Going West: True Crime - Jennifer Odom // 280
Episode Date: February 18, 2023In February of 1993, a 12-year-old girl disappeared near her home in rural Florida after a day at school. Her community banded together to find her, but six days after she went missing, her body was f...ound in an orange grove 10 miles from the bus stop where she had last been seen. With multiple suspects in mind and a vehicle description, police worked hard to catch her killer. This is the murder of Jennifer Odom. BONUS EPISODES patreon.com/goingwestpodcast CASE SOURCES 1. Nancy Myer on Unsolved Mysteries: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHi_Kmx1FUk 2. Fox 13: https://www.fox13news.com/news/who-killed-jennifer-odom-detectives-still-searching-for-answers-29-years-later 3. Tampa Bay Times: https://www.tampabay.com/data/2018/03/14/jennifer-odom-after-25-years-a-mothers-grief-and-questions-remain/?fbclid=IwAR0gZE8czQqdXwGLS3XcsGjZQlYsBXZepIKw3lVgSbxzy2u1ZZu4HfDql0A 4. Find A Grave: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8059383/jennifer-renee-odom 5. Medium: https://medium.com/@jennbaxter_69070/unsolved-in-florida-the-brutal-murder-of-jennifer-odom-440b680453f1 6. FOX 13: https://www.fox13news.com/news/who-killed-jennifer-odom-detectives-still-searching-for-answers-29-years-later 7. Tampa Bay Times: https://www.newspapers.com/image/324455128/?terms=%22jennifer%20odom%22&match=1 8. Unsolved Mysteries Wiki: https://unsolvedmysteries.fandom.com/wiki/Jennifer_Odom 9. Tampa Bay Times: https://www.newspapers.com/image/323756818/?terms=%22sidney%20pete%20odom%22&match=1 10. The Tampa Tribune: https://www.newspapers.com/image/341031840/?terms=%22jessica%20converse%22&match=1 11. Tampa Bay Times: https://www.newspapers.com/image/328897452/?terms=%22jessica%20converse%22&match=1 12. Tampa Bay Times: https://www.newspapers.com/image/324051606/?terms=jennifer%20odom%20frank%20potts&match=1 13. Tampa Bay Times: https://www.tampabay.com/archive/1994/03/15/is-inmate-a-serial-killer/ 14. Tampa Bay Times: https://www.newspapers.com/image/324269208/?terms=clark%20converse&match=1 15. Tampa Bay Times: https://www.newspapers.com/image/328897509/?terms=clark%20converse&match=1 16. The Tampa Tribune: https://www.newspapers.com/image/340016053/?terms=%22walter%20ducharme%22&match=1 17. Tampa Bay Times: https://www.newspapers.com/image/340061833/?terms=%22walter%20ducharme%22&match=1 18. Tampa Bay Times: https://www.newspapers.com/image/327269477/?terms=%22kimberly%20ducharme%22&match=1 19. The Tampa Tribune: https://www.newspapers.com/image/343273043/?terms=%22jeffrey%20norman%20crum%22&match=1 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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What is going on True Crime fans? I'm your host Tee. And I'm your host Daphne. And you're listening to going west.
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All right guys, this is episode 280 of Going West.
So let's get into it. In February of 1993, a 12-year-old girl disappeared near her home in rural Florida after a day
at school.
Her community banded together to find her, but six days after she went missing,
her body was found in an orange grove 10 miles from the bus stop where she had last been
seen. With multiple suspects in mind and a vehicle description, police worked hard to catch her killer.
This is the story of Jennifer Odom.
Jennifer Renee Odom was born on August 25, 1980, near Dade City, Florida, which is a town of less than 10,000 people nestled between Tampa and Orlando.
Jennifer was born to newly wed's Renee and Sydney Odom, who were just about 20 years old when
she was born.
And soon after they had Jennifer, her mom Renee gave birth to Jennifer's sister Jessica.
Eventually, juggling two babies and a new marriage proved to be too much for Renee and Sidney,
so they decided to divorce.
And with that, Sidney moved over to the city of Orlando and didn't seem to have much
involvement in the girls' lives after that point.
Although Renee claims that she and Sidney were unhappy, she was still very hesitant to
get a divorce and explains that she likely would have stayed married regardless of her
misery, but when Sidney wound up leaving her, it turned out to be the best thing that could
have happened for her and her daughters.
It was then that Renee met Clark Converse, who was a very kind and gentle man who proved
to be a wonderful stepfather to the girls.
Clark had been married before as well, in fact twice, and had a son with each wife, so
two kids just like Renee.
But because he traveled for work, his ex-wives maintained primary custody of his sons.
Although Clark really yearned for a more traditional day-to-day life, where he could,
you know, be home with his children more.
Renee and Clark got married, and Clark actually legally adopted Jessica, who remember is Jennifer's
younger sister, so he adopted her as her, her, her, his own, and, uh, she officially became
a converse.
And according to Jessica in an interview she did later on, she said, quote, he was planning
to adopt Jennifer but didn't have the time.
The four of them settled on Jennifer's family's sprawling 15-acre property in sleepy St. Joseph
Florida.
St. Joseph is just a short drive from Dade City, and both are situated in Pasco County.
Now according to her family, Jennifer was a joyful and kind little girl who was quote
full of life.
Rename recalls her affinity for animals, especially the family's spring or spaniel named Gypsy.
But Jennifer really lit up when she was on the water.
Because she was a barefoot water skier,
and she was actually once named the seventh best
in the country in her age group.
That's wild.
I've always wanted to water ski, I've never done it,
but it sounds awesome.
Get to it.
So she also had a passion for playing the clarinet
in her middle school's band.
At 12 years old, Jennifer was attending seventh grade
at Thomas E. Waitman Middle School.
She was an honorals student and she was well liked and respected by her teachers and also by
many friends alike. Starting to enjoy the freedoms that came with being almost a teenager,
Jennifer was now allowed to walk home alone from the school bus stop, where she had the family's
home tour cell for about an hour before she would be joined by her little sister Jessica, who was actually still in elementary school at
this time.
Friday, February 19, 1993, began like any other day.
Jennifer was particularly looking forward to that weekend as she would be playing clarinet
in her school's band's competition over in Tampa the following day.
Their morning routine consisted of Renee driving Jennifer to the bus stop and then driving
away along with the bus until their paths diverged.
Renee remembered, quote, she would always wave goodbye to me.
That morning, Jennifer was wearing white pants and a white turtleneck shirt under a red
cashmere sweater.
Over it, she pulled a white hooter zip-up hoodie, yes, that hooters, with the logo on the
sleeve, and she was carrying a teal backpack, a brown purse, and a black clarinet case with
the initials L-O because it had originally belonged to her cousin.
And then her shoes were lace up black boots.
So each day actually Renee would drive Jennifer
to wear her school bus picked up,
which was near the end of the family's very winding driveway,
which spanned about 600 feet.
So it was a super short drive that Jennifer surely could have
walked, but it kind of gave them a moment together
before they started their days, especially since, you know, Jennifer would have to walk back up at the end of the day,
at least Renee could take her down to the bus stop so she didn't have to do that walk alone twice daily.
Yeah, I mean, that's just kind of a nice moment.
Like, I remember my mom taking me to middle school, even though it was like, you know,
like less than a half a mile away.
Yeah, yours was really close.
Yeah, I could have definitely walked it,
but she just liked to have those mornings with us.
Yeah, absolutely.
So insane with Renee and Jennifer.
So at the end of the driveway,
sat the Converse Family's mailbox
near the intersection of Jim Denney and Jessamon Roads
and the former Jim Denney is actually named for Renee's father,
because remember, this is like the family's property.
So Renee remembers watching her daughter take a spot at the back of the bus and
waving to her out the back window. And that would be the last time she would ever see her daughter.
Later that day around 4 p.m. her sister Jessica arrived home to, you know,
commence their afternoon routine of Jennifer letting her in before their parents arrived home from work.
But Jennifer didn't answer the door and the house was locked and completely dark.
So this was very odd and unlike Jennifer, who usually arrived home around 3pm, which again would have been an hour earlier. Renee's parents, so the girls' grandparents, lived on the same property, so Jessica walked
up to their house to request a spare key.
And when she did, Jessica went back down and opened the door to a very quiet house that
was devoid of both Jennifer and her school belongings as if she hadn't been home at all.
Confused, Jessica called her mother Renee at work who worried instantly.
It just wasn't like Jennifer to make plans without consulting her first
and she didn't understand why she wouldn't be home.
So Renee called one of Jennifer's best friends whose name is Michelle,
who told Renee that she remembered seeing Jennifer get
off the bus that day, and that she hadn't heard from her since.
Renee said sadly, right then I knew.
I knew it was bad, and it was bad.
Now being a little girl herself, Michelle was, you know, haunted by her friend's disappearance,
which happened practically before her eyes.
Jennifer had even asked Michelle if she'd wanted to come over to practice their clarinetes for the band concert that was coming up the following day, but Michelle declined,
knowing that she needed permission from her mom, so they made plans to meet up later.
Michelle's mother said that the guilt has stuck with her forever, she said, quote,
she second-guessed that for a long time, whether that would have prevented
it.
Of course, the other side of that is, it could have been both of them.
And unfortunately, Jennifer was the only student who actually got off at that particular
stop, making her a very easy target to single out.
Fellow students remember pulling up to the stop around 2.45pm that Friday afternoon, and
Michelle remembers Jennifer waving to her and telling her to call her later.
Multiple students saw her walking toward the direction of her family's driveway, but
the bus pulled away before any were witnessed to what actually happened to her.
Not willing to wait in hopes of hearing from her, Renee called the Pasco County Sheriff's
Office immediately and reported her daughter missing.
They, like Renee, were instantly concerned.
I mean, she's a 12 year old girl who people saw get off of this bus and now she is gone.
Especially because the bus stop is essentially at the bottom of their driveway.
So it's like there is a very short distance between that bus stop and her front door, like I said about 600 feet of driveway.
So where else would she have gone?
Right.
And as an unincorporated community blanket it in orchards and orange groves, St. Joseph
itself housed only about 100 residents.
One local paper printed quote, in this rural area, a crime like the murder of Jennifer Odom
affects nearly everyone, because here, neighbors are not strangers.
I mean, it can't even imagine something like that happening in such a small community.
Right, and as we'll talk about, I mean, and as you kind of just said,
like her murder, as we're going to get into, not to jump ahead,
made such a big impact on this community
because of this whole, we know everybody type of scenario,
which always makes it so much harder
and so much closer to everybody
because everybody is so familiar with everybody else.
Then you can imagine the amount of possible
finger pointing going on and also,
the thought that was this just a, the thought that, you know,
was this just a stranger blowing in from,
you know, blowing through town?
Right, yeah, like you're saying.
And, or like the rumors would be rampant of like,
if somebody's kind of weird in town,
people would wonder if it's them.
Like there's so much more of that,
I think than there would be in a larger area.
Exactly, and actually Jennifer is stepfather Clark,
echoed this sentiment saying, quote,
for us, we don't wanna believe
that we could actually be shaking hands with
or sitting down with the person who did this.
I think we rationalize, oh, it wasn't somebody we know
because we don't want it to be somebody that we know.
But the reality is that, you know,
in such a small community, that is a distinct
possibility. Absolutely. So law enforcement started by questioning the other students with
whom Jennifer had been on the bus to see if any of them had noticed anything or any one
suspicious around the time that Jennifer was dropped off. Because these are the only people
that would have seen anything. And, you know, of course, they were kids.
So, a few of them actually did see something,
but while no one was able to comment
on the appearance of the driver
or whether or not he was accompanied,
several students remember seeing a car idling
near the bus stop that afternoon,
after Jennifer was dropped off,
or while she was being dropped off.
So parked on Jimmy Denny Road had been what was described by the students as a quote,
faded blue pickup truck.
The truck was a bit older, believed to be a 1970s or 1980s model, but remember this case
takes place in 1993, so not that old, and likely a
general motor's make.
It had a silver-painted bumper, and there's an important distinction here.
It was not chrome, it was metal that appeared to have been painted silver.
On the rear of the vehicle was a tractor hitch, hanging wires and pipes, or potentially
a ladder.
Some kids even claim that they saw the car start to follow Jennifer's path as the bus
drove away.
So with that as their only lead, police really grabbed hold of the theory that the driver
of the truck was to blame for Jennifer's disappearance.
In just 24 hours, police stopped and questioned the drivers of hundreds of pale blue trucks in and around Pasco County.
And as you can imagine, with many drivers of pickups in the surrounding farming community, this was a monumental task.
But unfortunately, none of them led to Jennifer.
So, the family was gripped in fear. I mean, Renee didn't step away from the phone all weekend,
just hoping that someone would call with good news. Renee's father Jim and her husband Clark
conducted their own voracious search of the area, just looking everywhere
that they thought she might have been taken.
Police took the matter seriously as well.
The area was terrified at the possibility of a child of Doctor or a potential murderer
among them, so other than to most importantly get justice for Jennifer and her family, the police had
reason to find her of Dr. and fast.
Police did contact Jennifer's biological father Sidney, of course, in Orlando, but they
found no reason to believe that he had been involved.
So soon enough, searches spilled over into neighboring counties and hundreds of volunteers
consisting of firefighters, officers, and concerned citizens alike scoured the
areas surrounding Jennifer's home. It expanded to include searchers on horseback,
helicopter, and even via the Air Force. Kedavardogs were also utilized searching
surrounding farms, pastors, orchards, orange Groves, and Forested Areas.
The Red Cross provided close to 400 meals for locals, aiding in the search for Jennifer.
And local supermarkets put forward donated tissue boxes for students returning to Jennifer's
school for the start of the new school week.
Love seeing stuff like this.
Yeah, I mean, they just really banded together here.
So by the following Monday, Jennifer was still nowhere to be found, and there was still no sign of her clothing, backpack,
or her clarinet, which she had brought home with her on Friday in anticipation of her concert
the following day. So on that Monday, the FBI were called in to assist in the search.
Over 60 square miles, or about 100 square kilometers,
were searched in just the first 48 hours alone.
Tips flooded in mostly sightings of a blue pickup truck,
but none that led them to the driver
believed to have abducted Jennifer here.
So was the weekend drew to a close, police announced, quote,
in our description, we don't have anything
distinguishable other than
the truck. We've stopped a lot of blue trucks in the last 24 hours, I can assure you that.
Remember, this is Pasco, virtually everybody's got a pickup truck.
But Jennifer's family would soon have answers. Just not nearly the answers that they were
looking for, because sadly, just shy
of a week after her disappearance? On Thursday, February 25, 1993, Jennifer's body was found.
Renee said later that she had always told her daughters should they run into trouble
to run into and quote zigzag the orange grove in order to lose whomever was after them.
She said quote, I can find you in the orange grove.
And this was advice that would prove tragically foreboding.
Because 12-year-old Jennifer's remains were found naked and face down in an abandoned
orange grove in neighboring Hernando County.
Likely due to the six days of exposure to the elements, she was described as severely decomposed.
Around 11 a.m. that morning, a local couple had happened upon her body while searching
the grove and they called police right away. She had been discarded about 600 feet
off of Powell Road in a Grove located about 10 miles or 16 kilometers from her family home.
Dental records along with Renee's confirmation of the jewelry that she had been wearing
substantiated the discovery. And by that evening, it had been announced
that all hopes of finding her alive had come to an end.
At this point, the search had transitioned, of course,
from looking for Jennifer to looking for evidence
that would bring her murderer to justice.
So while Renee, Clark, and Jessica
begin their harrowing grieving process, the police continued
to dig for answers.
And autopsy was conducted on Jennifer's remains, but they concluded that she had likely
died from blunt force trauma to the head.
And because she was found naked, it's possible that she had been assaulted, but also because
of the level
of decomposition, it was just impossible to tell.
Mercifully, it did seem as if she had been in her final resting place, since shortly after
she had been abducted, so it didn't appear that she suffered very long.
Again, the small community just really rallied behind Jennifer's family.
Billboards stunning her picture and asking for information dotted the roadside and boasted
a $20,000 reward.
Her story was also even featured on two separate episodes of Unsolved Mysteries over the
years.
But somehow, there was just no sign of the pickup truck or her belongings. And also, no indication as to what fate may have been falling between when she was last
seen and when her body was found six days later.
This story had rocked the area so much that close to a thousand people attended her
memorial.
And like you said, there's only about a hundred people living in her community alone.
So this really just outstretched.
Right.
People from Pasco County and, you know, other counties came to this memorial to share
their respects.
One fellow student who was Jennifer's age remembers quote, it was my first encounter
with danger, with evil.
A plaque was hung in the hallway of Jennifer's school that read, quote, Remember Jenny, don't walk alone. Jennifer's family pastor who performed both
her baptism and her funeral said, quote, this truly is God's country, or at least
it was until some criminal invaded it. There is a sickness on our land. Time passed
excruciatingly slowly as her killer remained at large and would take close to
two years for investigators to come across any evidence in this case.
But finally, on January 5th, 1995, they did. Before that quick break, we explained that it took almost two years for evidence to be
found regarding Jennifer's disappearance.
But then, on Thursday, January 5, 1995, a couple out searching for scrap metal happened
upon Jennifer's black clarinet case and her teal backpack. Inside the backpack was one of her textbooks still adorned
with her handwritten name. So these items were recovered from a thicket behind Oak Hill
Hospital in Spring Hill, Florida, which is over 25 miles or 40 kilometers from her home.
But strangely, her clothing was not found with the items that were recovered, which indicated
multiple dumping spots or interference.
However, there were fingerprints on the items that didn't match those of the couple who
discovered them, nor Jennifer's family, or Jennifer herself. But sadly, these were never matched to anyone.
And crazy enough, this was the last evidence found in Jennifer's case, which now happened
30 years ago with the last evidence being discovered 28 years ago.
But there have been plenty of suspects since then, so let's get into that portion
of this story.
So in March of 1994, so just over a year after Jennifer's murder, police announced
their first person of interest, a man named Frank Potts.
Now according to the Sheriff Major, he said, quote, it seems wherever Mr. Potts is, people
disappear and die. If what we suspect is true, Mr. Potots is, people disappear and die.
If what we suspect is true, Mr. Pots is indeed a serial killer.
Frank had been working on a farm in Lakeland, Florida, which is about an hour away from
where Jennifer lived around the time of her murder, and he had a very dark criminal history
filled with ludaxe involving children.
So at the time he became a potential suspect in Jennifer's case,
Frank was serving jail time for sexual battery
against an 11-year-old girl.
While Frank was originally from Florida,
he owned a large property consisting of 40 acres
in the neighboring state of Alabama.
In early March of 1994, while Frank was being held
without bail for assaulting the young
girl in Lakeland, authorities searched his property, and they found the body of a young
man buried within its limits.
The sheriff announced that they were contacted by authorities across Alabama, Tennessee,
Georgia, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and New York in connection with missing persons.
All of those states had connections to Frank Potts when he worked as a migrant farm laborer.
He was also said to have owned a blue 1978 GM pickup truck at the time, which again is
the type of car believed to be involved in Jennifer's abduction and murder.
In anonymous tip to the Pasco County Police said quote,
you need to look at Frank Potts.
He likes kids and he has a blue pickup truck.
Police were able to seize the truck, eventually, which had changed in appearance since Jennifer's
murder, but found no evidence that Jennifer was ever inside.
But to be fair, if he was involved, he had over a year to make sure that there wasn't
any evidence left behind.
So basically at this point, unable to connect him directly to Jennifer's murder, Frank
Potts was released as a suspect.
And four years after this in 1998, another suspect emerged, this, accused by his own wife of his involvement.
Walter Ducharm was in his early 30s and living in Pasco County at the time of Jennifer's
abduction and murder, so he was right there.
Now he already had a lengthy rap sheet at this time, including exposing himself to an underage girl, burglary,
theft, drunk driving, driving with a loaded gun, and multiple violations of restraining orders
from former partners.
However, this did not prove his involvement in Jennifer's case specifically, but when
his estranged wife Kimberly accused him of child abuse against her
son, who was Walter Stepson, she told police that she also believed him to be linked to
Jennifer's murder.
31-year-old Walter married Kimberly when she was just 18, and she claims that the abuse
started immediately.
She had a baby from a previous relationship and the two then had
a daughter together, and in 1993, so the same year that Jennifer was murdered, Kimberly
claimed that Walter beat her so bad that it caused her to miscarry. He was convicted of
aggravated battery for this and explained that he had a severe drinking problem and that he was also unaware of how
to stop. A letter that he wrote to Kimberly, red quote,
�I am still drinking. I'll never stop. You know me, drink, drink, drink. I don't know
how to stop. I don't want to. I live to drink."
The investigation into his involvement went as far as to extra-dite him from his home in Maine
back to Florida, where he had been living at the time of Jennifer's murder. A jury heard two days
of testimony in a case against him, but ultimately concluded that there were, quote, many inconsistencies
and factual inaccuracies in the allegation. And so here this, like Kimberly later recanted her statement that Walter, from whom she was
then divorced, was involved in Jennifer's murder.
And by that point, Kimberly herself was serving jail time for child abuse, and she herself
then confessed to the abduction and murder of Jennifer Odom, which is a confession
that was very quickly met with skepticism, of course, and ultimately deemed false.
She later admitted to involving herself simply because she loved and craved the attention,
writing in a letter quote, I'm sorry I brought this whole mess on myself with these lies.
What are what is up with these fucked up people? I mean, I think that in particular is very
sad that you're going to, you know, accuse your husband and then accuse yourself. And it's
like, what do you think? How do you think that Jennifer's family feels about you just
making up all the shit? Right. yeah. Like on their daughter's account.
Exactly, yeah.
You're just basically at that point,
you're just torturing this poor family.
Because obviously when you say-
Because they want attention.
Right, and when you say shit like that,
police are obviously gonna have to investigate it,
and that just brings up all these bad memories
for the family and the, again.
And it was police's time.
And this went to court like absolute insanity.
What a dumb dumb.
So anyway, Thomas Ellis Brown was also another man believed to be in the area at the time
and his checkered past raised eyebrows among investigators.
In 2003, an article printed that over the past 35 years,
Thomas had been arrested more than 70 times in eight different states, most
recently for trying to lure a 16-year-old girl into his car while he sat inside naked.
So while this seemed like a pretty promising lead, Thomas was confirmed to have been in
Maine at the time of Jennifer's murder.
As recently as 2015, a new person of interest emerged after his son's DNA tied him to a cold
case of over 20 years.
At 3pm on January 16th, 1992, almost exactly a year prior to Jennifer's murder, 17-year-old
Carolyn Murray was abducted, attacked, and raped in Spring Hill, Florida.
And this is where Jennifer's backpack and clarinet were found.
Jeffrey Norman Crumb Sr. had approached her when she was walking home from her bus stop
after school, and kidnapped and raped her before leaving her for dead and a wooded area.
But miraculously, she was lucky enough to be found by her family about two hours later
before she could succumb to her injuries and she survived.
Carolyn was eventually able to give a description to police, but her attacker went without apprehension
for over two decades.
And then, like you said, when Jeffrey's son, Jeffrey Crumb Jr. was arrested on charges of armed robbery,
a DNA sample that he entered into the system was a match
for the rape kit done on Jeffrey's 1992 victim.
Carolyn, who is now in her 40s, lived,
but she sustained brain damage from how brutally Jeffrey had beaten her.
And remember, Jennifer, at least they believed that Jennifer had died from blunt force trauma
to the head.
Yes, very good thing to note here.
So doctors initially didn't even believe that Carolyn would pull through, and she had
to go or undergo, rather, multiple surgeries and fell into a coma. I mean, Jeffrey had hit her so
hard in the head that she was missing a piece of her brain. So her left side remains paralyzed
and she cannot speak in full sentences. She lives in a full-time care facility and her mother
claims that she is still scared to go or even look outside from fear of what
happened to her.
Which is so horrible if you think about it, it literally ruined her life.
Devastating.
So in 2017, two years after Jeffrey's arrest for the attack of Carolyn Murray, authorities
announced that he was now a person of interest in the murder of Jennifer Odom. The similarities in the
time and place and just the opportunism of the girls both having been getting
off of the school bus have led many to believe that he is connected to Jennifer's
case as well, but this has yet to be proven. In 2019, Jeffrey Crum Sr. was given
two life sentences for what he did to Carolyn Murray.
16 months after Jennifer's murder, desperate for answers.
Investigators actually brought in a psychic and a pretty unprecedented and controversial move.
Psychics in criminal cases are rare and not proven effective, but this time they hoped that it would be.
cases are rare and not proven effective, but this time they hoped that it would be. Nancy Meyer of Pennsylvania had at that point assisted in over 300 criminal investigations
and turned up clues 80% of the time.
A retired police colonel who was interviewed on the episode of Unsolved Mysteries about
Jennifer's case said of Nancy quote,
When you come to a dead end and you have no place to go,
if you have someone who can open a door and say,
Hey, I think I can help you?
And just through her psychic powers,
she's able to put us in another league.
Then through good investigation techniques,
we can go on, continue and solve the crime.
And that's what we've done.
So Nancy was brought to two places
that were key to the investigation.
The bus stop that Jennifer was believed to have been abducted from, and the orange grove
where her body was found.
Now according to Nancy, Jennifer was likely abducted by the man in the blue pickup truck
after he stopped her to, you know, innocuously ask for directions.
At the time, investigators had yet to find any of Jennifer's missing belongings, and Nancy
observed that they were discarded nearby and was also able to pinpoint a few of the items
that were yet to be discovered, including the Claire and Net case without being prompted
by police.
Now Nancy explained with confidence that Jennifer had been abducted by two
adult men. She described them as muscular and said that they likely worked as mechanics,
and one she described as a smoker with a persistent cough. But sadly suspects matching these
descriptions have never been located, so it's hard to say if this was helpful or not.
So it's hard to say if this was helpful or not. As recently as 2013, an officer was assigned full time to Jennifer's case, but that has
yet to help them obtain the answers her loved ones so desperately deserve.
It seems even a decade after that development that there are no closer to being able to
solve the horrific murder of Jennifer Odom.
Jennifer's case file is over 75,000 pages long, and then the three decades of the investigation,
there have been hundreds of interviews and thousands of tips.
Each of these false starts were excruciating for Jennifer's family, and eventually,
they petered out altogether.
And with this case, it's so hard to speculate
because even though we do have multiple persons of interest,
which is great, it still just feels impossible
because obviously there is so much that police
have not released in Jennifer's case
and then regarding these persons of interest.
But one thing that is big to me is just the fact
that somebody was at this bus stop slash near the bottom
of Jennifer's driveway to begin with,
because this is a smaller community.
It's a rural area.
She herself lived on 40 acres of land.
So that's how big the property was.
So this is not just like a residential neighborhood where all these kids are, you know, popping off the bus
and this is a popular zone. Like it's a little bit more remote feeling. So I
wonder how this person even knew to be there and knew to be there at that time,
which is what would make me believe that this person was familiar with this particular street
or was familiar with Jennifer or her family or the school bus is route.
You know what I mean? Like one of those or else how the hell did they happen to end up in this place where only one kid gets off the bus?
Right. And you know, it could be just simply the fact that they had been stalking
Jennifer had been watching her for a period of time or it possibly it was just a
very opportunistic situation they were passing by to go somewhere else that's
very true I think either one which is hard because which is it I mean in my
personal opinion about this case I'm really leaning toward Jeffrey Crumb senior because of the fact that he had already
attacked a girl, you know, around the same age and-
Five years older, but I know what you mean, yeah.
Right, an attacker in the same way, and then also the fact that police believed he drove a
general motor as a blue pickup truck.
I mean, it's just, there's too many connections for me to not notice.
Well, and like you had mentioned, the whole blunt force trauma thing. So yeah, I definitely
agree with you. I just wish there was some form of DNA, but hopefully answers will come
to this case at some point. And while her family is still alive to get that news.
I mean, DNA these days is just incredible, and the things that they're doing to connect these criminals to the crimes is amazing.
So I really feel like there's a lot of hope.
Right, exactly, and that is how Jeffrey Crumb got, you know, was able to be convicted anyway
and was caught.
Exactly.
Anyway, it was because of genealogy.
So, and DNA testing.
So despite the passage of time, Jennifer, who would now be 43 years old,
is still missed dearly by her family.
Renee remarked, quote,
we were very together as a family,
and we're still that way.
We just have one less,
and she has missed all the time.
So if you have any information regarding the murder of Jennifer Odom, please call the
Hernando County Crime Stoppers at 1-866-990-8477.
Thank you so much everybody for listening to this episode of Going West.
Yes, thank you guys so much for listening to this episode and on Tuesday we'll have an
all new case for you guys to dive into.
As we always say, please don't forget to share this case.
I mean, I feel like it's good to share every story, but especially the unsolved
ones where people are desperately looking for answers all the time, sharing costs nothing
and it's so easy and it just helps.
That's all it does, it just helps.
Absolutely, you never know who has information out there.
It's so true, especially if you're in Florida or near that area, but either way, you know,
people move all around and we have so much reach
on social media, et cetera.
So thank you guys so much in advance for doing that.
Thank you for tuning into this episode.
And we'll see you next week.
All right guys, so for everybody out there in the world,
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