True Crime All The Time - Jose Herran
Episode Date: November 3, 2025Jose Herran moved to Pennsylvania in the fall of 2015 to live in a property owned by an old friend. He went missing weeks later. The case went cold, but a year later, a police informant in an... arson case claimed he knew exactly what happened to Jose. Join Mike and Gibby as they discuss the murder of Jose Herran. Roberto Torner and David Alzugaray came under law enforcement scrutiny. The investigation revealed an extensive drug operation, a possible cover-up by the Chief of Police, undercover informants, and murder.You can help support the show at patreon.com/truecrimeallthetimeVisit the show's website at truecrimeallthetime.com for contact, merchandise, and donation informationAn Emash Digital productionSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello everyone and welcome to episode 458 of the True Crime All of the Time podcast. I'm Mike Ferguson.
And with me as always is my partner in True Crime, Mike Gibson. Givby, how are you?
Good. How about you? I'm doing great. Yeah. You know, we talked about it on our Patreon weekly minisode.
Yeah. We talked about your mints a cup. Very nice. Plastic. Yeah. Yeah. Very nice. We talked about
the perfect neighbor, which is a very interesting watch. You did. And kind of what we
else we've been watching what's up with us so you know what we didn't talk about what's that the fact that
you have this like smoking jacket on with no shirt underneath it it's kind of disturbing yeah well that's
why i do that kind of stuff it's definitely i want to keep you on your toes keep you a little uncomfortable
i'm uncomfortable let's go ahead and give our patreon shot house we had frozen ghost what's going on ghost
blake miller hey blake lesley oh thanks leslie max there's max nani
X2.
X2.
Angelie Dupine.
Hey, DuPine.
Lady Mags.
What's going on, lady?
Melanie Dionne.
Hey, Melanie.
Janelle Meadows.
Thanks, Janelle.
Rioco Lou.
Oh, Rioco.
Mrs. Mays.
Thanks, Mrs.
Laura.
And there's good old Laura.
And last but not least, Alicia Lowe.
Hey, Alicia.
And then if we go back into the vault.
This week, we selected I lean.
You lean, we all I lean.
I lean.
think that's how the saying goes. Oh, if we have an episode out right now,
Gibby on True Crime All the Time Unsolved, where we're talking about three women who went
missing in Florida in the 70s and 80s. They didn't know each other, but they all had one
connection. And it was to a man named Cleveland Hill Jr. Police learn that they all went missing
after they ended their relationships with this guy. Interesting. Yeah. It's a
an interesting episode, make sure you check it out. Hey, if you haven't signed up the go out to
CrimeCon in Las Vegas, now is a good time to do it and make sure you use our code. What is that code, Mike?
T-C-C-Cat. T-C-C-A-T-T-T. Yeah. Come to see us. Yeah, you save a little bit of money off
your standard badges. All right, buddy, are you ready to get into this episode of true crime all the time?
I am excited. We're talking about Jose Horan. Jose Horan moved to Pennsylvania. In the fall,
of 2015 to live in a property owned by an old friend. He went missing weeks later. The case went cold,
but later, a police informant in an arson case claimed that he knew exactly what happened to Jose.
So a little mystery here. Yeah. Jose Pepe Horan was born in Cuba. He was 56 years old at the time
he went missing. Jose was from New Jersey. But in the fall of 2015, he moved to Pennsylvania. He moved to
Pennsylvania because his friend Roberto Turner offered him a place to stay.
Roberto owned a three-story boarding house in Freeland, Pennsylvania, known as the cottage.
And Roberto was, you know, he was well known in the area.
He was friends with Freeland Police Chief Anthony Harris.
He was involved in local government and purchased multiple properties for renovation,
which I know a lot of people are into, right, buying houses, fixing them up.
you can make quite a bit of money doing that.
Yeah, if you're good at it.
Now, I know a lot of people got hurt like in 2008 when the economy tanked and the property market tanked.
Values dropped and people were like, oh, now what?
Yeah, I have these properties that I bought thinking I was going to make a profit on it.
No, I'm not.
Jose had only been living in the cottage for a couple of weeks when he went missing in the late fall of 2015.
November 17th, 2015 was Jose's mother's birthday.
And Jose always called her on her birthday no matter what.
Virginia Rodriguez was worried when she didn't hear from him.
She called him repeatedly but received no answer.
And you and I talk a lot about patterns, right?
Patterns are important.
They are.
In some of these cases, okay, is it unusual maybe to go X amount of days or even
weeks without talking to someone. No, it might not be. But when your birthday rolls around and your son doesn't
even reach out to you and he has a pattern of doing it every single year no matter what,
that's going to be concerning to a mother. And it's going to make you wonder, why haven't I heard
from him? Jose's daughter hadn't heard from him either. He also hadn't been in contact with his
parole officer. Okay.
So, you know, it's one thing you don't call your mom on her birthday.
You don't talk to your daughter, but then you don't contact your role officer.
Yeah, you're not going to want to miss that, right?
It's a check-in, and if you don't check in, that could be some big problems for you.
You could be going back.
Yeah.
So Jose was reported missing.
Virginia told the police that the last time she talked to Jose was November 13, 2015.
Law enforcement learned about Jose's move to the cottage.
in his association with Roberto Turner since June 2015,
the Luzerne County Drug Task Force had been investigating Roberto for heroin trafficking
and possible gun crimes.
The same guy that had a friendly relationship with the local police chief?
Yeah, yep, and was also involved in local government.
The investigation into Jose's disappearance stall.
Basically, police didn't have any lead.
Meanwhile, Roberto Turner gained ownership of a home in nearby Weatherly Pennsylvania
through nefarious actions per the ATF.
Nefarious. I like that.
Yeah. Obviously, it's not good, but it's still a little vague, right, as to what the actions
were. In the early hours of August 6, 2016, the Weatherly PD responded to a large house fire.
on 3rd Street.
The fire also spread to neighboring houses,
but all residents escaped without serious injuries.
And to me,
fire is always scary,
but,
you know,
when you live in a community
where houses are pretty close together.
Yeah.
A fire in one,
I mean,
that's scary in the fact that not only is it going to damage that one,
but it could jump pretty easily
and affect a bunch of houses around.
And accelerant sniffing dogs.
hit several areas, and the fire was ruled in arson.
You know, we talked about arson last week.
Yeah.
And learn a few things, right?
And as we always do.
As we always do.
Here we have these dogs that specialize in sniffing out this kind of stuff.
Well, there's a dog for everything.
You think about the cases that we do, right?
There's cadaver dogs.
There's drug dogs.
There's accelerant sniffering.
Fiffing dogs. Basically, dogs are so amazing, you can train them to do anything. That's really true.
You know, here, smell Gibby's underwear, now go find him. And they can do that.
Strangely, very fast. That one didn't want to at all. He's like, I get the smell, but I don't want to
find out who belongs to that smell. The morning after the fire, police learned Roberto Turner owned the
property, he was asked if he had anything to do with the fire, but he denied it.
The weatherly police brought in the ATF due to the size and destruction of the fire.
Officers checked houses and businesses on the street.
For surveillance footage, there was a camera a couple of blocks away from the house.
They captured a distinctive white Mitsubishi eclipse with a large spoiler on the back.
The ATF executed search warrants on all of Roberto's properties, including
the cottage in Freeland.
Police noticed that residents of the cottage were reluctant to talk, but one individual told
investigators they needed to talk to a tenant who was not on their radar, a guy by the
name of Donald Warren.
Warren had been living at the cottage since the fall of 2015.
According to Donald, late one night in December 2016, he received a call from a blocked number.
It was a police sergeant who told Donald he was.
was parked across the street from the cottage, he wanted Donald to go with him so that they could
talk. Donald agreed and they went to the weatherly police station. How eager would you be to
jump into a police car? You know, you get that phone call. They say, hey, you got some time.
What am I talking to you? About as eager as I am to run on the treadmill. Yeah. Zero. Zero eagerness.
But no, you know, seriously, you're going to be a little worried.
I think.
I think so.
Anytime somebody gets a call from the police or a federal agency and they say,
hey, we'd like to talk to you.
Nobody wants that.
No.
Because typically it's not good news, right?
Well, obviously, if you've done something, you don't want it, but even if you haven't,
you really just don't want that because it's going to be stressful no matter what.
Donald was brought into a room of federal agents.
He admitted he knew about the fire and was.
present, he tried to convey that he was not a willing participant, but authorities didn't believe
him. He also claimed he knew what happened to Jose Horan. Authorities doubted he was telling the
truth until Donald said he drove a white Mitsubishi eclipse at night, the same vehicle that was
captured on surveillance before the fire. So he's saying, not only did he know about the fire.
He was present. Oh, and by the way, I know.
what happened to this guy, Jose, who you've been trying to, you know, figure out, right, what happened to him.
Donald explained that he and his girlfriend split up in 2014. He needed a place to live and got a room at the
cottage. There were people in and out constantly. A woman named Alba was the one who dealt with the
elderly residence. A family lived down the hall from Donald. He eventually met Jose Horan, who moved in
in 2015, Donald learned that Jose and Roberto had known each other for years.
Okay, this seems like a strange living situation to me.
Must be at one, a pretty large home.
Or you just have a lot of people packed in more than maybe you should have.
Yeah.
Jose was only at the cottage for about two weeks before he disappeared.
Roberto knew Donald needed money.
So he offered him some painting jobs around the property.
On November 13, 2015, Donald was told he needed to go to Roberto's property on Buck Mountain Road
in nearby Foster Township and paint over a floor with a very specific type of paint.
He was instructed to apply as many coats as he could.
Now, Donald thought this was strange because he was painting a subfloor that was going to have carpet installed over top of it.
but once he got there,
he found a large bloodstain.
Yeah,
that would be weird
until you sold a blood stain.
You're thinking,
you're going to put carpet over it.
Why do you even need to paint it?
You know,
maybe one coat to kind of seal it up
so you don't get any
old odors coming out of the subfloor.
Okay,
so it's not weird when you discovered the bloodstain?
That's weird.
I think that's weird,
you said it would be weird
until you discovered the bloodstain.
Well, yeah.
I mean,
so when you get there,
then you're like, oh, this is why they want.
Yeah.
Like you realize why they need this thing painted.
But then it also becomes, okay, why is there a huge bloodstain here?
Different level of weirdness.
Donald became fearful for his life.
The next day, a bag of weapons was put in his room.
The bag contained a 45 caliber gun, a 9mm, a 22, and an AK-47.
that's quite the arsenal.
It is.
Donald was told to clean the guns with bleach and ammonia to ensure there was no DNA or
fingerprints left behind.
He was also asked to get rid of the serial numbers and file the barrel of the 45 caliber.
I think at that point I would be really nervous.
Like, I know I said I would do odd jobs.
These are too odd.
Yeah.
And also maybe incriminating.
Yeah, and if I don't do it, what could happen to me?
And the fact that I am going to do it or they want me to do it,
does that put me at risk later too?
What could happen to me?
Yeah, I mean, so obviously that's why he was fearful for his life.
You have the bloodstain, now you're being asked to do a bunch of stuff to these weapons.
It all seems very suspicious.
But there was a kind of a no point of return, right?
for Donald because he knew what the weapons were used for.
He did his best to make it appear that he clean the guns
without erasing all potential evidence.
Donald claimed that Jose was killed by Roberto Turner
and David Al-Zugare,
Roberto's right-hand man and a resident of the cottage.
According to court documents,
Roberto asked Donald to participate in the murder
at least 25 times.
That's a lot of a request.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, I guess points for stick-tuitiveness, but I mean, how many times are you
going to ask, hey, will you help us kill this guy?
Hey, will you help us kill this guy?
I mean, at a certain point, number one, you're putting a lot of trust in this guy, Donald,
that he's not going to talk.
And obviously he must have trusted Donald because he sent him over to paint over this bloodstain.
Right.
He asked him to do all this stuff with the guns.
I mean, you pretty much showed him all the evidence the police would need to arrest somebody.
Here's the bloodstain where the murder happened.
Here's the weapons that were used.
And you did ask me to participate in the murder.
Well, and again, back to why he was probably fearful for his life, right?
he knew a lot.
The night, Jose disappeared.
Roberto was driving a van with David in the passenger seat.
Roberto told Donald, we're going to do this right now.
It's now or never.
Roberto smiled and showed him a 22 caliber revolver in his waistband.
Donald was ill at the time and refused to join him.
Jose got in the van and Roberto drove away.
Later that night, Roberto and David returned to the contest.
without Jose, they were wearing different clothes and smelled like fuel oil and smoke.
That same night, the two men told Donald details about the murder.
Again, very trusting of this guy, Donald.
But according to Donald, Roberto and David took Jose to the property on Buck Mountain Road.
David pulled out a 22 caliber revolver and started shooting at Jose.
Jose tried shooting back, but couldn't because he had dummy rounds.
in his gun. David pursued and fired repeatedly. Jose was shot at least five times. Roberto then walked up to
Jose and finished by shooting him in the back of the head. And let's not forget, these two guys were friends.
Well, that's what I was thinking. You know, you were friends. You invite him to come stay with you.
And two weeks later, this is what happens. You decide that he has to be killed. And there's no doubt there was some
planning involved, right? Somebody had to put dummy rounds in Jose's gun.
If we're seeing that this was going to happen, right?
Well, if you're going to be in a shootout, it's good to know, I guess, that the other person
doesn't have real bullets. But how can you do that to your friend?
Jose was then dismembered into small pieces. The remains were burned and put into buckets.
Donald claimed the men were laughing and joking. Most disturbingly, he claimed he saw Jose's head.
in a bucket in the back of their van.
Well, that's just messed up.
It's,
it's going to cause some nightmares,
I think,
for many people.
Roberto also showed Donald
the collection of butcher knives,
clevers and a machete.
He said were used in the dismemberment.
This guy is just,
it's almost like he's bragging.
Yeah.
Because he's telling Donald all these details.
He's showing him all the guns,
all the knives,
and telling him basically, yeah, this is how it happened.
But he's also probably putting the fear of, you know what, into Donald.
Well, just from the mere fact that he knows so much, he has to be somewhat fearful.
Authority suspected jealousy was the motive.
Jose was described as a good-looking man who received attention from women.
Roberto wanted someone who could be easily controlled.
But that wasn't the case with Jose.
In his December 2016 interview, Donald was asked why he never went to the police.
He claimed he approached Anthony Harris, the Freeland Borough Chief of Police.
And we mentioned it, right?
Harris was friends with Roberto Turner.
Donald claimed he walked up to Harris and said he had some information, but was fearful
and didn't know what to do.
After telling Harris what he knew, the chief allegedly told him,
well, your best bad is just to mind your own business.
That's terrible advice from the local police chief.
But why do you think he's giving that advice?
Well, obviously, he, or I feel like he's on the hook.
Is that like on the take?
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, yeah, I think it has something to do with his friendship, right, with Roberto.
But Donald also claimed the chief said that could just as easily happen.
to you.
And there is the threat.
Well, and if Donald wasn't thinking that,
obviously he would start thinking it at that point,
but I don't know how he couldn't been thinking it already.
Donald returned to the cottage that evening
and saw Chief Harris leaving the house.
Everyone got quiet when he walked in.
Someone hit him, and then, according to him,
like a pack of hyenas.
He was attacked.
Someone put a gun under his chin and threatened to kill him.
Donald said the chief misunderstood him and convinced them to let him go.
A lucky night for him.
Yeah, because he could have easily been killed there.
After this, Donald lived every day in fear.
He knew if he drew any attention to himself, he could die.
I think I would try to find a way to slowly, or not even slowly, quickly disappear from that area.
Try to extricate yourself from that situation.
But I don't think this is hyperbole.
right living every day in fear knowing that you could die i think that's a very real thing now the
police were aware of the rumors about roberto's friendship with the police chief donald provided
some insight about roberto's friendship with david alzou garret according to donald
dave was roberto's personal automaton he did whatever roberto told him to do
David once did something that angered rock.
And in order to pay penance, he beat himself in the face with a stone until he bled.
He claimed that David had items in his room related to Santa Ria and black magic.
You ever beat yourself in the face with a stone?
No, I've never done that.
I've been beaten in the face with a stone, but I've never beat myself with a stone in my face.
Hmm.
This did kind of remind me a little bit.
remember that movie The Da Vinci Code?
Yeah.
Was it the Da Vinci Code or the second one?
I don't know, but you had that one actor.
He's kind of a big actor, but he would hurt himself on his legs.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Paul, uh, yeah, I can't think of his name, but yeah, he's a big actor.
He's been in a lot of things.
It kind of reminded me of that.
Like he was doing penance almost.
Donald also provided information about weapons and where authorities could find
Explosives. Investigators found C4 explosives that were stolen from an Army base in Kentucky.
Roberto was released on bail in advance of his federal trial, but while on release, he planted stolen U.S.
military C4 plastic explosives at the residence of his co-defendant, David Alzu Garvey, per the U.S.
attorneys of it. I mean, this guy's not messing around. No. If he thinks that you've done him wrong,
or are about to do him wrong, he's going to kill you. I think he killed Jose without a second thought,
and he was set to blow up his friend David Al-Zugard with some C-4. On November 7, 2017, Roberto Turner,
his fiance Lisa Robles, and David Al-Zugard were charged with drug trafficking and firearms offenses.
According to the charges, the three conspired to distribute heroin in Luzerne County in June 2015.
Roberto and Liza were charged with conspiring from May 2012 to August 2017 to provide firearms and ammo to a convicted felon and to possess firearms and ammo as a convicted felon.
Not good charges to have.
Liza purchased six firearms and gave.
them to Roberto, a convicted felon.
Torner also purchased a gun from an unnamed individual.
And you know why he needed so many guns?
Because when you're in the heroin distribution trade, things can get a little hairy sometimes.
Yeah, I think you probably need it for security protection and...
Taking TCB in?
Yeah.
In February 2018, Special Agent Larry Whitehead interviewed Roberto about the disappearance of
Jose Horan. During his interview, Roberto spoke in hypotheticals about a missing item, which he believed
was chopped up into little pieces. It's a weird thing to do to bring that up and talk
hypothetically about it. It's also weird to try to say hypothetically when it's outside of your
repertoire. Well, you can say hypothetically it probably is. No, you said it right.
that time. But that is weird. You're right. If the police are interviewing you about the disappearance
of this guy, you know what you did. But instead of just saying, hey, I didn't have anything to do with it,
I don't know what you're talking about. Let's deal in hypotheticals, right? There's a missing item,
and I believe it was chopped up into little pieces. On May 1st, 2018, prison officials received word that
David Alzu Garay wanted to talk to law enforcement.
David confessed to shooting Jose with a 22 caliber pistol,
burning his clothes,
dismembering his body,
and throwing the remains in the Lehigh River.
He insisted Roberto was not involved at all.
He claimed they went to the Buck Mountain Road property
and got into an argument,
police believed David was jealous of Jose,
because he and Roberto got along so well.
David told police that he cut the remains into such small pieces.
They likely wouldn't be found.
But to investigators, it seemed like David was trying too hard to make sure that he took all the blank.
And that's, you know, that's something to me.
It goes back to, you know, maybe the hold that Roberto had over this guy.
Could be.
That even after they were caught, he was willing to step up and basically say, hey, I did all.
of this, Roberto didn't have anything to do with it.
Sounds like the police feel like he's overselling it.
Yeah, and I'm sure they might even have some evidence at that point.
It's kind of pointing to Roberto, so maybe that's part of why they don't believe him.
Police search the burn pit on the property and found fragments of human bones.
In May 2018, police searched the Buck Mountain Road property and they found two burn pits,
one of which contained bone fragments.
Investigators determined the fragments were pieces of a male skull,
but they couldn't prove the bones were Jose Horan's remains
because there was no DNA.
One thing I never understood when people burn things like that,
but they shouldn't burn, but they do it to try to get rid of the evidence.
But they don't go back and scoop up all that, dig all that up,
and dispose of it somewhere else.
And they don't realize that it's not going to completely burn up.
Yeah.
It's really hard to create a fire that's hot enough to burn an entire body completely,
like a crematorium furnace.
And that's why in that one series, they always went to the crematorium.
Oh, Ozarks?
Ozark.
Yeah.
Hey, if you need to get rid of some bodies, you buy a funeral home.
That's right.
That has an oven.
Police did an extensive search of the Lehigh River, but found nothing.
Months later, Roberto did another interview with law enforcement.
This time, he claimed he knew about the murder of Jose Horan.
On November 13, 2015, he instructed David and Jose to take construction debris to the Buck Mountain Road property.
And burn it, he was worried because there was animosity between the two men.
He got a bad feeling and decided.
to go check on it. Roberto got out of his vehicle and yelled Jose's name. David came out of the chicken
coop and waved to him and that's when Roberto learned he had killed Jose. So this is Roberto's story,
right, kind of dovetailing off of David taking the entire blank. David claimed that Jose attacked him.
as David was running away, he shot over his shoulder.
A bullet struck Jose in the head and killed him.
A pretty lucky shot.
Yeah.
I would say, you know, not one in a million, but I don't know what the odds would be of running,
not looking and just kind of firing a gun over your shoulder and hitting someone in the head.
The police also spoke to Roberto's associate Alba Veras, who was put into witness protection.
And we mentioned it earlier, but Alba previously lived in the cottage.
She watched Roberto's children.
By the time of the interview, she was no longer living there and was able to get away from Roberto's control.
Police asked what she knew about Jose Horan.
Alba said that in 2015, Roberto instructed her to clean cutting instructions.
instruments and told her where to hide them. She admitted that she had a romantic relationship with
Roberto. Roberto questioned her loyalty. About a week before Jose went missing, they drove out to
the Buck Mountain Road property with Jose. Roberto handed Alba a gun and told her, I want you to shoot
Pepe. She held the gun up, but couldn't do it. So, I mean, you mentioned it, right? These guys are
friends. And like two weeks after, you know, Jose comes, Roberto once him dead,
well, now we find out maybe it was more like a week after he got there. Right. Pretty quick.
Hey, good friend. Glad you came down to stay with me. A week later. He's trying to get his girlfriend
to shoot and kill him. Yeah. The other thing that's really jumping out of me, Gibbs, is the control
that this guy had on virtually everyone, you know, kind of in his,
circle or in his life.
Yeah, I mean, if he can get out with a pull that trigger, he'll own her.
Now I have something on you.
You killed him.
And it seems like he had major control over David before David even participated in the murder.
Yeah.
Now, I think when it came to Donald, yeah, there was some control there, but I think it was
mostly fear, right?
He was just scared that he, you know, he was going to mess up and Roberto was going to try
to kill him.
Well, that's another way to control somebody.
Yeah.
Just put all that fear into them.
There's a lot of different ways to control people.
And fear is one.
On November 12, 2015,
Alba heard noises coming from the basement of the cottage.
She went down to investigate and found Roberto and David
manipulating ammunition.
They created dummy rounds,
incapable of firing,
and gave them to Jose.
Well, that's premeditation, right?
or could be?
I think it's part of it.
Yeah, no doubt.
Now, how would you create a dummy route?
I was kind of thinking about this during the research of the case.
And my thought is there's a number of ways to do it.
You could take an old fired casing and insert a new bullet in it without the powder
and leave the old primer in the casing.
and essentially nothing would happen, right, when the firing pin or the hammer struck that
primer. It's not going to have the powder to propel and it's not even going to have a new
primer to create the ignition. It would just be a dud. It just wouldn't do anything. But it would
most likely feel like a real bullet. It would feel and look like one unless you look at the
primer, which a lot of people don't.
And depending on what round it is, there's not that much powder in a lot of the pistol rounds,
four grams sometimes.
I don't know that it's going to make a huge difference when you have some rounds in your
hand.
I don't know how much time people are spending inspecting their ammo before they load their gun.
And maybe they gave him the gun already loaded.
which would be even less of a chance that he would notice.
Police went to the cottage and searched the attic,
where they found cleavers, knives, machetes, and ammo hidden under the insulation.
Alba also showed the police two guns, hidden in a hollow cavity of a railing near the altar.
In January 2019, Roberto and others were charged with arson, solicitation, conspiracy,
endangering persons, insurance fraud, and risking catastrophe, which is a charge I do not believe I've
ever heard of. Risking catastrophe. Yeah, you could cause a catastrophic event. Yeah, no,
I understand what it means. I just don't think I've ever heard of it. Well, this is a lot of charges.
It is a lot of charges. Now, what you don't hear in there is murder. It wasn't until February 10,
2020 that the Luzerne County DA's office announced homicide charges against David Al-Zugare and
Roberto Turner. David was charged with criminal homicide, conspiracy to commit homicide, and
abuse of a corpse. Roberto was charged with homicide, conspiracy to commit homicide, and two counts
of solicitation to commit homicide. And I'm assuming one of those counts was directly
related to the 25 times he had asked Donald to participate in killing Jose Horan.
I'm going to agree with you on that.
After Roberto was arrested, he told reporters, you should ask the chief of police,
referring to Chief Anthony Harris.
I'm pulling him into this.
Which I think if you're the chief, you're not thrilled about.
Right.
Now, it did sound like maybe he was not on the upper.
and up just based on his relationship with Roberto what Donald said that he said to him when he
tried to confide in him about, you know, what had happened. Two days later on February 12,
Roberto was sentenced to 22 and a half years in federal prison for conspiring to distribute heroin,
distributing heroin, possessing heroin, possessing and conspiring to possess firearms.
as a multi-convicted felon.
So we haven't even gotten to the homicide charges yet,
and he's already facing 22 and a half years for these other things.
It's a healthy stint.
Yeah, no doubt.
Now, you shouldn't do any of that, right?
You shouldn't make heroin, distribute heroin.
You shouldn't use heroin.
You're also not supposed to possess firearms as a convicted felon.
And boy, did he possess some firearms?
He had a bunch of them.
His fiancé, Liza Robles, and David Al-Zugari were convicted of heroin trafficking offenses.
And Liza was convicted of firearm offenses.
David was sentenced to 27 months and Liza was sentenced to 36 months in prison.
Now, 27 months doesn't seem like a lot for trafficking heroin.
I mean, Liza got more than that for buying guns and giving them to a convicted felon, which I'm not saying is a good thing.
Don't get me wrong.
But heroin trafficking, you know, that seems like it should be a very serious charge and come with a much stiffer.
Stiffer penalty.
Yeah.
Roberto's murder trial started on May 9, 2003.
The state spent most of the first day of trial proving host.
Jose Haran had not been seen since 2015.
His body hadn't been found, but based on the investigation,
prosecutors believed he was killed and dismembered inside a trailer owned by Roberto
Torner.
And I think that's important for the prosecution, right?
In a nobody case, you have to try to demonstrate that this person is most likely deceased.
because you know the defense is going to argue,
well, how do you know that the person was even killed is even dead?
Yeah, it's a good point.
And you want to put it back on the prosecution to prove that.
Or at the very least, you want to plant that seed of doubt, right, in a jury's mind.
The jury also learned that Jose was a confidential source for the FBI.
FBI Special Agent Thomas D'emico's testimony suggested that Jose was killed for providing information about drug and firearm trafficking in the Philadelphia region.
Well, that could get you killed if you're mixed in with the wrong group of people.
Which he was. Now, does it also maybe shed a little more light about him going to live with his good friend Roberto, who was a heroin,
trafficker. Yeah. State police corporal Jesse Bachman testified that they searched three
burn pits in a bedroom at Roberto's property. Information gathered indicated Jose was shot and
dismembered in that bedroom. The subfloor under the carpet looked like it had been haphazardly
painted. The floor tested positive for blood. And I think that fits right in line, right, with Donald's
story. I was told to go paint this subfloor. I saw a big blood stain and I painted over it.
Dr. Conrad Quentin and anthropologists testified that five of 18 bone fragments recovered from a
burn pit on Roberto's property were part of a male skull. The 13 other bones were too small
or did not have features to make a conclusion. Senior forensic analyst Lisa Sansom testified that
authorities were unable to recover DNA from bone fragments found in a burn pit.
I mean, you found pieces of a skull just seems very alarming.
Well, it seems incriminating, right? But I think a lot of times juries, especially in this
day and age, they expect to be wowed by DNA. Yeah. A lot of them probably do, right? So you found these
bones, why can you not tell us conclusively that they're the bones or they're the remains of
Jose Horan? But authorities weren't able to do that. There just wasn't enough there.
The state called on Richard Di Stefano, who testified about Roberto's past in New Jersey.
De Stefano testified, Roberto told me on occasion that when he was younger, that his uncles
and I guess other gang wars in the town or whatever happened, that he, he said, he was, he was
He was present when they would chop up bodies and put them in a drain, basically.
De Stefano also testified he said that he used to also participate in cutting up the bodies.
I just don't know how people have the stomach for that.
It cannot be the easiest thing in the world.
Now, if you're dead inside, right, if you have no emotion, no empathy, then maybe that's how you get through it and it doesn't matter to.
Just another job.
Yeah.
like building a birdhouse.
Yeah, maybe to some people.
De Stefano claimed that Roberto asked him to build an incinerator.
Turner said that they had an opportunity to make a lot of money,
but they would need to get rid of the body and they needed an incinerator.
De Stefano said he didn't take the question seriously.
And I think it would be a tough question to take seriously for most people.
Hey, can you help me build an incinerator?
First of all, no, I don't know how to build an incinerator.
And even if I did, I don't want to be involved in you getting rid of a body.
Yeah, because you're probably going to give it a test run with me, the guy that built it.
Or somewhere down the road, I'm going to end up in the incinerator somehow.
Informant Donald Warren identified meat cleavers and knives in court and told the jury,
each one had notches on the wooden handles that were quote unquote scorecards for the number of bodies
Roberto claimed to have chopped up right if true that's a very scary thought i mean how many
notches are on these handles how many bodies has this guy you know cut up and disposed up while living
at the cottage Donald got to know Jose Horan and David Alzugare he believed Roberto and Jose
they were best friends until the fall of 2015 when Roberto solicited his help in killing Jose.
Yeah, I think at that point, you no longer believe that these two guys are best friends.
Right.
Because most people don't want to kill their best friends.
Now, they might from time to time, but, uh, you know.
Not going to be typical.
No.
I mean, you and I might get into it and I might have a fleeting thought that I could,
strangle you from behind, but I would never do it.
Yeah, yeah, I understand. Believe me, there's times I grasp my cabard and then
think better of it.
No.
Think better of it.
Yeah.
First of all, we don't want to mess up the studio.
Well, I'm okay with that.
Oh, because you're leaving right after.
Yeah.
Well, I don't want to mess up the studio because I've got to live here.
Just for the record, I would haunt your ass.
Yeah.
To the point that you would move.
that's one of the reasons. The other reason is it's going to be really hard to explain your
disappearance when you're not on the podcast next week. That's right. Our listeners will come through
for me. We think we know who did it. Well, you just ate dinner with my wife and family. So, uh,
my alibi is not going to be great. At the same time, Donald claimed Roberto was soliciting him
to assist in killing David Al-Zugari. I mean, I just think Gibbs that
Roberto, he wanted everyone gone who was around him. And again, talking about Donald living in fear,
so if he participates in these two killings, he has to know he's going to be next on the list.
Yeah, why wouldn't he be? He's a prime witness at that point. Donald testified that he spent
several weeks in the hospital. One day after he was released, he was standing outside smoking.
When Roberto and David approached him, he was unable to give an exact date, but it was cold outside.
Donald testified, Roberto and David got into the van, and they were telling me to get into the van saying,
we're going to do this tonight now.
When Jose came outside, the conversation abruptly changed, and they drove off towards Roberto's trailer on North Buck Mountain Road in Foster Township.
Donald testified, I knew what was coming.
I couldn't look at Pepe.
Two hours later, Roberto and David returned soaking wet,
wearing t-shirts and swimming trunks when they opened the van door.
He was hit with a diesel smell.
Later that night, Donald was summoned from his room to Roberto's room
where they were bragging about the murder.
David claimed he cut off Jose's face and wore it as leather face from the Texas Chainsaw
Massacre movie.
A little egg game stuff going on.
That is extremely sick.
You think about Ed Gein.
You think about the scene from Science of the Lambs where, you know,
Lecter kills that guard.
Yeah.
And then essentially uses his face to be transported out of the,
the place where he's being held prisoner.
Yeah.
Freaky.
And then you think of.
Jim Carrey using a piece of baloney on his face and saying silence of the land.
And then, you know, that's kind of more funny than freaky.
Yeah, yeah, a little lighten it up a little bit.
Donald testified that he was told to clean the guns, investigators found inside the church.
He cleaned them, but he didn't file the inside of the 45 caliber, as he was told to do.
And why would they have wanted him to file down the inside of the barrel?
Well, they don't want them trace back to anybody.
Right.
They want to throw off ballistics, right?
That's the only thing I can think of.
Roberto's fiancee Liza Robles testified that he admitted to killing and dismembering Jose
Horan.
She last saw Jose going with Roberto to burn trash at the Buck Mountain Road property.
She never saw him again.
Roberto later told her that he and David shot Jose in the head and cut up his body.
She testified the bones he had smashed.
in the chicken feedbacks.
The flesh was dumped in the Lehigh River.
She admitted that she soaked butcher knives in five-gallon buckets of bleach and water at the cottage.
The day after Jose was killed, she woke up and saw Roberto and David cooking meat in a pan.
She wanted what she thought was a piece of steak.
Roberto told her not to eat it saying, no, that's Pepe.
Okay, that's just sick.
Yeah, I mean, we've gone from drugs and murder to dismemberment, cannibalism, Texas chainsaw massacre.
I mean, there's a lot of stuff to this murder.
Yeah, but now you're putting some of the meat in the frying pan.
Liza testified, David kept some of the meat for a religious ritual he wanted to do.
I don't know any religious rituals that say, take human flesh.
and cook it up.
Well, we did say that he was involved in Saneria.
Yeah.
Black Magic.
In a later interview, Donald Warren claimed he heard that the two used Jose's remains
to make sandwiches and invited people over.
Roberto allegedly bragged about a special recipe.
Hey, I made some really good sandwiches, guys.
You're going to really enjoy this.
Grab a sandwich to sit down and watch the game, okay?
I'm telling you, this is another.
reason that I don't like to eat things at like family gatherings when I don't know exactly who made it.
Who made it?
And sometimes when I do know who made it, I don't like to eat things.
I remember we used to have these, they called them carry, carry ends at the office.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I know we would look at the table with all the food on it and we would laugh because we knew.
Who made what?
And we were staying away from certain items on that.
Yeah.
And I mean, not to say anything bad about people, but it's just like, okay, I don't know if I want to eat that.
Yeah.
You know.
Stayed clear.
Will I be okay without it?
Yes.
Absolutely.
Do I think this person is a serial killer?
Not necessarily.
But I don't know for sure what people do in their spare time.
Did you ever put some on your plate?
Like you were going to eat it.
And then when you got to your office, like.
Tost it in the trash.
No, why would I do that?
It's just wasteful.
Donald said it was one of the most
ghoulish things I've ever witnessed in my entire life.
And not so much the act, but the attitude,
the laughter.
They were treating it like it was a birthday party.
Yeah, I mean, they seemed fairly relaxed and...
Almost giddy.
Yeah.
That they murdered this guy.
Liza testified that Roberto continued to earn
$12 to $18,000 from rental properties,
owned in the Freeland area.
Per Roberto's instruction,
she deposited $300 a month
into David's prison account.
The prosecution suggested the money
was for David to take the fall for Roberto.
Remember, they were already going to prison,
right, for these drug charges.
They weren't getting out of those.
I mean, 300 bucks a month,
I'm guessing it kind of goes kind of far.
I would think you could live fairly large
at the commissary.
on 300 bucks a month. I don't know that for a fact, because I've never been in prison.
Seems like a lot of Twinkies.
And Raman. Liza also testified that Roberto and David manipulated several 9mm bullets that went
to Jose's 9mm Glock. They removed the gunpowder because they didn't want the gun to discharge
rounds. So, you know, they could have even left the primers in. It just wouldn't have been
gunpowder in there to, you know, ignite and cause the bullet to come flying out.
Yeah.
During cross-examination, the defense said Liza had an immunity deal in exchange for her testimony.
They suggested that each time she told the story, she added new details.
Liza maintained that added details were the result of additional questions being asked of her.
Well, sometimes when the police say, tell me everything you know about the night of,
or about the murder of, they're expecting you to go ahead and lay it all out there
and not for them to have to keep digging and pulling information out of you.
Yeah, but how often does someone have every detail the first time out?
Now, if you have wrong details, that would be different.
But if you just don't offer up every detail because you're not thinking about it,
all right, that would make some sense.
But you can't blame the defense for making a big deal about it.
No.
Anytime somebody gets a.
community, they're going to make a big deal about that.
A state police firearms and toolmark examiner testified that 10, 9mm bullets he examined were
missing gunpowder.
The bullets were recovered when state police found three firearms at the church.
The shell casings had tool markings possibly from pliers or vise to remove the bullets
and gunpowder.
It's not that hard to do.
No, it's really not.
and they make special bullet pullers,
but obviously maybe these guys didn't have one of those.
They're not expensive at all.
Retired state police corporal and county detective Sean Williams
testified that the investigation intensified.
When David Al-Zugari came forward in 2018,
Williams interviewed Roberto,
who gave his own story and made inconsistent statements
about locations where Jose's remains were dismembered and discarded.
During a third and fourth interview, Roberto placed blame on Freeland Police Chief Anthony Harris.
Earlier, State Police Corporal Richard Imra testified that investigators grew suspicious
that former Freeland Police Chief Anthony Harris knew more about Jose's disappearance than he was letting on.
Harris died of suicide on September 7, 2020, just after police contacted him to discuss the case.
I wonder up until that point how much he was sweating day after day knowing the clock was probably just ticking.
Yeah, I'm sure it was something that was weighing on him heavily if he really was involved in some way.
During cross-examination, Williams admitted several witnesses provided different versions of events.
But the version given by David and Roberto had many inconsistencies.
For example, David claimed Jose's body was dismembered in the chicken.
coop while Roberto said he was dismembered in the basement of the cottage and in a detached garage
behind the cottage. Investigators searched for a large circular bloodstain on the garage floor
that Roberto said would be there, but there was no trace of blood. David Azulgari testified
that while Jose's body was being dismembered inside a chicken coop, Roberto showed up and became
angry and sad. Roberto had nothing to do with the murder.
Once again, David said he killed Jose in self-defense and decided to dismember the body out of fear of assassins.
Assassins.
Yeah.
You got to watch those assassins.
You do.
They're nasty.
David testified that Jose and Roberto were brothers.
And David considered himself Roberto's brother.
He didn't consider Jose a friend or an enemy, but he knew Jose was an assassin who hung out with other assassins.
Where are all these assassins?
They're at the assassin cafe.
It's like a bar like in Deadpool.
Yeah.
Just a bunch of assassins hanging out.
That's exactly right.
They like their macha during the afternoon.
Yeah.
Assassins like a good macha.
Yeah.
He shot Jose in self-defense while they were unloading a truck of debris to burn at Roberto's property.
Jose threatened him with a 22 caliber revolver.
The drop to the ground during a,
fist fight. David picked up the gun and started running. Jose chased him with the machete.
As he was running, David shot under his arm and it hit Jose in the head. Again, we talked about
this, right? You're running away from someone. You're not even looking at them. Yeah. And you kind of
point the gun backwards. Now he's saying kind of threw his arm under his armpit and he just fires the gun.
and just miraculously happens to hit Jose square in the head with it.
That'd also be the day you would want to go play the lottery.
Yeah, because that is an amazing Bill Cody, wow Bill Hickok type trick shot.
Yeah.
I mean, could it happen?
Yeah, technically.
Yeah.
Yeah, but is it likely to happen?
And I would say no.
He said he feared assassins were going to come after him.
So he dragged Jose's body to a chicken coop and began the dismemberment.
Roberto left the property after he discovered what he was doing.
David claimed that he placed the remains in buckets and took them to the basement of the cottage.
Roberto didn't give him any instructions about what to do with the body,
and he disposed of the remains in the Lehigh River.
So he is really covering for Roberto.
Oh, big time.
Roberto decided to testify in his own defense.
He said he had absolutely nothing to do with any of it.
He testified that he moved from New Jersey to Freeland, Pennsylvania, where he started
buying rental properties.
He was renovating another building to open a restaurant.
Roberto described Jose as his counselor, mentor, and brother.
They had known each other since the mid-80s.
When Jose reached out to him in 2015, Roberto told him to come to him to come to
Freeland and he would help him open a bakery.
This made sense to Roberto from a business perspective because his restaurant could be one of Jose's
customers.
He claimed that all he wanted to do was help Freeland thrive by opening up closed storefronts.
So he's an angel investor.
You know, he's a do-gooder.
Yeah.
He's just trying to improve the community.
He's not a heroin distributor, trafficker.
Murderer. No, he's, what do you call those guys of the, a pillar?
A pillar of the community. Yes. That's a perfect word.
On the day, Jose was killed. Roberto drove up to his property where David and Jose were supposed to burn wood and debris.
He pulled up and saw smoke and flames. He called out to Jose and David, but didn't see them. He then saw Jose's body on the floor of the chicken coop. Roberto left the property and reported. He reported.
what he saw
to police chief Anthony Harrods,
then went to the cottage to wait
for investigators
who never came.
Roberto said the testimony
of Liza Robles,
Donald Warren,
and other witnesses,
who said Roberto and David
wanted Jose killed
was untruthful.
They're all liars.
They're all liars.
And hey,
man, I told the police chief,
but for some reason,
no one ever showed up to my house
and talk about it.
And he's not here to tell me why.
Yes, he can't defend himself or implicate himself either way.
But there's no reason for me to lie about it.
You know, that's what I did with him.
He denied that he planned the murder or was involved in any way.
During each interview with investigators, he wanted protection from prosecution.
Roberto testified per the Times leader.
I knew I wasn't going to tell everything that I knew until I was represented and treated the right way.
He didn't have a response when asked why he didn't call 911.
He denied hiding the guns inside the church and denied telling his fiance to hide meat cleavers and knives.
He claimed he purchased the meat cleavers and knives at an auction in 2016, months after the murder.
He planned on using them as Halloween props.
Because you know what makes good props?
Real cleavers and knives?
Yeah.
Yeah, they do.
he's fighting, right?
He's going down swinging.
Oh, for sure.
But to do so, he basically has to make the jury think that everybody is out to get him
and everybody who's testifying against him is lying.
Yeah, his best friend, his fiancee, everybody.
In closing arguments, the prosecutor described Jose as an invited guest at the cottage,
adding, this was a case quite simply, quite plainly, of this.
town not being big enough for the both of them.
Oh, we've had that problem here.
But I don't understand that at all.
Even in a small town.
Okay, there's two people.
Yeah.
The town's not big enough for these two people?
Can't share it.
The prosecutor called David Azzogari's story,
the silliest self-defense claim that I've ever heard in my entire life.
The defense alleged that the key witnesses had their own legal
troubles and fabricated contradictory stories to save themselves.
Witnesses provided new sensational details at trial, such as the claim that Roberto
distracted Jose by pointing at an eagle in the sky so David could shoot him from behind.
The defense pointed out that DNA testing on the bone fragments and weapons found no DNA,
blood, or incriminating evidence.
And you know, this idea, because I thought we did talk about early on,
on David, Jose being shot in the back of the head.
Well, then, you know, you kind of look even closer at David's story.
If he's running away from Jose who's chasing him with the meat cleaver.
Yeah.
How is he firing underneath his arm and hitting him in the back of the head?
It just, none of it makes any sense.
It doesn't matter.
And maybe that's why prosecutors called it the silliest self-defense story ever.
on May 18th,
2023,
Roberto Turner was found guilty
of first-degree murder,
criminal solicitation to commit homicide,
and criminal conspiracy to commit homicide.
He said after the conviction,
is quoted by the Times leader.
You win some, you lose some.
That's what you get when you go for it.
There you go.
I tried.
I tried to win this one.
I gave it my best, man.
I get it.
It's a baseball game, a basketball game.
something like that, you win some, you lose some. You could say it about a murder trial, but I think the
stakes are just a little bit higher. Yeah. He also said, that's what you get when you go for.
What are you going for? You're on trial for murder. It's not like you chose that. No.
It's not like that million dollar game, you know, like if you get the answer, you win a million bucks.
But if you get it wrong, you lose it all. But you could also stop before.
that. Yeah. And take your prize. Exactly. Walk away with pretty good money. Yeah, but he's saying,
you know, I went for it. On August 24th, 2003, Roberto was sentenced to life without parole.
He received the second 20 to 40 years for conspiracy and solicitation to run consecutive to his
federal sentence. According to the Times leader, Roberto told the judge, I'm not guilty of this crime.
However, it hurts me.
It is going to haunt me for a long time that a man called my brother and friend is gone.
I'm sorry this happened to him.
I wish I could have done something for him.
In the deepest corners of my heart, I had nothing to do with this.
I'm really sorry for what happened to him.
So that's his story and he's sticking to it.
Yeah.
But he also said just not too long ago, you win some, you lose some.
And that's what happens when you go for it.
So doesn't really
Well,
make a lot of sense.
If you have like another month to think about things,
you know,
maybe it's starting to set in now.
Yeah.
It's a little bit more than when some lose them.
On October 20th,
20th,
2003,
David Al-Zugari pleaded guilty
to third-degree murder and conspiracy
to commit homicide.
He was sentenced to 17 to 45 years in prison.
On February 24th,
2005. Roberto pleaded guilty to arson. The 2016 fire caused a million dollars in damage to three
homes and endangered the lives of neighbors. He received an additional 10-year prison sentence.
Well, it's just pretty much guaranteeing he's staying right where he's at. Yeah, he's got a long time,
right? He's never most likely getting out. Roberto lost his most recent appeal on July 10th.
in 2025, although the case is closed, the remains of Jose Haran have never been found.
As we wrap this one up, Gibbs, the motive in this case, it still remains a mystery, right?
Did Roberto want Jose killed because of jealousy, a loss of control, or possibly because he
found out that Jose wasn't informant?
There's a lot of conflicting statements and witnesses who, you know,
truthfully had their own legal cases to deal with.
So authorities may never know exactly what happened to Jose on the night he went missing.
And they may never know exactly why he was killed.
But when I look at it, you know, yeah, jealousy.
Could that be a reason?
Maybe.
But I really doubt it since I knew each other for a long period of time.
But if you find out, the person that you thought was one of your best friends is,
Is an informant?
Yeah, because you think about what could happen within a week of this guy arriving.
Yeah.
In a relationship that had spanned decades.
And that could be it.
The revelation or finding out that Jose was working as an informant, that could be enough to have caused Roberto to won him dead.
I mean, don't forget, this guy's trafficking heroin.
He's doing a lot of illegal stuff.
and it probably comes down in Roberto's mind.
It's either him or me.
Yeah, he could have had that thought, no doubt about it.
But that's it for our episode on Jose Haram.
We got a voicemail.
Gibbs, you want to check that out?
Yeah, it's here.
Hi, my name is Leah Peach, and I've been a long-time listener.
I've been listening since I think 2020,
and I'm just a huge fan.
I'm team Givie.
I absolutely love Givie, and he just messaged me back.
on Instagram, which is really cool.
But I'll get to the point.
So I'm from Nova Scotia in Canada.
And in 2020, we had our first, like, mass shooting.
And over the point of 12 hours, Gabriel Wartman, who is a denture fitter,
and who my little sister and my mother actually met because he does dentures,
his hands were in my mother's mouth.
So that's crazy to think about.
But, yeah, he killed about 18.
people and it really took a huge toll on my community. I'd love to hear this on the podcast on
true crime all the time. I love the show. Keep doing what you're doing. Stay safe and keep your
own time ticking. Bye. All right. Thank you so much for the voicemail. I mean, I think I remember when
that happened, but I don't remember a lot about it. So it would make for a very interesting case.
It's got me interested already. Well, that says a lot.
It does.
Does it?
Does it really?
End up in Nova Scotia.
Like how I say that?
Do I like?
It doesn't matter if I like it.
What matters is if people in Nova Scotia like it and or are not offended by it.
I don't think they be offended.
That's all that matters.
Offend it by it, eh?
Oh.
A.
Hey.
I just watched a documentary on ESPN about the Montreal Expos.
Oh, did you?
And it was great.
Yeah.
The only problem with it was it was almost entirely in French.
We.
And I did not realize it would be.
Obviously, I know a lot of people in Montreal speak French.
But I didn't realize the documentary.
I had to read most of it.
That's the one thing I've learned since, you know, I go up to Ontario so much,
is it's the law that everything you see has to be in English and in French.
Yeah.
And sometimes, like, it cracks me up some of the French words, you know, because I'm thinking, if you just pronounce them, you know, like phonics-wise, I don't, you know what I'm saying.
I do.
Phonetically.
Phonics-wise.
It cracks me up, you know, like, wow.
You know, but, yeah.
Now, I'm assuming that's not Canada-wide.
No.
Because not every part of Canada is.
as heavily populated with French-speaking people, I don't think, right?
Yeah, you're right.
The weird thing for me is that, so in Ontario, so, you know, has to be in English and French,
except if you're in Montreal or Quebec, it doesn't have to be.
It can just, like, in Montreal, it can just be in French, and they don't have to add the English part.
Hmm.
So it's like, wait a minute.
You would think that was, those would be the most important places.
Yeah.
Those are the most populated.
Exactly.
So I don't know.
All right.
Well, we appreciate the voicemail.
We'll definitely look into it.
We do.
All right, buddy, that is it for another episode of true crime all the time.
So for Mike and Gibby, stay safe and keep your own time ticking.
