Crime Junkie - MURDERED: Roberta "Bibi" Lee
Episode Date: July 15, 2024Roberta Lee, or "Bibi" to her friends, vanished while on a run with her boyfriend and friend. When her body was discovered weeks later, her boyfriend was arrested and charged with her murder. But with...out any physical evidence, and a lackluster confession, the question of who killed her still remains.Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit: crimejunkiepodcast.com/murdered-roberta-bibi-lee Did you know you can listen to this episode ad-free? Join the Fan Club! Visit crimejunkie.app/library/ to view the current membership options and policies. Don’t miss out on all things Crime Junkie!Instagram: @crimejunkiepodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CrimeJunkiePod | @audiochuckTikTok: @crimejunkiepodcastFacebook: /CrimeJunkiePodcast | /audiochuckllc Crime Junkie is hosted by Ashley Flowers and Brit Prawat. Instagram: @ashleyflowers | @britprawatTwitter: @Ash_Flowers | @britprawatTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, Crime Junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Britt.
The story I have for you today is kind of a doozy.
It's one where, honestly, I was kind of, like,
arguing with people in the office,
because even we couldn't fully agree on who did it,
if they did it.
The person who went to court or was put on trial,
did they do it?
It's one where I think there are a lot of questions,
but if you really dissect it, I think it's very possible
that this case is still unsolved,
despite what some may say.
This is the story of Roberta Lee. I'm out. It's 11 p.m., November 4th, 1984, and roommates of Roberta Lee, or Beebe as they call her,
they're getting worried.
Like she's gone on a run that morning with her boyfriend and another friend, but that
was in the morning. It's 11 p.m. now and she's gone on a run that morning with her boyfriend and another friend, but that was in the morning.
It's 11 PM now and she's still not back.
And have they checked in with her boyfriend?
Well, no, because they know that he has actually already called them twice
earlier looking for her.
Oh, so like she didn't show up for the run.
No, no, no.
So she showed up for the run.
She hadn't stayed with her boyfriend and the friend though.
Like Brad, her boyfriend says that he and Bibi and this other friend Robin all met up
that morning.
They drove about 20 minutes from UC Berkeley, where they all go to school, to the entrance
of the Redwood Park, or what is now known as the Dr. Aurelio Reinhart Redwood Regional
Park.
That's a mouthful.
But anyways, from there, they got out.
They do all go run, maybe like two, two and a half miles
to this recreation area.
But apparently, that's the point
when Bebe kind of veered away from Brad and Robin,
and they all started running in different directions,
like Brad and Robin still running together
and Bebe kind of off on her own.
Now, according to Brad, this wasn't concerning,
because apparently she'd been a little frustrated
with school, like she had a lot on her mind
But he also says like she hadn't been super upset or anything that morning
So I don't know maybe he thought she was blowing off some steam or whatever either way him and Robin they kept on their path
They stopped at like two overlooks just to kind of admire the view over the Bay Area
And then after that when they still still hadn't run into Bebe,
they started to look for her,
but she was just completely MIA.
So they assumed that she'd started back to the car.
So they walked back there, but of course she's not there.
Brad even gets in his car,
starts driving around looking for her
while Robin waited there at the entrance of the park,
just in case she came back.
But in the short time he spends,
I think it's like 15 minutes or so,
and that time that he spends driving around,
he doesn't see her.
And then when he gets back to the entrance of the trail,
Robin's, she's there by herself waiting.
And when the both of them realize she's nowhere around,
they decide to leave.
So how was Bebe supposed to get home?
Good question.
I'm not totally sure,
but Brad seemed pretty confident that she was fully capable of making get home? Good question. I'm not totally sure, but Brad seemed pretty confident
that she was fully capable of making it back on her own.
I don't know if you thought she would hitch a ride
or run or what, but they left.
He's thinking that she's gonna make her way back home
somehow, which is why,
to bring me back to where I was originally,
he had been calling earlier looking for her.
But we know she's not there earlier looking for her. Right.
But we know she's not there now at 11 p.m.
And as it gets later and later, her roommates just become even more certain that something
bad happened.
So by 2 a.m., they frantically call Brad one more time, who's saying, okay, he's going
to come over to the apartment.
They're all going to decide what to do together.
And once he's there, one of Bebe's roommates
starts calling nearby hospitals and police departments,
but no one has seen Bebe.
At that point, the group agrees that come morning,
they have to file a missing persons report,
which they do, first thing,
and an officer comes to the apartment to take that report.
Now, thankfully, it doesn't seem like the officer wastes time
with any of this, like, wait 48 hours.
Oh, thank God.
BS or whatever, yeah, because the search of the park
gets underway pretty much immediately.
And they pull out all the stops.
Around 37 officials come out for that initial search,
as do five bloodhounds, two horses,
and several four-wheelers.
And a reservist with the sheriff's search and rescue team named Ilyar Noshee looks to
Brad to help narrow their focus.
Like where should they start?
Where did she veer off?
What direction was she going in?
But Ilyar is kind of put off by how disinterested Brad seems in helping him.
Like they're in this building at the park when he's talking to him, and there's this
TV inside.
And as Yulier is trying to ask these questions, an article by Don Martinez for the San Francisco
Examiner says that Brad keeps looking over at this TV where a football game is on, like
he's more interested in that than finding his missing girlfriend.
But still, he gets Brad to answer some of his important questions.
Where he last saw her, yada yada, I told you.
And he gets him to answer this one too.
What do you think might have happened to Bebe?
And according to that same article,
he says that she might have hiked to Mount Diablo,
which is miles away, or he says, maybe she had been,
and I quote, kidnapped and put into slave labor.
Brad, sir, take several steps back.
What?
Yeah, it seems like an extreme thing to jump to.
I mean, the abduction part.
And specific.
Yeah, the abduction part I can understand,
because again, he thought she was fully capable
of getting home, like hitchhiking or whatever.
So for her not to have gotten home, like something must have interfered, right?
Right.
I mean, it's totally possible she made it out of the park and then she realized her
ride's gone, she gets another one from the wrong person.
I mean, there's even one source that claims that's actually what Bibi's dad ends up thinking
early on too, even though her friends are quick to say that Bibi would never hitchhike.
Okay, but again, like the slave labor part, like, what does this UC Berkeley kid know
about slave labor?
Yeah, this doesn't sit well with this Elir guy either.
And I'm sure that weird feeling just kind of gets worse, because an article in the Oakland
Tribune by David Alcott says that Brad changes up the location where he'd last seen her, like a few times.
But it doesn't matter what direction he sends them in or how many times it changes.
No one finds any trace of Bebe.
Though the search dogs do find her scent and they track it about a hundred feet from one of the areas where Brad said
he last saw her, but then they just lose it.
So what's Robin's story in all this?
Can she corroborate any of what Brad's saying?
Even just like one of the locations?
I'm sure they're talking.
They have to be talking to her at some point in all of this, but I actually can't find
anything specific about what she was saying in the very early days other than the fact that I know she said she wasn't too happy with the idea of leaving without BB.
But like early on in the park when they're like, we can't find her and Brad's like, hey, we should just like go.
She says it was Brad's idea and she's like, you know what, like Brad knew her better.
So if he was confident that she was fine and she's going to make it back on her own, like she trusted that.
But that's the only thing I've seen reported about what she says early on.
Now pretty much from the get-go, police announce that they are suspecting foul play.
But they don't outright call Bebe's disappearance an abduction.
Although it seems like the most likely scenario
when a woman calls investigators with an alarming tip.
when a woman calls investigators with an alarming tip.
This woman says that around noon on the day that Bebe went missing,
she was driving past the walking trail
when she saw a man holding a young woman
who looked a lot like Bebe.
And he's holding this woman by the arm,
dragging her towards this golden brownish Dodge van.
Now she describes this man as a white guy,
about six feet tall, roughly 40, 45 years old,
and heavyset with light brown hair.
And when is this woman calling this in?
It's a little fuzzy, I can't totally dial it in,
but it's been at least a few days since she saw it.
Why'd she wait to say anything?
Well, because she says that it wasn't until she saw a photo of Bibi,
I assume on the news or on a flyer or something,
that that's when she realized that the woman she saw being pulled-
She put like two and two together.
Yeah. Though just like a quick tip to everyone, I feel like if you see
anyone being dragged towards any van, any vehicle,
feel free to let someone know you don't need to see the missing person flyer.
Worst case scenario, you are wrong, but what if it's not?
It probably is not.
But when police get this tip, they create and distribute a composite sketch of the man
stating that they're looking to locate him for questioning.
And at the same time, they keep searching the park, even beyond the park, spreading
out into the neighborhood next to it.
By November 14th, Bibi's parents have posted a $5,000 reward, and by the 16th, a special
task force is established with investigators from several jurisdictions and the FBI.
They even go so far as to film a dramatization of what they think happened,
Bibi getting pulled into the van by this tall man with brown hair,
and they make this available for the news stations to broadcast,
I guess hoping it'll like trigger someone's memory or,
I don't know, just gain attention.
And their efforts do result in tips being called in,
but none of them lead anywhere.
Now, all the while, Bebe's friends and family are doing their own boots-on-the-ground things
to try and help find her.
One of her roommates, Anne Brad, begin organizing their own search efforts, and they're joined
by a small army of volunteers who distribute posters in the Bay Area and conduct their
own searches.
They start calling themselves the Friends of Bebe Lee, and they're assisted by a volunteer
with the Missing Children Project.
They get this headquarters of sorts kind of set up in a donated apartment, and they have
phones manned 24-7 taking tips and passing those tips on to law enforcement.
It wouldn't be a tip or a poster that helped find Bibi.
It would be a dog.
Because on December 9th,
the Bay Area Mountain Rescue Unit is doing a walking search
through the park.
When one of their search dogs,
trained to find human remains,
lead searchers to some thick bushes,
maybe like 36, 37 feet from the very same road
that Brad said he was driving down
when he was trying to find Bebe, calling her name.
But in these bushes, this is where the dogs find Bebe.
She's laying on her back,
covered in just a few inches of dirt and pine needles.
She is severely decomposed by this point,
indicating that she had likely been there for weeks,
and possibly this whole time.
But immediately, the searchers are confident,
or fairly confident that this is Bebe,
because she's wearing the same running clothes
that she went missing in.
Now, the shirt she's been wearing
have both been pushed up to her chest,
and when her body is moved,
investigators see that the back of her skull
has been severely fractured.
How far away was she found
from where Robin and Brad had last seen her?
Well, this is what's wild.
So according to some court documents I found,
she's only like 700 feet south of where they last saw her.
And all these searches are happening.
I mean, how did they miss her the first day?
How did, like, how did this happen?
She's not deep in the ground, right?
Like it's just a few inches of dirt,
some pine needles, whatever.
This is what is kind of wild.
They missed her, but maybe they didn't.
So there was actually one dog who led his handler
to that area where she was later found.
But I guess he didn't indicate anything
or like do the right indication.
So they, you know, like he brought them there,
but they were like-
So maybe she hadn't been there the whole time,
but who knows?
Either she hadn't or she had, but like the dog didn't indicate the exact right way.
And so the handler was like, oh, that's not the indication.
Let's keep going.
But at this point, no one knows.
Was she there?
Was she not there?
I don't know.
Now, later that evening, she's officially identified and the next day her autopsy is
conducted.
And after consulting with a forensic anthropologist,
it's determined that she died after being hit with
a blunt instrument in the back of her head,
resulting in three skull fractures.
Now her nose and her right eye socket were also fractured,
and due to decomposition,
they cannot tell if she was sexually assaulted.
But from everything I gathered, again,
it was really only her shirts that were pushed
up.
I'm pretty sure everything that I read said that like her pants were still on and nothing
else seemed disturbed.
Not that like, like someone couldn't have put them back on or whatever, but it's just
worth noting.
Now, the full extent of what is taken from the crime scene for testing isn't clear.
The only thing I can confirm is that investigators collect two rocks found near Bibi's body.
So now that their missing person case has become a homicide, they want to go all the way back to the beginning and talk to the last people who saw Bibi.
Now, I again can't find anything about what Robin says this time either, but Brad, on the other hand, there's plenty about what he says. So Brad's interview begins at like 10, 12 AM.
And for the next hour, they question him about his relationship with Bebe,
how things had been for her at school, and more specifics about the morning that she vanished.
They finish that first round of questions, like I said, after about an hour.
But they're not done with him yet.
The investigator leaves, and then 20 minutes later,
they come back in and they tape his statement.
Brad says that he loved Bebe,
but their relationship had been a little rocky recently.
Specifically, he talks about this party
that he'd gone to with another girl the night before,
which made Bebe pretty angry.
So that morning, when they'd gone on that run, he said that she was super upset.
Didn't he initially tell police that she wasn't upset?
Like, concentrated with school, yes, but like, not upset upset.
That's exactly what he said before.
But now he's saying that during the drive there
and then throughout the run, things were really tense.
But other than that, much of his story remains the same.
They lost sight of her when they kind of split off. They went back to the car, he drove alongside
the road next to the trail, looked for her, and when he didn't see her, he goes back to where
Robin was waiting. And he still says he wasn't all that worried, because once when they'd gotten into
an argument at dinner, Bebe had gotten up and left and ignored him when he tried to follow her.
So he thought this was another one of those times
where she just needed her space.
And like, even if he kept searching,
like if she's this determined not to talk to him,
like she's not going to, she'll find her way home.
Now at some point, they just ask him outright,
did you hurt her?
And Brad says, no.
They ask him if he'd be willing to submit to a polygraph and he says yes.
Now I don't have all the questions that he's asked during this polygraph,
but according to David Alcott's reporting when the examiner asks Brad,
did you see Bibi Lee after she disappeared, the test shows inconclusive results. He also is asked,
did you injure Bibi Lee twice? In the first time Brad's response is inconclusive results. He also is asked, did you injure B.B. Lee, twice?
And the first time Brad's response is inconclusive,
but the second time that he's asked it,
the test shows that he's being deceptive.
There are three rounds of questioning
during this polygraph in total,
but partway through the third round, Brad just breaks down.
He puts his face in his hands and makes a sound
that I've seen described in articles as wailing.
But the examiner notes that he doesn't see Brad actually crying,
like there's no tears in his eyes, and this makes the examiner end the test because he doesn't think he's gonna get any
accurate results if it continues like this.
Mm-hmm. So the examiner leaves for a little bit and when this sergeant that's been talking to him enters the room,
he finds Brad with his head in his hands,
mumbling, I really loved her, but I really loved her.
By this point, investigators begin pressing Brad
for more information.
I mean, they're thinking, I think at this point,
that he did something to her,
and I mean, they tell him that straight up.
But Brad denies having anything to do with her death,
although maybe he just doesn't remember.
Doesn't remember killing his girlfriend?
Well, I think it starts being suggested,
like maybe he could have blacked out as it was happening.
And the thing is, I don't know who first suggests
the amnesia theory.
And as soon as I heard it,
in my mind, I'm like immediate red flag.
Like I've seen this interrogation play out. Like I've seen this play before, right?
Yeah. And every time I've seen it play out, it's
usually the cops that put that idea forward. It's kind of like setting the treat out to
see if the dog will come forward. Ooh, like maybe this is an option that you can like
easily talk your way into or out of something. And listen, my crime-drinky senses are never wrong.
I've gotten them pretty honed in by now.
We're going to come back to it.
But what I do know is that at some point,
the cop suggests, to help him remember,
he should close his eyes and try to picture what happened.
And it's then that he admits that he remembers
hitting and kicking her, but he can't remember when or where it happened.
And he says he doesn't remember any more details than that.
So investigators tell him that they know he had something
to do with Bebe's death because his fingerprints
were found at the crime scene.
They didn't have sh-t at the crime scene.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. We know that,
because we know the game. They're lying to him.
They also suggest that maybe he didn't intend to kill BB. Maybe something got out of hand.
But he keeps on denying it, saying he must have blacked out.
So they tell him another lie, that a witness had come forward and reported seeing Brad's
car south of the entrance to the park, which is close to where BB's body was found.
But Brad says he hadn't gone that far south
when he was driving around looking for her.
But still, they keep pushing and pushing and pushing
until finally, Brad magically remembers what happened.
Brad says that when he was driving around looking for her, he had gone south, towards
where her body was eventually located.
And that's where he saw her running up to him.
He pulled over, got out, and led her away from the road, up this little hill area, into
a tree area.
And like, that's as specific as it gets.
Hill area and tree area.
He says once they were shielded from view, he tried to talk to her, even tried to hug
and kiss her, but she pulled away which made him angry.
So he backhanded her, which caused her to fall backward.
He thought that she must have hit her head and passed out because she was unresponsive
and her nose was bleeding.
But instead of helping her, he went home.
And then sometime between 7pm andm. and 1 a.m.,
he came back, found her deceased. So he took a blanket from his car, laid it down, and sexually
assaulted her body before moving her body closer to the road and then using a hubcap that he had
in his trunk to cover her with a layer of dirt. I mean, murderers never make sense, but like, this does connect a lot of those dots.
I don't know, it seems like reasonable?
Uh, yes, in theory.
So investigators have him repeat the story, and then they ask him to tell it again so
they can record it.
Now he does, but his tone changes.
Whereas before, the investigators say he was a little more
matter of fact, this time he sounds like
he's not sure of himself.
And he doesn't provide as much detail.
Like when they ask him if he'd sexually assaulted
Bebe's body, he says, quote, yeah, I think so.
And when they ask him if he said anything when they met up
before he led her into the woods, he says, quote,
I must have said something. I don't know.
And then he goes back to saying that he didn't remember hitting Bebe and he didn't know where her body was.
So, yes, I mean, initially, this sounds plausible.
And there are enough consistencies, even in this vague one, that investigators feel strongly that they have
their guy. So they bring in the deputy district attorney. I'm sure confident that this will
all be over soon. But that's far from the case because when the deputy DA comes in about
an hour and a half later, so this is like 9pm, to tape another confession, this time
Brad recants. Thank God at this point because it's making me believe that the confession isn't actually
what happened at all.
Uh-huh. And he claims that the only reason he said what he said earlier was because he
was confused and afraid. This time he's like, I didn't kill Bebe. But his imagination had
run wild and almost convinced him that he had. And again, is that his imagination? Was
it the police?
A little combination of both.
And one of the things he points to,
one of the reasons he said he confessed
was because the investigators said
his fingerprints had been found.
He said the polygraph freaked him out.
And then investigators told him he was going to, quote,
sit in jail and rot away from the inside out
if he could not remember, end quote.
And he says, listen, every time I told the truth, they would say I was lying.
So the only way out was to give them the answers that they wanted.
Plus, he says that the whole time, like on top of all of this, he was feeling really
guilty because he couldn't help his girlfriend.
So with the help of these officers, he constructed this imaginary story.
So just for a second, let's put the confession aside.
Why was he lying and saying things were completely fine with their relationship
when, like, he then admitted that things had been tense,
or, like, he had that interaction with the searcher
where he was, like, more interested in the football game than talking to them?
There's a reason they were looking at him to begin with.
Like they didn't just like go into like,
it's always the boyfriend mode.
Like he was, there were like weird things, right?
There are things that look bad and I can't explain it,
but the one thing I'll say, if I've learned,
I feel like I've learned a couple of lessons
from our time doing this.
And one of the things like,
as I've done so much research
on so many cases that I've found,
is that a newspaper article is black and white,
but the story itself isn't always.
Like, usually there's so much context missing
from those short 500-word stories,
and it's that context that's full of color,
and we never get that.
So, like, all I'm saying is like, yes,
there's some stuff that looks bad, but I'm not sure that...
Well, hang on, I'll just keep going and you'll understand.
Because I did find more stuff as that were not in the news
articles, but I found them at the court docs.
The important thing at this point that I think people
should know is that there are things in his story
that don't match up to the crime scene.
So take those three fract up to the crime scene.
So take those three fractures
to the back of her skull, for instance.
So he says that he backhands or hits her basically
and she falls backward,
but the severity of the fractures wouldn't have come
from something like a fall.
The fractures to the nose and the eye socket
might have come from him hitting her,
but he would have had to either
use an object like a rock or slammed her head into the ground to injure her that severely.
But those inconsistencies, I guess, don't matter to anyone because nobody in the early days is pointing those out. And so Brad is charged with BB's murder in the early morning hours of December 11th after his final statement
recanting his confession.
Now, in their version of events, Brad killed Bebe,
went back to cover her body,
and then spent the following five weeks
playing the role of the grieving boyfriend
and volunteering with the search efforts
so that he wouldn't raise suspicion.
Now, the whole time, Brad continues
to maintain his innocence and pleads not guilty at his
arraignment and he's eventually let out on bail to await his trial, and investigators
spend that time looking for more proof to make their case rock solid.
Like ideally, the blanket and hubcap that Brad said he used.
He said he got that blanket, put her on it, sexually assaulted her, used the hubcap to
dig.
So they end up finding both of those things in his car
and they send off both to be tested,
hoping to find proof that will corroborate
the original story he gave.
Now, while that's happening, the trial gets going
on April 14th, 1986.
And David Alcott reports that the trial includes
almost 100 witnesses, over 400 items of evidence,
and it takes 27 and a half days. So it is a big one. But I'm going to try and keep it as
straightforward as I can. I'm kind of going to go point by point as chronologically as I can.
So once we get into trial, let's start with Robin's testimony, who we finally get to hear from in a meaningful way.
She claims that Bebe was clearly angry that morning and things between her and Brad were tense.
And she says when Bebe broke off from the group, she didn't think too much of it.
Now after they couldn't find her and they went back to the parking lot, she admits that she was
the one who recommended Brad go drive around and look for Bebe while she stayed there at the parking lot.
And when Brad came back, she didn't see any evidence of a struggle, but noticed that he
looked a little more worried, and that he was maybe a little quieter.
No big red flags, though.
Now I should note, this is slightly different than what she said in a pre-trial hearing.
She apparently testified then, for the defense, that she didn't notice Brad acting any differently
when he came back looking for BB on his own, when he was, like, after he was supposed to
have killed her.
I mean, it's not totally different, no, but just slightly.
Just a little bit, yeah.
So let's move on to the search.
So the defense argues that searchers and bloodhounds were within 90 feet
of where Bebe was eventually found, but they didn't pick up on her scent or find her for
five weeks. However, they also bring up that the dogs did pick up a scent near the area
where the woman, remember she called him that tip, the woman who claimed to have seen someone
who looked like Bebe with the man in his van? Yeah. So the defense is saying like, okay,
we don't have her scent where her body is found,
but we have her scent like where this supposedly happened.
Like apparently that was the same area.
And then all of a sudden it disappears
kind of like she would have gotten into a van.
But the prosecution tries to explain that away
by stating that Bibi's scent could have gotten mixed up
or mistaken for that of her family,
who by that point had come out to California
and been there searching too.
Like they had like a similar enough scent that the dogs got confused.
I've never heard of that.
Me neither.
So I don't know.
I don't know if that's legit or not.
Someone who knows anything about search dog needs to write in and tell us.
But one of the searchers who was actually there with the dog, I told you about this
earlier, he's the one that comes forward at trial and says that his dog did lead him
to the site where Bibi was found.
He claimed that his dog pawed at the ground,
but that wasn't the right signal
that he was trained to give when he alerted.
So the searcher didn't think to report it.
So we don't get this until trial.
And he says that he didn't say anything until now
because quote, it's hard to get people to say
they or their dog made a mistake.
You're walking on very sore toes in that area, end quote.
Oh, so this is just an ego thing.
Yes.
Yeah, that's what it sounds like.
Now Brad's efforts in the search are disputed.
Some testify that his efforts were minimal and that there were a few times that he was
asked to do something that he didn't.
But there were others who say that he was boots on the ground as much as possible in
doing everything he could.
Now speaking of Brad in those early days, remember Ilyar Nashi, the searcher who interviewed
Brad like right when BB was reported missing?
Okay, so he comes and testifies.
And his story hasn't really changed, like he stands by it.
But the thing I didn't tell you before
is that one source claims that he didn't tell any officers
about all the supposedly weird stuff Brad said
or the way he was acting until after Brad was arrested.
Which the defense was, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The defense was all over. Yeah, cause that like, knowing that someone was arrested, which the defense was, yeah, yeah, yeah, the defense was all over.
Yeah, because that like, knowing that someone was arrested
can color every former interaction
you've had with that person.
And if you don't have that context,
I get that he was one of the last people
to like be with her or see her
and he's the boyfriend or whatever,
but you have less reason to like hone in on him
the way that they did.
Versus like, oh, this guy's been charged?
Yeah, I did get a weird feeling from him.
Right. He was acting, oh my gosh, yeah, that been charged? Yeah, I did get a weird feeling from him. He was acting.
Oh my gosh, yeah, that changes everything.
Yeah, plus remember the football game
that he said that Brad was like so distracted
by during their chat?
Well, an article from the Oakland Tribune
states that another person who was there when
that conversation was happening actually
testifies that Brad wouldn't have been able to see the TV
from where they were standing.
It was like in a completely different room.
Does that mean he still couldn't have been distracted by the noise? I mean, possible.
But it's another point that the defense is able to use to kind of destabilize the prosecution's
like theory or points or whatever. Right. Now the prosecution gained a little bit of ground when
discussing some of Brad's behavior in the weeks between when Bebe went missing and then when she
was found. People who saw him in that time testify that he was just doing some things that were out of the ordinary for him.
Like staying in BB's room, wearing one of her shirts, sleeping with her teddy bear, painting his fingernails, wearing her eyeshadow.
Which like none of those things are crimes.
He just maintains that he was really distressed during that time, like we all handle stress differently.
And like, you know, surrounding himself with her things,
like I kinda get it.
I'm gonna say stress and also like potential grief.
Grief, yeah.
Like this person you love isn't here
and you don't know where she is.
Right, but it was this poem that he wrote
that like brought people pause.
It's titled, Suitable Ending.
And it's about Bibi going off into the unknown.
The prosecution specifically focuses
on one line in particular, which reads, quote,
"'On a warm winter's morning, terror howled in the soul.
The appetite of the mind's eye took a second look
and didn't see,' end quote.
The prosecution takes that line and the title to somehow be an admission of guilt, saying
that B.B.'s death to Brad was a suitable ending for her.
But in one of the sources I found, it says that Brad clarifies the line that they read,
says it was referring to the witness who saw the woman who looked like B.B. being pulled
toward the van, but
then doing nothing about it.
And the title was supposed to mean, quote, you never find out what happened, it was just
left up to God to help us, end quote.
Now, according to more of David Alcott's reporting, when Bebe's sister testifies,
that's when Brad's case takes another hit, because she says that when she went to help search Brad was already
referring to BB in the past tense.
Which is just never a good look.
I know.
You mentioned the witness talking about the van and it made me wonder,
does anyone ever come back to the man in the van? Like are we saying that that was Brad, that it never happened?
Like, well, no one's saying that it's Brad, not even like the police or anyone, because
the witness description doesn't match him. I mean, if you remember, the guy was supposedly in his
40s, like even the age aside, even the physical description isn't Brad, and he was not driving
a van. He couldn't have gotten a van in that short time. Right. So sure, it's possible that it never happened.
But when I walk you through the next parts of the trial, the sightings of BB, I think it's more likely than not that there was a man who wasn't Brad, and this did happen.
There are three more sightings of BB that the defense brings up that investigators don't
seem to have put much effort into like sussing out.
One in particular was from another woman who claims that she saw a young woman running
down a road close to where Bebe went missing with a man running behind her.
Not necessarily in pursuit though.
And what makes this sighting significant is that this was in the same area where the search
dog led his handler, but didn't alert.
Now, the other two sightings were of Bibi supposedly alive at a grocery store and a
shopping center parking lot at times after she is thought to have been murdered.
So that doesn't really fit with the man in the van theory, but it does offer a bunch
of possibilities of reasonable doubt. Right. Just poking man in the van theory, but it does offer a bunch of possibilities
of reasonable doubt.
Right, just poking holes in the prosecution's case.
Right.
Okay, so I wanna move on to the physical evidence
after Bebe's body was found, or rather, the lack thereof.
So the two rocks police took from the scene
don't have any DNA on them.
The hubcap and the blanket,
to me these are the really important pieces,
neither one of those can be placed at the scene or be connected to the crime in any way.
Now her body was too decomposed to tell if she'd been sexually assaulted, but there's no evidence
like that she was based on her clothes or like I said that blanket that supposedly Brad sexually
assaulted her on according to his one story which he later recanted. And like I said, that blanket that supposedly Brad sexually assaulted her on, according to his one story which he later recanted.
And like I said before, the injuries that Bebe sustained don't match up with what Brad's one story was.
The pathologist who did the autopsy even testifies in court that they had never seen someone sustain the injuries she had just from a fall backwards.
The prosecution tries to say that the lack of physical evidence doesn't mean that the
crime didn't occur, but-
But doesn't it?
I mean, I'm sorry, you should have something.
I mean, truly, what is this case against him even based on?
Well, his confession, which like, let's talk about the confession.
Which is one of the biggest points of contention.
The prosecution claims that they didn't give Brad any information about where Bebe's body
was, what state her body was in, how she died, all of that.
And so they're saying, like, we believe his confession because he was able to give us
those details.
He knew these things.
Yeah, stuff that only the killer would know. But, as we
speculated, the defense says that Brad knew all of this because he was told by investigators,
not necessarily during the interview, but before. You see, when Bebe's body was located,
police called the friends of Bebe Lee headquarters to let them know that she'd been found and
identified. And the defense claims that the police told
whoever they called those details,
like where the body had been found,
the condition of her body, the condition of her clothing.
And they claim that though Brad wasn't the one on the phone,
Brad was there and he discussed all of that
with the other members present.
But that ends up being contradicted
by one of the volunteers from the Missing
Children Project. She says she's the one who actually picked up the phone when they got
the call and she says that all they were told was that Bebe's body was found. Nothing about
where she was, what condition her body was in, none of that. She does say that when she
told the people there, including Brad, about the discovery that he broke down and had to leave the room.
But then someone else who was there
when the phone call happened,
admits that there was some discussion about, you know,
how it would be possible for police to identify a body
if it's so decomposed that it can't be recognized,
but that the conversation was more like speculation,
no one actually knew anything for sure.
And there's a lot of back and forth here,
because according to an article in the Oakland Tribune,
Brad ends up saying that all of that isn't true.
He claims that the volunteer from the Missing Children Project is just straight up lying.
Now when it comes to whether the confession was coerced or not, the defense takes a strong
stance that it was.
They bring in a psychiatrist who after reviewing the taped statements testifies that the level of mental fatigue Brad was experiencing after over 12 hours of grilling, combined with
what he calls coercive persuasion by the police and manipulation of his guilt resulted in a coerced
confession. And the confession is a huge point that Brad talks about when he takes the stand in
his own defense. We don't see that a lot. He sticks to his talks about when he takes the stand in his own defense.
We don't see that a lot.
He sticks to his story about how he was threatened
with jail time unless he could explain how BB died.
And he genuinely became convinced
that he had done something so heinous,
so out of left field that he couldn't remember.
And that's why he says he believed police's suggestion,
which he says it was their suggestion, that he blacked out.
He also claims that he trusted the polygraph examiner
when he was told that he had failed the polygraph.
He truly believed that he had done something
he couldn't remember, which by the way,
he didn't fail the polygraph.
The results were inconclusive.
And the defense actually gets Cleve Baxter,
this guy who pioneered a major technique often
used today in polygraphs.
They get this guy to testify that the examiner who did Brad's test misread some of the results.
And the results for the questions where he showed deception weren't strong enough to
actually be considered deceptive.
Most everything should have been inconclusive.
Wait, we're in trial right now talking about polygraphs.
Because it was the defense that actually argued for them
to be admitted as evidence.
Because they say that investigators
use it as an interrogation tactic rather than a fact
finding tool.
So they think it's important because it relates
to the confession that Brad went on to make.
Oh, and again, speaking of this confession,
so remember when Brad broke down and the examiner thought that that was an indication
that he was being deceptive?
Well, Cleve says that as a polygraph examiner,
they shouldn't be reading into that.
He says that they should have stopped
and completed the test later when Brad wasn't so emotional.
Like, it's not their job to weigh in on the why.
Now, police deny threatening him with jail time
if he couldn't come up
with an explanation for what had happened. They also deny suggesting the
amnesia theory. But without the transcript of their conversations, like
I actually don't know one way or another. I mean at least I think the
early ones weren't taped, so I don't know if there is a transcript of anything
other than like police notes. So that's the confession. And the final thing that I want to talk about in relation to the trial has to do with the
timeline.
We're talking about when Brad might have had time to not only kill Bebe, but then go
back and hide her body.
So he was only searching for Bebe in his car for like 15 to 20 minutes, which Robin confirms.
And later that evening, a few people remember seeing him at very key moments.
So first, a young woman named Amy claims that she saw Brad at 8 p.m. and then again between
8.30 and 9 in the co-op dorm where they both lived.
And this is during the time that he said in his confession that he went back to bury Bebe's
body. Amy says that she noticed him because she had a crush on him,
so she would always, like, be kind of aware when he was in the room.
And it's worth noting that by the time this trial is happening
and she's testifying to this, they're actually dating.
Oh.
Yeah, though she is clear that they didn't start dating
until after Brad was arrested,
which to me, that's not the strongest witness.
Right.
Especially because she didn't mention this until, like,
a month before trial when, oh, by the way,
she was now pregnant with his child.
But we also have Brad's roommate,
who initially says that he saw Brad go to bed
between 9.30 and 10 p.m.
And then we have 11 p.m. when that first call from
Bibi's roommates come who are looking for her and Brad was definitely there at
11 p.m. Same thing at 2 a.m. for the second call when he got up and went over
to their apartment. Now on cross-examination this roommate sort of
kind of like backtrack says he can't be a hundred percent sure that Brad was
there before 11. But again 11 p.mm., locked in, he's definitely there.
So he's there at the call out between 8.30 and nine,
and then he is definitely in his room by 11
to get that call, so.
That's what we have people testifying to, yeah.
Right, so we have like two, two and a half hours
where we can't be entirely sure of his whereabouts,
is that right?
Yes, potentially, you know, of TBD witnesses, but yes.
And how long would it have taken him to drive to the park? I mean bury her body and then drive back?
I mean they talk about this the rough estimation is like an hour and a half like total.
Okay, so he like
could have had the time then?
Yes, but you also have to say like,
so it's in that time when he leaves Robin
to go look for BB that they say he killed her.
So he kills her in 15 to 20 minutes.
That's possible too.
But I guess in my mind, like,
it almost isn't because they didn't have like
a rendezvous spot for this, right?
Like he had to find her first.
And then have some kind of confrontation,
which I know they were already heated.
Like, she was already kind of upset with him.
But I mean, you-
Which could be motive, whatever.
But you have to go from zero to 60
for like everyone to be like on this run together
and things are okay.
Robin, you know, Robin says, sure, she was upset,
but like, they're not fighting all along this run.
They're all running together.
She chooses to go off.
So this couldn't even have been like premeditated, you know what I mean? Like
he didn't know she was gonna go.
I guess that's where I'm like, the timeline is really tight because it's not premeditated.
He didn't know that she was gonna veer off and stop running with them, run somewhere else.
He didn't seem to know where she was going. he would have to find her immediately.
And like you said, start a verbal argument
as soon as they get together
and escalate it to a murder in that short amount of time.
Explain the physical evidence, right?
Because you didn't just get in a heated argument,
backhand her, and then she falls down and dies.
Everyone has said that's physically not possible.
It's not how it would have happened.
So there has to be a murder weapon.
There has to be like more of an altercation.
And then I always found it so strange
because in their story he leaves and when he comes back
and realizes she's dead because again,
also like the way he's saying it happened didn't happen.
So he would have known she was dead right away.
Right.
Based on the physical evidence, but okay, he leaves,
he comes back.
Because she couldn't have just fallen,
he would have had to kill her.
Right.
What I never understood either is why he would have moved
her closer to the road.
They said that, because where the fight supposedly happened
was deeper in the woods, and why would you move her
closer to the road to be found,
unless you wanted her to be found?
Like it doesn't make sense.
It's all a mess.
And to go back to like the premeditation of it all,
according to an article in the San Francisco Examiner,
the prosecution tells the jury that by now,
he's not even going for a first degree conviction
because he doesn't think he can prove premeditation,
for all the reasons we just said.
Yeah.
So he ends up asking the jury to convict on second-degree murder.
But even that feels like a little too much though, because after seven days of deliberation,
the jury deadlocks.
So the judge, instead of saying, okay, mistrial,
the judge tells them that they can consider the lesser charge of manslaughter.
This is apparently called the Stone Instruction based on a 1982 ruling that the court can partially acquit a defendant but convict on a lesser charge.
So first and second degree murder is too much and the jury finds him not guilty there, but maybe
they'll come to a verdict on manslaughter.
They don't, though.
After another six days, they're still deadlocked, 8-4 in favor of conviction.
So that's when the judge declares a mistrial.
After it's all said and done, some of the jurors speak to the media and explain that
they just didn't feel that there was enough solid evidence to point to Brad's guilt.
Many of them still had reasonable doubts and didn't believe the police's investigation was thorough enough.
There were too many questions with not enough answers.
But a mistrial doesn't mean Brad's out of the woods, because he can still be retried for voluntary manslaughter.
And he is, in early 1988. Now there is way less reporting
on this second trial and there isn't any new evidence brought forward so I'm going to skip
to the end and tell you that Brad ends up getting convicted in this one of voluntary manslaughter,
and this is in April of 1988. He gets sentenced to six years in state prison, but he remains out pending
an appeal. And by 1991, his conviction is upheld, though he only ends up serving two
years and eight months of his sentence. And he was released in February of 1995, where
he stayed out of trouble for a few years until 2002. And this is where it gets a little strange because he ends up
being arrested in New Zealand for indecent exposure. It had something to do
with like, I tried looking it up, I can't get to like the New Zealand court records,
but something with him exposing himself to a woman like hiking or like, which
so like it's like out in nature. I know there's something a little like strange about it that a lot of people bring up and
listen I don't something to note that's like a little side eye yeah and I don't
know this for sure but I was you know I you got to check the forums like what
are people saying and someone was like you know in the US like you if you like
are like going to the bathroom outside you can get like clocked with something
and somebody who's claimed that they were from New Zealand was like, no, no, no, that's not happening here. Like you have to like,
whip it out for something like this to happen. So I don't know the details around this at all.
And neither do the people commenting on red, you know what I mean? But right, it's weird. It's a
thing you'll always see come up, like what what was happening there. But whatever it was, it seems
like that was the last time
he had a brush with the law though.
From what I can tell, Bebe's family continued to believe
that he was responsible for her death.
They even filed a wrongful death lawsuit,
although I can't find any records of where that ended up going.
I mean, I feel like you're right, this does have so many unanswered questions,
but I kind of keep wondering about physical evidence
and testing. Is there anything else that's around that hasn't been tested that we could
retest now?
I don't know that they would have kept it because he was tried, convicted, and now he's
served his sentence. Appeals aren't even a thing. And even if stuff was around, you have
to get the authorities that like have possession
of the evidence to do the testing and in their minds, the case is closed.
For this one, I mean, I keep coming back to like all they had was his confession, which
got recanted and in Corpus Delecta, you have to have some physical proof that the crime
actually happened.
You can't just go off the confession.
And when I look at it, I'm like, what did we have?
The way he said it happened, you have...
Couldn't have happened.
The expert saying it couldn't have happened.
The only two items of evidence that in his confessions,
you say were connected to the crime,
could not be tied to the crime.
Even like, so you have opportunity, kind of,
question mark, motive, not really.
I mean, I think there is tons of room for questions.
I just don't know that anyone is who's an authority is asking those questions.
I think in their mind, it's it's it's done.
Right. I mean, this story was a difficult one to put together,
not only because of the sheer amount of information, but just like, I mean,
it all seems to conflict with one another.
There was never really one narrative that I could really trust to tell me
the truth of what happened.
And I know for me, I keep coming back to the man in the van.
I mean, it seems like police were so into that lead at some point.
And then as soon as they decided they're suspicious of Brad, it just got dropped because it didn't fit into that theory.
Like, they had a whole like dramatization of that.
I know.
That they produced and put out there and then disregarded it.
And here's the thing I'll say is, like, the people who have the evidence
and the people who are, you know, quote unquote, in charge,
they might not be asking questions, but we're not the only ones
who haven't forgotten about this or that man.
Because while researching this case, we came across a potential serial killer
named Michael Patrick Eide,
who may have been active in the Bay Area when BB went missing.
So, Connie Chung actually was one of the first people to put his name out there in a segment for her show, Eye to Eye,
which used to be on CBS.
And this guy was bad news. I mean, he'd been convicted of sexually assaulting and trying to kill a woman in 1978.
And then later, he was convicted for killing another woman in November 1984 in San Francisco.
And then by 1994, he was investigated for the murders of three other women and girls
all near the San Francisco area, all in like 1983 to 1984.
And according to an article in the San Francisco Examiner,
he resembled the man with the van.
Now, police came out to say that the connection
between Michael and Bibi is circumstantial at best,
and they are confident that they got the right guy.
But they have, you know, a lot of reasons
to want to be confident and not go digging.
I was gonna say, and also the chance that Brad killed BB
is, in my opinion, circumstantial at best.
Like, ah.
Yeah, and this Michael guy ended up getting convicted
of one more murder, which actually wasn't even one
of the three that he was thought to be connected to in 1994.
Oh, wow.
So like, who knows what else is out there?
And if nobody is like, trying to find out, you know what I mean?
Like, I have way more questions than apparently police do.
But he died in 2005, so he's not around to ask about this.
Which leaves us in a place where we have a conclusion to this case that doesn't really feel like a conclusion.
I think there are plenty of questions still to be asked
that no one is asking except for us.
So if you have any information, you can contact the police,
but the truth of the matter is I don't think anyone's taking the call. But that doesn't mean we should stop talking about Bibi's story,
because it's in talking about these cases
that I've been able to draw so many connections to other things,
and this is how you get information out there.
And so maybe there's someone out there who has information on Michael Eide,
and maybe there's something that they know,
we can put these pieces together
or maybe the right man got convicted.
But we shouldn't stop telling these stories.
["Souls of the Dead"]
You can find all the source material for this episode on our website, crimejunkiepodcast.com.
And be sure to follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast.
We'll be back. Crime Junkie is an AudioChuck production.
So what do you think Chuck?
Do you approve?