The Deck - REMEMBERING: Owachige Osceola (8 of Diamonds, Oklahoma)
Episode Date: May 21, 2025Our card this week is Owachige Osceola, the 8 of Diamonds from Oklahoma.Recently divorced and living on her own in a new city, 27-year-old Owachige Osceola’s life was in a season of transition befor...e she was killed in the bedroom of her Norman, Oklahoma apartment in September 2013. While the medical examiner who performed her autopsy concluded her cause and manner of death were “undetermined,” a detective who remains on the case today insists a killer has been allowed to walk free for nearly a decade.Please join us in writing a letter to the Oklahoma Attorney General’s Office calling for a formal independent review of the methodology used during Owachige’s autopsy. Below you will find a prompt you can use and the address to send the letter to.(WHERE TO SEND)Mr. John O'ConnorOklahoma Attorney General's Office313 NE 21st StreetOklahoma City, OK 73105eric.pfeifer@ocme.ok.gov To Whom It May Concern:I'm writing in regard to the criminal investigation related to the mysterious death of Ms. Owachige Osceola in September 2013, which is being conducted by the Norman Police Department.As you may be aware, Ms. Osceola's cause and manner of death were classified by the Oklahoma Office of the Chief Medical Examiner as "undetermined" despite credible evidence that she was intentionally strangled to death in the bedroom of her apartment.After hearing concerns expressed by Norman Police Department investigators working this case and closely listening to details about the criminal investigation into her death as reported by Audiochuck Podcast Network's "The Deck," I'm deeply troubled that the medical examiner's office has been unwilling to reconsider its original ruling — directly hindering further investigative efforts to pursue justice for Ms. Osceola and her loved ones.I implore the Oklahoma Attorney General's Office to reexamine evidence in this case and to insist that the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner consider that Ms. Osceola's death was the result of a homicidal act. I also kindly request that this office publicly publish its conclusions in the matter.Respectfully,[YOUR FIRST & LAST NAME] View source material and photos for this episode at: thedeckpodcast.com/remembering-owachige-osceolaLet us deal you in… follow The Deck on social media.Instagram: @thedeckpodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @thedeckpodcast_ | @audiochuckFacebook: /TheDeckPodcast | /audiochuckllcTo support Season of Justice and learn more, please visit seasonofjustice.org.The Deck is hosted by Ashley Flowers. Instagram: @ashleyflowersTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieTwitter: @Ash_FlowersFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AFText Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
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Hi everyone, this is an off week for the deck, but I'm popping in your feeds anyway because
I want to bring your attention back to a case that we covered a few years ago on this show,
Awachagi Osiola.
Some of you will remember her case because we did a letter writing campaign to urge the
Oklahoma ME to change Awachagi's cause of death from undetermined to homicide, and a
lot of you took action. But I'm sad to report that all these years later, despite clear evidence of murder,
Awachegi's death still isn't classified as a homicide, and it's standing in the way of getting answers in her case.
The other reason I want to highlight her story is because earlier this month, the Oklahoma governor
vetoed a bill that allowed the state to help fund solving missing
and murdered indigenous persons cases.
According to reporting in the Oklahoma newspaper,
the governor said that he couldn't back the bill
because quote, justice must be blind to race.
The announcement was issued on May 5th,
which is a national day of awareness for the MMIP crisis.
The detective overseeing Owachigee's case made us aware of this because he is in the
process of trying to get the Bureau of Indian Affairs on board to help with her case, and
he fears that due to the governor's veto, that might not be realistic anymore.
So please, listen to Awachigee's story, which we originally aired in May 2022.
And if you feel inclined, it is not too late to take action.
Our card this week is Awachegi Osceola, the Eight of Diamonds from Oklahoma.
Even though Awachegi called for help on the morning her killer broke in, what actually
happened inside her apartment is still a mystery.
And while evidence supports police's theory about who killed her,
one huge hurdle still stands in the way of justice.
I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is The Deck. Music On September 25th, 2013, Toni Brown was hanging out at home in Anadarko, Oklahoma when she
saw a Facebook status from her friend Awachiki.
It had been posted earlier that morning and read, quote, Moose is Trina KM.
Toni knew Awachagi was dating a guy named Moose, but she wasn't sure what KM meant.
Just then, Toni's phone alerted her to a text from Awachagi that said the exact same
thing as her Facebook status.
Moose is Trina KM.
Awachagi wasn't answering any calls or texts, and Tony was freaked out, so she rounded up
three of their friends to go check on her.
The group made the roughly hour-long drive from Anadarko to Awachakee's apartment
in Norman, Oklahoma, and when they pulled up, their feelings of unease only grew.
They saw that the door was slightly open from having been kicked in.
They could tell because there was a shoe print on the door
and the frame was splintered.
So Tony and the group didn't even go in.
They called police instead.
As soon as Norman police officers got inside,
they saw cabinets and drawers left open and stuff everywhere.
But when they called out to see if anyone was home, no one answered.
It was in an upstairs bedroom that police found Awachagi.
She was laying on the floor, face down, with her sheets and comforter tossed over her head.
They checked for signs of life, but she had clearly been dead for a while, though it wasn't
entirely clear how she had died, because there were no visible wounds.
In her room, the bed looked as if someone stripped it in a hurry.
The mattress was bare except for three pillows, one of which had blood on it.
And there were clothes and stuff tossed all around the room.
In fact, the rest of the house was a mess as well.
It looked as if the living room, kitchen, and bedroom had all been ransacked.
They found another bloody pillow stuffed in a dresser in the bedroom.
But when they went searching for Awachegi's cell phone and stuff like her cash and cards,
they couldn't find any of that in the apartment.
So they were obviously wondering if someone had robbed the place.
Officers secured the scene and went outside to tell Awachegi's friends what they'd
found.
But it was what they didn't find that concerned Tony and her friends the most, because police didn't mention anything
about finding anyone else in the home.
And Tony knew that Awachigee lived with her
five-year-old daughter.
Immediately, officers started looking for the young girl.
They weren't sure if they were dealing with an abduction or
what, but the first place they checked, the first place any
investigator checks when a child is missing, is with their living parents or guardians, and Tony and Awachigi's other
friends said that her dad lived back in Anadarko.
Sure enough, when officers tracked him down, they found the young girl and determined that
she was safe.
Still, they weren't sure what involvement Awachigi's ex could have had in her murder
since they knew the two had recently divorced and had gone through custody hearings.
So they brought him in for an interview.
The ex-husband cooperated and said that he had been in Anadarko all week, and he had
no idea who might have killed Awachigi.
He said she actually had full custody of their daughter, but it just so happened that week
their daughter had been with him. Police had no reason not to believe the man's alibi, so they moved on to see what else they
could find out about Awachigi's personal life. When it was her turn to give a statement,
Tony filled police in about the weird text and Facebook status about Moose.
Tony said it didn't sound like Awachigi, who usually texted in full sentences,
and didn't use abbreviations.
Toni also told police since moving to Norman, Awachagi had been online dating and not too
long ago she had started seeing a man who went by Moose, and that guy lived in Oklahoma City.
Studying Awachagi's Facebook status, Moose is trying to K.M. Police deciphered it as Moose is trying to kill me.
So it was imperative that they find Moose ASAP,
which they did.
He was in Oklahoma City, about a half an hour north of Norman.
Moose was shocked to hear about Awachigee's death,
and he was willing to talk to police,
telling detectives the two hadn't known each other very long.
When he was shown the Facebook status that mentioned him by name,
Moose immediately gave an alibi.
But just as investigators started working to verify Moose's whereabouts
over the last few days, they became aware of a weird call that had been made
from Awachigi's apartment the day she was murdered.
It was 2-9-1-1 and made by Awachigi herself. It's difficult to make out what's going on, but obviously something was wrong.
And minutes later, a watch geek called back, but this time her tone was different.
The dispatcher never routed a police officer to her apartment. And officials didn't put two and two together
until the next day when they realized
that there was a murder investigation
underway at the same location.
Norman police detective Jim Parks,
who's working the case today,
has analyzed those phone calls over and over.
That tells me either she or the male
that you heard in the first call
was afraid that
the cops were going to show up because 911 was called.
So she was forced to make a second call saying, hey, everything's okay.
It was an accidental call, yada yada.
The fact that nobody had been called to at least do a welfare check at the apartment
surprised police.
It was protocol to alert patrol officers of an emergency call.
And they couldn't help but wonder if they had been dispatched,
if they would have interrupted the attack.
Of course, no one can say for sure that Awachigee would still be alive if police
had been dispatched.
But it's an element of the case that's always frustrated her family.
In fact, Detective Park said that there ended up being an internal investigation and the dispatcher was actually let go because of the whole thing.
The 911 calls made police lean further into their theory that whoever tore up
Awachigee's apartment likely killed her. The calls also provided a decent jumping off point
for the investigative timeline because now they had confirmation that a watch a key had been alive and not alone at her apartment
Around 6 a.m. The morning of September 24th that detail also helped police confirm moose's alibi which checked out
He was in Oklahoma City when a watch a key called 9-1-1
Around this time officers in Norman made arrangements for another police department to notify aachigee's mom, Roberta, of her death,
because she lived in Florida.
I was getting ready to leave my house and I walked out the front door
and that's when I saw two seminal police cars coming into my driveway.
And I thought to myself, oh no, which one is in jail?
I wasn't thinking murder.
And my life, my life stopped right there when I was informed.
The Seminole Police Department assured Roberta that detectives in Oklahoma were working hard
to find her daughter's killer.
But it didn't matter.
Roberta was on the next flight out.
My tribe offered to send me out there to be with her body.
So I landed in Norman.
When I got to her apartment, her front door was kicked in.
The place was a shambles.
So looking around and seeing what I saw
after the police had gathered evidence and whatnot,
I felt terror.
I felt mourning. I felt anger.
After talking to Roberta, police learned that Awachagi was born and raised on the Seminole
Tribe's Big Cypress Reservation, which is in the Florida Everglades, about two hours
northwest of Miami.
Everybody knows Awachagi.
She had that kind of personality.
She was—Awajiki means star in Seminole language.
And that's exactly what she was.
She was a shining star.
She was a bright star to where everybody knew her, recognized her.
Not only that, but Oseaola is a prominent name in the Seminole tribe,
their descendants of Chief Osiola, who's a famous tribal leader.
Police and relatives wondered if Awachigee's killer knew that she received
a monthly stipend from the tribe because of her prominence,
and if she had been targeted because of that. Whoever kicked in her door was there to get something.
I had to replace the ignition keys to her Cadillac.
So apparently maybe he tried to take her car,
but that didn't happen.
Her purse, her bank account was emptied out.
So there was aggression.
Whoever did that had one thing in mind was to get what he wanted and leave her like trash,
like she was nothing.
Pretty soon, detectives made some progress by backtracking Awachagie's bank records.
They discovered that she had used her ATM card to withdraw $500 on September 23 at a gas
station near her apartment.
And just to double check that it was her using her card and not someone else, detectives
got surveillance video from the 7-Eleven, which clearly showed Awachagi going in and
getting cash and leaving.
Detectives also noted what she was wearing in that video
because it was the same clothes that she was found in.
Bank records showed another almost $500
was taken out of her account on September 24th
from an ATM in a nearby casino.
As police worked the ATM leads,
they were still waiting to hear from the medical examiner.
The autopsy was taking longer than usual, so at this point they still didn't know
how she died, though they did learn that Awachiki had either had sex or been sexually assaulted
recently because there was semen present.
Unfortunately, examiners couldn't tell if she had been sexually assaulted or if the
sex act was consensual.
They just knew that it had happened within the last few days.
Through more interviews, investigators learned that Awachieke was a cocaine user, and her
friend said that the reason she moved to a college town like Norman, at least in part,
was to be closer to a dealer that she knew out of Oklahoma City whose name was Rob Ross,
better known by his customers as just cocaine Rob.
Police looked up Rob and saw that he was a felon with a long history of drug
related charges. So with that intel they made moves to track him down and they
also worked to get his phone records along with the watch keys and what they
found was very interesting.
What they found was very interesting. Cell records showed that Awachegi and Rob had been texting and talking on the phone
up until the morning of September 24th.
And as they suspected, the last text sent from Awachegi's phone was the one to her
friend received about Moose trying to kill her.
But they learned that that text wasn't sent from her apartment.
It was sent from the Riverwind Casino, which was a few miles away, and it was the same
location where her ATM card had been used the day that she was killed.
Detectives headed straight to the casino to review surveillance footage, and sure enough,
they spotted Rob at the casino the review surveillance footage, and sure enough, they spotted Rob
at the casino the morning of September 24th.
The videos showed Rob at a slot machine talking to a man, walking through the casino with
a woman, and at 7.23am he was at the ATM machine.
Rob used a debit card to withdraw just under $500, which perfectly matched Awachigi's bank statements.
Bingo.
Now by the way, we made several efforts to try and get in touch with Rob for this episode,
even leaving messages on a working cell number that we obtained, but no luck.
So police were really closing in on Rob, but they wanted to be sure that they had all the
information possible before arresting
him, so they identified the two people that he was seen with at the casino, and they brought
them in for questioning.
The man that Rob was seen chatting with at the slot machines cooperated and told police
that he just happened to be at the casino that morning and ran into Rob.
He said that the two had served time in jail together in the past, and Rob had tried to
actually recruit him to sell drugs.
The man said he didn't know anything about a murder
and that Rob hadn't mentioned anything about it.
So next, police interviewed the woman
Rob had been with in the casino.
The two were actually spotted on surveillance together
in her car in the casino parking lot too.
And what she had to say basically sealed
the deal for police.
The woman admitted to police that Rob was her dealer, and sometimes she would give him
rides in exchange for drugs.
She said that Rob had asked her for a ride early on the morning of the 24th, and she
took him to an apartment complex in Norman.
She told detectives that per Rob's request, she dropped him off across the street from the apartment that he needed to visit.
The woman said that Rob asked her to wait for him, so she did.
But at least an hour went by and
finally Rob called her and said to pick him up at a nearby stop sign, like a completely different
location than where she dropped him off. You can actually see a map marking these areas on our website, thedeckpodcast.com.
The woman said that when Rob got to her car, he was, quote, sweaty and nervous.
She also said that he had some items with him, but she couldn't tell what because he
stuffed them under the passenger seat.
Then he asked her to take him straight to the casino, so she did.
Detectives reviewed surveillance footage that showed Rob and the woman getting to the casino
around 7.15 the morning of September 24th.
Then two minutes later, at 7.17am, the Facebook status was posted to a Watchgeese page, Moose
is Trina K.M.
After they parked, Rob was seen on surveillance throwing something into a trash can in the
casino parking lot.
After going in and visiting the ATM and playing those slots,
Rob and the woman can be seen on video
leaving the casino parking lot in her car at 8.08 a.m.
Now the woman even agreed to take detectives
to retrace their route the morning of the 24th.
She pointed out the apartment complex
where she dropped off Rob,
which was a Watchaghees building.
But because she parked across the street,
she didn't see which apartment he went into.
Detectives figured it was a Watchaghees phone
that Rob tossed into the trash in the casino parking lot,
but unfortunately, by the time they went looking for it,
the trash had been emptied and the phone was long gone.
But that didn't mean that they couldn't connect him to the phone.
Along with placing him at the casino where the text and Facebook status were made from,
detectives found messages that Rob had sent to other friends on his phone,
where instead of typing out trying to, he wrote Tryna, T-R-Y-N-A.
It's the same spelling as Awachigee's Facebook post and group text.
By this time, there was little doubt in the minds of detectives that Rob was their guy.
They needed to find him and quickly.
But it wasn't easy.
Rob didn't have a house or apartment or any address of his own.
He was known to stay with friends and family in Oklahoma City, but he bopped around to
different couches all the time.
They finally were able to track him down several days later,
and on October 5th, investigators sat him down for an interview.
And to their surprise, he was willing to talk. Sort of.
Do you understand how all this looks to us?
Mm-hmm.
You get that, right? Yeah. And how does it look to us. I mean, you get that, right?
Yeah.
And how does it look to us?
I mean, I'm not with social, which I'm not who you all want.
Our reporting team got copies of Rob's interrogation
and he's super hard to understand.
But he said something to the effect of,
I'm not who you all want.
But the detective wasn't having it.
If you're not the person that killed her, which I think you are, I'll the detective wasn't having it.
To that, Rob just kind of groaned in response.
He didn't actually say anything.
Then the detective asked to see Rob's shoes, because he wanted to compare the tread to
the shoe print that was on Awachigee's front door.
Rob was like, okay, fine, but that won't prove anything because I have like 10 pairs
of shoes.
But detectives could see on surveillance that the shoes that he was wearing
on the morning of the murder were the same,
but they didn't have to reveal that to him.
Next, the detective asked Rob
about Awachigee's Facebook status,
and Rob said that he hadn't seen it.
But the detective just lays it all out there.
I know that you typed that on her phone.
I know you hit the Facebook icon on her phone
and you were able to type that
to make it look like Moose was involved."
The investigator was like,
listen, everyone is talking.
We have so many witnesses
and all the fingers are pointing in your direction.
So this is your moment to give your side of the story.
And finally, Rob said,
okay, fine.
I was at a Watchagee's apartment that morning, but we just got drunk on Patron and had sex.
Rob said he did not kick down the door.
He said that Awachigee let him in and that he knew nothing about her calling 911.
Rob said after they had sex, Awachigee let him borrow her debit card and even gave him
her PIN number because she owed him money for cocaine.
And that's when he difference in this case. And she deserves justice. And you don't want
to look at her photo. That's fine. Maybe you're trying to forget about her. But it's, you
know, she's not.
It's her. It only works when she was a good person. And I know I didn't do it.
If you couldn't understand him, Rob said,
"...she was a good person, and I know I didn't do it.
Rob told police that after he left the casino,
he went back to Oklahoma City and met his cousin
and they went to their aunt's funeral.
Detectives confirm this funeral story,
but what Rob said after didn't make sense.
He said it was after his aunt's funeral on the 24th
that he learned a body had been found in Normant.
At first he said the information came from the internet, and later he said a friend called
and told him.
But police knew that both stories were BS because her body wasn't discovered until
the night of the 25th.
When asked what happened to Awachigee's debit card, Rob said that he had tossed it out the
window on the way home from his aunt's funeral because he was worried the cops were after him over a drug deal.
So you might be wondering if police arrested Rob right then and there,
but they didn't. They released him after he asked for a lawyer.
But before he was released, Rob allowed police to inspect his shoe tread,
and he provided a DNA swab.
Detectives sent off Rob's DNA to see if it matched the semen found in Awachagi,
and they even sent off the shoe markings to an expert to see if they matched the print on the doorframe.
And at about this time, finally, the autopsy findings came back,
and the results baffled detectives.
The autopsy showed Awachagi had injuries to the back of her neck which police said were consistent with strangulation.
But the medical examiner listed her death as unknown.
The cause of death being undetermined wasn't the surprising part.
It was that the examiner also categorized her manner of death as unknown.
Manner of death is the category where they're supposed to say if the victim was murdered
or if the death was accidental or what.
So here they were ready to charge cocaine rob with murder and now they couldn't because
they had no homicide ruling.
It basically meant the ME didn't see enough physical evidence to prove, one way or another,
how Awachagi died.
It was more than clear, at least to investigators, that the last moment of Awachagi's life was
met with violence.
Cuts and bruises were noted on different places of her body as well as traces of blood on
her pillow.
There wasn't enough blood left at the scene
to be helpful though.
Investigators did collect it
and they tried to have it tested
to see if it was the Wachigies or not.
There just wasn't a big enough sample to get any results.
But thanks to toxicology findings,
now they knew that there was no way a Wachigie overdosed
because there was no alcohol in her system
and there was very little cocaine detected, like trace amounts that were barely even measurable.
Awachegi's mom, Roberta, was devastated over the ruling.
I don't know what else to say about that, except I'm not going to accept undetermined.
Something has to happen, or somebody has to say something to change that."
To make the case even stronger, DNA came back confirming Rob had had sex with a Wachigi.
But he had admitted that much.
So police asked Rob, if the sex had been consensual, why did a Wachigi end up bleeding and dead
on her bedroom floor shortly after he left
her apartment?
Now, he said he didn't know and that she was alive when he left to go to the casino.
But that wasn't good enough for the Norman Police Department.
So they asked the local district attorney to charge Rob with Awachigi's murder anyway.
But prosecutors wouldn't because of the undetermined ruling.
So there was nothing else detectives could do.
They truly felt as if Rob had gotten away with murder.
And years went by and nothing happened.
That is until 2017, when Detective Parks reopened the case.
He reexamined all the evidence and in 2019 he decided it was
worth getting a second opinion on Awachigee's manner of death. One of his
FBI contacts helped him recruit the assistance of the Armed Forces Medical
Examiner's Office in Maryland. They agreed to take a second look at the case
and its original findings. And in April 2019, six years after Awachigee's death,
the federal ME was like,
yeah, there's no doubt she was murdered.
The manner of death was homicide.
The cause of death was homicide by unknown means.
And they provided a several page report
on why homicide by unmo means can be a justifiable ruling of homicide.
With the other Emmys' determination in hand, this was Parks' shot, his Hail Mary.
And so I presented that to the district attorney's office and they were pretty excited at first and then later decided
no we're going to we have to we have to work with the state medical examiner's office and all of our
cases we're going to stick by their ruling and we're not going to file. We reached out to the
Oklahoma's office of the chief medical examiner to try and better understand their findings
in this case, but they declined to be interviewed.
In a letter to Detective Parks in response to his asking them to at least recategorize
Awachigee's death as a homicide, the chief ME said, quote,
Whereas the circumstances of death are indeed suspicious. I find it inappropriate to insert any reference
to manner of death into the cause of death statement. The cause of death in this case
is undetermined. The manner is best classified as undetermined."
In the early days of the investigation, police interviewed everyone in Awachagie's orbit.
Her friends, an ex-husband, her boyfriend, her family, all of whom had alibis that checked
out.
Only one person could be placed at Awachagie's apartment on the morning of September 24th.
Do you have an opinion as to who may have taken your daughter's life? I'm going to say that, according to my detective,
he indicates that all evidence leads to one person.
I want justice for my baby.
In November of 2020, the Seminole Tribe
wrote letters to the Oklahoma Attorney General's office
and called for a formal independent review of the methodology used during Awachigee's autopsy.
But as far as Detective Parks knows, nothing came of it.
At the end of the day, he wants to see charges brought against Rob, even if it's for second
degree murder.
You know, I can point the finger.
Did Norman Police Department fall down on this case a little bit?
Yeah, we should have sent a patrol officer on that first 911 call.
There should have been somebody there within a few minutes.
But we did what we could to rectify that problem.
Should the medical examiner's office have better supervision over their pathologist?
Absolutely.
They have done nothing to reconcile their mistake.
Should the district attorney file a case against Robert Ross
for the death of Awachigee?
Absolutely, because it's the right thing to do.
Leave it up to a jury to decide whether he's guilty or not guilty,
but it's the right thing to do.
It needs to be done.
To this day, no arrests have been made thing to do. It needs to be done.
To this day, no arrests have been made
in connection to Awachegi's death.
Her missing phone and debit card have never been found.
Roberta told us she hopes to one day see the whites
of the eyes belonging to the person
who stole her daughter's future.
I would say that there are measures that have been put in place with the Lord, and He will
seek justice for me and Awadji. And whoever did this to her, he's going to answer to
the Lord. He's going to have to answer to God.
If you're walking away from this case as unsettled as I am, the family and the tribe
encourage you to do what they did. Send more letters to the Oklahoma Attorney General's
office and call for a formal independent review of the methodology used during Awachigee's
autopsy. We will put the contact information for the Oklahoma Attorney General's office
in the show notes and on the website.
We need to show them that people are paying attention
and that Awachegi deserves justice.
And if you have any additional information
about the murder of Awachegi Osceola,
you're asked to call the Norman Police Department
in Oklahoma at 405-366-5208. The Deck is an AudioChuck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis.
To learn more about The Deck and our advocacy work, visit thedeckpodcast.com.
So what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?