
And he pointed at her, and she was just laying there.
Volunteers had already been searching for days, but on this particular day, at this spot, about five miles outside of Melbourne,
they noticed vultures circling overhead.
Never a good sign.
Searchers located Rebecca's severely decomposed body about 35 feet down the embankment.
She was wearing only a t-shirt and underwear.
You can see her hair was like over her head, like her face, I mean.
What I didn't realize at the time, it literally had decomposed off of her scalp and had just moved down.
It almost looked like, you know, like if you have long hair and you just flipped it over like that,
I was in an absolute shock.
Like I was like, it was like being in a tunnel.
That's the only way I could describe it.
Like all of a sudden I couldn't hear anything.
I couldn't see anything.
My heart was racing.
my head just was throbbing, you know.
At the time, I had two very small kids,
and so I'm sitting here thinking,
I've just talked to this mom and this dad,
and they're hoping we out,
hope that this is what happened.
A few minutes later,
I drive back to the sheriff's department,
which as the crow flies,
is only four or five miles from this place where she was dumped.
And her father, Dr. Larry Gould, came running up to me,
and he grabbed me, and he said,
did they find my daughter?
and I said, Larry, you need to go talk to the sheriff right now.
And he grabbed me and he said, did they find my daughter?
And I said, yes.
And he just collapsed, went to his knees, started crying, put his head in my stomach.
And this is a man, I hadn't even, I'd known him for five days.
Rebecca was gone forever.
And for a few days, time stopped.
At least for the people who had hoped she'd come home alive.
I can honestly say that I was never the same person after.
that. I remember when I wrote the story I wrote it I went back to the office that
night and I stayed till four o'clock in the morning writing it and it was the newspaper
office was this old creaky building as a huge building and if the wind blew you know
you hear all these creaking sounds and I was just sitting there with her missing
poster sitting on my desk and I wrote about I've written about this before I've
never every single resume that I've ever submitted after this
attached that resume was a story I wrote about her case, and she never left me.
It was in my soul after that.
Everyone's focus shifted to finding Rebecca's killer.
While the medical examiner did the autopsy,
investigators turned their attention to the trailer where she had last been seen.
She had an on-again, off-again boyfriend named Casey McCullough,
and she would come back, you know, she was living up in northwest Arkansas at this point.
She'd come back and see him on the weekend.
She'd stay at his house.
They were just kind of on again and off again.
You know how it is when you're that age, you know, 22 and you're dating someone, you know.
And he obviously was not a long-term thing for her.
She was quite a catch for him.
I guess I'll just put it that way.
And he was obsessed with her.
He was totally in love with her.
But weirdly, when she vanished, he didn't spend one second looking for her.
And Tim, how did you come to know, Rebecca?
We worked at Sonic together.
The very first day that she worked at Sonic, I thought she was the most beautiful creature we've ever seen.
So, you know, that's when we started talking.
How long did you live with Rebecca?
For about two, two months.
Okay.
And after that, just a relationship, did y'all split up or what took place?
Well, we did split up.
We decided that, you know, it would be better for just stay friends, and that's what we did.
We still spend an awful lot of time together, though.
she would live with certain people at certain times, you know, and she kind of bounced around a little bit,
but then she finally decided that she wanted to go into pharmaceutical sales.
And so she had a sister that was already going to school up in Fayetteville,
which is about, I don't know, three hours or so from Melbourne.
So she moved up there, and she moved in with her sister into an apartment,
and she started attending a local community college, and she started taking classes.
And so she was 22, and she was just trying to get her life together.
The previous spring, Rebecca and Casey's relationship had been pretty serious.
Casey was head over heels for her, which brought out the controlling side of them.
That didn't work well with Rebecca's fiery personality.
By the end of the summer, things had become a little messy.
On her drive from northwest Arkansas to Melbourne, Rebecca told her sister that this would be her final trip.
She told her sister, she's like, I'm done, this is it.
and then they stop off at their dad's house.
He gives them each $100 bill on their way to Melbourne,
and she tells her father, she says,
I'm done with Casey, it's over, we're done.
Detectives often use an investigative strategy
called Cantor and Larkin's circle theory.
It's a fancy way of saying that most offenders don't stray far from home
when they commit a crime.
They stick to what they know.
Neighborhoods they've been in,
routes they're comfortable with,
places that feel familiar.
So investigators start looking close to the victim.
Family, partners, roommates.
Then they widen the lens to include friends, coworkers, casual acquaintances.
And if that still turns up nothing, only then do they start to consider strangers.
With this in mind, you'd think the first person in the hot seat would be the boyfriend.
It's always the boyfriend, right?
Arkansas State Police didn't think so.
Instead, they zeroed in on an old friend of Rebecca's.
The main suspect for years and years and years and years was Chris Cantrell.
And he was just this guy who was involved in a local kind of drug scene.
You know, I don't think he sold a lot of drugs, but he consumed them.
He'd get in trouble for it.
And this guy, I mean, you're not talking about somebody who has the sophistication.
probably to, you know, wipe their own DNA from a crime scene
or get rid of all their fingerprints and all this other stuff
because the story was is that he killed her over like a very small drug debt.
Like, now I'm talking like $40, which was really weird
because she had at least that much money in her possession when she was killed.
So if that was the motive, why didn't he take some of her stuff or her cash?
And the second problem with it was was that, you know,
I've written about assassinations, you know, where somebody is, you know, you're involved in the drug trade and we're going to get rid of you.
And that involves something very simple.
They come with a gun.
They shoot you in the head.
They leave.
They don't do anything else.
And they walk away.
Rebecca's autopsy report remained unreleased for years.
Even today, only a few people have a copy of it.
The report suggests that she was likely bludgeoned.
It's hard to tell if there were any defensive wounds.
She'd been exposed to the elements for a week, and her body was very badly decomposed.
Rebecca had two clear blunt force injuries, one to the left side of her head, and one that was a direct hit on the center of her face.
Experts and medical professionals who have read and analyzed the report say that neither of those injuries would have killed her immediately.
In fact, it's very possible that Rebecca was alive for hours after the killer hit her.
Even worse, she could have been alive when her body was dumped down the embankment.
As for the weapon, the autopsy pointed to something long, thin, and heavy, something like a tire iron or a bat.
And in the house, where Rebecca disappeared, police noticed something strange.
the piano
yeah there was a piano
the piano was missing
one of its legs
this story that this guy
shows up at this house
out of the middle of nowhere
that he's never been before
doesn't bring a weapon
he's like hum gee I wonder if the piano
leg will come off of this piano over here
okay whoa here we go
yeah I mean it was just this ridiculous stupid
like are you kidding me story
like come on
a guy named Dennis
was the Arkansas state police detective
working the case
This man was hell-bent on pushing the Chris Cantrell story, and he wouldn't give up.
Ego is a hell of a drug.
Well, Dennis was a narcotics officer.
They had a working theory that drugs were somehow involved in this, even though no drugs were found in their system that they could find.
And he had dealt with Chris in the past.
And I've always said this about Dennis.
It's one of my favorite sayings, you know, if you're born a hammer, every problem in the world has to be a nail.
there's no other, it can't be a screw, it can't be a, you know, attack. It's got to be a nail.
So that's what he turns into.
Dennis gets the case, I think, in November, December, and then he starts to focus in on Chris Cantrell.
And it was pretty widely known by, like, June, July of 2005 that they were focusing on Chris.
I mean, that was out in the public. People talked about it.
There were other suspects along the way.
and people in town gossiped about the possibility that Rebecca's boyfriend Casey was the real killer.
But this detective wouldn't hear any of it.
He refused to look into any tips or reanalyze any of the existing evidence.
But a lot of it pointed straight to Casey McCullough.
I mean, I spent, you know, years just befuddled by the detective
because, you know, you automatically assume that they know more than you know,
because they've got the case file.
And there must be,
there had to be something in there
that was really pointing them away from him.
George didn't get his hands on the case file
until years later.
But by the time he'd read it,
this detective decided to pay him a surprise visit.
Armed with all the original evidence,
this turned out to be a perfect opportunity
for George to ask Dennis
why he was so focused on the wrong suspect.
And I'm not kidding you,
this guy, this detective,
snuck into a book signing of mine one time.
And these cut off Daisy Duke looking shorts, cut off flannel shirt.
I mean, like, I'm not going to notice this dude coming in here.
I pitch him the book because I didn't recognize him at this point.
And then as I said, do you want to buy a book?
He's like, no, I'm Special Agent Dennis Simon's with the Arkansas State Belize.
He pulls out his badge.
And I looked at him.
I'm like, okay, Dennis, I haven't seen you in years.
But, you know, come on.
And he tells me, I told him, I said, I don't understand something here.
why would he clean up the mess?
Why wouldn't he just take a match and torch the place?
And he said, George, if you had the case file, you'd know exactly why this person did this thing.
And I'm like, okay, well, we have the case file now.
And it's even more incomprehensible.
This Dennis character sure does remind me of Lieutenant Jim Dangal from Reno 911.
Can you picture it?
Life imitates art, I guess.
Rebecca's case swirled around in George's mind for years, and all the while it had become a closed loop.
He wrote articles about the case and about various theories, but law enforcement was holding all the information under lock and key.
They held no press conferences and gave no updates.
Fourteen years passed with no progress.
When Rebecca's father tried to request a copy of her autopsy report, officials denied it, citing the case was still active.
George kept writing articles, web sleuths discussed the case to death, and by 2018, a woman named Catherine Townsend hoped to put even more eyes on this mystery by doing a podcast.
Rebecca was murdered in this woman's hometown, so she traveled back there, lived in the community for six months.
months and did her own investigation.
I first heard about a podcast called Hellingon in late 2018.
This is Jen Bukholtz.
She's a former U.S. Army counterintelligence agent who served in Iraq and Afghanistan.
She now teaches forensic science at American Military University and works as a cold case investigator
for Colorado's El Paso County Sheriff's Office.
And it was my content editor at the University.
who we would go back and forth sometimes about new podcasts and cases and sometimes I'd write about
different cases. And she was like, you really should listen to Hell and Gone. I think you're going to
find that case really interesting. Maybe you won't write about it. And so, of course, he was correct.
And I binged it. And George was featured in several of the episodes. So I thought, well, I'll reach out
to this George guy. He clearly knows a case really well. And so I very carefully crafted this email to him.
Whatever I wrote, which I don't totally remember now, it caught his attention because he called
me pretty much right away. And then we ended up on the phone for three hours and 22 minutes,
I believe, our first conversation. And so it was like, oh, yeah, we're going to work on this case,
I think. I don't know. We had very similar mindset was the behaviors that this killer took and
the importance of understanding those behaviors and what they meant about the relationship between
the killer and victim. Very clear that the detective at the time had no idea about criminal
profiling or behavioral analysis, and it was really being overlooked.
And that was, like, one of my key points in reaching out to George.
And as you'll hear, he had the same thoughts through the years.
Jen Buchholz spent years working as a private investigator before stepping into her
current role in cold case investigations.
Now embedded within a police department, she sees a sharp divide, maybe even a distrust
between law enforcement and civilian investigators.
In many cases, police simply won't accept outside help.
Again, ego is a hell of a drug.
Rebecca's father, Dr. Larry Gould, learned that the hard way.
He spent thousands on private investigators over the years,
but law enforcement never seemed interested in what they uncovered.
Here's Dr. Gould.
The law enforcement officers that, to me,
are truly the real professionals
are the ones that reach out to the public and they ask for help.
The ones that reach out and say, they don't use their ego.
They say, I'm the officer.
I'm in charge of this case.
Help me.
Now, there's somebody I respect.
And there's no reason to not be that way, especially nowadays.
There's a lot of unsolved murders that the public can get involved with.
There's a lot of the public that loves to get involved with these types of cases
because they feel sincerely like they can help and that they can,
offer something.
And this is where the internet proves
it's worth, to some degree.
Perhaps.
I can't believe I just said that.
In case after case,
it's not a detective who breathes new life
into a forgotten file.
It's a podcast, it's a
subreddit, it's a web forum,
or a Facebook group, or even a TikTok channel,
where some web sleuth,
usually a middle-aged woman, I might add,
that has so much time on their hands,
hands and so much empathy in their heart that they have to do something with it. So they focus on
their favorite hobby. They dig into parts of a cold case that no one ever seemed to be able to
uncover. Not even Lieutenant Jim Dank, I mean, Dennis. It's a lesson learned by us that can be
passed on to other, not just private investigators or citizens, but law enforcement agencies too.
Like, keep an eye on social media sites for your victim. See if any of your suspects are
in there. Like, I do it at work.
Because sometimes
the killer does come back to
the scene of the crime.
Only in Rebecca's case,
the scene
was now virtual.
By the fall of 2018,
Rebecca Gould's case
sat unsolved for nearly
14 years.
The crime scene had been cleaned.
The man she was last seen with
had quietly receded into the shadows.
And the Arkansas
state police special agent, was borderline obsessed with pinning the whole crime on the wrong guy.
But then, something shifted.
A podcast called Hell and Gone started digging into the case.
The show gave the public a voice, and it gave the story, New Life, Online.
One of the podcast's fans was a former Army counterintelligence agent named Jen Buchholz.
Another was George Jared, the very reporter who had watched Rebecca's body be pulled from the embankment.
When these two connected, they spent hours on the phone.
Soon after, they created a Facebook group.
The plan was not just to rehash the case, but to solve it.
Once and for all.
Well, me and George were the admins, and we set the group settings so that it's a public group.
anybody can find it, but you have to request to join because we always want to keep track of
who's joining. So, you know, one of our goals, and I guess subconsciously one of our goals
in the week in the group was to lure the killer in there or somebody who knew something.
The Facebook group grew quickly. At this point, neither the police's case file nor Rebecca's
autopsy had been made available to the public yet. This meant that the host of the Hell
and gone podcast had to piece the story together using rumors and gossip from people in town.
By the time Catherine Townsend aired the final episode of season one, the narrative had shifted
away from small town gossip and toward a deeper, darker truth.
This was never about random drifters or drug deals.
This looked like a crime of passion and a cleanup that took time and work.
So here's the thing about this case.
We don't have a definitive time of death for Rebecca.
This is the working theory, the prosecutorial theory about what happened.
Is on that Monday morning, Rebecca takes Casey to work because his father had borrowed Casey's truck the night before.
Casey needed a ride.
So she drops him off at the Sonic that morning.
then she goes back to his house to collect up all her things.
She had a little Pomeranian dog and she had her clothes.
And she brought two big suitcases because she had told her father and her sister Danielle
that this was going to be the last time that she came to Casey's house.
And so she brought an extra suitcase because she had some personal items over there at the house.
And so it's during this time frame that morning when she's collecting of all this stuff.
That's when the police and the prosecutors think that she was murdered.
And so I will say this, there is absolutely no proof of life on Monday morning.
There's none.
And for years, we were led to believe that there was a video at a convenience store that she stopped off and got a coffee and a breakfast sandwich.
And so we thought there was all this evidence, you know, that she was there.
The problem is that none of that stuff was true.
So there's no proof of life Monday morning.
But that's the official story.
Just to fill in some gaps, the day Rebecca went missing, Casey's father had borrowed his truck.
So he was carless and needed transportation to and from work.
He worked at Sonic, by the way.
We know Rebecca's plan was to quietly pack her things and dump his ass that day.
But Casey was clueless about this?
Or was he?
Did he find out?
Was there a subsequent altercation?
This is where things get really suspicious and a little messy.
So he asked a group of four friends, people that he was friends with.
They were going to go to the movies that night.
They were going to go see the movie Resident Evil, too.
And so he asked them if he could ride with them.
And they were all kind of surprised by it because he was kind of a recluse.
He didn't like to hang out with anybody.
And so he went down to Batesville that night.
They watched the movie.
They go into some stores.
he was clearly trying to make himself available to cameras that were in, you know, like they went to a Walmart to look at Halloween decorations and they went to some other places.
And it was clear that he was trying to make himself visible on these cameras.
And then at one point in the night, he gets a call.
And during this call, he used his friend's phone to make this call, by the way.
He didn't use his own phone.
After he hangs up, he tells all four of these friends that Rebecca is missing.
He used his friend's phone to call his own voicemail, so he didn't actually talk to anybody.
He listened to his messages, whatever they were, and then get off the phone and told his friends that Rebecca's missing.
Now here's the problem.
She wasn't reported missing until the next morning at 8.30 in the morning by her mother.
The second part of it is all four friends and all four of their statements to police said that he was obsessed with her, and I'm paraphrasing this, that he was obsessed with her and they were all shocked that he wasn't running out.
the door to go and find her.
And so what he did instead is he went to
his friend's house, smoked some
marijuana, played some video games,
and fell asleep on the couch.
Are you suspicious yet?
Fellow web sleuth?
So she dropped you at work and just a little past eight?
Mm-hmm, a little past day,
and I just, all I remember was saying by and flound
each other and waving. That's a lifetime I saw her.
Okay. Do you have any contact with her by telephone?
No, sorry. I tried.
That he talked with her.
since Monday morning at 8 o'clock about the last time I talked to her.
You haven't seen her since.
I haven't seen her.
So did you plan on seeing her before she went back?
Yes, she was supposed to come back and pick me up from work to go pick up my truck from Batesville.
Did she show up?
No, sir, she did.
What time was she supposed to pick you up?
Four.
And then you came back to Oxford.
And any time since you left there, did you go back to your house at any time that night?
No, sir.
Did you ever go back there to get some clothing items?
Is there a chance anything like that?
No, sir.
Never went back to the house?
That night.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
What time did you leave off for that house and come to work the next morning?
About 7.30.
You get to work at 8.
And how long did you stay at work?
I stayed there for about 10, 15 minutes.
I called Rebecca's mom to see if she had heard from Rebecca.
Because, you know, I haven't yet.
She sounded really worried and freaking out.
And so I asked my manager, Daniel, if I could go down to the house and see if she was there.
Tell me what you find when you get to your house.
I drive up and I see her car.
So I'm thinking she's there and she's safe inside.
And I walk in and I see her dog, which gives me a little bit more.
What's the way I'm looking for?
Insurance.
What's significant about the dog being there?
that if she's there, then she's,
and Rebecca's got to be there
because Rebecca goes nowhere without that dog.
I walked in, I checked our room.
I'm going to call it R room because it is.
And, um...
Whoa, did you catch that?
Tell me you caught that.
We walked in the R room.
I call it R room because it is.
That's what he said.
No need to be so, uh, defensive there, buddy.
We weren't questioning your relationship status.
No sheets on the bed.
Nobody's in there.
And I thought it was very odd.
No sheets on the bed because she just washed them the week earlier.
And I wouldn't say why should we washed them again.
I looked at the whole house again, double back in every room.
And I didn't see anything.
And I was, well, appeared to me.
I thought it was on the clock because I punched it in.
That thing doesn't work all the time.
And so I took off back towards Sonic.
Okay, was her car there?
That car was there.
Okay. Did you see anything like her slipper or anything like that in the house?
Yes, I saw her pink covers.
These are all clips from Casey's first interview with police.
He tells them that he never went back to the house that day, the day Rebecca went missing.
It was the next morning that he said he drove back home by himself to search the trailer for clues.
One day I was driving through Melbourne, and I saw him outside smoking a cigarette in the parking lot.
This is probably eight or nine months after the murder.
and so I just pulled my truck in, got out, and I just confronted him.
I said, so tell me what happened.
And he told me that he never went back to his house before he went with the police.
And so he lied.
When we get the case file, not only did he not notice that his room, and I'm not, I don't think I'm exaggerating,
it looked like a tornado had gone through his room.
I mean, there was stuff broken everywhere.
I mean, it was a mirror off kilter off the closet.
There were bloody pillows in plain sight.
He admitted, in his first interview with the police, that he did go to the washing machine, open it up,
and it's full of bedding with blood all over it.
You know, like the, what's that thing, the agitator?
There was bloody water in there.
The, like the bleach dispenser thing was completely caked, caked with blood.
And he just puts the lid down, gets in his truck, and drives back to work like nothing happened.
Did you subsequently go back after your house?
with the deputy.
I asked him, I said,
do you just want to follow me?
And I thought I was,
and he just followed me all the way there.
And when you got there,
the police,
I looked in your house.
Yes,
I let him freely walk through the house.
I showed him that her belongings were still there,
how it's very odd,
and she really never,
ever leaves without it.
And he walked into the back room,
checked under the mattress,
and found some blood.
And I really didn't know where it came from.
That's when I started getting really scared.
Didn't know what to think.
Then after we checked the mattress, he turned around and checked the washer.
When we checked the washer, we saw just a little bitty film on something red.
We didn't know if it was blood or not, but we noticed and we tried to put 10-2 together that, you know, the sheets were on the bed.
Let's ask you this case.
What do you think has happened to Rebecca?
I think she was killed.
I don't know.
So Monday night is when he tells his friend she's missing and whatever.
So Tuesday morning, he had spent the night at his friend's house.
He hadn't gone home.
Tuesday morning goes to work for a shift at Sonic.
Well, for some reason, he didn't have his Sonic shirt, even though he worked the day prior.
So his boss is like, you got to go home and get a Sonic shirt.
You got to be in uniform.
So he was forced to go home Tuesday morning to his residence.
And he walks in, you know, her car's there, her purse, her dog.
The mattress is flipped.
There's bloody sheets.
in the washer, all his stuff.
I mean, broken ashtrays, broken mirrors.
And he grabs a shirt and just goes back to work.
And then later on said he didn't notice that anything, you know, was a miss, which is
impossible.
I mean, you can't.
After we got the crime scene photos, you're like, yeah, there's no way you could, like,
how would you go in your room?
And his bed was moved to cover a big blood stain on the carpet.
Like, you can't tell me you didn't notice your bed's in a different position in the room
and it's been stripped and all this stuff.
You already said the night prior she's missing.
and you go home to this mess,
why aren't you immediately calling police, you know?
If the lies, the changing timeline,
and Casey's strange behavior weren't bad enough,
just wait, it gets worse.
Well, it's even more suspicious
because he confessed a hurting her.
He, in, let's see, April of 2010 or 2011,
they're not quite sure what year.
And so he was working on like these towers,
he was climbing towers.
and he was one night
he and two other people were in a hotel room
one of them is Tad Hickerson
and he signed us one affidavit to this
where they're all in a
hotel room they're drinking
he starts crying
and tells them that he
hurt Rebecca that he had
hit her with some type of a wooden object
that he had hurt her
and they were of course they were thought he was just
full of it they're like well the police have cleared
you, you know, how could this be possible?
And he said that the reason that he was getting away with it was because their timeline
was off, but they couldn't figure that out.
So the next day, Tad still thinks, you know, he was just drunk and crying and feeling guilty
and all this other stuff.
Well, now they're sober.
And so Tad asks Casey, he said, so tell me what happened.
And he said that she said something to him, like said something like mockingly to him,
like laughed at him or scoffed at him, and he just flew into a rage, hit her twice.
He said he threw the wooden objects, which, you know, we believe could be a piano leg.
That's, you know, obviously missing.
That he threw it into White River.
And that he said, well, what mistake did you make?
And he said, cleaning up the mess.
By when exactly was the evidence cleaned from the trailer?
According to police, Rebecca was killed sometime on Monday, September 18th, after she dropped Casey off at
work. And Casey had an alibi for that time period. He was working at Sonic all day. Then was seen on
camera hanging out with friends in the evening. So because of that, Casey was cleared because they assumed
she was alive Monday morning and he was accounted for at work during the hours that they thought
she was killed. So he, I mean, Dennis Simon's the detective who was on it for 14 years at botched it.
He did publicly clear him, which is always a mistake.
You don't clear anybody.
But he did publicly clear Casey.
So Casey fell off the radar for most people, I think, from that point forward.
It was open and shut.
Sherlock and Daisy Dukes had nailed the timeline.
Or did he?
Jen and George certainly didn't think so.
They think Rebecca may have been killed much earlier, perhaps that morning,
giving someone plenty of time to erase what couldn't be explained.
And that changed everything.
If the murder didn't happen when police thought it did,
then Casey's alibi wasn't airtight.
So fast forward to the year 2019,
when fans of the Hell and Gone podcast are in a frenzy,
obsessively discussing all these suspicions, day and night.
Y'all are relentless, I'll tell you.
Well, all this change.
Chit chat attracts attention to anyone who's interested, and also their cats.
Do I know my audience or do I know my audience?
The Facebook forum continues to grow and grow, and all of a sudden, a new name starts leaving
comments in the forum, a guy by the name of William Miller.
And he was one of the first people to join our Facebook page when we created in October of 2019.
and there's a girl on our crowd sourcing team who's really good at genealogy.
You know, like she's good at putting family trees together.
And as soon as he joined our page, and her name is Miranda,
and she immediately told us.
She said, hey, this guy's the first cousin of Casey's.
And we're like, well, okay, we didn't think anything of it because he lived in the Philippines.
And I think Jen had done a little research on him and figured out pretty quickly that he lived in Iranza's past, Texas.
You know, so we didn't think anything of it.
and he was, you know, postulating theories on how she died,
and he was very active on the page.
And we just thought he was a mold for the family, you know,
because what had happened previously, you know,
when Helen Gone came out as these Facebook pages formed,
and a bunch of family members got on there
and people would get into these huge fights,
and they would say all this stuff.
And so we just thought, okay,
they don't want to join and get into these, you know, brew ha-haz.
And so they're just going to send in this first cousin, you know,
he's kind of, you know, kind of a weirdo anyway.
you can just tell that from his messages and stuff like that.
But he's living in the Philippines.
He's working on oil rigs all over the world.
He flies all over the place.
He's a very world traveler, and he made a lot of money, too.
And then this may be a coincidence,
but I just can't believe that it's a coincidence.
Casey's birthday is January 16th.
So on January 16th of 2020, right before the pandemic starts,
William Miller starts sending private DMs to Jen.
Now, he had sent me one or two, but I never responded because, I mean, he was Casey's first cousin, so I'm just like, no, who cares?
Of course, Jen is a much more thorough investigator than I am, so she started responding to him and asking him questions.
At first, William Miller seemed like any other dedicated member of the group.
Curious, passionate, maybe a little too invested.
But as Jen talked to him, the tone shifted.
The conversations were often long, back-and-forth dialogues.
Sometimes William rambled and didn't make much sense.
In one message, he claimed he was being targeted by other group members trying to stir up drama.
I am being attacked by a few people.
They took picks and sent them to Dennis, and he was one of them to blow up on me.
He got more paranoid, even defensive, at one point he.
wrote. Now he talks shit to me. I'm sorry to talk like that, but about to block the guy,
if he keep it up. He'd to be a grammar Nazi here, but anybody know English these days?
Anyway, this guy William seemed like he wanted to be helpful. He wanted to be part of the team.
He insisted,
Sorry if I sound like I am on Casey's side. Maybe I come across that way, but am not.
But behind the scenes, Jen was already putting the pieces together.
William wasn't just engaging with the case.
He was circling it, fixating on details like gloves, DNA, and forensics.
No fingerprints, no DNA.
First thing pops in my head is, did he have gloves?
Jen's goal was to find out why William was so interested in this case.
Or at least to see what kind of answer he would give.
They knew he was Casey's cousin, and they knew he was being evasive about it.
But why?
And he was lying.
He wouldn't tell her, like, what was the relationship to the case?
Like, why was he interested in it?
And he just said podcast, and then she asked him what states he'd been to, and he said,
50 of them or something like that.
And her and I would talk about him some early on.
And then the pandemic hits.
And then in September we found out something very interesting.
We did not know that he was in town the weekend of this whole thing happening.
We never knew that.
Even more suspicious, they didn't know that William's mother Linda and his brother Jeremy
had actually been living in the area at the time of the murder.
Like the family kept that way under wraps, which is so telling.
Even Casey and his family never divulged that publicly.
I'm like, why are you hiding that?
Jen and George both saw the signs.
William Miller was quickly moving up their list of suspects.
Me and Jen are talking one day and we're just like,
this guy could be involved.
Like, as soon as we found out that he was there,
because our analysis had always pointed towards a male member of the McCullough family.
His name is William Miller, but he's as much as McCullough as the McCullough's are.
He fit the profile.
And it was even more interesting with him because he immediately left.
It's like your cousin's girlfriend vanishes and you don't stick around for a day or two to try to help find her.
Of course, at this point, we knew Casey hadn't been trying to find her.
And then I'll never forget this.
We kept digging on him.
And so we're trying to put this together all through October of 2020.
And little dude, we know that the police were on the same track.
Because we weren't, we weren't communicated to them when we were doing.
at this point, and they weren't communicating obviously with us.
A new detective had been handling the investigation,
and it took him only eight months to get his sight set on William Miller.
This detective wanted to get William in an interview room,
but knowing that William lived overseas, he called his mother Linda.
Just so you know, they're going to be referring to William as Billy, by the way.
Hello.
Hey, Linda, how are you doing?
Hanging in there?
I didn't know you still worked.
You still working?
That's Alzheimer.
Oh, okay.
And that can be difficult sometimes.
Oh, yeah, I can imagine.
I can imagine.
I wanted to reach out to you.
Okay.
You know, I'm going through this case file,
and the, I guess the opinion of the Arkansas State Police is that they're basically wanting everybody re-interviewed.
So I'm going back and I'm going through, you know, all of the documents and trying to, trying to accomplish that.
And I know that you and Jeremy and Billy were all interviewed back back in 2004.
And, you know, I just wanted to reach out to you guys and see what, of course, I get, you know, Billy's in the Philippines.
I probably won't be able to talk to him for, I don't know if he's planned on.
coming back anytime soon or do you know?
I don't know.
Oh, you know?
You don't know.
You don't know?
Right.
And you have no idea when Billy might be returning to the States?
This job is.
So the last, the last time Billy made it home was sometime last year or?
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, if you would, Linda, get with Jeremy and see if there's,
one day.
We're home at the same time.
Yeah. Awesome.
Well, thanks, Linda.
That was Linda Miller.
October 21st, 2020.
It should be noted that
Billy Miller
is currently in Oregon.
He returned from the Philippines
a little over a week ago.
It's entirely possible
that William or Bill or
Billy was sitting right
next to his mother, listening to her lie to the detective about his whereabouts during this call.
Just a little bit later, probably after having a team meeting with her sons, Linda called the
detective back.
Oh, really?
Well, when's, when's Billy coming back in?
November the 7th.
Linda Miller and her two sons believed they were heading into just another round of questioning.
What they didn't realize was that every word they spoke.
would be used to dismantle the lie they'd been upholding for 16 long years.
By the fall of 2020, almost exactly 16 years after her murder,
there was a Facebook group, rife with theories on Rebecca Gould's case.
One of the people offering up ideas was a man named William Miller.
Jen Buchholz and George Jared, the two investigators who had taken a personal
interest in Rebecca's story realized pretty quickly that William was Casey McCullough's first cousin.
At first, they thought the McCullough family had sent him in as a spy, someone who could figure
out just how much the public knew. But the more that William talked, the higher he moved up
their suspect list. Coincidentally, Arkansas State Police were coming to the same conclusion
in parallel. On November 7, 2020,
detectives finally got William into an interview room.
His mother and brother sat in the room next door.
First off, let me tell you, this is called a non-custodial interview, okay?
You probably never heard of such a thing.
But what that means is you came up here voluntarily.
You're not being detained.
You're free to go at any time that door is not locked.
You know, I didn't tell you what I told the police down in Texas when they came and stuff.
Yeah, and I'm going to be honest with you and truthful with you on everything.
You know, maybe I saw something that maybe you'd be a key factor in something there and all that stuff.
Right, right.
So you're an oil field worker.
I've been working in an oil field for 23 years.
Right.
I remember moving mom up there.
And then she was moved into that little house.
I was a couple miles down the road from Grand Valley.
father's property.
Yeah.
Yeah. And you're right.
That was about, your mom's house was about two or three miles from the McCullough trailer where this happened.
Okay.
So, so I've been in that home and all that stuff.
And prior to the homicide.
Yes.
How many times had you been in that trailer, do you think?
Maybe two, three times.
Maybe two or three times.
Two or three times and stuff.
So she was, Rebecca was killed.
September of 2004, when was the last time you were in that trailer, do you think?
It was the way before that.
Months. Yeah.
William goes on to explain that back in September of 2004, his mother asked him to help her move
to Texas with William's younger brother. So, he drove up to Arkansas and arrived on Sunday.
The same day, Rebecca had gotten into town.
So in the information that was provided to Texas in 2004, you said that whenever you showed up in Melbourne that you went and visited family in the small town.
So that made it sound like that you were with your mom and that you visited family in the small town.
So do you remember going to the grandparents' house on Sunday?
Because that's what you told investigators in 2004.
I can't remember and all that stuff.
Yeah.
Do you think that probably if you, if you, if you, if you, you know,
said it in old four that that would probably be more accurate.
They would probably be more accurate because we sat there and went and then, and then,
because I know that when I came up, I remember going and asking Casey if you could give me a hand.
Helping you move.
Helping you move.
Help me mom move the stuff into the house and he was like, hey, I'm too busy.
Is that whenever you showed up to Casey's trailer on Sunday?
No.
Okay.
When did you have that conversation?
when mom moved up there three or four months before.
William claimed that this interaction happened months before.
But now that we have Casey's original interview from September of 2004,
we can look back and see that Casey told police something different.
What's his name?
His name is Billy.
We call him Little Billy Miller.
And it's Billy Miller.
What where does Billy live in?
He lives in Texas.
and I'm not for sure where.
What was he doing up here?
He was coming up here to move his mom and his brother back to Texas.
So has he already gone back, you know?
Yes, he's already gone.
I'm pretty sure.
And so I guess he came up and spoke with you just a short period of time that night.
Yes, sir.
That would have been Sunday evening.
Uh-huh.
Okay.
So how long did he stay?
About 10, 15 minutes of tops.
We just really talked about all the time.
Did he come into your house?
No, sir.
He stayed outside.
I was outside.
He never came in the house, but Rebecca was on the front porch.
He saw Rebecca on the front porch.
Did he know that you and Rebecca dated in the past?
Yes.
Did he know if y'all were living together?
He knew that she visited on the weekend.
He stayed.
Remember, Rebecca arrived at McCullough's trailer on Saturday, September 18th.
The police originally thought she was alive on Monday morning.
Jen and George think she was actually killed before that.
Late Saturday night or maybe sometime on Sunday.
There's a problem, though, with this part of the story, too.
Here's the problem.
So this was what Casey told people in, you know, when he was interviewed, the police.
And then William kind of told a similar story that he just pulled up into the driveway and, you know, that was it.
Well, a couple of weeks after their statements are taken,
Casey's asked, whose DNA could possibly be in the house?
house.
And he gives a list of people whose DNA could be in the house.
He lists William and Jeremy.
And beside each of them, there's S-U-N, meaning Sunday night, next to each of them.
Well, if you never got out of his car, how could his DNA be in the house?
Obviously, I can't talk a lot about the evidence in the investigation.
You know, it's an ongoing investigation.
But I can assure you that.
there are items of evidence that there should be no reason your DNA should be on it.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
We believe investigators with the people that have worked this, we believe that we have the suspect's DNA on a piece of evidence that is very specific and very unique and nobody else's DNA should be on it.
So that's why I'm asking, there's a number of people that have provided DNA voluntarily.
Would you be willing to provide your DNA?
It would be a cheek swab.
I don't want to take blood or...
But if I'm in the house and all that stuff, my DNA would be in there.
You know, if you don't feel comfortable doing it, I'm not going to push you or try to put any pressure on you.
No, I didn't take your test and all that stuff, but, you know,
Yeah.
If you're best fine,
it's just,
to me,
it's just,
you know,
yeah,
my DNA is going to be
other stuff.
Right.
Okay.
Since he was so willing
to give up his DNA,
a polygraph
would be no problem,
right?
Like I was talking before
about polygraphs,
you know,
almost all of the McCullas
had been polygraph.
A number of other people
had been,
you know,
that's one,
that's a tool
that we,
like to use to, you know, it kind of gives us a pretty good indication of somebody's lying
or telling the truth.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, would you be okay with taking a polygraph?
I'll just ask you.
Yeah, I don't have a problem with it.
You don't have that problem.
You want me to go to Arkansas take one?
No, I tell you what, let me holler.
I'll call a, I'll call a sergeant up here to see.
They may have a polygrapher in town.
You know, it's a shot in the dark, but, uh...
Actually, it was the fur.
this thing from a shot in the dark.
This detective had his polygrapher
locked and loaded.
All right.
We're going to administer the test.
We're going to give you the test. They'll be done in several phases.
And I'm going to evaluate the exam results.
I'll tell you how you did before you leave today.
Okay.
Cause the death of Rebecca.
Cool.
How would you answer that question?
How would I answer that?
Yes.
That, you know, how can you do something when you're in another location?
Okay.
Perfect.
So if they were to ask you that on the
example, what would your answer be?
No. Okay, perfect.
And are you 10010% positive?
Yes. Perfect. You know, you're not going to have a problem past the test.
You know, if you didn't do it, you didn't do it. And then let's go through the process.
And that's what you want to know, right?
William sat like a statue in his chair for the duration of the test, answering yes and no questions confidently.
When it was over, he didn't have to wait very long to get his results.
I think you did.
So the results on the exam of deception indicated, right?
So as to the questions of did you, you know, was that caused, you failed the test.
I found the test.
Yes.
Yes.
And so.
My heart, but he felt like it was just beaten out of my chest.
Yeah.
You know, we talked about your DNA being at the crime scene.
And you've tried to give an explanation as to why your DNA would be at the crime scene
because your mom gave Claude furniture.
Maybe you're furniture and all that stuff.
And bedding.
And you even said that it would be reasonable for your DNA to be on the bedding,
which is absolutely absurd.
No, I didn't say that.
Okay.
I just said that, Mom, the furniture and all that stuff.
Okay.
All right.
This is a washcloth that was under the bed that the killer used to clean up.
It was watered up in a ball.
Okay.
We've got the killer's DNA.
on that washcloth.
Okay.
Would there be any reason for your DNA to be on that washcloth?
It shouldn't be.
It shouldn't be on there.
Are you ready to have your mind blown?
The detective is lying.
His DNA was not on the washcloth.
This is just one of the tools in a seasoned detective's tool belt
that's used to get a reaction and possibly a confession out of a
suspect when there's little loss to go on.
They were baiting him.
He got tricked.
And it was a gutsy move.
I'll give Mike McNeele credit.
He got tricked.
He got tricked into thinking that his DNA was on a rag that they had found.
They were going to do some DNA testing.
And they also got tricked into thinking that Rebecca's DNA.
What Mike did is he went and found the truck, the actual truck that he, that William
Miller owned.
2004. It was somewhere in South
Texas. He sent the Texas Rangers down there
to take pictures of it. And so Mike
has a folder.
And this is after William has failed the polygraph
test during his interview.
And he comes in and he says, well,
I've got to share something with you. And he pulls out these
pictures of this truck.
That truck looked familiar? Yeah.
Yeah. That's your truck.
Yeah. Okay.
Biological evidence
really lasts for
decades. Blood, skin cells, all kinds of stuff.
Okay. All right. That was a really bloody crime scene. What happened, you got blood on the side
of your shoe. We got Rebecca's DNA next to the gas pedal in your truck. No question
about it. Her DNA's in your truck. So what you have to do is you have to do is you
have to explain to me how that's possible. If you didn't kill her, you know who did. And if you know
who did, if you're covering for Casey, dude, I'm telling you, you have got to come forward right now
with what you know. And William immediately knows it's his old truck. And he goes, we're going to
get this tested. And whoever killed her is on this rag. Neither one of those things was true.
But it was enough to scare William into confessing.
still want to be a detective?
We know what you did.
We know how it went down.
We've got her blood in your floorboard.
You tried to clean up best that you could, Billy.
Don't drag your mom through this anymore.
Don't drag your brother through this anymore.
Give the family some peace.
It was a freak deal, man.
You did not mean a killer.
It happened.
It should have never happened, but it did.
Okay?
So tell me, Billy.
Just tell me.
Tell me what you did.
How it happened.
Can I speak to my mom outside?
You can look at me email.
I'm not going to run off for anything.
Listen, let me do this.
Let me bring your mom in here.
And let's talk to her together if that's what you want to do.
I want to talk to her outside.
Outside.
and I promise to come back in here and tell you whatever you want.
William Miller had failed his polygraph test miserably.
He realized the walls were closing in,
and he asked for one last chance to talk with his mother.
When he came back into the room,
William told police exactly what they'd been waiting to hear.
He had murdered Rebecca Gould all of those years ago.
It was him.
that had always been him.
Okay, I'll get Jeremy in a minute.
We need to have a conversation.
I held up my end of the deal.
Let's talk.
What do you want me to tell you?
I want you to tell me what you did, how it went down.
One thing about this is it's been reeling in your head like a movie reel since it happened.
There isn't anything about this that you forgot.
I know that, because I've been doing this a long time.
I'm going to tell you that I did it.
I did it.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry for what I did.
You got to tell me how it went down.
I'm just going to tell you that I kind of blocked it out of my mind in a way to survive.
Everybody that I'm associated is a victim of me.
Absolutely.
A victim.
Absolutely.
And I played everybody as a fool.
Everybody.
I never told anybody but you right now.
going into the trailer and stuff and then it just happened so quick and so fast and then
I freaked down and I can't go off over what happened so fast and so quick what happened
where did it happen you have to tell me these fans if you got his own injuries you know
I do I do or should I just get a lawyer and all that stuff no I'm just asking you that because
And I'll, listen, man.
You know, I'm telling you, you know, I'm confessing to you.
I'm telling you that I did it.
What you do?
Arrest me.
What'd you do?
You know, arrest me.
What you said in that?
You said that I killed her by her blood and all that stuff is in there.
Didn't arrest me.
I'm confessing.
I did it.
Billy, you're under arrest for the murder of Rebecca Gold.
Okay.
Okay.
Take me to Arkansas.
Let me listen.
No, that's the whole whole.
We'll get there.
I know that.
It doesn't happen the way you want it to happen.
It just doesn't take me at Arkansas, do this, do that.
It doesn't happen that way.
Here's the thing.
In the state of Arkansas, you can't, and this is true in a lot of states,
you cannot just have a confession.
You have to have some other piece of evidence that ties the person to the crime.
The problem for William is that there was a piece of evidence that did tie him to the crime,
and that's the missing suitcase.
when police arrived the day that Rebecca vanished,
there were three things missing,
one of her suitcases, the piano leg, and her.
Okay, but I need to know what you did with Rebecca.
Where did you put her before you dumped her?
I need to know all that stuff,
and I know that's not easy to talk about,
but we've got to have that conversation.
Where did you put her before you dumped her?
Where did you keep her?
That's the trouble.
Where in the truck?
The back end of the truck.
Okay.
What was she in?
She was in a shirt in the money.
No.
Did you put her in a trash bag?
No, I didn't put her in.
No.
What'd you put her in?
There was a blanket and all that stuff.
What was used to cause her injuries?
Well, go to Arkansas, and I'm going to point out something to you.
And then you'll find some certain things that you might be looking for.
all right so you're telling me right now in November of 2020 there is still
physical evidence that has not been found yeah let's go to Arkansas that
will nail the in the coffin would it well no I'm telling you you know
unless somebody picked it up and thought it was trashed but it should
be or attack.
It should be where it's at.
Well, that's helpful.
Ain't it weird how humans can do inhuman things, but not talk about them afterwards?
Words too violent for you, Billy?
We are a strange species indeed.
For 16 years, they were trying to find this suitcase.
Well, William told them where to find the suitcase and it was in proximity to his mom's
old house.
when she was living in Guyon.
And it took them about, the search we estimate was about three to four hours,
but they found the suitcase.
The suitcase is weird, though.
And there's a reason why it's weird.
William says he took it, and William's a, he's not tall, but he's a big, stocky guy.
You know, he weighed over 300 pounds, there was only like five, six.
And so he took this suitcase and he said he launched it from the highway,
and it landed like 30, 40 yards away or something like that.
and so when it's found, it's open, and all of the bedding,
and there's some bedding and there's some clothes,
they're all in a pile over here,
and there were some CDs in there,
and all this other stuff.
So Jen is at my house one night after we get the pictures of this suitcase,
and it was confirmed, you know, it was her suitcase, her stuff.
There's only one problem.
Think about the physics of throwing,
suitcase. Okay, if it's all zipped up, you throw it, no problem. But if it was open, then all that
stuff would have been scattered all over the place and all of the clothing type items would have
long been gone, deteriorated into nothing. They weren't faded. You could see the, this is how we
know it was, came from Casey's houses because the plaid on the sheet matches that that was in
his washer. And we've actually done our own suitcase experiment. We, one of the local residents in
Melbourne went to Goodwill and got two black suitcases.
And her backyard, it has a very similar landscape to where this suitcase was found with the
same types of trees and leaves and obviously the same weather pattern.
So what we did is we had her put sheets in one suitcase and zip it closed and just put it out
like that.
And then the other one we had her put the suitcase like Rebecca's was found with it unzipped open
and the sheets.
They're not in a neat pile, but they're very close to the suitcase and just laying on top
of the leaves. And so she put those sheets out there. This started in December of 2023. And within a few
months, those sheets were like unrecognizable, deteriorated, and now they're just basically gone.
So that's how we know, like Rebecca's suitcase could not have been laying open like that for
16 years, and the sheets look pretty new. So somebody opened that suitcase, but we haven't
figured out who yet.
What would you say to
Rebecca as well?
I'm true. Sorry.
I'm sorry.
I know that I can't bring her back.
I know
if there was times that I
wanted to go to Dr. Kohl's office
go to his office
and I had him a gun to tell him
that I did.
But I was too chicken shit
to do that.
Like he gave
this confession, gave really no reason as to why Rebecca, you know, he killed her. But then
at his sentencing, he agrees to meet with Dr. Gould afterwards. And he tells a completely
different story about how he gave her, that he hit her, but then he gave her CPR. And if they
find his DNA on her shirt, it was because he was crying. He keeps telling all these crazy
stories that don't make any sense. But like with anybody who's lying, there's grains,
there's grains of truth in there and you've got to somehow try to mind them out.
Of course, now I claims he had nothing to do with it in case he did all of it.
And for listeners who want to waste 11 hours of their life,
they can watch his entire interview, polygraph confession, everything on YouTube.
William was arrested for Rebecca's murder and eventually took a plea deal that landed him
40 years in the Arkansas Department of Corrections.
And like George said, these days, William has changed his story.
yet again, as you might suspect.
He and Jen have been in contact with him since his arrest,
and he now says that Casey murdered Rebecca.
He just helped clean up the scene.
And fun fact, the cleaning supplies that were used to clean up the crime scene
were delivered by Linda, and that's verified.
She delivered those cleaning supplies.
Now, she claims that her brother, he asked her to pick up certain items
for the house, and they were all cleaning items that were used by the killer or killers
to clean up the mess in the house.
No one knows for sure just how much Linda Miller knew about the situation,
but it warrants some serious speculation.
Rebecca's murder wasn't the only secret her son had been keeping, though.
The same day he took the polygraph test, failed it, and confessed to the murder,
he also confessed to five others, too.
That's right.
William could be a serial killer.
What happened was, is he confessed to Rebecca's murder.
And, of course, then, you know, the detectives were trying to press him, like, hey,
we know this wasn't your first rodeo.
And so then he confesses to five other murders, but he doesn't give the names of the victims.
He didn't give specific details, though, about how he kidnapped one of these victims from,
she was, like at a pay phone at a convenience store late night.
and he gave specific details about how he would, you know, trick them.
He said some of them were sex workers.
You know, they would think they were about getting ready to have a sexual encounter.
And sometimes he would have a strap underneath his, somewhere in his truck that he could just grab it and wrap it wrap it around their neck and strangle him.
I am almost 100% confident that he's a serial killer and he's done this many times.
I just believe it.
Jen still waivers on whether she agrees with George on this one.
but she is 100% sure that William was somehow involved in the murder and disposal of Rebecca Gould.
I just, and this is the tragedy of it in a way is that if only the state police had shared a little bit with us and we had known William had been in the state of Arkansas, the weekend of the murder.
I mean, everything would have been so different from our side the whole time and then him joining the group.
I mean, that was a golden opportunity.
They're lucky that we're smart
and I'm used to running sources and stuff
and we know how to interview
or what to say and not to say
because we could have totally screwed the whole thing up
and scared him off
and he never would have gone to that interview and confessed.
But they also could have used us
to try to get information from him.
If only they would have communicated with us,
you know? And that's just what's so frustrating to me
about this case.
And we're not here to defend William.
I am 100% confident.
involved in this whole thing and maybe others. But there are just aspects of the investigation
and that and his confession that weren't vetted enough. For instance, his timeline on this
murder Monday morning. And they didn't challenge him on any of those details. And just to clarify
for listeners, Williams' DNA and Prince were never found in that residence. I'm not saying they're not
there. I'm sure his DNA was there somewhere. But
they did not have anything else on him except his confession, which had parts that cannot be true.
And there's actually a lot of DAs that would not approve an arrest warrant on this.
It's no wonder this case has held the attention of so many for nearly two decades.
It's not just the brutality of what happened to Rebecca.
It's the sheer scale of what we don't know.
The conflicting timelines, the recycled alibi.
the parade of rumors, false leads, and players who still haven't been entirely ruled out.
William Miller is serving a 40-year sentence for a murder he now insists he falsely confessed to.
He continues to beg Jen and George to uncover new evidence that will put Casey or someone else in prison for this crime instead of him.
But that ship has sailed.
He took a plea deal.
He confessed.
He volunteered evidence.
And in doing so, he gave up almost any chance of appeal.
So I've been to visit him three times, and George actually got to interview him and take video of it because he's an official, you know, journalist or what is it, George?
A media member, I guess, that got you in.
And so I'm just, if he's willing to keep talking to us, I'm not going to give up because I feel.
compelled to not only try to get the truth about Rebecca's case, but also try to figure out
if he has other victims.
And so I told him this last time, this is just a couple months ago when I went with Jeremy,
as a dude, we're about the same age and barring some major catastrophe or me getting
cancer, like, we're going to be alive for about the same amount of time and I'm not going to
stop talking to you.
And in the absence of official help, it's civilians like you and me,
who are stepping up and finding William's other potential victims.
Not ego-driven cops and short-chorts.
Regular people like you and me
with a moral compass, a strong sense of right and wrong,
and a need for justice.
People who will not stop asking questions,
even when officials have long forgotten the case and told you to shut up.
Web sleuths like this have already been comelyt,
calming through other cold cases across every state William ever set foot in,
trying to make sense of what he vaguely blurted out during his police interview.
So we can't do it by ourselves.
And so we started this project several months ago,
and I just called it Operation Rebecca,
because I didn't know what else.
I couldn't come up with anything better.
But I have an official sign-up form.
I have a video on our YouTube channel explaining the process of what we're doing,
and I just ask volunteers to fill out the form, it's only four questions,
sign up for a state, and then watch the video,
and then email me once you watch a video,
and I'll send you the links to the Google Drive folder
that has all the information you need.
We'll post a link to Jen's info in the show notes at sordonscale.com
so you too can join the investigative fun.
Now, where did I put that magnifying glass again?
Anyway, I think this case proves Justice doesn't always wear a badge.
Sometimes it looks like a true crime podcast enthusiast with a search tab open at 3 a.m.
And way too much coffee in their digestive system.
Get 20% off at strong coffee company.com with promo code sword, by the way.
But as I was saying, sometimes justice looks just like you and just like me.
Sometimes it requires a hive of citizens to stand up for justice
and collectively uncover what a single mind can know.
or will not.
It's kind of amazing to see it happen in real time.
And next time, maybe, just maybe, you'll be the reason.
Someone's story doesn't end in silence.
YouTube.com slash Sword and Scale TV is where you can find all three seasons of Sword
and Scale Television.
It's ongoing.
new episodes every month.
That's going to do it.
Thank you for joining us.
Until next time, stay safe.
