Crime Junkie - CAPTURED: Ashley Freeman and Lauria Bible's Killer
Episode Date: May 14, 2018 In April of 2018, we were all talking about the capture of the Gold State Killer but did you know another long-time cold case was solved that same week? On December 29, 1999, best friends Lauria Bib...le and Ashley Freeman were having a sleepover at Ashley's house. Sometime in the early morning hours of December 30th, Ashley's parents were murdered and their home set on fire. The two girls were never seen again. For years, theories surrounded this case. Did Someone take the girls? Were the girls responsible for one or more murders and then ran off to start new lives? Well in 2018 we finally got answers, though, as of this recording their remains have still not been found.  For current Fan Club membership options and policies, please visit https://crimejunkieapp.com/library/. Sources for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/captured-ashley-freeman-lauria-bibles-killer/  Â
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Hey there, Crime Junkie listeners!
This is Mandy and Melissa from the Moms and Murder podcast.
We are two moms sitting around a kitchen table talking about some of the fascinating cases
in the world of true crime.
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Britt, guess what I just did?
What'd you do?
I went and checked our PO box, which always makes me so happy because every time I go,
we've got some kind of fan mail, and this time I had a couple of letters or notes from
listeners, and I even got a package of coffee from one of our Instagram followers Paul Rez,
which is amazing, and I promise to try and save you some for when you come down and visit.
But I also got this wonderful letter and a book from some of our listeners who call themselves
Junior Junkies, and it's Sophie and Adriana, and I don't know if they're Junior Junkies
because they're younger than us, or they're Junior Junkies because they're brand new into
true crime.
Their letter was so sweet, and they were telling me about this serial killer in their backyard.
They're from British Columbia, and instead of just telling me I should look into this
guy, they actually sent me the book on him, which was just so kind of them.
Oh my gosh, that's awesome.
I know, so anyone listening, you can get our PO box on our website.
If you just want to even send us a little note, it means so much to us to go to the
PO box and have notes from you guys.
It's so encouraging.
It keeps us going, so feel free to send us some mail there.
We love hearing from you, and make sure to keep telling your friends about the show so
we can keep this going.
A couple of weeks ago, we all heard about the capture of the Golden State Killer, and
obviously we were psyched about all of that, like the true crime community was freaking
out.
We all collectively were freaking out, but what kind of got dismissed is there was another
case that broke just days before that that hasn't gotten nearly the same amount of attention
that I want to make sure we cover as well.
And that is the story of Ashley Freeman and Laura Bible.
These girls went missing back in December of 1999, and their case has been cold until
just a couple of weeks ago.
But before we go back to December of 1999, I need to take you back just a little bit
further to give you a little history about Ashley's family, the Freemans, who all lived
in rural northeast Oklahoma.
In 1998, the local sheriff's office gets a call from Ashley's dad, Danny, that his son,
Shane, had run away and he can't get him to come home.
The officer tracks down Shane, and Shane says, yeah, I ran away because my dad beat the living
crap out of me for disobeying him.
And he shows the deputy his wounds, and they were actually so bad that Shane had blood
completely through his underwear, like it was all on his legs, very bad.
So needless to say, Danny gets charged with abusing a minor, and after that, Shane refused
to go home.
He actually would often stay with Laura's family, and Laura's mom said that he was really
starting to act out, like stealing stuff from them, getting into trouble.
And there was actually this whole phase where we didn't know it was him until after what
I'm about to tell you, but he was going around impersonating an officer.
And he would actually like, he stole a red light and would pull people over all the time.
And this is like my actually a huge crime-junkie life role that I have, because I've heard
lots of stories like this, and even if you Google this now, like, man impersonates police
officer pulling people over or whatever.
So many stories come up of people doing this, and they're there for very sinister reasons
like usually it's not just for fun, they're like abducting people.
And I am very much the belief that if you're on a roll road, like there's no one around,
you can put your flashers on, call 911 to verify that the person pulling you over is
actually a cop.
There's nothing wrong with that.
The cop knows your flashers are on, you're not going to get in extra trouble, or if you're
on a freeway or anywhere where it's dark, it's okay to pull over somewhere light, somewhere
well populated.
Again, just turn on your flashers, you don't have to pull over the second that they flip
their lights on.
It's okay to like make sure they're a real cop, because I've gotten pulled over a couple
of times and I always do this, like usually it's in a well populated area, so I'll just
put my flashers on and like pull over, but anyway, so he's going around doing this.
And four months later, on Friday, January 8th of 1999, Shane has the attention of the
sheriff's office again.
He was spotted on the side of a road with a pickup truck that had looked like it was
broken down.
And all we have to go off of for this interaction is the one deputy's account who was there
because there were no other witnesses.
But what this deputy says happened is that after he pulled over and got out of the car,
Shane like right away pulls a gun on him, so the deputy shoots and kills Shane in self-defense.
Shane was found dead at the scene and the judge ruled in fact that it was self-defense
and the shooting was justified.
The gun that he actually pulled on the deputy was one that was stolen from the Bible's home
just the day before this shooting took place.
And Laura Bible's mom actually says that he was talking to people the day before about
how he was planning on either committing suicide or suicide by cop.
So it could have been what he was trying to do, but Ashley's family didn't believe this.
They said he would run if he was confronted by law enforcement.
So they figured that he had to have been shot while running away.
Even though the reports that were later released from the autopsy showed that no, that's not
what it was.
He was not shot in the back.
Everything corroborates self-defense.
The family though would not accept this and they were telling people that they were going
to be filing a wrongful death suit against the sheriff's department.
Well if you do that, you have one year from the date of the incident to file that lawsuit.
And again, that happened on January 8th of 1999, so they would have had until January
8th of 2000.
So now I'm going to jump forward from January of 1999 when this shooting took place to December.
Shane's case will become relevant soon, so just like keep it in the back of your mind.
But I want to tell you now more about Shane's sister Ashley and her friend Laura.
The two were high school age girls and they were absolutely best friends.
They grew up together from the time they were little and they actually used to live right
across the street from one another before Ashley's family moved about 20 minutes away.
But the 20 minute trip didn't change their friendship at all.
They still spent almost every single day together.
Laura was already 16 and Ashley's 16th birthday was actually on December 29th.
They were both on Christmas break when Ashley's birthday rolled around, but she didn't really
want to do anything big to celebrate.
It was her first birthday after losing her brother and the one year anniversary of his
death was approaching.
So the two girls just decide that they're going to like play at low key, they're going
to spend the day together and Laura's mom, Kathy, takes both of them into town just like
maybe do some shopping, they go to dinner and then they decide that Laura will sleep
over at Ashley's house.
Kathy takes the girls to stop at Laura's house to get all of her stuff like a sleepover
clothes and she needs to ask her dad and they lay it on thick to her dad.
Like it's her 16th birthday, I need to spend the night with her like yada, yada, yada.
Of course her dad is going to say yes.
Like we used to lay it on thick to our parents like we would sell slumber parties to them.
So her dad of course says yes, she goes inside and grabs some clothes and as she was leaving
her last words to her dad were I love you daddy.
And as she's walking down her driveway, her mom is actually coming home and she says make
sure you're home in the morning because like we have dentist appointments so don't forget.
Kathy takes Ashley and Laura back to Laura's house and they watch some TV together until
about 930 when Ashley's boyfriend Jeremy comes over to give Ashley her birthday present.
They all have some birthday cake together and then he leaves and Jeremy is the last known
person to see any of them alive.
What happened between the time Jeremy left at 930 and 530 the next morning is still kind
of a mystery all of these years later.
It's slowly getting pieced together and I'll fill you in more as the story goes on but
what we know for sure is that at 530 in the morning the firefighters arrive at the Freeman
home after a passerby had reported a fire.
Their trailer home was completely engulfed in flames and by the time they're able to
put the fire out it had been burnt to the ground and while officials are trying to figure
out who lived there and who else might have been in the home word around town is spreading
and at 730 in the morning Laura's mom Laureen gets to work and she gets a call from her
son and he's like mom the Freeman's home is on fire wasn't Laura there last night and
of course she starts freaking out immediately and Laura's mom makes contact with the sheriff's
office and goes to meet them because she wants to know you know what did you find did anyone
get out do you have my daughter and she's like I know she was there in that home and
is she okay but they won't tell her anything so she actually goes to meet them in person
since they're not giving her any information over the phone.
When she gets in the deputy tells her that from the rubble they have found just one body.
This is super confusing but at least gives her a glimmer of hope that her daughter made
it out so she calls her husband to pick her up from the sheriff's office and they go out
to the scene together I'm assuming they did this because they thought maybe if the girls
made it out they would actually be around there somewhere you know what I mean yeah
when they get there they see that the home has been totally burnt to a crisp and there
is police tape surrounding the entire home but they get immediately agitated because
it kind of seems like everyone is just standing around like not really doing anything clearly
three people are missing so like what's going on like where's the urgency well when the
deputy approaches them he lets them know that they're waiting for OSBI which is the Oklahoma
State Bureau of Investigations they're waiting for them to get on the scene because they
can't investigate themselves why not well the sheriff's office had to call the OSBI because
they didn't want to be a confused of conflict so the sheriff's office was the one who had
shot the Freeman's son they knew that there was this like possible pending lawsuit in
the background there was a definite conflict of interest between the families so they didn't
want to be accused if they were to investigate the scene and something were to go wrong they
didn't want to be accused of tampering with it or doing something like nefarious if that
makes sense yeah okay when the OSBI finally arrives and processes the scene they tell
the family that there is a single body of an adult female they couldn't confirm right
at that moment that it was Kathy but there really wasn't any doubt in anyone else's
mind and tests later came in that did verify that it was her once the remains of Kathy
were removed they searched the rest of the home or like the pile of ash that was the
home and by 5 30 that evening the OSBI says listen there's no more bodies we've collected
all of the evidence we are done so this was really encouraging because a lot of people
including Laura's family hoped that Danny and the girls had escaped and just went somewhere
safe to like either just get away from the fire or maybe to hide from whoever was after
them they really think someone was after them a house fire obviously isn't normal but it
seems pretty innocent so it could have been an accident and that's what they don't know
so there's all these most people thought like okay they just got away from a fire but there
is this question in the back of everyone's mind if this fire was set intentionally which
we don't know yet someone had to have done that so maybe there is someone who did this
and the rest of the family is like in hiding and while they're trying to figure out what's
going on Laura's parents can't just sit around and wait so her dad organizes a search with
people on horseback and they cover over 40 acres but they come up with absolutely nothing
like none of their items no shred of evidence no direction which they might have gone that
same night they go to the sheriff's department to be formally interviewed by the OSBI and
what comes out of their interview is they said Danny had a history with drugs both using
and growing marijuana so the OSBI start to wonder if maybe this was a drug deal gone
bad or some kind of vendetta that was drug related they also asked Laura's parents if
there was any enemies that the Freeman had and this is when they say listen all we know
about is this few that they had with the sheriff's office yeah this is what the 30th now so
they would have had like nine days to follow that wrongful death suit yeah so a lot of
people were looking at the sheriff's office and being kind of suspicious of them because
they almost thought it was so weird that they were so quick to bring in the OSBI but that
would be some serious corruption for a sheriff's office to kill someone or a whole family just
so they wouldn't sue them right I love a good conspiracy theory but that just doesn't make
sense for me oh I totally agree and with them being so quick to turn the case over I don't
think they were covering up anything and additionally a judge had ruled on their side before like
for that shooting so even if they went to trial from what I can tell all the evidence
they had pointed to Shane's death being justified the shooting being justified so they likely
would have won a trial in court anyways so you know you're in these moments these like
pie intense emotional moments I can see people coming up with all these crazy stories but
I think their call to calling the OSBI was the right call because if they would have
done the opposite people would have been confronting them for that anyways so Laura's parents leave
their interview and they're just kind of more confused than ever no one's really sure who
would want them dead there's this conspiracy lurking in the background which you know even
now we're thinking that there's no way it's real I'm sure in the moment you'd have to
you know at least consider it right yeah definitely well things get even more confusing because
the next morning when news comes out that the cause of death for Kathy was a single gunshot
blast from a rifle and she was dead before the fire even started what yeah and accelerant
had been used so now people aren't thinking that Danny and the girls got away Danny is
becoming a prime suspect so what's the theory he killed Kathy and abducted the girls yeah
people were saying the biggest theory was that he went off the deep end and basically
he was saying I will give you Laura and Ashley if you give me the deputy that shot my son
so instead of going to court he was like making his own justice but there were never any demands
like that made it was all rumor but people kept going with it because people would say
they saw Danny driving in a white pickup truck with the two girls that theory doesn't explain
at all why he would kill Kathy though not at all but it really doesn't even matter because
something totally shocking happens that changes everyone's theory about the case by the thirty
first police had released the crime scene so Laura's parents went out to the site and
they just were gonna dig through the ash themselves what did they think they were gonna find honestly
probably nothing but I can see the need to just want to do something you know like instead
of just sitting around and because of this I literally want to recheck every crime scene
ever because when they come back almost immediately after walking through the debris Laura's dad
finds another body what like a whole body not like a bone or some teeth a whole body
he said immediately he knew it was Danny and now he didn't know what to think because
if the girls aren't with Danny where are they I mean they could very well still be in that
house how do you miss a whole body when processing a crime scene I have no idea but it makes
me wonder what else they missed like there is no way you went through everything and
got every bit of evidence if you missed an entire person can you imagine where this case
would be if they never went back and looked I would hope that someone would have eventually
found it like when they clear the land but seriously who knows because it's not unthinkable
that it would have gotten missed again all these years I mean if they literally process
that scene air quotes and found that and when Laura's dad was there he said there were literally
like boot prints on the body because they walked right over it so naturally when Laura's parents
call 911 to report this body they are pissed and when officials arrive they ask the family
to leave and they're like no way we are not leaving until we physically watch you with
our own eyeballs search every inch of this place to make sure our daughter isn't in
there so they do in fact clear the rest of the scene but the girls are not in there so
we know for sure that both parents are dead and new suspicions and rumors start to come
out apparently the Freemans had been telling people that they were in fact going to file
that lawsuit against the sheriff's office and they needed to raise about $5,000 to do
that so people start wondering if maybe Danny's drug dealing had gotten a little more out
of control and he was trying to make some really quick cash so maybe he really had pissed
somebody off but that really didn't explain where the girls were so there was another
set of people who theorized that the girls themselves had something to do with this wait
why well because of Danny's history of abuse with Shane they thought maybe Danny had been
abusing Ashley and something had gotten out of hand and maybe Kathy had tried to step
in so Danny killed Kathy and then Ashley killed Danny and then Ashley and Laura ran off together
and a lot of people kept coming back to this because Ashley was saving up for a car and
she had something like $4,000 in the freezer which was gone when they processed the scene
so people think Ashley could have taken off with the money and run off. Isn't it just
as likely that the $4,000 fit into the theory about someone else coming into the home and
killing them over drugs or for whatever reason? Ashley could have been trying to give them
the money to get them to leave especially if whoever it was was there about drugs or
money. Oh totally and that's the problem with so much of this with two people dead
and two other simply vanishing into thin air. No one knows what to do with any of this evidence
and so it went cold for a long time and it wasn't until 18 months after the fire that
they got their first break inmates in a local jail said that they saw the girls at a local
New Year's Eve party at some meth house the day after they went missing. Basically they
said the girls were kidnapped, raped and tortured in front of a group of people and
all of this was on videotape. So naturally the police serve a search warrant on this
house in July of 2001 and they even take cadaver dogs but they find nothing there. There's
a bunch of like buried meth equipment, the cadaver dogs don't hit on anything, there's
no videotape but they do find one spot of what looks like body fluids in that home likely
blood and so they take that in as evidence and do you want to know how long it takes
to get that spot tested? I mean I know CSI is a lie and it's not hours or like the 15
minutes on TV but I'm assuming like weeks or months. Their family had to wait over a
year to get that lab report. That is insane there has to be a better way for this stuff
also relating this back to the other big case that overshadowed this, the golden state killer
when they had a possible suspect identified they turned around his DNA in like a week.
I know and I don't know if it's like a manpower thing or a money thing or what but the priority
of testing this sample just seemed super off to me. Well when it comes back it doesn't
belong to either of the girls so that lead just totally dies because investigators can't
find anything else to corroborate that story. But another lead pops up there's a man on
death row in Texas named Tommy Lynn Sells. He's in prison for stabbing a 13 year old
girl one day after Ashley and Laura went missing and he confesses to killing the whole family.
He takes police on this wild goose chase where he says he buried them but there is nothing
there and he was literally just taking them for a joy ride. Around the five year anniversary
a new theory starts to emerge. There's a 31 year old guy named Jeremy Jones who's in
custody. He had a history with drugs and he was now on death row in Alabama for raping
a woman, killing her, dousing her in gasoline and then setting her home on fire. Sounds
familiar. Want to know something even more eerie? Oh my god I don't even know. The same
night that everything went down at the Freemans he was arrested in the early morning hours
just 10 miles away for being intoxicated in public. So he was right there and has a history
of killing people in a similar fashion? Yep. So the OSBI goes to Alabama and starts interviewing
this guy and they go for a couple of days, a couple of hours each day and on the second
day towards the end of their interrogation Jeremy Jones finally starts talking. He tells
investigators that what happened is Danny Freeman owed money and he went to get it.
He said things went bad and he killed Danny first because he was the strongest. Then he
killed Kathy. Then he said he doused the house in accelerant to destroy all of the evidence
of him being there and he knew exactly what kind of accelerant was used even though that
was never released to the public. As he was leaving he said that the two girls came running
out of the house and his first thought was oh crap witnesses. But he said they had no
idea what was going on. They see him and they start running towards him asking him for help.
So he lets them get in his truck and he says once they're in there he points a gun at them
and they start crying and then he starts crying because he had no idea what to do with them.
But he says eventually he tied them up in his car, drove them out to one of the mine shafts
in Kansas, killed both Ashley and Laura and then drove back to Oklahoma and got high and
that's where he was arrested that night. So this feels like the first really credible
lead that the OSBI and the family have because not only did he tell them the story and know
about the accelerant but he knew exactly what kind of shotgun was used as well. In June
of 2005, five and a half years after the girls went missing, the OSBI go out to do this search.
They bring cadaver dogs, they bring manpower, enough officers for a full ground search and
they get out to the mine shaft and their hearts sink when they realize there's literally hundreds
of shallow mines all underground and they're all linked. So when you drop like a body in
one of them, they're like water underneath, it can just float anywhere. So even if he
told them exactly which one it was at, there's no way that they could actually find them.
So note to self if I ever need to get rid of a body. You know I had the exact same thought
as I was watching one of the documentaries on their case. I was like, A, love all this
info, but B, why are you telling everyone who watches TV how to get away with murder?
So anyways, they drop cameras down these mine shafts but despite all of Jeremy Jones' detailed
instructions, they find nothing. And when no evidence is found, he ends up recanting his
entire confession. For the longest time, that's where things stood. This was all the way back
in 2005. So for all those years between 2005 and when the case broke a couple weeks ago
in 2018, did the family believe that Jeremy Jones did it? From a lot of the interviews
I've seen, they would often bring him up because it just didn't make sense that he knew so
much that wasn't released. I don't know for sure if they thought he did it because they
were also had a private investigator and were getting a lot of information as well, but they
definitely kept pointing back to him like he was a question mark for them. That is so
strange. Right, but there were some doubts, at least within law enforcement because the
timeline was like, it was really tight. He was arrested at 4am on the 30th, which means
based on where he said he left the girls, the latest he could have left was 3am. And
I guess with what they know about the fire, it just seemed like it would have been, like
had to have been the perfect crime. But doable, right? Oh, for sure. Otherwise, they would
have ruled him out years ago. It still baffles me why these people make false confessions.
I get false confessions by people who are intimidated by police or whatever, but guys
that are already serving life or on death row for murder, like why? What's the end game?
I don't know. And I don't know if it's literally just to mess with people like play games because
they're bored. Maybe they want to torment people emotionally because they can't torment
people physically anymore. But crime junkie life rule two in one episode. Yes, I've said
this before, but don't try and understand crazy. You won't leave it to the professionals.
We could speculate all day, but I have no idea. You mean the other podcasts that tell
us the inside psyche of people they've never met? Yeah, leave it to them. So I actually
do have a lot of questions about Jeremy Jones still. And normally I would keep asking them,
but we don't even need to spend time on him because we actually know the ending now, right?
And he isn't in our ending. So in early 2018, there was a press release basically saying
that the investigators on Ashley and Laura's case found some long lost investigative notes
inside an office crate in a police department closet. It seems there was a changeover in
sheriff administrations and the new administration found this and said, quote, these notes and
documents have proven to be extremely valuable. This information has produced leads that have
produced additional leads, end quote. So they make this announcement, and then they go away,
and then nothing really happens in the public until boom, April 2018, when they announced
that they have arrested a man that I had never heard of named Ronnie Dean Busek, who is now
66 years old. And we also learned that according to police, he had two accomplices who are both
deceased now, Warren Philip Welch II and David Pennington. Their obituaries are just like
disgusting. For example, Warren Welch, who was supposedly the mastermind of this whole murder
conspiracy or whatever, was like, Oh, he was this super great churchgoing man. He served in the
military. Like, I feel like obituaries are the Facebook of like back in the day before there
was Facebook. Does that make sense? Like, yeah, totally. Like, here are all these great things I
accomplished in my life, all summed up in my obituary. Yeah, I'm going to leave out that I'm
a crazy methhead who murders people, but isn't my life perfect. So here's what I found out.
Apparently, when they found this mystery box, some notes in there pointed investigators to some
new witnesses, many of whom told investigators about a pair of private detectives who had worked
on the case years earlier, like in the very early days of the investigation. The new investigators
eventually tracked down one of these old TIs or investigators, whatever he was named Tom Pryor.
Now, Tom didn't have his files anymore, because it's so many years later, but he kept one single
super important item, which was an insurance card found at the scene on the day after the
Freemans were killed. The card belonged to a woman who happened to be living with Warren Welch.
He had often drove her car and the insurance car put Welch at the crime scene. After they keep
questioning more people about Welch, Busek and Pennington, they hear story after story about how
Busek had gone to the Freeman trailer to settle a bad drug deal. And one witness told police the
girls were held for days and raped and violently strangled to death. And basically, the girls were
never part of the plan. But when they got there, they just decided to take them and have some
quote fun with them. And a former girlfriend of Welch told investigators that when she lived with
him in the months after the murders and the disappearances, he had actually decorated the walls
of his trailer with missing posters promoting the $50,000 reward for information about the girls.
That's so sick. And like again, that's not something that you want to tell police about is
your like boyfriend wallpapering with missing flyers. Right. So the girlfriend told police that
she actually discovered pictures of the girls after Welch was jailed for beating her. And this
was a few months after the murders. And basically, he had kept these pictures in a leather briefcase.
And when she found the briefcase, she knew immediately who the girls were. And she even
recognized the bed that the girls were photographed on as the one being the bed in her own room
that she shared with Welch. She gets so creeped out that she said she put all of the pictures in
the trunk of his car and left him. And when he got out of jail, she said he called her and was
like, listen, I know you've seen those pictures. First of all, I want them back. And don't you ever
tell anybody about this or you will end up in a pit just like those girls. And she wasn't the only
person to talk about these pictures. Other witnesses came forward and said that these guys used to
flaunt them almost like they were a prize and they were proud of this. So a ton of people
have known about this for a very long time. Yes, even the Bible family made a statement on their
Facebook page about it saying that the man charged with murder and the other two men mentioned
were all names we have heard for years with tips that we've received. They continue to write the
Polaroids mentioned we've known about for years. None of this information was new to us, although
seeing it on paper made it very real. So do we know how long the girls were kept alive? I don't
know. And I'm sure that is what's eating at everybody. That insurance card that they found
was found the day after this happened. The girls were still alive. I cannot understand the communication
breakdown that kept people from tracking this guy down at his home if the girls were pictured on
his bed. Like obviously they were there. They had this insurance card which they linked to him
20 some years later. Why couldn't that have happened sooner? Yeah, and you said a private
investigator found the insurance card and it wasn't found in a police search? Right. So again,
this goes back to the way that they searched the home to begin with. I mean, they missed a body.
I don't know if they if the insurance card was found before police came back for the second time
or even after that or why it was obviously in the investigative notes to begin with. I mean,
that's how these new investigators got back to them. So again, I cannot comprehend the breakdown.
You know, I'm very close with law enforcement here in Indiana and I often take law enforcement
side, but I'm also willing to recognize when a bad job was done and a bad job was done here.
Every one of the press conference was kind of doing the pat on the back like yay, we never gave
up. And yeah, good, they shouldn't have given up. But what the heck went wrong back in 1999? And
how do we fix that? Yeah. And you know, there's this whole season of a podcast kind of dedicated
to the exact same thing. In the dark season one was all about how there aren't necessarily criminal
geniuses just getting away with crimes. There are really just bad investigations. And I think
this one was a bad investigation. Yeah, I definitely think people should check out in the dark. I mean,
it's all talks about how just an investigation can go so awry and something that is solved 2030
plus years later really could have been solved day one if the proper measures were taken. So I
encourage everyone to go check out in the dark. They actually just released a season two. And if you
want to discuss this case, you can go to our Facebook discussion group, just search crime junkie
podcast discussion group on Facebook. And you can follow us on Twitter at crimejunkiepod and on
Instagram at crimejunkie podcast. This case is still unfolding in the news. We'll try and keep
you up to date if there is a trial and as things progress. And until then, we'll see you next week.
Crime junkie is written and hosted by me. All of our sound production and editing comes from
Brit Prey what and all of our music, including our theme comes from Justin Daniel. Crime junkie is
an audio check production. So what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?