The Binge Crimes: Deadly Fortune - Fatal Fantasy | 1. Overkill

Episode Date: March 2, 2026

Renowned DNA scientist and father of three, Dr. Robert Schwartz, is found stabbed to death more than 30 times by a sword inside his Virginia home. A Satanic pentagram and other clues point to some sor...t of witchcraft. Binge all episodes of Fatal Fantasy ad-free today by subscribing to The Binge. Visit The Binge on Apple Podcasts and hit ‘subscribe’ or visit GetTheBinge.com to get access. From serial killer nurses to psychic scammers – The Binge is your home for true crime stories that pull you in and never let go. Join our free newsletter at Patreon.com/TheBinge. The Binge – feed your true crime obsession. Fatal Fantasy is brought to you by Sony Music Entertainment and M. Williams Phelps LLC. 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. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Listen to all episodes of fatal fantasy ad-free right now by subscribing to The Binge. Visit The Binge channel on Apple Podcasts and hit subscribe at the top of the page or visit getthebinge.com to get access wherever you listen. The Binge. Feed your true crime obsession. The Binge Every human being fantasy. daysdreams, lies in bed at night, drifts off during the day while at work or school, perhaps envisioning a different version of reality. They might peer into the crystal ball of their future and see themselves hitting the lotto,
Starting point is 00:00:56 having children, becoming a professional athlete, getting that girl or guy they've always wanted, or perhaps carrying out a diabolical murder in the most brutal ways imaginable. Fact is, some fantasize about unicorns dancing in fluffy pink clouds, while others imagine that person they despise dying a slow, miserable death. This is the story of both, with the fantasy aspect of it all gone, horrifically and fatally wrong. We can't force anybody to believe what I have to say. I am stating, I don't care how it makes me look.
Starting point is 00:01:57 I don't care what it does to my reputation. Dr. Schwartz deserves a truth. He deserves a truth. His family deserves a truth. Dr. Robert Bob Schwartz hasn't shown up for work. It's the 10th of December 2001. His coworker Terry said it was unlike him to miss a meeting and not come to work. The renowned scientist, a pioneer in DNA research, would have let someone know if he wasn't coming in.
Starting point is 00:02:36 Dr. Schwartz is not answering his phone, so his boss, who happens to know one of the neighbors, calls and asks the neighbor to go over and check things out. Schwartz's driveway was under construction. To get to the house, you had to walk. When the neighbor arrived, he found another neighbor standing outside. He'd asked him if he'd seen Dr. Schwartz. No, the guy said, and he'd been there since 7.30 that morning. So the two men head down the driveway.
Starting point is 00:03:11 They see Dr. Schwartz's vehicle parked in its usual spot, over by the stables where he keeps his horses. The house is made of fieldstone and cement, a cross between the Hobbit and a revolutionary war colonial. It was a home that was in a very rural area. It was out away from most of the neighbors, the closest neighbor, was probably about a quarter of a mile away. They go around to the back of the house,
Starting point is 00:03:47 where there's a door into the kitchen. Inside now, everything has this awfully and eerily quiet vibe to it. The neighbor senses right away that something is off. There's a sour, steely, metallic smell mixed with the feeling of something even more alarming. Death. He takes one step into the kitchen, and there is Dr. Schwartz. And upon his entry, he found a very gruesome and disturbing scene. Dr. Schwartz was located in the kitchen, based down on the kitchen floor, in a pool of blood, and had numerous wounds that were visible.
Starting point is 00:04:40 Now, Dr. Schwartz's neighbor is no forensic expert. But even to him, it's clear this wasn't some kind of robbery. there's no forced entry. Whoever had murdered Dr. Robert Schwartz walked into the house without resistance, as if someone invited them in. Investigators from the Loudoun County Virginia Sheriff's Office secure the crime scene and begin taking stock of the gruesome attack. Blood is everywhere. On the floor, walls, countertops, smeared along the wooden floor. As a working true crime journalist for over 25 years, I have written about and studied hundreds of crime scenes,
Starting point is 00:05:28 and I can tell you that the brutality of this murder went beyond a crime of passion. Schwartz had one arm sticking out, his eyes wide open like a doll, a large pool of blood around his head and torso. And there are even droplets of cooked blood. inside a frying pan on the stove. Here's one of the investigators involved early on, Detective Greg Locke. Dr. Schwartz suffered over 30 stab wounds. Some of the stab wounds penetrated through his body and actually into the hardwood floor, indicating that he had been stabbed numerous times after he had fallen to the floor.
Starting point is 00:06:18 In total, Schwartz was stabbed. 31 times. 31 times. Delving into this case years ago, interviewing over 50 people for a book I was working on, I had so many questions about the crime scene alone. Clearly, Dr. Schwartz's murder was fueled by an enormous amount of rage. And yet, looking deeper into it,
Starting point is 00:06:48 I began to wonder if something far, more sinister was going on here. And then, combing through crime scene photographs, I come to an obvious, premeditated, carefully executed incision on the back of Schwartz's neck. A large X carved deliberately and clearly visible by what appears to be the tip of a large blade. Crime scene investigators on scene flip Dr. Schwartz over and find a series of wounds on his chest and stomach.
Starting point is 00:07:30 Wounds in the shape of what appears to be a five-pointed star. A satanic pentagram? In all my years of true crime reporting, I have never seen anything as barbaric and bizarre as the murder of Robert Schwartz, Digging deeper over the years, this story became something I would have never suspected, something hard to fathom, taking me into a world of live-action role-playing, dark and twisted fantasies, mythical worlds some believed were real, and even the creepy, sadistic, underground world of vampires. She was frantic.
Starting point is 00:08:13 You need to tell me what exactly happened when the police showed. up. She goes, they said he was under arrest for the murder of somebody. I told you guys something horrible was going to happen and something horrible was coming and nobody wanted to listen. I told you something was coming. But all you guys told me was it was all in my head. And look what happened. My name is M. William Phelps. I'm an investigative journalist and the New York Times bestselling author of dozens of true crime books. from Sony Music Entertainment and M. William Phelps LLC, you are listening to Fatal Fantasy.
Starting point is 00:09:05 This is episode one, Overkill. Can't get enough of the story of Margo Freshwater? Do you need more than the episodes can provide? Real quick, we just launched a free true crime newsletter and community page to go along with our binge shows, including the crimes of Margo Freshwater, and you can access it at the link in our episode description or at patreon.com slash the binge. You'll get behind the scenes reporting, case updates, and a chance to chat with one of the show's creators and other fans. The newsletter comes out twice a month. It's totally free, and it's where
Starting point is 00:09:59 the story continues. I'll see you there. Just hit the link in the description or head to patreon.com slash the binge. I've been trying to simplify my wardrobe lately, not some dramatic throw everything out kind of way, but just being more intentional. Fewer pieces, better quality, things I actually want to wear over and over again. And that is where Quince has been amazing. They have premium fabrics, thoughtful design, and everyday essentials that feel effortless and dependable, even as the seasons change. I've actually really been enjoying the Mongolian cashmere quarter-zip sweater in the olive color. It's one of those pieces that instantly makes you look put together, but still feel relaxed. You can wear it on your own, layer it in a jacket, dress it up a little bit.
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Starting point is 00:12:21 year leading up to December 10th. Loudoun County Sheriff's Office detective Greg Locke had yet to be involved in a murder investigation. That is, before he took the call to head out to Dr. Schwartz's house, his boss had warned him that this homicide was unlike any other the Loudon County Sheriff's office had seen in as long as anyone could recall. I was actually in leadership class for the sheriff's office, and I received the notification to respond to the scene of the homicide. As I stood on the street facing Dr. Schwartz's property, an eerie sense of how his killer, or killers, descended upon his house, washed over me. The property is set far back away from the road. At night, with the lights on in the house, it would be easy to watch anyone inside without them knowing.
Starting point is 00:13:32 Heather Greenfield is a local Associated Press reporter who covered the case extensively. I reached out to her back when I began writing my book about the case to get a better lay of the land. This is one of the most affluent communities in the country, the most affluent communities. counties. And so people live, it's just these beautiful rolling hills and farms and people that have succeeded in Washington, whether it's in politics or IT or in his case science, they buy their dream house out in the outskirts of Leesburg. And that's indeed what he had done. Dr. Schwartz and his wife Joan had settled in Leesburg in the early 80s and raised their three children there.
Starting point is 00:14:25 And I think that people were just shocked that something like this could happen. It's just one of the safest suburbs, fantastic schools, beautiful scenery, and it was just shocking. And he wasn't just a scientist. He was famous. Well, Dr. Schwartz was a renowned scientist specializing in biometrics and DNA research. and for the 15 years before his death at age 57, he had been one of the leading members of a team that was working on DNA sequencing.
Starting point is 00:15:03 Detective Greg Locke is tall and thin, sports brown hair, a thin mustache to match, and presents the overall look of a television detective, smooth and laid back. On that day, December 10th, 2001, When the Loudoun County Sheriff's Office arrived on scene, Locke had been on the job for only a few months. I was primarily assigned to robbery homicide, but worked all types of crimes, including sexual assaults, child cases.
Starting point is 00:15:38 The only thing in particular really that stood out in my mind inside the house were the indentations in the floor of the kitchen where the body was found. Schwartz's killer had stabbed him through his torso entirely, lodging the blade into the floor, leaving gouge marks in the wood. That's volcanic rage. And it speaks to the personality of Schwartz's killer. I guess at that point was just the question mark of why. We were still at that point trying to determine why this had happened to a prominent scientist who appears, not to have any disagreements or problems with any friends, neighbors, colleagues.
Starting point is 00:16:30 So we're still trying to very much put the puzzle together. Victimology becomes the number one focus. If you think of the victim as the bullseye on a target, those closest to him are the first ring around the bullseye, and you need to speak with them first. Family is obviously number one, but that would go along with making the death. notification. So Locke reached out to Dr. Schwartz's employer and those he worked with.
Starting point is 00:17:03 He was well liked by his co-workers. In fact, it was one of the things that they said, you know, he was always on time, always punctual. Schwartz had worked on early DNA sequencing that could actually help solve his own murder. Back in 1978, Schwartz co-authored a white paper. with Margaret Dea. Science, which had set the stage for identifying individuals by their DNA. So if Schwartz's killer had left his or her DNA at the scene with no obvious witnesses to the murder, this research he had done to prove individuality would help law enforcement prove who had killed him by narrowing down a potential suspect pool to one person.
Starting point is 00:17:54 When I was standing along the road leading down into the Schwartz residence, it occurred to me that the road itself then, a dead end, for anyone driving down it, they either lived there, had been invited there, or might have gotten lost and wound up on the road inadvertently. It's not one of those roads you just pass by or stumble upon. Detective Vincent D. Benedetto had been with the Loudoun County Sheriff's Office for 15 years when the Schwartz investigation began. D. Benedetto's expertise is documents following the paper trail of murders and financial crimes. And almost immediately, as he begins thinking about the crime scene, D. Benedetto's thoughts go toward motive. Certainly was quite gruesome, probably the most gruesome crime scenes I've looked at from Loudoun County. And it seemed pretty obvious he was stabbed many, many times after he had died. Rage is not usually a motiveless crime.
Starting point is 00:19:06 Then something comes up. The pathologist confirms by late into the night of the 10th that Dr. Schwartz had actually been murdered on Saturday, December 8th. 8th, probably in the evening. So Schwartz had been dead for two days before his body was discovered. And the pathologist reveals something else, the weapon. They are now almost certain was not a knife, but a sharp, slightly curved object, definitely similar, but with a much longer blade. This changes the game for investigators.
Starting point is 00:19:49 Now they need to look back and focus on two days before Schwartz's body was found, which can often complicate matters. Effectively, your killer is now two days ahead of you. Listen, we see you. Crushin workouts, building your thing from 9 to 5, and somehow also from 5 to 9, you hold yourself to a higher standard, and honestly, your drink should too. That's where nowadays comes in.
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Starting point is 00:21:00 That's try nowadays.com slash crimes or just put crimes at checkout. Drink responsibly must be 21 or older. He's a good guy, yeah. He was, he could be a quirky, there could be quirky aspects of him sometimes, but he was basically well-loved and very likable. At 57 years old, Dr. Robert Schwartz
Starting point is 00:21:26 was one of the most respected, scientists in his field. He had founded the Virginia Biotechnology Association and been at the Center for Innovative Technology, CIT, since the company started in 1986. A handsome guy, in a Leslie Nielsen sort of way, with a bit of middle-aged weight around his belly, Schwartz's co-workers, family, and friends told me the guy was serious about life and work, but also had a soft humorous side to him as well. In other words, the polar opposite of a man you'd think was hated enough by someone to want to stab him 31 times inside his own home. Terry Woodsworth retired today, first met Dr. Schwartz in 1986.
Starting point is 00:22:20 He didn't talk about himself a lot. He really didn't. He was focused on what was going on and all that business kind of guy and stuff. He also had a sense of humor, and I began to sense that as we had meals and stuff together. Schwartz was the oldest of seven siblings. A sister later lamented Schwartz was a, quote, remarkable older brother, who always had a gentle touch. Working alongside him for over a decade, Terry got to know Dr. Schwartz on a more personal level. During that time, Schwartz's wife Joan had become ill with lung cancer. It changed him.
Starting point is 00:23:02 Before Joan got sick, he was more outgoing and social. But as she became sicker, and he had to face the fact that he'd soon be a widower, he retreated more into himself and became quieter. I knew that that was just a real tragic time when she was ill and he was trying to and take care of her and then basically woke up one morning and she was gone. You know, that was tough. Joan Schwartz's death crushed the guy. Their kids were in their late teens and early 20s at the time,
Starting point is 00:23:39 and raising them now fell squarely on his shoulders. Even when Joan was alive, the family had its share of Rocky Times. But once she was gone, Clara, the youngest, took it the hardest. Her mother had been bipolar, as I understand it, and quite erratic at times, and she was close to her mother. That's Dr. Catherine Ramsland, a forensic psychologist who has written about this case. She's talking about Clara Schwartz, who actually found her mother's body. And then mother dies when she's in, I guess, 10th grade, and she's bereft. and her older brother and sister go off to college,
Starting point is 00:24:27 leaving her isolated in the stone house with her father, who is very different from her and has expectations of her that she doesn't want to live up to. Dr. Schwartz, a single father, struggled with how to deal with Clara and get her through high school. They lived together then on the farm, where there was plenty to do, and he expected her as most parents would to step up.
Starting point is 00:24:58 He still cares about her. I mean, he always was concerned. She wasn't taking care of the horses, and that was a responsibility that would show that she could do things, but she wasn't doing it. Dr. Schwartz's co-worker Terry says, as Dr. Schwartz's kids grew older, he opened up about how proud he was of Jesse, the oldest,
Starting point is 00:25:20 Michelle, the middle child, and even the youngest, Clara. I knew about Jesse going to NC State. He was very proud of him, Michelle at JMU. He was very proud of her work because she was interested in some similar things as he was. Clara, I think he talked about that it was really hard when Joan died. It was hard on him. I mean, gosh, he's ending up being a single dad. He adored his kids and would light up when talking about them.
Starting point is 00:25:47 It always seemed to go back to Jones' death and Schwartz having to raise them alone. He strove to get the best out of them all, and being an overachiever himself expected it. I think he was respected by people because you didn't know where he stood. He was not going to suffer fools gladly. In all of the investigations I have been involved in, you have to consider the victim's chosen career path, especially when someone has high visibility within what is a high-profile company. We saw this recently with the healthcare CEO murdered on the streets of New York. So a question came up. Was Dr. Schwartz targeted? After all, he knew big players within the
Starting point is 00:26:41 scientific world. Hundreds of millions of dollars were at stake. Had he been involved in in research or something else that could have gotten him killed. Bob was at the second level down from the head of CIT. So he was one level down from that by the time he was killed. He was at the point where he was interacting with university relationships and overseeing that technology growth and development for the whole state. Detective Locke was not ruling any possibility out. There was some information that was coming out.
Starting point is 00:27:18 through the media that this might have been some bigger conspiracy. We had to focus on the evidence we were presented and work with that evidence to determine what had happened. Locke's next point of evidence gathering was the grim task of attending the autopsy and seeing what unusual details of the crime the post-mortem revealed. It was very obvious. Dr. Schwartz endured a very vicious attack. He had multiple wounds on his hands and arms, as well as over 40 lacerations, incisions to his body. So Schwartz fought with his attacker, which meant it was going to be DNA. With over 700 autopsies under her belt, Dr. Carolyn Revercombe noticed immediately after she started her cursory inspection of Schwartz's body that he had suffered two stab wounds to his neck
Starting point is 00:28:22 that went entirely through one side of his body and out the other side. She counted 27 stab wounds to his torso, along with several additional stab wounds, some superficial, some penetrating the skin an inch or more, others all the way through his body. Just as they had thought back at the crime scene,
Starting point is 00:28:44 many of those stab wounds going all the way through Schwartz's body were inflicted when he was not moving and did not have blood pressure. Revercombe confirmed. This was significant. Schwartz's killer repeatedly stabbed the guy when they didn't have to. So Schwartz was on the floor, face down, not moving, his killer standing over him, jabbing the weapon into him over and over in a sordid, murderous frenzy.
Starting point is 00:29:14 Overkill. The pathologist then saw a possible power. pattern, there were three particular wounds in a group on Schwartz's upper left back, very close in space, that appeared to be in the shape of a three-leaf clover. The suggestion was that these three wounds had a ritualistic sensibility about them or were inflicted for a purpose other than to cause pain and death. Then one other point Reverend Cole made was the weapon. She believed Schwartz was murdered with some sort of long, thin sword, more pirate-like than Conan the barbarian. It occurred to me that Schwartz's killer had entered into some sort of blackout rage,
Starting point is 00:30:02 meaning there seemed to be a disassociation with the crime on some level. I have investigated several of these murders, and the psychological framing is always the same. The killer's intent jumps from murder to complete annihilation or, interesting here, punishment. Locke was certain the wounds inflicted post-mortem were personal. Still, the working theory was that a dark, fantastical individual, or group, perhaps practicing witchcraft or Satanism, was involved. One major fact investigators confirmed is that Schwartz had been interrupted. It appeared from the forensic investigation that Dr. Schwartz was in the process of cooking dinner when someone came to the house.
Starting point is 00:31:11 There were no signs of forced entry as if he possibly either knew someone who he allowed into the home or they gained entry without force. Now they have a general timeline, evening, somewhere near seven, or 8 p.m. on Saturday, December 8th. Some of the investigators are detailed to other assignments that may consist of locating surveillance cameras, talking to any other business or homeowners that might be in the area, to try to obtain information of whether someone saw something recently in proximity to the incident. In this particular case, being in such a rural area, there were no other Homes close by, there were no cameras, and there really was not a significant number of homes
Starting point is 00:32:05 for us to go to, to talk to people. Detective D. Benedetto is back at home base, digging through finances and the paper trail to see if any patterns or information jump out. Was Schwartz in financial trouble? Did he somehow get himself involved in a bit of shady business that could, have led to his murder. Could he himself be part of a satanic group nobody knew about? If there is one thing I have learned about murder investigations of this nature,
Starting point is 00:32:39 include every possibility until you can exclude it. So D. Benedetto began combing through Dr. Schwartz's credit card receipts and bank statements over the previous week to see if that information might tell a story. It was going to Ruby Tuesdays a place where I'd eaten many times, and I went to get the credit card receipt from what I guess would have been his last meal. It just gave me kind of a chilled feeling to hold this and realize that, you know, here he was, normal guy doing normal things, having a meal out, and he did not know that in a few hours he would be dead. For Greg Locke, after leaving the autopsy, like any old school police investigator, he next focused on the moment. most obvious, Dr. Schwartz's friends, family, colleagues, and neighbors. I contacted the supervisor on the scene and asked if they wanted me to go ahead and start canvassing
Starting point is 00:33:41 the neighborhood. And in that particular area, the residences were very far apart. So the two closest houses, which were approximately an eighth to and a quarter of a mile away, is where I started my canvassing. The chances that anyone in the neighborhood had seen anything were slim. With the house being secluded, set so far back into the woods. So the first house that I stopped at, there were two individuals home, husband and wife, and they stated that on Saturday night that a male knocked on their door, and they answered the door and were speaking with him and basically indicated that he and some
Starting point is 00:34:25 of his friends had gotten stuck in the mud right up the road and wanted to know if he could use their phone. Being good neighbors and decent people, the couple invited the young guy in. During the conversation, he stated that he was really not that familiar with the area. Did they know of a wrecker service that could come tow them out? They did have a record service in mind and actually made the call for him and had the record service respond to pull the car out of the mud. And did they describe who these people were? He said that there was three people there. There were two males and a female and that one of the individuals did most of the speaking and they were not familiar with the area. Anyone who murdered Schwartz would not have visited a neighbor and called the
Starting point is 00:35:18 tow truck to pull them out of being stuck in the mud. But perhaps these people had seen something. Perhaps they were witnesses and didn't even know it. When I spoke to the neighbors near Dr. Schwartz's house, they really didn't detect anything out of the ordinary in speaking to this individual. He seemed very polite and cordial toward them and gave them no reason to be suspicious of any improper activity. Could these young strangers have possibly seen someone at the Schwartz residence? What investigators do know is that a man was violently killed in his own home as he was cooking a meal for himself on a rainy Saturday night, that he probably let the killer into his
Starting point is 00:36:09 house and had little idea of the horrible fury that would imminently come down upon him, that the crime scene was offering precious few clues as to who the killer was. And that around the same time, as this vicious deed occurred, three young adults were stuck in their stationary vehicle just down the road waiting for a tow truck to drag them out of their muddy confinement. As I thought about all of this, something Keith happy-faced killer Jesperson once told me years before rang in my ears. There are no coincidences in murder.
Starting point is 00:36:49 Only... Connections. Next time, on Fatal Fantasy, investigators deliver the death notification to Dr. Schwartz's family, and the search for the three youngsters stuck in the mud produces a major lead. She seemed to take a pause for a second, and then she didn't look up, she didn't gas, she didn't. All she said,
Starting point is 00:37:20 And a quiet voice was how. Before the first big break in the case comes in. So it certainly appeared from the images that were obtained from the ATM that we now had persons of interest. And a shocking piece of evidence is discovered. Do you recall where you guys found it? It was wrapped up in a cloth in a closet. Don't want to wait for that next episode?
Starting point is 00:38:01 You don't have to. unlock all episodes of fatal fantasy ad-free right now by subscribing to The Binge Podcast channel. Search for The Binge on Apple Podcasts and hit subscribe at the top of the page. Not on Apple, head to getthebinge.com to get access wherever you listen. As a subscriber, you'll get binge access to new stories on the first of every month. Check out the binge channel page on Apple Podcasts or getthebinge.com to learn more. Fatal Fantasy is a production by Sony Music Entertainment and M. William Phelps LLC,
Starting point is 00:38:50 written and executive produced by me. From Sony Music Entertainment, the executive producers are Jonathan Hirsch and Catherine St. Louis. And our production manager is Samantha Allison. Jeremy Adair is my senior producer and script consultant. And Matt Russell, my sound engineer. I use Epidemic Sound for music and SFX.

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