Morbid - Episode 243: John Edward Robinson Part 2

Episode Date: June 25, 2021

Part two of John Robinson is somehow crazier than part one! He stays on his bullshit: scamming people out of thousands of dollars, continuing to fake his philanthropist ways and he’s still ...trying to tell us that Lisa Stassi is happy and in Colorado with a man named Bill. Only this time, we’ve got people who are on to him… including the actual FBI. Somehow, even with them on his tail, John Robinson manages to murder 6 women in between prison stents. Stay tuned for part three!!! CHECK OUT THIS BOOK! Anyone You Want Me To Be by John Douglas and Stephen Singular As always, thank you to our sponsors:  Hello Fresh: Get twelve free meals—including free shipping!—with code morbid12 at HelloFresh dot com slash morbid12 Chili Technology: Head over to chilisleep.com/morbid for ChiliSleep’s best deal, available to Morbid listeners for a limited time! Prose: Take your FREE in-depth hair consultation and get 15% off your first order today! Go to Prose.com/morbid Caviar: And just for our listeners, Caviar is offering $10 off an order of $20 or more. All you have to do is put in the offer code MORBID2021 at checkout. Better Help: This podcast is sponsored by BetterHelp and Morbid: A True Crime Podcast listeners get 10% off their first month at betterhelp.com/Morbid See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:52 That's W-O-N-D-E-R-Y-P-O-D. Audible.com slash wonderypod or text wonderypod to 500-500 to try audible for free for 30 days. Angie's list is now Angie, and we've heard a lot of theories about why. I thought it was an eco-move. For your worst, guess paper. It was so you could say it faster. No way. It's to be more iconic.
Starting point is 00:01:12 Must be a tech thing. But those aren't quite right. It's because now you can compare up front prices, book a service instantly, and even get your project handled from start to finish. Sounds easy. It is. And it makes us so much more than just a list. Get started at Angie.com.
Starting point is 00:01:28 That's ANGI, or download the app today. Hey weirdos, I'm Olena, I'm Ash. And this is morbid. Woo-woo. I'm so excited. I'm so excited. I'm so excited. Morbid. Hello.
Starting point is 00:02:00 That's what we are. Talk about a bunch of morbid things here. That's what we do. That's what we do. That's what we do. That's what we do New in doing welcome to the crew. Hey, I don't have any more rhymes You know, I didn't even do to do I know it didn't That was just over here in my own little world like I could see it on your face You were just like yeah, my coffee hasn't taken full effect yet. It has not That's okay. I am back on the coffee. Back on that coffee.
Starting point is 00:02:25 I can't say no to you. Can't stop, won't stop. Or no, what is it? I can't quit you. I can't quit you. Coffee. That from? Broke back mountain.
Starting point is 00:02:34 Broke back mountain. Or an iconic film. Very quick. You. I love it. Well, I think one thing we just wanted to touch upon because it was, it like shocked both of us. Terrifying.
Starting point is 00:02:46 Is that condo collapse in Miami, Florida is like breaking my heart, shocking my brain. I just cannot get over it. I just don't understand how that happens. Like how do you neglect a building for that long? That's, I'm very interested to see what comes out about what was going on there. Yeah. Because I think it was built with like cement and like rebar and all that. So I don't know if there was something like they should have been taking care of it or fixing something.
Starting point is 00:03:14 Right. That I mean the video that came out of it is absolutely horrifying. And I think there's 99 people still unaccounted for. Four people are dead now. It's horrifying. Well, just to see all the family members of just like, their mom lived there, their sister lived there. How do you, I just can't even imagine, like putting my brain through that. I don't know how they went to sleep last night,
Starting point is 00:03:39 like any of them, and we're able to even take a moment to breathe because they're showing all the pictures of everybody missing and it just makes you want to, I got a lot of my throat this morning because I just picture knowing that your loved one is trapped under that rubble. And it's like, and you can't do anything.
Starting point is 00:03:56 It's just like, you're totally helpless. Totally helpless. It just really breaks my heart. So we wanted to send our love and thoughts to all our Florida weirdos and all our Miami weirdos. And I really hope none of you have family members that are involved in this. But if you do, we are sending so many thoughts
Starting point is 00:04:18 and love to you. But it's just really sad. So we just wanted to talk about it really quick, because we were really bummed out about it this morning. Yeah. And hopefully we get some good news out of it. I hope some good stories come out where people are found and are just to be found alive.
Starting point is 00:04:32 So, exactly. We'll definitely keep paying attention to that. But we are going to continue on with our series about John Edward Robinson. To be have to, let me tell ya, this guy. I'm actually joking, I'm very intrigued to see what happens next. This guy, the whole world.
Starting point is 00:04:56 I mean, it's like, it's the coquinhas on this one. Oh, you think you think you know? No, I really don't, though. You don't think you know. I don't. You don't know. I know, I don't. I know. You think you know. I don't. You don't know. I know, I don't.
Starting point is 00:05:07 I mean, it's... No, I don't. I ruined your bit. Because I don't know. No one knows. No one knows. No one knows. I want to plug one more time, the book,
Starting point is 00:05:16 anyone you want me to be. John Douglas was like a huge part of this book. Everybody knows John Douglas. He's huge in the true crime world. Hell yeah. Hello, mind-tunter. And it was written with Steven Singular, and they did, I'm telling you, read this book.
Starting point is 00:05:33 I have it on the Kindle Cloud Reader, and it is unbelievable. I've read it cover to cover in two nights. I could not put it down. It is so in-depth, I'm gonna give you like a, what I can out of this, but there is so much more in this book and I want you to go get it and read it because it's fucking amazing.
Starting point is 00:05:54 Sometimes do we love John Douglas? Do you ever just feel like we're doing like Book Report sometimes? I do and I love it. I'm present to get to the class. I don't like Book Report. You gotta read this book. You gotta read this book. You gotta read this book.
Starting point is 00:06:05 And again, John Douglas, hello. Hello. So, and he does, it's just amazingly told. I mean, they go into so much detail. There's so much more detail about this stuff that I can't even go into. So you gotta read the book because the sheer, the vast amount of fraud, scamming of, you know,
Starting point is 00:06:24 you know, just all kinds of shit that this dude, I mean like, affairs, the amount of affairs this man was having while being a father and a grandfather and also a scam artist and a murderer is like outrageous. He was living so many lives out, outrageous. So go read the book because after you listen to the episode because it's it's so amazing. So all right. So when we last talked to you in part one and by the way,
Starting point is 00:06:53 this is going to be a three-part area. You're getting two parts like boom boom right one after the other because I can't make you wait. Because hi, I love you. I we just love you and I don't want to make you wait because it's too crazy of storage and I Not tell you all at once. So the last time we told, we talked to you guys, I was telling you about Lisa Stasi and her four-month-old daughter Tiffany. Also, can we talk about how freaking beautiful Lisa Stasi was? Dropped like a knockout.
Starting point is 00:07:18 Like a knockout. Stunning. Stasi has one of those faces where I feel like she would like, I feel like she would waive to people in her car. Like I feel like she's like I feel like she would wave to people in her car Like I feel like she's like a nice person. I do that But I feel like Lisa Stasi would have my back on the love you're like, I just feet. You know what? I feel like we have I feel that yeah, she just she has she was I mean stunning stunning in little Tiffany
Starting point is 00:07:42 Oh my god in Tiffany. I keep any or Heather now Heather Heather Tiffany Tiffany. Oh my god in Tiffany. Tiffany or Heather. Now Heather, Heather, Tiffany now. Oh my goodness. She was just and she still is beautiful, but she was like, oh my god, as a baby, I was just like, oh my goodness. Well, what we found out was that John Edward Robinson ended up tricking Lisa Stassie into thinking she was going to get into a program that him and local businessmen were running to kind of help her out.
Starting point is 00:08:07 She was a single mom. She was going through rough times. She had come out of an abusive relationship. She had a four-month-old baby daughter that she was trying to take care of. And what he ended up doing was putting her up in a hotel, making her sign a bunch of blank sheets of paper and a dress of unshine envelopes. And then what they think happened, and we will find out later why they think this, because they don't have her body.
Starting point is 00:08:29 They've never found Lisa Stassi. We do not know where she is. They believe she was likely bludgeoned to death. And then Tiffany, who is now known as Heather, was given to John's brother, Donald, his younger brother, Donald, who was going through infertility troubles with his wife. Donald didn't know any of this. Yeah. Donald basically was under the impression
Starting point is 00:08:53 that his brother was, he was a business guy. He'd been a lot of different things in the community. He had a lot of community connections. And he had basically made him see that, like, think that like, he had gone through normal ways to get an adoption going. Because he forged all these papers and everything. He forged papers with a lawyer, with a judge.
Starting point is 00:09:10 Yeah. I mean, he had full-blown adoption papers, and he was, he had him basically pay him money to adopt this child. We're just so fucked, because you know that that just went directly to him and, like, not to anything. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:09:22 It did. And, I mean, and then he started, then Lisa's family started getting letters that were typed apparently from her. But she couldn't say any bunnies. She couldn't really type. They said it just wasn't her and those letters. Obviously she'd sign pieces of paper.
Starting point is 00:09:37 So we had her signature. Oh my goodness. All very fucked up. But it's, so that's where we kind of left you. Everyone kind of stopped looking for Lisa Stasi at this point because those letters came in and she had basically said she was fine, she was starting a new life with her baby and this man named Bill. And John Robinson had told everybody, yeah, she just took off with this guy named Bill DeColorado and I think they're happy and everything's great. So police were like, well,, she's 19 years old, she's an adult.
Starting point is 00:10:07 Meanwhile, she called her, what was it, her mother-in-law that she was on the phone with? Yeah. So she had gone just to like give you a little like recap of that just because it does play in later. So there was a night, it was like a horrific snowstorm. Lisa had left the hotel with her baby daughter to go to her sister-in-law's house. She was kind of telling her sister-in-law that John was weird. It wasn't sure if the situation was what it was supposed to be. Her sister-in-law Kathy was very concerned. It was like, yeah, I'd really prefer you just to stay here. But John ended up because he had also made her write down the names, addresses, and phone numbers of people close to her. He had called Kathy's house looking for Lisa and the baby.
Starting point is 00:10:48 He showed up in a snowstorm, parked down the way so that he wasn't even in front of the house. And he came and literally collected them. That's so scary. And then that same night, she called her mother-in-law, it was either the same night or the night after. I think it was the same night that she called her mother-in-law. It was either the same night or the night after. I think it was the same night that she called her mother-in-law sobbing hysterically. And her mother-in-law was like, what is going on?
Starting point is 00:11:10 And she was telling her, you know, they're telling me that you're gonna steal, you're gonna take Tiffany if I don't sign these papers and like make sure I'm the guardian of her. Like, what? And she's like, I'm not gonna take your baby. Like, no, I would never do that. Like, no, no, no, like they're lying.
Starting point is 00:11:24 Right. And then she said, do not sign anything. And she said,, I'm not going to take your baby. Like, no, I would never do that. Like, no, no, no, like they're lying. Right. And then she said, do not sign anything. And she said, I already did. I already did. And then she said, something along the lines of their here, I got to go. What if you were trafficked into a cult over shot nine times or fell in love with a vampire or went
Starting point is 00:11:44 into a minor surgery and woke up one week later, paralyzed. What would you do? I'm Whit Missildine, the creator of this is actually happening, a podcast from Wondry that brings you extraordinary true stories of life-changing events, told by the people who lived them. From a young man that dunes his entire future with one choice, to a woman who survived a notorious serial killer. You'll hear their first person account of how
Starting point is 00:12:11 they overcame remarkable circumstances. Each episode is an exploration of the human spirit and personal discovery. These haunting accounts sound like Hollywood movies, but I assure you, this is actually happening. Follow this is actually happening wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Wonder app. Hey there, fellow podcast listener, it's Elena and Ash and we're taking you back to the days before streaming services. Whoa!
Starting point is 00:12:46 You know when you would come home from high school and it was only a few hours until that TV show everyone was watching was about to come on? Well in 1999, that show was Buffy the Vampire Slayer. In our podcast with Wondery, the re-watcher Buffy the Vampire Slayer, we take it back to 1999. So get out your knee high boots and paste that poster of Angel on the wall. It's time to enter the Buffyverse.
Starting point is 00:13:11 Some of you avid morbid listeners already know what we've gotten store. Hey, my nose. Join us as we sway our way through Buffy's drama, action, and romance. Episode by episode. Slazy, follow the re-watcher, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:13:29 You can listen early and add free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app. Darn, ee-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e- last conversation you had with your daughter-in-law? I can't hear. They're even fathom. That's so terrifying. I can't even fathom. And that was the last time they saw her. They believe now that night that he took her from her sister-in-law's house and spoke to her mother-in-law that he bludgeoned her to death.
Starting point is 00:14:00 And there were other people involved. Yeah. I mean, they think so. That's one of the things that has never been proven in this case though. The fact that she said they're here, but they can't connect anybody. They can't connect it for me.
Starting point is 00:14:12 I'm like, I don't know. Like spoiler alert. They've never connected another person to him. That is so crazy. And that does become a thing where we're gonna talk about probably in part three, that they, at one point are like, there has to be more people. But then they kind of teeter on that and they're like, no, I think it is just him.
Starting point is 00:14:31 I mean, other people are involved in like fringe ways. Sure. You know, like, you know, a people that he knew that would like have connections and stuff, but like in the actual act of what he did, some people think that he may have had people do his dirty work at some point, but later it became just him. Gotcha. So here we are. So Robinson had Keplisa and Baby Tiffany in the hotel in this hotel with two other women that he had picked up through birthright and Truman Medical Center, which are like birthright was the place for like single young mothers. By all accounts, those other two women were doing like, alright, in the sense that they
Starting point is 00:15:09 were alive. Like, that's all we have. They were still around. We knew where they were. Stephen Hames was the probation officer that we talked about in part one where he was the one who knew this guy's number from the get-go. I love that. I love that expression.
Starting point is 00:15:23 He got his number. I got your number. the get-go. I love that. I love that. That expression. He got his number. I got your number. He, so everyone else was like, he's a con man. He wants to make money. He's just a, you know, this is just a con man. He's not like dangerous. He's not going to like hurt anyone like physically.
Starting point is 00:15:37 He's just going to steal from everybody. And like screw people over. And Stephen Hames was like, no, this guy is dangerous. He's going to escalate. I know it. He knew his pathology. And people weren't listening to him. But what he said, and this is from the book, he said, quote, what really got my attention in 1984, was the initial call from birthright that said he was trying to do something very suspicious
Starting point is 00:16:00 with a young girl and a baby. This doesn't fit with him. It doesn't fit with a good con man because they go around the block to avoid hurting people because they're smart enough to know the penalties when people get hurt are much more significant. So yeah, he's saying with the way he was working initially was like to get money, to get money, money, money. That was all he was trying trying to get and he was trying to like you know pass off this facade and all that and he was like you know hurting people physically is a whole new level. Like usually they don't cross into that that's not a thing that they do so that but he was like I knew it as soon as like any things were going to
Starting point is 00:16:39 rye I was like he's involved. Right. So that same year in 1984, he met a 21-year-old woman named Teresa Williams. Now, she was in Kansas City initially from Boise, Idaho. They met like, kind of off-handedly at like a McDonald's, and he just walked right up to her because remember, he's all about walking up to ladies, flattering them. He was talking to his neighbors.
Starting point is 00:17:04 Yeah, he talks very sexually, explicitly to them. Like, he's gross. And he just walked right up to her. He started flattering her. He said he would love to give her a good life that she deserved. And she was kind of on hard time. So I'd be like, you're at McDonald's.
Starting point is 00:17:19 Like, what are you gonna give me? What are you gonna give? Well, she and she was like, I'm basically a long desperate at this point. So she and he is a charmer. You will see there's I can't even I don't understand what is going on here because he is able to convince women to do outrageous things. He has like a John Wayne gasey kind of like. Oh, he's very John Wayne Gacy-ish. And you could see how it would be very easy to be schmoozed by him.
Starting point is 00:17:48 Like he doesn't look, I mean knowing what you know now, like you kind of look at him a little differently. But if I saw him on the street, I'd just be like, oh, that's like a dad. Oh, no, literally part of the reason he was able to do this for so long is he looks like a friendly grandpa. He does.
Starting point is 00:18:04 Especially now. And back then, he was a friendly grandpa. He does. Especially now. And back then, he was a grandfather in the 2000s. So when he was really doing a shit, he looked like a grandpa, which is a f**k. So scary. And back then, he had a very like, you know, in the book, a lot of times John Douglas like points to the fact that he has like this very round face, which can make people feel weirdly like, like it has a kind to look about it. It's just like a very...
Starting point is 00:18:28 It's just our evolutionary things that we look at around, I don't even know how to explain it, it's just he has that kind of face and he has eyes that almost, sometimes can almost look kind. I was going to say that and then I didn't want to. Sometimes they're terrifying. There's certain pictures where you're like, oh, there it is. But it's like even like Ted Bundy, like people thought he was so handsome,
Starting point is 00:18:52 which is like, you know, troublesome and everything. But then like people would say his eyes would flash into this, like different like animalistic kind of thing. All you have to do with Ted Bundy, because of course everybody like, it's, that's a big thing. But like, some people think he's attractive, people don't know it's like neither here nor there It's really not the important part of it
Starting point is 00:19:10 It just became such an important part of his identity as a serial killer Because that is how he was able to lure a lot of women to help him He had a face that you weren't scared of right and it's it's like, unfortunately, the facts of the case. The fact those eyes can just switch. But there is one video from his court, from his trial, and I point to it every time when people say, like, you know, like, it's so scary, like, he looked so normal and bulldogged, like, just look at that trial video where they tried to grab his arm to bring him out of the trial because he's the defendant,
Starting point is 00:19:47 even though he was being his own lawyer, they grabbed his arm to walk him out of the thing and he rips his arm away in the flash face that he gives that bailiff. Like he wanted to murder him right then. And you look at that and you say, that's what those women saw. That face right there is the base
Starting point is 00:20:04 that all those women saw, the survivors, the victims, all of them all saw that face. And it's like, that's the fucking monster right there. And he hides it real well sometimes, but they can't hide it forever. And it's like, that's that one video always freaks me the fuck out. Because you just see him on a dime. And you know that's what they all saw, which is so horrifying.
Starting point is 00:20:27 That went from this normal 70s dude to that. And it's like in the, that's like, kind of like this guy too. It's true in this guy. And John Wayne Gacy too, he had that round kind of plump face. And he was like a good goofy guy. And just like, hey hey I'm John Wayne
Starting point is 00:20:46 Gacy they're all John love you John my right but like they're all John and so you you trust a John yeah I know like it's John I mean Ted Bundy's name is fucking Theodore It's theodore it's just John you not trust Johnny over here you know like this who's gonna get upset about a John I'm like but you should get upset about a John? Good for us. But you should. Yeah, that's it. I guess we'll get upset about these John's. But yeah, so when he came up to this woman, Teresa Williams and the McDonald's, he was flattering her, you're beautiful. Somebody needs to lift you up.
Starting point is 00:21:18 Somebody needs to give you things and make you happy and make you comfortable and you deserve love and all this. She was psyched. Now, obviously. Remember, he's married with children and still acting like a very good member of society at this point.
Starting point is 00:21:32 I mean, he was like, again, a Sunday school teacher. He was part of the Homeowners Association. He was roughing his son's soccer games. He was going to church. He was doing all kinds of shit just to be like BTK-ish, like just pretend to be this good dad. But either way, anyways, he had her move into those duplex apartments that he had,
Starting point is 00:21:53 because he had several properties, apartments that he would rent. He would also bring girls to these motels, which we'll talk about in a little while. But he had turned these apartments into basically like Bordeaux, like he was putting girls in there and then he was forcing them to perform sexual favors. I think so.
Starting point is 00:22:12 But he was also like pretty out front having her work as a sex worker, kind of just being like with like his friends and clients. So he basically brought her in here and was like, yeah, I'm gonna take care of you, but this is what you need to do. And she was just kinda like, what is she gonna do?
Starting point is 00:22:30 She's gonna do what to do. Yeah, you're trapped at this point. And it was all very rough stuff. Like, like I said before, he was into BDSM, but he was not, and I know I do this every time we talk about BDSM, but I just really think it's important not to like, fuck with people's kinks. So it's like, you know, I mean, like, I know there's a lot, I'm sure people listening are part of that community, and I don't want anyone to be like, well, that's not what
Starting point is 00:22:51 it's about. Yeah, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no That's the main thing that is part of a BDSM relationship. There's like, safe words. Submissives have trust of their doms. Like, doms show compassion and trust to their submissives. It's not about like, completely owning someone.
Starting point is 00:23:14 It's not like 50 sheets of credit. No, and it's not like, it's not inflicting pain without any kind of like, pleasure involved or any kind of like discussion or trust involved. And that's not what he was into. He was into owning a woman out of their control, out of their wishes, out of any kind of discussion of safe words or anything. And that's really fucked up.
Starting point is 00:23:37 And he was also involving his friends who were into this really intense offshoot of BDSM. He was involving them with this girl. I mean, putting her in this. This is rape. 100%. Yeah. And it's just like torture. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:53 It's basically torture. Because this is not just no discussion here. And even when he would do, because as we will see, he liked to do instead of the dumb sub kind of thing, he did master slave, which is a totally different thing. And what he would do is he would give some of these girls contracts, which is typical and media simulatious to have written things down. Yeah. That like, you know, I think it's like, because I did a lot of research about this, because I always want to be like careful to not like
Starting point is 00:24:22 offend. Think I know what that is when I don't. So if I'm wrong on any of this, by all means, like we never want to get that kind of stuff wrong. But from what I have read is like, there's always some kind of a written agreement or verbal agreement involved where like, you tell each other what your boundaries are. Like, like, Dom's should know their sub-s boundaries and they don't cross those boundaries because the whole point is pleasure with pain.
Starting point is 00:24:49 Right. Not just pain. And like, they're safe words. There's all that and people, it's supposed to be trust. You trust that they're not going to cross those boundaries. He would have a contract, a slave contract is what he calls it. Which is totally fucked up. And in these things, you would lay out these things
Starting point is 00:25:05 that he would expect from his sex slave and what he expected as their master, their sex master. And he would constantly cross all of those boundaries. Those contracts meant nothing. And also the contracts themselves were usually way over the top and these women were not comfortable with them, but he had their choice. He would just make them sign them anyway.
Starting point is 00:25:26 So this is just such a different offshoot of BDSM. It's like even weird to call it BDSM. But either way. So she was working, being forced to work as a sex worker, living in the department that he's renting. All really rough, terrible stuff. And she was in the apartment which is now being investigated like this. Oh wow. Yeah so she's in there and they're starting to
Starting point is 00:25:50 get his number a bit not as much as they will later but once Lisa Stasi and her baby Tiffany when missing Stephen Hames that probation officer he was like now it's time to kick this and that he like, does anybody want to listen to me? Well, and he was like, we're finding Lisa Stasi. Like, he was like, we're finding her in this baby because at this point, they didn't know where the baby was either. Right. So he's like, we gotta find these people. So he met with Robinson himself in January 1985
Starting point is 00:26:19 and he just blatantly asked him about Lisa and Tiffany. And, you know, Robinson was like, I don't really have any like real information about her wearabouts, but you know, like I think she's like off with some guy, but he was like, you know what, I'm just really upset because I'm trying to do this nice stuff. And I'm trying to be like a philanthropist and I'm trying to help these women. I'm just trying to help my community. And people, I said of the goodness of my heart. And like people are accusing me of doing something bad now,
Starting point is 00:26:46 like that's really fucked up. Like he was acting like, how dare you? Dude, it is so wild to me how people not only can lie like that, like I can't lie to save my fucking life. I definitely couldn't lie like that. But like to make, it's crazy on people can make you feel insane. Like you know what I mean? Like you you're like full blown gaslighting. He's just trying to help them.
Starting point is 00:27:08 I'm such an asshole. Like, you're like, oh shit, maybe I'm being a dick. Obviously, this guy, Stephen Haynes, is it? Yeah, obviously he's not, he's realizing that this car is a crocker shit. But like, if I was in that position, I'd be like, well, I'm a fucking asshole. You'd be like, well shit, I'm just accusing this philanthropist
Starting point is 00:27:23 and pillar of his community. The Sunday school teacher, grandfather, father, blonde mower, homeowners association presidents, how dare I? I'm murdering a young mother in her shot in her baby infant. It's just so terrible. I'm not. Banana's to be, to have the power to lie like that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:41 Well, and Stephen Haymes, of course, was like, so Haymes was like, well, what are you getting out of all these like good deeds? What are you doing this? Why are you doing this? And he was like, I just get the satisfaction of helping people. And Haymes was like, immediately, I was like, suss, suss, suss.
Starting point is 00:27:56 Like he was like, nope, don't feel that I do not get that funny. I know the world. Yeah, everybody wants to get that. Well, and also he was like, I know people who do things out of the kindness of their heart. Yeah, you're not get to know. Well, and also he was like, I know people who do things out of the kindness of their heart. Yeah. They're not one of them. You're not it. Well, it's just that you don't. He knows. He was like, I knew people. I had seen a lot of bad guys. I had seen a lot of
Starting point is 00:28:14 guys who had made mistakes and came around. This was not that guy. Right. And it's like he, this guy has a past of conning people. Like suddenly turn around and want to help everybody physically hurting people. he doesn't have yet. Like that, well, he does, but not that they know of. Right. But you're still financially, mentally, emotionally, like spiritually, psychologically harming people. That's a lot.
Starting point is 00:28:38 Right. Right. So, Haymes immediately was determined to find Lisa and Tiffany, or at least find out what happened. This was like his new like fuck this guy. I'm gonna take him down. This is my whole life. Stephen Hames is a big part of this whole thing
Starting point is 00:28:52 and like he did not give up on this. Rock on. Rock on Hames. So, he met with Robinson again, with another probation officer, and he told them that a man named Bill, he was like, all right, I know more. He's like the guy's name is Bill, who picked up Lisa.
Starting point is 00:29:07 He said, you picked him up at the roadway in Lisa and Tiffany, this guy Bill did. That's where they were last were and they had gone off to Colorado and that's the last he heard of them. He was like, I was going to help her, but this guy came along. They fell in love. They're going to have a family. It's great. Which sounds like a pretty normal story.
Starting point is 00:29:23 It sounds great. You're like awesome. Yeah Well, they checked with the hotel manager of course because paper trails and that manager said well I last saw at least sent Tiffany leave with John Robinson when they checked out Mm-hmm. So lies immediately because he's saying this guy checked them out like that was it No, she said nope. They left with him. So how would you not think of that dude? You've been a con artist for how long? That's the thing he did think of that But he doesn't care But so what if the hotel manager said that I don't give a shit
Starting point is 00:29:55 He's like I'm saying this is what I'm saying and so far his whole life that's worked That's crazy. So what if I don't have any of these credentials. I'm saying I do right you're right I mean anyways, he learned that yeah What if I don't have any of these credentials? I'm saying I do. Right. You're right. You're hiring me anyways. He learned that real quick. So what if I just got arrested and I could face jail time? I won't. Why? That's literally his whole life.
Starting point is 00:30:11 That's just like, I know. He's just conditioned. Now during the course of this investigation, they had spoken to several women connected to him that they knew were in the apartment at some point or another because they had been kind of watching them a little bit. And they had spoken to two women in particular who had lied for him and said that at one point or another that Tiffany and Lisa had stayed with them.
Starting point is 00:30:33 Okay. And they finally talked to law enforcement again and said we lied. We lied for him and they said we wanna tell you but he had shit on us like he would take nude photos of us. Oh. That becomes his thing. This dude is a piece of shit.
Starting point is 00:30:50 This is his piece of shit. Whenever he would get a woman out there, he would immediately take nude explicit, like sexually suggestive photos of them. Right. And then he would use it as blackmail so that they would have to be on his side. They would have to be loyal to him.
Starting point is 00:31:03 He would have complete power. What? That is so fucking twisted. And to do this to two women, to make them lie about a 19 year old mother and her infant babies whereabouts. What is wrong with you? What the fuck?
Starting point is 00:31:18 And it's like for them to feel they had to do that, he must have threatened the shit up. Oh, obviously. So the FBI was already involved here now, because again, there's a baby involved like this is getting bigger. And they had, they had a previous partner in some of his like previous like money schemes because again, read the book because there's so many other money schemes that happen that like I just, there's so many you can't even talk about them all. He had a previous partner and one and his name was Irvin Blatner. He was like an ex-con.
Starting point is 00:31:50 And so they decided to get in touch with him, the FBI, and they were like, I'm pretty sure we can turn him into an informant because he probably will. He'll probably sing. Why not? Like if we offer him something, I'm sure he'll be like, sure. Let's do it. So then they're going to go through his record. So they're starting to go through his records. They're starting to go through all the scams that he is committed. Because now the FBI is looking into this. And they're like, oh, dang.
Starting point is 00:32:12 What the fuck, guys? Like, they're like, how the fuck did this, dude? Just splice them through. I wonder the radar like this. So they're like, OK, well, now we got to like, we got to do something here. Because like, he's clearly escalating. And he's clearly been allowed to skate through this life here. So what they do is they set up a sting operation and they had a female agent meet with Robinson and this female
Starting point is 00:32:36 agent would ask him about getting a job because that was his thing. He gets females who are down on their luck, he says he's going to get them a job and then something happens. So she posed as the sex worker and he told her he ran a business that employed sex workers for high class clientele like lawyers and doctors and CEOs and shit. But he was like, just so you know, the sex is gonna involve some like
Starting point is 00:32:58 say to a massacism and torture, like are you into that? So basically saying she would be hired as a submissive to be a sex slave to a master. Then she went back to the FBI with all the wire info because obviously she was wired. And she was willing, she was like, I'll keep going undercover.
Starting point is 00:33:15 Like I'll keep doing this with what a bad bitch. She was like, I will keep doing this but they pulled the operation because they were worried for her safety. If they sent her like too deep into this. I would be terrified. If after that conversation, I'd be for sure for sure. And then I'd go back and I'd be like, for sure.
Starting point is 00:33:30 On my head. On the head, oh, I'm going to take my vacation this week. No, she was. She was like, I'm an FBI agent. I will do this shit. But they were like, we're going to keep you alive, honey. That's why I'm not an FBI agent. Yeah, we don't want something happening to you.
Starting point is 00:33:43 So she's a badass. Hell yeah. Like she just awesome. But they were like, no, we don't want to lose you. And they were like the way he was talking, the way he was negotiating with you was scary. Like it was evil. So then they called Truman Medical Center staff
Starting point is 00:33:59 and they said, hey, those two women that you referred to him that are still staying with him, we need to get them out of that hotel immediately. And they did, they got them out. Good. So they were okay, but they were literally like we need to get them the fuck away from him like immediately.
Starting point is 00:34:13 And you need to not refer women to him because we're trying to figure this out. Magic getting that call in you're the one that referred them. You feel so terrible. Oh, unreal. Or like being the person that referred Lisa Stasi, I can't imagine. That person didn't do her job. Oh yeah unreal. Or like being the person that referred Lisa Stasi, I can't imagine. That person didn't do her job.
Starting point is 00:34:27 Oh yeah, because we spoke about that. That person, I think, that social worker and got into trouble later. She did, yeah. And that's, she didn't do her job. Like, let's do our job. Let's do our job, so. Let's, when we get paid for jobs,
Starting point is 00:34:40 let's do our job. Especially when it involves a 19 year old single mother and her four month old baby. Yeah. Let's be a little more like. Let's clock in that day and get to it. Let's do all those diligence. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:51 Let's make sure we cross all those eyes. We dot all those T's. Please. No matter how psychotic it makes for your writing look. Exactly. So at this time, in early 1985, randomly out of nowhere, He decided he was like he made Teresa Williams dress up to the 9s. He handed her $1,200 and he said you're going to go to a park. He's like, I have a job for you. You're going to go to a park. You're going to wait in that
Starting point is 00:35:17 park. You're going to wait for a limo that's going to pull up and get you. And he was like, and you're going to do whatever that person tells you to do. And she was like, okay, so she did, and a limo pulled up. And she got in, the driver blindfolded her, drove her to a mansion. She went inside and a man in his 60s, who she was told to call the judge. What the fuck? Brought her down into a sex dungeon basement that he had.
Starting point is 00:35:46 He strapped her to a rack, like a medieval torture rack, and he started stretching her until she almost passed out. What the fuck? And she finally released her after basically almost like killing her and immediately sent her back in the limo. Back to Robinson. Robinson was pissed because she didn't satisfy the judge because she was supposed to stay there. Like he was pissed that she was like being like being whiny about it.
Starting point is 00:36:19 Being whiny about being stretched. He took back the money he gave her, the $1,200, and hit her and it was getting like really rough. Oh my goodness. So then he left her, he just left her in the apartment, she's like so upset. Then like soon after this, he randomly shows up at her apartment, she's sleeping,
Starting point is 00:36:40 he rips her out of bed, throws her on the floor, stuck a gun in her face face that he kept in a shoulder holster, by the way, because, oh, so cool. And she was freaking out and he told her if she didn't be quiet, he would blow her brains out. And he pulled the trigger in front of her face and the gun went, click. There were no bullets in the gun.
Starting point is 00:37:01 Oh, shit. And this is a trigger running for rape. He then raped her with the gun and left. Oh, no, no, no, no. Now in March 1985, the same year, Irvin Blatner, the partner that they were gonna, the FBI was gonna try to get to turn on him the previous partner.
Starting point is 00:37:18 Sure. Turned on him like they thought he was. Oh, yeah. Or something immediately. He signed a statement that basically confirmed that Robinson was the perpetrator of a shit ton of financial scams. He was like, I can tell you every role he has had
Starting point is 00:37:33 in every one of them. He's like, here's financial scam A through Z. Literally. Do you have time? Here's the, you know, every other alphabet you can think of amount. So March 21st to 1985, Robinson came in for his regular probation meeting
Starting point is 00:37:47 and was immediately arrested, because now they got him. So he was booked into the Clay County jail and while he was there, he suddenly was like, hey guys, I know where Lee Sun Tiffany are, by the way. Does anyone want to know? And they were like, yeah, and he was like, they're safe, they're doing fine. And they were like, yeah, and he was like, they're safe. They're doing fine. And they were like, cool.
Starting point is 00:38:07 He got released on $50,000 bond. Why? He paid it. So now June 7th, Haymes and two FBI agents went to the apartment's unannounced to try to catch him off guard. Because that didn't work now. He got out on bond.
Starting point is 00:38:22 What are we going to do? And so because we got to get more stuff. And as we'll see later, the DA, when it comes to like the 2000s, you know, I mean, like way later, the DA that they have Paul Morrison does it so smartly because he's like, I know that everybody's getting frustrated and they want us just to jump in and arrest him. But we have to be like, he has slips through the cracks
Starting point is 00:38:43 every fucking time that someone has arrested him. We are we have to be like, he has slips through the cracks every fucking time that someone is arrested and we are not gonna be a next in line to let him go free and do this. So he like really bides his time and really gathers as much as he can to make sure that it's like airtight and pays off. I love it. So thank you for that,
Starting point is 00:38:59 cause I made it to, obviously I know he gets apprehensive, but I just, I need to say that. But it's a good payoff, along the way. So, so Hay just, I need to say that. But it's a good payoff along the way. So, so, Hayms, two FBI agents in June, they show up at the department's unannounced. They want to start, you know, they want to see Williams Theresa Williams and they want to like just try to catch everybody off guard. So she's there and they ask her about him and she's lying for him.
Starting point is 00:39:22 She's terrified. She works for his company, Bapabah, and once they're like, yeah him. She's terrified. She works for his company, blah, blah, blah. And once they're like, yeah, like that's cool. You know two women he worked with previously have gone missing and we're pretty sure he murdered them and a baby as well, right? Like, you know that. You know that, right?
Starting point is 00:39:37 Like you're comfortable with that. And like you realize that like you're probably likely next, right? Like he's doing the literal same thing to you. She begins sobbing. Oh. Told them the whole truth. Of course. She told them everything. And then she revealed that after that incident where he like raped her with a gun, he showed back up to Teresa and he tells her he needs her to help him get out of this urban thing. So Irvin Blattner, the
Starting point is 00:40:01 previous partner that was like singing like a canary. Mm-hmm. Apparently he had gotten wind of it. He went to Teresa and he was like, you need to help me. I went to her. So he got wind of that. He knows everything. That's crazy. So he told her, you need to write fake diary entries to discredit Irvin and say he was
Starting point is 00:40:20 trying to kill you. What? So that when they bring him in to try to come against me, it's all going to be discredited because he's a fucking asshole. Wow. So basically, yeah, it's insane. So it would look like, too, on top, it's got like a dual purpose because it's like he's going to make Blattener look stupid on the stand if he ever went against him saying
Starting point is 00:40:41 all this financial stuff because what we have to say is that says you're a fucking crazy person who wants to kill this woman. Right. And on top of that, if he decides to kill Theresa Williams, they're going to think that everything. Now it looks like, if she goes missing, it looks like Blatner was the murderer and killed him. Right.
Starting point is 00:40:59 So you can use it in several ways. So he also had her put all her belongings in a storage place that he had and told his lawyer to find the diary in the event of urban testifying in the future. The fuck? Like had his lawyer ready to go get that diary at a moment's notice. Yeah. So for her doing this diary this fake diary entry Robinson promised He said like you know what I'm gonna give you is like I promise not to kill you awesome
Starting point is 00:41:29 Thank you. That's cool. And also take you to the Bahamas on June 15th I don't want to go to the Bahamas with you because I feel like you know people out there And it's not really gonna be a vacation and he was like well He was like you know what I'll I'll send you to the Bahamas and like you can have a vacation And he's like you can get away and that'll be your fake death. So that if this really does go the way we needed to, your last entry was going to be June 15th and then no one will see you again. He was 100% Bahamas.
Starting point is 00:41:56 No, of course he wasn't. He took all our shit and put in storage so that he could just make her disappear. Wow. So with all of this info, they were like, Oh, she's been terrified. So we can get him on some shit and finally, hopefully get him in jail. So they moved her out of the apartment immediately. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:42:13 And he found out she was gone and went fucking bonkers trying to find her. He hired a private investigator to find her. And the FBI had to move her three times to stay away from him. Well, they built the case against him. And you probably just lived the rest of your life in the future. How do you ever...
Starting point is 00:42:30 Even when he's in jail, you're probably like... You're because he has so many fucking connections. Who knows how many people she meant to. Yeah, exactly. Well, and he eventually found her himself. The FBI is hiding this woman, and he finds her. He found her. And the PI tried to talk to her directly. She came out of somewhere and he tried to like walk up to her and talk to her.
Starting point is 00:42:52 And luckily the FBI moved her out of state to keep her safe. But literally moved her out of the state to keep him away from her. I'd be like, can you move me to like the Bahamas? I'd be like, FBI, can I just live with you? Yeah, right? FBI. Like seriously? Can you bring me to like the Bahamas. I'd be like FBI, can I just live with you? Yeah, right? FBI? Like seriously. Can you bring me to Quantico? I just want to like, can you please? So finally in July, he was charged with violating his probation on several counts and they ordered seven years in jail.
Starting point is 00:43:16 Okay. He was freed on a quarter million dollar bail and had to see Haymes daily. So again, he's getting out of this shit. Then he started his appeals process and he argued that because they moved Teresa out of state, he didn't get his constitutional right to confront his accuser. Because she wasn't gonna come to obviously to his court. In May 1986, Judge David J. Dixon,
Starting point is 00:43:42 wanna make sure his name's out there there agreed that it was unconstitutional and he was free to go. We really got to work on that Constitution. Judge David J. Dixon in 1986 who knows if you're still around, but I hope do you feel good about that because we'll see what happens after this. So he had to go through another whole court debacle right as this one ended though, because now the FBI and Haymes and law enforcement were on his shit and they had dug into those past scams.
Starting point is 00:44:12 So now they can keep trying to throw different things at him to try to see if something's still. They got a ton of shit. So he was accused of stealing over $50,000 through billing scams and this like, it's so far reaching. This is what I'm talking about, like read the book because I'm gonna mention things that you're like,
Starting point is 00:44:29 wait, what, he did what? Excuse me. And it's like, I can't even go, this would be like an 85-part series if I did it. But there was some like bogus condo sale and like Arizona that he was a part of too. And where was he living? I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:44:41 He was between Missouri and Kansas. At this point he was in Kansas. Gotcha. So now we're in Arizona. He had some bogus condo sale in Arizona that he had scammed people out of money. So he was getting in trouble for that now. And I guess he like sold the condo and then kept the money from the sale or something like that of some kind of weird thing. He pretended to be their real estate agent. And so now he was facing six to 19 years in prison. So he probably took all the money that was in escrow. Yeah, literally. I think that's how it worked. So as he's about to finally enter prison because he is going to get prison time. Yeah. In 1987, he killed a woman. In 1987, he killed a woman. So he's on his, like, in between facing these charges, he killed someone.
Starting point is 00:45:29 OK, that'll do it. After he was let go, when that judge, David J. Dixon, decided that he needed his constitutional right to face the accuser that he had violently raped that he killed someone after this. OK. So a woman, 27-year-old Catherine Clampett, was a mother looking to better herself.
Starting point is 00:45:50 She had moved from Wichita Falls, Texas to Kansas City to get a job. She had left a child with her parents to do so. She was trying to get her life together. Right. She was staying at her brother's home. His name was Robert Bales, while she was trying to look for work and get a steady place. Yeah. She was staying at her brother's home. His name was Robert Bales
Starting point is 00:46:05 while she was trying to look for work and like get a steady place. Yeah. So she ended up seeing an ad that Robinson put in the paper. Because he loved to put out the paper. He loved to put out the paper. He was hiring for his company, EqualPlus,
Starting point is 00:46:17 and she was like, oh, hell yes. So she interviewed with Robinson and he hired her on the spot. That's so sad too. Like, please, for a second, can we think about her, like getting ready for this interview, doing her hair all right, making sure she has a nice outfit, trying to impress this guy who is eventually going to murder her.
Starting point is 00:46:35 Yeah, and sitting there and being like, oh, I really hope I get this job. Like, I gotta get everything together. Like, my child's back up here. Calling parents being like, I've gotten an interview today. I think this is it. Yeah, that's the saddest thing. Yep.
Starting point is 00:46:49 So he hired her on the spot and she was psyched. But what happened was like the hours started getting crazy. She began not coming home at night. Her brother was getting worried. And there would be days he wouldn't see her. And she really couldn't give him an explanation when he would ask. And she acted couldn't give him an explanation when you would ask.
Starting point is 00:47:05 And she acted very cagey, she acted very nervous. And he was like, what's going on? Like, what are you involved in? And then she didn't show up back at his place for an entire week. And he called the police and filed a police report. The police interviewed Robinson, but they basically did nothing. They just didn't do anything. They interviewed him and were like, well, no evidence, so bye.
Starting point is 00:47:27 Hey, you have to look for it a little bit. Yeah. I think is usually how that goes. She was never seen alive again. Did they ever find her? We'll get there. So from 1987 to 1993, Robinson was incarcerated on all those different charges.
Starting point is 00:47:43 Sure. Because remember, that happened between him basically going to face those charges and him actually facing it, he just quickly did that. So he was first incarcerated in Kansas from 1987 to 1991. This was on like a ton of fraud convictions, like all kinds of financial shit. And then he was incarcerated in Missouri for more fraud convictions and like all kinds of financial shit. And then he was incarcerated in Missouri for more fraud convictions and parole violations. So they deserve two different sentences
Starting point is 00:48:11 and two different states. I love it. His wife and kids, his kids were now in college in high school at this point. They had to sell the home and move into an apartment. They stuck by him. He just ruined everyone's life. Oh yeah, because she keeps having to move
Starting point is 00:48:25 at a different places. And to move your like three grown children into an apartment, I can imagine. Yeah, like in college and high school. And they stuck by him. And she kept up the facade that he was a great father, a great husband, a pillar of the community. I have a lot of questions.
Starting point is 00:48:40 Let me tell you, Nancy does that for a long time. So he was a model prisoner at Hutchinson Correctional Facility, but he had a few small strokes while he was there. Oh. Interestingly enough, apparently there was no verbal or cognitive issues after them that were noticeable. They couldn't find anything like that really changed much. Okay. In fact, two really respected psychiatrists in the area. I think their names are George M. Penn, he are Dr. George M. Penn.
Starting point is 00:49:10 And he was from the super, he was the supervising psychologist, sorry, at the Kansas Department of Corrections. And then the director of medical services, Kai Hong, which is also a doctor, they said, quote, he was a model inmate who has best has made the best of his incarceration. He is a nonviolent person and does not present a threat to society.
Starting point is 00:49:34 He is a devoted family man who has taught his children a strong value system. His verbal skills were, skills were measured in the high average range, performance skills in a very superior range. So is he basically like very, he's very intelligent, very conning, very manipulative, very able to, he's manipulating two of the most respected doctors in the area. Wow. Yeah. Is he ever like formally diagnosed with anything?
Starting point is 00:50:02 No. And he was never diagnosed with anything. Because here's the thing, like, he's full, I mean, he's definitely not mentally ill in the sense of not understanding his actions. What's going on? What's right from wrong or anything? He's very calculated.
Starting point is 00:50:17 Oh, yeah. Very calculated. And it takes superior thinking and planning to do what he's done for so many years too. Like, I mean decades. He's doing this. He seems like he's definitely a philous, genius range, I would say. And to be doing what he was doing, it takes a lot of skills.
Starting point is 00:50:36 Unfortunately. Which really sucks that he didn't use them for something awesome. He could have been a great philanthropist if he had actually put, actually, like if he was not an evil person, then I'd actually follow humans. Taken these thoughts he had of like, actually helping mothers and children and like carrying that out. Carried it out instead of just doing what he did.
Starting point is 00:50:54 If he was a different person, he would have been great. Like a different person with the same kind of skills. Sure. And somebody who would use them differently, you know, like it's just sucks. If he was anybody else, it would have been awesome. If he was literally a totally different person, then he would be great.
Starting point is 00:51:10 Yeah. He'd be it. He'd be really getting person of the year and like man of the year instead of just making himself person of the year. Dude, I literally forgot that he made a person of the year. He made his own plaque. He made his own fucking press announcement.
Starting point is 00:51:23 He fooled the mayor. I gotta go. Yeah, he's a lot. Imagine fool own fucking press announcement. He fooled the mayor. I gotta go. Yeah, he's a lot. Imagine fooling the mayor. Imagine fooling the mayor. Full jam mayor. Full jam mayor. And mayor.
Starting point is 00:51:31 He mayor. Fold ya. Psych. Um, so psych. That was good. So at this time, oh, I'm sorry. I thought that that was your coffee that you just threw across the room. No, I did the, I did old faithful and I ripped my charger out of the wall.
Starting point is 00:51:47 These plugs. So Nancy actually ended up losing the apartment and moved the family into a trailer on a farm. Nancy, it's time to go. Oh, Nancy's nowhere near go in Truster. You gotta get out of here. So when Perole came up, they wrote, he was, quote, a docile nonviolent individual who does not pose a threat to society. It is unlikely that further incarceration will be of any benefit to either Mr.
Starting point is 00:52:12 Robinson or society. I beg to defile. Imagine being the human being who had to fucking write that down. Imagine. And then imagine later, oh, incarceration will not be of any benefit to either Mr. Robinson or society. Little did you know. I have about five barrels that are going to disagree with you. Ah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:37 So that's how much he was able to fool literally everybody around him. It's bananas. It's truly bananas. He was paroled in January 1991. Wow. Immediately he was transferred to Missouri and jailed there. Love it.
Starting point is 00:52:52 Because he was like, whoa, I'm done. Nope, not done. Now you got to do it in Missouri. Everybody was like psych, psych. And he was jailed there at Western Missouri Correctional Facility. He had tried to get out of it by arguing that he was frail and sick. He had strokes. Guys, come on. He should be released immediately,
Starting point is 00:53:12 but this judge luckily was like, no bitch, you're fine. Go to prison. So there was a doctor in this prison obviously as there are in most prisons and his name was Dr. William Bonner. and obviously as there are in most prisons. And his name was Dr. William Bonner. He didn't find Robinson to be sick at all. He was like, you look fine to me. You're somewhat plump. Like you seem like you're good. Like because he was literally like, I'm frail,
Starting point is 00:53:35 I'm dying, I'm starving to death, but when they're like, you look fine. And you look like Santa. Like it's cool. You look like Santa. But he also found him to be an asshole. He was like, I really don't like this guy. I'm glad finally someone.
Starting point is 00:53:50 And Dr. Bonner's wife, 49-year-old Beverly Bonner, actually worked at the same prison as the prison librarian. Squad goals. Not really. So Robinson and her, you're like too soon. I'm like too soon. It sounds like it, but no. So Robinson and Beverly actually figured out that they had worked together at mobile, or a mobile oil like 20 years before this. They bought to fall in love.
Starting point is 00:54:15 And so they immediately bonded. She fell for his charm, his charisma. Was it the prison they started a Roman take affair? What? She is married to the prison doctor, Dr. William Bonner. She works at the prison. She works at the prison of the library with her prison husband, Dr. William Bonner, and she is starting an affair with John Robinson, inmate number. Yeah. Girl.a. Yeah. Girl. So yeah. Your husband is a doctor. I don't understand this. I am confusion.
Starting point is 00:54:49 Unfortunately, this has a very bad ending too. He was released from there in 1993. And by 1994, she had divorced Dr. Bonner and moved to Kansas City to be with Robin. No, no, no, go home. Who was still married to his wife and not planning to leave her. Do you know if she knew that he was married or was he fooling her? Oh, I think he was fooling her that he was going to leave her. So, you know, but together they restarted
Starting point is 00:55:15 together a company. She is on the Articles of Incorporation for the HydroGrow Company. Wow. That was a very, I didn't see. Wow. Yeah. That was his marriage. I didn't see. He's married. And this woman is on the articles of incorporation for his company HydroGrow. Like, it's really messed up that he's married, but I'm still at the whole thing where they met
Starting point is 00:55:34 when he was an inmate. Oh, there's so much to it. I'm still there. They were both married. Yeah. Like, now she's listed as the president of HydroGrow. And it's also listing him as James Turner because he was a convicted felon. He couldn't use his real name.
Starting point is 00:55:50 He also started having her signed blank pieces of paper. That she did without question. Suddenly her family and friends start getting letters signed by her that were saying she was traveling overseas in Europe for business and how happy she was. They all had foreign postmarks. What? But the forwarding addresses were a mailbox in a commercial mail center that was called the mail room and it was in Kansas. What? It was in like a shopping center.
Starting point is 00:56:20 That's crazy. Robinson had rented this mail room, this like mail space. Sure. This one like mailbox I think. center. That's crazy. Robinson had rented this mail room, this like mail space, this one like mailbox, I think, in Beverly's name and he was using this box to take the $1,000 divorce settlement checks that Dr. Bonner was sending monthly. And it turns out he had used a service that would create foreign postmarks for him. Yes. So this needs to be a visual medium. She needs to be.
Starting point is 00:56:47 Because I literally just think about on my hands and just like, leave her mind silently. What? I just became a mind. So her friends and family are getting letters that are like, hey, fam, I'm in Europe. We're having a great time.
Starting point is 00:57:00 Oh my goodness. And they're like, oh, look at these foreign postmarks. Yeah, they're coming from overseas. He bought those to use and had her sign shits so that he could make it look like they were coming from overseas and had her signature on them because he was having to sign blank places of tape air. Wait, no, he didn't even buy them, he made them.
Starting point is 00:57:16 No, he used a service. That's created foreign postmarks for him. I thought you said he created this. No, he, like, he used a service that created foreign postmarks for him. I thought you said he created this. No, he, like, he, but still use the service that created for in postmarks for him. What? Yeah. But he also rented a storage unit and said it was for his
Starting point is 00:57:34 sister Beverly. No. He told workers there that his sister was a broad for work and was having so much fucking fun in Australia that she was just going to stay there and never return. I am so happy. And he pulled up one day in Beverly's car and placed a huge metal barrel in the unit and then just left.
Starting point is 00:57:52 No one looked into it. Um, what? She was never heard from again after 1994 when she divorced her husband and he came the president of HydroGrow. Do we have a statement from her husband? We don't. That poor man. This is that poor woman.
Starting point is 00:58:08 But we find everyone. But we find everyone. So, oh, not Beverly. Oh my bananas. Yeah. So he struck again with a 45 year old mother and her 15 year old daughter
Starting point is 00:58:23 who was disabled and in a wheelchair. No. Sheila Faith was 45 years old. It was 45 years old. Her daughter Debbie was 15 year old, 15 years old and confined to a wheelchair. She had been diagnosed with cerebral palsy in Spina Bifida as a child.
Starting point is 00:58:40 No. They lived in Fullerton, California. Debbie was known to be Debbie's the daughter. Debbie was known to be hilarious, really upbeat. Her doctors were sure that she would walk some day, purely because of her attitude. Wow. And she was determined to. She wanted to eventually become a gym teacher and was a badass, strong girl. You're going to ruin me. And her mother took really good care of her. And her father, John Faith, had been an amazing father until he passed away from cancer in 1991. So Sheila was left to try to make ends meet. She was dealing with a lot of medical expenses for Debbie. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:59:17 So she was trying to find a partner to be with because this is a lot to deal with alone. And she just needed help her little family. So she went to the internet because this is the 90s. It's the beginning of all this. And she would meet guys on there, but now that we're really working out, then she met this guy online called John Robinson from Kansas City. So he said he had tons of land.
Starting point is 00:59:40 He had horses. He was a farmer. He wanted Debbie to be able to ride one. And Debbie was like, I'm gonna ride a horse someday, like that's my thing. He also said he would get Debbie into a special and very expensive school out here. He was gonna take care of them. They became very, very close. They talked on the phone. Eventually, he said they should move out with him and start their lives together.
Starting point is 01:00:04 Uh-huh. Again, this is John Fuckin-Robinson. So in 1994, the year that Beverly divorced her husband became president of HydroGro and then went fucking missing. The same year. They decided to go to Kansas to live with him. So he had basically just killed. Literally just had done all of that. Had got that year.
Starting point is 01:00:24 He got her to divorce her husband, her prison doctor husband, become president of HydroGrow, and then he killed her. And then he somehow managed to convince these people to come to Kansas. So apparently Sheila left everything behind when she went and told her friends to just watch her male and grab it for her just in case this didn't work out because she was trying to be like kind of like I don't know. There was a thousand dollar disability check that came monthly for Debbie like a little over a thousand dollars and she wanted them to keep track of those. So she was like just watch my male. Weirdly no male arrived after they left and
Starting point is 01:01:00 they discovered it was all being sent to the mail room in Kansas. You know, the place Beverly Bonner's checks from her ex-husband were being sent and cashed from. So he must have convinced her to have her mail forwarded. That mailbox was now being registered to James Turner. And he had picked up, and cashed 152 of Sheila and Debbie's checks.
Starting point is 01:01:26 So $152,000. Over $80,000 actually. Because I think it was like a little stuff. But letters started going out to family and friends of Sheila's with her signature, but they were typed. Because they're always typed, but they have the signature at the bottom. And they all said the same shit the others said. We're doing great. We're having an awesome time.
Starting point is 01:01:46 This is my new life, everything's wonderful. Now that he had found the internet and saw that it was working for him, he was becoming a regular in the BDSM chat rooms and shit. He was like very active in those. He did this while Nancy was working her ass off every day at work. Right, and like does he have a job job?
Starting point is 01:02:05 Yeah. So, yeah, and remember, this is, so he's using the internet to like lure these women. Like, he lured Sheila over there, she better. Now, at this moment, everyone thinks that Sheila is doing fine. Yeah. Nobody knows what's going on with Sheila and Debbie. So far, just her friends are getting stuff,
Starting point is 01:02:24 her family's getting stuff, it seems like everything's fine. So we're Debbie? Mm-hmm. So far, just her friends are getting stuff, her family's getting stuff. It seems like everything's fine, so we're gonna, that's that. Yeah. But people end up not seeing them again. Right. Now, he's bad. So again, during the day, he's on the computer, he's in these chat rooms, he's luring more women, he's getting into these weird relationships.
Starting point is 01:02:41 He used the name Jim Turner, James Turner, and Slave Master. He received and sent a ton of nude photos for various online ladies. He would dress up as a farmer in the picture that he would send people. He got a ton of women to leave other states and come to Kansas City, tons of women, to be his sex slaves, literally.
Starting point is 01:03:01 He was rolling in submissives for a while, like they were a constant stream. Then in 1999, he met Isabella. Isabella, Luwica is how you say it. And this was in an online BDSM chatroom. Isabella was born in Poland on April 11, 1978. She moved to the United States with her scientist parents when she was like 14 turning 15 and they'd settled in West Lafayette, Indiana. Now she was a brilliant artist and in 1996 she had enrolled at Purdue University to study fine arts. She had also done like murals for her high school like she was this amazing artist. Very talented. She was known to be very shy and kept to herself, but she was also very smart and just out of this world creative.
Starting point is 01:03:50 And she dressed really artistically. She favored a nice mix of Bohemian and Goff. Girl mixed it together. She would wear long black velvet dresses. She had lots of piercings and she would dye her hair black. And like, she just like wet all over her hair. She's cool as well. She was art on the outside as well.
Starting point is 01:04:09 I love it. Now Isabella is a really like sweet thing to say. She was art on the outside. She was really cute. Art on the inside, out, out on the outside. Now Isabella was really into BDSM and like also into like, you know, the darker shit like vampires and death and stuff. Like she was interested in that stuff. She was more of a, like I feel it.
Starting point is 01:04:27 And you know, just things that are interesting and different. She was into like the learning about the occult and to like witchcraft and all that. Like she was into cool stuff. So she was looking for people with similar interests and sometimes it can feel like that's hard when you're into weird shit. So she was drawn to the internet because it's the 90s. And you know, it's still like in its stages where everybody's just like getting like really into it.
Starting point is 01:04:48 And it's, you know, and I think these people like the ability to be anonymous and to be able to like live in the fan if you ever want to be. You want to be. The VDSM stuff is not always accepted in normal society or like normal, quote, air bunnies, air bunnies. But so this is a place where you can go in a chat room, you can do what you want to do. So these people, it was like an escape for a lot of them.
Starting point is 01:05:12 Now chat rooms were fucking huge when the internet exploded. Oh yeah, you know all about that, grandma. Like people, hell yeah, buffy the vampire chat rooms, hell yes. But people could finally connect with people all over the world who were into same niche interests that you were in. Okay, so I'm, because if I'm sure you all remember, like how many different chat rooms there were for any kind of subject you could ever think of.
Starting point is 01:05:36 Yeah, I remember. And you could even make one, like, you know, I mean, so if you were into that stuff, you could make one yourself. People would show up and then you got a friend group, you know, if you were feeling lonely. So in 1997, I'm alive. I'm alive. So in 1997, she happened to meet a man online. This was in a BDSM chat room,
Starting point is 01:05:58 and she felt like she clicked with him on a deeper level. By chance, was his name James or John? Perhaps. I think I just said, Jim's. You did. But that's cool. Maybe his name was Jim's. So they spoke a lot over the web and he told her he was an international bookage and he wanted her to be an illustrator for some of his books and blah, blah, blah. And after a while of connecting, he told her, you know, you should move to Kansas City with me. I could give you a job as a secretary at my firm. Like, you could start a new life. Like, my name is Indiana, that's dumb.
Starting point is 01:06:30 They don't understand you there. And that same year, she just decided, you know what? I'm gonna move to Kansas. And I'm gonna start my new life. And she told her friends this literally out of the blue. And they were like, well, what? But no one was happy. Or trusting of this arrangement. Her friends were like, well, what? But no one was happy or trusting of this arrangement.
Starting point is 01:06:46 Her friends were not happy. Her parents were really upset. But they were like, what can we do? This is what she wants to do. So she was emailing her parents once she moved there. But it was kind of few and far between. So they were like, we don't want to push her, but we need to know what's going on.
Starting point is 01:07:02 So she did tell them she was living at an address on Metcalf Avenue in Kansas. What they didn't know was that she and John Robinson had filed for a marriage license together. Mm-hmm. I just blanked a lot of times. Yep. And she was 19 years old at this point.
Starting point is 01:07:19 What's he like, somebody ate at this point? He was in his 50s at this point. Dang. So, yeah, they they filed for a let marriage license together. He's also married that whole thing. Yeah. So he must have done this under another name. He did it under the name John Anthony Robinson, which is not his now. We're getting into Tony's. Yeah, you know, so they didn't actually get married legally, but the should it was filed. Like, okay, they didn't actually go through legally, but it was filed.
Starting point is 01:07:45 They didn't actually go through with a wedding or anything like that. But legally they were married. But no, they weren't legally married yet. Like they filed for the license. They didn't go through the whole shebang. But yeah, so it's just like a weird thing. I think he did it to make her think that they were married. Right.
Starting point is 01:08:02 That's what I always thought if you filed a certificate, then I thought you were married. Yeah, like they filed for the license. Right. And then they never actually went through the wedding or marriage. Mm-hmm. Then her parents didn't hear from her for like two months.
Starting point is 01:08:15 So, and they couldn't get a hold of her. So they drove out to look for. Oh. This is when they found out that the Metcalfa dress that she said they were living at was a mailbox and not an apartment or house. The mailbox service couldn't give them another address because it's illegal so they left
Starting point is 01:08:32 and they had to go back to Indiana and couldn't find her. I can't even imagine what they were thinking. Suddenly, they get some emails again from her, but they're like off. Something does not need her tone. And especially her father was like, this is not her. So he decides to test this. And he asks her to speak to him only in Polish. Smart.
Starting point is 01:08:51 She does this. She responds in Polish, but it's all short sentences. Like, I'm fine and I'm doing OK. Right. And he's not really convinced. And she did kind of let out a few personal details, but as we know, he gets personal details from these women so that he can fuck with their family and friends.
Starting point is 01:09:08 Exactly. Now in 1998, she was still around. She enrolled in Johnson County Community College, but she did so under the name Isabella Luica Robinson. Mm-hmm. She went to classes a couple of times, and witnesses said she was wearing a ruby engagement ring and showed it off.
Starting point is 01:09:26 That's so sad. She told people she was married to and are an older man. She was very happy. She seemed like she was psyched. Yeah. At this time, she and Robinson had definitely entered into the master slave relationship. So he would basically pay for things
Starting point is 01:09:43 that she needed, pay for her rent, and all that. And in return, she had to be completely submissive in every single way. She had to own every part of her. She actually signed a slave contract that had 115 items on it. Literally gave him complete control of her, including over her bank accounts. But was that what she was into? Like, does it feel like she was okay with that? She was definitely into like BDSM. She's into being submissive,
Starting point is 01:10:14 but this just went further. Okay. You went further. Like you had control of her bank accounts. Yeah, that's far reaching out of the whole thing. And again, he's not putting, he's not bringing these girls to Kansas and being like, what do you want? No, what do you want out of these relationships?
Starting point is 01:10:31 You know what I mean? Like if he was doing that and that they wanted to complete control, that's a totally different thing. Yeah, totally different things. That's their business. But he's taking, immediately taking nude photos of them, immediately making them give all their information over to him so that he has all the power and control and then he goes this is what I want. Right. Out of the relationship and you just have to deal with it. Right. So people saw them around town
Starting point is 01:10:54 often and he would refer to her differently all the time. Sometimes he would say it's his wife, sometimes he would call her, hey no that's not Nancy. Yeah, sometimes he would call her his girlfriend, sometimes his daughter, sometimes his daughter's friend, sometimes his niece, like weird as fuck. Yuck, yuck, yuck. So in 1999, he rented another apartment and had her live in it alone. And he told the building manager that Isabella
Starting point is 01:11:17 was his adopted daughter that he had rescued from abusive parents. Oh, yeah, for sure. Now Isabella wasn't working obviously because she just had to be there for him all the time. So she's just kind of like hanging out a lot and she started like meeting people online. She was meeting people around town. She was making like friends because she was a cool person I think. So her friends were into like vampire role-playing games and she met this group that
Starting point is 01:11:43 would actually like live-action role-play in the woods as like vampires and shit, and she would join in. Yeah, didn't you pretend to be Buffy all the time? Hell yeah, like RPGs, that was the chat room. What was it? Role-playing games. Oh, okay. Ash.
Starting point is 01:12:00 We in chat rooms with like our friend, like we would like have like chat rooms that are like group messages on AI. Yeah, see, no. I've never been in an actual chat room. But I've always centered around either Buffy the Vampire Slayer or horror movies. I don't even know how you would find them. Because this was on AIM.
Starting point is 01:12:16 Yeah, well, it was in AOL. AOL chat rooms. Yeah, I never did that. No, you were past that yeah era. That's happening It's probably a good thing for me because I I would have fallen victim to some shit You you definitely would I take that I hope not like my shit This shit was all like innocent fun. Oh, yeah, I think you would have I would have fallen to a predator I think probably would have been really scary some really glad you didn't have that as well and now thinking about it
Starting point is 01:12:44 but Isabel was really into into this role-playing stuff. And I guess this was literally in the woods. It's like, because larping is a thing. Like that is full on Renaissance fares are larping. Yeah, I've never seen true life. Like true life, I larp or whatever it is. But that's a thing. And I'm like, get it.
Starting point is 01:13:04 It's fun. It looks fun. And it's like, get it. It's fun. It looks fun. And it's like, wow, to be able to let your inhibitions in any sense of, you know, you just let it go, and just do something that you enjoy. It's fucking cool. That's awesome for you.
Starting point is 01:13:18 But she was into it. So she was having a good time. She was meeting people she liked. She was doing what you wanted to do. I'm here for you. And he moved her again into a different place, like a duplex situation. Because he was constantly having to move these girls so that people didn't get too much of an eye on them. I also wonder what she thought about the fact that he wasn't living with her. Oh, that was something that did come up. So she would tell people, you know, people are weird about our age difference and like,
Starting point is 01:13:47 how we met and stuff and that we're in like a BDSM relationship. So like, we live separately because like, it's in society doesn't think that it's appropriate for us. So we have a relationship and it's ours and like everybody knows that. I feel like he told her to say, oh no, he definitely told you to say that. Yeah. That doesn't really make a lot of sense. No, of course, he's none of this does. But so he kept her in this duplex and he told that, and he basically told the property
Starting point is 01:14:13 manager at this new duplex that he was going to be having a ton of women there from all over the worlds because he was training them to help with his international publishing business. They were all going to be like secretaries and other admins. But this property manager was like, I only saw Isabella there. Like he just lied for no reason. So, out of nowhere, she suddenly tells her parents,
Starting point is 01:14:36 we're not speaking in Polish anymore together. And she said, I married an American. My husband is American, I am speaking English because I will only speak my husband's language. Uh-huh. And they were like, she wouldn't have said that. No, that's not you. They're like, that's weird.
Starting point is 01:14:52 So that same year Isabella told people she was leaving Kansas, people around town. Like, she used to frequent like this bookstore that she became friends with like the seller and stuff. Yeah. It was like, cool, weird, occult books and stuff, which I was like, that sounds right. I wanna go there. And she told them like, I'm gonna be leaving Kansas. And they were like, what?
Starting point is 01:15:09 So, but her parents got emails saying she was traveling already with her husband. Right. Now, she was being short and cold with them. And her parents knew that wasn't like her. But she would respond to the emails with again, a little bit of personal information, just to kind of quell their fears a little bit.
Starting point is 01:15:27 And she kept telling them she wasn't going to let that. She was like, I, they kept being like, what is your husband's name? Like she wouldn't give them his name. Oh, I didn't know that. And she kept saying, I'm not going to give you his name. You don't need it. No, you do. And basically, she was telling them, I'm pretty ready to like leave you guys behind.
Starting point is 01:15:43 Like I'm pretty ready to like start my life without you guys. Okay. They were like, what the fuck is going on? But in 2000, no one was seeing Isabella around anymore, not around town, not with Robinson. Now and they probably just assumed that she left Kansas. Well, here's the thing though, like it was more noticeable than the other ones because he had paraded around town. He paraded around a lot of places.
Starting point is 01:16:05 He broke the lease early on the duplex, and when people asked, he said that she was caught smoking weed and deported back to Czechoslovakia. Yeah, I don't know about that. She was never seen alive again. Now, he ended up, she came to Kansas with a lot of shit, like all her possessions. She had a lot of paintings that she had done,
Starting point is 01:16:28 like big paintings. There was one in particular that was like big and orange. I guess it was like massive Kansas canvas. She had like bed sheets. She had like kitchen stuff. She had all kinds of shit that she had. Right. He ended up giving all of those possessions,
Starting point is 01:16:44 like the paintings and shit, which he, by the way, painted his own name over her name on those paintings. Are you fucking kidding me? I don't know why that just made me so angry. That's so beyond. That is, like, that's so beyond. That makes me so mad. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:00 He was actually giving her possessions to another woman that he was having a full-blown like years long affair with. While all this is going on, he was maintaining relationships, air bunnies, air bunnies with like 600 good jelly and women. Dozens and dozens of women all over the state while maintaining a relationship with his wife and children. Children and eventually grandchildren And trade children.
Starting point is 01:17:25 All while doing this. This girl Barbara, this woman was like, she was around for 30 plus years as his mistress. What? Yeah. And she was given all of Isabella's possessions, including the paintings with Johns. Imagine finding that out later. Oh yeah. And the fact that he destroyed her finding that out later. Oh yeah. And the fact that he destroyed her paintings
Starting point is 01:17:47 by putting his dumbest name on them. Yeah. And again, he was having a full blown thing with this woman Barbara and was keeping her in an apartment too for this whole time. Nancy found out about this one. She knew about, I was gonna say. She knew about them, but this one for some reason.
Starting point is 01:18:04 I think it was because Barbara had worked for them at one point So I think it like really worked her and like you said it was like 30 plus years and this one was just like Maintaining so she got she was really pissed and she actually sent her a letter at one point being like stay away for my husband And I guess she laid out like we have children together like you need to go away And at one point He and Nancy were at a grocery store together. They walked right by Barbara and Barbara said that he pretended he didn't even know or see her and just walked right by her. And she kept staying with him after
Starting point is 01:18:36 that. Yeah. Now on to his next victim. His next victim was Susette Trouten from Monroe, Michigan. She was 28 years old. She was aspiring to be a nurse at the time. She battled some depression when she was younger and had like, she had gone through like weight issues and like body dysmorphia. And at actually at some point when she was younger, she had shot herself in the stomach
Starting point is 01:19:04 to try to enter life. Oh, wow. But it failed and she was okay. It actually missed anything of significance. And she took it as a sign to live your life, how you want to live it, and be open, be curious, be a good person. So she decided to do that. And she was really curious. She always wanted to do experiences. She was going to take her second chance at life. Yeah. She had worked as a manager
Starting point is 01:19:30 in a restaurant while she tried to make it through nursing school. And also worked as a home health aide to the elderly. Oh my goodness. She's amazing. She had two pecanese dogs named Pecan Harry. Cute. And she was obsessed with them. She never went anywhere without them. They came with her everywhere. They're everywhere. They really are. And during this time she had become interested in BDSM and entered a lot of chat rooms because again, this is the time. She met a lot of people online. She had a lot of friendship. She had some like relationships online. In 1999, she met Robinson in a BDSM chat room. He told her about his role as a slave master.
Starting point is 01:20:06 He said he was part of the International Council of Masters that like really scary, scary thing where they were literally like raping women. And how he had a ton of experience being a dumb, like she was into it. So they became closer and closer and he eventually said that, you know, my elderly father is really sick. And I'm looking for a nurse that can like, kind of be a live nurse, like help us out with him. And meanwhile, his father had been dead for a decade at this point.
Starting point is 01:20:36 So he was like, hey, can I pay you to fly out and like pay you to be my father's nurse? Like, we'll hire you and she was like, oh my God, this is like my chance to step into this role. I wanna, like, will hire you. And she was like, oh my God, this is like my chance to step into this role. I want to do this, so I work. So he said he would pair like 60,000 plus salary a year, benefits, all that.
Starting point is 01:20:54 And he was also on the side. He was like, I'll teach you about this like master slave relationship thing. And she was interested in it, so she was like, sure. Yeah. So he also had told her he was going to make sure her pat, he was like, you know what, make sure your passport is up to date because I'm going to jet set you
Starting point is 01:21:11 all over the world. And he was like, and also, you know, I said, you can also work at my company. And so we can travel for business. It can all be like written off. So like, make sure your passport is ready. So she was like sucked. Of course.
Starting point is 01:21:24 Her friends were really skeptical of this and wanted her to not do this. They were like no. But she decided she was interested and she was like, you know what, I'll meet him first. I'm not just gonna like run out there and live there. Smart. So in fall of 1999, she had like a trip out there.
Starting point is 01:21:39 She met him, they hung out, he winded and dined her. She thought he was great. He was awesome. Nothing bad happened. She went back again that same year for another trip, same thing. They had a blast. She felt like she could trust him.
Starting point is 01:21:53 This is what's really scary. Because the amount of people that like meet people online and do end up forming lasting connections. I mean, marriages, relationships for life, like partner for life. Friendships for life. You have a friend that you met on Couple of friends that we like met in the a well days like that was who you're so friends We're still friends like shout out to Kelsey and you know shout out to Charlie shout out to Marcus
Starting point is 01:22:20 Allina just goes on like a 25 minute like shout out to to her. These are all people I like still talk to. And it's like, we still are friendly. And, but we, but like, in that happens, like that, that's the good part of it. Right. But then there's this whole other side of it. I see this guy meeting this girl twice, having full blown trips with her and getting her to trust. And think that this was a great thing.
Starting point is 01:22:43 So she decides, I'm'm gonna go work for him. Okay. This is great. So he said, cool. You know, bring your dogs with you because I know they make you feel more comfortable. Like they can live where I'm gonna put you up. I'm gonna put you in apartments.
Starting point is 01:22:55 It's totally fine for them to be there. I'm gonna lease you a vehicle. It's gonna be great. Wow. Wow. So she arrived and there was no car for her and he put her up in a motel room. And he didn't have her work with any ailing father
Starting point is 01:23:09 and kept coming up with excuses for why she wasn't starting to work with the ailing father. And he would just show up at the motel, demand to have really scary sex with her and take nude photos of her and then just leave. This poor woman. So she's confused as fuck. She's like freaking out. And she even ended up now the motel is telling her those dogs can't be here.
Starting point is 01:23:30 So she had to put her dogs in a kennel because the motel wouldn't let them at the place. She probably broke her heart. Then he says to her finally out of nowhere, he says we're going on our first business trip to California tomorrow. No, we're not. And he had her signed 30 blank pieces of paper. Why? And it dressed 40 envelopes to friends and family
Starting point is 01:23:49 because he said after California, we're going to go jet setting in Europe. And he said, you're going to be so busy that you're not going to have time to write letters or anything like that or keep up correspondence. So we're going to do it now. No. And get it out of the way.
Starting point is 01:24:02 No. And he's so convincing that everybody's like, yeah, you're right. We're going to be so busy. Why not just get this done now? No. Like fun. February 30th, 2000, she talked to her mom, Carol, and told her she was leaving for California and then you're up the next day.
Starting point is 01:24:17 So that next day, Robinson is seen on camera checking her dogs out of the kennel, paying the bill for her hotel room, and then dropping off some of her things at a storage unit. Then he just left the dogs outside of somewhere and let them loose. They were found. Oh, thank goodness. And they were adopted to lovely homes, so that's good. Oh. But March 3rd, he looked through Suzette's computer and gathered information about her friends and family, and then he used it to pretend that he was her talking to them. Dude, this guy is a piece of fucking shit.
Starting point is 01:24:51 He also sent letters to Carol's mother, and she immediately knew it was not her daughter. Because it's like, dude, these people know their family. Like, yeah, of course. I know you don't have actual connections with anybody, but other people do. But other people do. And I know your family doesn't really know you don't have actual connections with anybody, but other people do. But other people do.
Starting point is 01:25:06 And I know your family doesn't really know you because they have a totally different view of who you are, but like these women actually have real connections. Unfortunately, Suzan was never found alive again. And that is where we're going to end part two. Girl, but don't worry because we're just going to do part three right after. Girl, I need a stretch break. I need a mental break. It's gonna get real gnarly. What do you mean? It's gonna get it? Don't worry. It's gonna get even gnarly. How? I can't tell you We can't do too much for part three
Starting point is 01:25:37 All right guys. We love you. We hope you keep listening We don't I was gonna do it for you. I don't keep it But that's where you ever sign any Blake piece of paper ever again in your whole entire life listening. We all do. I was gonna do it for you. I know. Keep it. Weird. But not everything you ever signed any blank piece of paper ever again in your whole entire life, I feel like I'm gonna find blank paper, I'm gonna find blank pieces of paper very triggering in the following days, but I just don't sign them. I love you. Love you guys.
Starting point is 01:25:57 Blink, blink, blub, blub, blub, blub, blub, blub, blub, blub, blub, blub. Thank you. Hey, Prime Members! You can listen to Morvid, Early, and Add Free on Amazon Music. Download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen ad-free with Wondery Plus and Apple podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondery.com slash survey.

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