Sword and Scale - Episode 350
Episode Date: April 29, 2026In 2016, 22-year-old Cati Blauvelt was found stabbed to death in the basement of an abandoned house. The search for her killer would uncover a story of control, deception, and betrayal — and reveal ...how one man turned trust into a weapon.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.
Unfortunately, you're right in the middle of all of this.
And to sit here and lie to us to begin with, it is not helping you at all.
This is a friend of yours or was a friend of yours and somebody brutally murdered for you.
Hello, and welcome to Season 13, episode 350 of Sword and Scale.
A show that reveals that the worst monsters are real.
Simpsonville, South Carolina is a small southern town, where life moves at an easy pace.
Families know their neighbors. Church bells still mark the hour. And the peaceful atmosphere feels almost rehearsed.
But on the afternoon of October 26, 2016, the calm was broken. Inside a cramped interview room at the
Simpsonville Police Department,
investigators spoke to a young man named
Ricky Hargrove.
I want to tell you what you've effectively done,
Ricky, is you've inserted
yourself into a murder investigation.
I mean, what do you think?
I think it would do something like that.
Take some kind of monster to do something
like that to someone.
This interview with Ricky was one of the
first threads in an investigation that would span nearly a decade.
It was a horrific homicide case that centered around a 22-year-old woman named Katie Blaville.
Katie believed she could build a simple life for herself in Simpsonville and was doing what she could
do to make that happen.
Katie was an animal lover, and in 2016, she was working full-time at her local PetSmart.
I just want to confirm with you, she was working here on Monday, and do you, she was working here on Monday,
And do you remember what her hours were here on Monday?
She was 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. 9 to 2.
I don't know exactly what time she left, but I mean it was no later than 2.15.
So you were working on Monday, did?
Yes.
How was Katie's demeanor that day?
Perfectly fine. She was talking about picking up her, someone named Cheyenne.
I don't know who that is to her.
And they were going shopping together.
On October 23, 2016, Katie worked a full-time shift at Petsmart.
When she clocked out at around 2.15 p.m., she confirmed plans to meet up with her younger sister, Cheyenne.
But I said, what are you doing? And she said, I'm driving around.
I asked her, I said, when you take me eat money to get food.
And you money will buy you food. And she said, yeah, I'll be there in an hour.
And I said, well, if you don't know what you're doing right now, I said, why is it going to take you an hour to be here?
You know?
And she said, I don't know.
But I kind of just let it go because I was like, you know,
maybe she's doing something she don't want to tell me about.
She's grown.
She can do that, you know.
And so I fell asleep, and I got her back in like an hour and a half,
and she didn't answer.
Katie never showed up to meet her sister that day.
When phone calls went unanswered, Cheyenne felt the first wave of panic.
She immediately knew that something was very wrong.
Her phone was off, and then that's when I got to say,
kind of started to worry because I'm like Katie never leaves her phone off.
You know, Katie never blows me off.
And I'm all like 12, 31 o'clock.
I called John.
And he answered and he sounded like he just woke it up.
And I said, I can't find Katie.
And I said, I need to know if she's at your house or if you see me.
I said, just tell me, you know.
And he said no.
Shut out.
I don't talk to her anymore, so he sat on the phone.
Desperate to find her sister, Cheyenne did the only thing she could think of.
She reached out to Katie's estranged husband, John.
What's your wife for me?
Catherine Ann Blowelt.
And are you familiar that she's missing?
Oh, yeah.
28-year-old John Blauvelt was an active-duty soldier in the United States Army.
When Katie went missing, he was living and working in Simpsonville as a recruiter.
So I understand you've been deployed twice?
Yes.
Iraq or
yeah
once last time
he got back
2010
how's recruiting
obviously a lot different
than being deployed
yeah that was probably the worst job of the red
yeah because you know I joined the army at 18
to fight in Iraq
shoot guns
and then they had me sit behind a desk
and you know that's not really
get a different assignment right
yeah I know
it's one of the
It's like one of the armies, like mandatory assignments you to take it or you get out.
John and Katie met by chance outside the Army recruiting office where he worked.
Her job was just a few doors down, and one afternoon during a smoke break, their conversations began.
So me and her just kind of met and started dating.
I was staying at her house most days during the week at her dad's house, and then we finally got an apartment in December.
And you got married from what year?
Uh, 2015.
After they married, it didn't take long for John and Katie to realize they weren't as compatible as they'd hoped.
They barely lived together for two months before the relationship fell apart, and Katie decided to walk away.
She left John, and the two were officially separated.
What kind of stuff are you all arguing about?
Um, everything.
Just normal.
Just normal stuff.
People stuff.
And then being a recruiter, I talked to a lot of different people.
so I had two phones and I talked to a lot of females and she did my chats.
But that was my job as a recruiter.
I had to talk to everybody.
And she wouldn't like that.
So then we'd argue about that.
So you guys weren't very long at all.
Two months.
In October of 2016, Katie went missing.
And naturally, her husband was one of the first people police wanted to talk to.
For the most part, John was open and cooperative.
He admitted that their marriage had been difficult, even.
horrible at times.
But he insisted he'd never laid a hand on her
or caused her any physical harm.
I mean, we were the worst couple.
You know, we argued a lot.
But I think it was just bad timing, honestly,
because she was going through some shit.
I was going through some shit.
And she's left one day.
When was the last time you actually saw her?
I'd say probably July.
Because she moved out in April, I think.
Have you ever got to?
I've gotten so mad at her that maybe you did something you didn't mean to do.
No, absolutely not.
John also told investigators that he hadn't seen Katie for months.
And he provided a reasonable alibi for the day she went missing.
Did you work this Monday?
Mm-hmm.
What time did you get off Monday?
Like 2.30-ish, 2. I don't know.
Where'd you go have to work?
Did you stop anywhere on the way home?
No.
Was anybody home with you?
Yeah, my roommates were there.
John's roommates backed up his story.
They told investigators they saw him come home from work that day,
on the day that Katie went missing.
Though they did lose track of him later in the evening
when he said he was going out for a job.
Investigators also spoke with people who knew both John and Katie
and were familiar with their relationship.
Many described John the same way.
Polite, disciplined, the picture of...
an army soldier.
For them, the idea that he could hurt Katie
didn't seem possible at all.
They used to fight a lot,
but, like, he was never, like, violent with her
when I lived there.
And a lot of the time, it was, like, mostly her
that, like, started the argument.
What do you think, chance are that John
lost his cool and did something to her?
I know he didn't.
I've been around him when he's drunk.
straight up drunk and he's not angry, you know, they've gotten really upset and he just,
he just comes in and just cries. Like, I mean, I've seen him mad, but, you know, he just yells
and that's the end of it. After looking into John and finding no clear link to Katie's
disappearance, investigators began to consider other possibilities. They knew that after the marriage
ended, Katie had started dating again. This opened the door to new questions and,
a different suspect.
I don't know what her family has told you.
Hopefully, Cheyenne's been up front with you,
but she's been dating around a lot.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah, we're looking into some of that.
Investigators learned that Katie had recently
reconnected with an ex-boyfriend,
21-year-old Wayne Roper.
This was a bizarre relationship
that quickly became the focus of their suspicions.
And through a series of strange, unsettling events,
that relationship led detectives to another name.
The young man you heard at the beginning of this episode, Ricky Hargrove.
Yesterday when I was finishing up some assignments in my classes online,
I got a call from Wayne at around 1130.
Wayne caught, says, hey man, can you come pick me up from work?
On the night of October 24, 2016,
Ricky received an unexpected phone call.
It was from Katie's ex-boyfriend, Wayne Roper,
who asked for a ride home from the Walmart where he worked.
Ricky hesitated, then agreed,
as long as he got a little gas money.
When he got out into a car,
I say, hey, man, what's up with Katie being missing?
And he said they haven't been able to find her.
They pinged her phone in West Virginia.
something, and then they pinged it again, and it was in Simpsonville.
And he said, yeah, there was this house that we used to hang out at.
And I've been wanting to check that because I think that she might be there.
When Wayne climbed into the passenger seat, his request caught Ricky off guard.
He wanted to go to a nearby abandoned farmhouse, a place that was rumored to be haunted.
strangely, Wayne said he thought Katie might be hiding there.
I get out of the car with him, giving my lamp, my head lamp, and we walk in there.
I'm talking about the house being haunted.
I don't want anything to do with this.
And I tell him about, you know, if we do find her, he says, we're going to call the cops.
And I say, but I got a bunch of weed in there.
and then I'm not expecting the finder at all in there.
And I was just kind of dismissive.
Whenever we go in there, we check all the upstairs rooms.
And then when we get done checking those, we go downstairs.
Reluctantly, Ricky drove Wayne to the abandoned farmhouse,
and together they searched the dark, empty rooms for any sign of Katie.
After several minutes of searching, and after they made their way into the
basement, Wayne Roper pulled out his phone and dialed 911.
Since then 911, what's location of your emergency?
I'm in that discovery church across in the woods.
My friend, she's been missing for, I think, 30 hours now.
And we went into the woods where we used to all hang out at, and there's a house there.
and we went looking for her there just in case like she might be there staying or something
and we found her in the bottom part in the basement covered up with pieces of wood
okay like was she still alive no sir no response she's pale yes are you still there with her
no sir i walked away i couldn't is anybody still there with her
That night, the body of 22-year-old Katie Blavelt was found in the basement of an abandoned farmhouse.
She'd been covered with planks of rotting wood, and an autopsy later revealed she'd been brutally stabbed to death.
Simpsonville wasn't the kind of place where people normally vanished, or where murder made the nightly news.
When it did, everyone knew about it.
Naturally, solving Katie's murder became a top priority for local investigators.
But answers didn't come quickly.
Nearly a decade would pass before a jury would finally hear the case.
And even then, the truth was anything but certain.
On October 23rd, 2016, 22-year-old Katie Blavelt was supposed to meet her younger sister after work.
but by that evening she was missing.
The following day, investigators began piecing together what little they knew,
a troubled marriage with an army recruiter, a recent separation,
and a late-night drive to an abandoned farmhouse.
That's where two young men, Wayne Roper and Ricky Hargrove,
claimed to have made a discovery they'd never forget.
It was Wayne who happened to be Katie's ex-boyfriend,
who reached for his phone and dialed 911.
I was worried about my occasion, and she went missing.
She's been missing for a while now.
And she came in this house that we used to all hang out in.
And she was going to know a lot.
What's wrong with her, sir?
She's no while.
We found her in his house, no a lot.
You found her?
What?
We found my friend Katie Boyer, dead in the house.
Okay.
Okay.
In other words, she's dead in the, are you saying she's dead in the house?
Yes, ma'am.
Now, you sure she's dead?
No.
She's not breathing?
Is she cold?
She's very well, and there was no response.
There's no response?
No, ma'am.
Okay, sir.
And what's your name?
Wayne Proffer.
After Wayne made this call, officers quickly arrived at the scene, and the search for Katie Blavelt came to an end.
Her body was found in the basement of the abandoned farmhouse, stuffed into a narrow cement opening and covered with planks of rotting wood.
An autopsy later revealed the cause of death.
She'd been stabbed multiple times, including twice in the neck.
A fragment of the knife used to kill her was stupt.
still lodged in her throat.
Investigators later concluded that the murder had taken place somewhere else,
likely nearby, perhaps in the driveway,
and that Katie's body had been dragged into the basement
in a hurried attempt to hide the crime.
Now that Katie had been found and the case had shifted from a missing person
to a homicide investigation,
detectives turned their attention to the man who claimed to have discovered her body,
Katie's ex-boyfriend, Wayne Roper.
How did you meet Kay?
I'm at the school with her at Hill Criss.
Okay.
Y'all was that class?
Y'all are the same age?
She's 22 and I'm 21.
She's a few months older than me.
But y'all are in the same grade?
She was a year above me.
Okay.
And did you all have classes together?
How did you all meet?
We rode the bus together, and we also had the same lunch.
I first met her.
We were friends at first, and then we dated for, like,
a month or so.
Wayne explained that his relationship with Katie had been a brief high school fling,
and that after they broke up, the two remained friends.
Years later, after Katie married Army recruiter John Blavelt,
Wayne ended up moving into their home.
In a strange twist, he had become a housemate to his ex-girlfriend and her new husband.
John offered me to move in with him and be a roommate.
So you live with her and her husband?
Did he know that when you moved in?
Yeah.
According to Wayne, John was aware of his past relationship with Katie and never seemed to be bothered by it.
In fact, after a night of heavy drinking, Wayne claimed he was invited into their bedroom.
When you were living with John and Katie, how often were you all being intimate with each other?
It was the one was.
And John was there or not there?
It was...
Did he know it?
How did you not know it?
I hate to...
Yeah, it was like a three-something thing.
And, like, after that, like, he just, he changed.
And how did that come about?
I was drunk, and he was drunk and it was her idea.
I can see where that might cause some friction, but you continue to live there.
Yeah.
I mean, he didn't say anything verbally to me, you know, and...
like I just thought everything was going to be okay.
Then they started having arguments because of me,
because she told me that he was jealous of me.
Their arguments started getting worse.
Wayne described how John and Katie's marriage had fallen apart,
marked by constant fighting and tension in the house.
Eventually, Katie moved out, and a few months later, Wayne did as well.
Then after Katie went missing, Wayne claimed he had just decided on a whim to go look for her
at the old abandoned farmhouse where her body was found.
Tell me about the abandoned house.
How do you know about it?
We used to go there and drink all the time.
I didn't get off of work until 11.
And I called Ricky and see if you gave me a ride.
And I was almost home from work.
And I asked him if he would take me to go.
abandoned house to look.
I used his flashlight
to go in there and I was looking
on the car. It was a headline.
Okay.
And I was looking on the ground for any
footprints or tracks
or anything.
Wayne said he went to the abandoned farmhouse in the middle of the
night to look for Katie, which was
something investigators immediately found
unusual and
highly suspicious.
Then we went down to the basement.
I looked at her
in that concrete thing, and I've seen a jacket, looked to the left, and I see her on.
How do you know it was her?
She was missing.
Like, it's the first thing that popped in my head.
After that, we ran out of there, and then once I got to the road, I called on the moon.
Investigators also spoke with the young man who had driven Wayne to the farmhouse, Ricky Hargrove.
His account of that night largely matched Wayne's version of events.
And then he looks down and he said, I think he said, there she is.
Oh, my God.
And then I looked, glanced at her.
I said, oh, my God.
I turn around and I hear him say, Katie, like trying to wake her up or something.
I'm like, dude, I think she's dead.
I'm kind of going up the steps by then.
And he comes up behind me when he's pulling out his phone calling right then.
Naturally, investigators were puzzled by this story.
Something about it just didn't add up.
It was strange enough that these two guys had randomly decided to search for Katie in the middle of the night.
But even stranger was the first place they looked, they found her body.
Detectives knew something wasn't right.
One of them, or maybe both, had to be lying.
Why did you call the police?
They already put out a missing report for me.
No, no, I'm talking about all this conversation about the abandoned house.
I'm just curious.
Why didn't you refer it and say, hey, look, y'all might move over there and look.
I didn't think of it at the time.
I didn't.
That's kind of odd, isn't it?
It's just, like, I don't know.
I just didn't expect anything to be there.
You hit a call and said, hey, I don't know if there's any truth of this,
I've heard people talking, and there's an abandoned house down here, and y'all may want to check that.
That makes sense to me.
Putting on a headlamp like a miner and going up in there at midnight don't make no sense to me.
Another detail that bothered investigators was that Katie's car wasn't at the scene.
It had actually been found the day before, abandoned in a parking lot several miles from the farmhouse.
with its license plates removed.
So when Wayne and Ricky showed up at that old house,
investigators had to wonder,
why go inside at all?
If Katie's car wasn't there,
what made them think she would be?
Did you think she was dead?
No, I didn't.
Okay.
But there's no cars there.
So what are the odds if she's really there that she would be okay?
I just...
Well, I mean, help me understand.
I mean, I don't know.
I'm trying to get it.
Because you drive up there because you're kind of worried about her.
When you get there, there's no cars.
Yeah.
Right?
So what's the probability that she's really there?
How would she have gotten there?
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
This is just the bedroom house?
Did you know if she was dead?
No.
Detectives pressed Wayne with simple questions,
one that should have been easy to answer.
But instead of explanation,
they got shoulder shrugs
and a string of
I don't knows
it's really hard for me
to get through my brain
that you've got
hundreds of law and forth
officers looking for this little girl that you said
was a friend of yours
we're peeing phone
we're subpoenaing records
we're trying to find this girl because
people that love her are trying to find
her and yet you
and other guy in there
the first place they look they find her
one of the odds of that
what do you mean
I think they just said what I mean
you had a bunch of options yeah
but if you if you really cared about her
why didn't you tell somebody
why didn't you get somebody else
Why would you think the best idea is for you to walk into what turns out to be her final resting place
where somebody murdered her and dumped her down there like a piece of trash?
Why do you think the best solution for you and Riggi is to go up there and put your DNA all over a murder crime scene?
Why?
I just, I didn't think about that.
Listening to this interview, it's not difficult to figure out what investigators were thinking.
They clearly believe that Wayne already knew what had happened to Katie.
He probably knew where her body was, and this so-called discovery had been completely staged.
And we need to decide whether we're going to continue to risk being a accessory before after the fact of a murder,
helping dispose of a body after it was already dead,
or play stupid and end up getting charged with all of it.
Yeah, because right now we can't put your hand
being the one that killed that girl.
But you finding her there,
that's way too big of a coincidence from me, pal.
So I'm not opposed to helping anybody that's made a mistake, Wayne,
but I can't help you if you don't tell me the truth.
You're telling me the truth.
You're telling me part of the truth.
I'm telling you the full truth.
I've told you everything that I know.
You haven't told us everything you know, Wayne.
But it's time for you to do that, okay?
Investigators kept pressing Wayne for what they believed was the truth.
But no matter how hard they pushed, he stood by his story.
That he'd simply found Katie's body and he had nothing to do with her death
or how she ended up in the farmhouse.
You took that your poor unsuspecting.
friend right down into crime scene
because you knew exactly where she was
and you couldn't stand the fact that she was going to be there
and might not be found.
That's what I think happened.
You took that boy in there
so you could find her body.
No, I didn't.
I'm telling you all the full truth.
I've told you everything that I can think.
What kind of hand did you have
in putting her body there?
None. None at all.
None.
Despite the investigator's efforts, Wayne stuck to a story and to his claim of innocence.
After several hours of questioning, both he and Ricky Hargrove were released and sent home.
From there, the focus shifted to the farmhouse itself.
Detectives began narrowing down their list of suspects by looking for anyone,
who not only knew about Katie, but was familiar with the property.
They soon learned the house had a reputation.
It was a popular hangout spot for local teenagers looking to drink or get high.
Because the abandoned house that she was found in, like it was released in the news, was a high school hangout for us.
We'd go over there and chill sometimes.
But the only people that really knew about the house was the immediate group, which was me, Cameron, Wayne, who found.
John, Katie, Cheyenne, Ali, Nick, and John.
When detectives reviewed the names of people connected
to the farmhouse, one caught their attention,
John Blaville, Katie's husband.
He was 30 and an Army recruiter.
So what was he doing, hanging around a known
teenage party hotspot?
Are you familiar with this abandoned house?
Yeah, okay.
That's the spot.
What's the hangout spot?
I've been there a couple times.
What was last time you were there?
I don't know.
Like a week ago, a month ago.
It's been months.
When asked, John admitted he was familiar with the farmhouse.
He'd partied there before with some local teenagers.
But he claimed he hadn't been there in months.
Even if that was true, investigators couldn't ignore how strange it was for a nearly 30
year-year-old Army recruiter to be socializing with high school students.
As they dug deeper, they learned that John's job often brought him into contact with
juniors and seniors, and that drinking with them had apparently become part of his routine.
Many of those students said they admired him.
And why wouldn't they?
It was a good-looking soldier with a confident smile in a uniform that commanded respect.
On the surface, he looked like a man who had his,
life in order, disciplined, trustworthy, the kind of person parents might even encourage their kids
to follow. But beneath that polished exterior, investigators were hearing something very different.
According to several of those same teenagers, it wasn't unusual for John to invite potential
recruits back to his house, where he let them drink and get high.
He was doing some recruitment thing, and I guess he wasn't meeting his quota.
So he had told her to invite some friends over to smoke,
and then he would do the recruitment stuff then.
And then that's how we met him.
So it was a pretty safe statement.
That's a hangout for, if I said, you're age back then, to hang out.
Yeah.
Drugs, drink alcohol.
Yes, sir.
As investigators spoke with these teenagers, they began to get a clearer picture of John and Katie's relationship.
What they learned didn't quite match the simple and amicable separation story John had been telling.
During the time that you were around when they were together, did you ever see any violence between the two of them, any arguing, fighting?
Katie? Yes.
Yes. It was frequent. They were always fighting about something. And then John,
would always be yelling and screaming at her,
and then they would just go in their room and lock the door and just fight.
And we wouldn't see any of it visually, but we could always hear it.
Investigators eventually discovered that before her death,
Katie had filed a police report with a different department
than the one handling her murder case.
In that report, she stated that John had threatened to kill her and her entire family.
Katie filed a criminal domestic violence report with Fountain in police in January.
And in the report, she detailed a fight that she had had with her husband a month earlier,
where he threatened her several times at home with a revolver,
threatening to kill her if she would not open or unlock her phone.
The report went on to say that John Blalfeld grabbed his shotgun, both sets of keys,
and left the house saying he was going to kill everybody she knows.
Following this incident, Katie made up her mind a lead.
John. She went to the police and reported what had happened. Within days, officers were at the door
to arrest him. She just left one day. It was like a Tuesday, and then she came back Friday with
the entire found-in police department, and it was a pretty big scene. It was a four-hour thing.
When police arrived at John's door, he was drinking and getting high with high school students.
And then the night that it happened with the cops showed up, he was, I'm not sure,
sure what he was on, but he was running around the house waving guns saying that he wasn't going to
let the cops in and that he would, like, would rather, like, use the gun before he let them in.
So.
Is this the night he got arrested?
Yes.
Okay.
Strangely, when officers arrested John, it wasn't for threatening Katie with a gun,
even though she'd filed a report saying he had.
Instead, he was charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor for drinking and using drugs
with teenagers.
After the arrest, the Army was notified
and John's recruiting duties were suspended
pending an investigation.
Because of the civil investigation,
all my recruiting duties have been suspended.
So I've literally been sitting here
since about March.
weren't they happy due during the day,
just office type of stuff?
I'd play on the phone.
John knew that the Army's investigation
was mostly a formality.
He knew what the outcome would be.
He'd be found guilty and discharged.
ending a 10-year military career with a dishonorable record.
After a decade of service, he'd essentially destroyed everything he'd built.
But instead of any self-reflection, instead of admitting that giving alcohol and drugs to
teenagers might have been a bad idea, John looked for someone to blame.
All of his anger landed squarely on a soon-to-be ex-wife, Katie Blaville.
and everything kind of went back for a little while.
He looks like it's your fault, but he's losing his job.
He just, he just blames it all on her, you know?
And I don't know if this matters or not.
But I know he has like a $150,000 life insurance policy on her too.
As Don waited for the army to discharge him, his behavior didn't change.
He continued drinking with the high school students,
and according to several of them, he often talked about,
Katie's life insurance policy and his desire to see her dead.
I was over there one day with a bunch of friends and like John, like, he plotted out ways to
like kill her, but it was jokingly.
Incredibly, John also offered a 16-year-old girl $50,000 to help him build a false alibi.
He planned to have this teenager drive his car and take his
phone to Charleston, so it would appear he'd left town, when in reality, he'd still be in
Simpsonville, killing Katie.
He was like, do you want to go to Charleston?
And I was like, who doesn't want to go to Charleston?
I don't want you to talk to my phone and all that.
Me, you and shine?
And he was like, no, just you.
I thought, that's real.
And he was like, I can't really tell you.
He was like, kind of like didn't want to tell me really.
And I was like, well, why?
I was like, I'm not even, why do you know me to go?
He was like, take my car, my phone, and my credit card.
That's what he wanted to do.
And he was drunk.
And he was like, because I'm going to feel kidding.
He was going to get Ali to take his credit card in his phone to Charleston.
And Ali asked why.
And he said so.
It would look like I was in Charleston.
And Ali asked him what he was going to do once he was in Charleston.
He said he was going to kill Katie.
And he would give her $50,000.
which is the exact amount of life insurance policy.
Naturally, after hearing these things about John, investigators confronted him with the accusations.
John denied it all.
Have you ever, and probably jokingly, I would assume, made a statement to any of your friends about wanting to kill Katie?
No.
Ever said, you know, well, if Katie dies, you know, we'll get some money or buy money to do anything with?
No.
Have you ever got up to any friends and said, hey, would you do me favor and take my car, take my keys, my debit card, my phone, and go away for the weekend of Charleston, say.
And that'll make it look like I'm out of town so I can kill Katie.
No.
Okay.
So if somebody told us that, they're making that up?
I believe so, yeah.
Okay.
After being confronted with the accusations, John pointed the finger at Katie's family, claiming they were spreading lies about him.
In his version of events, he was the real victim, and just as hurt as everyone else who loved Katie.
That's the same type of shit that has been coming out of her family's mouth for the last fucking two weeks.
And I'm getting kind of sick of it because I don't feel safe in my house anymore.
Fucking dirtbag-ass family.
Well, you got to understand right now.
They're going through a lot too much.
I'm trying to understand, but I'm going through the same fucking shit.
I lost a friend.
maybe not the best life, but I lost the fucking friend.
There was another crucial element in this investigation,
one that would eventually give investigators their best shot at justice for Katie.
It centered around a teenage girl named Hannah Thompson.
This girl, Hannah, tell me about her.
Her and John, like a couple?
Hannah and John, I've been sorted together, I guess,
for like seven, eight months, seven months.
So pretty much since he and Katie split up.
While John and Katie were still living together,
John began sleeping with 17-year-old Hannah Thompson.
And after Katie moved out, Hannah became John's living girlfriend.
Once investigators learned about Hannah and her connection to John,
they were, of course, eager to speak with her.
When was the last time you saw Katie?
Like a few months ago.
What was your feelings towards her?
I mean, I always, like, I've always seen her as, like, a friend
because, like, you know, she always told me that she was, like,
here for me if I had a neat and day thing.
So it's fair to say you were on good terms with her once she was killed?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
We had a good relationship.
Like, we were kind of close.
Did John ever make any mention of life insurance policy on her?
I don't know.
He never talked to me about it.
Does he ever joked around about things would be better if she's dead or I should kill her?
No.
Have you ever joked about that?
Yes, sir.
Within moments of speaking with Hannah, investigators were fairly certain of one thing.
She was trying to cover for John.
In other words, she was lying to protect him.
which was an extremely dumb thing to do.
We've been working this case steady since she disappeared.
So there's a lot of these things that we know the answers to.
I can tell you already, you're lying to me.
Okay.
You do not want to get wrapped up and catch a murder charge.
You're 17 years old.
You have your entire life ahead of you.
You may love John and you may think you two are going to get married
and walk down Yellow Brook Road.
Okay.
But no man and no woman is worth going to prison.
for all.
Investigators gave Hannah the typical pep talk about honesty, consequences, and the importance
of coming clean.
But none of it seemed to sink in.
When you told me earlier that you and John aren't an item, that was a lot, right?
No, we're not really, like, there's not a label loss.
So who are you dating?
I'm not dating anybody.
But if you look at your Facebook status, you just posted it on Sunday that you're currently
in the most amazing relationship ever or something along those lines.
So who was that relationship with on Sunday?
It was, I mean, it was with John, but we're not, like, in a relationship.
Like, we're not dating.
I just have a good relationship with him.
While Hannah denied being in a romantic relationship with John,
investigators only turned up the pressure.
They were clearly convinced that she knew a lot more than she was saying.
Well, after,
me and John started like getting together
Katie started not liking me and I'm going to say it right now
that like she was not nice sometimes
but she did not deserve that
what she deserves right now is for us to figure out who did this
I know I know I know and at this point
nobody needs to cover for anybody
if you know something and you're trying to cover up for it
you're going to go down with the rest of them
you're going to go down with the person who did this to her
I don't know anything about her murder
you do I don't you do
we really do you do we know more than you think we do
I think which is evident
I don't want to talk anymore right now
okay you know who else can't talk right now is Katie
man she's not able to
ever tough again.
Investigators kept pressing, Hannah, but they went too far.
The moment they showed her the photos of Katie's body, the interview fell apart.
What do you think about somebody that would stab a girl in the neck to the point where the
knife went all the way through to the other side and then stick her body like a piece of
trash in the basement of an abandoned house to sit there for a day and a half before somebody
finds her?
Look at her, man. She's right here.
I want to look at her.
That's your friend.
I don't want to do this anymore.
Don't want to do what?
Don't want to help us find out who killed her?
All you got to do is tell the truth.
It would be so stinzy.
I can't look at her.
Can I tell you something?
To tell the truth, you don't have to try.
It just flows.
It just comes out.
Can I please leave?
Can I please leave?
Hannah, this is a friend of yours that we're trying to do it.
I know.
And I want to help that I can listen.
You'll listen to me for just a second.
This is a second.
friend of yours or was a friend of yours and somebody brutally murdered her they know.
Okay.
Unfortunately, you're right in the middle of all of this.
And to sit here and lie to us to begin with, it is not helping you at all.
Before long, Hannah abruptly stood up, walked out of the room, and the investigators had no
choice but to let her go.
Around the same time, their interview with John ended as well.
after he refused a lie detector test and said he'd be contacting a lawyer.
I'm just going to ask you to be point blank.
Did you kill her?
No.
Do you know who he killed her?
No.
Would you be willing to take a ponderous and we can go ahead and do that with you and eliminate you and start looking else for?
I'd have to talk my lawyer about that first.
Okay.
See what he says.
Because I don't know about that at all.
By this point, investigators had gathered a good amount of evidence against John.
Several interviews with friends and acquaintances painted the disturbing picture of John,
repeatedly talking about killing Katie and hiding her body.
One witness said that John even offered them money to help him create a false alibi.
Investigators also knew John had a documented history of domestic violence towards Katie
and that he was the sole beneficiary of her life insurance policy.
Also, cell phone records placed John's phone near the parking lot where Katie's car was abandoned.
At the exact time it was left there.
Despite all of this, investigators decided to hold off on arresting John, wanting more time to strengthen their case.
They let John walk out of the interview room.
This was a decision that would turn out to be a very big mistake.
Hannah Thompson's mother reported her missing yesterday to the Fountain Inn Police Department.
The report states that the teen was last seen on October 30th.
Hannah's mother told police that her daughter is believed to be with John Blahfeld, the known homicide suspect.
Investigators told Hannah's mom that Hannah's bank account has been left untouched since her last paycheck.
In November of 2016, when investigators went looking for John and Hannah again, both of them were gone.
No note, no warning, no trace.
They had simply banished.
Their phones were dead.
their car missing, and every lead hit a dead end.
Overnight, the prime suspect of his teenage girlfriend had disappeared into the wind,
leaving behind a grieving family in an open murder case.
For the next six long years, the investigation into Katie's death would remain frozen in place,
just waiting for the day that John Blavelt finally resurface.
In November of 2016, the investigation into Katie Blauvelt's murder took a shocking turn.
Her estranged husband, the prime suspect, Army recruiter John Blavelt, had disappeared.
He'd fled town with his teenage girlfriend, Hannah Thompson, and nobody seemed to know where they might have gone.
Well, 28-year-old John Blahfeld is charged with murder in the death of his wife, Catherine, who went by Katie.
Katie's body was found in an abandoned house in Simpsonville, back on a little.
On October 26th, investigators say she was killed with a knife two days earlier.
Her husband was last seen on November 15th in New Mexico and remains on the run.
Simpsonville police say investigators believe that he's with his 17-year-old girlfriend.
After John and Hannah fled, police spent weeks chasing scattered tips across state lines,
but nothing brought them any closer to finding the couple or even knowing where they might be hiding.
For Katie's mom and the rest of her family, this was a crushing setback.
Because losing your child, I mean, losing a member of the family's hard, but losing your child is just unbearable.
And then in the beginning we had hopes that we knew John did it.
We just, in our hearts, knew John did it.
But police have to go through their steps before they can, you know, serve once and get him.
And waiting was hard, but we thought, you know, we know they got him, they'll get him.
But then when he ran, our heart sunk.
Like, now what?
Weeks turned into months, and there were still no credible signs of John or Hannah.
Then, just when it seemed like all hope was lost, Hannah Thompson,
walked into a police station and turned herself in.
Obviously, we brought you in here today because we wanted to talk to you about the trip
and about everything that's been going on with you,
but let me tell you that we are very glad that you're going on.
back and that you're safe and nothing that happened to you.
After Hannah returned to Simpsonville, investigators wasted no time.
To find John, they needed to know what they'd been doing while they were gone.
Well, where did you go first?
When you guys first left from the Simpsonville fountain area, where did you guys go?
We went to Spartanburg first.
Because John had, like, a friend that he worked with that said that we could park the car in his yard to sleep there.
And so we did that for a few days.
And then he drove, like, for two days straight, like, not sleeping or anything, like, through Georgia.
And then Alabama, like, he basically drove all the way to Texas when we were going to sleep.
According to Hannah, she and John hit the road and never looked back.
They drove through several states living like fugitives, mostly sleeping in their car,
always on the move and always looking over their shoulder.
What was the game plan when you guys left?
I don't think we really had one, like, I guess both of us just kind of panicked,
and he decided that he wanted to leave, like, the state.
and he told me that we were going to leave
and I was like, okay, like, what was the reason for panicking?
I think that was like around the time that like
you and like the other investigators have been like texting me
and he wouldn't let me reply or anything.
Hannah told investigators that John had simply panicked.
He knew it was only a matter of time before he was arrested, so he ran.
As for Hannah, she claimed she'd only left with John because he'd convinced her that she had no other options.
Like, he just kept telling me that if I talked to anybody, that I would go to jail.
If I went back home, I would go to jail.
If I left him, I would go to jail.
Like, he just kept saying that, like, pretty much every day.
He made me believe that, like, he knew what was best for me, and he was, like, keeping me safe.
Hannah explained that after several weeks on the run, the couple made it all the way.
way to Oregon.
That's where John's paranoia began to take over.
He was unraveling more and more each day and panicking over the smallest things.
Then one afternoon at McDonald's, his anxiety finally got the better of him.
We had stopped down at McDonald's and he was going to use, like, Wi-Fi because that's
usually where we would go, like, start looking at McDonald's to get his Wi-Fi.
and he like
went to go find a table
and I went to the bathroom
and then when I came out
he was like
he had like packed everything up
like really fast
and he was like we gotta go
like right now
and I was like asking him why
and he just wasn't like
talking to me
he was just like
we just got to go
and we got in the car
and he like
he just kind of like
threw the laptop like
on my lap
and like
basically forward it out of McDonald's
and I kept asking him, like, what's going on, like, what's wrong?
He was, like, I can't talk right now.
He's like, I'm trying to focus.
Don had seemingly snapped.
It began driving like a madman,
weaving through the winding roads of Eugene, Oregon,
pushing deeper into the mountains as his paranoia took over.
We, like, drove up into the mountains,
and he, like, freaking out, like, just being really, like, he's, like,
really like hectic and like in his own head and you know just panicking I kept asking him more
and he just kept telling me to be quiet and not talk to him and stuff like that and then he just got
the car like stuck in the like in trees like in the mountain and then I was like why did you do that
like what are you doing like how are we going to get it back out and he was like we'll figure out
he said that we would hike.
We had to hike and walk off the mountain, basically.
John's paranoia had made a very bad situation even worse.
The couple was already on the run for murder,
and now John had managed to get their car stuck deep in the wilderness.
There was no way to get it out without drawing attention,
which meant they just lost their only means of transportation.
Hannah said this was the moment it finally hit her.
Something inside her 17-year-old.
brain finally clicked.
She was trapped in the middle of nowhere with a man who was losing his grip.
And for the first time, she realized that her life was in real danger.
I feel like when he crashed the car, if he was trying to kill me or both of us,
because he was just driving, like, into trees, like, full of speed, just, like, so fast.
And we were hitting stuff, and I was really, I got scared, like, at that point.
That night, John and Hannah spent what would be their final night in the car.
John talked about ending it all.
A double suicide, he said, might be their only way out.
The next morning, as they made their way off the mountain,
he confessed something that was just as terrifying.
That night, I remember before I went to bed, he told me,
He was like, I'm thinking about letting the car run all night so that we both die in our sleep.
And then the next morning, he had taken a gun with him when we left.
And the next morning he said he really thought about shooting me in my sleep in and shooting himself.
After weeks of living on the road and dealing with John's spiraling, unpredictable behavior,
Hannah finally broke.
She wanted out.
She wanted to live, and she wanted to go home.
And I was just, at that point, I was kind of like not really having it.
And I was crying, and I was like, I can't do this anymore.
I was like, I need to go home.
And he just started crying and he was like saying,
oh, don't worry, let me fix it.
I'm going to fix it.
He was like, I'll find him someone.
He started yelling at me and calling me names and saying that if I left, he was going to kill himself.
He, like, ran from me, like, he ran away from me, just, like, screaming.
And then he came back.
And he was just, like, I was panicking again.
He was, like, saying that he did all that stuff for me, like...
Did all that stuff.
Like, killed me, like, he was, like, I did that for you.
and like all that kind of stuff
like trying to make me feel like it was my fault
like
and he kept telling me that like
if I went home
like I wouldn't get to see my parents
because I would just go straight to jail
he was just trying to make me feel
really guilty
and like he told me that
like he was the only person that I could ever trust
in the world
he basically told me I didn't have anybody else but him
Hannah told investigators that John had manipulated her into staying with him,
convinced her she didn't have a choice.
But then, one day, John was simply gone.
Then, like, one morning, like, he had gotten up.
He was, like, I'll be right back, like, I'm going to get into the bathroom.
So I was like, okay, that's kind of, like, half of sleep.
He just got up and left.
And then I went back to sleep.
Then I had woken up.
He still wasn't back.
And I was just like, I was just going to like sit here.
And by then I was having me as a box and too.
So I got up.
I went to try and find the library.
Anna said she made her way to a nearby library.
logged into a public computer and sent a few messages through her social media.
A friend responded offering to come get her and take her home to Simpsonville.
She accepted and said that from that moment on, John Blavelt was gone from her life.
By the time I had gotten back on the computer, everybody had responded to me.
And that's when, like, Angie came to pick me up.
They had, like, arranged it where it could pick me up.
Did you ever see John?
during this interview it became clear that Hannah had switched sides she now recognized that
john was dangerous and manipulative and investigators appeared to believe her story at least
that's the impression they gave her do you understand now what he was trying to do
he was just trying to like manipulate me and just make it so that like he would be alone
or so that I wouldn't tell anybody anything.
It seems to me like he was looking out for his best interests the whole time,
and it really had nothing to do with you.
It just is really upsetting because, like,
I've never, like, trusted somebody that much before.
With Hannah now seemingly on their side,
investigators shifted focus.
They pressed for details about Katie's murder.
They wanted to know what Hannah knew,
how involved she'd been
and anything John might have told her.
The last time you went to work with him, was that that Monday?
That was the last time you would work with him?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
So he was driving you and fast in your seat?
Mm-hmm.
What's the judge the two of me?
Yeah.
And you went up to work with him at 9.
Mm-hmm.
Did you sit in a car? Did you go walk around?
What did you do?
I sat in the car.
And I remember him telling me
he needed me to drop him off of him.
the Woodchus Road.
And so I turned and you were in the parking lot.
And he got out of the car.
He started walking.
And I didn't think to like ask him what he was doing.
Like, because at this point we've been dating for kind of like a while.
And it was just not something that I usually do, like ask him what he's doing or like why he's
doing something.
Hannah told investigators she had nothing to do with planning Katie's murder.
and claimed she didn't even know what John was up to.
According to her, on the day of the murder,
she simply gave John a ride to a remote parking lot
and dropped him off without asking any questions.
Investigators later concluded that John had likely lured Katie
to the abandoned house where she was killed.
Phone records showed that despite their separation
and despite the restraining order,
the two were still in contact.
It seemed that Katie ever hopeful,
wanted to believe their marriage could still be saved.
John used that hope to his advantage,
and ultimately to lure her to her death.
What was his relationship with Katie?
Like, did he still communicate with her to your knowledge?
Every time they talk, she would call from a private number,
and they would only use, like, texting apps to talk to each other
because they had a frustrating word, I guess.
and so they were like kind of sneaking around talking to each other.
Hannah also claimed that John later described the murder to her.
He told her that when he stabbed Katie, the knife broke off in her neck.
And as she bled to death, Katie begged him to let her go.
At some point they were like on the trail leading up to the abandoned house.
He told me that's where they went.
They took her there.
He says that they were talking.
for a little bit. He doesn't say exactly
the conversation. He just said they were
talking and then he
just did it. And he said that
he stabbed her
in her neck and that there was a lot
of blood. And she told him
that if he lets her go, she won't
say anything to anybody.
Investigators believe that after Katie
bled to death, John dragged her body
into the basement of the abandoned house
and covered her with planks of wood.
Then he went home, met back up with Hannah,
and once again asked for her help.
So I went at home, John was outside.
Like, I didn't even go inside the house.
But he was outside, and he was like,
he needed you to follow me in his back to car somewhere.
And I was like, okay.
And he had this, like, bag.
John loaded what investigators believed was a trash bag full of his bloody clothes in the Hannah's car.
Then he told her to follow him as he drove Katie's vehicle to an empty parking lot.
And I followed him and he just drove like for a long time because he didn't get on the highway at all.
John parked Katie's car, removed the license plates and climbed into Hannah's vehicle.
The two then headed back home, but not before stopping at a couple of dumpsters where John disposed of the plates, the bag of bloody clothes and anything else that might tie him to the crime.
When he threw the clothes away or the bags away, did you know at that point in time what was in the backs?
Nothing.
Okay.
Then what happens?
Do you go home?
Hannah claimed that as she drove John around that day, she had no idea she was essentially acting as his accomplice.
She said she didn't even know Katie was dead until days later, after the body was found and after the story hit the media.
When I woke up in the morning, my mom had, like, sent me, like, the new story that, like, a body was found in the man-house.
And I was just, like, I immediately got, like, cold chills.
And I was, like, oh, my gosh, like, what is going on?
Like, I used to go there all the time.
It was just really scary, and I immediately woke John up and I showed him.
Hannah said that once she learned about Katie's murder, the truth slowly began to sink in.
At first, John denied having anything to do with it, but deep down, she knew he was lying.
Eventually, he admitted to what he'd done, though he rarely talked about the details.
And whenever Hannah tried to ask him, he'd turn it back on her, making her feel guilty
for even bringing it up.
It was just so crazy because I didn't know of what to think.
And he had told me, like, the police you didn't want to talk to you.
She was, like, you need to lie to them or else you were going to go to jail.
Like, you're never going to get you to see your mom.
Like, the way that I felt, it felt like I did it, you know, like...
When did it?
He felt about me killed her?
She never, like, came out and said,
I killed her, but like, what did you do in your gut that he did?
Yeah.
Did you ever ask him?
Hey, John, you killed him?
Mm-hmm.
Not what he said?
He was just, he would just brush it off.
Like, he'd be like, you really want to talk about that right now?
Like, kind of make me feel dumb for one to know for asking it.
Considering Hannah's relationship with John, that she was sleeping with him, running with him, and protecting him,
it would be easy to doubt her story.
But honestly, I don't.
John completely played her for his own benefit.
And I do believe that he turned her into an accomplice without her even realizing it.
Judging by the way the investigators treated Hannah,
I don't think they doubted her story either.
I'm not saying that you knew what he was about to do, Hannah.
Okay.
And quite honestly, I don't think.
that you had a hand in and that at all.
I'm just scared.
I don't want anybody to think that, like, I would do
or help somebody do something like that's at anybody.
Like, I'm just really scared.
Here's what I think, okay.
One, I know he took advantage of you.
He trusted you and he lured you in,
promised you whatever, told you, whatever,
and then made you you.
made you do stuff
that in the long run
was just to save him.
Hannah's return to Simpsonville was a good thing
for several reasons.
For one, she was safe
and no longer on the run with a killer.
And it also gave investigators
another potential witness
that could testify against John
when his case went to trial.
But that would only matter
if they could actually find him
and catch him.
We're still nothing for John.
while he's out there, there's no telling him what he's going to do.
Did he ever talk about going to Mexico or Canada or flying anywhere?
Lou, for the first west, he talked about going to Mexico.
Unfortunately, when it came to John's whereabouts, Hannah didn't have much to offer.
As far as anyone knew, John might not have even been in the country anymore,
and the investigation into Katie Blavelt's murder remained don't.
and unresolved for years.
This week marks three years since 22-year-old Katie Bluvelte was brutally murdered in Simpsonville.
Police say her estranged husband, John, is a suspect in her murder.
But Simpsonville police say he's been on the run since they found her body in a cellar of an abandoned home.
Now, he was last seen on the West Coast back in 2016 and not been seen since.
By 2021, investigators had renewed their efforts to find John.
Part of that effort meant bringing Hannah Thompson, now 22 years old, back into the interview room.
John is not a good person, obviously.
And we are trying desperately to find him, okay?
But we're still looking for.
And he needs to be held responsible for what he's done.
Okay.
During this follow-up interview, Hannah made a disturbing admission.
She told investigators that she'd remained in regular contact with John for years after returning to Simpsonville in 2016.
And how are you guys communicating?
But at the very beginning, we were communicating on Facebook and Messenger.
And then after that, we were talking on Snapchat.
Like, at first we were talking every single day, multiple times, like for hours a day.
I was the one that stopped communication with him.
And I had just decided to, like, do it.
I didn't tell him, like, I'm not going to talk to you anymore.
I don't think.
And so I think the conversation was pretty, like, no, like, substance to it, really.
Just maybe, like, hey, how are you?
Where was he back then?
I know that he was living with somebody who,
a girl that he said that they were dating.
She had her own house, I think.
I think it was an apartment.
Okay.
But he also did, like, meet her parents and, like, they had gone to her parents' house,
stuff like that, too.
So what's the girl's name?
I don't know.
Where was that at?
I don't really know.
Whenever I would ask him, like, where he was, he would not tell him.
He would say, like, I'm not telling me that.
Or, like, I can't tell you that.
Unfortunately, by the time Hannah made this admission, it had been nearly a year since she'd last heard from John.
Even so, the information helped investigators narrow their search.
In 2022, about six years after Katie's murder, John Blavelt was finally found.
Tonight, an upstate man on the run since 2016, who investigators say killed his estranged wife, is now in custody.
The victim's family just confirmed to us, John Blevelt was arrested in Jackson County, Oregon.
Online records show he's been booked into that local detention center today.
After his arrest, John made several jailhouse calls to friends and family.
The recordings gave investigators a glimpse into his state of mind as well as the events that led him to go on the run.
Oh, you're not even in prison yet?
No, I still got to go to trial and everything.
I'm going to be in his jail for two to three years.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
I thought you were in prison.
So, okay.
That's why I need a lawyer.
I signed up for a public defender, but, you know, they're like fresh out of college.
They don't give a shit what happens.
They just need to do their car.
So that's why I can get a real attorney.
But we'll see.
I'm going to be in this jail for years.
You know, they're not going to get me a pawn.
because they know I'll run
because I just ran for six years.
The day I ran,
I wasn't staying at my house anymore
and I was on my way home
from work or something,
from somewhere.
Because I just like to stop by
and check on my dog.
And I saw the police at my house
knocking on my door.
So I said, okay, I'm leaving.
And then I left and, you know,
I was almost for a while.
Then I was working for a while
and I met a girl
and I lived with her.
for like four years.
And then one morning, the U.S. Marshals came.
I was out front, tended to my vegetable garden,
and the U.S. Marshalls just pulled up in the driveway.
But that night I got the best sleep that I've had six years.
So I guess there's a positive to it.
Yeah, I guess I don't know.
I've been anxious.
I've had that anxiety, depression the whole time.
But I'm actually feeling really good now.
I'm at peace.
During these calls, John said more than once that he was released.
to be caught, happy even, that he no longer had to live his life constantly looking over his shoulder.
And I was just to use to pace. Every night I would pace in the living room until like 3.34 o'clock in the morning, fully dressed, like ready to run.
You know what I mean? It was, like when I seen the marshals, like pull into the driveway, like 10 dudes, guns out, and I just, I swear, dude, I smiled.
I was like, I was like, I can't believe it's over.
I got in the truck and the marshal was like six years a long run, man.
And I was like, oh, I'm glad you finally found me.
I was like it was a nightmare.
What's most disturbing about these calls is what John didn't say.
Not once did he mention Katie, her family, or show a single hint of remorse.
Like a textbook narcissist, every word was about himself.
and the supposed peace he'd finally found.
He didn't need.
Why do you say that?
She never cried about her.
He was in any possible.
I'm not feeling you get mad at me if I started crying about it.
In later phone calls, John shared more about the six years he'd spent on the run.
He described how he'd managed to weasel his way into another woman's life,
lying about his name, his past, and who he really was.
Then I met that girl
Did real good
I like maintain her budget
Put her on diet
So I can
Turn her life around
We bought a house together in September
I took three years
To save up poor
We bought a house
All in her name
And then
I got arrested
The U.S. Marshals
tracked me down
And I called her
Like a week later
From jail
And she was like
Fuck you
You ruin my life
And I was like
Oh okay
you didn't know about anything I guess
no hell no I didn't feel like to shit about this
I had a fake name I was going by then
I liked that name too
we had a good time we had a good life man
we had a house, we had a dog
with three cats
I didn't work for two years
I worked for the first two years we were together
I was a landscaper
small lawns built and fences and stuff like that
right and then
that guy retired
he retired so I was out of a job
and she was like
well, you can just stay at home.
Just keep the house clean and take care of the dog.
And I was like, all right.
Once again, this narcissist seemed either blissfully unaware
or simply incapable of understanding that by dating this woman,
living with her for years and hiding his past,
he'd made her a victim as well.
So he's being arrested on charges out of South Carolina for murder.
Are you serious?
Yeah.
He would do random odd jobs.
He was basically here watching.
my cats of my dog all the time.
When John's girlfriend learned the truth, she was devastated.
And who wouldn't be?
Imagine living with someone for nearly six years, loving them, trusting them, only to find
out they were wanted in another state for murder, that the name and the backstory they'd
given you were complete lies.
The man she thought she knew had been living a double life.
But this woman wasn't the only one.
one to face the fallout. With John behind bars, it was finally time for Hannah Thompson to face
justice as well. There is also a second suspect in Katie's death. Hannah Thompson was John Blauvel's
teenage girlfriend who fled the state with him. She is now 25 in charge with obstruction of justice
and accessory after the fact. Despite the charges against her, Hannah agreed to testify
against John at his trial without any promise of leniency from prosecutors.
Unlike John, Hannah's remorse seemed genuine,
and as the star witness for the state,
she helped ensure that John Blaveldt received the prison sentence that he deserved.
On Friday, a jury found John Tufton Blavlt guilty of murdering his estranged wife in 2016.
Blaveld, the former U.S. Army recruiter out of Greenville,
now a convicted killer was sentenced by the judge to life without the possibility of parole.
As for Hannah, she pleaded guilty to her charges and received probation for helping John flee after the murder.
Her reduced sentence reflected both her cooperation with investigators and the fact she was only 17 when she ran away with them.
There's no question that Hannah was also a victim in this case.
John clearly manipulated her.
But one thing about her lenient punishment still feels hard to accept.
After returning to Simpsonville in 2016, Hannah stayed in contact with John for years.
And she didn't tell investigators about this until 2021.
She said nothing, knowing that Katie's family was still suffering.
She said nothing knowing that a killer was still out there and could strike again at
any time. Maybe a more fitting punishment would have been a prison sentence that matched the years
she kept this secret. But that's just my opinion. And what do I know? I'm a podcaster.
In the end, what matters most is that Katie's family finally got some measure of justice and
hopefully a bit of peace in knowing that John Blavelt will spend the rest of his life behind bars.
What's one thing that we should know about Katie?
One of the things I had was something about her laugh and her big eyes and her smile and she just had a true heart.
And her name is Katie, but her name is Catherine, and it meant innocent and pure.
And that's what she was, and we lost that.
The murder of Katie Blavelt wasn't a crime of passion or a moment of rage.
It was the calculated act of a man who understood appearances, how to weaponize them, and how to hide behind them.
As a soldier, a recruiter, and a husband,
John Blavelt knew exactly how to make people believe he was something worth trusting.
But beneath that uniform, an easy smile, was a manipulator
who saw others as tools to use, to control, to discard.
He fooled his wife, his girlfriend, his community,
and for a time even the system meant to hold him accountable.
In the end, John's greatest deception wasn't how he escaped justice.
It was how long he convinced everyone that he was one of the good guys.
If nothing else, Katie's murder is a reminder that trust should never be automatic.
Because anyone can wear a uniform that hides their deception.
And sometimes, that person wearing it is a monster.
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This is my long bag.
I only do this once a year.
I do a long bag.
It's part of my
routine
before I go back
to my natural habitat.
But,
um,
yeah, I'm running out of things to say here.
So,
um,
Yeah, just buy it or something?
I don't know. Or don't.
I guess it's a free market speaking up.
Probably shouldn't have alienated all of you.
Woke people.
Sorry about that.
Oh, well. I guess I made my bed.
For those of you still left, I hope you have a wonderful, wonderful rest of your week.
And, uh, I don't know.
Stay safe.
