Crime Junkie - MURDERED: Oklahoma Girl Scouts
Episode Date: November 19, 2018One of Oklahoma's darkest stories. Three young girl scouts are brutally murdered while away at their first night of camp. A Native American man is pinned for the crime but decades later much of the pu...blic still wonder if the real culprit eluded capture. 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/murdered-oklahoma-girl-scout-murders/  Â
Transcript
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Hi, crime junkies. I'm Ashley Flowers. And I'm Britt. And I am going to warn you all up front.
Today's podcast is going to be a little rough. Anytime we talk about crimes against children,
it is especially hard. And this case is one of those that will just tear your heart into pieces.
So brace yourself, because today we are talking about the Oklahoma Girl Scout Murders.
Back in 1977, there was a thriving 400 acre camp called Camp Scott in Maze County, Oklahoma,
smack dab in the middle of the U.S. This camp is one that young girls flock to from all over
the state. And when I say young, I'm talking like eight, nine, 10, 11 year old girls.
Little babies. Yeah, some of them going away from home for the first time ever. In the summer of
1977, camp took place in June. And all the campers would get dropped off at the Camp Scott headquarters.
And then they would get bused out to the campsite where they could spend time in their cabins or
tents, depending on what you want to call them. And in the mess halls playing outdoors, just like
young kids should. But as they drove the bus down these long desolate roads, seeing sign after sign
of what was to come, I don't think any camper or any counselor could have prepared themselves
for what would happen in the next 24 hours. Once they arrived on site, the campers would get split
up into cabins, usually four girls to each. At this specific site, which is called Kiowa,
where this story is centered, there were eight cabins. Cabin one was for the counselors and
cabins two through eight were for the campers. That's why if you have done any research on this case
online, you'll often see it say that the girls of our story were in cabin eight, some say they
were in cabin seven. So technically they're in cabin eight, but only two through eight were for
the campers. So sometimes people say it was seven. Now I have a map of this Brit that I can share
with you. And we're also posted on the website. So you can kind of get an idea of where these cabins
were. Okay. So this is just kind of the arrangement of this, I'm sure, clearing of land where
everything is, right? Right. So you'll notice that the tent seven or tent eight, however you
want to call it, is actually the furthest from the counselor's tent. And it's actually one of the
only ones that's completely out of the line of sight because they're just about to say that
there's a big building between the two of them. Yeah. There's this kitchen storage shower area
that kind of blocks it off. So this is the one that is the most desolate and they actually look
kind of close together on this like hand-drawn map. But people who have gone out to the campsite later,
even one of the parents who went out later said that tent eight felt so desolate that even they,
as an adult, wouldn't have wanted to stay in it. So in cabin eight, this cabin furthest from all
of the other campers were these three young girls, Michelle, who was nine, Denise, who was 10, and
Lori, who was only eight at the time, but whose ninth birthday was less than a week away. Now,
I need to give you a little background on the girls in cabin eight because I think it's knowing how
some of them ended up at camp that breaks my heart into pieces the most. Lori, just little Lori,
I guess she was super adventurous. And actually, the more I read about her, the more I see myself
at age eight in her. Like, Britt, you and I have this picture of us at eight, which I'm going to
post online. But I remember I was like eight going on 25. I was very much like Lori. I don't care if
I was the youngest. I want to do all the things that the big girls are doing. I want to go to
sleep away camp. You're so tough. You're so tough. You still are. Yeah. Like put me on an airplane
parents. I don't like, I'll see you later. I'll send you a letter. We've said it before. You also
wanted to solve murders by that time. Like you were like a hardened seasoned detective. Like you
were, I thought I was fully capable. Yeah. So she was the youngest camper, but I don't think she
felt like the youngest. She wanted to do what all the other girls were doing. She wanted adventures.
And that's why before that summer, she had begged her mom to let her go to a sleep away camp.
She just begged and begged. And her mom was really reluctant at first. I mean, at first,
like she's eight years old. Like again, I thought I was old at eight, but I look at eight-year-olds
now and I just want to grab them in my arms and keep them safe forever because they're little
babies. Yeah, definitely. Like I'll never have kids because I'm going to be such a smother mother.
But Lori's mom was starting to give in and Lori had two camps that she wanted to go to that summer.
Either Girl Scout camp at Camp Scott, or there was this camp put on by the Y. And Lori had no
preference. Lori's mom says she doesn't know why she did and she will regret it every day for the
rest of her life. But it was her decision, not Lori's, that ended up sending her to the Scott camp
that summer. Now, when we talk about one of the other girls, Denise, Denise's mother had an even
more heart-wrenching experience with sending her daughter off to camp that June. You see, Denise
was a mama's girl. She would get really homesick. Like she didn't even really like doing sleepovers
at her friend's houses because every night she wanted to be at home. She'd be one of those
girls who would go and then call her mom at nine o'clock at night to come pick her up so she could
be in her own bed. And that's why Denise's mom was shocked in the spring of 1977 when Denise came
to her and said, mom, I really want to go to a sleepover camp this summer. All my friends are
going. I'm going to be the only one who isn't. I really, really, really, really want to. And her
mom, like any mother is like, girl, we have been down this road. You're going to call me to come
pick you up. And she's like, no, mom, no, I swear. I really want this. And they go back and forth
all spring into the summer until her mom finally gives in and says, okay, I guess she really wants
this. Maybe she's growing up a little bit. And Denise is all about going until the day before
camp when she really starts to worry. And she totally backs out just like her mom suspected
she would. And she starts to beg her mom, please let me stay home. Please. I don't want to go.
I'm scared. I'm not going to know anybody. I don't want to sleep by myself. But her mom's kind of
fed up with the back and forth. And she's listening like you begged to go. I'm putting my foot down.
You are going to go to this camp. And even all the way up to the point where she's getting
dropped off, Denise is saying, please, please let me stay home. And her mom says, listen,
I will make you a deal. We are all the way here. I paid for you to go spend one night.
If after one night you want me to come pick you up, I will. Oh my God. So Denise got out of the car,
took the bus to the campsite, and she spent her first and last night at camp because that was
the night that she and her two bunkmates were murdered. And here is something that the parents
didn't know at the time, something that I think might have changed all of their minds about letting
their young vulnerable daughters go off to camp. Two months before all the girls arrived there,
there was this training session held at Camp Scott. And the training session came to an
abrupt halt when one of the counselor's tents was ransacked. And there was this very chilling,
handwritten note that was found in an empty box of donuts. And it said, quote, we are on a mission
to kill three girls in tent one. And it went on to say other things, but there was this hand drawn
picture of a stick man hanging from a tree by its neck. And the note was kind of poo poo,
like dismissed. And I think they dismissed it because along with this message that we're
going to kill three girls in tent one, there was also some talk about like Martians or aliens.
So they just thought this was a crazy person. I mean, even if it is just some random crazy person
rambling, as a parent, I would still want to know that that happened and there were precautions
taken. We're sending our kids here. That's kind of a big deal. Oh, I totally agree to know even
if this was a crazy guy, I don't love the fact that a crazy guy can just break in and ransack
your tent. And there's like no cameras and no one cares. Yeah, no security, like nothing. And again,
these are babies. These aren't even like teenage girls who like stand a fighting chance if this
guy was being serious. And it's kind of, you know, when you look back and think about it,
the note said we're on a mission to kill three girls in tent one. They don't work at the camp.
So 10 eight could have easily been mistaken for 10 one. Definitely. And I think this was like a
very ominous message. Now, like I said, this camp is in the middle of nowhere, no cameras, no kind
of surveillance. So the only way we have any idea about what happened the night of the murders
is by piecing small bits of information together. When the girls first arrived, there were actually
four of them in cabin eight. Another young girl named Angela was placed in there after finding
out that there was no room in the tent with the troop that she actually came with. There's an
interesting quote from her from an article I read that said, quote, I stayed there with the three
girls. I talked with them one on one and even put my stuff in their tent. We sat around the campfire
talking and getting to know one another end quote. But just as she was making these new friends,
the camp counselors ended up coming back and they said, Oh, hey, you know, we actually
have room for you now. If you want to go back with the girls and your troops. So
this girl, Angela actually ended up leaving Lori Denise and Michelle and she went back and she
says all the time, like I can't figure out why I was the one that was spared. So they all got
settled in and one of the girls, even she said needed to go to the latrine. And so she says,
quote, we all got up to go together. You know how these girls play jokes on one another. We were
all on our way to the latrine and on our way down there, we noticed three flashlights that had come
toward us. So we all screamed the flashlights disappeared. So they ran back into their tent
and kind of got settled in again. But I think this is like the first sign that we're seeing
that somebody is out in the woods with a flashlight kind of watching this area. Now at this point,
the weather took a turn for the worst and these girls were told to stay in and they all actually
go back and write letters home to their parents. And this is when we know for sure that the three
girls wrote their letters and they ended up finding these three letters later that they wrote to
their parents that were just heartbreaking and even worse in Denise's letter, she's telling her mom,
listen, I was right. I don't want to be here. Please come pick me up. I can't stay for two weeks.
Now what happened after those girls wrote those letters can only be left up to your
worst imaginations. What we do know is that one of the counselors said she saw a dim light in
the woods out by the tree line surrounding the camp. And I don't know if this is like the same
area where those little girls had saw flashlights or if those flashlights are totally unrelated.
But the counselor said no one should have been there. So she actually got her flashlight and
pointed it out to the trees. And as soon as she did that, the dim light turned off. And so she
turned off her light and kind of waited. And after she waited a while, that dim light kind of came
back on and moved northwest toward Kiowa where we know the girls are. Now later that same night,
a counselor in Kiowa wakes up to a loud noise. It's like this horrible grunting noise. And grunting
isn't even like the right word because she said it was almost otherworldly. It didn't sound human,
but it didn't sound like any animal she'd ever heard either. It sounded like something in pain,
just like low and guttural. And she woke up the other counselor and her tent and she's like,
do you hear that? And the other girl was just way too out of it, too tired to care. So this
counselor grabs her flashlight and she went out to investigate. She steps out of her tent,
turns on her flashlight and the sound just stops. Nothing but crickets and the night air. So she
does a slow walk around the tents, but everything is quiet. Nothing seemed out of place. And so she
went back to bed. The same night, a few tents away, the girls in tent six said they saw somebody
with a flashlight approach their tent, but never enter. At the time they thought maybe it was a
counselor, but as we will learn later, no counselors ever went up to their tent. That light left
their tent and slowly moved to tent eight. That next morning, our counselor, the one who had been
up late the night before was an early riser. And so she wanted to hit the showers before all of the
campers woke up. It's already hot and humid as she grabs her towel and her shower bag and leaves
the tent. Now she heads up the road when something catches her attention just out of the corner of
her eye. It's a sleeping bag. And the first thought she has is, oh, the buses must have brought more
stuff that maybe didn't make it up the night before. But what an odd place to leave it. So she
starts to walk over to the bag and she realizes it's not luggage. The sleeping bag is full and inside
is a very small, dead young girl. And immediately she runs to notify the camp owners. A small crowd
of staff and counselors begins to draw around the area when it dawns on everyone. There are two other
girls missing from the cabin. Several yards away, they find two more sleeping bags, both holding
two more small bodies. The first responders on the scene said the bags were so small and the girls
were curled up. So tight, it was hard to believe there could even be a body inside. More agencies
flocked in, including the Highway Patrol and the State Bureau, and the three girls were all pronounced
dead at the scene. As the crime scene was processed, a picture of the night before became more clear
in investigators' minds. Someone had entered into the back of the tent and struck the children. Michelle
and Lori were killed inside the tent while Denise was dragged or carried through the dark woods and
then killed. Tape and rope had been used to bind her hands behind her back, and some of them had
a sewn gag that was used on them. After they were killed, their killer moved their bodies about 100
yards away from the tent. And they did this, we know, sometime between 11pm and 6am. And we know
that because their sleeping bags were actually dry, which means they had to have been placed there
after 11 when the rain had stopped, but before they were found early the next morning. We also
know that Denise was the last to die. When the girls were found, both Michelle and Lori were
already cold and rigor mortis had started to set in, whereas Denise was actually still warm.
After they were moved, their killer returned to the tent and attempted to wipe up the tent floor
with mattress covers and towels, anything he could find to try and wipe up the blood,
and those items were then stuffed into the sleeping bags with the girls and carried to the location
where they were found. All three girls showed signs of being sexually assaulted. There were
actually swabs taken from Denise and Michelle that had semen. There were no semen swabs taken from
Lori, but one of the officers said that when he saw her body, he felt like it was clear she had been
assaulted in some way because her underwear was pulled very far to the side in a way he said
that she would have never worn it. All of the girls showed signs of mutilation, brutal beatings,
strangulation, all by a monster who appeared in the middle of the night. While the investigators
worked at the camp, employees worked hard to move the children. That young girl who was originally
supposed to be in 10-8 that night said, quote, they told us something was wrong with the camp
water and we were going back early. We were pretty bummed, end quote. So these young girls had no
idea that something bad had happened. They're all just kind of getting rushed out of the camp.
And I don't think anyone told a lot of them for a long time. And it said that a lot of the campers
and counselors even to this day suffer like very traumatic PTSD. All of the girls were bussed back
to the headquarters in Tulsa where each child was escorted off the bus one by one when their names
were called. Angela said the little girl who was supposed to be in 10-8 that she actually dropped
something. So when her name was called a couple of times, it took her a couple of minutes before
she got off the bus. And when she finally walked off of the bus, after what I imagined seemed like
an attorney to her parents, calling their name, calling their name, because the parents know
something bad has happened. Angela sees her mom and her mom is on her knees just weeping. And again,
she still had no idea what was going on. But you can see that the parents had all seen the news,
but they were given very little information. So the parents all just came and waited anxiously
hoping that their child would be one of the children that walk off the bus. Now, Michelle's parents
were ones that learned about the murders actually from the television. So when they got a call from
the camp that same day, they knew that a tragedy was waiting for them. Lori and Denise's parents
also received phone calls. But none of the parents were the camp's first call. The first people that
were contacted, according to the families, was actually the camp's lawyers and the camp's
insurance agencies, which is kind of disgusting. Yeah. Even when the parents are called, they're
only told that there had been a quote, accident. And it isn't until much later that they find
out the gruesome truth about what happened to their daughters. There was a story Denise's mom
told that is kind of haunting. You know how sometimes children are just more in tune to
things that we can't see or feel anymore as adults? Oh, it's so creepy. Yeah. So she feels that Denise's
younger sister, Kathy, had some kind of like childhood intuition about what was to come
without even really understanding what it was she was feeling. So Kathy's only five.
And apparently the day she dropped Denise off at camp, Kathy starts asking her mom out of nowhere.
This has never happened before. She wants to know what happens when people die. And you know,
Denise's mom doesn't know where this is coming from. And she's like, well, you know, you know,
people die and then more people are born. And so the world just keeps kind of going on. And
Kathy says, well, what if everybody dies? And she's like, well, everyone won't die at once.
Again, like some people die, the world goes on, more babies are born. And Kathy says something
to the effect of like tomorrow, everybody's going to die. And her mom thinks this is crazy. This is
just like creepy kid talk. Right. And the next day, they were all dead. Now back at the coroner's
office, the investigator said there was so much excessive force used on these young girls. And
he said it was especially striking seeing Lori. He said he'll never forget opening her tiny bag
and seeing her in there because even though she was strangled and they were hit, her face had not
been damaged. And he said it just looked like she was asleep. And at any second, she was going to
wake up as he watched the coroner perform autopsy after autopsy on these little girls. He said he
hoped and prayed each and every time that just one of these girls hadn't been sexually assaulted.
But as we already know, they find out that likely all three of them were now investigators have this
crime scene. They have the autopsies, but they actually had very little to go on. And the little
that they did have was kind of confusing. Found at the scene were nylon rope, duct tape, a red
flashlight and a crowbar all next to where the bodies were found. The other thing noticed by
officers is that 10 eight was not the only tent our perpetrator went into that night. There were a
number of other tents that were missing eyeglasses. But later those eyeglasses, it's not like they
were stolen. They would be found in all of these different places around the campsite.
That seems so bizarre, like almost mischievous. Why would you take these items and distribute them
other places other than just to play a joke on somebody? Yeah, you know, there was a documentary
on this that I watched that said the perpetrator was looking for a prescription that fit their eyes.
And that's kind of the theory that they went off in this documentary. But I don't think that makes
any sense at all. Like, why would you come to a crime scene not being able to see and then go
around looking for glasses? Like, that does not make any sense to me. Well, and you're going,
you're going there knowing that there's children like their children's glasses,
so they're small, they might not fit even if they are your prescription. And some of these are from
counselors, though, like so they're they're all women's glasses. I mean, even if they're adults,
again, like, I don't know why you would go in blind hoping somebody has a prescription that
kind of matches you. I think more likely, like you said, it's either like very mischievous,
or it's like some kind of weird fetish. Yeah, I guess I could see that. And now that you mentioned
the counselor's glasses, maybe they were just hoping that without their glasses, they couldn't
see the bodies. That's true, too. So that is a great point. Like, what if they were just
moving all of the glasses? So that way, if a counselor woke up, they bought them more time.
Exactly. That's actually a really good point. Well, it didn't take long before some of the
evidence started getting linked back to people in the area. So if you remember that nylon rope
that was found by the girls, well, it turns out that it came from a nearby farmhouse. But this
farmer insists that he had actually been robbed and multiple things from his farm had been stolen.
And he ends up passing a lie detector test. But to show you how the media was at the time,
newspapers totally like outed him as the murderer just for taking a lie detector test. They ran a
front page story that said lie detector given in Girl Scout slang. And on the other page,
it continued with his picture. And the word above his picture was slayer. So he received so many
harassing phone calls that he either like mentally or physically broke because he had to be hospitalized.
And it turns out he actually passed that lie detector. And police ended up ruling him out as
a suspect. They actually believed that stuff had been stolen off of his property. And the stuff
that was stolen is what was used in the homicides. Oh my gosh. I mean, you say the media was back
then. The media's still kind of like that. Yeah, it's amazing. A lot of people try to be like the
first on the story or have the most exclusive information. So fact checking has kind of gone
to the wayside. As the days go by and police got further and further from an arrest, they were
desperate and willing to try anything. And like it starts with like the most innocent thing being
bringing in these like magical tracker dogs whose owner guaranteed they could close the case within
48 hours. And listen, magical, I believe in magical prephets, but say those are real, right? Yeah,
obviously. I also saw some stuff about them experimenting with Native American rituals to
help like guide them. And this is kind of where the Native American culture starts to peek out in
this story because it plays a heavy part later when in a command staff meeting, the police mentioned
that a Cherokee man named Gene Hart had escaped from prison back in 73. So four years before,
and he's at large in the area. So I mean, this is this camp is like in the heart of Native American
land. And a lot of stuff in this case revolves around Native American culture and race. And so
this man, Gene Hart, that they had mentioned, he had actually been a local football hero in the area
until 1966 when he kidnapped two pregnant women, forced them into his car, tied them with nylon
rope and duct tape and sexually assaulted them. And I'm not sure if it was just the fact that he
was a violent criminal who had been loose in the area and the fact that he was raised just about
a mile from the campsite, or if it was because one strange detail that they thought that this
might be their guy, one of the women that he had attacked said that while he was raping her,
Gene had made these incoherent sounds. And this woman tried to draw comparisons or give some
kind of frame of reference for these noises. But every time she tried, she was just speechless
because it was like nothing she had ever heard before. And so I, like police at the time,
have to wonder, could these have been the same noises that that counselor at Camp Scott was
awoken by the night of the murders? Another interesting thing about this attack, one of the
victims said that Gene actually took her glasses and was like trying them on. That actually makes
a lot of sense with the glasses though. Right. So these are the things that are making them look
at him. And when he was done attacking these women, what he did is he placed a rag in their
mouth and then wrapped their entire face, eyes, nose and mouth with duct tape, totally taping
them up so that they couldn't breathe and left them in the middle of the woods like covered in
brush and leaves. And somehow this woman says she still doesn't know to this day. She said it was
like a miracle. She got the tape off of her face to breathe. And that's the only thing that saved
her. And so she ended up testifying. Obviously she lived and testified against him. And he ended
up going to prison, but he ended up escaping years later. Now the command staff meeting is where
they first brought up Gene Hart as a suspect, but it wasn't long after this that a cave overlooking
Camp Scott was discovered and it appeared like someone had been living in it. Now inside the
cave, they found tape, they found plastic material, they found women's underwear, a pair of women's
glasses, newspaper and a crumpled picture of a woman. All of this would turn out to be very
significant. Now remember that flashlight at the original crime scene? Yeah. Well, there was this
piece of newspaper crumpled inside of it to hold the battery in place. The same addition of that
newspaper was found inside of the cave. The underwear that was found in the cave was actually
a pair that was missing from one of the women at camp, just like the glasses. Those glasses were
also taken from the campsite. So it turns out of all of the pairs that the killer like took and
moved or tried on or whatever he was doing with them, he did end up taking one pair. I guess I'm
having trouble connecting the dots. All of this connects to the campsite, but how does it connect
to Gene? So, so far, all of this stuff doesn't link to Gene. This stuff links to the campsite,
like you said. Police say proving whoever was living in that cave had to have been the one who
killed the girls and they say they can prove Gene was the one living there because of that crumpled
picture of a woman that they found. They actually place a national ad in all of the newspapers
across the country looking for this woman. They think somehow she's the link. If they can find
who she is in the picture, they can find out maybe how this person had it. So they end up
finding out that this picture had been taken by a local wedding photographer and the wedding
photographer got help from a man in prison to develop them and the man in prison's name was
Gene Hart. Now, at this point, there is a national manhunt for Gene and when they end up capturing
him in like a true creeper fashion, he's wearing women's glasses, a clear visual to the arresting
officers that connects him to all of the crimes. Now, the first officer who interviewed him said
that when he looked him dead in the eyes, he just said, you did it, didn't you? And Gene's only reply
was, you will never pin it on me. And Brett, you know, when Gene looks at the officer and he says,
you're never going to pin it on me, of course, the officer takes this as an admission of guilt
and saying, okay, this is a challenge, him versus me. But do you know what that statement kind of
reminds me of? What's that? We did an episode on the murder of Angela Savage and her fiance kind
of had a similar statement. Investigators brought him in and said, you know, we suspect you have
killed your fiance. And he said, well, you're going to have to do your job and prove it. And I mean,
we found out 20 years later that he actually didn't kill her like DNA proved it. But it's amazing how
because as we go on with the story, there's a big group of people who think Gene is innocent.
And I just never know how to take their comments. So in addition to the stuff they found in the cave,
when investigators found Gene, he was arrested in a cabin. And in this cabin, there was a corn cob pipe
and a mirror found with him that was also linked to the campsite. So investigators felt like this
was a done deal. He is our guy. When they took him to trial for this, it was a freaking circus.
And the best way I can think to describe it for people to understand in 2018 is Gene was the Steven
Avery of 1970. There was a very large community who to this day thinks that Gene was framed by the
police. I mean, Steven Avery aside, I feel like everything's kind of pointing to Gene. How can
there be this huge group of people who are like, absolutely not? Well, so here's the thing. So there's
stuff that makes him look guilty. Like when you actually look at the stuff that was on him. So
he's caught wearing women's glasses, looks super fishy. His arrest before his crimes before he has
these weird moaning sounds that are indescribable. And then someone else hears indescribable noises.
So maybe you can connect in with that. The way people think he's framed is they're saying
everything in the cave and everything found in the cabin where he was captured is actually put
there by police. And again, like in Steven Avery's case, I think they kind of have a lot of parallels
because Steven Avery had this like crime he supposedly committed before. Now there's this
like second crime of murder. Also Gene was Native American and it very much became about race and
about culture. Now the one thing I should bring up that his defense used was there was sperm at
the crime scene. Yeah, you had mentioned that before. Two of the girls had DNA on them, right?
Right. But what the defense points out is that Gene had had a vasectomy. So they say if he was the
killer, he wouldn't have been able to leave sperm. The defense also pointed to some hairs found at
the scene that experts said, quote, matched. But when they were just like matching them, all they
do to match hairs is look at them under a microscope. And this is kind of junk science now because as
of 2015, the FBI basically said there are so many problems with it. It's like discredited completely
as a forensic technique. And his lawyer even picked up on that back in the 70s because this is one
of the things he said, you can't compare DNA or you can't compare hairs. So you can't prove that
this is his hair just because it looks similar. So the defensive strategy was to refute the physical
evidence like the hair and the fact there was sperm, but they also come in hot saying that he was
completely framed. And here is the evidence that they say they have of that. Number one is they
had a jailer come up and testify that that crumpled photo of a woman that was supposedly found in
the cave that like was the only thing in the cave linking the cave to Gene. This man said when he
testified that he saw those photos in the sheriff's desk after Gene had escaped from prison and
before they were ever found in the cave. So he thinks that they were planted there. The second
point he brings up is his defense attorney said there was a fingerprint on the flashlight that
they don't believe was genes. And apparently inside the tent there was also a footprint in blood
that was about a nine and a half and Gene wore an 11 and a half shoe. And so I can see you maybe
wearing a shoe size up, but to go to shoe sizes down would be kind of difficult. Yeah, definitely.
Finally, the evidence that he said was planted is do you remember that corn cob pipe and that
mir that I said was found where he was captured? I feel like one doesn't just forget a corn cob pipe.
Right. We've never, we talk about a lot of the same stuff here on Crime Junkie and corn cob pipes
aren't one of them. Well, first of all, again, this reminds me so much of the Stephen Avery case
because they had actually this cabin where he was found. He was staying with a friend who lived
there. And when I say cabin, I don't know what you imagine, but it's like this itty bitty place
that's like three rooms tops, very small. And when they arrested him the first time they searched
the place, they didn't find this corn cob pipe and mirror. It wasn't until they did a second search
of the place that they magically found this corn cob pipe and mirror. So the defense brings on a
witness, Sam Pigeon, who actually owned the cabin. And he said, listen, they did the search and that
stuff was never there. And he said all of a sudden it like appeared there after they came into the
second one. So his defense attorney insinuated hardly that police had planted it there. So,
you know, going into this trial, Brett, like I've told you the main points of evidence,
like where do you lie? Innocent, guilty, Gene Hart, what do you think? I kind of feel like
he's guilty. Well, so the jury goes to deliberate, they come out and they find him not guilty.
Really? Really. He was still sent back to prison, though, to finish serving his sentence because,
remember, he had escaped. So because of his crimes, because of the escape, he was actually
given like 300 years. So he goes back to prison and he ends up dying in prison. He's like working
out and has a heart attack. But do you want to know the really interesting thing? Always.
They did an autopsy on him after he died. And it was found that his vasectomy never took.
No. So he very well could have actually left the sperm. Now, in 2008, they sent the sperm off
for DNA analysis, but it was too degraded to actually test. But everybody listening,
set your Google alerts, people, because at the end of 2017, it was reported
that they were sending the DNA off for retesting because in the last 10 years,
DNA testing has advanced like crazy. So we could know now, any day, once and for all,
if Gene was the guy. And if not, who could it actually be?
Yeah.
Yeah.
This episode of Crime Junkie was researched, written and hosted by me with co-hosting by
Brit Preywatt. All of our editing and sound production was done by David Flowers. And all
of our music, including our theme, comes from Justin Daniel. Crime Junkie is an audio chuck
production. So what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?