Crime Junkie - WANTED: Killer on the High Bridge
Episode Date: February 12, 2018On February 13th, 2017, Abby Williams and Libby German went for a hike near the Monon High Bridge, in Delphi, Indiana. After Libby posted a Snapchat photo of Abby at 2:07 pm, the girls were never seen... alive again. Searchers found their bodies near a creek parallel to the bridge less than 24 hours later on Valentine's Day. The investigation that has since ensued has left an entire nation searching for the Killer on the High Bridge. 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/wanted-killer-on-the-high-bridge/  Â
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Hi, everyone.
Welcome back to another episode of Crime Junkie.
This week, I have a really big case,
but a really kind of hard case for Brittany
because it is local.
It is still really fresh.
We're gonna be talking about Abigail Williams
and Liberty German who were murdered in Delphi, Indiana.
Last year, well, it's almost exactly a year from today.
It'll actually be tomorrow.
The 13th is the one-year anniversary
of when they went missing,
and then they were found murdered on the 14th.
So, more than ever,
I want to tell you guys a little bit about Crime Stoppers,
who is the local organization here in Indianapolis.
They're not actually taking tips on the Delphi case,
all that's going through the FBI,
but they do support all of those law enforcement officers,
so never a more important time
to tell you about such an important organization.
This episode of Crime Junkie is brought to you
by Crime Stoppers of Central Indiana.
Excuse me, can I ask you a question real quick?
Yeah, go for it.
Do you know what Crime Stoppers is?
Is it that dog, the scruff of a gruff?
Nope, can't sing the song, can't afford the song,
but do you know what they do?
It's that the dog just kind of goes around
and helps solve the murders for the statement,
I don't know.
No, no, not quite.
While everyone loves the idea
of a badass crime-fighting dog,
that's not what Crime Stoppers is.
Crime Stoppers is a nonprofit that allows a place
for people to give anonymous tips about crimes
if they are in fear for their life
or for whatever reason don't want the police
to know who they are when they give the tip,
but they have valuable information.
You can do this through phone numbers, online tips,
they even have an app called P3
that you can download and submit your tip
along with photos and videos.
Crime Stoppers is a nonprofit
and receives no government funding,
so look into yours, see how you can get involved,
see how you can help,
and if you want more information
on Crime Stoppers of Central Indiana,
go to CrimeTips.org.
All right, Brett, are you ready to jump into this one?
Ugh, this is such a big case,
and again, so close to our home,
close to our hearts, and so reason.
Right, and a couple of other podcasts have covered this,
and there isn't a lot of information,
so what I really wanna do is I'm gonna try as best I can
to stay away from rumors and speculation,
there's a ton of that on the internet,
and you can find it there.
This is gonna be a one-part episode,
I really just wanna give you the facts,
and more than anything,
I really just want people to still be talking
about these girls,
because I still think it's really important
that we get justice for them,
and I think it's important
because there is still someone out there
who murdered these girls
that everyone needs to be aware of and keep an eye out for.
It really is so scary.
Right, Delphi, Indiana is actually just an hour
and 23 minutes from where I'm recording
this episode right now,
and last year in February of 2017,
it was unusually warm in Indiana,
like 50 degrees from what I remember,
and from what I'm finding online,
and Libby's grandfather remembers it being even warmer,
like closer to 60s,
because he remembers trying to convince Libby
to take a jacket with her when she wanted to go outside.
So our story takes place over a Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday,
and the reason I talk about the weather
is because normally these girls would have been in school,
and I often wonder how different everything would have been
if they would have been in school that day,
but their school had a built-in snow day,
and for those of you who live in beautiful, warm places
and have no idea what I'm talking about,
it's built in snow days,
so in Indiana, we just prepare for God-awful weather.
It's gonna happen.
It is, it's gonna happen.
So we build in these days where if we have snow days,
we make up our school in these built-in snow days,
and if we have a beautiful, warm-ish winter,
then we get these days off.
So these girls actually had Monday the 13th off of school.
They weren't skipping school,
and it was beautiful and warm,
and so that Sunday night, on the 12th,
Abby decided to stay the night at Libby's house.
These girls were best friends.
They wanted to have a sleepover, they watched movies,
they ate pizza, they hung out with Kelsey,
which is Libby's older sister,
and just had a girl's night and a movie's night.
Both families said the girls were extremely close,
and they did so much together, both in school and out.
They were in band together,
and even played the exact same instrument,
which is the alto sax.
So I feel like, Brett, this was kind of us as young kids,
like BFFs who did everything together.
I played alto sax, this is really similar.
I was gonna say minus the instruments,
because you played all the instruments,
and I got through fifth grade by pretending to blow
into my flute for an entire year.
But it was still like, hey, I have a day off of school,
we need to do something because we never,
like, we never get this opportunity on a Monday
as 13-year-olds.
Like, it was definitely something
that I remember doing with you growing up.
So that next morning, that Monday,
when they had off of school,
Libby asked her older sister, Kelsey,
if she would drop her and Abby off
at the Monon High Bridge.
And this area is kind of like desolate,
but it's a normal hiking trail.
So one of the things I see online all the time
is like they were hiking in the middle of nowhere,
and it's this like abandoned railroad track,
and why would these girls go there?
But it's, everyone goes there,
it's like a historical site,
but it is a little bit different
than a normal hiking trail that we have maybe here
in Indianapolis or some other areas.
There's not this designated area to park
or where everyone filters in one way.
You basically just roll up to like a trailhead
and you can enter in a bunch of different places.
But it is made specifically for walking
and this Monon High Bridge is a very,
I wanna say touristy destination,
not that many people tour Delphi, but right, exactly.
So the girls were dropped off at about one o'clock,
and the plan was to have another family member
pick them up in a couple of hours.
The family member that was coming,
I read somewhere that it was Libby's dad.
The plan was when he got close,
he was just gonna call them and they were gonna come
where they were dropped off and be picked up.
So the next thing we know for sure that happens
is at 207, Libby posts a Snapchat photo of Abby
walking across this bridge.
From what I can see in the picture,
she's about halfway through the bridge.
The bridge is totally empty.
It doesn't appear that there's anyone else walking.
It's not a busy day and there's really no caption
with this photo, it's just her walking.
It's like very dramatic like you are when you're 13 and 14.
I love it.
At 311, her dad calls Libby to say
that he's getting really close,
but she doesn't answer her phone.
And at 313, he calls her again
because he's actually at the pickup location at this time.
But again, she doesn't answer her phone.
So by 330, he's gotten out of his car
and he started to hike.
And maybe hiking's the wrong word
for people who aren't familiar with Indiana.
Walking through all woods.
It's all trails.
Yeah, all trails through the woods.
It's not hilly, it's very flat here.
So he starts walking the path
that the girls would have walked.
And by four o'clock when he's not finding them,
he's starting to get really concerned.
So he calls Libby's grandma Becky.
And Libby actually lives with her grandma and grandpa
at the time.
So he calls to alert them, something's wrong.
I can't find them anywhere.
I need you guys to come out and help me look.
And they actually call Abby's mother as well.
Her name's Anna.
And get her out there to help them look.
And so the family starts hiking the trail.
They go across the bridge.
All the places that they know the girls would normally be,
but they don't find them.
So at about 5.30 is when they start raising the alarms
and calling the police.
And there is a full on community search almost right away.
And this is something that I'm so proud of.
Cause usually in cases like this,
you can point to all the things police did wrong.
But really, I think they did everything right in this case.
They were out there immediately.
They got so many people involved.
They took this so seriously.
And they just did a really stand up job.
I remember I live about two hours,
two and a half hours north of Delphi.
And I mean, we were getting Amber alerts.
We were getting notifications.
Like it was huge up here by the six o'clock news.
And we're, you know, two or three hours away
from where the girls went missing.
So they really did a great job at getting the word out
immediately.
They did.
So they're looking for the girls.
And best I can put together
from the information that's out there
at about the time that they call the police at 530 Mark,
Libby's phone goes dead.
And I can't find out any information
on Abby's phone if she had one,
but they're no longer able to even try
and get in contact with the girls phones.
At one point in the night around midnight-ish,
they have to call off the search
because it's gotten just too dark
for people to even know what's going on.
They're not making great progress in the dark.
And they decided that the best thing to do
is just to call off the search until the next morning.
But at this point, I mean, again,
news outlets are already there
and police are saying that they're not suspecting foul play.
And even the families, you know,
when they go back and talk about it,
they believed at the time that the worst thing
that probably happened is one of the girls had gotten hurt.
And they were so close that the other didn't want
to leave them.
So they were just waiting for someone to come help.
They resumed the search in the morning,
which now we're about Tuesday, February 14th, Valentine's Day.
And the search resumes with canine units, dive teams,
and now the FBI is participating.
So everyone is out here in full force.
Around noon, though, that day,
Kelsey said her sister,
she's out there searching with everyone else,
and she recalls just hearing somebody yell
that they had found them and it wasn't good.
The girls were found on the edge of the water in Deer Creek,
which runs parallel to the bridge
that Abby was last photographed on,
but they're about a half a mile from what I could get
on Google Maps, like from each other.
So it's not like the creek is directly underneath the bridge.
You'd have to get off the creek, walk a ways,
but they do run in parallel from one another.
This area where they were found was super close
to this park and this public area,
but we later learned that it's actually part
of a 40-acre lot that's private property
belonging to a seven-year-old man named Ron Locke.
Did they not get that far that night,
or was it something that they had searched the night before?
Do we know?
There's a lot of back and forth
about whether that area was searched
or not the night before,
and a lot of this, again, is on those blogs where nothing,
I feel like, can be known for certain.
Some searchers say that they did
and they didn't see anything,
but something to remember is that
they stopped searching around midnight.
They called in the police at 5.30.
It gets dark here in February by six.
I mean, I think six is even pushing it.
Right, so if they were searching,
they were searching in the dark,
but this kind of feeds into the next part.
They did autopsies on the girls the next day, February 15th,
and confirmed that it was Abby and Libby that were found.
I don't think anyone's really expecting anything different,
but they had to confirm the identities,
but they wouldn't release anything
about the manner or cause of death
or whether or not they had been sexually assaulted.
There have been rumors, again, online about everything,
so nothing at this point means anything to me.
People have literally given every variation
of what could have happened.
They've said both girls were sexually assaulted.
Only one girl was sexually assaulted.
Neither were sexually assaulted.
Neither were, but they were mutilated.
Like literally everything has been said,
and it often gets said with such conviction,
like I don't know how these people think they're so right.
It's crazy.
But if something happened to them,
I think it's unlikely they would have been able
to have been attacked where they were found,
because from the time the Snapchat photo was taken,
until when people were looking, was only a couple of hours.
So I have no idea how someone would have moved
the bodies of these two girls by themselves.
They couldn't have done anything to them right there.
So my best guess, and it's just a guess,
is that they were killed where they were found.
And I don't know when that was though,
if they were killed right away,
or if they were alive and moved and then killed later.
Because we don't have a cause or manner of death,
we don't have an approximate time stamp of death either.
Right?
Right.
So they could have searched it,
they could have not searched it,
they could have searched it,
and they could have been there.
Big question mark.
There's also been a lot of rumors
around the cause of death itself.
And again, Reddit and Websleuth is a mess with theories,
and people are so sure that they're right.
It's just insane to me.
There are people saying that the crime scene was bloody
and a mess, and they believe their throats had been cut.
And then the post right after it would say,
nope, there was no blood at the scene,
their necks were broken.
And people say that they didn't die at the same time,
it's all alone.
And there's no official report,
so there's nothing to check it against.
Right, so I don't know if people are going off
of what they're hearing in town,
but there is nothing to go off of.
People do not know what they're talking about.
Until we get something from the cops,
that's the only thing that I will trust.
The rumor that I did hear most consistently,
and there may be some weight behind,
was that the girls were wearing scarves
at their memorial service,
and this is why people believe
that something would have happened to their necks,
and I think that's why they keep guessing
at what could have happened.
But back to what we do know.
So the same day they do the autopsies
and confirm the identities,
they release a photograph of a man who's likely hiking
in the same area that same day.
And you can see this photo,
if you haven't seen it already,
I mean, it's been on every Facebook page,
on every news outlet,
but we've got it on our website as well,
crimejunkiepodcast.com.
Initially, the police don't call him a suspect.
They just say they wanna talk with him
because he may have seen something.
By the 16th, the girls story had made national news.
They were everywhere, CNN, NBC.
So on the 19th, they officially call this guy
the main suspect,
and say that he was there the exact same time as the girls.
And I get why before they were just saying
they wanna talk to him,
hoping maybe that he would come forward
to try and rule himself out,
but he's not coming forward.
No one is giving their name,
because even if it was a relative,
I can see why someone would be hesitant
if it's the main suspect,
whereas you're like, oh, you were hiking that day,
dad, and you look just like this guy,
you should go forward.
And at this time, February 19th,
so I was in and out peaking at WebSleuth,
and everyone was going mad with speculation
about this picture.
Did it come from a camera on the trail?
Was it in a parking lot?
Did someone on the trail take it?
I literally probably could have just gone over there
and seen if there was a camera or not,
but this just in, I'm not the police,
and I'm not trying to get in anyone's way.
Unfortunately, though, even with this renewed urgency,
the cops saying, okay, people, we're not playing around,
this is our man, still no one significant comes forward.
So on Wednesday, February 22nd,
the Delphi Police Department,
the Carroll County Sheriff,
and the Indiana State Police, along with the FBI,
hold a giant joint mother-of-all press conference.
Do you remember this day?
I remember it like it was yesterday.
It's so hard for me to even believe this is a year ago.
We were both on the road this day, and...
Yeah, they dropped the bomb like that morning,
and you and I both had to travel,
and we were freaking out.
And so I remember, Justin, for me, was driving.
You were driving yourself, so we'll talk about that later.
But listening to the press conference on my phone,
driving through a rural area of Indiana, for me at least,
listening to this press conference
about a new possible lead or clue in this case,
and just being completely consumed
by this massive press conference
that involved multiple law enforcement agencies,
I was glued to my phone.
And I was just dying to know what they had.
I was sure that what they were gonna tell us
was they had some big break in the case.
There was a death information on how the bodies were found,
anything that could connect this case
to any other case that was already out there, or a suspect.
But what they gave us, I was not expecting.
So police reveal that the picture we have of the suspect
was actually taken from Libby's own phone.
And not only that, they have audio of this man,
and they release a small clip to the public,
hoping that someone will recognize his voice.
We do have some new information for you today.
It's in the form of an audio file
from the cell phone
that Liberty German had with her at the time.
We're not going to play everything that we have.
Liberty had the presence of mind
to turn on her video camera.
Again, we're not going to be able to share everything with you.
But we are gonna share this audio clip with you momentarily,
with the hope that somebody will recognize this voice.
I wanna be very clear that what you're about to hear
is just four short words, excuse me, three words,
down the hill.
You're going to hear this played four times.
The audio quality is not superb,
but there's enough there that somebody
could recognize this person's voice.
And a superintendent Carter said,
not to rationalize the way.
If you hear this today,
and you think, my God, that sounds like filling the bank,
call us, make an anonymous tip,
tell us who you think it is, let us investigate it.
If it's not the right person,
they'll just be out a little bit of time,
and they'll be queered, and they can go on,
and they'll never know that you called,
but you may tell us who the right person was,
and you can be the person that helps us to solve
this horrible crime.
Micah, play the clip, please.
The dumb hip, the dumb hip, the dumb hip, the dumb hip.
Should we play it one more time?
The dumb hip, the dumb hip, the dumb hip, the dumb hip.
So that audio clip later today
will be available on the Indiana State Police website.
You can simply go to our website
and add the extension slash delphi.htm.
There will be information on that website
that talks about the reward that is being collected now.
Sergeant Slawton will talk more about that,
the amount of money that's been raised
who weren't solving this case,
and really money shouldn't be what drives somebody
to help solve this, just the sense of forgiving
and wanting to help, and to get this person off the street.
The image that you see there, the suspect,
that came from Liberty's phone.
I think many of you had speculated that before,
we weren't prepared to discuss it at the time.
We have more video.
We're now releasing it.
It's germane to our investigation,
and it's important that we spread
in that person's voice far and wide
to somebody that will recognize who that is,
and will call us and tell us.
I remember listening to this clip over and over again
and calling you and saying, what did I just hear?
What is this?
What do we do with this?
Yeah, I mean, so he just says down the hill,
and I know there's more audio.
I know they just clipped this little part.
I don't know why that they chose this part.
I mean, they have their reasons, but of all of it,
and why just these three little words.
But I have listened to this over and over and over,
and I don't feel like I can draw anything from it.
I mean, I don't think I know this guy.
Do you think it's enough to give people,
hoping that they'll connect it
to someone that they personally know?
I don't.
It's three words.
We're Midwesterners.
We have the most amiable accent in the world.
People love Midwestern accents because there isn't an accent.
There's nothing to identify him from my dad or your dad
when it comes to saying these three words, really.
Exactly.
I mean, that's what I'm saying.
He's like no one, but he's everyone I've ever met.
So to this day, that's the most the public has gotten
from this video taken by Libby.
And police say that it was taken,
the video during quote, criminal activity.
They won't say it was captured during the crime
or part of the crime, the entire crime.
But a lot of people speculate it does
because if you watch a lot of these press conferences
that police have done, police get really emotional
when they talk about this video.
And it's so sad to see you can tell
that this case has just rocked,
like even the most seasoned investigators.
Even FBI investigators seem to be very emotionally
arrested and affected by some of the factors of this case.
So do we know if she took the video on purpose
or if it was just something that she was taking a video of
and then this happened or is that part of the mystery too?
So we didn't know for a long time,
but now that it's a year later
and the more police talk about it,
they've openly said that they speculate
it was a conscious choice by her
because she knew that what was happening wasn't normal.
Her grandma actually said that Libby and Abby,
when I say her grandma, I mean Libby's grandma,
said that Libby and Abby were both into true crime
and wanted to go into law enforcement.
And Libby specifically wanted to do some kind of forensics.
And she said they watched true crime shows.
So she really believed that Libby felt uneasy
and started recording on purpose
because she knew that something was wrong.
Somehow that makes this more sad.
It does, they were a little crime junkies.
They were trying to point us to their killer.
That's like, I have full body to be saying that.
I know, that's the thing is even the police,
like when they did their big press conference,
they just said, you know, Libby had the presence of mind
to know that she needed to record this.
Okay, so we don't know,
we assume that she took this on purpose,
but do we know where the photo was taken?
Was it by the bridge, by the creek where they were found?
We know kind of, again, so I'm openly telling you,
I'm diving into the speculation area.
Police have never put a red dot on a map
and said this is where they took the photo.
I found this YouTube video online
where this guy went out and he filmed the entire bridge.
And then he overlaid the picture of the suspect
on different parts until he found a damn near perfect match.
And it's almost at the end of the bridge.
So I'm gonna post this video on our website
for you guys to see as well.
If this guy is legit, it would appear
that the girls started walking on the bridge,
took the picture of Abby about halfway through,
and then shortly after that,
the guy must have gotten on the bridge behind them.
And something that he did, or what he did,
or just the way he was, or he said something,
made the girls nervous enough to start recording.
And if this guy's shot is right,
her video or the photograph was taken
towards the end of the bridge,
and then he could have confronted them
shortly after that video was taken
when they were off of the bridge.
And it could have been at that point
that he tells them something about down the hill.
Do we know why she would take a photo
or a video in this point?
Like, why wouldn't you call 911?
Or even your, I mean, your sister, your friend,
a family member, just so they could be
on the other line hearing whatever might go down,
and alert authorities from there. No idea.
And I don't know if it's because she was already on Snapchat,
and that was just, maybe this guy approached them
in such a fast way that that's really
the only thing she had time to do.
If he was threatening them,
I also remember being 13 and 14.
And while I was a baby crime junkie,
I also didn't think anything bad in the world
could actually happen to me.
So I could totally see, like, oh my gosh,
there's this creepy guy, and I got a video of him.
And like, oh, I was so close to danger.
I can't wait to show my friends tomorrow.
But not really.
Yeah, but you, but in the back of your mind,
you never think really something like that's gonna happen to you.
No, there's definitely a sense of invincibility in,
your teenage years is a total, to be honest,
but especially when you're 12, 13, 14,
and just getting that freedom to yourself.
Yeah, so I absolutely don't think
that they did the best they could.
And I'm like, thank God she just got what she did
when she was able to.
And we don't know what all she got
because we've only seen what the police have released.
Exactly.
So this guy, they have a video.
They have his picture.
They have his voice,
but no one has been able to find him.
As of January, 2018,
police have gotten 26,000 tips in,
but they just haven't gotten the right one in yet.
So finally, they take this video
and some eyewitness testimony they have to the FBI,
and they put a sketch together
of what this guy could possibly look like.
Again, we've got this on the website.
If you haven't seen it already, if you haven't seen it,
I don't know what rock you're living under,
but come out, enjoy the fresh air.
There's true crime up here.
But police have been saying over and over,
don't get too caught up in this sketch.
Focus on the body.
They did the same thing with the voice too.
And for a minute, I remember you and I going back and forth,
we thought that maybe we were talking about two people
because they would say,
if you know someone with that voice,
but it doesn't match the sketch or vice versa,
still call.
And they were kind of weird about it.
It's definitely the same guy,
but what I think they meant is like,
don't get too much in your head
and don't talk yourself out of it.
Cause I can see someone being like,
oh God, I know that voice,
but I don't know, like he looks too short.
He look, you know what I mean?
Like talking yourself out of something
you feel in your bones.
And as a crime junkie,
you've watched all the shows,
you've listened to all the podcasts,
you know that eyewitness testimony
is not the most secure thing in the world.
So honestly, auditory memory is generally better
than visual memory.
So I can totally see why they made that sort of disclaimer
on the audio versus photo of the potential suspect.
Yeah.
And even, I mean, as recently as the 15th
when they were on Megan Kelly,
the police officer was saying,
like don't focus on the face.
Like we put this together,
like he's facing down in the picture,
what we have a picture of his body type.
He's like, if it were my family member,
I could recognize their like slouch
or their walk or their body type,
even if the sketch is a little bit off.
So really focus on the body type.
And then I think the sketches meant more for people
who aren't close to the suspect
and maybe are walking down the street.
Well, the next thing that happens is in August,
they tell us they have DNA,
but the direct quote I found on this says,
in quotes, at every crime scene,
you're going to have DNA.
We are still working on identifying all of the DNA
that we have there.
And this was from Sergeant Holman.
After that, people keep talking about DNA,
but I'm not sure if they really had the killer's DNA.
Cause that quote is like at every crime scene,
you're going to have DNA.
We're still working on identifying all of the DNA
that is there.
That does not tell me that you have the killer's DNA.
So this is a pretty popular trail in the area, right?
I went to a, it's technically a state park nearby
where we grew up pretty frequently when I was growing up
and people camped there, people hiked there,
people rode horses there.
And I hurt myself on those trails.
I hurt my horse occasionally on those trails,
not badly of course,
but that all constitutes as DNA,
including dogs, dogs who chase rabbits,
dogs who chase rats and squirrel.
Like there's a lot of things
that can technically constitute as DNA
without actually being tied to a case.
Well, even aside from outside forces,
I mean, when I read that, what I hear is,
okay, we have Abby's DNA, we have Libby's DNA.
We have the searcher who found them, their DNA, police.
Like you have stuff there, you don't know what's relevant.
Now, everything I keep reading after
keeps referring back to DNA.
So it is completely reasonable to think
that maybe I'm missing a quote somewhere,
but this is the only one directly
from an officer that I could find.
But people do keep coming back to the DNA.
It kind of reminds me of when you hear about a murder
or a last known location of like a hotel room.
And there's a lot of stuff that goes into that hotel room
or murder in a public place like a subway or a sidewalk.
There's just a lot to process.
And especially because this is an outside rural location,
there's a lot that goes into that
and you don't know exactly what the crime scene radius is.
So assuming they've processed a lot of this DNA,
do we know if there's any suspects tied to it?
They say that there's been a lot of suspects,
like less than six months into this investigation,
police had already done something crazy, like 300 interviews.
They started with interviewing Ron,
the guy who owned the property that the girls were found on.
He was actually on probation for some DUIs
and he was initially investigated
because it was his land, he had to be investigated.
But they ruled him out pretty quickly.
However, they did arrest him
because the day of the girl's disappearance,
he was at the city dump, which driving
was against his probation at the time.
And he was only a month from being off of his probation,
but he blew it and he had to have been conflicted
because I can see wanting to lie about something
you were doing that you should've been doing on probation.
But my God, if you had an alibi, you need to use that alibi.
Telling the truth to break probation
versus being a murder suspect is worth it.
Oh, for sure.
Well, kind of, he's kind of a dick about it later.
After he gets arrested, he is in front of the judge
and the judge asks if he has anything to say
on his own behalf and he says, maybe in the future,
and quotes, maybe in the future,
no one else will be murdered in my backyard.
Uh, sorry if it was an inconvenience to you, you dick.
Like, he was just like a turd.
I mean, so a lot of people think it's super fishy,
like, oh, what was he doing at this dump?
Like, he was wearing, in some of the interviews,
he was wearing this like blue coat and a camel hat
that people were like, oh, it looks just like the guy
in the picture, but police have totally ruled him out.
He's also 77 and while police won't give any kind of age
range for their prime suspect, I don't think the guy's 77
because Ron had some facial hair too, but it is white
and the guy in the picture has no white facial hair
from anything that I can see.
While they investigated Ron, they never called him
a person of interest.
The only person to date that they've publicly called
a person of interest has been Daniel Nations.
For everyone listening, keep in mind
that Britt and I are over here in Indiana,
we're fully abreast of what's going on with Delphi
and their case, but not a clue as to other random crimes
happening in other states, like, say, Colorado.
Well, on September 25th, the internet blows up
and I wake up to all these Google Alerts
freaking out a man named Daniel Nations
had been arrested in Colorado for suspicion
of wielding a hatchet on some trails and threatening people
and also in connection to the possible murder
of a biker on a trail who had been shot.
Already, we're like, acts on a trail, OK, pretty fishy,
especially since we don't know how the girls were murdered.
We just know they were murdered on a trail
in the woods.
It's text for him, me, and you specifically
to make sure we knew about this.
Yeah.
Yeah, like we didn't know about this.
He is our own Google Alert, though.
It was good to know.
Good job.
So after they released this acts thing,
they release his picture.
And it was like if God sculpted him out of clay
to match the sketch that police had released back in July.
The side by side, I mean, I posted it on my Instagram
way back in the day.
I will repost it.
The side by side is out of this world.
I remember texting him and being like, OK, case is over.
This is it.
We've got answers.
Yes, thank God we're going to get some closure.
Her family is going to get some closure.
And I'm not sure if you mentioned this, though.
And so this, though he was arrested in Colorado,
he has ties to Indiana during the time the girls were here
and murdered.
Right.
So police confirm that they're going to go talk to him.
Like, yeah, this is pretty fishy.
And when they go out there, that's
when it starts rolling in like all of the stuff
that we find out that not only is he this dude just
in Colorado with some like fishy similarities,
but he's a Hoosier Indiana dude in Colorado
doing all these fishy acts things.
So his backstory is in 2015, he has
to register as a sex offender after deputies
say that he hid in the stall of a woman's restroom
at a rickers gas station on US 31
and was caught peeping and pleasuring himself.
Side note, been to that rickers totally creepy.
Pass it all the time when I go to Indianapolis, like.
Yeah.
December 15th of 2015 through January 27th of 2016,
he served time for domestic assault.
And in 2016, he has like a number of other arrests
for driving on a suspended license,
charged with possession of marijuana,
and then his landlord files an eviction petition,
like nothing crazy.
In January of 2017, he registers as a homeless sex offender.
After he registers as a sex offender,
he has to check in every single week
because he doesn't have a normal address where
they know he's going to be at and they
can go in and check on him.
He has to do an in-person check in every week.
And this includes February 14th of 2017,
the day that the girls' bodies were found.
And he faithfully checks in every single week.
His last check in was in April.
And then he stopped checking in.
July 17th is when the police released that composite sketch.
And his parole officer took notice because, again,
it's like a freaking picture of him.
And on July 18th, an investigation
begins into Daniel Nation's whereabouts
after he failed to register his new address
as part of his program.
So police are looking for him.
He's definitely on their radar.
At this point, no one knows he's on their radar,
but they're doing their due diligence trying to find him.
And then they get alerted, September 25th,
that he's arrested in Woodland Park, Colorado.
And they're down there on the 29th investigating,
doing whatever it is they do.
And when they come back, they announce to everyone
that they can't rule him in or out.
But they do officially make him a person of interest,
which is the first person of interest in this case.
Yeah, but I don't understand how you don't rule someone out.
It's suspicious.
But outside of the main suspect, which is currently
a picture of a man walking from like 50 feet looking down,
and an audio clip of three words, which is the main suspect,
this is the first time we've had a name and a face
to put as the person of interest in this case.
So here's a question I have for you then.
And this leads back to my wondering
if they have the killer's DNA or not.
If they had the killer's DNA, do you
think they could officially rule him out as a suspect
if his DNA didn't match?
Or if they have the killer's DNA and his DNA doesn't match,
are they keeping it open to the possibility
that there's more than one perpetrator?
Because a lot of people think that in order
to subdue two girls, you have to have more than one person.
I think if they had the killer's DNA,
they would have ruled him out already.
But I've also watched Law and Order SVU
enough to know that there are privacy laws that
prevent DNA from being collected from suspects
unless they are X, Y, Z.
I don't feel like they would have any probability
of his DNA in the fact that he had already broken parole.
He's in another state.
He's been convicted of another crime, which includes
starting with a deadly weapon.
I think the charges associated with the biker who was murdered
were eventually dropped, correct me if I'm wrong.
But it also seems weird to not officially say,
like, he's someone we're looking at.
He's someone we're not looking at.
But also.
Well, he's still considered under suspicion
for the biker's death as well.
And last I heard, he had been paroled for his crimes
of wielding a hatchet.
I believe the late December or early January of this year,
he was paroled.
Right, so the latest development, now you guys
are hearing this in February.
We're recording it in late January.
On January 15th, the Sheriff's Office in a Tennessee town
released this notice that the FBI had expanded their search
to Southeast Tennessee.
And while this news is breaking, the family
and one of the law enforcement officers from the case
were actually being interviewed on Megyn Kelly.
And the officer said, no, it's a national search.
I'm tracking what's going on in Tennessee,
but it is national.
Right after the deputy's office in Tennessee posted that,
they took it down and then just posted a general flyer
of this guy's information and his crimes.
But I remember texting you right away and being like,
what do you mean you're expanding it to Southeast Tennessee?
I had the same thought that that law enforcement officer did.
I thought we were looking everywhere.
And again, I could be wrong, but I
feel like the agency that posted it in Tennessee
had to maybe even issue a retraction saying,
we're looking for it specifically,
but also everywhere else is still looking too.
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
So it makes me wonder if something happened in Southeast
Tennessee, we're only getting a small piece of the story,
which we're getting a small piece of this entire story.
There's no reason for them to tell the public everything
right.
They're doing what's best for the investigation,
but it's just one of those things that
perked my interest, peaked my interest, whatever one's right.
Well, and you have to wonder if something in Southeastern
Tennessee that we haven't stumbled across yet
didn't cause Southeastern Tennessee to post something
like that.
Right.
Well, so again, when they got this information,
they were on Meg and Kelly.
And I have to say, just like a side note to all of this,
the family's composure through this whole thing
has been astounding.
I mean, when you and I were flipping out about Daniel
Nations, I mean, they were just saying, yeah,
I think it kind of looks like him.
I can see it in the mouth.
I can see it in the nose.
The voice to figure out if it's him or not.
Yeah, we trust law enforcement.
And they said, you know, we can't ride the roller coaster.
Like, we can't get our hopes up every time.
We trust that the police are going to get this information.
They're going to vet it out.
And when it's really serious, they're going to let us know.
And specifically, one thing that I
found really interesting that one of the law enforcement
agents, officers said, when asked on TV,
if there were any other MOs similar in the area,
the officer basically said that they think a person who
would commit such an evil crime like this
has likely committed the crime before,
and they will likely commit that crime again.
So again, am I reading it wrong?
Are they saying this guy's a serial killer?
It really sounds like it's a serial killer.
I know that you and I have talked about,
I believe it's a pair of cousins in Iowa that
sounds kind of similar.
That is still unsolved?
Yeah, so Lyric and Elizabeth, they were 8 and 10,
and were abducted in 2012.
And they were riding bikes, and their bodies actually
weren't found for five months later.
But so many people have connected this case,
because the two girls were about the same age-ish.
The girls in Delphi were a lot older,
but they were found in a wooded area near water as well.
And just like kind of creep factor,
they also went missing on the 13th day of the month,
but it was in July.
So on the 13th day of the month, it's not
super consistent with that, but the 13th of February
was the day before a holiday.
I'm all about finding serial killers who
have really specific tendencies and times that they act,
or ways that they act.
Is there anything connected to day before holidays,
or holiday killings that we know of,
with the same sort of victim typing, maybe?
OK, this is when you can turn off the podcast if you want,
because I'm telling you, from here on out,
nothing I'm about to say.
I don't believe that this guy is responsible for the next cases
I'm about to talk about.
It's just a weird coincidence that we
have cases in the Midwest that happen before a holiday.
So there is a girl named Naveah Buchanan, who
is five years old in 2009.
And she was abducted outside of her apartment complex
and then left buried alive on the bank of a river
with concrete poured over her.
The only connection there, again, not connected to this case
at all, it's just that she was found near water,
and she went missing right before Memorial Day.
So it was right before a holiday, and she was a young girl.
And there's another case that I've
been deeply invested in lately.
And going to be doing a podcast on in a few months
is another little girl named April, who was abducted and murdered
in 1988, right before Easter.
Yeah, that was around Good Friday, right?
Again, yeah.
So again, not related to this case.
It's not the same guy, but it's weird
that these things are happening.
So close geographically, but right before holiday.
Super strange.
So I don't know what's going on in the holidays in Indiana
and in the Midwest in general, but don't go outside.
To go back to the two cousins, police
have released a couple of things.
They've actually talked to the police there.
Lyric and Elizabeth, their families actually
reached out as soon as Abby and Libby were murdered
because they wanted police to know that this was so similar.
They actually never released the cause of death
in Lyric and Elizabeth's case as well,
which was very similar.
But police have ruled it out.
They've asked everyone to move on.
So while they think he's done it before,
I don't know that they're able to tie specific cases to him
yet.
And if they are, they're not telling us.
And again, I think they're doing what's
best for the investigation.
So there is a $240,000 reward leading
to the apprehension of the suspect or their prime
person of interest.
So again, if anyone knows anything,
I really recommend going to our site.
You can see all of the pictures.
Someone has to know this guy.
He isn't a ghost.
Take a look.
There's $240,000 in it for you, even
if you don't want to just be a good person.
You can get all the information on our website.
For those of you who still don't know,
that's crimejunkiepodcast.com.
And remember to come back next week
for a new true crime story.
Crime Junkie is written and hosted by me.
All of our sound production and editing
comes from Brick Preywot.
And all of our music, including our theme,
comes from Justin Daniel.
Crime Junkie is an audio check production.
So what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?