The Binge Crimes: Deadly Fortune - Fade to Black | 1. Pumping Pure Adrenaline
Episode Date: November 1, 2023On the way home from a writing trip in New Mexico, screenwriter Gary Devore disappears in the California desert. After a mysterious last call home, in which he tells his wife Wendy that he’s “pump...ing pure adrenaline” - she begins to suspect foul play. Unlock all episodes of Witnessed: Fade to Black, ad-free, right now by subscribing to The Binge. Plus, get binge access to brand new stories dropping on the first of every month — that’s all episodes, all at once, all ad-free. Just click ‘Subscribe’ on the top of the Witnessed show page on Apple Podcasts or visit GetTheBinge.com to get access wherever you get your podcasts. A Campside Media & Sony Music Entertainment production. Find out more about The Binge and other podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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the bench
i didn't understand that people go missing this way not until either, if you're in law enforcement or something
like that, or if you actually have it happen
to someone you know.
It's a very odd thing. You don't know
how to handle it. I always
say to people, you have no idea what it's like
to lose a human being on your
watch.
It was a few minutes after 1 a.m. on June 28, 1997,
and Wendy Oates DeVore was alone in bed,
waiting for her husband Gary to call her back.
At the time, they lived in a small beach house
on a windswept lane in Montecito, California,
about an hour north of L.A.
Wendy's husband, Gary DeVore, was a screenwriter,
known for some of the biggest action films of the era,
starring people like Tommy Lee Jones, Kurt Russell, Arnold Schwarzenegger.
He was driving home from a work trip that night.
Saturday, June 28th, was a date that would become infamous
to a lot of people around the world
because of a heavyweight boxing match in Vegas.
Oh, and some nasty stuff in there.
There needs to be a bite almost.
Holyfield is very unhappy.
Yeah, the one where Mike Tyson bit the ear off his opponent,
the Vanderholle field.
That was definitely a bite.
But that hadn't happened yet.
The fight had been on Wendy's mind all day
because Gary had rented it on pay-per-view,
which was kind of a thing then, because it was new.
They were having friends over to watch it that evening,
and Wendy expected Gary to arrive back in plenty of time.
Gary went to Santa Fe to stay with Marsha Mason,
who was a very dear old friend.
Marsha Mason, the four-time Academy Award-nominated actor
and amateur race car driver, was an old friend of Gary's.
She and her partner had a guest room where he often stayed to write.
He had been a truck driver when he was young,
and when he was trying to work out scripts and ideas,
he loved taking very long drives so that he could think about what he was writing.
Gary had gone to New Mexico to finish the adaptation of a script he was excited about,
but which had been dogging him.
It was called The Big Steal.
Gary had made most of his money in recent years
as a rewrite guy,
punching up other people's action films
about a stolen U.S. Army payroll.
What are you looking for?
Just a few hundred thousand dollars.
There's nothing here.
Early on that Friday morning of his return,
before he got behind the wheel
of his white Eddie Bauer edition Ford Explorer to begin the 897-mile drive home, Gary had phoned Wendy to say he had a breakthrough.
He was finally ready to get back and deliver his script. He left after lunch, calling Wendy
frequently along the way. I mean, I talked to Gary a dozen times a day. He called me all the time
from the road. It was certainly not normal not to hear from him. Gary's last call to Wendy had been at 12.38 a.m.
He told her he was pulling in for a cup of coffee at a Denny's in the Mojave Desert.
And that he'd call her again when he was back on the road, in just a few minutes.
But 45 minutes passed,
and Wendy was getting impatient.
Well, it was the middle of the night.
I slept in the buff.
We had a gate that I used to go out and open for him
when I was staying up and waiting for him to come in.
I was trying to decide whether to throw on some clothes
and go out and open the gate or wait for his next call.
I gave him enough time to have a cup of coffee, and then I got mad.
I wanted to go to sleep, so I said, oh, screw it, I'm going to call him right now.
So I called him. I needed an answer. I called three times.
And then I got really concerned.
As she waited for Gary's call on that cool June night,
Wendy could hear the waves rolling into the sand just a few feet from her window.
The silence of her phone had become deafening.
And then, at 1.15 in the morning...
The phone rang, and it was him.
And he said, was that you calling?
And I said, well, who else would it be at 1 o'clock in the morning?
And he didn't even respond to that.
And I said, Gary, are you okay?
And he said, I'm pumping pure adrenaline here.
And I said, Gary, and he said, gotta go.
Writers pick their words very carefully.
I'm pumping pure adrenaline here is not a normal thing that he would say, ever.
And there was something else.
You could tell back then very easily
if a person was on a cell phone as opposed to a landline.
And he was on a landline, and I knew that.
And for Wendy, one final point.
We made a deal with each other
that when we hung up the phone,
we would always say, I love you.
We'd made so many mistakes in all of our relationships.
This is what we did.
It was the only time in our whole relationship
that he said,
got to go.
He didn't say, I love you.
And he hung.
I mean, it was gone.
The last ping from Gary's cell phone was picked up by a relay tower
in the Mojave Desert at 1.20 a.m.,
near that Denny's where Gary had stopped for coffee.
This Denny's has to be one of the most remote Denny's on the entire planet,
placed there probably because it's at a critical juncture,
just 20 miles from Edwards Air Force Base,
in the desert industrial town of Palmdale,
home of the Lockheed Skunk Works and the Stealth Bomber.
It's also just off Highway 14, the road Gary was on when he vanished.
A modern superhighway built in the 70s
with twisting, elevated concrete spans
carved through the rock canyons.
It's remote, but heavily traveled.
And that's what drove people crazy
about Gary's disappearance from the very beginning.
The area around it is sparsely populated.
There are barely any trees
and just zero urban cover.
How could Gary and his 4,000-pound Ford Explorer
have just vanished into this barren landscape without a trace?
And now, as Wendy sat there wondering
why Gary had acted so strangely on the phone,
something he'd told her popped into her mind.
Over the coming months, these words would haunt her.
Gary told me that this script was going to blow the lid off the CIA.
And I just chalked it up to his enthusiasm and his ego.
From Campside Media and Sony Music Entertainment,
I'm Josh Dean, and this is Fade to Black.
Episode 1, Pumping Pure Adrenaline.
The disappearance of Gary DeVore in 1997 was a huge story when it happened.
But today, more than 20 years later, it's maybe even bigger,
at least in certain circles, having taken on an entire second life as an internet conspiracy
theory. And for sure, we're living in an age when internet conspiracy theories have become a kind
of plague. What Wendy DeVore thought was a throwaway line from Gary about his script blowing
the lid off the CIA would end up becoming central to every
conspiracy theory and question that still surrounds his disappearance today. What was Gary's actual
relationship with the Central Intelligence Agency? Who had he been meeting with before he vanished?
And was the CIA somehow involved in his possible abduction or even murder?
I'm a journalist and I have an open mind.
But I think most conspiracy theories are ridiculous, if not dangerous, because the bad ones drive out the truth.
And yet what makes them so tricky to debunk is that they're often rooted in some kernel of truth.
And this one about the missing screenwriter who disappeared into the desert, it's really a mind-bender.
Because there are real anomalies in the accounts of what happened to Gary.
And they haven't been fully answered to this day.
I vaguely remember reading about his story before it was a conspiracy theory,
when it was simply an impossible question.
How did this screenwriter, his truck, and his laptop,
containing the first script
he was ever going to direct seemingly all vanish into thin air on a desert highway just 85 miles
from LA? But there's another reason this story hooked me when it popped back onto my radar about
a year ago. I've written about the CIA a lot. I once spoke at CIA headquarters in Langley. I've become friends with some CIA officers.
And two people very close to my family have worked for the agency. So I understand very well how so
much of the CIA's power lies at this intersection of truth and fiction. The agency, maybe more than
anything, wants its adversaries, typically foreign adversaries, to wonder,
just what are these people capable of?
I wrote a book about a scheme
the CIA hatched in the 60s
when they invented an entire industry,
deep sea mining,
and got Howard Hughes to provide the cover story
just to try to steal a Soviet submarine
that had sunk at the bottom of the Pacific.
And I've always loved shows like Homeland, created in part by former Israeli spies, that explore fictitious CIA
conspiracies that easily could be real. In Homeland, the main character Carrie Matheson,
played by Claire Danes, is a CIA officer wrestling with severe mental illness.
Is it tie-in? Are we going?
Going?
To work. We gotta hop to. We gotta haul ass to Langley.
Carrie herself was often uncertain whether what she was witnessing in the CIA was real or imagined.
Whether she was putting the facts together properly or losing her mind.
They have to understand, Saul, that Zere's movements in green, after fallow yellow, always creeping towards purple, are methodical, meaningful, momentous, and monstrous.
Okay, I'm going to get you a bit more out of van to settle you down.
I don't need to settle down.
This show's co-creator, Evan Wright, wrote on Homeland.
He's also covered the CIA at length.
He knows all about the gray areas of the intel world.
And when he and producer Megan Donis first sat down with Wendy DeVore,
it struck them that she had been living
a similar version of Carrie Matheson's life.
The moment Gary vanished
and Wendy ventured forth,
searching for answers,
she entered a bizarre new reality.
One where the key facts about Gary
and her life with him
started to unravel.
It was as if Wendy wandered
into the shadowy underworld of whatever
conspiracy, or conspiracy
theory, swallowed Gary up
that night. And she's been trapped
there ever since.
Part of our motivation
in taking on this investigation was to find
real facts, hopefully something
new or overlooked, that can
help set Wendy free from the limbo
she's been living in for nearly 30 years. But first, let's go back to the 1990s, the dawn of a particular moment
in the history of American media. Part of the reason Gary's story initially blew up
is because his disappearance came at this moment.
You know, things have really fallen fast for pop stars.
Milli Vanilli, they're at the top selling millions of records and winning a Grammy.
Then the lip sync scandal and now a suicide attempt.
We'll have the very latest in just a few minutes.
Bill O'Reilly looked like he never showered in the 90s.
He was too busy because that's when shows like Inside Edition, Hard Copy, even the soft and cuddly Entertainment Tonight, discovered the immense ratings value of true Hollywood crime.
Sleazy tabloid news took over as mainstream media struggled to catch up and cashed in on the ratings bonanza of mayhem in the lives of the rich and famous.
Eric and Lyle Menendez, the infamous brothers, the savagery of their crime. Many
Hollywood murder mysteries ever took a more dramatic turn than a couple of savage Beverly
Hills killings. The victims were a man and his wife. He helped finance such movie hits as Rambo,
First Blood, Part Two, and Red Heat. And that was just a warm-up. O.J. Simpson, football star,
movie star, is described as armed and dangerous, and if found, he could face the death penalty for the murders of Nicole Simpson and Ronald Goldman.
What had previously been the stuff of trashy daytime TV became nightly news.
A lot has been said about Princess Diana and her romance with Dodi Al-Fayed,
but we found someone who was there in the last...
Gary disappeared in the brief interregnum between the OJ murder story and the death of Diana,
who would pass away chased by paparazzi in a fiery Paris car crash, some two months later.
For a short period there, Gary was the story.
The search is on tonight for a local screenwriter who never arrived back home from an out-of-town trip.
The Highway Patrol and the L.A. County Sheriff's Department have both been on the lookout for any sign of DeVore's car,
and so far they tell us they have nothing to report.
It's like Gary DeVore simply vanished into thin air.
Gary's disappearance was also a giant business story in Hollywood.
RKO Pictures, the studio financing his film The Big Steal,
had bet its future on him, securing financing that was contingent on Gary turning in his script.
But his most recent draft of the screenplay had disappeared along with him. It was apparently
stored in the laptop computer he'd had with him in the Ford Explorer, now missing in action.
As the rest of the media dove into this Hollywood mystery,
Gary increasingly resembled a
character from one of his own thrillers. On this episode of Mysteries and Scandals, we'll bring
you never-before-heard interviews concerning the bizarre vanishing act of Gary DeVore.
Something's happened to him. He's either run off or been kidnapped. I don't think any of us ever
saw Gary as a victim. Gary was a guy you went into the bad part of town with. That was part of the shock of his disappearance. Of course, no one was more shocked than Wendy.
She barely slept that night. Her mind was racing. I was completely kind of freaked out and I was
waiting for him to get home so I could yell at him. I was waiting for him to get home so I could
tell him how much he had upset me. And also I was going to open up the gate and all of that. And then,
you know, nothing, nothing. He never came home.
And yet the reality that Gary was gone hadn't hit.
I didn't really understand that this had happened until I went out to open the gate in
the morning. I mean, I thought he should have been coming in. And then Jim, who lived in the house
in front of us, came out and said, what are you doing? And I said, I don't know. Gary was supposed
to have come home and he didn't. He didn't come. If it weren't for Jim, I don't know that I would
have ever called the police.
Once the gravity set in, Wendy hit the ground running.
She began making calls to anyone she could think of.
She traced Gary's route, found hospitals, police departments,
seven Native American reservations that he would have driven past.
Wendy called every possible authority she could find.
There was no sign of Gary or his vehicle anywhere.
She next called Gary's best friend and former writing partner, David Devin. And I got a call from Wendy who said,
I haven't heard from Gary.
I said, well, you know, maybe he stopped for something or, you know, something.
No, he always calls me when he's supposed to call me.
And this time he called me and he said something that is so Gary, but so scary.
And said, according to Wendy, I'm pumping pure adrenaline.
I'll never forget that. I'll never forget that.
I'm pumping pure adrenaline.
And that sounds like Gary DeVore.
That really sounded like Gary.
And by that, David meant it sounded like a dramatic line
Gary would have written in one of his scripts when a character was in a threatened position, say.
And David would know. He and Gary had met in their early 20s, both trying to break into Hollywood.
Writing jokes for The Dating Game and other game shows that in the late 60s had become hugely
popular because of their risque humor. Gary and David lived together,
slept with the same women, fought over the same women, sometimes were dumped by the same women.
Devin went on to marry Stockard Channing, who played Rizzo in Grease, and starred in Six
Degrees of Separation on Broadway. David and Gary were so close they finished each other's sentences,
in person and in the scripts they wrote together, David had a feeling from the moment Wendy called
that something was very wrong.
He's either running from something or after something, you know?
He wasn't the type that would just sit around and steam, you know?
He would take some kind of action.
Even 20-plus years later, David is still running theories in his head about what could have
happened to his best friend he was a good driver but he could be you know someone who made a mistake
because he was so emotional at that point what about drugs no he didn't take drugs. That was my job. Right, well, you know, you gotta be a backup sometime.
By the afternoon, Wendy already had guests arriving from L.A. for the fight party.
It was just too late and too weird to call it off. One of Wendy's closest friends was among them.
My name is Rebecca Holden, and I'm a One of Wendy's closest friends was among them. My name is Rebecca Holden and I'm a friend of Wendy's. That's an understatement, but
that's all right.
When they met, Rebecca Holden was an aspiring actor from Texas who had become famous as
the Breck Shampoo Girl, but was still trying to break into film or TV. They met at a table
read and Wendy immediately took Rebecca under her wing.
All I know is Wendy said, you can be big in this town,
but you need to do this and this and this and this and this.
And she, I mean, she was at Universal.
She knew all the people there.
Rebecca would go on to play April on Knight Rider,
the TV series starring David Hasselhoff in a talking car in the 1980s.
She remained close with Wendy and was among the first people to drive up to Montecito
the moment Gary disappeared.
Wendy doesn't show her weakness. I mean, she's always there for everybody else.
You would look at Wendy and think, she's got everything under control all the time.
So for a situation to occur over which she has no control. That was different. And so me being in a position to
want to watch out for her, I think she was so desperate for any leads or any help that could
come from anywhere that she didn't have a guard up. Another call Wendy made that morning was to a woman she'd
barely ever spoken to before, one of Gary's previous wives, Claudia Christian. Gary had a
string of Hollywood marriages before Wendy. His third wife, Claudia Christian, played Commander
Ivanova on the sci-fi TV series Babylon 5, but was almost more famous in some circles for being
the longtime lover of Dodi Fayed,
who was also involved with Princess Diana.
Claudia was having brunch
with her friends that morning when Wendy called.
We were all at Claudia's
house. There was a whole group of us
at Claudia's house.
And it was Saturday, it was during the day.
That's Damon Reiser,
a childhood friend of Claudia's who she brought to
Hollywood as her assistant after high school
when she started to be cast in TV shows like Dallas.
And Wendy called because she was looking for him, right?
It was like he disappeared the night,
so she was like, by any chance have you heard from Gary?
And of course it was no.
As Claudia's personal assistant when she and Gary met,
Damon knew Gary well. There was a part of Gary, as far as I was concerned, that was no. As Claudia's personal assistant when she and Gary met, Damon knew Gary well.
There was a part of Gary, as far as I was concerned, that was cool as shit.
And he'd tell me stories.
Oh, my God, you know, this is cool.
Oh, my God, you know.
And I was a 21-year-old kid.
It was awesome.
Wendy's call that morning, though, seemed completely out of the blue.
He didn't know her at all, and neither did Claudia.
I don't think they had ever actually met
before that. I mean, unfortunately, it's so Hollywood. It's so, I mean, it was the fourth
marriage. Yeah, both women deeply cared about Gary, and Claudia was determined to find some answers.
Your first reaction is, well, we got to do something, you know, but it's like,
what the hell do you do? You know, he was driving back from New Mexico, for God's sakes. He was in the middle of the Mojave Desert.
But Claudia had resources.
On a film, she'd met a military advisor who worked in special forces.
Who I called, and I said, okay, what the hell can we do?
And he was like, well, we could hire a helicopter.
We could hire a helicopter and search.
I have two guys.
They have some sort of infrared heat-seeking camera,
search and rescue type stuff.
He said, I got them.
They'll do a grid.
Because here's the thing.
None of Gary's friends could picture the Gary DeVore they knew
being kidnapped or killed in the Mojave Desert.
He was tough.
I don't know what to tell you.
He was a tough guy.
You know, he wouldn't have gone easily. How's that? being kidnapped or killed in the Mojave Desert. He was tough. I don't know what to tell you. He was a tough guy.
He wouldn't have gone easily as that.
I mean, it would have been a thing.
I think if you look at most of the interviews that were done at that time,
that was kind of the attitude.
Like, most of his friends were like, dude, Gary, are you kidding?
So, yeah.
The disappearing was just the weirdest thing.
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Listen to Lipstick on the Rim now on Apple
or wherever you get your podcasts. It was now 4 p.m. on June 28, 1997,
a little more than 12 hours
since Gary's last disturbing phone call.
And more friends were still arriving at the beach house.
Here's David Devin. There were a bunch
of guys, I don't know how many, three, four, maybe five, who were going to go watch the fight at Gary's
house because it goes through, would come through his TV. The guests who came for the Tyson-Hollyfield
fight didn't know it, but they would soon become the nucleus of a desert search team for Gary. In a sense, it was as if a cast were being assembled
for the heartbreaking adventure Wendy was beginning. After rejecting Wendy's earlier
attempt to file a missing persons report, the local police showed up at the house at 7 p.m.
to take one. People often think a person must be missing for 24 hours in order to file a report,
but that's not actually true.
And it hadn't been 24 hours when the police agreed to take Wendy's report.
But it had been more than 24 hours since Gary had left New Mexico,
the last time he'd been seen alive by anyone who knew him.
So the cops' arrival was a good thing.
Except that, just before they showed up,
one of Gary's friends had turned on the pay-per-view fight,
reasoning that wherever Gary was,
he wouldn't have wanted his friends to miss the main event.
Also, it felt weirder for everyone to be sitting around in silence,
feeling helpless.
The TV with the fight on was like a comforting distraction.
But to the cops,
detectives from the Santa Barbara Sheriff's Department,
the fact that this party was just going on
while the hostess was filing a missing persons report for her husband,
this was highly suspicious.
David Devon could just feel it.
I was there when the police came into the room
and basically accused Wendy of being responsible for this.
Well, apparently they think that if something happens to a husband,
they think that the one who either caused it or knows about it is the wife. And so they
hit her with some direct questions. It made me uncomfortable anyway. They were asking
her about him and what he would do and why he would do something and what she would do about it
into that morass of relationship.
The irony was,
Wendy had been hoping for an aggressive police response.
The first 24 hours are the most important.
That's usually the time you can find people
when they're still alive.
Just not this kind. Problem was,
those first officers who came by, they had
already formulated a theory, one
that they got stuck on. It was
this. Wendy and a lover
had colluded to murder Gary.
And the lover they chose to implicate
was a close friend, who was also
there at the party. TV writer
Phil Combest.
Within a couple of days of all of this,
of the disappearance,
two Santa Barbara detectives came
and interviewed Wendy and I together,
separate from anyone else.
And there's no question what they were thinking was,
well, you know, these two are having an affair,
and this is that and the other thing,
and, you know, just like everything on Columbo.
To Phil, whose TV credits include the massive 1980s primetime hits
Simon & Simon and Magnum P.I.,
the police were spinning murder conspiracies
that even the most hack Hollywood crime writer would reject. And, you know, it was just, it was actually kind of funny because I said, here's the usual response to that question, you know, as a joke.
And, you know, they looked at me like, this is not funny.
What the police actually wrote about Wendy that night was later summarized in this FBI report. Oates DeVore had a Tyson Holyfield party on 6-28-97 at her residence.
She did not appear to certain witnesses to be grieving in any way.
She talked about how she was going to spend DeVore's money and she was coming on to certain
men in attendance.
While the police had described Wendy and their report as flirting and cavorting suspiciously
with her male guests the night of the fight party,
Wendy's memory that evening is very different.
She mostly remembers being just overwhelmed.
I didn't think it was real.
I really didn't.
I thought it would have been much more believable
that he took off, didn't call me,
and spent the night somewhere,
and God help him if it was a woman.
And in the middle of her disbelief,
Wendy was being asked to provide videos and photos
and copies of Gary's credit statements
so the police could use them to track his movements.
I never changed my name or anything until he disappeared.
Up until then, Wendy hadn't felt the need to take Gary's last name.
And the FBI said, we need you to have his name.
We need you to utilize your married name for police things so they could find me.
You know, it made you more easily attached
to the person that was missing.
When the police finally left around 9 p.m.,
the media calls were starting to roll in.
Now Wendy's phone was blowing up.
America's Most Wanted actually asked me
if I would mind talking to a psychic.
But in a strange way, all of this was expected.
Yet Wendy was relieved, at least,
that the police and the media were paying attention.
She wanted the story spread far and wide.
I feel that what you have to value as the victim's family
to judge how well it was done
is how much competition there was for them to be the one
that solves it and I would say that the competition was quite strict and heavy between the FBI what
they might find the Sheriff's Department and what they might find I think the competitiveness and
the networks because this was a screenwriter and the studios were going,
you know, put a light on it.
As the hours ticked on into the night, the house became quiet,
and Wendy could hear the ocean outside her windows for the first time all day.
She could finally breathe.
In a movie or TV show, this is the quiet, unguarded moment
when the writer wants to insert a car crash or an explosion for a major plot twist.
And for Wendy, this was that twist of a different kind.
It's the moment when she first entered the realm of conspiracy,
where she's still living today.
And here's how it began.
Among the people who'd phoned Wendy that morning
when Gary didn't show up
was the first director Gary ever worked for.
John Irvin played a very large part in Gary's life.
He was a very, very big British director.
We reached out to John Irvin,
who at 83 is busy working on a film
and chose not to comment at this time.
But it was John who gave Gary his first job
on a feature movie, hiring him in 1980 to rewrite the script for a spy film called Dogs of War.
Six years later, Gary returned the favor, getting Irvin hired to direct Raw Deal, the script Gary
wrote for Arnold Schwarzenegger. Then at his peak as the biggest movie star on the planet.
Wendy had known John Irvin simply as a close
friend of Gary's. Irvin kept a house in LA and was a frequent guest at the Beach House in Montecito.
Tall and handsome in a rumpled professorial way, Irvin was English to the core, always wearing a
heavy sweater, even on the warmest days. But Wendy had yet to hear back from him, until later that
first night when the guests had dwindled. That's when John Irvin
just showed up.
He drove up to my house
to talk to me.
He would not talk to me
on the phone.
Wendy expected him
to come in and say hello
to the few friends
who'd lingered.
But?
He put me in the car
and drove me up to that
lacking cell phone area.
As Wendy recalls,
John drove her straight up
into the mountains
overlooking Montecito and Santa Barbara,
then pulled over in a spot where he felt they were completely alone
and told her,
This is not an ordinary case of missing,
and I want you to know that.
Irvin seemed to be implying something nefarious,
that Gary had some sort of double life that Wendy didn't know about.
Thing is, Irvin was short on details,
and he had actually introduced more questions than answers.
And he said, I cannot protect you, I cannot help you,
I will be gone for 18 months.
I am going to get someone, you're going to be assigned to him,
he's going to take care of you.
What Irvin meant was that someone with government
connections would be coming to help Wendy.
He said, Wendy, he's been
higher up in government, he comes from the Reagan administration
and he started babbling all these
things off. And he said,
he will call you, his name is Frank Thorwald.
But it was so
fucking bizarre.
That really wasn't the half of it. Before making
Dogs of War with Gary, John
Irvin directed a 1979 BBC
miniseries called Tinker, Taylor,
Soldier, Spy.
It's the story of a retired spy who begins
to question whether he's trapped in a conspiracy.
One being directed by
a former boss who disappeared
and might have faked his own death.
The series was so
highly regarded when it came out
and seemed to give such an authentic representation
of the world of spies
that rumors started that John Irvin had ties to MI5,
the British equivalent of the CIA.
Rumors that Irvin has always denied.
Shortly after Irvin drove Wendy back home,
she received a call from the contact he told her about,
Frank Thorwald.
John Irvin, who's a motion picture director, called me up, who was also my business partner at the time,
and said his best friend Gary DeVore had gone missing and that he had to leave the country on business. The reason John, I think, asked me to do that,
because he knew that throughout the 80s,
I had been in high-level positions in the U.S. government,
special assistant to the attorney general,
two attorney generals of the United States.
I'd worked at the White House doing things with President Reagan.
It's true. Thorwald's a connected guy.
On the wall of his suburban Phoenix house,
he has a picture of himself drinking a beer with President Reagan the week Reagan became president.
Before that, Frank worked as an international mining engineer
and as a theatrical agent.
Sometime after he acquired his government security clearances,
he became acquainted with John Irvin.
Well, he knew I used to be special assistant to U.S. attorney generals,
and that this was going to be different.
As he termed it, it was not normal, and there were some unusual things about it.
This was not a normal kidnapping or disappearance. I don't remember his exact words after 25 years, but the essence of the flavor of it was that. And that he felt
because of my contacts and because of my personality that I could probably work with Wendy.
Thorwald's arrival in her life signaled to Wendy that she was in a terrifying new world.
But at the same time, this strange man with powerful friends was somehow reassuring.
And Frank Thorwald, frankly, became my link to becoming calm and feeling somewhat protected. I mean, he came into L.A. and stayed at a small
hotel and called
me and said, okay, I'm here now for you.
It was help
that Wendy desperately needed.
Her husband was gone, and she was
starting to question everything.
And the more I realized that there
was a reason, the more I realized
Gary had
probably another life I didn't know about,
which just the fact that they thought it was important enough
and maybe dangerous enough to get someone to help me,
quote-unquote, was pretty major.
Coming up this season on Witnessed, Fade to Black.
He came in to go through Gary's computer.
That's why he came.
Even after 25 years, it seems strange.
I want to know how the hell he knew.
And I want to know who he is.
And I want to know why.
The CIA had had an office in Hollywood that they'd set up.
You don't want to get involved with those people.
When I first moved in with him, he said to me, you're going to pick up the phone,
and now and then you're going to get a call from the CIA,
from the New York Times.
With Gary, you know, he didn't care.
He'd challenge anybody.
Weird things start to happen that scare the living hell out of you.
Wendy gets a package.
She's thinking, what's in it ahead?
They said that I should be terribly worried if I spoke about it
because I have a daughter.
There is a point where coincidence disappears and it is no longer coincidence.
The minute that I heard that Arnold Schwarzenegger was active in trying to find Gary, I thought he would.
I had the biggest action stars in Hollywood searching for my husband.
I went to a seer in the desert.
I was shown a vision of what happened to him.
I absolutely think it's the Department of Intelligence.
I have no doubt.
If my husband is dead, then show me a body.
We don't know what happened to those bones.
I was there when they pulled the car out.
With the skeletonized body inside?
Maybe a...
I said, there's something wrong here.
It's not him.
And then I see there are no
hands. Where are the hands? And that's always been an unanswered question.
Witnessed Fade to Black is a production of Campside Media and Sony Music Entertainment
in association with Stowaway Entertainment.
The series was co-created, written,
and reported by Evan Wright and Megan Donis.
Megan Donis is the senior producer
and Sheba Joseph is the associate producer.
The executive producers are
Evan Wright, Jeff Singer, and me, Josh Dean.
Niall Cassin is the consulting producer.
Studio recording by Ewan Lytram-Ewan,
Blake Brooke, and Sheba Joseph.
Sound design, mixing, and original music
by Mark McAdam and Erica Huang.
Additional engineering by Blake Rook.
Additional music by APM and Blue Dot Sessions.
Additional field recording by Devin Schwartz.
Fact-checking by Amanda Feynman.
Special thanks to our operations team,
Doug Slaywin,
Destiny Dingle, Ashley Warren,
and Sabina Mara. The executive
producers at Campside Media are
Vanessa Gregoriadis, Adam Hoff,
Matt Scher, and me, Josh Dean.
If you like the show, please
take a minute to rate and review it, which really
does help other people find it.
Thanks for listening. We'll see you next time.