The Deck - Jimmy “Jamie” Riddle (9 of Diamonds, North Carolina)
Episode Date: May 13, 2026In the fall of 1991, just as the season was starting to change, a couple fishing at sunrise at a small lake in Fayetteville, North Carolina, noticed something floating near the surface of the water. A...t first, they thought it was a blow-up doll. But upon closer inspection, the couple saw hair on the legs and realized it wasn’t a doll. It was a human being—a person who would be identified as 24-year-old Jimmy Riddle. Jimmy was also known to some of their friends as Jamie, but how much their identity played into their death isn’t clear. What the police have to go on are potential witness statements, items left at the crime scene, and maybe, just maybe, DNA. Nearly 35 years after Riddle’s killing, there’s a new detective on the case…a detective determined to unearth the answers once and for all. If you know anything about the murder of Jimmy or Jamie Riddle in Fayetteville, North Carolina, please call the Fayetteville Police Department at 910-433-1529. You can also call Fayetteville/Cumberland County Crime Stoppers with tips at 910-483-8477. Anonymous tips for an open/unsolved case through Fayetteville/Cumberland County Crimestoppers could receive up to a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest. Please note: While writing this episode, our team worked with trans sensitivity readers and editors to ensure that we address Riddle's episode and this topic with respect. View source material and photos for this episode at: thedeckpodcast.com/jimmy-jamie-riddle Let us deal you in… follow The Deck on social media. Instagram: @thedeckpodcast | @audiochuck Twitter: @thedeckpodcast_ | @audiochuck Facebook: /TheDeckPodcast | /audiochuckllc To support Season of Justice and learn more, please visit seasonofjustice.org. The Deck is hosted by Ashley Flowers. Instagram: @ashleyflowers TikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkie Twitter: @Ash_Flowers Facebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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Our card this week is Jimmy Jamie Riddle, the Nine of Diamonds from North Carolina.
In the fall of 1991, just as the season was starting to change,
a couple fishing at sunrise at a small lake in Fayetteville, North Carolina,
noticed something floating near the surface of the water.
At first, they thought it was a blow-up doll.
But upon closer inspection, the couple saw hair on the legs and realized this wasn't a doll.
It was a human being.
a person who would be identified as 24-year-old Jimmy Riddle.
Jimmy was also known to some of their friends as Jamie,
but how much their identity played into their death isn't clear.
What police have to go on are potential witness statements,
items left at the crime scene, and maybe, just maybe, DNA.
Nearly 35 years after Riddle's killing,
there is a new detective on the case,
a detective determined to unearth answers once and for all.
I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is the deck.
On the evening of September 26, 1991, Max Riddle was sitting at home in Fayetteville when the phone rang.
It was someone that he knew saying that he should watch the news that night because his younger sibling might be on TV.
Now, the tone of the call must not have been ominous because Max sat back on the couch and held his baby thinking that his brother,
who he knew as Jimmy was going to be highlighted in some way.
Now, through our reporting, we learned that Riddle also went by Jamie on occasion,
though their family didn't know that,
so throughout this episode, they will refer to their brother as Jimmy.
And because of that, you'll hear us refer to them as Riddle.
According to reports, a couple of friends say that Riddle used Jimmy and Jamie interchangeably
and often wore feminine clothing.
But no one knew exactly how they identified.
To their family, it didn't matter.
I don't think it was ever talked about
because we wouldn't raise to be like that to people and stuff
we were raised to be nice and be kind to everybody
and it doesn't matter what they are or what they do.
Riddle was loved within the family for being charming and charismatic.
Someone who, and I know this is going to sound cheesy,
but it's true, someone who could light up a room.
So when Max sat down on the couch with his new baby in his arms,
he was excited to see what was going to come on TV
because in his mind, it could only be something good.
I didn't know if he was on a TV show or what,
but when the news came on, it said they found a body.
And when they did, they were trying to find out who it was,
to identify the body.
The body, they spoke about, had been found earlier that day,
floating face down in College Lake.
They didn't show pictures, didn't even give many identifiers.
But instantly, Max's world shifted.
That call he'd gotten earlier that day took on a different tone.
And when the news anchor made a call to the public asking anyone who might be able to identify the victim to come forward,
Max knew that he was going to have to be that person.
Now, Max never found out how that friend knew what happened first.
And now that he's passed away, we can't ask that first.
friend. But at the time, Max, who is a military veteran, instinctively snapped into action. He
gently handed his baby to his wife, grabbed his keys, and drove straight to Cape Fear Valley
Medical Center. It was the only place that he knew to go. I went to the desk and I asked, I said,
hey, I was told that my brother was found dead and that he was here, that somebody needed to
identify him. So they ended up getting somebody and they took me back there and they pulled the
sheet up over his head and that's what I knew it was him. In that dark moment, Max quickly became
the family's point person. It was a role that made sense to everyone who knew him. The Riddle family
are members of the Lumby tribe, the largest Native American tribe east of the Mississippi River.
and Max had long carried a deep sense of responsibility to his family.
He was the first to graduate from high school.
And when his mother, who was only able to attend school through the fifth grade,
wanted to learn to read and write,
it was Max who patiently taught her.
He was the one that people leaned on, the one who stepped up.
So when the person he'd known all of his life as his brother Jimmy was killed,
that same instinct to protect his family pulled Max to become the nerve-sense.
center of this tragedy. Max got on the phone calling his mother in Florida and all three of his
siblings to share the horrible news. And for all of the calls he made, Max told our reporter Annie
Roderick Jones that there was one call that he was expecting to get that just never came.
I don't recall nobody ever reaching out to me from the police department or nowhere.
Never reaching out to you. No, ma'am. I don't recall none of that.
Not the first year?
No.
I still don't even know who the detective was back then.
It wasn't even just the first year.
Max can't remember ever speaking to a detective.
Neither can his sister Ann.
Me and my girlfriend, we were roommates at the time.
We sent it on the 12 o'clock news.
It was called the boat dock.
We knew that's where people went and partied.
So we were wondering, geez, who is it?
Is it one of our friends, you know?
Because that's where the teenagers hung out and stuff when we were in school.
They didn't say any names.
They just said a man was found dead in the lake at College Lakes.
And what did you think when you were watching that?
We were just wondering who it was, you know.
Never in a million years did I think it was my brother.
And then how did you find out it was your brother?
Matt caught and told me that it was just.
me that they found.
And then after that, Anne, did police come to your house to talk to you?
No.
We've never spoken to the police.
They've never talked to me.
And did you wonder when they were going to call you?
Yeah.
Always.
It's like surely they'll be talking to us.
Yeah, that's our little brother.
But the call never came.
Why do you think that is?
Personally, I think it's because he was a little gay Indian boy.
They didn't care.
Yeah, just another gay guy.
Who cares?
For their family, it seemed like no one did.
Anne says she last saw her sibling, about a month before the murder,
when they'd come to do her hair and makeup for a date.
She says that's who Riddle was, helpful, attentive,
someone who liked making the people around them feel good,
which is what made the next time she laid eyes on her younger sibling of five years so shocking.
It was the day of the funeral right before the service.
You could see it on his face.
We went to see him.
They tried to cover it up, but you couldn't cover up all the bruises on his face.
They beat him.
Whoever it was, beat him.
And nobody deserves that.
I don't care who do hard.
You don't disturb it.
The beating isn't what killed Riddle.
Their official cause of death is listed in the autopsy report as drowning, complicated by ligature strangulation.
But the family was in the dark about that when they laid their loved one to rest in Harper's Ferry Baptist Church Cemetery alongside the rest of their family.
For decades, the grave had no headstone.
I mean, for many years, it was an expense that the family couldn't afford.
But in 2021, Max was finally able to buy one, giving his siblings and the family a place where they could come to grieve and lay flowers.
But Riddle's mother never got to see that headstone.
She died in 2020, nearly 30 years after her child was murdered.
You know, every mom has a favorite.
They won't come and tell you.
But we knew it.
They had just a special relationship.
And we knew it.
But we didn't care, you know.
We all had a good relationship with our mom.
But it broke her, you know, especially she died, not knowing who killed her baby.
For almost 30 years, she knew even less than that.
The whole family had been left completely in the dark about the police investigation.
And they didn't have the strength to push.
I think we have this unrealistic expectation of families sometimes.
We want them to fight, to,
Demand answers and investigate themselves and fill in investigative gaps where a department falls short.
But that's not their job.
They shouldn't have to.
And sometimes just surviving is the hardest thing to do.
Anne and Max had young families of their own that they needed to be there for.
You don't get to stop showing up to work when something like this happens in your family.
They don't defer the water bill or your mortgage.
The way they survived was by mistake.
moving forward, one step at a time, one day at a time, hoping that one day the phone was going to
ring and they would finally get that long-awaited call from police. Well, that phone did ring over three
decades later, but it wasn't police on the other end. It was us calling. And the timing, it was
serendipitous because not only were we able to help bring together police and family for the first time
in over 30 years. It came right at a time when a new detective had been assigned the case,
and he was able to share some major breakthroughs.
When the deck team reached out to Max Riddle in December 2025, he was happy to talk with us.
But he was pretty upfront that he knew next to nothing about the actual investigation,
which we took as a challenge. Even if we couldn't solve the case, just getting answers for the
Riddle family would be a huge step forward. So our team reached out to the Fayetteville Police
Department, and we were connected with Detective Joseph Bergamine. And there was something I can only
describe as fate about the timing of this call, because Detective Bergamine had just recently,
like a couple of months before we called, picked up a few of the department's cold cases. And this
was one of them. When Annie sat down with him, a stack of handwritten notes was spread across his desk.
His attempt at consolidating the information that had accumulated over many years via work by multiple detectives.
Detective Bergamine walked our team through how the investigation began,
and how, more than 30 years later, they're still trying to piece together what happened back in 1991 when Riddle was found in the lake.
So officers and detectives were called to the scene.
They did notate that there were tire tracks in the sand, and they actually took.
tire cast from those tracks.
They also found several items of evidence that they documented.
When Riddle was pulled from the shallow water,
the only thing they had on were white nylons pulled below the waist,
black knee-high boots,
and a single dangly earring hanging from one ear.
But more of their stuff was found on the ground,
not too far away from the water's edge.
They observed some blood in a dirt area approximately 50 feet away from the water.
Around that same area, there's a disturbance in the sand.
From that disturbance in the sand, they then see drag marks,
which appear to be someone's feet dragging towards the water.
Some items of evidence that they collected was a pink wallet or purse and earring
that matches the one that Jimmy had on.
They also collected a beer carton as well as two beer cans with that, a condom wrapper, a condom that was used, and a military-style belt buckle.
I know a crime junkie's mind instantly goes to the used condom or beer cans thinking about DNA.
But the belt buckle was actually a really interesting find because that told them something.
The belt buckle is described in the file as being a military-style box.
belt buckle, which led me to believe that it probably did belong to a male.
This was important because they did find what they believed was Riddle's clothing at the scene,
a skirt, shirt, and jean jacket. That belt buckle was the outlier and likely belonged to the
killer, who might have been military, which would make a lot of sense, but would also open
them up to a large suspect pool. You see, just to the west of Fayetteville, North Carolina, is home
to Fort Bragg, one of the largest military bases in the world.
Now, it probably isn't going to come as a surprise to anyone when I say that in 1991,
this case wasn't given much attention.
I mean, the family themselves told you that police never even bothered contacting them.
And our reporter confirmed there were zero records that the family was ever contacted
about Riddle's murder.
Anne's assumption that they wrote her sibling off early on feels accurate.
And the little police presence resulted in even less media coverage.
After that initial broadcast came out about an unidentified body floating in the lake,
the only other thing that circulated publicly was that a, quote,
cross-dressing male prostitute had been murdered.
Now, it seems like police had somehow found and spoken to people who knew Riddle
and confirmed they did sex work.
That's how they got to the, quote, prostitute portion of what they released to the press.
But authorities failed to include the other things that they learned from those same people,
like the fact that Riddle used both Jamie and Jimmy, along with both he and she pronouns, among a small group of friends.
In the early 1990s, trans and non-binary identities weren't as well understood in mainstream culture,
except as jokes or stunts on daytime talk shows.
People who didn't identify strictly with the sex they were assigned at birth often didn't have the language to describe their experience.
So while police would never get information from the public who may have known our victim only as Jamie,
it wasn't complete radio silence from the community.
There were several tips that came in.
Detectives did follow up on a lot of those tips.
They continued to come in even months after the case, and they did make contact with several people.
Three people in particular really helped police fill out a timeline.
of Riddle's last known movements,
Terry Hunt, Victor Bowling, and James Oxendine.
They were all out on Bragg Boulevard
in the early morning hours of September 26th.
And Bragg Boulevard was this main drag
that cut through the center of town.
People frequenting that area
and picking up sex workers was a common thing.
So even though a lot of cars passed through,
If you were out there on a regular basis, you learn to pay attention to who's coming through and who's getting into what cars.
And everyone clocked that Riddle was with two white guys in a red pickup truck.
So on the early morning hours at approximately 12, 30 or 1 a.m., Victor Bowling and James Oxendine
see the two white males in the red GMC pickup truck in the area of Bragg Boulevard.
At approximately 2 a.m., they see the same red truck with the two white males with Jimmy inside the truck.
They provided a pretty detailed description of the truck that there was a port brag or military sticker on the rear window
and possibly three gray stripes, and it was a later model GMC pickup truck.
Detectives also got information from them that one of the white males stated to the other white male,
Let's go Shea.
At least two of the witnesses actually encountered these two men later that same day.
Terry Hunt was at his trailer, located at 18 Shaw Road in the Thomas Mobile Home Parks,
by 2.45 or 3 o'clock that morning.
And that's when Riddle, Shea, and this other truck guy showed up wanting to use Terry's place for a sexual encounter.
One of Terry's friends who was there told police that Riddle was charging the men $20.
each. But Terry wouldn't agree to let them use his trailer. He said no, and so some arguing between Riddle and Terry ensued.
And then, Riddle supposedly walks off on foot, alone, back in the direction of Bragg Boulevard.
The occupants of the trailer then advised that two white males get into a red GMC truck,
and they drive away to the same direction as where Jimmy was last seen walking.
Now, that walk to Brad Boulevard would have been a quick 15 minutes, but no one reported seeing Riddle again.
Instead, a few hours later and seven miles away, Riddle is found face down in College Lake.
Police don't know how Riddle made it to College Lake or who was there with them.
But evidence suggests that the GMC truck may have made it there at some point.
So they took cast of the tires at the boat ramp, as well as tire tracks at 818 Shaw Road.
They sent those both to the state lab to be compared.
According to Detective Bergamine, the lab report they got back read, quote,
the tire track impressions represented are of similar type of tread design and could have been made by the same brand of tire.
However, the questioned impressions are of insufficient quality and detail to determine if the questioned impressions were made.
by the same tire."
So kind of a long jargony way to say,
maybe it was, maybe it wasn't.
Whether or not it was the same tire impressions
at both the trailer location and the lake,
detectives knew that finding the two mystery men
was their best bet at moving this case forward.
So they had a composite created of both of them
and they made that public.
The guy named Shea appeared to be in his early 20s.
He was 6-2,
about 165 pounds with a muscular build, and he was clean-shaven.
He had sandy blonde short-cropped hair with a distinct hairline.
If you're not watching this, it's a little hard to describe, but it's like he has a deep widow's peak,
but it's deeper on his right side, so it looks almost slanted.
Now, the other guy, he's also a white guy in his 20s, he was shorter, about 5'7 and maybe 150 pounds,
with short and what honestly looks kind of like wavy or curly dark brown hair.
Now, he had a mustache and glasses with what I can only describe as like a late 80s style frames.
The black and white pencil drawing makes this guy come across a little older than his 20s.
So if you're not watching right now, think like your high school biology teacher.
Now, Shea looks distinctly military.
But guy number two's mustache was throwing me a little bit.
I mean, I assumed military men had to be clean shape.
Well, shame on me, assume nothing.
I looked up the Army's grooming standards, AR-670-1, which were in effect in the late 20th century.
And it says that, quote, faces must be clean-shaven, mustaches must be neatly trimmed
and not extend over the top lip line or beyond the corners of the mouth.
Dead Ringer for guy number two stash.
Though interestingly, his hair does seem scruffier and longer than the two-inch-inch-match.
listed in the same grooming standards guide.
But between the belt buckle found at the lake, the Fort Bragg military sticker seen on the
truck, and the physical descriptions of these two, everything was pointing early investigators
toward one place to look for their suspect. Fort Bragg.
And it feels like that shouldn't be that hard, right?
Point me in the direction of Shea, who has access to a red GMC truck.
But for some reason, nothing comes of this.
And I mean, not nothing, nothing.
They brought a few people in, gave polygraphs,
but it began to feel like a merry-go-round.
Red truck, guy named Shea, red truck.
But whatever they were getting, it wasn't enough for an arrest,
or even enough to name anyone as a real suspect in the case.
But they had to have been on the right track,
because there was chatter going around the base.
Specifically, one military member overheard some guys talking about beating up a trans person,
and then this got back to police.
You know, this conversation that they had was lining up with the assault on Jimmy and his death
because they didn't know of any other incidents that had occurred in the past few months.
One of the main individuals was brought in for questioning,
and he ultimately did not take a polygraph.
was going to, but then he did not take a polygraph. And he was interviewed, but he denied any
involvement and was never, nothing ever panned out from that as well.
Detectives did learn that this person owned a red truck. And interestingly, went on to sell it
to an auto place there in Fayetteville. Suspicious, right? Well, police did their legwork.
First off, this guy was not named Shay, and he didn't match the description of either man in the
suspect sketches. But they still tracked down the truck. And it turns out it wasn't even the right
kind. They're looking for a GMC, but this guy had sold a Chevy. Detective Bergamine told us that
beyond that overheard conversation, there just wasn't any additional evidence to support that
this guy was one of their suspects. As time wore on, the information coming in dwindled.
And without fresh injections of information, the police focused their attention.
on other cases. And it's not like the media was banging down their door asking for updates.
But still, Riddle wasn't altogether forgotten. In the early 2000s, a new detective came along
and used some new technology to develop the case's first real breakthrough.
Detective Bergamine told our reporter that in 2006, Lieutenant Jeff Locklear was working the department's
cold cases, and the Riddle case was prime for new DNA testing.
They had loads of evidence, including that belt buckle that they theorized might be their killers.
So they sent that off for testing first.
But that was a bust.
Next, they tried the beer cans, beer carton, and that one single earring that had been lying on the ground that matched the one in Riddle's ear.
There was an unknown male profile found on the earring, and then there was a male profile on one of the beer cans that,
there was a CODIS hit for in 2006.
At Detective Bergamine's request,
we won't be naming this individual
because they're actively reviewing him
as a strong possible suspect.
So I'm going to call him Mark.
And Mark, in my opinion,
bears a striking resemblance
to the dark-haired suspect sketch.
He's a little taller than described.
And in the one picture I've seen of him
from a few years before the murder,
he wasn't wearing glasses,
but the mustache, the hair, it fits.
And though Mark wasn't in the military, he was raised in a military family.
By the time of this codice hit, Mark was already in prison.
After brushing up on police reports, Bergamine told us that Mark first went away in 1991
for assault on a female, carrying a concealed weapon, driving with a revoked license,
an assault on a law enforcement officer.
But he was out by January of 9,000.
1998 because that is when Mark picked up a teacher, sexually assaulted her, tied her naked
to a tree, and left her there believing she would die.
He went to prison for that crime in 1999 and began serving his sentence, which was a minimum
of 28 years, maximum 34.
Now, Mark was known to be controlling and abusive toward women, so finding our victim badly
beaten would not be an unlikely MO for him, which seems significant.
considering how Riddle bore signs of severe violence when they were found.
Except for reasons Detective Bergamine didn't know, this is where the investigation seemed to stop.
I don't know if the Fayetteville PD just had the mentality of like, well, good enough.
As in this guy is already in jail, off the streets would be for decades to come at that point.
Good enough.
Maybe Locklear intended to circle back around to it because maybe one of the other calls,
cases was popping off. Or something present day came up. I mean, in Fayetteville, new crime pops up
regularly that needs investigative attention. I don't know. I cannot explain to you why this
white hot lead was dropped, but it was. Just left on the floor waiting for someone, anyone,
to come pick it back up. And that someone would be Detective Bergamine. By the time he entered the
picture, Mark was still in prison for the 1998 offense against that teacher. But he still had never
been spoken to about Riddle's murder. And Bergamine picked up on something really interesting.
So Mark first went to prison for a 1991 offense, right? Well, he was convicted on September 24th,
1991. But for some reason, he didn't begin serving his sentence until September 27th, 1991,
as in one day after Riddle's murder. So what was he doing on his last day of freedom? Since no one had
ever spoken to Mark to find out, Detective Bergamai knew that was going to be his first stop. And on February
23rd, 2026, he took a trip out to the correctional
institution where Mark was incarcerated for a face-to-face.
Where was he on September 26, 1991?
Well, Mark said probably getting ready to go to prison.
Mark says the reason that he wasn't incarcerated right away is because the court provided him
some time to get his affairs in order before reporting to serve his sentence.
And so that's what he told Bergamine he was doing during that time, paying bills,
getting his belongings intact.
But was he really doing that from midnight to 3 a.m.?
Seems odd to me.
When confronted with the fact that his DNA was found at the scene,
Mark couldn't explain it.
He denied ever having been near the crime scene.
He denied knowing Riddle,
denied knowing anybody named Shea.
Now, Detective Bergamine said that Mark never owned a red truck,
but he is still actively looking to see
if he's ever known someone who did.
And there are other leads that Bergamine is pursuing related to Mark as well,
which is something that he not only told our reporter Annie,
but he also got to tell Max and Anne.
After our interview with Max and Anne,
our reporter had them follow along in Max's truck to the Fayetteville Police Station.
It would be the first time that they had ever met anyone
who worked on their siblings' case.
And on March 10th, 2026, they finally got the meeting that they had waited nearly 35 years for, right at the entrance to the Fayetteville Police Department.
How you doing, sir?
Hey, I'm a little great, sir. How are you doing?
Good. Detective Bergamine.
Okay. Max Riddle.
Detective Bergamine. Nice to finally meet you all.
Hey, you too, sir. I'm really thrilled that, you know, somebody's looking into this.
Hopefully something comes out of this and we can find out what happened to my brother.
Detective Bergamine, along with Max and Anne, stepped aside from our camera crew to have a private conversation.
And as Max held on tightly to his sister's shoulders,
Bergamine finally told them the story that I just told you,
most of which they were hearing for the very first time.
And he answered the question that we all have after hearing this story.
So what was happening between 2006 and 2006?
I don't know, I don't have an answer for either.
Detective Bergamine, though, has a plan about what he's going to do next.
We've already contacted several individuals in the case file, and that includes witnesses,
involved parties.
Anyone that we can identify that still alive, we're going to try to make contact with
and touch base and get a statement from them.
While doing so, we're also going to send
those items to a private lab for DNA testing.
Again, much more advanced now than it was back then and even in the early 2000s.
So those are some of the next steps we're going to be taking.
Specifically, they want to get a better profile on the unknown male DNA found on the earring,
which to be clear was not a match to Riddle's DNA.
He's also going to send off the one thing that I'm sure my realist do crime junkies thought about right away.
and that's the used condom.
In addition to that,
they're going to send the clothing
that was found at the scene.
The ones that they believe belong to Riddle.
Those have never been sent off,
and Detective Bergamine says that based on the way
the clothing was found in the bushes,
he firmly believes that the suspect
would have had to have handled those at some point.
So it feels like we are this close
to another breakthrough.
When our reporter asked Detective Bergamine
if he felt like this case was solvable,
He seemed very hopeful.
I believe with some DNA, with the DNA technology in place,
and the items we still have, you know,
I believe that this is definitely,
even though it's been such a long time that we can solve this case.
And the pressure is on.
Because solving this case could have huge implications,
not just for the Riddle family,
but for the citizens of Fayetteville in present day.
because according to Detective Bergamine, Mark is projected to be released from prison on April 7, 28.
For the first time, in a long time, Max and Anne have some real hope.
Hope for a solve. Hope for a day when they'll see justice. Until then, Anne holds tightly to the memories that she has.
Like the way that her sibling would play their favorite band, Vanity Six, and Dance Around the House.
or the rocking chair, Riddle gave her daughter,
carefully hand-drawn with her face.
She still has it to this day.
For Anne, it's impossible not to wonder who her sibling would be now,
what their life might have looked like.
I would hope Jimmy would be living his true self
and be in whoever he truly was.
And I hope he would have a loving person in his life
that cared and loved him as much as good.
We did.
Max continues to be the family's North Star.
He has four daughters and ten grandchildren and tells them every day that he loves them.
He has multiple alarms set on his phone throughout the week to call his siblings and his cousins making sure that they're all right.
For a family that has spent decades waiting, waiting for answers, for justice, for closure, that question still lingers.
Who took their siblings' life?
and how much longer will it take to finally find out?
If you know anything about the murder of Jimmy or Jamie Riddle in Fayetteville, North Carolina,
please call the Fayetteville Police Department at 910-4331529.
You can also call the Fayetteville-Cumberland County Crime Stoppers with tips at 910483-8477.
Anonymous tips for an open and unsolved case through the Fayetteville-Cumberland County Crime Stoppers,
could receive up to a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest.
The Deck is an audio Chuck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis.
To learn more about the Deck and our advocacy work, visit the Deckpodcast.com.
I think Chuck would approve.
