Crime Junkie - MURDERED: The Powell Family
Episode Date: October 1, 2018During a blizzard in December 6, 2009 Josh Powell Claims to have taken his two young sons, ages 2 and 4, camping. When he returned home he finds friends and family frantically searching for them. They...'re all relieved when he and the boys arrive safely. But where is Susan? Josh becomes a prime suspect in her disappearance but when the system fails to prove a case against him and protect his kids he turns on them and kills them in an unimaginably brutal fashion.  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-powell-family/  Â
Transcript
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Hi crime junkies, Ashley Flowers here.
The case we have for you today is a dark one, one that our listeners have requested over
and over again.
It's the story of Susan Powell and her two young boys.
Part of the story revolves heavily around child protective services and caseworkers'
supervised visits.
All stuff that I have zero experience with, so I have asked Britt to tell us the story
this week.
As a lot of you know, she's fostered multiple kids in the system, and along with the baby
that she just adopted, she's currently fostering another child as we speak.
So she has a lot of experience with the kinds of interactions that play into the case we're
going to talk about today.
So Britt, are you ready to take us on a pretty dark ride?
Yes, I am.
Okay, let's go.
Let's go.
So today's story actually ends on February 5th of 2012.
Wait, you're starting with the ending?
I am.
Ooh, you're totally shaking it up, okay.
So a social worker was taking two little boys,
Charlie and Brayden,
for a supervised visit with their father.
And she had taken the boys on a couple of visits
for the family before,
but they'd always done it in a public facility.
But because of the family's notoriety,
which we'll get to in a bit,
they were actually ordered to now have visits
in the father's home.
And the children had actually been removed
from the father's custody
and had been living with their maternal grandparents.
And I'd be lying if I said this wasn't
the most difficult part of the story for me.
And honestly, it's kind of why I'm leading with it.
I've known social workers.
I've had them pick up placements from my house
and to have supervised and unsupervised visits
with children's parents.
And this case has always echoed in my heart.
Every single time I've had to load a kiddo up for a visit.
And a lot of people have given the social worker
a lot of flack for her actions of this day,
but I honestly can't place any blame on her.
So she gets to the father's house
and the boys leap out of the car,
super excited to see their dad, of course.
And the social worker, who I'm sure,
like all the social workers I've known,
was probably lugging a giant messenger bag
with case files to update while she was at the visit.
She was probably lagging a bit behind them
and the boys get to the door.
Their dad welcomes them in
and with a smirk, the boys' father, Josh Powell,
slams the door in the face of the social worker
who is shocked and a bit taken aback by a whiff of gasoline.
The social worker, knowing the history of his family,
immediately calls 911.
But before we get to, what do you know,
a terrible 911 operator from the state of Washington,
I want to tell you a little bit more
about the history of Josh Powell.
Josh's parents had divorced when he was 16
and it was pretty ugly.
His parents had married in the church of the Latter-day Saints,
but his father, Steve, had become severely disillusioned
by the church and he was also kind of a creep.
Josh or his father?
Eventually both, but mostly his father.
Okay.
One of the downfalls of Josh's parents' marriage
was the fact that his father, Steve,
thought that he had the right to marry another woman
and had his heart set on someone
who was actually already married
and had zero interest in him.
That's not cool.
Don't do that, guys.
He allegedly wrote songs about this woman
and even stalked her a bit,
which would come to be a bit of a recurring theme
in their lives.
Terry, Josh's mom, stated that she had wanted full custody
of the couple's children after the divorce
because Steve had been known to expose
at least their sons to pornography.
So they did end up getting divorced
like after he thought he deserved
a second married wife.
Right.
Okay.
However, the custody was split between the two parents
and Steve got his sons and Terry got the daughters.
Oh, weird.
Eventually, at least one of the daughters
would go on to move in with her father, though.
So wait, is there stuff we don't know about Terry?
Was she even more messed up than the dad or what?
It seems weird that they would go live with him.
Not really.
In the divorce filing papers,
Steve had accused Terry of witchcraft.
What?
And Terry was basically like,
I'm a naturalist.
I'm an herbalist.
I enjoy not necessarily making potions,
but making my own tinctures and my own teas,
but it's not witchcraft per se.
Or a cry from like a black kettle in the woods.
Like not quite the same.
No, bloodshedding, nothing like this.
And that was really the only thing
that he had quote unquote against her
other than the fact that she was like,
hey, don't marry someone else too.
She's so crazy.
But even before Steve and Terry Powell divorced,
there were accounts of Steve being especially violent
specifically towards Josh,
singling him out and really harshly beating
and berating him.
And personally, I believe this probably contributed
to Josh's personality,
probably in more ways that we'll ever know.
When Josh was 13 or 14,
he actually attempted to hang himself.
And in some of the articles that I read,
there were even reports of him killing family pets.
And almost everyone mentioned
that he had threatened to kill his mother
with a kitchen knife
because she had wanted him to do the dishes.
How dare she?
I mean, everyone's making this woman
sound like a real monster.
You know, dishes.
Making your own tea.
Tea?
I mean, women.
So fast forward a couple of years,
his parents are divorced
and Josh meets Susan Cox at a church event as a teenager.
And by the time Susan was 19, they had gotten engaged.
And the Cox family wasn't a huge fan of Josh,
but it also felt like he was pretty harmless.
A few of Susan's friends said that
it almost seemed like Susan maybe felt sorry for Josh.
And in the accounts that I read about that,
the first thing that came to mind, Ashley,
was the term missionary dating.
Wait, I don't know missionary dating.
So missionary dating is kind of a very
specifically religious term maybe.
And it's where a religious person
dates a non-religious person
in order to make them religious as well.
That is not a thing.
You're just dating.
But it's dating in a way that,
if you're a Christian,
you would date a non-Christian as like a ministry.
So you're dating them because you...
No, you're not.
You're dating them because you want to date them.
And you're making a...
You're dating them in the assumption
that you can also convert them.
Can you guys feel my eye roll?
Cause my eyes are so far back in my head right now.
So, okay, missionary dating.
So Susan was very firmly grounded
in the church of Latter-day Saints
and knew that Josh had grown up in the LDS church.
And she really truly believed
that she could help make his faith stronger.
And say what you will about if that's possible or not.
But I did find a couple of humanizing facts
that you know I love about Susan.
Susan and her best friend growing up
loved doing hair and nails.
And Susan had actually trained
to become a cosmetologist eventually.
But her and her childhood bestie
had this dream of opening a hair salon.
Do you want to know what it's called?
Yes.
Beauty and your beast.
Which at first I was like, what?
But get this.
It was where there is like a human salon and spa
with a grooming salon and spa for the pets.
Oh my God, I love that.
It's not a terrible idea.
It's not.
Me and Charlie definitely need
to get our nails done together.
Like that needs to be a thing.
So for the first couple of years of their marriage
things were going pretty well.
Even though Josh kind of struggled holding down a job.
In a decision to lower their living expenses,
they moved in with Josh's father Steve.
Which was when things really started
to deteriorate between the couple.
Steve, as you know, history of being a creep
became infatuated with Susan.
And her friend said that Susan had mentioned to them
that she had caught Steve watching her change her clothes
or would try to sneak into the bathroom while she showered.
No.
And he had even groped her a couple of times.
Her father-in-law?
Yeah.
And she had confronted Josh about it
and he kind of brushed it off.
And he had even kind of blamed Susan
for seducing his dad.
Wait, what?
Yeah.
Very not cool.
Susan kind of chalked it up to the fact
that Steve wasn't a great guy
and Steve made Josh a worse person.
Spending time with his dad wasn't good for him.
Clearly.
Clearly.
And Josh had really kind of lost grip
of his role in their family.
As things started getting worse, still living there,
the couple eventually decided to relocate
to West Valley City, Utah for a fresh start.
And once they settled into their new home in Utah,
Susan took a job at Wells Fargo Financial
and they eventually have two sons, Charlie, in 2005
and Brayden in 2007.
Susan had really hoped that a new location
would inspire kind of a new era in their relationship.
And it did.
But not in the way Susan could ever have imagined.
Away from their hometown in Washington,
Susan's bubbly personality
gained many new friends at their church.
And a lot of those friends said
that they loved having Susan as an addition to their group.
But Josh really was just more of a hanger on.
He dominated the conversations with useless facts,
never letting anyone get a word in edgewise
and never really seemed to click with anyone.
He was also quote, legendary
for being incredibly controlling of Susan.
And side note crime junkies,
if you can describe anyone you know
as legendarily controlling, that's not cool.
Never.
Only every aspect of Susan's life was controlled by Josh.
She couldn't use the family car without permission.
She was made to keep a strict budget
and after grocery shopping had to log every item
and price on a spreadsheet.
Wait, what?
Yeah, this is incredible.
Like I have to submit an expense report for work
and I like, I even hate doing that.
If my husband made me have like a life expense report
for our groceries, I would flip a table.
It gets worse.
She was made to knit her own socks instead of buying them.
Which, what?
I knit, it can 100% be more expensive to make them.
I was just gonna say that.
That's like literally like the epitome of control
is because it's not about saving money.
It's about just making someone do something
that doesn't make sense just because you said to do it.
And on the note of things that don't make sense,
when Susan was in labor with their first child,
Josh told her she needed to call her parents
for a ride to the hospital.
He was busy.
What?
This guy, oh my God.
And she did.
She called her parents, they drove her to the hospital
and two hours after their first child, Charlie was born,
Josh shows up.
He wasn't even there.
Oh, oh, do you wanna know what he was too busy doing?
Yes, no, I mean, no, but yes.
Backing up his computer.
What?
Yep.
That thing that I do when I like go to sleep at night
because I don't wanna watch it happen.
Yeah, you don't watch your computer, but that's,
oh my God.
And it honestly gets more sad and I have to go into it
because it's pertinent to know.
But Josh even restricted what Susan
and the boys were allowed to eat.
One article said that Josh would tell Susan,
the boys already get one meal at daycare.
Why should I have to feed them?
They're just going to poop it out.
That's not how like the human body works, Josh.
And some of Susan's friends remember her
calling them to borrow hot dogs
because she literally didn't even have any food in the house
to feed Charlie and Braden.
And they were so hungry that they were crying.
Now this is what I have such a hard time understanding
and I don't claim to understand people,
like in an abusive relationship,
I understand that the psychology of it,
it's so hard to just walk away.
But I always wonder as the friends seeing this,
is it something in hindsight they're looking at
and being like, oh, it was weird, I guess,
that she would come to me and say they had no food.
But why wasn't anyone saying anything?
I mean, even if you can't get your friend to leave,
there is a point when do you call child services?
I mean, I guess I don't know what the thing to do is there.
How do you save your friend?
I say, and I'm looking at some of these accounts
and like, they're like, oh yeah,
he was legendary for being controlling.
And I'm like, God, that's why I said like, guys,
this isn't cool.
If you can say that about one of your friends,
you need to talk to somebody in authority
who can help intervene because that's not okay,
that's not cool.
If you can honestly look at someone in your friend group
and be like, yeah, like they are known
for having this very restricted relationship
to the point where it's notable, I can see it happening.
Please tell someone, like please.
We've had actually people reach out to us
because we've done a couple of episodes
where there are these kind of controlling relationships
and people have said it'd be really cool
to have somebody on the show who is a specialist,
whether it's a psychologist or a counselor
who actually specializes in that
because we don't know what to do.
Like I said, it doesn't make sense to me,
but I have no idea how to advise people.
What do you do if you see all the signs
and your friends in this relationship
and you like know where it's heading, I have no idea.
But it would be good to know, crime, junkie life rules.
Yeah, so this was the life that Susan led.
And she tried to get Josh to go to counseling with her
and he agreed to.
And then he went, but wouldn't participate
and then stopped going altogether.
Of course, things were just getting worse.
She made this really eerie home video
and I kind of found conflicting reports
about what it was for.
Some reports say that it was like a homeowner's insurance
video where she was documenting like everything
in their house, which is really common.
Other reports say that she was instructed
to take the video under counsel.
So she had like reached out to an attorney
and they were like, well, why don't you do this video
and give it to us so we can like have this on account
in case we ever need it for, you know,
proving what you're saying is true.
So I'm not really sure what it is.
You can find it on YouTube.
I probably won't play any clips here
because I personally get super creeped out by it
and it seems very expletive to put it here.
I wonder if she was considering getting a divorce
because that seems like something you would do
if you're trying to actually catalog all of your belongings.
So that way, if you went to a divorce attorney
and you guys were in the process of mediation
or whatever it was and he's trying to say,
we have $5 to our name and she's actually showing,
okay, he has all of this like IT equipment.
Well, and that's what some of the reports are saying
that she had gone to an attorney
and they were like document everything.
Yeah, yeah.
So that's an option.
But again, I was finding kind of conflicting reports
and her actual speaking on the tape
doesn't really make it super clear.
So she's going through a house with a video camera
and outlining everything they own
and most of the big ticket items, multiple computers,
you know, TVs, stuff like that all belong to Josh.
And she says that this is Josh's TV.
This is Josh's like server room.
This is all Josh's.
And every once in a while,
while she's going to the house,
she'll come across like a hole in the wall
or her jewelry stand and it's just kind of broken.
And she sort of shrugs and is like, yeah, Josh broke this.
Josh got mad and broke that.
And like it's the most normal thing in the world.
Was he, do we know up until this point,
was he violent with her
or did he just have violent outbursts?
It doesn't sound like he was ever physically violent with her
but he was at least verbally very explosive.
Okay.
Once counseling fell through,
Susan confronted Josh
about not being happy in their marriage anymore.
Obviously he did not respond well to this.
And she recounted he screamed that over his dead body,
would he let her leave with his boys?
And things never got better.
Susan continued to live in fear of Josh
who micromanaged and controlled every aspect of her life
except her faith.
Like his father before him,
Josh turned his back on the church after he got married.
But for some reason had no problem
with Susan continuing to attend
and even let her take the boys with her.
Which is exactly what she did
Sunday morning, December 6th, 2009.
She and the boys attended church that morning
and walked home with a neighbor.
As you know, she couldn't use the car
unless she had permission.
A friend from a choir had come over that afternoon
and hung out until Susan decided
to lay down for a nap around 5 p.m.
Or on the same time their friend leaves,
Josh said he was going to take the boys out to sled.
And that was the last time anyone admits
that they saw Susan.
The morning of December 7th rolls around
and the woman who owned the daycare
where Charlie and Brayden were enrolled
noticed that the boys were late.
She actually mentioned that if Josh was dropping off the boys
it was pretty normal for them to be dropped off
at like all hours of the morning, never any schedule.
But Susan, who usually dropped them off, was like clockwork.
So first they were late
and then they didn't show up at all.
So she starts calling Susan and Josh's jobs
and they both confirmed
that neither parent had showed up for work
and neither of them had called in.
So the daycare owner goes back to her paperwork
and starts calling the emergency contact,
one of Josh's sisters who lives with their mom.
Josh's sister answers and doesn't know where they are,
asks their mom, she doesn't know where anybody is.
So they call the police and head over to Josh and Susan's house.
And they actually authorized the police
to break into the house,
fearing the family had died in their sleep
due to carbon monoxide poisoning,
which had been weirdly happening
like super frequently in the area.
But the police break in and find the house empty
and really untouched.
It was like they were there a second ago.
The only oddity is two box fans were set up
and turned on, blowing on two wet spots on the carpet.
Wait, what?
Yeah, like how big were the wet spots?
I couldn't find anything on it.
And a lot of the articles that I read
and things that I watched and listened to about this
basically kind of say, it's not crazy,
it's Utah in the winter.
Like we both live in a state
that gets a lot of snow in the winter.
More carpets to be wet, isn't crazy,
but for it to be wet enough to set up two box fans?
Is insane.
Seems a bit much.
The only time I've ever known anyone to use box fans
are when they have a-
Basement flooding.
Exactly, when they have a basement and it floods.
I thought the same thing.
Nobody sets up box fans in the middle of their,
like living room.
That's not a thing.
That's not a thing.
And these cops should have had alarm bells going off
in every direction.
Right.
So now both sides of the family are frantically calling
both Josh and Susan's cell phones with no answers.
But then finally, Josh and the boys roll into the driveway
around five or six PM that night.
The entire neighborhood has been looking for them.
So someone's like, Josh, you need to go to the police
and be like, I'm okay.
Did he not have a cell phone?
They were calling the cell phones.
Oh, okay.
So Josh goes to the West Valley city police and checks in.
And when he gets there, they're like, dude, where were you?
And that's when Josh starts telling his story.
He says that, like he said,
around five or six PM on Sunday night,
he took the boys sledding.
They got home, they watched a movie.
He thinks it's one of the Santa Claus movies.
He can't remember which one.
And around midnight, he decided to take the boys camping
because they really wanted s'mores.
Wait, what?
Right.
Wait, I'm sorry. First of all, how old are these kids?
Two and four.
And you want to go camping at midnight.
In December, in Utah, side note,
in the middle of a blizzard.
Oh wait, a blizzard?
Yeah.
Because the boys wanted s'mores.
That you can make in the microwave.
That they should be sleeping anyway, so it doesn't matter.
You don't have to give two and four year olds
everything they want all the time.
Also, this dude doesn't feed them in general.
Why does he want to give them s'mores all of a sudden?
Ooh, good point.
Anyway, Susan was still asleep in the house,
but he packed up the kids anyway
and went to the Simpson Springs campground,
which is about two hours away from where they lived.
So yeah, in the middle of a snowstorm,
and the police are like, okay, uh-huh,
why didn't you call in to work?
And Josh is like, oh, today's Monday?
I thought yesterday was Saturday.
So I didn't think I had to work today.
That, no, that's not a thing.
Yeah, and police aren't really buying it either.
And while they're interviewing him, they don't tell him,
but they actually dispatched officers
to Simpson Springs campground to verify
that Josh had built a campfire there for s'mores.
And the main reason they did this
was because he was specific about the s'mores.
He mentioned that he got there, built the fire,
got the marshmallows out,
and realized he had forgotten the chocolate for the s'mores.
So they just had like marshmallow and graham cracker sandwiches.
So it's two in the morning,
and he's got his two-year-old and his four-year-old.
Giving them sugar?
In a blizzard.
Yes.
How many pe-
Were other people even at this campground?
Is this a thing that people in Utah do?
I need everyone to tweet us, who lives in Utah,
because I cannot even fathom that this is real.
We have blizzards here in Indiana,
and I would never consider going camping,
well, ever in them.
I don't go to the grocery store when it's blizzard-ing.
I don't go anywhere at two in the morning
with a two and a four-year-old when it's blizzard-ing.
This is all insane.
I don't know how everyone's alarm bells aren't going off.
So they had dispatched officers to this campground
to see if, I mean, if he had built a fire,
you know what, 12 hours before,
there would be evidence of it.
And they found no evidence
that anyone had been camping in this campground there
for a while.
Yeah, because it's freaking December.
Yeah, no, no one's doing it.
At this point, law enforcement tell Josh
that while they're thankful
that he and the boys are home safely,
Susan still hasn't been accounted for.
And Josh assures the officer
that she's probably just at work and is fine.
And they're like, we've already checked there,
she's not there, she never came in.
And Josh doesn't freak out at all.
He's just like, I'll check in with some friends and family.
I'm sure she just took the day off
knowing I was camping with the boys.
And somehow the police miraculously
decided to consider Susan a missing person.
Thank God.
And ask Josh to come back in tomorrow
for a formal interview.
Thank God.
And the next day, Josh calls his father-in-law,
tells him Susan is missing,
and Josh is going in for an interview.
And Josh gets there,
the police ask a lot of the same questions,
and Josh gives a lot of the same answers.
They still aren't happy with them.
They're so not happy with what he's trying to sell them
that they actually issue a search warrant for his house.
I don't mean to skip over all the little stuff,
but in most ways, it's your typical missing persons case.
There are vigils and both sides of the family defend Josh,
and everyone is passing out flyers
and posts on social media and trying to bring Susan home.
Wait, that's actually really interesting.
So Susan's family was supporting Josh at this point?
Yeah.
Everyone was backing Josh.
There was no reason in their minds
for him to have been involved at all.
He was an innocent guy taking his toddlers camping
at midnight in a snowstorm, as one does.
Were her family not aware of all the things
that her friends say were happening?
It seems like not.
And to a certain extent, I kind of get it.
Like you don't want,
like you can share with your friends your issues,
but you feel like a disappointment to your family
if you share them with them.
Does that make sense?
It does.
You tend to shout to your family
because especially if you're not planning
on leaving the person, like you want them to like them.
Yeah.
And like her family didn't like Josh in the first place.
Like she wasn't gonna give them anything to fan that flame.
So a week goes by and on December 14th,
Josh is scheduled to attend a third formal interview
with the police,
but instead he hires an attorney and skips the interview.
Which again, like I will admit,
I'm a total hypocrite
because that's the exact move I would do.
But because he did it, I want to say he's mad guilty.
Well, and here's something that makes me feel,
unfortunately, somehow aligned with Josh.
He skips the interview,
but does agree to give them a DNA sample.
Okay.
And the case just goes cold.
The police don't feel good about Josh,
but don't have anything pointing to him either,
just his kind of screwball story.
Throughout the rest of December,
Josh actually ends up going back up to Washington
to stay with his dad for the holidays.
And because of all the trauma in his life,
he gets let go from his job
and decides to move in with his dad permanently.
In early January,
Josh and his brother Michael drive back down
to West Valley City and pack up the house.
And Josh just moves to Puyallup, familiar city.
Why are we always talking about Puyallup?
Puyallup, I am so sorry.
I told Ashley as I was researching this,
we aren't gonna be doing any more Washington cases
for a while because I feel like we've been picking on you
very unintentionally, so.
It is always Puyallup, geez.
I had never heard of Puyallup
until we started Crime Junkies
and it's all I can talk about.
And now it's where all the crimes happen.
Yeah, King County.
I had never even heard of Puyallup till the Misty case.
And Ashley, I don't know if you remember,
but we practiced saying that the city name like-
400 times.
A lot, so because we wanted to do Washington right.
And now I can say Puyallup in my sleep, so.
Yeah, we're talking about Puyallup in King County
every other episode I feel like.
I'm sorry, you guys.
No more Washington for a while.
We'll pick on another state soon.
So he and his brother move all of Josh and the boys' stuff
up to Puyallup.
The police are still looking into him
and get a search for the family minivan
that he supposedly took out camping that fateful night.
And independent search teams continue to comb
the Utah Hills for any trace of Susan,
but nothing comes up in the search warrant for the van
or the independent searches in the area surrounding
where the pals lived.
They don't get anything in the van.
That's the only car that they own, right?
Right, that's kind of shocking.
So on February 15th, over two months after Susan
went missing, her friends and family call a press conference.
And this is when they begin to tell the public
the truth about Josh and Susan's relationship.
They outlined Susan's fear of Josh,
his controlling and demeaning manner towards her,
his desire to undermine anything she seemed to do,
and most damning, Susan's vow to leave Josh
if things hadn't improved by April 6th,
their wedding anniversary.
So do you think in these two months
that her family had started talking to her friends
and actually finding this stuff out
if we didn't think that they knew this before?
Yes, because this is really the first time
Susan's family starts distancing themselves from Josh,
but it was super difficult for them to do.
And all the reports that I read said that the only reason
that it was hard was because their grandchildren
were still in the care and custody of this man
that was now revealed to be a monster,
at least towards their daughter.
God, that's gotta be so conflicting.
Right, so they think this guy is terrible,
but they have to kind of buddy up to him
in if they ever wanna see their grandsons again.
Searches continue and continue to turn up empty,
but on the first anniversary of Susan's disappearance,
Josh and his family get somehow weirder than before.
In an interview that Josh and his father Steve do together,
they claim that Susan had been in a long-term affair
with a local journalist who had gone missing
around the same time as Susan.
They claim that these two had run off to Brazil together.
Wait, Josh's family is saying this?
Josh and his father specifically.
Those two are loony tunes.
And there is zero evidence supporting this claim
outside the fact that they are both missing persons
from Utah.
So there was actually a journalist who was missing.
Yeah, but the journalist was last seen
on a security camera alone,
and there's no link connecting these two in life.
Weird.
There's no reason for them to have ever had contact.
I mean, we know now that Josh is a super controlling person.
He would have had a pulse
on every aspect of Susan's communication.
Yes.
There would be proof somewhere
that she had contact with this guy, right?
Absolutely.
Josh and Steve even publish a website
that was listed as the official website of Susan Powell,
which sounds like it's gonna be like
a fine Susan website, right?
Yeah.
But it was all slanderous about her character
and what kind of mother she was.
And basically saying she was this seductress
who hated her children and hated her life in Utah.
And she was this terrible person.
Just awful, awful things about this woman.
So this guy has a missing wife
and instead of actually trying to find her,
he sets up a website
that is basically a character assassination of her?
Yep.
Wow.
And then about six months later,
these two decide they're going to publish segments
of Susan's childhood and teenage journals.
Why?
To expose what a sexual deviant she was.
What does this have to do with anything?
Nothing.
Steve even tells stories
about how Susan would try to seduce him
when he had them in his home
and how this is the creepiest quote to me.
He said they shared a quote,
father-in-law, daughter-in-law, flirting with each other,
maybe some sexual touching.
What?
Frankly, I liked it, end quote.
I wanna be clear, we both have-
Not a thing.
Yeah, we both have father-in-laws
and there is no such thing as a flirty relationship
with your father-in-law
where you enjoy some sexual touching.
Not a thing.
No, not a real thing.
And everyone's just like accepting this
or what is the public thinking at this point?
Cause this is insane to me.
Well, Utah and Washington actually both issue warrants
for the home that Steve has
where Josh and the boys are living.
And when they execute the search,
they find hard drive after hard drive,
computer tower after computer tower,
full of child pornography.
Wait, what?
Yeah.
Wait, did it belong to Steve or did it belong to Josh?
It all belonged to Steve.
And in addition to child pornography,
they find thousands of images of Susan
taken without her knowledge.
Like in day-to-day life or compromising positions.
Kind of both, just very voyeuristic,
creepy, stalkery photos.
What is going on?
Steve is arrested and eventually charged
with 14 counts of voyeurism, possession of child pornography,
all sorts of really disgusting charges like that.
Yeah, and I assume, I mean,
I hope he got arrested right away,
but I assume they would also say
that Josh and his kids can't be around him.
Right.
So even though this whole time,
Josh has been a publicly announced person of interest
in their mother's disappearance,
this is the thing that causes Charlie and Brayden
to be removed from their father's care.
So they are taken into state custody
and eventually released into Susan's parents' care.
And Susan's parents note that both the boys
had become physically violent with each other
and become even more defiant.
Like at this point, they're four and six, I believe.
Their maternal grandparents had had some contact with them,
but Josh was really kind of keeping them away
because he didn't want them around the people
who raised the sexual deviant of their mother
when really they were living with one.
Exactly.
The boys acting out physically and violently
may have just been the trauma
of losing a parent at a young age,
but the Cox family really put it back to the time
that the boys had spent with their father
and their paternal grandfather.
And at one point, Charlie, the oldest,
drew a picture of the family minivan with everybody in it
and was pointing out, you know, this is daddy,
this is Charlie, this is Brayden.
Oh my God, stop it.
And then cryptically, he said,
oh my God, mommy is in the trunk.
Britt.
I know.
My heart just sank into my butt.
That is, how else do you take that?
Right.
So because they were technically in state care
while being placed with their grandparents,
Josh still technically had parental rights to them.
But before he could regain custody,
Josh was ordered to undergo
extensive parental and psychological evaluations
before he was even allowed to think
about getting that custody back.
At one point, law enforcement found
simulated child pornography on Josh's computer.
Is that like people who technically are of age
but pretending like they're younger?
It's somehow weirder than that.
They aren't actually photographic images.
They're renderings or drawings.
So it was more or less like cartoon children.
The internet is a dark place.
Yeah.
And here's the darkest part of this.
Because they weren't technically photographs,
there was nothing illegal about them.
And he's like in the process of like getting his kids back.
Right, though they couldn't arrest him for anything,
it prompted the state to order
an additional psychosexual evaluation for Josh.
Through all this though,
Josh was still granted frequent supervised visits
with his sons.
And like I said earlier,
I've had to participate to a certain degree
with some supervised visit situations.
And they're honestly pretty standard.
You usually go to a neutral environment,
sometimes the parent or family member's home.
Sometimes there's transportation,
like in this case, but sometimes there's not.
And for Charlie and Braden,
Josh and their maternal grandfather, Susan's dad,
actually had had multiple public altercations
and actually had restraining orders against each other.
So having the social worker act as the go-between
was truly the safest option in the situation.
So this takes us back to where we started our story.
When Josh slammed the door in the social worker's face,
remember she smelled gasoline
and that is red flags all over the place.
She tries the handle, but it's locked
and she can hear Charlie and Braden yelling.
She can tell they're in distress
and she's banging and screaming on the door,
yelling for Josh to open it.
And she decides to call 911.
Hey, I'm on a supervised visitation
for a court-ordered visit.
And something really weird has happened.
The kids went into the house and the parent,
the biological parent,
who's name is Josh Powell, will not let me in the door.
What should I do?
What's the address?
It's 8119 and I think it's 89.
I don't know what the address is.
That's pretty important for me to know.
So I can't just let me get in my car
and see if I can find it.
Nothing like this has ever happened before at these visitations.
So I'm really shocked
and I could hear one of the kids crying,
but he still wouldn't let me in.
But I think I need help right away.
He's on a very short lease with CFHS and CPS
who's been involved.
And this is the craziest thing.
He looked right at me and closed the door.
Are you there?
Yes, ma'am. I'm just waiting to know where you are.
Okay. It's 8119.
And I swear, she got the same 911 operator,
Tom Ryder, back in episode 38 I got.
They were completely unhelpful.
And I'd like to pull out of the driveway
because I smell gasoline and he won't let me in.
You want to pull out of the driveway
because you smell gasoline but he won't let you...
I smell... He won't let me in.
He won't let you out of the driveway?
He won't let me in the house.
Whose house is it?
Dr. Kitt's in the house and he won't let me in.
It's a supervised visit.
I understand. Whose house is it?
Josh Powell.
Okay. So you don't live there, right?
No. I don't... No.
I'm contracted to the state to provide supervised visitation.
I see. Okay.
And who is there to exercise their visitation?
I am.
And the visit is with Josh Powell.
And who's supervised?
And he is the husband that I supervise.
So you supervise and you're doing the visit?
Yes, I supervise myself.
I supervise myself. I'm the supervisor here.
Wait a minute.
If it's a supervised visit, you can't supervise yourself.
If you're the visitor...
I supervise myself.
I'm the supervisor for the supervised visit.
Okay. Well, aren't you the one making the visit?
Or is there another...
I don't want...
You're supervising.
No.
Yes. I'm the one that supervises.
I pick up the kids with their grandparents.
Yes.
And then who visits with the children?
For some reason, this operator could not comprehend
what the social worker was trying to convey.
He thinks she's trying to supervise her own visit
and he tells her she can't do that.
And finally, she says,
no, I'm here with Josh Powell.
He's holding his kids hostage.
I smell gasoline.
This guy is dangerous and I need help.
And you have to remember,
this is the biggest case to hit this area of the country
in the past two years.
And...
Everyone should likely know who this guy is.
Right.
This guy's name has been all over the news.
His face has been on every television screen.
This is a big, well-known case,
but still falls flat with this 911 operator.
The social worker is literally telling the guy,
I don't feel safe.
I smelled gas.
I'm going to pull my car away from the house.
I'm afraid of what could happen next.
And over the next six minutes on the phone,
the operator finally says...
All right. Well, have somebody look for you there.
OK, how long will it be?
I don't know, ma'am.
They have to respond to emergency life-threatening
situations first.
The first available deputy...
Well, this could be life-threatening.
He went to court on Wednesday and he didn't get his kids back.
And this is really...
I'm afraid for their lives.
OK, has he threatened the lives of the children previously?
I have no idea.
All right.
We'll have the first available deputy contact you.
What is he not understanding?
I don't know. This call is infuriating.
She eventually is like, OK, whatever.
Thanks. Hangs up.
But shortly after hanging up, the house explodes into flames.
Hello?
Hi, ma'am.
Were you calling about the fire in the 8,200 block?
Yes, he exploded the house.
Ma'am, do you know the...
OK, do you know the exact address of the house?
Sorry.
Yes, it's 8119189...
8...
Court is two hours.
OK, still mine.
Do you know if anyone's in the house?
Yes, there was a man and two children.
I just dropped off the children and he wouldn't let me in the door.
Get a stand line for the third department.
OK, I'm going to get them on the line.
Do not hang up.
Hold on.
So she calls back in.
She finally gets someone to take her seriously.
And about 13 minutes later,
emergency responders arrive and eventually control the burn.
But it's too late.
Keep in mind, it's almost...
It's over 20 minutes since her first call.
Because they were too busy dealing with life-threatening
emergencies for her.
Right.
But now Josh, Charlie, and Brayden are all dead.
And this is really gruesome, so I'm sorry.
But the boys had hatchet marks in their head and neck.
Hatchet marks?
And it's later discovered that the boys died of smoke inhalation.
Not the hatchet injuries.
Oh, my God.
So he hits them with hatchets.
And then sets the house on fire where these boys are still alive?
Yes.
And we later find out that Josh had emailed his custody attorney,
along with some family members, apologizing for everyone
that he's hurt and saying, I love you and goodbye.
And it's total speculation that he's also admitting
to being involved with Susan's disappearance.
But a lot of people believe that that's something
that was like an undertone of these emails.
I can't even, I'm having a hard time even moving on,
because the way that the boys died, it's like.
It's so, so horrific.
If you're going to blow up the house,
I guess I don't understand why.
Why didn't he just, right, if he was going to blow up the house,
why didn't he just leave it at that?
It's so violent.
Or if you're going to, if you didn't want them to suffer
in a fire, why not?
I mean, I don't have really words.
I'm sorry.
No, I completely understand.
And honestly, the story kind of ends there.
Susan's disappearance case is open for another year
before the police feel like they have,
they know it was Josh.
They can't prosecute him.
They can't necessarily prove it.
But there's no one else who would have done this to her.
And they don't believe she walked away from her life
without her boys and just disappeared into the air
by choice.
And there's no indication he gave in his letter.
I mean, if he'd even admit to doing something to her.
He never explicitly admitted to anything about Susan.
So there's no way for them to even find her.
Did they ever track his cell phone data?
I couldn't find that they did.
But there was also some speculation into his brother.
I mentioned earlier that his brother, Michael,
helped him move from West Valley City.
And the police look into him because the car that he used
to move Josh from West Valley City back to Puyallup,
he sold to salvage right after that move.
And that would explain why they never found anything
in Josh's man.
Right.
And he had been asked, and I'm not sure if it was by police
or by the media, if he would tell if he knew anything
about Susan.
And he said, absolutely not.
And what's really strange, twisted, telling
is exactly a year after Josh killed both himself
and murdered his sons.
His brother, Michael, jumps off a seven-story parking
garage to his death.
Oh my god, he killed himself too?
Yes.
Holy cow.
Did he leave a note or anything?
No note, no explanation, no emails even.
Oh my god.
So what happened with their dad, Steve?
He was in prison for a long time.
He eventually got out and died of natural causes,
never saying anything about what may or may not
have happened to Susan Powell.
And so no one's found Susan.
She's just out there somewhere?
Yep.
Or her body is, I guess.
Brett, this one was so dark.
I know.
I was going to say we can do a light one next, but there's
no such thing.
Yeah.
Wow.
If you all are gluttonous for punishment and you want to hear
the entire 9-1-1 call or see that video of Susan cataloging
the items in her house, you can go to our website,
crimejunkiepodcast.com.
We will have links to all of those.
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This episode of Crimejunkie was written and hosted by Britt.
All of the editing and production
was done by David Flowers.
And all of our music, including our theme,
comes from Justin Daniel.
Crimejunkie is an audio Chuck production.
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Oh.