The Megyn Kelly Show - How Deranged Serial Killer Israel Keyes Finally Got Caught - Crime Week Continues with Maureen Callahan | Ep. 1219
Episode Date: December 30, 2025Megyn Kelly is joined for Crime Week by Maureen Callahan, host of "The Nerve" and author of the book "American Predator," to talk about her reporting on the serial killer Israel Keyes, why the FBI ori...ginally cooperated with her book on Keyes but then suddenly stopped, the shocking story behind the "final victim" of Keyes Samantha in Alaska, how Keyes was finally caught after more than a decade, the shocking police interrogation that happened next, what cops found in Keyes' car, the twist in Keyes' confession, what police would learn about various victims of Keyes, what we know about psychopathy and true evil, the strange moment in the interrogation of serial killer Israel Keyes when he stops cooperating, other potential victims of Keyes from around the country, how women can and should protect themselves, and more. Subscribe to Maureen's show The Nerve:Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-nerve-with-maureen-callahan/id1808684702Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4kR07GQGQAJaMNtLc9Cg2oYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@thenerveshow?sub_confirmation=1Substack: https://thenerveshow.com/ Pendragon Cycle (Daily Wire+): Discover The Pendragon Cycle: Rise of The Merlin—a bold retelling of the King Arthur legend where Merlin’s vision sparks a civilization’s rebirth; watch the full trailer now at https://pendragonseries.com. Riverbend Ranch: Visit https://riverbendranch.com/ | Use promo code MEGYN for $20 off your first order. Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at:https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow 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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Welcome to the Megan Kelly Show, live on Sirius XM Channel 111 every weekday at New East.
Hey everyone, I'm Megan Kelly. Welcome to the Megan Kelly show. Today we are examining a serial killer that some in law enforcement have called, unlike any other in a modern American history, a predator who was meticulous, methodical, unpredictable, and for years.
completely undetected. His name, Israel Keys. Keys had no victim type, no geographic pattern,
and an MO, the FBI described to be as, quote, unique as a fingerprint. Our very own Maureen Callahan,
host of the nerve, spent years uncovering how Keys operated. Her investigation led her to write
the best-selling book, American Predator, the hunt for the most meticulous serial killer of
the 21st century. Marine also appears in the ABC true crime documentary Wild Crime, 11 skulls
on Hulu, which traces the disappearance of Samantha Koenig, the crime that finally exposed
Keyes' double life. Watch. He was taking trips. He was killing people. He buried, very, very,
Victims all over the continental United States.
Underneath his bed.
There was 11 skulls drawn using a finger in blood.
All of these victims sold belonged to him.
They're mine.
This guy is an evil genius.
I'm more sane than most Americans.
He's the best serial killer that ever existed.
Wow.
Maureen is one of the foremost experts on Keys, and she joins me now.
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Hi. Hi. I've always known that you've written this book, but I had never read it,
and I'd never known who Israel Keyes was. Why is his name?
name so not on the list of all the big serial killers? It's really wild, isn't it? Isn't it?
Yeah. I mean, my theory about it is that, you know, not long after Keyes was apprehended, I'm going to say
about nine months in, I don't want to spoil how this sort of ends for anybody. The FBI announced that
they had this guy in custody. Nobody had ever heard of him. Nobody knew he'd been operating all over
the United States for at least 14 years, probably more. And they asked the public for help in
identifying other victims, in locating and identifying other victims. And then they just as quickly
pulled this case back from public view. And I could never understand why. So I began the book with
the full cooperation of the FBI. And in fact, one of the agents on the case said to me that he was
really surprised because he'd never seen the bureau in his like 26 years there give a journalist
such unfettered access to them and then about halfway through I got back from one trip to
Alaska he was based up in Alaska Keys and the FBI just shut down what year was this when they
shut down yeah with me well the book came out in 2019 so let me say like 2017 wow yeah all right
so let's start it's not exactly the beginning but let's start
with the murder of Samantha because this this would be the tripping wire for him. Yeah.
She was in, what state? Alaska. She was in Alaska and she was in one of those little kiosk
type things where you buy coffee from, right? Like coffee, some light food. Yeah. And she was working
late at night, which honestly, like, no woman should ever do. She shouldn't work alone in a little
box that anyone can come up to with a gun and get into because that's exactly what happened to her.
And we actually had that moment where Samantha was working in this little coffee hut.
This is from the ABC documentary, Wild Crime, 11 Skulls.
And he jumps in.
First, he pulls a gun on her.
You can see her back away.
And then all the lights go out, and he jumps in.
Watch.
In the video, you can see Samantha is closing up for the night in the coffee stand.
Cleaning and wiping things down.
It's late at night.
So there aren't many coffee drinkers that are driving up to the stand.
And then you can see somebody walking up.
You don't see a lot of people just walk up or driving a vehicle.
Samantha goes to the window.
So she starts making coffee.
And she appears to be engaging with the person.
At one point, she turns towards the window, and she reacts.
I vividly remember Samantha doing this and putting her hands up.
She then walks across the coffee stand and turns the lights off.
Oh, God.
Samantha took the money from the cash register.
Then Samantha puts her coat.
And then this individual just jumped straight into the coffee head.
That moment, Maureen, she saw the face of evil and she knew it.
I'll tell you, when I was working on the book, I think I watched that tape, the abduction tape.
I mean, I watched it many, many, many times, but I would go through it frame by frame,
partly because the initial working theory, Samantha was 18 at the time.
So she had just turned 18.
She was legally an adult, right?
But they decided to treat it like a missing child.
Her boyfriend was supposed to pick her up.
He was 10 minutes late.
He would have been there.
I don't know that it would have mattered because he's like taking people in pairs.
And that also distinguished him from many, many other serial killers.
Their original theory was that Samantha was in on it.
That that was a staged abduction.
So she could get the money.
So she could get like the $200 that were in the till.
And part of this also goes to the ways in which so many assumptions are made about victims of violent crimes.
Samantha's father was like Hell's Angel, Hell's Angel adjacent, had his own brushes with the law.
She was from the wrong side of the tracks.
She had overcome her own drug issues.
And so the theory was she's out partying.
and that's her accomplice.
But when you go frame by frame through that and you stopped right there,
when Keyes jumps in and he is a big guy, he's like at least six, four, very rangy,
he jumps like a predator.
There's something that's almost like a panther.
Because those kiosks are up off the ground.
They're on the side of the road in Alaska until Samantha's abduction,
always stuffed by staffed, rather by attractive young girls, often alone.
In the summer, they used to make them wear bikinis.
Oh, my God, that's crazy.
I know.
Girls, do not do this.
And those were very coveted jobs in Alaska.
It was something of a veneration.
It was something of a validation if you got a job.
That meant you were an attractive young woman who could lure customers in.
I used to worry, even my own brother, who, you know, he was, he's five years older than I am,
but he used to work in one of those gas station kiosks for his high school job, after hours, you know, up until like 11 o'clock.
at night or whenever they closed and he was alone and i used to worry about him just being in there
alone you just never know who's going to come through it's literally everybody comes through a gas
station and a female a young female in alaska which like a lot of bad stuff happens in alaska
it's so isolated like bad people go there to get lost 100 percent you know the thing too about
that is it doesn't even matter i think the time was like close to eight o'clock or nine o'clock you know
I was sure to go to Alaska in two distinct times, once in the dead of summer and once in the dead of winter, because I wanted to experience with those extremes really due to your mind and your body, and we're such animals, you know, like you go in the winter. I mean, you get like two hours of sunlight, if you're lucky, two hours of real sunlight. And it has a depressive feeling, but it also, there's a lot of, it's a lot of darkness. It's a lot of spiritual darkness. It's a lot of psychological darkness. Most people don't know this, but Alaska.
more people come from the lower 48 than our natives up there.
And they're all people who are running away from something.
Yes. Sorry, Alaska, but it's, I mean, you're the most beautiful state union, but you got a lot of misfits there.
Every other date line is about something in Alaska.
All these crime series like Alaska, wild Alaska, you know, all the, anyway.
So it's no accident. Israel Keyes found Alaska.
But he was from Washington State, right?
Or he had been living there at least.
That's where he was raised, yeah.
And it's, you're the one who turned me on to the.
Bundy book. Oh, the stranger
beside me. There's a lot of parallels
there. Oh, yeah. He was also from
Washington State and preyed
on women, E.Y,
in Washington State. Like,
the juxtaposition, both in Alaska and
Washington State, for that matter, of, like,
immense beauty and
zen and calmness and nature
and almost like godlike territory
and evil roaming among
it all. And, you know, the
thing about Bundy, which when
Keyes was apprehended, he
did say that was one of the serial killers that he had studied. He did sort of quote-unquote
admire. Bundy also was interstate. Most serial killers, like if you think of the Gilgo Beach
killer, you know, they, they tend to operate in one location, the Zodiac killer. He was interstate
also, but his last major, major spree, Bundys, was in Florida. And I know we'll probably get to it
later, but there is a very famous unsolved cold case involving multiple victims in Florida
that I firmly believe is the work of Israel Keys.
So, although unlike Ted Bundy, Israel Keys was not an attractive man.
Depends on how you look.
Like, honestly, there were some images where I was like, this guy is kind of attractive.
Really?
I can see it, yeah.
In the interrogation video, he is.
Oh, he looks like nothing in the interrogation video.
You recoil.
Oh, yeah.
No, he's, he's, all of his power.
He did have power. He was the most powerful person in that room. They were never going to solve another case without him. To a point. Once the interrogation gets to five months, six months, Jeff Bell, who was one of the leads, began putting some stuff together, which was remarkable, remarkable detective work. But, you know, the Samantha case, when they caught him, and that was an interstate chase. That was an interstate, like, he made the mistake of...
Wait, before we get there.
Yeah. Okay. So Samantha gets kidnapped from this coffee kiosk thing late at night. And they're not treating it quite with the urgency they would if, you know, some rich woman in California, you know, had this happen to her. And days go by. And then a ransom note appears on like a park bulletin board.
Yep. And it shows a picture of her holding a newspaper that is dated post the date of her of her abduct.
So they know actually this is legit.
This is from a person who really has her.
And then what happens?
And then they go to Samantha's father.
The kidnapper is demanding like $50,000, $60,000.
He's already started what would be considered now like a go fund me.
The community is donating money.
James is not a man of means.
And James is frantic.
But they say, okay, now is the time to wire the money into this.
into this account. And James says, I don't want to. And then the FBI gets a tip from someone who
knows James and says, he's acting strangely. He yelled at my daughter, a friend of my daughters,
because she made some t-shirts, find Samantha, and she's selling them. And James is very upset
that we're making money off of that. So now the FBI is, and Anchorage Police are really confused
because when they door-knocked James,
he wouldn't let them in the house after Samantha went missing.
So now he's looking suspicious.
So now they're looking at him and they're looking at the boyfriend
who has been living with Samantha and James
and they don't know which end is up.
But they've never encountered a parent who is resistant
to giving the reward money to the kidnapper
who's promising a return.
Right.
Yeah.
Well, then they do get,
money deposited into her account and the kidnapper starts making withdrawals with her ATM card,
which is by the way how he gets caught. But who made the deposit into her account? James
eventually relented. And they said, he's going to ask, he's asking for this much. We only deposit
this much because now we have him, we're in contact. And now it's a negotiation. So that's
conversation. He doesn't seem to realize that using this ATM, they're like five minutes
behind him every time he withdraws. Every time he withdraws. They're like five minutes behind him and he
knows what he's doing because he knows where all the surveillance cameras are in any given
place he's going. He's covered up. You cannot see. It looks like it's a man. You can't really
see. Then it stops working in Anchorage. The card stops pinging there and then it starts pinging in
New Mexico in these very tiny towns in New Mexico. And up in Alaska, it's like a movie. It's like
these FBI agents get word that her card's pinging down there and they jump out of bed and they rush
to their war room at the FBI field office and they're calling bank managers in Lawrenceburg,
New Mexico saying, can you get there? Can you get there? And the first one they called was like,
sorry, I'm sleeping. I'm not getting out of bed for this. Oh my. No, it's a serial killer. Well,
I guess that that was just a suspicion at the time. They knew they had.
had someone who abducted this young woman, they still didn't know whether she was in on it
or not. It was very suspicious, a guy that's sophisticated, if this is a true stranger abduction,
they're very rare. So it's easy to see why the theorizing was such that it's the boyfriend,
it's the father, she's in on it, whatever. They, they couldn't figure out why he would be using it.
It's such an easy mode of detection. It's so bold because.
It's so easy, right, to see, oh, my God, her ATM just pinged again, where.
And it is sort of how he got caught because he made the mistake of letting his car gets caught on camera at one of the locations, right?
And so they saw what kind of make model, et cetera, of car, and maybe even a license plate I'm trying to remember.
But they track that car, and that's how they found him.
This was also incredible police work, and this is where the Texas Rangers come in.
And these guys are such badasses.
They are just like, like Jeff Bell, who is one of the main guys in Alaska.
He's a, he's, I think he's from the Northeast, maybe originally.
I don't know.
But he was like when he went down to Texas and met the Texas Ranger who led that manhunt
that caught Keyes, which was a very cinematic event, because Keyes was driving the most commonly rented vehicle in the United States of America.
So it really was needle in a haystack.
He was like, oh, my God, this is a Texas Ranger, just like in the United States.
The movie is like a real badass, you know?
Right.
Yeah.
So they track him down.
They arrested him and they found incriminating materials in his car.
Like, it was kind of Bob's your uncle once they found him.
He was not banking on cops pulling him over.
No.
And so then they bring him in for this interrogation.
Now, who does the interrogation?
Like, is it the feds?
Is it the Jeff Bell of the Washington?
Well, first, it's...
Steve, Ranger Steve Rayburn, since retired, and an FBI agent named Deb Ganaway, who was
looped in very quickly as all of this was unfolding in a very kinetic moment-by-moment fashion.
And Steve Rayburn told me that they were so caught off guard that they didn't even have
like a two-way radio system set up in their interrogation room.
So they had to go to Target and buy a baby monitor.
Oh, no.
So people could listen to it outside of the room?
Oh, my gosh.
Like, this is how MacGyverish and like they, and they had no idea who they were dealing with.
They really didn't.
They knew he was dangerous.
They knew he had this woman.
The lead agent on the case, Steve Payne, even in that moment, he, he's up in Alaska,
sitting at a car at one of these coffee kiosks.
And he's the one agent on this case who has been holding out hope that Samantha is alive.
Jeff Bell.
Jeff Bell took one look at that ransom note with the proof of life photo of Samantha.
She's looking at the camera, dead center with the print paper.
And he took one look at that and said she's dead.
How?
How did he know that?
I don't know if he was just more dialed into the realities of what he factually was seeing.
Or if there was something unnatural that he picked up on, you know, Steve, by his own admission, did not want to believe it.
He knew he was in denial about it.
and even the search of his car was like a it was a multi-state mess because he's up there worried
that if they go into that car without the proper I mean what's the word for thank you or they have
probable costs then everything they find even if Samantha's body is in there is thrown out like
it can't can't get in yep but Deb says to Steve down here in Texas we have
a much looser interpretation of this.
And if we've got a bad guy...
Good old Texas.
And we think he's got bad shit going on in his car,
we can go into his car.
Here, we have some of this.
This is from the ABC Doc, Wild Crime,
and it's dash cam footage from the moment
that investigators decided to do a warrantless search
on Keyes's car.
Here it is.
And we opened the trunk
and the ranger started going through things
in the trunk of the car.
There you go.
Hey, gray hoodie with glasses in the pocket and a mask.
We found a gray hoodie that appeared to be the same hoodie that the perpetrator had been wearing in the ATM videos.
And in the pocket of that was this gray piece of cloth that looked like a mask.
We also found the amber shooting glasses.
We got her gun.
Sir, you're under arrest.
After he was put under arrest, he was transported to the Lufkin Police Department.
The Ranger and I do a thorough search of Israel's wallet, and we found Samantha's ATM card.
Samantha's cell phone.
I mean, that's just devastating from a criminal standpoint. That's everything you need. You've got
the victim's cell phone. You've got her license. And you've got his disguise that he was wearing all
the times when he was making the withdrawals with her ATM card. Really strong. Very strong,
but they don't have a body. And they don't know whether she's dead. And they don't even know
whether she's dead or alive. So they need a confession from him. He is taken to Lufkin,
down in Texas, again, small town, these small towns he's operating in.
And they try to talk to him and he says, I'm sorry, I can't help you.
So then they call up to Alaska.
And Jeff Bell and his partner, his then partner on this case, Mickey Doll,
who was this sort of very glamorous, young, beautiful detective who had just joined homicide.
She'd spent like 10 years doing drugs.
As a police officer.
Oh, sorry, phrased that.
Yeah.
Undercover.
on narcotics.
But so they jump on a plane
and they go down there
and they're so wired
and they're so like dying to talk to this guy
and they get in there
and Keyes kind of lights up a bit
because now he's got the attentions
of this beautiful young detective.
And it's, it becomes this sort of
almost like a,
I talk about it in the book
is like a Clarice Starling
Hannibal Lecter kind of dynamic, you know.
But he won't talk to them either
and so they have to extradite him
up to Alaska.
And this is all, like the TikTok is really, it's so pressing because at a place like Lufkin, as would prove true even in Anchorage, they did not have the wherewithal to really contain this guy.
Like this guy was such a predator and so dangerous, such a genius completely self-taught.
This guy did not have formal schooling at all, at all.
And he taught himself how to hunt and kill.
And so they get him back up to Alaska.
and that's when it really starts clicking in
because they know Samantha's dead.
They've gone to the house he shares with his living girlfriend,
a travel nurse, and his 10-year-old daughter.
By all accounts, he is an incredible father.
It's crazy.
And they toss the house and they're looking for Samantha.
They can't find her.
There's a shed on the property.
This is before or after he's confessed.
He hasn't confessed to anything.
He hasn't.
Okay, so they're just doing a search of his property
because he's under arrest.
And there are two sheds on his property.
and they physically remove a shed from the property
and they bring it to the FBI field office
where they leave it.
And then so the fight begins now
as to who's going to lead this interrogation
because they all know this is a big, big case
and this is a career maker.
This is a star maker.
If you have your eyes on becoming like a legal analyst on CNN
or like, you know, they're going to make a movie out of this case
who's going to play you, the egos start coming into play.
and Steve and Jeff
are the most experienced
and they're gaming out
how they're going to talk to this guy.
They really don't have much evidence.
They don't have
that footage of him
he's unrecognizable
in that surveillance
clip of him abducting Samantha.
Sure, a couple of items are in his car
but he says she gave him to me.
I was her dealer. She owed me money.
Prove it. Prove I took her.
You don't have anything.
He was an excellent.
expert at leaving no physical evidence behind. So you have to have very experienced detectives go in there
or agents go in there who can say, like Steve's favorite tactic was to, like, he would say some
people like to go in with like boxes full of paper. It's all blank paper. Oh, we have all this shit
on you. We've got all these photos. And you may as well just give it to us now before we like really,
you know, throw you away forever. And Steve, his whole thing was like less is more, like one photo.
that's that's just the tip of what we've got on you you know it's a whole mind game and the federal
prosecutor on this case comes in and he sees what this case could be and he says to them i'm leading
this investigation now i'm questioning this suspect that's so real i'm in charge he's white
collar megan he's never dealt with violent crime nor do they usually have the investigator be the
prosecutor you can't right because if this goes to trial now the prosecutor's also a witness
And now he's going to testify.
Yeah, it can't happen.
But this is how wild it is up there.
It's so funny, the twin polls of this case are Alaska and Texas, like two states with this psyche, which is like, don't tell me what to do.
I'm going to do it my way.
You know, fine, to a point, not when you've got, like, what will become the most high value, like, suspect in federal custody.
Like, only Jeffrey Epstein exceeds this guy in terms of, like, the three.
threat he posed even behind bars.
Oh. So he does confess. We have video of, so we've only titled it FBI interview. So I don't
know which interrogators these are, but you'll tell us after we watch Sat 53, in which he does
admit to killing Samantha Koenig. Here it is.
He directed us north out of Anchorage towards the Matanuska Valley.
in mountains like how many yards off the short line or feet off right there
and he pointed to a spot on the lake
and what should they look for specifically
ice fishing spot
was it a hole that you cut or was the hole there
no it was a hole I cut
you'll you'll see
get you'll see where the hole was probably i don't imagine there's not very much snow up there
and israel kees said that is where we would find uh samantha coning
she's not wrapped up or anything but there'll still be some blood on ice they got to find
anything else out there oh you'll find her DNA you'll probably you'll find her my DNA on her
the one thing I do need to know is how you killed her why I mean it doesn't really matter how it
happened I'm saying that yes I was responsible and yes I told you where she is so you killed
yes yes okay several things about that clip
We are looking at Jeff Bell, who was one of the league guys, and then that voice in there that says, I need, I need you to tell me why you killed her.
That's Kevin Feldis.
That's the prosecutor who bigfooted this case.
That's not a question you ever ask a suspect like that.
It doesn't matter what you need.
I need to know.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
And I think these little things were tells.
Now, that's he's telling them where he put her remains.
He had her in his shed after he murdered her.
Like steps away from the home in which his daughter was living?
Yes.
And girlfriend was packing for their trip the next day.
They were going on vacation for two weeks.
So she's out in the shed for two weeks.
He left her there.
And when they asked him about it, they said, weren't you worried?
And he said, was I worried?
Like, it's like 10 degrees in Alaska.
No, the body's going to freeze.
It'll be fine.
But they took the wrong shed when they arrested him.
What?
They took another shed that he just used as a shed.
He was a contractor.
They didn't take the right shed.
There were a lot of mistakes on this case, a lot, a lot of big ones.
The confession, which is in American Predator, the text of the entire confession, the FBI's
never made that public.
I had to get that through someone very, very close to the case, but it's in none of the
records that have been made public.
The audio of it doesn't exist.
They've tried to bury it.
It's a confession in two parts.
And it's broken up because, one, it went on so long.
But two, Feldis was in real danger of tipping their hand that they had nothing, that they had no evidence.
And once you lose that power, you can't get it back.
Third, Keyes originally spoke to them on the promise that he would not get the death penalty.
They broke midday, came back to finish the confession, and he said he would only finish the confession.
if they promised to give him the death penalty.
Right, right.
That's so strange.
We don't know what explained the flip, the switch?
I think his mother spoke to me for the book.
She's never spoken before or since.
She said when she saw the footage of Keyes getting arrested in Texas,
she knew that he knew his life was over, that that was it.
Yep.
She knew he was a killer, by the way.
What?
Oh, she knew he was a killer.
How?
From the cat and the animals.
Well, the cat, the animals.
She and her husband kicked him out of the home.
He was about 14.
He was breaking and entering.
He was gun running.
He had this habit of he would break into people's homes and move their furniture around.
Oh.
And then he would go outside and like peep and wait for them to come home and look through the windows and watch how freaked out they were.
You know, he was he was a budding, budding, budding, budding serial killer.
And she told me, she said, oh, the FBI thinks Israel first killed in, you know,
this date. And I know his first kill was much earlier.
Whoa. Okay. Okay.
Great. Could you be more specific?
Why don't you call the FBI with that information?
Well, and he said something like it became apparent to me at a young age that the things I thought
were okay. No one else thought was okay. And like I was different from the others.
And it really does go to like, is a serial killer born? Is it, you know, nature and nurture?
Right. Do you arrive here in the crib as a little psychopath?
and no matter what happens, that's what you're going to be, or do you have to be subjected to
some amount of torture and neglect and so on as an infant in order to get there? Do we know the answer
to that in his case? It's a tantalizing, philosophical, neurological, behavioral question that
hangs over the book. And I spoke to a guy named Roy Hazelwood, who has since died. He was
like the godfather of criminal profiling in the FBI. God. God.
father and I asked him that and he laughed and he said I was waiting for how long it was going to
take for you to ask me everyone wants to know and he said we don't know he said the youngest
incidents of psychopathy I've ever encountered was in a two-year-old oh gosh who was self-harming
in a sort of psychosexual way um but he said we don't know you know keese was one of 10 siblings
they all suffered abuse and neglect at the hands of the parents all of them oh boy only one turned
out like this. So I don't know. Yeah, I don't know either. I wish we did. Okay, so let's keep going.
So he gives that confession about, do we know how many days he had Samantha before he killed her?
Oh, he only had her for hours. How did he get the paper that was post the abduction in the photo?
I think he had saved it. He had saved it and how he made her look alive. So she was dead in the photo and he made her look alive.
Jeff was right. She was dead in that photo. Oh my gosh. So he took.
he was an avid outdoorsman, also an ultra-marathoner who was hunting in national parks and the like.
But he took fishing wire and sewed her eyes open.
Oh my gosh.
And then put makeup on her.
He took his girlfriend's makeup.
This is a very sick person.
And that was the proof of life photo.
Okay.
So at what point did the cops start to glean there's more than one?
Oh, once he starts talking about Samantha, they know.
The detail, the affect, the flat, matter-of-fact way of communicating this, we're negotiating
now.
We're demanding the death penalty.
We're demanding it's off the table, on the table.
This is someone who's very interested in power and control, and it's not the first time
he's done it.
And in fact, Jeff told me that when he and Mickey Doll first walked into that police station
and Lufkin into that interrogation room,
he said the hair's on the back of his neck stood up
before they even said a word to him.
They knew.
They knew.
I think that's right.
I do think when you're in the presence of true evil,
you know it's a different energy.
It's just a vibe shift, as the kids say,
but it's real.
I mean, you'd like to believe that.
You know, you'd like to know that when you're around somebody
who's truly evil, you'd have that response with the hair, you know?
Well, now that totally tracked to me
because he's in custody.
They know he took Samantha.
Jeff knows she's dead in his bones. He knows it. But he was very, very, very good at wearing a mask in real life. I mean, the irony is that where he and his girlfriend lived, it's in a suburb called Turnigan in Anchorage. And it is a neighborhood heavily populated with judges, federal prosecutors, lawyers. And he was the contractor on all of their homes. And so many of the people they interviewed after.
after they apprehended him, we're like, he had the keys to my house.
And when we were away, we'd be like, going and do all the renovations.
We trusted him.
Oh, my gosh.
Can you imagine, like finding out that a serial killer had been in your house regularly
working on your kitchen?
So the next murders that he confessed to, right, are really the only other murders that he owned,
correct, that the husband and wife?
He fully owned, yeah.
Across the country.
In Vermont.
So tell us about that couple.
this is so wild and it's also interesting how they got this confession because they know he's a serial now
they know it so they're like okay you want the death penalty you got to give us something else we can't go
to the feds and say you're getting it for one you have to give us more and he says okay he says
I'll give you two bodies and a name and he says I need you to get a map and I need you to pull it up
for me so now we're in Vermont and he begins with
with where he dug up his kill kit.
So he's got these kill kits buried all over the country.
And they're still out there.
There are five-gallon Home Depot buckets that he filled with cash.
He was a bank robber, only used cash when he was committing crimes, zip ties, guns,
ammo, and draino to accelerate human decomposition.
Oh, my.
So then what he would do is he would start walking around and looking for,
people to take.
That's what he called it, taking people.
And he was out this night
in Vermont. He was on a family
trip. Was this after? No, it must
been before. It had to be before, because she was
his last. She's his last known victim,
which is very important.
Definitely not his last one.
So
he
it's a rainy night. This is
his own self-report. He's staying in like
a holiday inn or something. He goes out
and he's looking for someone to take
and he comes upon this apartment complex
and this car is pulling in this little like VW bug
and he likes this.
And this guy gets out and puts, it's raining
and he puts his newspaper over his head
and he's trying to rush into his apartment complex
and Keyes is right behind him unbeknownst to the guy.
And the way Keyes described it,
his arm went like this behind the guy, like that.
Like he just missed him.
He was just about to take him.
Like reaching forward and missing.
and he said that guy has no idea
because if he had been like one second slower
he would have gotten it that night
he would have been the one
I mean he had no victim profile
he would take anybody
and when I say take
he would abduct rape, torture and murder
and so he was bisexual
he was always like
like they call it practicing
the parlances like on sex workers
you know
anyway so he goes
he goes back to his hotel
waits for the rain stop
then it's like midnight he goes back out his own self-report he comes upon this house it's a suburban
it's like a flat single story he sees in the um yard there is no indication of uh dogs or kids
he says i won't go near kids since having my daughter now now you sort of see where he's beginning
to realize he's going to be in the pantheon you know he says he doesn't want anybody to know he
exists but he does this is the kind of thing the fictional character dexter
would say like I'm a serial killer with a code you know yep I don't touch kids give me a gold star
he did touch kids um so he decides he's going to cut the phone line to see if an alarm goes off
which it does not um he smashes his way in as a contractor he's pretty confident he knows the
layout uh there is an there's an older couple living there named bill and lorraine courier
they are older they are overweight they are sickly they have medication they have a bird in
house and this was one of the more chilling details that law enforcement told me when he goes in
they had this huge bird i forget whether it was a power or something but the bird cage which was like
six feet had the had the cover over it so it could sleep at night so it's almost like a shroud of death
is already there and he said he from breaking the window pane on the back door to gain access to
the house and tying the two of them up like hog tied on the bed six seconds.
And the FBI did it
and they figured out he did it
in six seconds. He did it. He took them
from the house. Took them
from the house in their car. Can I just ask you because
I saw how they
look and yes, tracks exactly with what you said and they look to me
helpless. Yeah. Like even, you know,
in their nice, you know, picture predating
this terrible event, they looked completely
helpless, completely harmless. So
he still got a Jones from that.
Like he got a Jones from
capturing and killing people who posed
absolutely no threat or conquest to him?
I think in his mind it was a conquest because it was a strange house.
He didn't know how many people would be in.
He could guess it would be two, probably a married couple.
But he's breaking into their house in the middle of the night as a stranger and he's
not just going to kill them in their home.
He's going to abduct them and he's going to move them to a second location that he
had staked out like a day prior.
And nobody saw any of it?
Nobody saw a thing.
Dead of night.
We don't know if they were screaming.
I mean, he probably had them.
He had them gagged.
Okay.
So he gets them in the car.
He moves them to some dilapidated looking like.
Degerted farmhouse.
Yeah.
Falling apart.
And then he kills them both.
The husband tried to fight for his wife.
He did.
He separated them both.
He put the husband in the basement, tied up.
And then he brought the wife to the second floor.
and he raped her up there.
His older woman.
Older woman.
He had an issue.
He had a lot of rage at his mother, a lot of rage.
And this goes into his taking of people in pairs and mothers and children.
And then he brought Lorraine.
No, no, no.
Then he hears from upstairs.
Bill Currier in the basement
is making a lot of noise.
He's a big guy.
He's a former army veteran.
He's an army veteran.
And he's trying to break free.
And he's like shouting for his wife
and leave my wife alone and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Keys goes down there and he shoots him dead.
Shoots him dead.
And this angers him because that was not in the plan.
He wanted to strangle Bill.
He wanted it to be personal.
He wanted it to be that violent.
And it takes a long time to strangle somebody to death.
It's not like in the movies.
takes a long time. It takes a lot of force. So then he's infuriated, but Lorraine has begun to run.
She's gotten out of the house and she's running towards the highway against like three or four in the
morning. It's desolate out there. And he catches her. He catches her and he brings her down to the
basement where he shows her, her husband, and then he strangles her to death. Oh, that's sick.
And then he leaves them in the basement. He leaves the bodies in the basement. He's running out of time.
the sun is coming up. Normally what he would do would be to move the bodies across state lines
to yet. So you make it multi-state. You make it very difficult to track. But he's got to go.
And he figures this house is a tear down. So anybody who buys this property, it's going to be a
developer. They're going to tear down the house. And the animals will get to the bodies before any of
this even happens. He was right. He was right. Well, I don't know about the animals, but
They show that the house gets torn down.
It gets dumped in a landfill.
No one's walked through and seen two corpses or skeletons.
Nope.
They went to the landfill, the police, and searched it,
trying to find any remnants, didn't.
So their remains have never been found.
They're not even classified as murdered.
They're classified as missing.
Even after a confession?
Speaking of which, let's play some of it.
Here is Keyes admitting to killing Bill and Lorraine Currier.
Sot 54.
There was a shovel in the basement and I hit him with that a couple times.
I didn't have all aimed up and grabbed the 10-22.
He saw the gun and he started to say something.
Then it just pissed me off and I just started telling him triggered.
I pulled as fast as I could until the gun.
magazine was empty.
After he killed Bill, he tells us that he
rapes Lorraine Courier.
He rapes her multiple times.
And he said he took Lorraine downstairs and Bill's obviously deceased on the floor.
He describes killing her and then using contractor bags to
who put their bodies in in the basement of that house.
The bodies were completely covered
and they were underneath a lot of debris
that piled on top of them, like wood and trash.
I mean, just like the callousness is shocking.
Not that you expect a killer to, like, respectfully dispose
of the remains, but in garbage bags underneath
a bunch of garbage left for the animals.
Just like zero humanity in him.
Nothing.
Nothing.
And, you know, with recovering Samantha's remains, you know, he dismembered her.
And he just put the limbs and the head in the water.
And I spoke to the lead on the dive team who led that recovery.
Oh, God.
And the two divers who recovered Samantha's remains.
And the lead diver, the lead, Bobby Chacon, you know, he's retired.
tired now. He is PTSD and he has a therapy dog. And he talks about this case because it's instructive
for members of law enforcement. They should know about it. But that recovery, he said, was among the
most brutal. And they see a lot of things no one should ever see. And in fact, what they do,
these tough, tough, tough guys. Bobby sent me these drawings they did. And especially after recovering
children, the divers will often, their beautiful drawings will draw images of themselves
and they have all their dive gear on and their helmets on, but they have angel wings on
and they're always holding the victim intact, bringing them up. But while they're always bringing
them out of water, it's also sort of an ascension into a heavenly place of rest, you know.
And that's how they manage it. Special, special people who do this work.
you think about them right it's like when you're doing your job and you have a bad day and I think
oh this is tough oh my gosh then you remember how tough actual hardworking people with really
difficult jobs have to spend their days I think about it all the time with child sexual abuse material
like there are and that really just change people it changes them men in particular who have to
spend their days chasing the most vile among us having to look and they have to look at the images
just because they've got to go after.
They've got to make a case against these people.
And I've heard so many on different podcasts and so on,
just talking about what it does to you.
Like it deadens your soul.
Most don't last that long.
This is just how can you spend your day doing that?
No, I know.
Oh.
To expose that level of darkness and things that most people would never even think up.
Yeah.
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So Keyes admits to this double murder of Bill and Lorraine.
They know he killed Samantha.
But then a weird thing happens in the interrogation where they want him to say more.
But he's suddenly coy.
And now he doesn't want to like give it up.
And there's a moment in the investigation.
This is from July of 2012.
where he kind of objects to giving them any more.
And it's sort of odd.
Please explain this to me.
It's SOT 60.
I just think at this point,
I'm kind of feeling like I'm in a position
where I'm giving you a certain amount of information.
None of it has, or I shouldn't say none of it.
About half of what I thought you had an understanding on, you know, from the very beginning, hasn't worked out in my favor.
Granted, you know, some things haven't worked out in your favor, but I just think at this point, I just don't see what incentive I have to tell you anything else.
What does he mean it hasn't worked out in my favor?
He wanted the death penalty, and he wanted it really fast.
Well, how long was the series of interviews?
So they started March, April, and they went till about, he really began shutting down, I'm going to say, right around there.
July, August.
He tried to kill himself in prison, and it wasn't successful.
And so there's so much secrecy surrounding this case
And I have theories as to why
It's not just about a federal prosecutor
Who is too big for his britches
It's not that
But Jeff Bell
He would go over every day to the prison
The jail rather to see
They didn't have anything
remotely secure enough for a guy like this
He never should have been up there
He should have been in a super max
Yeah
He went over there every day
To see if Israel wanted to talk every day
And he went
So Israel almost escaped from court, very Ted Bundy-like. Remember when Ted Bundy?
Yes.
Okay. This footage has been scrubbed from the internet. Fox had the footage from inside the courtroom.
Keys shackled, ankles, wrists. Samantha's father is in the courtroom. Everyone's in the courtroom.
Keys suddenly, in the middle of the hearing, leaps up out of his chair. He's out of his shackles.
and he's jumping like what do you call those rows i think of them as pews from church but in a
courthouse he's jumping from like benches top to top to top to top before like he's tased
he's jumped and he's tased he almost got away um he was tased he seemed to very much enjoy the tasing
um but how did he do it how did he do it well he took he would get a little baggy lunch every day
before going over to court and he took the cellophane that wrapped the sandwich
and he fashioned little keys out of that thing.
And he used it to, oh, yes, yes.
And so Jeff would go over there
and he would be like, stop giving this guy anything.
Take away his shoelaces.
Why does he have subscriptions to magazines like outside adventurer?
What's going on in here?
They could never get an answer.
They could never get an answer.
He was just so clever.
He fooled everybody.
That's an advantage, right?
When you're a killer who's very smart
and you're smarter than your jailers.
maybe than the cops, some of them.
Yeah.
So notwithstanding his lamentation that he wasn't getting put to death fast enough, he hadn't
had a trial or anything, it was, I don't know how he thought the system worked.
They were figuring out that he was responsible for more than just those three murders.
Absolutely.
Go ahead.
The other thing that I'm remembering now that was stalling him up, this is like the lawyer
and you will appreciate.
So his defender, his public defender,
is this guy named Rich Kirtner,
who is a great lawyer,
great lawyer.
He's also very anti-death penalty.
So there's a man who enters this story
named Rich Kirtner.
What's his story?
So he's assigned to Kee's the moment Kee's is arrested.
He is Kee's public defender.
Okay, Keyes can't afford a lawyer.
So he says,
because all of his cash is tied up in kill kits
all over the United States, you know?
So anyway, Rich takes this case.
And Rich is way into this case.
And I talked to Rich at his office in Anchorage, and he was like, I really liked Israel.
Oh, my gosh.
I know.
Rich, you got to get out more.
Seriously.
He's like, I liked him.
But he would not, the minute he said, I want the death penalty.
Rich was like, well, I'm not arguing for that because I'm anti-death penalty and I won't do it.
And so now he's got a court-appointed lawyer that he can't get out from under who won't advocate
for what he wants.
and the FBI is trying to get get him what he wants,
but it's not moving that quickly,
and they can't get any traction anywhere.
Okay, but they do figure out it's more than these three.
Oh, yeah.
So how did they do that?
They asked him.
They said, how many people did you kill?
They just asked him, and he said, well, less than 12.
And Steve Payne always thought that was a weird number.
Yeah.
Because most people go by fives and tens, right?
Like, you round up to a five or a ten.
What does that even mean?
Like, less than 12.
That's a great point, right?
Like, what does that mean?
But Steve took it to mean 12, like 11 or 12.
And, but I talk to people on the case who think it was way more than that.
And I definitely think it was way more than that.
And do we know who they are?
Like, you mentioned something in Florida.
We know some of them.
We know some of them.
There are some cold cases.
as I lay out in the book that I definitely believe are the work of Keyes. Absolutely.
A 12-year-old Paralympian in Colville, Washington, where Keyes lived. Very, very small town went
missing when Keyes was a very young man. He was like 14 and this girl was 12? Maybe 19. Her body
was later found with her feet, her prosthetic feet were far away from her remains. But she,
She was seen. She knew him. She knew him. She knew him.
So it's not true that he didn't kill children, to your point.
Absolutely. And there was another 12-year-old girl who was murdered with her mother.
And I think that was Keyes as well, in Colville as well.
There's a man named Jimmy Tidwell who went missing in Texas after Samantha was taken while Keyes was still on the loose.
I go into all of the evidence as to Jeff Bell.
Well, knows it's Jimmy, too. He won't say it publicly, but we talked about it. After the book came out, after American Predator came out, I got an email from a woman who said, your book came to me through a circuitous route. I am Jimmy Tidwell's niece. We have never been able to get an answer from either local law enforcement or the FBI, but now we know what happened to him. So thank you. Wow. There is a very famous case I'm obsessed with in Florida called the Boka murders.
there was a man in Boca Raton who was targeting women at the mall,
upscale luxury mall, broad daylight.
First victim, she is going to her vehicle with her toddler, son, and she's loading up
the back of the car.
Honestly, Megan, after writing this book, I don't move through the world the same way at all.
Like, I will never, my head is on a swivel in like a garage.
He comes up to her and he's got to.
gun and he's like get in the back of the car get your kid in the back of the car takes the car
starts driving them all over never never do it by the way to the listening audience never let them
take you to a second location and that would qualify as a second location like from the parking lot
into your car to go someplace run run run run you have much better chance of surviving he's probably
not going to shoot you he's probably not the difficult victims they just kind of let him go but i'd rather
somebody take a shot at me while i'm serpentining away than have me in the car you know though what the
thing is, and he understood the psychology of this. If you are, like the home invasion with the
couriers, you know, when you're awoken, startled in the middle of the night, and it takes you
a minute to be like, am I awake? Yes. You know, like, he's capitalizing on those five seconds of,
like, orienting yourself. Yeah. And so then who's going to believe a stranger's in your house on top,
you know? I know. So he's, this woman with her little child. Don't comply. He's got his gun in her back.
He's like, get in the car. It's like, she probably couldn't even take that minute.
you know? Oh, I don't judge her one day. Oh, I know you're not.
But for the people listening, don't comply.
You're absolutely right. You're absolutely right. And you do it, especially if you have a child with you, you're like, I'll do anything to protect my child. That thing is to run away. That's what that thing is.
Yeah. Yeah. So they get in the car and he starts driving out and all around Boca Raton and she is terrified and her child begins to cry and she's worried that the crying is going to just infuriate him further. And she just gets.
keeps talking to him. She just keeps talking. Samantha tried this too. It was really smart.
Humanize yourself. You don't want to be doing this, right? Like, we can end this. Like, you know,
he does let them go. He lets them go. He drives them back and he lets them go. The other victims
weren't so lucky. Another mother and daughter were found in that mall, tied up in their car,
zip ties. There was a woman who was also, the witnesses saw this happen. This is how she was
discovered. She was driving a Jeep, a very well-to-do woman, married, middle-aged, and the Jeep
just starts going just erratically. It's like slowing down, but it's going erratically. And then
the driver's side door opens and she falls out. So that means there's someone in the passenger
side who pushed her out of the car. So when the police and FBI arrived at the
seen at the mall with the woman and
her eight-year-old daughter who were tied up
and murdered, they were like
this is as unique as a fingerprint, this
MO, and it matches keys.
Now, Jane Doe, the woman who survived with her
toddler, spoke to Dateline.
She has never given her real
identity. We have a little bit of that
and set 55. Let's watch.
I put my son in first. I strapped
him in his car seat. He's in back.
Yeah, in the back. Then
I go to the back of the truck
and I put the stroller in, shut
gate and start walking to the front.
Mama, mama.
And I could tell if he's worried or scared.
That's when I look in to see if he's okay.
And there's a guy sitting there.
A guy in a floppy hat wrap around shades sitting in her SUV right next to her two-year-old.
That moment, how terrifying is that?
I was in shock at that moment.
And I just stood there and the guy said, get in the car.
And I was frozen.
and when he said get in the car
for the second time
that's when I noticed the gun
The gun is pointed at her son
I see him pull out a pair handcuffs
He handcuffs my wrists behind my back
and he pulls out a bag of zip ties
And he'll zip ties my ankles together
And then zip ties my neck to the headrest
And he takes out a pair of darkened sunglasses
With duct tape, I'm guessing
And puts them on my eyes
so now I'm blindfolded.
Speak to me of terror.
I started losing it and I started choking, choking myself because the zip tight was so tight,
couldn't breathe and gagging and crying and it was just hysterical.
Zip tied her neck to the headrest?
That is disconcerting.
I mean, I can't imagine being able to function with anything like your full brain power
when you're in that position.
No, and actually, I,
I had that detail wrong. He was in the car. He got in the car before she knew. And her kid was crying
and going mommy, mommy. But that was that was Keyes' M.O. And the sketch that she worked up,
they showed a little bit of the police sketch that she worked up of her abductor, her and her child's
abductor. It's a dead ringer for Israel Keys. It's amazing he let her go. Why would he show
empathy in that case and none other? It's such a great question. I don't know. I don't.
don't know what it was. I don't know if it was the crying child. I don't know if it somehow
sparked something in him about his own daughter. But it makes no sense because a couple of
months later, another woman with her eight-year-old daughter, he murders. So it doesn't make any sense.
This is after he has his own daughter or no? Yeah. Is she around his biological daughter?
She is. What's her story? She was raised by her mother.
on a reservation way up in Nia Bay in Washington State. It's a very, very remote place. And Keyes lived there
for quite some time. It's real poverty up there. It's real, real poverty. People know who she is
and she just lives her own life. You know, she's never sought publicity or anything. I remember,
I reached out to her mom right before the book came out and I said, you should know,
know this it's coming out like you might want to remove photos you've got of her on your social
media you know it'll be easy for people to find her so she's probably mid 20s now yeah my gosh
he had a stepson by the way who killed himself that's been omitted completely from the FBI narrative
killed himself after keys was caught so what what happens because now they're starting to get
what they think is a is a toll you know a number and then it all comes to a
an end one day. It all comes to an end one day. Jeff Bell is getting ready to barge into a house
and make some arrests and he gets a phone call. It's very early in the morning that Israel Keyes
has successfully committed suicide in his cell. And he has left in blood drawings of 11 skulls
with the words
we are one
what the FBI
did not make public
was that he also wrote
on the wall of his cell
and I went there
I went to the jail
and I went to the cell
and I saw exactly where it was
and this was a plexiglass cell
so if you want to tell anybody
that he did it in secret
and nobody would ever have known
it's impossible
so they knew he was killing himself
yes
there was video of blood
pulling out from under his door
for hours
he used
Disposible. Yeah, the razor blade from his razor.
Well, you know, the warden of the jail told me that he put a sign on Keyes's door that said,
do not give this prisoner a razor blade. Wow. And they didn't follow that? It's Keystone cops. How did
they ever get past that? How did they ever get past that? Dick tat. I don't know. But I got,
wow. After the book came out, I spoke to somebody who was impacted. Wait, wait. You were going to say
something that was on the wall. Oh, on the wall. He's in his own blood. He wrote,
Belize, the nation.
Why?
Well, I asked his mom about that, and she said he went to Belize on vacation, and he was really
struck by the poverty in Belize, and it really, it made him hate America even more
and hate the federal government even more.
And, you know, he had planned to, he had in his planning, you know, at one point this case
in the middle of it, it was reclassified.
It went from serial murder to.
domestic terrorism, and the FBI's never said why. Wow. Well, does that reclass do anything for the FBI's
ability to hide the case? I think they're doing exactly what they want to do. You know, there's like
50,000 pages. Why would they get to the point where they don't want to disclose it just because they
look bad? Because if the numbers climb too high, they look like they're due or no nothings?
I don't know, because I think they're, as discussed, like with just a few of those, there are others in the
book, there are plenty of cases I believe could easily be ascribed to him. You know,
you could say we could close this out with a fair degree of certainty, right? Give surviving family
members some peace of mind. Yeah. He was allowed to join as a volunteer, a volunteer recruit
the United States Army despite not existing on paper. He was raised off the grid by these cultists
who belonged to a church, a white supremacist church where they were friends with,
Keyes was very good friends with Chevy and Shane Kehoe, who grew up to be on the FBI's
10 Most Wanted list of domestic terrorists, potential ties to Timothy McVeigh, Oklahoma City
bombing.
Keyes mentions McVeigh in his interrogations with the FBI, and he says a lot of people I know
regard that guy as a hero.
Wow.
He was a super soldier in the Army, his special forces training.
I asked for his Army records.
I got like three pages.
And one of those, two of those pages, the interesting things,
One is his father died.
They have no idea how or what happened to the body.
Oh, boy.
And they were interrogating the discovery of a skull, a human skull,
on the base where Kese had trained for quite some time.
Well, it's no accident.
He drew skulls with his own blood as his final thing here on Earth.
And he drew 11, which is less than 12.
And now we only know officially.
of three. So yeah, that's the big mystery. Who are the other nine? We just don't know yet.
I mean, we have suspicions, but we don't know, and we're probably never going to know,
given that you're saying the FBI is kind of clammed up on it. What did his mom say after the fact,
after all this was done? So his mother is a member of a cult called the Church of Wells. Last I heard
in Texas. And she said to me, these interviews were really difficult because there was a lot of
proselytizing to get to the point. Oh boy. I must have love that. It was hard. But she said one day
they were driving somewhere in his Jeep and she knew something was wrong with him. And she said,
he turned to her and said, you know, mom, not everyone wants to live the way you do. Not all of us
want to live the way you do. And then she said, she knew her son was guilty of these things.
Like when the FBI showed up at her door and they were like, we have your son.
arrested in connection with the disappearance of this young girl,
she was like, yeah, that sounds about right.
And Jeff Bell saw Heidi at the courthouse,
and he said she looked like someone out of Little House on the prairie,
like the long dress and like the handmade thing
and like the long braid.
And he went up to her and he said,
please, can you help us?
Your son won't talk.
There's a missing girl.
They didn't know if she was dead yet.
I mean, they knew.
And she said to Jeff,
if the Lord wants that girl to be found,
that girl will be found and turned her back and walked away.
Okay.
this is what we're dealing with. This is what we're dealing with. So as you look back in the case now,
it's been a couple of years since you wrote the book, like where does he fall in the pantheon
of American serial killers? Well, you know, the FBI said they'd never seen one like him before.
And I think that's why his case remains so little known. They know more than they're telling,
but not nearly as much as I think we think they do.
they have something called the Evil Minds Research Museum.
The FBI does.
What?
Yeah, I tried to get in there.
They really wouldn't let me in.
They let David Fincher in for Mind Hunter, but they wouldn't let me in.
Who is this pest who keeps subpoenaing us?
Knock, knock, knock.
But there they have the brains of serial killers.
They have artifacts.
They have a lot of keys of stuff, like his journals, his own self-reports.
they have also, when they were going to let me,
and they were like, don't publicize this, but screw them.
They have like a big stuffed Hannibal Lecter in like a prison cell,
like, you know, in the middle of the movie?
Like for fun?
When the senator comes in, yeah, that's like that's their idea of kicks.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah.
This is like at where?
Quantico adjacent.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, it's official.
It's an unmarked building, but it's a real thing.
So like agents are supposed to go there to learn?
Or like the academics, I guess, at Quantico.
or are in there trying to figure out the origins of psychopathy to this degree?
Well, I'm glad they're studying it.
I mean, it sounds like to me they'd be better off reading your book.
Yeah, they should give it a shot.
Yeah, that's helpful.
Well, I can't believe I didn't know.
I mean, I am obsessed with true crime.
I feel like I listen to all of them.
And I've never heard his name before.
And my dear friend wrote the book on him.
So it's like, I mean, I was going to say thrilled to know, but that's not the right word.
I'm fascinated because they're all so different.
And this guy's so bizarre.
where there's not an M.O. There's not like a typical victim. There's not a geographic tie.
Just so bizarre. It doesn't make me, it's somewhat unsettling, right? Because you want to believe there'll
always be that, and that'll make them easier to catch. But the thing is, is like the more we learn from
this one, you know, Keyes said, he was asked, who is your favorite serial killer? They thought they
would get something, right? And he said, it's the one who hasn't been caught. Because he knew that
there was someone better at being undetected right behind him. And I'll tell you this,
Megan, when the Idaho College murder story broke, and before we knew who did it, I was convinced
that whoever did it had studied the case of Israel Keys. Definitely could be. I mean,
he was a criminologist. He was a criminologist. He was, it was like, he had Washington State
connections, but he crossed state lines to do it. A lot of them do. Washington State is another one.
It is.
So is Iowa.
So is Long Island.
Yes.
I know.
As much as you think it would be like New York or Chicago or Baltimore, they have different kinds of murders, but it's not really serial killer central.
They're much more dispersed than that.
Yeah, the serial killer thing, although I will say just a note of comfort for the audience since it's the holidays.
C.C. Moore, the great genetic genealogist woman who catches everybody speaking.
of Brian Colberger. She told me, she doesn't believe you can have a serial killer in 2025 America.
She's like, we've gotten too good. The touch DNA, that they, like, it's no longer,
they don't need a fingerprint. They don't need blood or semen or bodily fluids. It's like,
touch DNA. Look how Colberger kind of got caught. Right. Touch DNA on the knife sheath,
which, yes, then he left behind. But like, that touch DNA, 10, 15, 20 years.
years ago would have been meaningless. They wouldn't have been able to find that. Right. That would
have been nothing. If it wasn't like a bodily fluid that you could see in like bag, forget it.
Now they know to look for it. And that touch DNA, they didn't have a hit. They had to be the genetic
genealogy. They went. They got like some hit to somebody, some distant relative of Colberger,
which they then traced back to the dad of Colberger. And then they start using her skills to
figure out who's around this dad, who could be potentially in Idaho on this night. And then they quickly
got to Brian. But anyway, she doesn't think that you can have a serial killer in 2025 America,
which makes me feel better. The only, I would say my caveat to that would be, if you look at the
Gilgo Beach killer, who was active for many, many, many, many years, it's the victim. It's just
as important, right? He was, he was targeting sex workers, and they don't stay on sex worker cases
for very long. It's terrible. You know? So I guess if you're, if you're a predator and you know
your prey. That would be my one thing where I'd maybe push back on that. Yeah, you're going to,
like, the victims no one cares about. Exactly. That society regards this kind of disposable.
Well, I was trying to leave it on an up note, but I don't think we're going to be able to now.
Well, the book is fun to read. And there's, oh, and they're great, I didn't see the 11 skulls,
but I hear it's, it's great. The Key's case is fascinating. I was amazed you found the date line
footage because I was trying to find it while doing the book, and I couldn't find the footage.
Yeah, I don't, my crack team found that.
So good.
It was, I mean, the whole case is dark, but fascinating.
You know, it's like sometimes the serial killer stuff is too much for me.
Like, I can't take any torture stories.
But we think we did a good job today of skimming over some of the more disturbing parts of this guy.
Because you can go deep and you can go way darker on him, even than we did.
Well, and that's our silver lining.
I like it.
You could have gone worse.
It could have been worse.
We say nothing says.
It's like true crime.
So, look, I think the reason so many people are drawn to true crime is because it takes
your mind off of your own problems.
You cannot be thinking about whatever thing is stressing you when you are thinking about
something like this.
There's something soothing about solving it, you know, like justice.
I think there's a good contingent of us so that really feels validated when justice
comes to bad guys.
It makes you believe again in the world, you know, like people aren't all going to get away
with it.
Mother Fers.
and that will conclude the things of positive things I have to say, the list.
Love you.
I love you.
Oh, happy holidays.
Merry Christmas.
Happy New Year.
All of it, lady.
Great to see you.
Thanks for listening to the Megan Kelly Show.
No BS, no agenda, and no fear.
