Crime Junkie - MISSING: Alissa Turney
Episode Date: November 26, 2018In 2001 Mike Turney reported to Phoenix, Arizona police that his 17-year-old step-daughter, Alissa, had run away to California. But 7 years later, a serial killer comes forward with a story that would... launch an investigation into her disappearance and make her family fear that Alissa had been a victim of foul play. 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/missing-alissa-turney/  Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Crime junkies, Britt and I have a wild ride to take you on today.
It is the case of missing Alyssa Turni that will have you picking your jaw up
off of the floor by the end.
But before I start this episode, I need something from you.
We have hammered this into you all before.
These are real people we're talking about on our show.
This isn't just a fun 30 minute way to make your morning commute cushier.
The families we talk about in these stories
have had their lives turned upside down and they let us share their stories
because they're hoping people on the other end will actually care
and actually do something.
So before you listen to this story, I need you to commit to doing something for me.
At the end of the show, I'm going to ask you to sign a petition
that Alyssa's sister has put together.
This will cost you no money.
It will take less than two minutes, and this past week was Thanksgiving.
And I'm sure most of you got to spend time with your family.
But Alyssa's family has been torn apart by her disappearance.
So if you have 30 minutes to sit here and hear her story, you owe her sister
the two minutes it will take you to actually make a difference.
So again, please listen all the way to the end of our episode.
And when you're done, go to crimejunkiepodcast.com to sign that petition.
With that, Britt, are you ready for me to dive in to the disappearance of Alyssa Attorney?
I am so ready.
OK, let's do this.
I want to take you all the way back to a time that is particularly nostalgic for me.
2001, a time when Life House was at the top of the billboard charts.
Brittany and Justin were wearing matching denim and the first ever iPod was introduced to the world.
It was a great time to be a teenager.
And at the center of our story is 17 year old Alyssa Attorney.
Alyssa was like most girls her age, wanting to be a little edgy, testing her boundaries
by dating boys, staying out late, smoking weed.
She was a junior in high school and living at home with just her stepdad and her half sister, Sarah.
You see, Alyssa's real dad was never really in her life and wanted little to do with her.
Alyssa's mom got remarried to a man named Mike, who had three boys of his own.
And together they had Sarah.
Now, Mike's three boys were grown and out of the house.
So when Alyssa's mom was diagnosed and passed away from cancer in the span of one year,
just Mike, Alyssa and Sarah were left in the house.
Mike had very different relationships with his two daughters.
With Sarah, he was the fun, loving, cool dad that let her get away with anything.
He would buy her and her friends beer.
He not only allowed her to skip school, but he actually encouraged it.
With Alyssa, on the other hand, he was like a completely different person.
He monitored her every move.
He would often follow her like when she would go to work.
He would sit outside of her work to make sure she was there.
He monitored her attendance, how she was doing in school, who she was hanging out with.
And he would often come down on her for drinking and smoking weed.
Mike used to tell Sarah that this was because Alyssa was naive and reckless,
that she needed more guidance because she was susceptible to falling in with the wrong crowds.
And he thought Sarah didn't need that because she was a good kid and Alyssa just wasn't.
But there were signs of something more brewing,
tensions between a stepfather and daughter
that Sarah couldn't quite put her finger on as a young kid.
And just to show you an example, take a listen to this clip from a home movie taken back in 1997.
Give me the camera now.
And you're still recording.
And Alyssa is stupid moron.
And Alyssa is a stupid moron.
Well, I don't like that at all.
Yeah. So you can see tensions were always running high between the two.
So what happened on May 17th, 2001, was only a little surprising to Sarah.
That day was the last day of school before summer break.
And her dad didn't show up to pick her up after school.
All the buses came and went.
And when he still wasn't there, she walked to a friend's house.
This actually wasn't unusual at all.
Sarah would walk to this friend's house so frequently
that it didn't even register with her that maybe something was off.
And without any communication to her dad, he knew to pick her up there.
When he did arrive sometime likely between 4.30 and five, he tells Sarah
that Alyssa is missing and he can't get ahold of her.
Here, he says, he passes his cell phone to her.
You try calling her and attempt after attempt as they drove.
The phone would just ring until Alyssa's voicemail would pick up.
Finally, when they arrive home, Sarah was the first to enter the house.
And her dad told her to go check in Alyssa's room
for any kind of sign of her or where she could have gone.
When Sarah enters, she sees that the contents of Alyssa's backpack
had been emptied, but the bag itself was gone.
And that cell phone that she had been calling was left on Alyssa's dresser
right beside a note.
And Brett, can you read this note for me?
Dad and Sarah, when you dropped me off at school today,
I decided I really am going to California.
Sarah, you said you wanted me gone. Now you have it.
Dad, I took $300 from you. That's why I saved my money, Alyssa.
Now, Sarah was sad that her sister had left, but truthfully not surprised.
Her sister had an aunt that lived in California
that Alyssa had talked about going to live with in the past.
That night, Mike Turnie did call the police to report his daughter as a runaway.
He said they had an argument and she left for California.
Now, I should mention Mike Turnie had a history with law enforcement.
He actually used to be a cop himself, so he knew how the system worked.
And he had to have known that reporting a 17-year-old as a runaway
and saying he likely even knew where she was at her aunt's house
wasn't going to raise any big alarm bells.
And it didn't.
Police opened a missing person file on Alyssa,
but no real investigation was done into finding her.
Police didn't come by the home to ask questions or look into her things.
They didn't go do interviews with people at school or her friends
who saw her the day that she supposedly left.
If they would have, I think they would have seen
that her disappearance wasn't as straightforward
as Mike Turnie had presented to them.
About a week after Alyssa supposedly left,
Mike reports to police that he got a call from her
very early in the morning and a call where he said
that she just cursed at him and blamed him.
For the reason she left.
Alyssa told him she was in California and would never be coming home.
Did police verify that this call even happened?
No, so I think they were just taking Mike at his word.
Remember, they didn't really even do an investigation.
And this was just even more proof to them that she was in California
because he said she was in California.
But for some reason, Mike wanted them to have proof of this call.
Mike was a very litigious man,
so he ended up suing AT&T for the phone records.
And he was able to prove that there was actually an incoming call
from California to his home in the very early morning hours on that day.
This call would be the last time Mike or anyone was contacted by Alyssa.
In all the time after her disappearance,
she never once contacted her family and never once contacted her friends or her boyfriend.
What about the aunt that she supposedly went to live with?
Did she actually have her? I'm guessing no.
So she had the aunt in California, but she never contacted her as well.
And it's super interesting, I think, because Sarah said
that there actually was talk of her going to live with this aunt
shortly before her disappearance.
Her dad and Alyssa could not get along.
And he said, you know what, if you don't want to be here so bad, go live with her.
And Alyssa was kind of warming up to the idea.
And here is Alyssa's sister, Sarah, on a 2020 special
saying where she thought Alyssa might have been.
Until I'm shown evidence otherwise, she's on the beach sipping margaritas,
living a brand new life.
You know, that's the way I want to think of her.
I won't let myself think negatively without evidence.
So pretty much all of her family thought that she was a runaway too, right?
Well, for a while, until Mike started to convince them
that maybe something more sinister had happened.
And here's where things, in my opinion, start to get a little hinky.
And it's only something we can now see from the outside looking in 17 years later,
because at the time, everyone else was too close to the situation
to see the forest through the trees.
Mike told the family and those closest to Alyssa
that he thought something terrible had happened.
He said that, yes, she had left, but after some time,
he thought someone had been following her
or somehow harm had come to her along the way.
He stressed to the family that he had reported her missing to the police
and they weren't willing to do anything,
so he was the one that had to be Alyssa's champion.
He said he was the only one who cared.
He was the only one who was looking for her.
And Sarah said in the weeks following Alyssa's disappearance,
her dad would make frequent trips to California
driving in the areas they were familiar with,
driving in the areas where he got that phone call,
looking for Alyssa and passing around her missing person flyer.
So he's telling the police that she's a runaway
and the family that something bad has happened to her,
did he tell the police that something bad happened to her?
No, he never said anything different to the police.
There's this huge contradiction.
He has convinced the family that something bad has happened to her
and that the police are doing nothing about it.
But at the same time, the only story he's ever given to police
is that she has run away and I probably know where she is,
so it's not a big deal.
What about that call?
We know we got a call in the early morning hours from California.
Right.
So that's actually something that I thought about for a long time.
And for a long time, like I said, people took him at his word.
He had this proof from AT&T that a call came in from,
I think it was like River County, California.
Yeah.
But when you think about it, the call came like a week after she went missing.
And in the week between the time she did go missing and he got that call
is when Sarah said that he was doing a lot of traveling to California
to supposedly look for Alyssa.
If for some reason he had something to do with it,
how hard would it have been if he hired somebody to make a phone call from payphone?
Now that you mentioned it, it's totally possible.
Or even, I mean, going even further on alleged,
he could have left something somewhere called someone and said,
you know, he has contacts there at that point.
It's more than just a coincidence.
Exactly.
And if we had any kind of like recording of the phone call, that would help.
But we will get to that later.
Unfortunately, Alyssa's case went cold for many years.
And for many years, it was the same story.
The family believing that Alyssa had left
and if you believe Mike, then thinking that some harm had actually come to her.
And the police probably not even knowing Alyssa's name
as her missing person file got further and further back
in a stack of cold cases never being looked at
because no one was calling to remind them.
Not that the family didn't care,
but they had Mike telling them all along that he was pushing police
and he was being her champion but getting no cooperation.
But in reality, it seems he was doing nothing.
Now, Sarah had resided herself to the fact
that she might never know what happened to her sister,
where she was living, who she was with, until 2006
when the case broke wide open.
There was a man named Thomas Heimer
who was serving time in a Florida prison for murder.
To understand this story, I need to give you a little background on Heimer
and why he was in jail.
Back in 2001, just months after Alyssa's disappearance,
on the other side of the country in Florida,
a housekeeper at a Fort Lauderdale beachfront motel
was cleaning a room when she found the body of a woman underneath a bed.
The woman had been strangled and stabbed in the neck.
And the police in Florida found out that her name was Sandra Lee Goodman.
She was a 30-year-old video clerk.
And in all points, Bulletin went out for her car that was missing, a 1996 Honda.
Within a day, it was spotted in Georgia with an unknown male behind the wheel.
And that man was Thomas Heimer.
Thomas had recently met Sandra and they'd been traveling together,
her a willing companion, until, for seemingly no reason at all,
Thomas killed her.
He has never given a real reason for killing her,
but he was extradited back to Florida and convicted of the crime.
Now, Thomas Heimer wasn't on anyone's radar for the murders,
and he certainly wasn't on the radar for the Phoenix Police Department in Alyssa's case,
until 2006, when they received a letter.
A letter from Thomas that said he was going to make them famous with his confessions.
When police got this letter, they looked through their files.
Who is Alyssa Turney?
Could this guy be legit?
They dusted off their files and took a photo of Alyssa with them to Florida to talk to this guy.
They put together a photo lineup of girls about Alyssa's age,
asking him which one was the girl that he knew.
And sure enough, he picks out Alyssa right away.
He says that Alyssa did in fact run away,
and they had connected, did drugs together, hooked up,
until he accidentally killed her during a sexual act and disposed of her body.
Now, this was a chilling lead to police, but they needed to verify it.
For the first time in seven years, these detectives were going to investigate Alyssa's case
and talk to people in her life to see if perhaps they had found the answers to what really happened.
However, it didn't take a lot of looking before they realized that Heimer's story,
it just wasn't adding up.
Heimer said that Alyssa was a heroin addict, but when police tried to verify this,
no, no she wasn't.
He said the lead detectives back in 2006 said that being a heroin addict
isn't something that you can hide from your friends and family.
There wasn't a single person in Alyssa's life who said that she did hard drugs.
So this didn't match up.
He's like, that's not something you can hide.
Secondly, Heimer gave details about his sexual encounters with Alyssa,
and he said that she had some very weird sexual tendencies, which he shared with police.
Again, they go back and try and verify this, they talk to Alyssa's boyfriend,
the one she was actually dating right before she went missing, and he said absolutely not.
None of what this guy is saying is true about her sexual preferences.
So it doesn't take long before investigators realize that Heimer is just conning them.
But if he isn't telling the truth, they thought, then where is Alyssa?
In trying to verify his story, they had been talking to her friends and her family,
and in seven years, this teen runaway had made contact with no one.
She had $1,800 in her bank account at the time she supposedly left,
and in the time that she had been gone, all of those years touched none of it.
Which doesn't add up to the note that she left.
Exactly. She said in the note that she had actually taken $300 from her dad,
and that's why she'd been saving her money.
So she takes $300, she steals $300, but doesn't take the $1,800 she had sitting in her account
that she had immediate access to?
That she acknowledges she was saving for this very reason.
Exactly. Things are not adding up.
Her social security number had never been used.
She never had a job, she never went to school after her junior year.
It starts becoming painfully clear.
This was not a runaway case.
Something had happened to Alyssa.
With seven years between the investigators and fresh leads,
the detectives now had to start their case from scratch.
Hoping people's memories of Alyssa were still intact,
and hoping they could find some physical evidence of what happened to her.
As they interview those closest to Alyssa,
a new picture starts to emerge of May 17, 2001.
Like I said, it was her very last day before summer break,
but for the first time investigators find out,
Alyssa didn't stay in school the whole day.
Mike tells police that he actually picked her up early that day,
sometime between 11 and 12.
Because police are finding out about this seven years later,
those school attendance records don't exist anymore.
But Alyssa's boyfriend, John, who was interviewed,
confirms that she had come into his shop class to say goodbye
and tell him that she was leaving school,
but she would see him later that night at an end of the year party.
Wait, we gotta back up, you just laid a lot out.
So she tells her boyfriend, she'll see him later that night.
Right, and not just her boyfriend,
apparently when they talked to all of her friends,
she'd been telling all of them that she was going to be
at this end of the year school party.
Okay, so I get that she wouldn't tell her parents
that she's running away, or your family or whatever.
You want to keep that hidden, because you're running away.
That's the whole point.
But you don't make plans with other people for that night,
especially with your boyfriend.
Especially with your boyfriend.
At 17, your 17-year-old boyfriend is like your whole world.
You know what I mean?
I married mine.
You literally did.
They had a really great relationship.
It's actually touching and a little bit heartbreaking,
because for a long time after this, John didn't date.
He was so in love, he thought they were going to have a future.
They were going to get married and have kids.
It was like he lost his person.
He did.
And so for her to run away,
it's not something that she wouldn't even tell him.
You know what I mean?
Like of all people in the world, you're right.
He was her person.
And she's telling him, yeah, I'm leaving,
but I'm going to see you in a little bit.
Okay, so we can move past that.
But let's go back to her.
Stepdad picked her up early.
Did we know that?
No, that is totally new information.
Brand new to police and get this.
In all of the years Alyssa was missing,
he never mentioned this to anyone in the family.
And they didn't even find out about it when police did.
They didn't find out until after ABC did a 2020 special
on Alyssa's case years later.
And it's when they watched it,
when like her aunts and her brothers and her sister
found out that the day she went missing,
she didn't come home from school like a normal day.
The day she went missing,
her dad for some unknown reason picked her up early.
Just out of curiosity,
do we know that he brought her home?
So the short answer is no.
We don't have any proof that he brought her home
other than that note that she left.
Now, according to Michael Turney's story,
he said that he just picked her up to go get lunch.
Then he does say that he brought her home.
And he said it's when they got home that they get into a fight
again about like normal house rules.
Alyssa said she was tired of following them.
And Mike did the dad thing,
like as long as you live under my roof,
you're going to follow my rules.
So according to him, like they did come home.
They have this fight and then he says she freaks out,
goes into her room and then he went to run errands
and then eventually picked up Sarah.
And that's when they arrive home and find Alyssa missing.
Police are suspicious of Mike's story,
but they have little to go on.
They think there's likely no physical evidence of anything
because it's been seven years, but they get lucky.
And they find out that Mike was not only a very litigious man,
like I had said, but he was a very paranoid man,
a man who wanted everything documented,
everything recorded.
And they find that for almost 20 years,
Mike had been passively recording every incoming
and outgoing phone call on his home line.
Oh my God.
He also had cameras recording everything outside his home
and they find out that he had even placed a hidden camera
in the vent of his living room recording everything.
No.
When they ask Mike about these cameras,
he sends police images of Alyssa with boys
from months before she went missing,
like a time that doesn't even matter
and her and suggestive positions with boys,
like why would you send that?
But he provides them nothing from the actual day
that she went missing.
This video, that could be crucial to finding a lead
in this investigation.
When police pressed him for it,
he said, oh, you know, I looked at it,
there's just like nothing on there
that would give you any clue to where she was,
like nothing really helpful.
It gives you a time as to when she left the house.
Oh, it gives you everything.
And police are saying like, if there's nothing,
just like, just give it to us.
Yeah, prove it.
They're like, your opinion of nothing is totally different
than my opinion of nothing.
There was this detective that was interviewed
and he said, you know, it shows me,
what was she last wearing?
What jewelry was she wearing?
So we can see her inside.
Did she leave alone?
What did she take with her?
Okay, you have cameras outside.
Did she get into a car?
Did she walk away?
He's like, I've got way more to go off of,
even if it is just her leaving the house
than I have right now.
I need that tape.
They also ask him to provide audio
from his home phone recorder
for the day that she supposedly called him from California.
Now, this is what I was talking about earlier.
You know, if we had proof, you know,
did he pay someone to call?
Did someone actually call?
If someone called, who was it?
So he records everything,
but he said that, oh gosh, you know,
just that day, that recorder happened to be turned off.
This is some Nixon stuff right here.
It's getting really fishy.
With suspicions rising,
police now have enough probable cause
to get a warrant to search his home
and look for those recordings themselves.
They detain Mike, not to arrest him,
but just to hold him, get handwriting samples from him.
As they look through the home,
in their minds, really searching for,
like, videotapes and audio tapes,
the investigators come across something mind-blowing.
26 homemade pipe bombs.
What?
And a 90-page manifesto written by Mike Turney.
Oh, totally normal, yeah, definitely.
Not what they were expecting.
As the bomb squad is called in,
investigators try to digest his writings.
It covers everything in his life,
everything he thought was wrong,
every way in which he was wronged,
and he claims a news story in this manifesto
about what happened to Alyssa.
In this manifesto, he still says that Alyssa ran away,
but, he says, she was followed by two men
from the electrical union which Mike used to work for.
You see, back in the day, Mike had been a whistleblower,
and he said the union was out to get him,
and they took revenge on him by murdering his stepdaughter.
So, he, according to his own writings,
avenged Alyssa's death by finding
and killing two men that had killed her.
Now, when police look into this accusation,
the two men were actually dead,
but their deaths were totally unrelated.
They died from natural causes,
and it seems that these were the writings of a crazy man.
Mike did plead guilty to the possession of the 26 pipe bombs,
which, by the way, he told ABC 2020,
that special that he was on,
that those were totally planted by police.
He'd never seen them before in his life.
Sure, he wrote that manifesto,
but had nothing to do with the bombs.
Did the police just have like a pipe bomb making night
where they fabricated all of these for it?
Like, where do you get 26 pipe bombs to plant?
Pizza and pipe bombs, clearly.
As police continue to search Michael's place,
you know, after the bomb squad comes and clears it,
they get tubs and tubs of paperwork,
videotapes, audio tapes.
Now, the videotapes that they had were really limited.
It looked like it was like the same tapes used over and over,
but the audio tapes, they had hundreds of hours of audio tapes
spanning decades to go through.
And it's like, you know, obviously the most mundane stuff,
like Sarah calling blockbuster,
but they have to go through everything.
Now, in all of the stuff that they found,
it doesn't seem that they found anything from that day
that she went missing.
So even though Mike said,
oh yeah, I saw the video, nothing's on it,
it doesn't seem to even exist anymore.
Whether he erased it, whether he had it turned off
and it never existed in the first place and he made that up,
they don't, they have all this information,
but they don't have the crucial information,
that missing day.
And again, to me, it looks more suspicious
when you have 20 years of recordings,
but you don't have the one day that matters.
They did find some really dark stuff.
There was this commercially made snuff film,
I guess that was viewed by like a million people,
but Michael Turney had that snuff film,
but instead of having the whole film,
he had like the actual like murder part of it
just looped like four times.
And that's what he was watching.
Oh.
And so it's stuff like that,
that they're, again,
they don't have evidence that he did anything to Alyssa,
but they have these really dark pieces of evidence.
Now, despite this conviction, despite this dark evidence,
Alyssa's sister Sarah couldn't believe
that her dad had anything to do with Alyssa's disappearance.
She started a website back in 2008 or 2009
dedicated to finding Alyssa,
and she had another site dedicated to advocating
for her father's innocence in Alyssa's disappearance.
She said, listen, I know him, other people know him,
he wouldn't be capable of something like this.
Everyone who knows him knows he's a good man.
And here's her again from that same 2020 special.
The public makes him look, you know, horrible.
On the news, you know, it's not him.
Everyone who knows my dad is shocked.
I mean, I guess it's kind of what you have to tell yourself.
Well, that 2020 special came out years ago,
and a lot can change in just a few years.
Hi, Sarah.
Does any part of you now think that maybe she could have run away?
No.
No.
No part of me that thinks she could have run away.
You'll learn more about Sarah's journey to the truth
on our next episode.
But between now and then, she needs your help.
It has become clear that her sister was murdered
and Sarah alleges it was done by her father.
She's asking that all of our listeners sign a petition
to get the attention of the state prosecutor.
She needs 500,000 signatures to even get noticed.
I know our listeners can put a big dent in that.
Like I said, if you had 30 minutes to listen to this episode,
you owe Sarah the two minutes it takes to sign the petition.
You can find that by going to our website,
crimejunkiepodcast.com, click on the episodes link,
and find the blog posted Missing Alyssa Turni.
This episode of Crimejunkie was researched, written,
and hosted by me with co-hosting by Brit Preywat.
All of our editing and sound production was done by David Flowers,
and all of our music, including our theme, comes from Justin Daniel.
Crimejunkie is an audio chuck production.
What do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?