The Misery Machine - The Crimes of Robert Ben Rhodes
Episode Date: November 10, 2025Robert Ben Rhodes was a man who lived on the road... a trucker who seemed like just another face behind the wheel. But hidden behind that calm exterior was a darkness few could imagine. His truck wasn...’t just a vehicle; it was a prison. A place where people’s lives ended in terror.Rhodes’ crimes stretched across years and state lines, leaving behind a trail of heartbreak and unanswered questions. Behind every headline and mugshot were real people — with families, dreams, and lives stolen far too soon.Support Our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/themiserymachinePayPal: https://www.paypal.me/themiserymachineJoin Our Facebook Group: https://t.co/DeSZIIMgXs?amp=1Instagram: miserymachinepodcastTwitter: misery_podcastDiscord: https://discord.gg/kCCzjZM#themiserymachine #podcast #truecrimeSource Materials:https://static.wikia.nocookie.net/unidentified/images/9/94/GreatBasinMurdersNewspaperClipping.jpeg/revision/latest?cb=20250424173559 https://www.newspapers.com/article/st-louis-post-dispatch-illinois-asks-fo/114749885https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Ben_Rhoades#cite_note-GQ2012-2https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/9175140/Torture-chamber-trucker-sentence-to-life-in-prison.htmlhttps://www.newspapers.com/article/st-louis-post-dispatch-sex-torture-phot/114750145https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Keqy_y4hBdE&t=1shttps://www.seattlepi.com/seattlenews/article/inmate-charged-in-90-slaying-of-seattle-woman-1167349.phphttps://www.deseret.com/2012/3/29/20500547/serial-killer-with-utah-ties-gets-2-more-life-sentences-in-texas/ https://www.gq.com/story/truck-stop-killer-gq-november-2012https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8220991/patricia_candace-zyskowskihttps://unidentified-awareness.fandom.com/wiki/Candy_Walshhttps://www.deseret.com/2012/3/29/20500547/serial-killer-with-utah-ties-gets-2-more-life-sentences-in-texashttps://www.cbc.ca/news/world/serial-killer-texas-trucker-kept-dungeon-in-cab-1.1266589#:~:text=Rhoades%2C%20a%20Houston%20trucker%20who,IDOC%2FAssociated%20Press)https://maamodt.asp.radford.edu/psyc%20405/serial%20killers/Rhodes%2C%20Robert%20Ben%20_spring%202007_.pdfdiscover.hubpages.com/politics/darknss-beneath-the-charm-unraveling-the-maine-bed-and-breakfast-murdershttps://facts.net/history/people/38-facts-about-robert-ben-rhoades/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanessa_Veselkahttps://www.facebook.com/groups/1996529647535547/posts/2230175777504265https://abcnews.go.com/US/texas-trucker-traveling-torture-chamber-admits-murders/story?id=16037743https://longreads.com/2012/10/25/the-truck-stop-killerhttps://www.findagrave.com/memorial/13424313/regina_kay-waltershttps://law.justia.com/cases/illinois/court-of-appeals-fifth-appellate-district/2001/5980821.htmlhttps://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8221018/douglas_scott-zyskowskihttps://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/truck-driver-who-killed-hitchhikers-gets-life-sentences-plea-deal-flna601950https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/national-international/natl-serial-killer-who-targeted-female-hitchhikers-gets-life-sentences/1943078https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/101919190/ricky_lee-joneshttps://www.facebook.com/InvestigationDiscovery/posts/after-debra-davis-appeared-on-evil-lives-here-kentucky-state-troopers-reached-ou/10156453112979902https://www.investigationdiscovery.com/tv-shows/evil-lives-here-after-the-evil/full-episodes/after-the-evil-deadly-fetish?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_content=sf205405427&utm_campaign=investigationdiscovery&sf205405427=1&fbclid=IwY2xjawNwmjFleHRuA2FlbQIxMQBicmlkETFJUm1lTlgwazZIYWQzbm00AR43K_xGxbF28zYnrTb2ALIbE3Gn_mePtxGhobXYtYzEnGmyqorKR3zY-GivSA_aem_2L3aEsHqPvrLEyajnT22sA
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Patricia Candice Walsh was born on December 18th, 1966 in Seattle, Washington.
Not much is known about her childhood or early upbringing.
What we do know, however, is that Patricia was a devout Christian who believed deeply in spreading love for the Word of God.
She was a member of everyday church, an evangelical congregation in Seattle that has since closed.
Patricia's brother, Adam Walsh, remembered her as outgoing and free-spirited,
the kind of person who could sit with anyone and share the gospel without expecting anything in return.
Patricia later married Douglas Ziskowski, a fellow church member who shared her faith in ideals.
The couple loved to travel and decided to hitchhike across the country to attend a religious workshop in Georgia.
In November of 1989, they left Seattle together.
Patricia's brother Adam later recalled that he last heard from her in December of 1989 during a phone call in which Patricia described their plan,
hitchhike across the country. According to Adam, Patricia said they were hitchhiking as an act of faith.
A friend of Patricia's from Georgia later stated that the couple felt called to the west to do the
Lord's work. But tragically, on that path of faith, they encountered one of the darkest souls
imaginable. That same friend last saw Patricia and Douglas in January of 1990 when she dropped them off
at Six Flags in Atlanta, Georgia. Shortly afterward, the minister from every single,
Day Church received a phone call from the couple in which they mentioned being in El Paso, Texas,
and planned to head west towards Arizona. After that, no one ever heard from Patricia
or Douglas ever again. Investigators later concluded that they had accepted a ride near El Paso
from serial killer Robert Ben Rhodes, a long-haul truck driver who preyed on travelers and hitchhikers.
Douglas was murdered soon after the couple boarded the truck. His body was discovered on January 21,
1990, dumped on the side of Interstate 10 West in Sutton County, Texas, midway between San Antonio
and El Paso. With her husband gone, Patricia was kept alive and held captive for nearly a week.
During this time, she was brutally essayed and tortured by Robert.
After not hearing from the couple for some time, Douglas' parents grew increasingly concerned.
They sat out on the road to search for their son, but their efforts turned up nothing.
Eventually, they filed a missing person's report. However, even though,
Douglas' body was discovered in January of 1990, it remained unidentified until 1992.
Going to official reports, this long delay occurred because some of the information from Douglas'
missing persons report was compromised during entry into the police computer system.
As for Patricia, her remains were discovered on October 26, 1990 by a group of deer hunters
in a remote mountainous area near Interstate 15. The location was described as an isolated ridge
covered with juniper trees, far from any signs of civilization.
According to the official report, Patricia had been shot four times in the head and neck with a 22-caliber
rifle. Evidence that the scene suggested that she was murdered there and that her body appeared
to have been deliberately positioned with her braided hair draped over her shoulder.
When investigators found her, there were no clothes, jewelry, or personal belongings nearby.
With nothing to identify her, Patricia became.
became known only as Jane Doe One. For over a decade, her identity remained a mystery. During that time,
her murder was believed to be connected to a string of unsolved killings known as the Great Basin Murders,
a series of at least nine women murdered between 1983 and 1997 across Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, and Idaho.
There were some similarities among all of these murders, as some of the victim's bodies were dumped
near interstate highways that cut across the Great Basin region.
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Jen.
But 13 years.
years after Patricia's tragic murder, in May of 2003, forensic anthropologist Dr. Walter
Berkby from the University of Arizona finally solved the mystery of Jane Doe 1.
Patricia was positively identified through her dental records. Captain John Kimball, who had been
pursuing the case for over 12 years, recognized the connection between Patricia's murder and the
earlier killing of her husband, Douglas. That connection was formally confirmed in June of 2003,
when a California Department of Justice worker contacted Texas Ranger Brooks Long
who had been investigating Patricia's disappearance.
The inquiry about the unidentified Utah body finally bridged these two cases.
On June 17, 2003, just one day after Jane Doe 1 was identified as Patricia,
her brother Adam visited the Millard County Sheriff's Office.
He had spent over a decade desperately searching for his sister,
and now, with the identification confirmed,
he shared with investigators everything he knew about her.
her disappearance and travels.
Two years later in 2005, investigators finally gathered enough evidence to connect
Patricia's and Douglas' cases to Robert Ben Rhodes, a man already serving a life sentence for
another murder.
But they were far from his only victims.
Robert, who was infamously known as the truck stop killer, was confirmed to have murdered
at least two couples in Illinois and Texas between 1989 and 1990.
The authorities believe he may have tortured, essayed, and murdered more than 50,
women between 1975 and 1990 based on his trucking routes and the disappearances of women
matching his victim profile during those years.
But who was this man, Robert Ben Rhodes?
Who was the stranger behind the wheel of that truck, the so-called truck stop killer
who prowled America's highways for years without being caught?
To understand the evil that took Patricia and Douglas' lives, we have to go back to where
it all began.
Robert was born on November 22nd, 1945 in Council Bluffs, Iowa.
He was raised primarily by his mother while his father served in the military in West Germany.
When his father returned from duty, he took a job as a firefighter,
and by all appearances, the Rhodes family seemed to lead a stable, ordinary life.
Robert was described as social and active.
He was active in various school activities such as football, choir, wrestling in the French club.
His first run-in with a law came in 1961 at age 16 when he was arrested for tampering with a vehicle.
The following year, he was arrested again, this time for public fighting.
In 1964, Robert graduated from Monticello High School.
After graduation, he enlisted in the Marine Corps.
On the surface, it appeared that Robert was on the path to a respectable life,
but in reality, it would be the complete opposite.
That same year, his father was arrested for the essay of a 12-year-old girl.
While awaiting trial, he removed himself from this earth.
In 1968, Robert was dishonorably discharged from the Marine Corps for his involvement in a robbery.
Between 1967 and 1968, he briefly attended college but eventually dropped out.
He later attempted to join law enforcement, hoping to become a police officer, but was rejected
due to his dishonorable discharge from the military.
Upon returning to his hometown of council bluffs,
Robert married and had a son.
However, the marriage quickly deteriorated
and by 1972 at just 26 years old,
his wife left him.
In the years that followed,
Robert married two more times,
both ending in failure.
His third wife, Deborah Davis,
whom he was married to from 1987 to 1989,
later spoke out about the violent she endured at his hands.
While there are no official records confirming similar issues in his previous marriages,
it's widely believed that his violent...
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And controlling nature played a role in their collapses as well.
Robert started a series of odd jobs
taking positions in stores, warehouses, supermarkets, and restaurants.
But during the 1980s, his interests began to take a disturbing turn.
He developed a deep fascination with BDSM.
As his fantasies grew darker, he found a way to live them out through long-haul trucking.
The job offered him isolation, anonymity, and a constant stream of potential victims along the highways.
Vanessa Veselka, who was a 15-year-old runaway hitchhiking on interstate
highways in the summer of 1985 described that world, saying truck stops in the 1980s were closed
worlds where what went on passed unnoticed on the outside. The stores were dimly lit and filled with
smoke, radically different from the family travel plazas of today. Magazine porn often dominated the aisles.
Glossies like hustler and barely legal, but also newsprint rags with cheap color covers.
Bottles of isobutal nitrate and rot-gutaphrodisiacs like locker room and Spanish
fly crowded the counters by the register, along with the iconic bumper sticker, gas, or grass,
no one rides for free.
Vanessa herself had run away with her 21-year-old boyfriend due to the problems they had
at home.
Together, they hitched rides from one place to another living day to day.
One truck stopped while the trucker they were traveling with went to pay for gas.
Vanessa and her boyfriend stepped away to use the restroom.
When they returned, the truck was gone, along with all of Vanessa's belongings, including her
guitar and knapsack. There were only her firearms left, which she later sold in New Orleans for some
money. After about six weeks of this nomadic lifestyle, Vanessa and her boyfriend got into an argument
at a station and decided to go their separate ways, each hitching rides on different trucks.
Without a fake ID, Vanessa couldn't stay in shelters and sleeping on the roadside made her an easy
target. Stay safe, she began hitchhiking from one truck to another, constantly moving in circles.
She recalled, the general rule was that you were a prostitute until proven otherwise, and then you were still a prostitute.
The citizens band radio was really popular among long-haul truckers at the time.
The radio used a short-range communication system that truck drivers can use to talk to each other while on the road.
Back in the 70s, 80s, and early 90s, it was the main way truckers shared road info, asked for directions or just talk to kill time.
Since Vanessa was on the run, she had learned to survive with almost nothing.
and that meant relying on truckers for rides, food, and safety,
even when the environment was anything but safe.
She quickly realized that walking into truck stop diners wasn't an option,
as waitresses would kick her out before she could even ask for help,
so she was forced to wait by the showers and hallways,
hoping to find a driver willing to take her along.
Over time, she figured out safer ways to travel.
Instead of speaking on the Citizens Band Radio herself,
which would instantly attract a storm of vulgar comments,
she would ask a trucker to use the radio for her.
It would come up with sympathetic cover stories to make her sound less suspicious.
These stories usually revolved around a dead grandparent,
a sick mom, or a jerk boyfriend who stole her car and her money.
In 1985, Vanessa saw police find the body of a young hitchhiker in a truck stop dumpster
and realize it could have easily been her.
Some time later, she was picked up by a polite-looking trucker who turned disturbingly cold mid-ride.
He began talking about the murdered girl and mentioned something called,
called the Laughing Death Society.
The society turned out to be just a made-up name.
Eventually, he pulled over by a wooded area, drew a knife, and ordered Vanessa to move to the
back of the truck.
Vanessa tried to calm him, begging him not to hurt her and promising to stay silent,
but his face went blank, cold and empty.
After a long pause, he said one word, run.
Vanessa sprinted in the woods, hiding until his truck disappeared down the highway.
Shaking in in shock, she returned to the road and kept hitchhiking, never reporting the
incident for years. But in 2012, the haunting memories of that day would come back to Vanessa once
again. By then, she had long left behind her life on the road. She graduated from Reed College
and built a new life as a writer, publishing both fiction and nonfiction. That spring, a friend
sent her a news article about serial killer Robert Ben Rhodes, asking if he might have been the man
that once threatened her life. Although Vanessa couldn't recognize him at first from the initial photos,
she soon noticed some similarities to Robert's older pictures,
especially his cheekbones, glasses, and other facial expressions.
Vanessa didn't realize that Robert was infamous.
But as she came across various documentaries, articles,
and books about the truck stop killer,
she soon realized that this most probably was the same guy
who held her at knife point.
So she began looking into him.
The investigation into Robert was complex
and stretched across five different states
involving multiple police departments and federal agencies.
Tracking his crimes wasn't easy as they spanned thousands of miles
and victims were found far from where they disappeared.
Eventually, the FBI Houston's office took the lead
since nearly every major clue pointed back to Texas.
Robert lived there, his wife Deborah Davis was from there,
and two of his known victims, Regina K. Walters and Ricky Lee Jones,
were also from Texas.
Even several other women he picked up had last been seen in Texas.
During her own search for answers, Vanessa reached out to retired FBI special agents Mark Young and Robert F. Lee, both of whom had worked directly on Robert's case.
Vanessa told the agents everything about the trucker, the Laughing Death Society, and the moment he pulled out a knife.
Agent Young noted that the man's way of controlling her through fear matched Robert's psychological profile.
He then showed Vanessa a photo of a woman named Shauna Haltz, one of Robert's few victims who actually made it out alive.
Shana had escaped less than a month after Patricia's murder.
She was only 18 at the time but had been living on the road since she was 12.
By her own account, she had been assaulted nearly 20 times.
Like Vanessa, she had learned how to survive the dark world of truck stops,
but her running with Robert would take her straight into hell.
When Robert picked Shana up, he chained her inside the back of his truck,
which he had turned into a torture chamber.
For weeks, he assaulted and tormented her while driving across the country.
Her nightmare finally ended when Robert stopped at the car,
a brewery in Houston, where she managed to escape and run for her life.
Agent Young told Vanessa that Robert hadn't left Shauna shackled.
He had simply told her to sit there and be a good girl.
And Shauna escaped, she still had a chain around her neck.
Both her head and body had been shaved by Robert and she had no clothes on.
There was more than enough evidence to put Robert away for years and open up a real
investigation into what else he had done.
But that never happened.
Shana refused to press charges, claiming that there wasn't enough evidence.
According to her, I don't see any good in filing charges.
It's just going to be my word against his.
There was any evidence I would file.
I would file charges and sue him.
Even though it was an open secret that women were being found dead along interstate highways
and that truckers were thought to be the ones behind it, law enforcement couldn't pin anything
concrete on Robert.
And so, Robert walked free.
Later on, Vanessa got in touch with Robert's third wife, Deborah Davis.
Deborah told her that back in 1985, Robert was driving for a trucking company out of Georgia,
one that had an office right off of I-95.
The two had met a few years earlier in the early 80s at a Houston bar called Chipkickers,
where Robert had shown up dressed as a pilot.
When Vanessa shared with her story of her encounter with the truck driver,
the one she suspected to be Robert, Deborah grew excited and remarked,
That's him.
That's exactly like him.
Deborah also recounted how Robert would initially leave his gun at home and take a knife instead.
When Vanessa recounted other details about her assailant like the cab of his truck and the clothes he was wearing,
her suspicions only grew stronger as Deborah assured her that it sounded just like Robert.
Like FBI agents Mark Young and Robert F. Lee, Deborah had never heard of the so-called
Laughing Death Society that Vanessa's attacker mentioned. But when Vanessa asked if that ruled
Robert out, Deborah disagreed. She explained that Robert had always been fascinated by secret societies
and psychological manipulation. She then recounted the case of Colleen Stan, a 21-year-old hitchhiker
kidnapped in 1977 by a couple who held her captive for seven years. They forced her to sleep
in a wooden box under their bed and convinced her that a secret group called the company would
hunt her down if she ever tried to escape. Deborah told her that,
Bob was obsessed with how they used an imaginary secret society to keep her from running away.
In the early morning hours of April 1st, 1990,
trooper Mike Miller of the Arizona Highway Patrol noticed a truck pulled over on the shoulder of interstate tenure Casa Grande
with its hazard lights blinking through the dark.
When he went to check it out, he was hit with something straight out of a nightmare.
Inside the sleeper cab, 28-year-old Lisa Pinell was handcuffed, naked, and screaming for her life.
Robert was right there, caught red-handed.
First, he tried to talk his way of the situation.
When he realized he was cornered, he went for his gun but failed.
He was cuffed and left in the patrol car.
Despite being secured, he made a desperate, near-successful attempt to escape.
He was quickly apprehended and subsequently charged with aggravated assault,
essay, and unlawful imprisonment.
This dramatic arrest was only the beginning.
Detective Rick Barnhart took the case and,
through dedicated follow-up investigation,
connected roads to a pattern of other crimes stretching back at least five months.
When Lisa was rescued, she was speaking in what sounded like a jumble of irrational statements,
talking about secret prisons and a desperate mission to see the president.
It was obvious she wasn't in the right state of mind after spending days trapped inside
of Robert's rolling torture chamber.
What stood out was how much her case resembled Shana's.
It's like Robert deliberately went after women he believed were vulnerable.
the kind who wouldn't be believed in court.
Back then, detectives often dismiss victims like Lisa,
barely taking notes during interviews
because they seemed too unstable to testify.
Lisa's statement that night was at least caught on video.
According to FBI agent Robert F. Lee,
most people believe Lisa was a sex worker
and what happened to the truck was merely a transaction gone bad.
He explained saying,
Lisa was talking all sorts of crazy stuff,
microchips in her brain,
holes in the ozone layer, she was wearing those slippers, but she was telling the truth.
Even though Lisa's statements were all over the place, the cops had more than enough solid evidence
to nail Robert. There was no denying that he held her captive and tortured her. But Robert
ended up pleading guilty to kidnapping with intent to commit SA. In December of 1990, he was sentenced
to just six years in prison. For the crimes he had committed, six years felt like a slughey,
lap on the wrist. That, however, was about to change. September 29th, 1990, the decomposed body of
14-year-old Regina K. Walters was found nude in the loft of an abandoned barn near Greenville, Illinois.
Regina was a runaway just like Vanessa once was, traveling with her 18-year-old boyfriend,
Ricky Lee Jones. The couple was picked up by Robert in February of 1990. Ricky was killed soon after,
and his partial skeleton was later found near Harleton, Texas on May 26, 1990, with evidence showing that he had
been shot. It's for Regina. She was kept alive only to suffer the same horrifying fate as Patricia
and countless other women who unfortunately cross paths with Robert. He also shaved her head and body,
pierced her skin with fishing hooks, and tormented her for days. At one point, Robert dressed
Regina in a black dress in heels, forcing her to pose her photos while terrified. He was finally
satisfied. Robert strangled her with a grope made of bailing wire.
leaving her body to decompose in an abandoned barn off Interstate 70.
Regina's autopsy report confirmed that she had died by strangulation sometime in early March of that year.
In February of 1992, while Robert was already locked away in an Arizona jail,
investigators executed a search of his home and discovered a collection of truly horrifying photographs.
One of these photos, the face of Regina K. K. Walters could be seen.
She was barely recognizable.
Though some agents initially couldn't match her with a photo provided,
by Regina's mother, FBI agent Young definitively identified Regina by a small gap in her teeth.
And the same role of film was a picture of another girl wearing a gray hoodie.
The detectives theorized that Robert had just picked her up as her hair was still long and hadn't
been shaved. She was later identified as Pamela Milliken of Saskatchewan after police posted her
picture on Facebook. She said that she was hitchhiking to go find her brother in Winnipeg
when she ended up in Robert's truck. He snapped a photo of her after she just got in.
She asked why, and he told her that he kept photos of his passengers so that he could show them to the cops in case anyone ever robbed him and fled.
Pamela shared that. He told me he was going to Florida and he wanted me to come with him.
At one point, he pointed to a sign on his dashboard that said cash, grass, or ass, no one rides for free.
I didn't have any money. I didn't smoke pot, so I knew which one it would be.
According to Pamela, they had what she described as a consensual encounter and he dropped her off at a bus depot in Winnipeg.
Gina's mother Carolyn Walters said in an interview from her home in Grapland, Texas,
that she was convinced the killer had called Regina's father, Jerry Walters,
around the time their daughter had went missing.
Gina's parents had just separated when she disappeared.
Fairland never revealed the exact details of that phone call possibly made by Robert.
Jerry also never spoke about the call.
But investigators confirmed it was placed after the time Regina was believed to have been murdered.
Caller also made sadistic remarks about what had been done to the young woman.
Brenda Oldham, the deputy county attorney who prosecuted Robert, told the court that he had welded metal bars with hooks into the back of his truck.
He'd used those hooks to fasten chains tied with the horse bridle he had forced his victims to wear around their necks.
Brenda also said that some of Regina's photos were shown to Robert in jail.
And although he made no claims, his face turned white as a ghost and he looked as if he was about to pass out.
As also later reported finding a page from Regina's notebook.
On it, Robert had drawn a gun and a large gun.
dagger dripping with blood next to the words, Ricky is a dead man. In September of 1992,
Robert finally pled guilty to the murder of Regina Walters. That same month, he was convicted
at the Menard Correctional Center in Chester, Illinois, sentenced to life in prison without the
possibility of parole. Robert's other victims were laid to rest with love and dignity.
14-year-old Regina Walters was buried at Mount Zion Cemetery in the Woodlands, Texas.
Her 18-year-old boyfriend, Ricky Lee Jones, rests in Baileytown Christian Church Cemetery in Stokes County, North Carolina.
As for Patricia Walsh and Douglas Ziskowski, they were both laid to rest at St. Patrick's Cemetery in Kent, Washington.
Years later, in 2005, Robert was extradited to Utah to face trial for the murders of Patricia Walsh and Douglas Zikowski,
but following the requests of the victim's families who didn't want to endure the pain,
of testifying again, the charges were dropped in 2006, and Robert was sent back to Illinois.
Eventually, in 2012, Robert appeared before a West Texas judge and pled guilty to two counts
of capital murder as part of a plea deal to avoid the death penalty. In exchange, he was given
two more life sentences. Even though Robert sits behind bars for four confirmed murders and
two charges of essay, the true scope of his crimes remains unknown.
and it's likely far darker than what's been proven.
For context, when an Illinois state trooper circulated a forensic description of Virginia
K. Walters as a Caucasian female ages 13 to 15 who had vanished within the last six to nine months,
he received over 900 matches.
Detectives believe that at his peak, Robert was murdering one to three women every month.
But his rampage has long ended.
While Robert has been sitting away for the rest of
his miserable life in prison since his 1992 conviction.
One of his victims, Vanessa Veselka,
has not only outlived his miseries,
but has spoken volumes about them.
Today, Vanessa stands as an award-winning author and survivor
whose voice carries the weight of countless untold stories.
Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile,
the message for everyone paying big wireless way too much.
Please, for the love of everything good in this world, stop.
With Mint, you can get premium wireless for just 15.
dollars a month. Of course, if you enjoy overpaying, no judgments, but that's weird.
Okay, one judgment.
Anyway, give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch.
Upfront payment of $45 for three-month plan, equivalent to $15 per month required.
Intro rate first three months only, then full price plan options available.
Taxes and fees extra. See full terms at mintmobile.com.
All right, class settled down. Today's lesson is on the Argo Rewards app.
Try to stay with me. The fundamentals are simple. Earn at least five cents a gallon in rewards,
then redeem them later for up to a dollar off every gallon.
Now here's where it gets complicated.
Oh, wait, it doesn't.
It's as simple as downloading the ARCO Rewards app to get started.
Class dismissed!
Savings of up to $1 per gallon redeemable with $20 rewards dollars in your loyalty account.
At participating locations, terms and conditions apply.
