Heart Starts Pounding: Horrors, Hauntings, and Mysteries - Special Edition: Is There A Serial Killer In Austin Right Now?
Episode Date: April 20, 2023Four bodies have been recovered from Lady Bird Lake in Austin, Texas this year, causing many to wonder- is there a serial killer currently operating, and are these drownings at all connected to simila...r ones five years ago? Subscribe on Patreon for more long form content, including exclusive episodes, and to become a member of our Rogue Detecting Society. Follow on Tik Tok and Instagram for a daily dose of horror. Heart Starts Pounding is written and produced by Kaelyn Moore. Music from Artlist Shownotes: https://www.heartstartspounding.com/episodes/austinkiller Â
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Welcome to a special edition of Heart Starts Pounding.
If you're new to the podcast, you're in good company.
This is a place for people who follow their curiosity into the dark corners of the internet,
into the strange and unknown, and into their personal experiences and communities, hoping
to turn up a little light.
We'll be back on our regular weekly programming
May 6th with a bunch of exciting new episodes. And right now, we're releasing the Timekeeper,
a horror audio drama on its own channel. Thank you all for the support. It's been on the top
20 fiction charts for the last few weeks now. Though Heart Starts pounding is technically on a short break, I felt like I had to put
this episode out.
What's going on in Austin has been weighing heavy on my mind, and I wanted to put a lot
of the information we have all in one place.
I don't have any answers.
I'm just going to tell you what's been going on.
On April 15th, a body was pulled from Lady Bird Lake in Austin, Texas.
While this was a tragedy that deeply impacted the Austin community, it seemed to increase
a fear that many locals had.
See, this was the fourth body pulled from Lady Bird Lake this year, and while each death
report keeps coming back with a stamp from police that reads, no foul play, some people claim they can see a pattern in the bodies being pulled from the lake this year.
Others think that this is an issue that goes back much farther.
Looking more into these deaths, I came across an article titled,
No Connection in Deaths Near Downtown Austin Waters, police say.
It reads like a headline ripped out of a recent paper, titled, No Connection in Deaths Near Downtown Austin Waters, police say.
It reads like a headline ripped out of a recent paper,
everywhere I turn, the police were repeating
this same exact sentiment.
But this article was from 2018.
Five years ago, the police were trying
to quell the growing fear that something malicious was behind
the back-to-back drownings in downtown Austin.
And today, the response is the exact
same. The new uptick in deaths has gained national attention, though the police are steadfast
in their convictions that nothing strange is going on, but many are wondering, is there
a serial killer in Austin?
To start this story, we need to look at the geography of the lake.
Austin is a city in central Texas.
It's long been known for its nightlife and music scene,
and is popular amongst local college students
and for weekend getaways with groups of friends.
A lot of what you'll hear me talk about in this episode
focuses on Rainy Street and Sixth Street,
two neighborhoods on the north side
of the lake that are flanked with bars and restaurants.
They're a short walk from each other, and Rainy runs right into the lake.
The lake itself is part of the Colorado River, which flows east to west through Austin,
and it's gorgeous.
On a sunny day, you can bike around the 10 mile parameter and hear the music echoing from
bars past locals doing early morning kayaking.
The lake is six miles long and it splits Austin into north and south.
The lake has an average depth of 14 feet and a width ranging from about one football field
to nearly half a mile across.
Swimming hasn't been allowed since the 1960s, but other activities
such as kayaking and boating are permitted. But what is typically a leisurely spot for locals
has recently become a tragic reminder of what's happening. Let's go back to 2018, when the police
felt like they needed to reassure the public.
The men whose deaths were referenced in the 2018 article, the one where police stated there
was no connection, were Randy Lexfold, Chris White, and Martin Gutierrez.
In December of 2018, 49-year-old Randy Alex Lexfold was in Austin with his family for
his daughter's swim meet. His body was found
floating in water below Shul Creek Bridge, a bridge just off of Sixth Street, around 830 AM
on Friday. Randy's wife told investigators that he ate on Sixth Street around 1030 PM,
and police believe that he made it on to Shul Creek Bridge between 1.30am and the time he was found.
Shul Creek Bridge is a long bridge that runs over a creek that's just a few inches deep.
The bridge has a knee-high railing but Randy was 6'1", meaning it wouldn't have been
difficult for him to go over it.
Police believed that Randy's injuries were consistent with the fall and ruled out any foul play.
By the time Randy was found, the article mentioned that he was the sixth body in Austin to be
found in water since May that year.
One of the other men that was found was Chris White, who was found in a different part
of the Colorado River.
Another was Martin Gutierrez.
Mitchell Gutierrez, brother of the 25-year-old Martin Gutierrez,
whose body was found in Lady Bird Lake in November of 2018,
just two weeks before Randi's,
still feels like the case isn't closed on his brother's death.
Video surveillance taken inside the alibi, a bar on Rainy Street, shows Martin behaving
strangely the night he died.
According to Mitchell, Martin was out with a group of friends but was keeping mostly to
himself in a corner, when all of a sudden he ran outside of the bar.
Other surveillance footage shows Martin making strange movements that were not consistent with his typical behavior.
His brother believes that someone may have drugged Martin and that the deaths this year are likely related.
A toxicology report showed that Martin was intoxicated but had no illicit drugs in his system.
His cause of death was ruled as accidental drowning, but Mitchell, who works in the medical
field, never believed that.
So what could have been happening to Martin the night of his death? Well, in February
of 2019, just a few months after his death, an article titled Something something is happening on Rainy Street was published.
In the article, ER director, Dr. Christopher Zeebole of DelSet in Medical Center said that
they'd seen a recent wave of patients exhibiting strange symptoms after night out on Rainy.
He said, quote, we're getting some cases of people coming in who maybe they've had one or two drinks yet somehow,
they've become really profoundly intoxicated or impaired.
And so the thought is that maybe something else
is getting slipped into their drinks.
He also acknowledged that, quote,
some of the more common date-rape drugs, though,
are not detectable on our routine drug screens.
So sometimes we routine drug screens.
So sometimes we do drug screens and everything turns out to be negative, but we still have
suspicion that something may have happened.
Not much information is being revealed by police currently on the bodies being found.
For many of them, the public does not have access to autopsy and toxicology reports.
And even if they did, these are drugs
that are not detectable in your system.
And bodies are being found in states
where toxic substances may have already leaked out of them.
So painting a whole picture is difficult.
But in 2018, the deaths were all ruled as accidental.
So let's look at what's been happening this year,
because many claim they can see similarities
between today and what happened in 2018.
So on April 15th, the body of 30-year-old
John Christopher Hayes Clark was found near Longhorn Dam
on the far east side of the lake.
The investigation is ongoing, but initial reports say police do not suspect foul play.
Again, at the time of this recording, this is the information I have.
I'm sure more will come out in the following weeks.
The news of John's death came just two weeks after the body of Jonathan Honey, 33 years old, was also found
in Lady Bird Lake.
Jonathan was in town from D.C. for a bachelor party, and was last seen at a taco truck on
rainy street at 2am.
His friends reported him missing on March 31st, and he was found the next day.
The police have also put out a statement claiming that there is no reason to believe
there was any foul play.
His family is asking for privacy at this time and has not made a statement.
A month prior, on March 5th, at around 10 a.m.,
the body of 40-year-old Cliff Axel was recovered in Lady Bird Lake near Auditorium Shore.
He was last seen at Stubbs, a barbecue joint just a short walk from Sixth Street.
Authorities have not confirmed the identity of Cliff, but Cliff's sister shared a touching
memorial of her brother on Facebook where she revealed that Cliff had been recovered from
Lady Bird Lake.
She also said that he was, while the creative, passionate, brilliant, daring, and full
of life.
Cliff was the father of two children.
Two weeks prior to Cliff's discovery on February 13, the body of 30-year-old Jason John
was pulled from Lady Bird Lake. Jason was reported missing a week prior. He had been last seen
also on Rainy Street after a night out with friends. According to Jason's brother, the medical examiner said Jason had no visible damage or scars.
Jason's air pods are still missing.
Looking at the profile of the identified men, both recent and past, people have commented
on some similarities.
These were adult men, mostly in their 20s and 30s, with cropped, dark brown
hair, and a large majority of them were seen out on rainy or sixth street the night before
they disappeared. I will note, there doesn't seem to be a profile for skin color, though
a number of victims were Hispanic. But maybe it's this profiling that led so many to believe
that there is someone behind this.
The police are not convinced. On April 13, just a few days ago during a town hearing
to address the drownings, Austin police released a statement that read, quote,
quote, The Austin Police Department is aware of speculations regarding the recent drownings in Lady Bird
Lake. Although these cases are still under investigation, an evidence
is being analyzed, at this time, there is no evidence in any of these cases to support
allegations of foul play. While each incident has occurred at the lake, the circumstances,
exact locations, and demographics surrounding these cases vary. Our investigators approach
every case with an open mind and objectively examine all available
evidence. We work closely with the Travis County Medical Examiner's office, which conducts a parallel
investigation into all deaths. The medical examiner performs autopsies in each of these types of death
investigations. The result of these autopsies have not revealed any trauma to the body's nor
indication of foul play.
One common theme in the drownings in Austin this year is the combination of alcohol and
easy access to Lady Bird Lake, which has numerous access points.
Many of the access points can be challenging to see at night.
The parks in which most of these drownings have occurred are park areas that close at 10
pm and occur after the park closes. We advise
the public to follow the rules on park closures.
Sure, the bars and restaurants are very close to the lake, and alcohol and bodies of water
hardly ever mix. One person suggested too that men are more likely to pull over for a bathroom
break while coming home from the bars, and being intoxicated increases the risk that you'll fall in.
But this does seem to be a high number of falling related deaths.
For reference, Lake Tahoe in California sees about 7 deaths in the lake every year.
And that's mostly from recreational lake activities like swimming and boating, so four bodies and
just a few months from falling isn't outside the realm of possibilities, but it does raise
a flag.
If the police keep claiming no foul play, however, that doesn't give families much to go
off of.
So much information is missing from these men's stories, because so many of them were separated
from their friends or families at the times of their deaths. We don't know if they felt weird after a drink,
if they had been lured somewhere, if they just happened to run into the wrong person while
making their way home. But there is one person whose story we do know, or at least, some of it,
or at least some of it, because he was found alive.
21-year-old Christian Pugh was in Austin to see a comedian perform in November 2019
when he went missing.
Christian has very little memory about
what transpired that night, but he's been able
to put together a timeline of events based on what friends have told him and video footage that he's watched of himself.
So Christian went out with a group of friends on Rainy Street for a friend's birthday party.
The last thing Christian remembers that night was arriving to a pregame for the party. He has no
memory of anything after that and he left his phone in an Uber when the pre-game was heading to the bars, so he can't track his movements.
Video surveillance footage shows Christian leaving the bar on Rainey Street where his friends
party was happening and heading north towards Sixth Street. The last camera to pick him
up was a bank in the area. After that, he wasn't seen for three days.
Police waited 48 hours before dispatching a search team, and it was a homeless man who
alerted police to Christian, who lay in a heap under Congress Street Bridge, which runs
over the lake. Christian had injuries consistent with the 30-foot fall he likely faced, broken
ribs, a dislocated leg, but he also had a welt on the side of his head,
a traumatic brain injury, and bloody knuckles that he felt were more consistent with a fight.
He was induced into a month-long coma, after which he needed to relearn how to write.
But the circumstance of Christian's disappearance and condition were never fully investigated,
so what caused him to go over the side of the bridge is unknown. According to Christian,
he felt brushed off by the police, as if they felt that because he was alive it didn't really matter
what happened that night. Pieces of Christian's story feel incredibly important in the current moment,
though, like the wounds found on his knuckles that were inconsistent with a fall were those self-defense wounds and is the memory loss from a brain injury
or from being drugged.
Nothing definitive has been said about what's going on, but we know that men in their
20s and 30s are separating from their groups after nights out and being found in Lady
Bird Lake.
These are the reported cases, but a Facebook group and Reddit dedicated to civilian sleuthing
is full of personal anecdotes of men being drugged on rainy and sixth.
And these aren't even all the bodies being pulled from the lake in similar conditions
over the last few years.
Whether it's a serial killer, a serial drug or just an issue with the lighting near the lake remains a mystery, but
pressure is mounting on Austin police to figure out if the deaths are more
than accidental. Some families have called for more protective measures to be
taken near Lady Bird Lake. More lighting was put up in February after Jason
John's death and a fence was put
around part of the lake. However, there are large gaps in the fence and it seems that the
lighting may only be temporary, plus three more bodies were found after these measures
were put in place. Even if it's a problem where people are accidentally falling into
the lake because of confusion or poor lighting, that's still a problem.
It's frustrating to watch this happen, but I've also felt inspired reading about
community members stepping up to do what they can. People are watching out for
each other and strangers at bars, and many men are starting to come forward with
their stories about being drugged in the area. I've read so many stories about
men who thought they were drugged near the area. I've read so many stories about men who
thought they were drugged near Rainy Street a few years ago and just shook it off. They were
embarrassed or they thought it would look weak if they made a big deal about it, but it is a big
deal and it's not embarrassing or weak to share your experiences. It could save someone's life.
In the meantime, be extra vigilant about safety measures.
Stay with your friends, check in on them throughout the night, make sure you and they have safe
transportation home, and be mindful of your drinks.
I've seen people recommend the Test My Drink strips on Amazon, though they are not fully
comprehensive of all drugs.
When in doubt, go for something you can open yourself,
and keep your phone charged and on you. If you or your loved ones live in Austin, I'm sure
you know all of this already, but if you know someone traveling there soon, make sure they're
aware of the situation. It could really help. I'll see you all on May 6th when we're back
with our weekly episodes, and until then, stay safe, everyone.