The Binge Cases: Scary Terri - Fake Priest | 1. An Unholy Priest

Episode Date: August 13, 2020

Investigative reporter Alex Schuman hears about a guy accused of swindling millions who has travelled the Midwest for decades pretending to be a priest. Alex starts his journey talking to two people w...ho have long tried to expose the truth. Alex is hoping to finally figure out why anyone would try to pull off such an elaborate con. A Neon Hum Media and Sony Music Entertainment production. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts to binge all episodes now or listen weekly wherever you get your podcasts. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:55 He's wearing tight wranglers with snakeskin boots and a black tank top. His hair looks blow-dried back. There's a bullet belt wrapped around his waist, and his expression is so so confident he looks like a 70s porn star on the one hand this photo is funny it's steeped in such a specific time but i also get this dark feeling when i look at it like i'm looking at two completely different people. And maybe I am. You see, in this photo, Father Ryan is tan and smiling. But down the line, his life couldn't look more different. He'd trade out disco clothes for a priestly robe, give communion on Sundays, baptize kids. But Father Ryan wasn't always so virtuous. He'd meet a priest who'd be murdered
Starting point is 00:01:49 and another who would die suspiciously. There are people who say he had something to do with each of those deaths. He'll leave a wake of angry followers and missing money wherever he opened a church. Most of them were in the Midwest, where I'm from. But in that part of the country, the church is the community in some small towns.
Starting point is 00:02:13 For devoted Catholics, the priest is the man at the center of their community. He's their mortal connection to Jesus, God, and the afterlife. And in a small town like mine, if that person were to ever betray the trust of their congregants, well, it would be devastating. I get how important faith is in that part of the country. But what I don't get is why Father Ryan isn't in jail. He's accused of stealing millions, leaving women who put their faith in him penniless.
Starting point is 00:02:50 He took every single cent from that woman. This man spreads pain on levels that just fucking astound me. This is stunning. I've never been caught like that in my life. If all these accusations are true, then there are so many questions. And that's where this shit really starts to get fun. I wanted to get the answers from Father Ryan himself.
Starting point is 00:03:18 Turns out, the fact he was dressed like a 70s porn star is the least interesting thing about him. From Neon Hub Media, I'm Alex Schumann, and this is Season 1 of Smokescreen, Fake Priest. Father Ryan has this way about him. When he enters your world, it's hard to forget him. That's how it happened for me. As soon as I read an article about him, I was instantly hooked. The article described a man who had an older woman adopt him into her family.
Starting point is 00:03:56 He reportedly had become her power of attorney. When the adoption happened, he would have been in his late 50s and she'd have been in her 80s. Her children weren't being allowed to speak to her. They worried she'd been brainwashed and taken in by a cult, led by this middle-aged man she'd adopted. The alleged cult was called the Holy Rosary Abbey, and the man who ran it was known as Father Ryan St. Ann Scott. I'll call as Father Ryan St. Ann Scott.
Starting point is 00:04:28 I'll call him Father Ryan. This Father Ryan claimed to run a Catholic abbey where nuns and monks could live. The woman who adopted Father Ryan was one of his nuns. People could also pay to stay at the abbey as kind of a religious retreat. There was a chapel where the public could attend Mass too. Now, it's not as if there's a lack of churches in the Midwest. So what made some of his followers choose this one?
Starting point is 00:04:54 Father Ryan was offering something you couldn't get in other churches. He was old school. It turns out that he was part of this whole religious subculture I never knew existed. He did his Masses in Latin. Leading a Mass in Latin doesn't sound like a big deal, but it is. Because in the 1960s, the Catholic Church moved away from speaking Latin. It was like an atomic bomb went off. For the first time, they allowed Mass to be spoken in local languages instead of Latin. It was the result of something called the Second
Starting point is 00:05:34 Vatican Council. They enacted a number of changes, things like no longer requiring Catholics to abstain from meat on Fridays. But these changes also moved away from how the church had operated for centuries. So the fact that Father Ryan was offering the traditional worship that many local churches had shed made him very appealing to a very specific group of people. They call themselves traditional Catholics. There are thousands of them all over the world, sort of operating underground. Still, reading the article on Father Ryan, I knew there had to be more to his appeal than just the Latin masses. It wasn't just that he attracted congregants of the faithful. These congregants were like zealots. The older woman who adopted Father Ryan
Starting point is 00:06:25 had moved around the country with him. They started in North Dakota, went to Illinois, then Iowa, and then down to Missouri. You don't move that much for a Latin mass. If he walked in this door right now, the whole room would turn to him. This is Maria Brown. Maria is matter-of-fact.
Starting point is 00:06:50 She looks you dead in the eye. She's a private investigator who spent a ton of time with Father Ryan after he was arrested in Missouri. I'm not Catholic. I had no idea what was so appealing about this guy. But as we sat at her kitchen table talking, I began to understand. I mean, he was the best of the best. He could have done PR work for a presidential election, and he would have been successful.
Starting point is 00:07:19 That's how good he is. But Father Ryan didn't choose a big, bright career. He took a vow of poverty and gave his life to God. Maria was so passionate as she talked about him. Once he possibly hands you a rosary or a coin and transfers that energy, you're hooked. He seemed to have this kind of power. I spoke to a few traditional Catholics, and they all said it. He wasn't just a priest.
Starting point is 00:07:48 He had charisma. One guy I talked to on the phone said he felt the presence of God in the room when Father Ryan delivered his sermons. His Mass was done in a very reverent and holy way. He said the Holy Rosary Abbey was beautiful. Father Ryan filled the Abbey with religious art and statues. The sanctuary and the mass where it was done was set up very nice.
Starting point is 00:08:14 I also talked to a woman who moved from North Dakota to a small town in Iowa to be part of his church. She said those living at the Abbey wouldn't question him. She said those living at the Abbey wouldn't question him. They happily started their day at 5.20 in the morning because that was the schedule he set. Not dressed in the church, stay in the office, regular work and mealtimes, ora labora. You know, things went in a very orderly fashion. Besides just being fun to say, ora labora is a Catholic phrase for working and praying. This incredible appeal of his, his sheer charisma,
Starting point is 00:08:56 is the only way the rest of Father Ryan's uncanny story makes any sense. Because no matter where he goes, and he moves around a lot, he also seems to get into trouble. He often gets accused of stealing money and property, defrauding local governments. Then there are the stories like the crime Maria described from the first article I read,
Starting point is 00:09:14 where he's accused of cheating his own followers. I couldn't believe all this happened, and not very far from where I grew up. One of his churches was only about 30 miles from my hometown in Iowa. I've been working as a reporter for almost a decade. I could tell this was going to be a tough story to get. But I wanted to understand who this guy was, and what motivated him to do what he did. Why on earth devote yourself to the church, but then mistreat your
Starting point is 00:09:45 followers? He felt like a man at war with himself. Who was Father Ryan? I figured the best place to probably start was with the guy who introduced me to Father Ryan in the first place, the author of that article. His name is Dennis McGee, and that wasn't his only article about Father Ryan. He'd written a ton. Luckily, when I got in touch with Dennis, he was happy I'd called. Turns out, he kept everything. He knew someday, this story would come up again.
Starting point is 00:10:24 It's a Sunday afternoon. We're setting things up for Dennis' interview at his house in northeast Iowa. There's a basketball hoop and an American flag out front. You can only see one house through his windows. The rest is farmland. He's already flipping through things before we get started. How many different claims have you run into? Thousands. I mean, literally thousands at random turned to a page. So I got this timeline.
Starting point is 00:10:55 Inside, the living room and kitchen are one big space. His wife had chili ready and prepared this whole buffet set up on their counter. Oh, and take this for what it's worth. You know, a lot of this never made it in print and a lot of it doesn't matter, but it's all just more, you know, mystery surrounding the whole thing. Dennis and I stationed ourselves at his long kitchen table. He's got short salt and pepper hair and a small hoop earring in his left ear. He's wearing a nice dress shirt. This was back in the spring of 2018. It was the first time I was interviewing someone about Father
Starting point is 00:11:31 Ryan. I have to admit I'm fairly amazed by him. And it just got deeper and deeper until the point you have five binders. Dennis has this irreverent smirk. You can tell he loves doing this. He's just one of those awesome, aggressive local reporters depicted in movies who solves murders or other big cases. He first heard about Father Ryan in 2011 when he worked for the Waterloo Courier. They're a newspaper in Northeast Iowa. The Courier ran a wire story about Father Ryan opening an abbey in a small town called Independence, Iowa. But he also had plans to do something unique. Father Ryan was going to open a llama petting zoo to make money. You heard that right. Llamas. The gist of it was there was this group of monks and that they were going to raise llamas to fund their activities.
Starting point is 00:12:26 And it was, you know, isn't this cute? It was basically the gist of it. Well, after we ran that story, then I took some couple of emails and some voicemail just tearing us apart. You know, how could we be so stupid? People were so angry about this guy, they called from all over to complain he got any kind of positive coverage. Dennis didn't write the first story. It was just a wire his paper picked up. But after it ran, Father Ryan practically became his beat for a while there. This binder is just the stories that I wrote and a timeline that I put together. He showed me all kinds of photos and documents he'd collected.
Starting point is 00:13:07 A picture of Father Ryan covering his face outside a courthouse. An auctioneer holding up a big Virgin Mary statue. So this binder is just the bankruptcy cases. At first, Dennis just thought he'd look into the accusations against a priest, write a story or two, and be done with it. Instead, here he was all these years later with box after box of information. It was a lot. There were boxes on the kitchen table, chairs, and floor.
Starting point is 00:13:38 He even had Father Ryan's own writings. He's a pretty prolific writer, which was kind of helpful. So whenever I found something that he had written, I would print it out and keep it. Father Ryan was a blogger of sorts for a while there. He had websites for his Holy Rosary Abbeys, but on them, he sometimes would just rant. Frequently on his websites, he would have some sort of diatribe just tearing into somebody, something, frequently a Catholic church, the diocese, wherever he may have been. I made his hit list a couple of times.
Starting point is 00:14:13 You can only find snapshots of the sites by using this thing called the Wayback Machine, which lets you look at expired websites. That's why Dennis was such a godsend. He'd printed everything out. He did it to try to figure out where the lies started and ended with Father Ryan. A lot of local reporters would have just let it go, abandoned the story. But Dennis felt he had to get to the bottom of this. If this guy was a criminal and the Waterloo Courier passed him off as a do-gooder, that's no good. We do want to be right. And the fact that we could have been that wrong was troubling.
Starting point is 00:14:51 One of the things that struck him was that whoever he seemed to call for his investigation not only remembered Father Ryan, but also had plenty to say. They were so tired of this guy and they'd had such a bad experience that I would call them and they'd be more than happy to talk about him. Most of their claims related to money. A pattern appeared. Father Ryan left a long trail. He left under a cloud, lawsuits, missing money, unaccounted for funds, angry, angry people, every entity
Starting point is 00:15:30 that he touched was my experience. That's what I found. Father Ryan had declared both personal bankruptcy and one of his abbeys bankrupt in 2011. That's the same year Dennis started covering him. But Father Ryan didn't seem to be struggling financially despite his bankruptcy filings. He was still shopping and gathering new followers. It didn't make sense to Dennis.
Starting point is 00:15:54 A little more than a year after the newspaper published that first story, Father Ryan and about seven followers suddenly abandoned the Abbey and Independence. Straight up walked away, vanished. Leaving behind everything they couldn't quickly load into a van. Dennis got to go inside when the building was repossessed. He showed me pictures. See all the stuff that he and his followers abandoned, you know, all this hundreds and hundreds of statues, religious icons, popcorn makers, lawn chairs.
Starting point is 00:16:28 I mean, just this weird collection of stuff that they had assembled. Father Ryan owed somewhere between $400,000 and $800,000 in his bankruptcy claims from that year alone. But he still managed to have all this pricey-looking stuff. There's a 12-foot clothing rack here of just the clothing that, just his cassocks and robes and stuff. You know, why one priest would need that many? No expense spared when it's other people's money. One picture Dennis showed me was just a room full of statues.
Starting point is 00:17:04 I mean, hundreds of statues. And they looked like actual stone, not plastic or cheap ones. Another picture showed hundreds of crosses. Was this guy a hoarder? What the hell was going on? Hi, everyone. This is Jonathan Van Ness. Clean water, fresh air, our health.
Starting point is 00:17:24 Electricity, honey. We tend to take for granted the things that matter most, like the separation of church and state. Americans United for Separation of Church and State has been on the front lines defending your freedom to live and believe as you choose, so long as you don't harm others. Most folks don't see how church-state separation affects our daily lives until that freedom is gone. The separation between church and state covers many core freedoms like civil rights for LGBTQIA plus people, women, and racial slash religious minorities, or reproductive justice and freedom.
Starting point is 00:17:57 But those rights are not a given. Every day, Americans United works at the state and federal level to make sure these freedoms and more are protected for every American to enjoy and benefit from. They can't do this alone, though. Join Americans United for separation of church and state and growing the movement because church state separation protects everyone. Freedom without favor and equality without exception. Learn more and get involved at au.org slash curious. Hi everyone, this is Jonathan Van Ness. Clean water, fresh air, our health. Electricity, honey. We tend to take for granted the things that matter most, like the separation of church and state. Americans United for Separation of Church and State has been
Starting point is 00:18:39 on the front lines defending your freedom to live and believe as you choose, so long as you don't harm others. Most folks don't see how church-state separation affects our daily lives until that freedom is gone. The separation between church and state covers many core freedoms like civil rights for LGBTQIA plus people, women, and racial slash religious minorities, or reproductive justice and freedom. But those rights are not a given. Every day, Americans United works at the state and federal level to make sure these freedoms and more are protected for every American to enjoy and benefit from. They can't do this alone, though. Join
Starting point is 00:19:15 Americans United for separation of church and state and growing the movement because church state separation protects everyone. Freedom without favor and equality without exception. Learn more and get involved at au.org slash curious. Infamous is celebrity gossip, but smart. It takes you deep into the stories that we just can't stop ourselves from following. From who Meghan Markle really is. Apparently ambition is a terrible, terrible thing. To the scandal at Lululemon.
Starting point is 00:19:52 You've got this man saying that his yoga pants don't work for women because they're too fat to wear them. We've got over 100 episodes ready for your binging pleasure. Listen to Infamous, the gossip show that's smart. So why do you, okay, if there's only three monks, why do you need 10,000 crosses, you know? He kept flipping through his binders. He just had picture after picture of religious relics Father Ryan stockpiled. I mean, that's an eight-foot picture of Jesus. See, that's amazing to me because he's just pulling from some elderly small town people, so I don't get where that money would be coming from.
Starting point is 00:20:31 Exactly. This was a room that they had turned into a chapel. It was actually pretty well, nicely done. But even like those antique pews, I mean, these were old pews. Those are expensive, you know, and very collectible and very sought after, particularly these little ones like that. So, yeah, he's invested thousands of dollars in this, thousands and thousands of dollars. Dennis's tour of the Old Abbey suggested Father Ryan had money to spend. Strange, to say the least, for a priest who is supposed to be more worried about serving his flock than buying off eBay.
Starting point is 00:21:09 The only part that didn't show off his big spending was, oddly enough, where the followers lived inside. And they're living on lawn furniture. But the larger question for Dennis was about the bankruptcies. Even after declaring bankruptcy, it seemed like Father Ryan had been moving stuff around from one abbey to the next. Once you declare bankruptcy, you can't do that. You can't be moving your assets around. When you declare bankruptcy, the bank is supposed to seize your assets. It's illegal to just grab your stuff and jump states. And that's another, you know, why did he not get
Starting point is 00:21:45 just hammered and go to prison? I don't know. I don't know. Something, something big, it seemed, just wasn't right. It bothered Dennis so much that Dennis stayed on this story even after Father Ryan fled. Dennis drove hours from northeast Iowa down to Missouri to attend a hearing four years after he first heard about Father Ryan. Father Ryan had been charged with abusing one of his followers and put in jail. Whenever Dennis had seen Father Ryan in Independence,
Starting point is 00:22:19 he'd always been dressed in his priestly uniform. He always dressed in black with a little white collar. Had a cross hanging around his neck. He's got, at that time, he had like snow white hair. But that day at the hearing, it was the first time he'd seen Father Ryan without his little white collar. Sitting there in an orange jumpsuit and handcuffs in court,
Starting point is 00:22:42 Father Ryan seemed like just another man. When I saw him in court, he had short sleeves on, he had a Playboy tattoo on his bicep and an Indian princess on his forearm. He didn't look so priestly at that point. Before Dennis could ever interview Father Ryan, he lost his job in a round of layoffs. But it was clear Dennis still wanted answers as much as I did.
Starting point is 00:23:04 By then, we'd both tracked down some of the same sources. The biggest advantage I had over Dennis was time and a fresh face. People's nerves are less raw now that some time has passed. It made me more optimistic I could pick up where Dennis left off. That doesn't mean I thought it would be easy. Father Ryan wasn't just a one-off story about somebody's mother joining a cult. Father Ryan had practiced all over the country, opening at least eight abbeys in seven different states. He'd been the focus of police investigations for elder abuse, stealing money, and fraud.
Starting point is 00:23:41 He also has at least two birthdays and multiple aliases. Every new detail only makes it more confusing why Father Ryan is free, and even more compelling, what this was really all about. Was he using this whole underground world of traditionalist Catholics just as a way to steal money? Or was it more layered than that? Did he really just want a group of devoted followers? Or was it darker? Did he actually want to form a cult? How did the guy, dressed like a 70s porn star, go from skin-tight jeans
Starting point is 00:24:15 to a loose robe with a white collar? Can we just take a minute to appreciate how ridiculous all of this sounds? I was worried. Dennis is a great reporter. If he didn't get all the answers, I might not either. But I wanted to try. These days, it feels like people with power get away with everything.
Starting point is 00:24:37 And I'm tired of it. How he was able to keep this going is just stunning. And why? And maybe that's maybe why I hang on to it is because I still haven't answered the big question. You know, I'm just still fascinated with him, how he's able to pull this off. Dennis never got to interview Father Ryan.
Starting point is 00:24:56 He seemed almost sad he had never figured out why Father Ryan had done what he'd done. You know, I don't know. I don't know if I'll ever get those answered. Dennis didn't, but that only made me want to try harder. There had to be a wizard behind the curtain, and I wanted to meet him.
Starting point is 00:25:14 So I took the torch Dennis handed me and ran. I figured, why not start with going to one of his abbeys? I asked one of Father Ryan's former followers to go with me. When was the last time you were here? July 2000. A woman named Vida Barr agreed to come back to Pocahontas, Iowa, a town she hadn't been to since it changed her life. Yep, there we are. There's a sign for Pocahontas, seven miles.
Starting point is 00:25:44 Vida is short with dark hair. She's unassuming, but her persistence makes Vita a soft-spoken force of nature if she sets her sights on you. When she moved to Pocahontas, Vita considered herself what's called a religious, someone who takes a public vow to live a life of faith. This is a level of devotion where you don't question priests. The abbey we were headed to was only about 30 miles from where I grew up. There's a giant statue of Pocahontas the Native American in front of a teepee. Yes, and that's how you know you've arrived. I know you've arrived. Pocahontas is a typical small Midwest town.
Starting point is 00:26:31 There are more churches than bars and a population of around 1,600. It's the type of place Father Ryan would always choose to open his abbeys. This one in Pocahontas was Father Ryan's third. He'd already been forced to leave two other towns. Lida didn't know about any of that, though. She moved down here in the year 2000 from a different traditionalist church in North Dakota. She was in her 30s when this became her new home. And this is it. Okay.
Starting point is 00:27:00 We parked in front of what used to be the Holy Rosary Abbey. What's it like to see it? Like this? Sad. The building looks rough. It's one story with broken windows and graffiti. I mean, it doesn't look cared for at all. We walked on the snow up to the building.
Starting point is 00:27:28 It was originally built to be a nursing home, and still pretty much looks exactly like one. Back when she first got here, the fact this wasn't an actual church didn't bother Vida. Convents and monasteries, you know, sometimes have to make do with what building they can get to start with and adapt it. So your expectation was that this was going to keep growing? Uh, yes. What was the last thing that filled you with wonder,
Starting point is 00:27:52 that took you away from your desk, or your car in traffic, or your sink full of dishes? As an actor, it's very freeing being part of these shows. You can step in the booth and kind of be anything. Well, for us, and I'm going to guess for some of you, that thing is... Anime! Hi, I'm Nick Friedman. I'm Lee Alec Murray. And I'm Leah President.
Starting point is 00:28:15 And welcome to Crunchyroll Presents The Anime Effect. It's a weekly news show. I literally, when I saw it, when I found out about this, I literally had like a nervous it, when I found out about this, I literally had like a nervous breakdown in a good way. With the best celebrity guest. I've never pirated anything, but I'll steal it if I have to.
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Starting point is 00:28:55 but more came to Mass in confession. Let's say about 15 on an average Sunday. And who is coming? Are these older people, families? Both. Both, some older people. Mainly, there were mainly a couple families who had moved up here from Texas to follow him. Vita came expecting to work and pray, that ora labora, following strict rules to honor God. at Ora Labora, following strict rules to honor God. The routine is part of the thrill for a religious.
Starting point is 00:29:31 But the wrong thing seems strict at the Holy Rosary Abbey. Father Ryan was controlling. He was the one who checked the mail, picked what could be watched on TV, and monitored the phones. Oh, he could use the phone whenever he wanted to. You weren't allowed to? No. One of the first things Vita noticed is that Father Ryan posted a schedule for the Abbey,
Starting point is 00:29:49 but then just kind of did what he wanted. He could get mad or he could decide something else or anything. Vida wasn't getting the great, deeply religious experience she expected. She was getting this guy. Father Ryan could easily skip praying on Sunday to go antiquing. the great, deeply religious experience she expected. She was getting this guy. Father Ryan could easily skip praying on Sunday to go antiquing. Vida felt something wasn't right. Occasionally, he'd lose control.
Starting point is 00:30:16 Did he have a bad temper? Very. How did that show itself? He could scream and yell. And he's been known to throw things. She avoided his temper the first couple months. Then, in the summer of 2000, Father Ryan decided they would go down to Louisiana to look into opening another location for the Holy Rosary Abbey.
Starting point is 00:30:38 He sent me on ahead and arrived by car two days later, you know, meandering and taking his way down. They stayed with a family in Louisiana who gave money to the Abbey. Vida was with them when Father Ryan arrived. That's when the fight started. I apparently did not greet him with enough devotion when he showed up. I sort of held back and let the family that he was coming to visit in Louisiana greet him first. And apparently that was a grave mistake. I should have been out there first, I guess, jumping on him when he got out of the car or something or laying on the ground so he could walk over me to greet the family.
Starting point is 00:31:27 She said he started screaming. It was the first time Father Ryan ever yelled at her like that. Vida was shocked. She saw Father Ryan act this way to others, but never imagined he'd turn on her. But now he had. That day was a line in the sand. Oh, I was getting out.
Starting point is 00:31:44 He was, you know, I don't need that temper twice. I am nobody's whipped dog. Then there was this super awkward period where Father Ryan and the family shunned her for a couple days before Father Ryan wanted her gone. Were you locked in a room? I wasn't locked in a room, but we were in a town that was hours from anywhere. He had the family dump me at a bus stop out of anger. I talked to this family. They remembered an argument and giving her a ride, but nothing else.
Starting point is 00:32:25 She arrived back in the Midwest on a Greyhound bus, and she realized perhaps Father Ryan's Abbey wasn't about God. He wants to be in charge the way an abbot is in charge of a monastery, because otherwise if he just wanted to be in a monastery as a monk or something, he could apply and be a nice, humble, ordinary, everyday monk. And he has to be God. When you came here, the way that Father Ryan ran things, did he run them as if it was honoring God, or did he sort of treat these people like they were honoring him?
Starting point is 00:33:07 Him. Who did you feel like you served? I'd like to feel I'd served God, but sometimes I'm afraid not. Sometimes I'm afraid not. Once back, Vida got a truck and snuck into the Abbey through a window and got her stuff. As she's packing things up, a member of the Abbey's they came up to me with a copy of some of the pages out of the Medjugorje Deception book. And said, here, you should read this.
Starting point is 00:33:54 That phrase she just said you probably didn't understand was the Medjugorje Deception. It's a book about fake seers and prophets who claim they got a message from God. The pages Vita was handed mentioned Father Ryan. It described him as working with one of these fake prophets. Ryan managed to get himself written up in a book, pointing out some of what was wrong with his situation. She got out of there and found a computer. What she found was much worse than she feared.
Starting point is 00:34:29 When I started verifying and double-checking, I found out he was not a priest. Father Ryan wasn't who he said he was at all. The guy who's opened three different churches, wears the robes, and speaks in Latin, isn't a priest? She felt tricked. And the more she found in her research,
Starting point is 00:34:54 the more Father Ryan seemed like a con artist. Not only was he not a priest, his name wasn't even Father Ryan Scott. It was Randall Dean Stocks. He was a divorced, convicted felon who'd been born a Lutheran. This season on Smokescreen. I've never been caught like that in my life. He took every single cent from that woman.
Starting point is 00:35:24 He took every single cent from that woman. I did an investigation about this guy who had defrauded someone of nearly $2 million. He's charismatic. He's flamboyant. You want to talk about white fucking privilege? I hope that you're able to go out and just document what this person has done and that finally the word spreads enough so that he dies a poor old man. He's got old time religion Buries his cash in a coffee can and he makes his
Starting point is 00:36:07 decisions down on his knees he's a full grown man and he Pig Priest is production of Neon Hum Media it is reported and hosted by me Alex Schumann, the executive producer is Jonathan Hirsch, producers are
Starting point is 00:36:23 Natalie Wren and Tanner Robbins. Catherine St. Louis is our editor. Fact-checking by Laura Bullard. Thanks to Matt McGinley for our theme music and to Blue Dot Sessions for tracks you hear on this episode. Sound design and additional composition by Jesse Pearlstein. And the song you hear now is Old Time Religion by Parker Millsap. Our engineer is Scott Somerville. Special thanks to Peter Manseau, Odelia Rubin, Haley Fager, Shara Morris, and Vikram Patel.

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