Morbid - Episode 263: The Murder of Mackenzie Cowell
Episode Date: September 15, 2021Mackenzie Cowell was a beautiful 17 year old girl with her entire life ahead of her. She was going to high school, on the dance team, modelling and taking classes at the Wenatchee Academy of ...Hair design. Mackenzie’s life was cut short and in such a brutal manner that it left Wenatchee stunned. Mackenzie's body was found stabbed, strangled, and mutilated. The case takes so many twists and turns with drug informants, potential cases of mistaken identity and eventually a conviction that left some wondering if the right person was behind bars. Gabby Petito GoFundMe <~~This will aid in search efforts to find her! Washington Post article Ash mentioned in the episode As always, thank you to our sponsors: Stamps.com: with promo code, MORBID, you get a special offer that includes a 4-week trial PLUS free postage and a digital scale. DailyHarvest: Go to DAILYHARVEST.com/morbid to get up to forty dollars off your first box! Upstart: Find out how Upstart can lower your monthly payments today when you go to UPSTART.com/MORBID BetterHelp: Special offer for Morbid listeners: get 10% off your first month at betterhelp.com/Morbid CareOf: For 50% off your first Care/of order, go to TakeCareOf.com and enter code morbid50 See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, Prime members, you can listen to morbid, early, and ad-free on Amazon music.
Download the app today.
You're listening to a morbid network podcast.
Whether you're running errands on your daily commute, or even at home, you can enjoy all
your audio entertainment in one app, the Audible app.
As an Audible member, you can choose one title a month to keep from the entire catalog.
This includes the latest bestsellers and new releases.
Plus get full access to a growing selection of included audiobooks, audible originals,
and more.
If you've been wanting to form good habits, break bad ones, and improve motivation, atomic
habits written and narrated by James Clear is a great lesson.
It'll reshape your mindset on progress and success by helping you develop strategies
to transform your habits.
New members can try audible free for 30 days.
Visit audible.com slash wundery pod or text wundery pod to 500-500 to try audible for free
for 30 days.
That's W-O-N-D-E-R-Y-P-O-D.
Audible.com slash wundery pod or text wundery pod to 500-500 to try audible for free for
30 days.
You can host the best backyard barbecue. When you find a professional on Angie to make your backyard the best around.
Connect with skilled professionals to get all your home projects done well.
Inside to outside, repairs to renovations.
Get started on the Angie app or visit Angie.com today.
You can do this when you Angie that.
Hey weirdos, I'm Alina.
I'm Ash.
And this is morbid and it's a really sad, very scary beginning to this morbid because one of our own is missing.
Yeah.
I think Ash has most of the information in front of you, right?
I do, yeah. So our listener, Gabi Petito, is missing. And she was last seen on August 25th in Grand Teton, Wyoming.
She was headed for Yellowstone National Park
and she was traveling in a white 2012 Ford Transit van
with her fiance.
They were headed north and around the time that she disappeared.
But she apparently is no longer traveling in the van.
Her fiance drove the van back home to Florida without her
and has not been available for questioning
and is not cooperating with the police.
And he just showed up to Florida without her.
Yeah.
And apparently, like Asge said, police can't talk to him.
Like the parents aren't letting him speak to the police.
He's not cooperating.
I'm concerned.
I'm concerned.
It's happening here. Obviously we don't know what's going on, but like not cooperating. I'm concerned. I'm concerned.
What's happening here?
Obviously, we don't know what's going on, but like, there's a lot of weird things.
And also, we've got to find Gabby.
Like, this is like, this is making me crazy.
I mean, her parents have been pleading with media, social media, any way that they can
share all this information.
Any outlet.
We've shared it on our Twitter and our Instagram
on our personal Twitter's.
Anytime, if you guys can see it on our social media
and you wanna share it, please do.
Make it like, it's shareable wherever.
Yeah, wherever you can do it.
Because we really, really wanna help them find Gabby
because this is like killing me.
If you, you know, her Instagram page is just like full of life.
It is.
She's so beautiful.
She seemed like such like a sweet,
just like free spirited.
Yeah, she and her boyfriend,
or excuse me, fiance,
were traveling around the world,
living like a nomadic lifestyle.
They were just visiting different parks.
And she was documenting all of this.
I believe on a YouTube channel that they shared together.
And then all of a sudden, it was just like,
no one had heard from her.
Suddenly, he shows back up to Florida without her.
Has no explanation for where she is.
And she had been checking in with her mom
throughout the trip, her father, her cousins.
I believe they said that her niece,
she was keeping contact with.
And her father said she always checked in.
She is not the type to go long periods of time
without speaking to them.
They are sure that something is wrong here.
Yeah.
And it's like breaking my heart.
So it's like killing me.
Also, all of her information,
she is 22 years old.
She has blonde hair, blue eyes.
She is approximately 55. And I read in one source, like blonde hair, blue eyes. She is approximately five five. And I read
in one source, like around 100, 110 pounds, she has let it be tattooed on her right arm
and a tattoo of a triangle with flowers on her left arm. And anybody with information
about the whereabouts of Gabby, please contact the Suffolk County New York Police Department. The phone number is 1-800-220-8477.
Again, that's the Suffolk County New York Police Department, and the phone number is 1-800-220-8477.
And we're going to, there's a GoFundMe setup to help in the search efforts.
We're going to post it in the show notes in case you didn't, I try to remind everybody
what the show notes are because I know some people don't know what they are.
I didn't before I started doing a podcast and I don't feel bad.
But the show notes that we talk about when we say we're going to link something, it's
just in the description of this episode.
So wherever you're listening to this episode, that little description under the episode
name, you can hit see more,
and that's where all the links are going to be.
So we're going to put the GoFundMe link in there, even if you can throw five bucks at it,
anything.
If you can't, that's okay.
Just share the information.
Whatever we can do, we want to get Gabby home.
I'm just about to spread the word.
Yeah, we want to get Gabby home with her parents.
So we just had to, we wanted to make sure we said that right away and
So sad I really hope that they're able to find her. I know
Bra homesick. Yeah, so to Gabby's friends and family we are thinking of you and we send huge huge amounts of hugs
All of them and we'll do anything we can to help so
Yeah, so that is the real bummer news at the top of the show.
Yeah.
But I think the, I mean, good news if we,
because we're going to have to move on with the show,
the good news is we are not talking about the sunset strip slayers anymore in this episode.
We're not, but you know, I didn't really bring it to like the lightest place.
I was already working on my case for the week when you decided to bring us down.
Yeah, I'm sorry. And I was like, oh, I'm not really lifting us up either. But you know, I don't
know if you're listening to morbid to be like, cheers. Yeah, I don't think so. And you know what,
if you're like, whoa, this has been pretty heavy, I'm going to take you to a spooky place this week.
So there will be a little bit of like, reprieve Yeah, probably not a lot, because it's me, but. I was just saying, you're like,
I can't.
The macabre majestic.
Yeah, I'll leave it.
I love that.
I know.
I just came out.
I like that.
I think I need to add that to like my official name.
What did I even just say?
Macabre majestic, maven.
Yeah.
I'm not caffeinated at all right now.
No, as she's real, she's struggle busing.
I really am, like deeply. And I don't really know why. I just, yeah as she's really, she's struggle-busting. I really am, deeply.
And I don't really know why.
I just, yeah, she's really struggling.
I can't speak, I can't function.
I just, I believe in you.
I believe in you.
I think you can do it.
All right, so this case that I'm gonna talk about today
is the case of Mackenzie Cowell.
This, just right at the top top is a very controversial case. I have not
totally made up my mind yet about like what I think, so I'm just gonna present all the
facts and you can feel about it however you want to feel about it. I'm not gonna tell you
how to feel one way or the other because I assume we don't know. Or is there no like
conclusion to this?
So there's a conclusion, but apparently a lot of people,
this took place in Wynatchee, Washington,
and apparently the town is just like completely divided
like on whether or not the right person is in prison.
Oh, okay.
Because there's just like a lot of weird things
that happened throughout the investigation.
There's a lot of, he said, she said
and a lot of circumstantial evidence
and then a lot of like solid evidence, but said, and a lot of circumstantial evidence, and then a lot of like solid evidence,
but then people are like, that's not solid evidence.
Oh, okay.
So it's a very like back and forth crazy case.
And at the center of it is Mackenzie Cowell,
and she was absolutely beautiful,
in this case, it's just so sad.
So let's get into it.
Mackenzie Cowell was born on April 1st, 1992.
Her parents were read in Wendy Cowell.
She grew up, like I said, in Wenatchee, Washington.
Wenatchee is actually known
as the Apple Capital of the world.
Really?
And I had to double check that.
I was like the whole world.
Wow.
Everywhere in the world?
Apparently.
That's wild.
It's apparently like a super quiet
Washington Apple.
Washington Apple.
That's a really good
partini. There you go. It's apparently like a super quiet rural
rural place where bad things just like rural rural
drummer where we're sure bad things usually just don't happen here like the
community was shocked by what happened to McKenzie. Now growing up and all
throughout her teen years McKenzie was a girly girl who absolutely
loved to dance.
She was really talented, she was hard working, she was driven, she actually danced on the
Appalettes dance team.
The Appalettes?
I know, in the living she was.
She went to high school full-time, she modeled in her spare time, and after school she took
classes at the Wenatchee Academy of Hair Design.
Oh, look at that.
She was a stylist. Oh, look at that.
She is.
Yes, she was a stylist.
This is actually called the Beauty School Disappearance
or the Beauty School Murder.
Oh, wow.
A lot of times in the True Crime World.
Now Mackenzie Stepmother said of her dancing,
she loved to dance, dance, dance.
Anywhere she went, she danced.
Grocery stores, gas stations.
Anywhere if a song came on, she would just break out in a bookie.
Oh my God. It was like ruined. Just break out in a bookie. Oh my God.
It was like ruined.
Just break out in a bookie.
In a bookie.
Oh.
And like everybody who knew Mackenzie just knew her
as this quintessential girly girl.
She loved putting together outfits.
She loved doing hair and makeup.
And she was really just immersed in that girl world.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Me.
I was like, I see girl.
Like same. Yeah.
She also had a boyfriend, Joaquin Villasano, and her parents said that she was totally in
love with him and vice versa.
They were like head over heels for each other.
So Mackenzie's parents read in 1D.
They got divorced at some point, and both of them moved on from the relationship.
Mackenzie's father got engaged to a woman named Sandy Francis.
She was the one who said that Mackenzie loved a boogie.
Oh, and her mother started dating a man named Joe Fisher.
Now, Mackenzie and Joe did not get along at all.
They fought constantly.
They just didn't see eye to eye about anything.
Oh, that's sad.
And actually the day before Mackenzie went missing, she apparently got into a fight with
Joe.
And she ended up telling her mother,
it's him or me. Oh, now that's the day before she went for a summoness. So the day she did go
Missing was February 9th, 2010. She left for school early that morning. Her father said that she
had like a super strict schedule for herself. She woke up really early in the morning, gave herself
about an hour to get ready and she had to be out of the door by 715.
So she would head to school, and then directly after that she would head to classes at the
Cosmetology School.
What makes a person a murderer?
Are they born to kill?
Or are they made to kill?
I'm Candace DeLong, and on my podcast, Killer Psychie Daily, which you can find exclusively
on Amazon Music.
I share a quick 10-minute rundown every weekday on the motivations and behaviors of the criminal
masterminds you read about in the news.
I have decades of experience as a psychiatric nurse, FBI agent, and a criminal profiler.
On Killer Psychie Daily, I'll give you my expert perspective on cases like the mysterious
New York City drugings, breaking down Lori Valow, aka Mommy Doomstays Motives, and what drove
Kaitlyn Armstrong to murder.
I'll also bring on expert guests who add even more insight into these criminal minds.
I promise you won't regret adding these 10 minutes to your morning routine.
Hey Prime members, listen to the Amazon Music exclusive podcast Killer Psychie Daily in
the Amazon Music app.
Download the app today.
What if you were trafficked into a cult over shot nine times or fell in love with a vampire
or went into a minor surgery and woke up one week later, paralyzed?
What would you do?
I'm Whit Missaldine, 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 dooms his entire future with one choice, to a woman who survived a notorious
serial killer.
You'll hear their first-person account of how 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.
Now everything that morning was going to plan. Mackenzie saw her dad before she left and they
made plans to have dinner that night. They were going gonna have like teriyaki burgers, I guess.
Oh.
And McKenzie and her dad were like super, super close.
They had like daddy-daughter dinner dates all the time.
Like, okay, just ruin me.
Yeah, like they would have like root beer floats,
like orange floats together, like any kind of float.
And they would all like call each other on cell phones.
Like she'd be upstairs and like call downstairs
and be like, what kind of float should we have?
Like they were just really close.
Super close and just like really cute.
But she just wouldn't have missed their dinner date friend.
So she did make it downtown that day
to the Academy of Hair Design.
So her morning went to plan, she went to school,
she made it to hair school after high school.
Okay.
Now around 3 p.m., she asked one of the other students,
do I need to sign out if I'm only leaving for 15 minutes?
Okay.
And it's unclear what exactly she was going to do.
Some of her classmates assumed that like,
maybe she was going to grab a coffee or something.
That would make sense.
Yeah, like nobody really knew exactly.
For 15 minutes, it's like she's just running
to do something quick.
Yeah, exactly, like a quick errand.
And she was known to go to like a certain coffee place
so they were like, make sense.
Yeah.
But the last video of her movement
shows her stepping out the back door of the academy.
She heads up the stairs to the parking lot
and walks to her car.
And that is the last known video of McKenzie Hall.
Really?
So she texted her boyfriend, Wookiee, and she said,
hey, and that would be the last text
he would ever get from McKenzie.
And that was the last time anybody heard from McKenzie.
Really?
So, Reads said that beauty school got out at five o'clock.
So he called McKenzie at around like 540
to see how close she was.
Cause remember, remember they're gonna have like
Terry Ockie Marguess tonight. Yeah, they have a whole plan and
Her cell phone went straight to voicemail which he said was really weird
That was like very unlike McKenzie like her phone would have always been charged and on yeah
So he texted her a couple more times at one point
He was like getting annoyed that she wasn't answering and so he sent her a text like hello
Like I'm getting irritated like why aren't you answering and then more time went by that she wasn't answering. So he sent her a text like, hello, I'm getting irritated.
Why aren't you answering?
And then more time went by and she wasn't answering that text message.
So he sent another one and was like, I'm not upset with you.
I'm sorry.
I'm just concerned where are you?
Starting the panic.
I'm exactly, I'm starting the panic.
Time kept passing and Reed was getting more and more worried.
And then about two more hours went by and he got a call from the local police,
and they said, are you missing your car?
So he told us, I'm missing that car,
and I'm missing the girl who drives it.
Oh, you kidding me?
Now, Mackenzie's car was registered in her father's name,
so as soon as he got that call,
his stomach must have just sank.
Hearing, are you missing your car
and knowing that your daughter,
who you have not been able to get a hold of,
is in that car?
Yup.
Must be one of the worst things you can ever hear.
I can't even imagine.
Like where your mind would go
and where your heart would drop, I can't even drop it.
And I just picture him like getting their dinner
like ready to just like just like,
just waiting, figure it out and like,
past the time as he's waiting for her to come back
and he's probably sitting there like,
oh, it's gonna be something silly, like, her phone died
or, you know, but.
That kills me.
She never kills me.
That really kills me.
Now, her car was found just two miles away
from the economy of hair design.
It was found on a rural, rural road.
That's so hard to say.
It is called Piltr Canyon Road.
Inside the abandoned car, the police found Mackenzie's purse, It's so hard to say. It is called Piltr Canyon Road.
Inside the abandoned car, the police found Mackenzie's purse, but her cell phone, her car keys,
and debit card were all missing.
And to this day, they've never been found.
Really?
Never been found.
Now, anyone who knew Mackenzie and was like close with her
knew that her purse went everywhere with her.
She wouldn't have gotten out of the car without the purse.
No. Now, later on in the investigation, the police would speak with three witnesses that described a similar looking man walking down a road right near where McKenzie's car was later found.
Okay.
They all said that this man was wearing a dark coat and that he was in the area between 430 and 530. One of the three had
like a slightly different description of the man than the other two, but like I wouldn't
necessarily say it can be real tough. And that's really like the only place that goes like
yeah it's not super prominent. Because it's hard. It's hard to know what you're supposed to believe
and what people really saw. And if the timing is even right,
it has one person's 530,
is another person's 6 o'clock.
Oh yeah, and there's been plenty of times
where I have trusted my own memory of someone.
I'm like, no, they had a beard.
Like I'm like, no, they 100% had a beard.
And then I'm like, I'm with you
and I'm like, that person didn't have a beard.
And then we'll see it and I'm like,
they didn't have a beard.
Where did my head conjure a beard?
And where did I convince myself that it was 100% true?
Because your brain naturally fills in the missing pieces.
Like, it literally, that's what dreaming is.
That's why it's so hard.
I went and the accounts are so hard.
They can be great and they can be so detrimental.
Like, honestly, even like the eyewitness accounts
always make me think of the Lacey Peters encase.
Yeah. Because there's so the eyewitness accounts always make me think of the Lacey Peterson case. Yeah.
Because there's so many eyewitness accounts and all of them are different times and they're
all messed up.
Oh yeah, it happens in so many cases.
Yeah.
So back to this investigation, four days into it on February 13th, McKenzie's father got
a call from the FBI and they told him that McKenzie's body had been found.
Oh.
Trigger warning, this body was found in a very disturbing way.
She was found laying in the shallow water of the Columbia River
in an area called Crescent Bar, and she was about 15 feet away from the shore.
This was an area where people would like go and party, like from around that area.
She was 48 miles away from home.
Wow.
Yeah. And her car was found like two miles away from the that area. She was 48 miles away from home. Wow.
Yeah.
And her car was found like two miles away from the beauty school.
Wow. Yeah.
Now there were various injuries noted to her body.
She had been stabbed multiple times.
There was blunt force trauma to her head.
She had a head wound.
My God.
She had been strangled and there was a deep neck
claseration.
And then on top of all of that,
whoever had done all of that to her,
also tried to saw her arm off.
What?
When her body was found, the knife was still stuck
in the tissue of her shoulder.
Stop.
Like the knife was literally, like they just like gave up
in the middle of it, which is interesting to me
because it's like, did somebody come and startle them?
Like, that is outrageous.
Yeah.
And to leave the weapon.
Yeah.
In the wound?
Right.
That's, like, so frenzied and so unorganized and so strange.
Well, and I think the whole manner of how she was killed was so frenzied and unorganized and so streamed.
Well, I think the whole manner of how she was killed was so frenzied and unorganized
because it's like, they clearly tried multiple things.
Yeah.
Wow.
That's like ugh.
Yeah, it's chilling and it's so sad.
Because you look at pictures of her and you're like,
so she's just like a girl that I would have gone
to high school.
Yeah, just a whole life I would have been a friend with.
Like, she just looks like somebody you could see walking down the street.
Yeah, it's a whenever you like obviously any victim you look and you're like you have the rest of your life in front of you
But when it's like a teenager or someone younger, you're just like
Man, you had decades decades over you.
Who are you gonna be?
That's the, I think that's the saddest part.
When you're that young, you don't know who you are.
Like, rarely do you know who,
if somebody did like kudos,
but like, I definitely didn't know who I was at 17.
And it's like, you know,
I never really found out who I was till I was like 30.
Like, that's when I really felt like comfortable
with who I am.
And it's like, yeah.
They never get a chance to feel that like,
total comfort in who they are.
Because I think life experiences
kind of teach you who you are. It's just like a it adds like such an extra bummer to it. It does.
Well, so the police obviously had to look into the family, of course, but they said McKenzie's parents were
never real suspects. Like it was just a formality that you just have to. Now someone that they were very
interested in talking to multiple times though though, was McKenzie's boyfriend.
Obviously, in any case, the significant others
looked at for obvious reasons.
Of course.
And this case may have started off like that,
but it definitely seemed like there were other reasons
why Joaquin was being looked at so intensely,
like people say.
For a while, he was told that he was the only suspect.
Oh, he was interviewed a few times,
like on multiple occasions. He was given only suspect. Oh, he was interviewed a few times, like on multiple occasions.
He was given multiple lie detector tests
and he was told multiple times
that he kept failing one particular question.
And the question was, do you know who kills McKenzie?
Wow.
So obviously he was saying that he didn't know
who had killed her and that he hadn't,
but the detectives were not happy with that.
And he said that they also asked him multiple times
whether or not he was a gangster.
And he was like, I'm not a gangster.
And also like what?
Yeah, what seemed to be like a little bit of racial
behind the line. I was just gonna say that.
That seems to be a little bit of like a, you know,
very pointed question.
Yeah, super pointed question, because I'm like,
and he was like, no, I'm not.
Like I'm just dating this beautiful girl
who was just brutally murdered.
But like, thank you.
Thanks.
Like making this all about me being a terrible person.
Yeah, cause I'm not.
Like cool.
So almost 800 people were interviewed
during the search for McKenzie's killer.
And her family just felt like it had to have been
someone she knew because like we hear in a lot of cases, in a lot of cases. were interviewed during the search for McKenzie's killer. And her family just felt like it had to have been someone
she knew because like we hear in a lot of cases,
in a lot of cases,
McKenzie wouldn't have gone off with someone
that she didn't know.
Like she wouldn't have gone anywhere
with someone she didn't trust.
Yeah, you know whether someone is that kind of person
or not, you know, a person that's more comfortable doing that.
Exactly.
Now McKenzie's mother Wendy, her boyfriend, Joe,
was also looked into especially because of that fight that happened where. Now, Mackenzie's mother Wendy, her boyfriend, Joe, was also looked
into, especially because of that fight that happened where she said, like, it's either him
or me, that comment was really chilling. Yeah, for sure. But he had an airtight alibi, and
according to the police, they completely cleared not only him, but Joaquin as well. Oh, good.
So neither of them did it. But then it's like, okay, so who the fuck did this? I know, because
it's, you're like, good, I don't want it to be her mom's boyfriend
or her boyfriend.
Like, that's, that's a whole nother layer to this.
But then immediately you're like, but who did it?
Who did it?
Now I need to know who did it.
So now this woman comes forward.
Her name is Liz Reed.
And she said she knew exactly who killed McKenzie.
Oh.
And that she saw a snuff film of the murder.
Oh.
And that the snuff film was taken by the killers,
obviously, who she knew personally.
Honestly, as like out there as that sounds,
whenever you hear snuff film, you're like,
what? No.
It happens.
Like the worst things in the world happen.
And then on top of it, how brutally she was murdered
does kind of lend itself to something like that.
I think so as well.
I'm not saying that that's definitely what happened,
obviously, I'm going to go out of the idea.
I'm just saying like, okay, I could see a connection
to that.
It's interesting.
Wow, that's really fucked up.
So the woman, again, was Lizbreed,
and she was working with them
with the Winachee Police Department already at this point as an informant.
She was enrolled in college full time.
She was a straight-A student,
but she also had connections to the drug world,
which is why she wasn't informed.
At the time, she was selling oxy-contin
and she was also struggling with an addiction herself.
Okay.
But at the time, they were still using her as an informant,
so obviously they trusted her.
Yeah. Now, she told investigators that now there was a task force for McKenzie's disappearance and
investigation. So she was telling the investigators that made up the task force that a man named Sam
Quavis and a manual Buddha Saros were the ones responsible for McKenzie's murders. So they two were
drug dealers, like they had been in prison before
and like serve time for things like that.
And Liz said that she was told by them
that the whole thing was a case of mistaken identity.
Oh.
Now, apparently Quavis and Serros
had mistook McKenzie for someone else
who they thought was also working for the police.
No.
And that's why she was killed.
They thought that she was an informant.
Liz read.
I can't even fathom this.
Liz Reid said they told her that they had, this is horrible.
They had to choke Mackenzie twice because the first time they thought that she was dead
and then she wasn't.
And then she said that Sam Quovas told her, quote unquote, we choked that bitch to shut
her up. What? Now, for me, it is interesting that they said theyas told her, quote unquote, we choked that bitch to shut her up.
What?
Now, for me, it is interesting that they said
they choked her twice because she had
that super deep, glassaration.
So I'm like, that's interesting.
Yeah.
That's just something to look at.
For sure.
Now she then got into further details about the knife
that the killers had used.
And remember, it was left there.
And she was correct about the knife that had been used.
And had they released this information?
And at that point in the investigation,
this was information that was being held close to the chest.
So that was a turning point in this case.
Maybe the scroll was telling them the truth.
This is exactly why they hold that kind of stuff back.
So somebody comes forward without the information
from the media and they can cooperate. Exhausted. So they'll cooperate cooperate. It corroborated. Wow, did I do that to you?
You did. Definitely. You're spirit-pasted to cooperate.
Co-operate. Co-operate. Now, according to the investigators, Liz read through the entire
investigation into overdrive. And a lot of the investigators working on that task force
thought that they had their guys. Yeah. Like they were full-fledged ready for this.
I mean, that seems like a pretty solid case.
It makes sense.
But then they got another tip from another informant named Theo Kies.
Now Theo wrote a letter to police while he was in prison
for exposing himself to upper east stuff.
Oh, just that.
Very specific crime.
Yeah, he definitely was troubled.
Yeah.
It was said that he struggled with a lot of mental illness as well.
OK.
So worth putting out there.
Yeah.
The letter stated that they should look
into someone that he was quote unquote friends with.
This person was named Christopher Wilson.
OK.
OK.
Now, Chris Wilson was actually one of Mackenzie's classmates at the Academy of Hair Design.
He was like an artist, a musician, and he was a very eccentric guy for Wenachi.
People like to point out that a lot of his artwork was really dark, that he dressed differently,
he worked dark clothing, he dyed his hair black, he liked the show Dexter.
Same. He had a tattoo of Hannibal Lecter.
I would too.
You were so right.
They were really just pointing out
like all the dark macabre things about him.
The stuff that only matters,
if the fact something like this happens.
Yeah, and that gets so hairy.
It's not fair.
Yeah.
People also look to the fact that he worked out
a funeral home as a red flag
when he became the prime suspect in this case
I don't think that's a red flag of course. It's no even after the fact
I mean people have to work a funeral home just a job
I'm not just saying that it's like no you're an autopsy type of person like I just don't think that's a
Indication of somebody being a murderer. No, it's no, I really don't. Well, and his mother had an explanation
for why he worked at a funeral home.
She said that actually he decided to start working
for a funeral home because of an experience
that their family had had.
So Chris's mother, Kathleen, she had been married
to a man who actually legally adopted Chris
and then they went on to have another son together.
Now, unfortunately years later, he passed away
when he fell from
like a three story hotel window. Oh. And the reconstruction they did on his face looked
nothing like him. And it was really horrible for the family members. Of course. And at that
moment Chris decided that he wanted to get into the business so that other families wouldn't
have to suffer like his. I mean, that's a maybe, I can do a better job.
That's a great reason.
Yeah, if that's the case.
And again, I don't know anything about,
I don't know this case, so I don't know what the deal is here.
I can see why after somebody gets named as a murder suspect
that you're gonna point to all these quote-unquote strange
or unique things about them to be like, look,
because sometimes it matches.
Sometimes it works. But I think it's like a really slippery slope.
It is. Because it's like, a Hannibal Lecter tattoo doesn't make you a serial killer.
No, he's not a real, he's a fictional character.
Not only that, he's a fictional character, and I, like, people have tattoos of actual serial killers,
but that doesn't mean that they're murderers. Exactly, it's like, dude, is it in port taste?
Sure, but that doesn't make them a murderer, you know?
It just is a totally different set of,
or like even, I think of on Halloween
when tattoo shops will do those specials
and you can get a butcher knife tattoo.
You don't know.
People do that all the time that doesn't mean
that you're a murderer.
Exactly, and it's like, sure, it might not be for you.
Right.
But it doesn't make someone who gets at a murderer.
No, that's just, that's a very dangerous thing to start, completely connecting what you have
on your body with being an actual serial killer.
Exactly.
Like, I think it's just a very dangerous connection to make.
Because then we're really showing people that judge a book by its cover.
By its cover, exactly.
And judge a book by what they do as an occupation.
That's not fair.
And the other thing was, that wasn't the only thing
he had done in his life.
He had specifically only worked at funeral homes.
He had worked at some funeral homes.
But he also had been in the army.
He had also worked at a bike shop.
He had worked at a hotel. He had also worked at like a bike shop. He had worked at like a hotel.
Like he'd worked in like plenty of different places.
But of course they're gonna stick to the...
It's like the death industry doesn't mean
that like you're obsessed with death in a way
that is like, gnarly and unsavory.
Mm-hmm.
You can be fascinated by death
and want to work in the death industry
and not be fetishizing death. Exactly. Like I am fascinated by death and what to work in the death industry and not be fetishizing death.
Exactly.
I am fascinated by death and what happens after we die.
I'm not fetishizing it.
I'm not, you know what I mean?
I'm happy that you said that because whether or not Chris Wilson did this, I do think that
they painted him way so much in that light because they were like, he was so interested
in serial killers and learning about them, he was like so interested in serial killers
and learning about them and he was fascinated by death.
And it's like, you know, like you could say that
about a lot of people.
Exactly.
All like, you know, true crime podcasts,
any, you know, medical podcasts, any medical people,
like people who work in the medical field
are fascinated by death because it's like,
it's just, it's such a blanket.
It's a blanket generalization that I think can be tough.
And that's not to say that I don't think that he did this because I personally haven't
made up my mind yet.
So, seeing I literally know nothing about this case, so I have no idea.
Even if he did do it, I just think it's something we shouldn't always do is point to what they
look like and what they wear.
Exactly.
And then to pinpoint them as a suspect.
That's my whole point.
Because we won't harp on this for much longer.
You're just saying, I always bring it back to Ted Bundy.
Nobody believed that he was a serial killer
just by looking at it.
He looked at screaming at the card.
He was involved in politics.
They don't always look the part.
And he did some of the gnarliest shit you could ever do.
I mean, he was a necrophilia.
It's like, let's not just look at somebody
and be like, well, they're weird.
Again, I think we've set up before, like Carla Hamoka.
Like, yeah, she's, they can't in the Kenan Barbie killers.
They can't in the Kenan Barbie killers,
because they looked like Kenan Barbie.
Like, it's just slippery slope.
It is.
But back to Theo and his life.
That was our PSA.
PSA, don't judge people by their faces.
Exactly.
And tattoos.
Now, back to Theo and his letter. Theo's letter said that the police should look PSA. PSA, don't judge people by their faces. Exactly. And tattoos.
Now, back to The Owners' Letter.
Theo's letter said that the police should look into Chris Wilson because he had an interest
in dead bodies, serial killers, and he had said that he liked to cut people up.
Okay, that's weird.
Definitely weird, but also like, do we have video of him saying that?
Like, do we know for sure that he said that?
No, but I mean, like somebody's saying that somebody said that is a little strange.
Oh, absolutely.
I'm just, I will say that.
Oh, it's really strange, and it gets stranger.
And that's why I'm like, every time I was like,
but wait, I was like, oh shit.
And then I was like, but wait.
And then I was like, oh shit.
Because again, it obviously doesn't prove you did it,
but it's like, that's a strange thing to say.
It's a strange thing to say.
You shouldn't like cutting people up.
No.
And this is a strange thing that was also stated in the letter.
Apparently a woman had told Theo
that Chris had come up behind her at a party
and started strangling her.
But then he stopped out of nowhere
and acted like it didn't happen.
Oh, that's fucked up behavior.
That's fucked up.
Yeah, so that's the thing.
That's why I'm like, I fucked up behavior.
Don't know what's going on here. Again, has nothing to do with what he looks like. That's just fucked up. Yeah. So that's the thing. That's why I'm like, I fucked up behavior. Don't know what's going on here.
Again, has nothing to do with what he looks like.
That's just fucked up behavior.
Right.
Now, apparently the police also got another tip from another woman saying that Chris Wilson
should be looked into as a suspect in McKenzie's case because he had told her that he killed
a woman in a hotel that he used to work at.
And he did so by strangling her with a belt.
Yeah, okay, it was just not looking good.
Not looking good, not looking good for Chris, not at all.
So now, right around the time that the tip came in about Chris Wilson,
is when the investigators on the task force started doubting Liz Read.
Like all of a sudden, they were like, I don't know if her story is so true.
Because they were trying to find that snuff film,
like they were trying to locate where that would be,
and they couldn't find any evidence
that it even existed.
Yeah, so they confronted her about that,
and they said that that's when she, quote, unquote,
changed her story.
Uh-oh.
Now she didn't really change her story, though.
She just retracted what she had said.
And this is where things got weird,
because a lot of the articles that you read say that Liz read out in Sam Quavis in a manual
a sero so that she wouldn't be looked to as a suspect. But why would she even be looked to as a
suspect at all? So then I was watching the video of her explaining why she retracted her statement
in the way that I took her saying it was that she recanted the statement about Sam and a manual
because she felt threatened by the police
that she had to retract her statement
or then the murder might get pinned on her.
Okay.
I'm not saying that's what happened,
but that's what it sounded like she was saying.
Like that's what it's on.
Because technically retracting your statement
is changing your story.
Okay.
Because you're now saying that story didn't happen.
Right.
So you're saying.
But I just, I mean, like, she didn't change any details or anything. She just took it all away. Exactly. Yeah. And the way that she said it was like, she felt like she had to or this
was going to be pinned on her if she didn't change her story. Okay. But then like, a lot of people
are like, no, she didn't want it pinned on her. And that's why she took her story away. And I
was like, if anything, that would make you look less credible and it might get pinned on you. Why would a tangled web this is? I can't, I'm like, I don't know.
See, I don't know.
That's the thing. That's why I'm like, I have no idea and girl it only gets more tangled.
I'm just gonna take these facts that come out and I'm gonna be like, I don't know.
Me too.
And I think it's sad because it's like a lot of people feel that way.
And it's like, at the center of this is McKenzie.
Is McKenzie and her family and exactly?
Did they feel this way?
Like did they?
Yeah, I have what I intend to have literally no idea.
Right.
Yeah, that's just like a real like to not I don't know if you'll say it later,
but like I hope they feel some kind of closure.
I'm not entirely.
I think they did.
It seems like they did.
Like I watched the 48 hours and it seems like they were like,
okay, like we have. have, we'll get there.
So, but why would they want her to retract her statement
when so many of them believed her for a good while?
Now, a lot of people think,
now this is where I say the community is divided
because some people think that the murder was pinned
on Chris Wilson at this point
because it had been a good six months or so
into the investigation with nothing. Now, it really wasn't going anywhere and they were apparently getting
desperate. Now, the case, this case was suggested a law in our inbox. I think I said in the beginning
and everyone pointed out that everybody had different feelings. And half of the people think that
the wrong person is in prison. So let's get into like a little more about Chris Wilson. Yeah. He was going to
Cosmetology School, by the way, because his mother and her husband opened a salon in town,
and he wanted to help his mother run the salon. So that's why he was in a hair school.
I was also going to think I would think that Cosmetology would be helpful in funeral
yes, home to if you're looking to get into like embomming and the post mortem makeup and all that. I feel like Cosmetology School would help. Yeah. Exactly. If that's what you're looking to get into like embomming in the postmortem Makeup and all that I feel like cosmetology school would help yeah exactly
That's what you're looking to do exactly
But it's interesting because then like his friend said like he didn't really want to work at the
Funeral home anymore because the bodies creeped him out
So like his friends were saying that it creeped him out and then other people were saying like he said that he like to cut up dead people
Yes, so it seems a lot of back and forth.
But back to February 9th, the day that Mackenzie went missing.
Chris Wilson is seen on the security footage
from the school leaving out the same back doors, Mackenzie,
not too long after she leaves, which is weird.
Yeah.
Now, when he was interviewed by police originally,
he said, yeah, he knew who Mackenzie was,
like they went to school together,
but that they didn't really talk.
And he willingly gave them a sample of his DNA.
Okay.
So it took a week for the DNA to come back.
And when it did, they brought Chris Wilson back
into the station again.
This time, they asked Chris Wilson,
if he had ever been to Crescent Bar,
where Mackenzie's body had been found.
He told them that he hadn't.
And then they asked him if that was so,
then how would his DNA have ended up there?
So, couple of that with the fact that the crescent bar
was only a few blocks away from his apartment.
Oh, the police were zeroing in on him.
They told him he was under arrest
for the murder of Mackenzie Cowell.
And at that moment, he immediately asked for a lawyer.
I mean, all this seems pretty good to me.
Yeah.
So Chris's family and you might think this name sounds familiar.
They hired famous defense attorney John Henry Brown.
Oh, hey, yep, Bundy.
There you go.
He represented Bundy, Colton Harris, more the birth of the bandit and Sergeant Robert Bales.
He's like a very controversial lawyer.
Yeah.
But John Henry Brown claims that Chris Wilson
was being framed for this murder
and that it wasn't the first time
when Ache was doing this.
And he recalled a case in Wenachie
that he had actually worked on in the mid 90s
where a ton of people were wrongfully convicted
of sexual abuse in what he called the Wenachie Witch Hunt
and which became known as the Wenatchi Witch.
Really?
Now, he was the one to get some of the cases
dropped for a bunch of clients.
I'm gonna link this really good Washington Post article
in the show notes to give you like a little more
about that case.
But the gist is that in Wenatchi in the mid 90s,
there was this officer named Robert Perez,
who was promoted to a detective during a time
where there was a lot of child sexual abuse cases going on.
That's awful.
Now, this guy was trained really quickly,
and he was the only investigator working
on these kinds of cases, but a lot of people
felt like he wasn't qualified for the job,
and that he was placed in a position of power
when he shouldn't have been.
Now, later, he and his wife were fostering a child
who I'm just gonna leave nameless for this.
Yeah.
She started having like horrific recollections
of essentially a child's sex trafficking ring
that involved like hundreds of people in the community.
What?
But then more and more involved it got,
there were people being accused
that like definitely didn't have anything to do with it because they weren't even living there at the time.
So like, fingers were being pointed at people and it seemed like fingers were being pointed
at people if they spoke out against this whole thing and like doubted it.
It literally was like the same with which child.
Which child.
Wow.
People said that Perez would quote, pick people out and target them.
Okay. People said that Perez would, quote, pick people out and target them.
Now, eventually this child, like the foster child,
named over 90 different people who abused her particularly
and got other children to say things
about what had happened to them.
But over time, her story started becoming less credible
because like I said, she was like saying,
people had done it that hadn't even been there at that time.
And then other children admitted that they were lying.
Oh wow, this is messy.
It's super messy.
And children also came out later and said
that Perez had intimidated them into lying
about some kind of alleged abuse.
Now Perez didn't admit later
that he would destroy his notes from cases.
What the fuck?
But not before a ton of lives were totally destroyed
and everything just died down.
But people went to prison for this.
Well, that all sounds bad all around.
But basically, it became the witch hunt of oneatch.
And these kids are having to go through all this traumatic,
oh, it's just like...
It's a case within itself that will definitely never cover
because I can't get into children stuff like that.
But again, I am gonna link that Washington Post article.
It goes like very into detail
and it was interesting to read about heart breaking
but interesting.
Wow, I've never heard of that.
Neither had I, but that was what John Henry Brown was referencing
and he was like, this isn't the first time
when Achi has like pointed out people that are different
because a lot of the people that were pointed out in that case
were a literate people, they were poor people.
I had some kind of unique things.
They were the outskirts, people, the oddballs, whatever.
Now, he was able to get some of his clients
charges dropped in that case, or he had them
plead guilty for less harsh sentences.
Okay.
Now, he's known as a defense attorney to have his clients plead guilty to lower sentences
just to get them, like, basically to get them plead deals.
For sure.
Now, interestingly enough, the prosecutor in that case as well, Gary Riesen, was going to be the same one trying to prove that Chris Wilson was guilty of murder.
So these two were going head to head again.
Oh wow.
Like, however, like what, 20 years later, that's crazy. Like rematch time.
Yeah.
Now, the prosecution did have a good amount going for them.
They had a piece of duct tape, and that's the one that was found along the shore.
It was found along the shore where McKenzie's body had been found, and Chris's DNA was found
on it, and so was McKenzie's blood.
Now, it was Chris's Y Strand DNA found on the duct tape, and it was found through YSTR profiling.
And YSTR can't actually identify a specific individual like a fingerprint would, but it
can narrow down a statistical pool of people.
So the DNA profile found on that piece of tape would most likely be Chris Wilson's, but
according to a Corde of a David, quote, a white male has a one in 1047 chance of sharing
Wilson's Y-S's YSTR profile.
Okay, now that sounds like a big number,
but it's really not.
But in, yeah, it's just, yeah.
So that, like his profile would be shared by his father,
his grandfather, like maybe even like some of his brother,
like it's, yeah, it's intense.
Yeah.
Now, obviously a slim chance that like it was somebody else's DNA because...
I mean, yeah, I mean...
I mean, it was in 1947.
It's a coincidence.
It's a coincidence.
It's a coincidence that it happened to be the guy that they're looking at.
But because it's not like a fingerprint or something like that.
It's not as compelling.
It's not as compelling and it's enough that would provide reasonable,
but reasonable doubt to a jury.
For sure.
So, the prosecution had more though.
Now this is where I'm like, okay.
They found a video on an iPhone belonging to Tessa Skylamen.
She was one of Chris Wilson's friends
and they had actually dated like when they were younger.
His mom said that she was like a daughter to her.
Oh wow.
Now the video is of she and Chris cleaning up his apartment
when he was moving out and they
seemed to be really concerned about the clonliness of the apartment and they said that was because
Chris wanted to get a security deposit back. Like that's why they were concerned about it. And
this is this moving out of the apartment that was near the crime scene? Yes. Okay. So, so this is
after McKenzie. This is after McKenzie had been married. Okay. Now, so they're having this really weird conversation.
It's, so I'm gonna tell you what it says.
It, Chris says, does it look clean?
And Tessa says, clean for what is happening?
Like, clean considering?
Yeah, it's clean considering, which is a weird thing to say.
For what is happening?
Yeah, like for what is happening, I was like,
what does that mean?
And then they found another video of Tessa
going into the apartment alone,
and they say that she moves a coffee table
and zooms in on where they ended up
finding Mackenzie Cowell's blood.
They end up finding her blood in that apartment.
Oh, okay, I mean, to meet that's case closed.
Case closed.
So they say that she zooms into the blood
and then she like goes into the bathroom
and takes a video of the bathroom
and then the video ends with her face and a mirror.
The police believed that it was obvious
that she was looking for blood
and saying that the apartment was clean
considering the fact that McKenzie had been murdered there
because she's sitting there saying considering
that it's out.
But according to Chris and Tessa,
that specific area of the carpet
had been damaged during a party,
and that's what they were saying
when they were saying, like,
clean considering what happened.
Well, I mean, it was found to be her blood.
It was found to be her blood.
That's it.
Right.
I mean, how do you explain that?
So.
Tessa actually ended up being arrested
on suspicion of obstructing an investigation
and rendering criminal assistance.
She was arrested and held on $29,000 bail,
but she was able to post the bail.
In the affidavit for the case against her,
the police also claimed that there's photos of her lying
on the floor where the blood was found,
quote, unquote, posing like
a dead person. But she said that those photos were taken after she passed out from being
drunk at a party there. And then the police said that her boyfriend at the time came forward
and said she didn't know where she was posing. Like she didn't know that the blood was
found there. And that Christopher Wilson had instructed her
to pose there like that.
That's why one of her boyfriend said.
But she had told the police that she had passed out
in that area and then like for some reason,
he took a photo of it.
So there's like three different stories happening.
Yeah, there's, yeah.
There's like 87 different stories happening.
Very shady.
So Chris's defense tried to argue
that the blood had been planted in his apartment and that there was no evidence proving that it hadn't been
But except that the video of her zooming in on it when they were just there
But they were trying to say that that was a stain from a party like that it wasn't blood because it also like wasn't super dark in that video
Mm-hmm
And then I don't know so they also argued that there would have been much more blood found in the apartment
because of the manner in which McKenzie was stabbed,
but her blood was only found in that specific area,
like that one cut out of the carpet.
And they also wanted to note that McKenzie was stabbed
and that her jugular vein had been cut.
I was gonna ask if they was like,
because that would be a whole different of blood.
And so her jugular vein was cut,
and remember they tried to saw off her arm.
Yeah.
And the prosecution had a point for that too.
Remember I told you Chris Wilson really liked the show Dexter.
Yeah.
They said that he was infatuated
with that specific serial killer.
So maybe he had taken notes from the show and laid out plastic.
That was there.
Okay. Which...
Okay. Sure.
Now, all of that, I mean, sure.
Yeah. I also think that the...
Since that knife was found in her arm still,
to me, that says that it was...
It was attempted where she was found.
That's... I don't think they would transport her
with the knife in her arm. Yeah. And not remove it at some point. It doesn't make a lot of sense. To's, I don't think they would transport her with the knife and her arm.
I'd not remove it at some point.
It doesn't make a lot of sense.
To me that it was done there.
Right, so maybe that explains why there would be
a lack of blood, exactly.
Exactly, because that part.
Maybe that part and maybe a lot of the medilation
and happened over there.
And stuff was happening over there.
Good point, maybe.
I mean, you can look at it whatever you want to
because there's, because just as a wild case,
we're about to get even more wild because this is what I find the most
interesting in terms of the concrete evidence. Okay. So in addition to Chris's DNA,
another unknown male's DNA was found on the strip of duct tape. On the knife
that was left in the tissue of Mackenzie's shoulder, they found genetic materials from at least three males on that knife.
None of which are a match for Chris Wilson.
Huh.
Now, one of the possible contributors of the genetic material on the knife is a detective
who was involved in the chain of custody, which can happen, but like they try really hard
to avoid that.
But I mean it definitely happens.
But that's not it.
The interior of Mackenzie's car was swiped for DNA
and there was some found,
but none of it matched Chris Wilson's DNA.
So no DNA in the car matched his.
Okay.
And it was determined to be from an unidentified male,
the DNA in that car.
Okay.
And finally, and this is the most compelling evidence for me, there was DNA found under
McKenzie's nails on her left hand that did not match Chris Wilson's DNA.
That's so interesting.
What the actual DNA is that?
Who's DNA is that?
So the only place he left his DNA was on a piece of duct tape.
Well, and it's like then to flip it,, you could say maybe this unknown male drove her car.
Yep.
Or was the one, and maybe there was
more to another car.
Maybe there was multiple people here.
Exactly.
Maybe it's not just one that really it is.
Right.
Because I just, I don't, wow.
This is like very, I would not even know what to say.
No, that's the thing.
So because like some of the evidence was circumstantial
with the DNA and all that, but then there was the blood,
but then the prosecution was trying to say
the blood was planted, everything was just all over the place.
And Chris Wilson got offered what many referred to
was the deal of a lifetime.
If he pleaded guilty to manslaughter,
he would only have to serve six and a half years in prison.
For what was done to her? For McKenzie's murder. They were willing to drop the charges to
manslaughter, which like, she'd only served six and a half years for stabbing a woman,
strangling her, leaving a deep laceration in her neck
and trying to saw off her arm.
And blunt force trauma to head.
And blunt force trauma to the head, thank you.
Six and a half years,
and they were gonna drop those charges to manslaughter.
I, I, I, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm literally,
like short circling right now.
How?
I have no idea.
How?
That is, I can't even, I can't even wrap my brain around it. I'm literally like short-circating right now. How? I have no idea. How?
That is...
I can't even wrap my brain around it.
So his defense attorney, John Henry Brown,
said it was a great deal for someone who was guilty,
but for someone who was innocent, that it wasn't.
Because you don't want to serve someone.
That's true.
That's true. For something you didn't do.
That's for something you didn't do.
And be charged with manslaughter when you did good.
And Chris said, no, I didn't do this.
I'm not taking that plea deal.
He said no to the plea deal.
And he was willing to go to trial and prove his innocence.
Okay.
He was like that confident in it.
Now insert Liz Reed back into the picture.
Oh boy.
She wasn't done yet.
She was like, I'ma let you finish.
But actually I'm not.
Wow.
So she comes back into the picture.
And she says that Emmanuel Buddha Seros
demanded that she come out to the place
where McKenzie was actually murdered
and find a ring that had come off her finger
while they murdered her.
And she said that she was willing to testify at trial
under oath about what had happened.
She found the ring.
She said, quote, it was
smashed. It was a little bent, but it was a ring. Now, the ring was shown to
McKenzie's family and her boyfriend allegedly, but none of them recognized it.
There is a photo though, where McKenzie is wearing a ring that looks an awful
lot like the one that Liz Reed found. And I will trust it. To me, it looks like the same ring.
And it's a very distinct ring.
You can Google it right now.
I'm literally going to go with it.
It's like silver.
And I'm not sure if it's pearls or if it's just like
silver beads on the top, but there's two beads.
There's the picture of the ring when Liz Reid found it.
And then there's a picture that Mackenzie took.
I think it's like a mirror selfie.
And it looks like the same ring on her finger in the picture.
Okay.
Now, Emmanuel Saro said that Liz was crazy,
that he finally had a good job.
He was turning his life around
and that she was ruining it for him.
Oh boy.
So all of that is going on before the trial even started.
They're all just sitting there saying,
like, I'm gonna say this,
and I'm willing to testify this and yada, y yada yada. So now they're doing jury selection. And
a lot of people being considered for the jury admitted in like question years that they
had seen a ton of media coverage about this. And apparently, either more than or just
around 80% of them were going into this thinking that Chris Wilson was already guilty. That's
a tough one.
So when he heard that, he panicked and he decided to ask for another plea bargain because he was like
really panicking at this point.
Yeah.
But in order to get this plea bargain, he needed to write a full confession and that would be an exchange for
14 years in prison. So if he really was innocent, he really should have taken the first one.
I was just gonna say, wow.
Chris Wilson agreed to that.
And the judge asked him in front of a packed courthouse.
And he paused before saying yes,
that this was indeed his statement,
but ultimately did say that he, quote,
recklessly caused the death of Mackenzie Cowell
by strangulation and stabbing her with a knife.
Whew.
Now on May 23, Chris Wilson was sentenced
to 14 years in a medium security prison.
And the judge, Judge Bridges, said,
it's almost impossible to find the words
for the family of the victim,
the family of the defendant, or the community.
It's just too bad for all of us.
But I just wanted you to know,
we're all kind of in this together.
So Mr. Wilson is going to prison.
It was just a really strange...
Okay, thanks.
Oh, like that's...
Like, he's apologizing to Mackenzie's family, thank God,
because they absolutely deserve to apologize to you for what happened.
But then he's also recognizing Chris Wilson's family
and the entire community and he says,
like, we're all kind of in this together.
I mean, I get it at the same time,
like at first I'm like, that's a strange way of saying it,
but then when I think about it, I'm like,
well, yeah.
This rocked a community.
Because no matter what, it's like,
you can't blame Chris Wilson's family
if he is the killer.
So you're gonna all the time.
And like, they're also victims in a different way.
And then the community obviously felt very connected
to this case and this young woman.
So in a way, they all were wrapped in it.
So it is like,
and it's not like he's got the same thing.
And I was like, sorry, Chris Wilson,
for like having to sentence you.
So it's one of those things where this whole case,
you look at it one way,
but then you look at it another way, and you can at it another way and you can kind of see you're like
Because when you're coming at it like when you can come at it from like oh, maybe he didn't do it
Then things start turning right different ways in your head
But then you really come at it from the other way it turns the other way right it's hard
There's a lot of gray area for me in this case
Like I'm glad I went into it not knowing this case
because I'm trying to look at things both ways
and I can tell you right now, I don't know.
Me either.
I don't know.
Okay, I'm glad that you don't know if they got it right.
I don't know if they got it right.
It seems, I don't know.
It's the DNA stuff is what throws me a little bit.
Cause that's the thing.
Cause as soon as they were like,
her blood was found in his apartment.
I was like, oh, I was like, he did close. Like there it bit. Cause that's the thing. Cause as soon as they were like, her blood was found in his apartment, I was like, oh shit, he did close.
Like, literally said case closed.
But then it's like, all this other DNA was found
like on her actual body and on the murder weapon
and he didn't do it.
But then you're also looking at it like,
well, he really liked Dexter and like Dexter's
really good at cleaning.
Like, well, one of the main things,
and of course, again, I don't like looking at what you watch
of what you listen to because if that's the case I'd be locked up like it's just like I look at
our Amazon like libraries. Yeah it's it's not a good thing to do and Avi and Dexter is one of my
favorite shows. Yeah. John and I were obsessed with Dexter. I had like the same blood spatter analysis
photos that he had in his like laboratory. I think that you said had.
That I, well, have them.
I haven't hung them up though, because children.
But it was before we had children
that I had them hung in our living room
and then I had to take them down,
because we would just be like, I was a lot.
I was like, oh, we're out of Lina's.
Yeah, and I'm like, there they are.
But I loved that show.
I still love that show, can't wait for it to come back.
But one of the things that is really specific
to Dexter's character and his whole role
as a serial killer is one, he kills bad guys.
So that's the other thing.
That's really great.
But on top of that is that he is methodical.
And then he has a room set up ahead of time
and that he puts the tarps down.
He's always wearing gloves.
He's always wearing a full suit. So not even a speck of anything could be found on him,
because his whole life was training to never be caught. So it's like maybe somebody who was
into that and was already feeling those feelings, sure, could take notes and say, I need to cover
myself completely to not get caught. Absolutely, that could happen.
It doesn't make it like, you know, dexterous faults or something.
So I also think that's like a stretch in a way
because what you watch and, but I don't know.
Well, then it's like, okay, so can we look into like his bank account?
Did he buy sheets of plastic at the end of the year?
No, that's what I'm wondering.
I'm like, do we have any evidence that shows that he bought plastic or anything?
But it did anything.
If they had that, they would have presented that.
And I didn't find that anywhere in my research.
But then it also doesn't mean that it isn't.
But also he caught and bought the evidence with cash.
Yeah, exactly.
Went somewhere where they didn't know.
Like, that's the thing.
It's like, it's hard.
Anything could have happened in this case.
And I feel like there's just so much that your love
to kind of fill in.
Peace together to make up your own mind
and at the end of this, I was like,
my mind doesn't made up.
No, I don't know.
Right, I hope they have the right guy.
Of course.
Of course, because you hope that.
Of course I hope that justice is being served.
And I hope that the family feels closure
and I hope that it's all, that's, I hope that's the way it is.
Yeah.
For Mackenzie's family and those who cared about her and knew her,
I hope that the right guys in prison
and that that closure is there.
And that they, that's my whole closure.
Like I hope that for them.
And I can see, I can see.
I can see why he's in prison.
Absolutely.
But it's like, I mean,
her blood was found in his apartment.
That you said, he's close.
That's real compelling to me.
I just don't know, but.
But interesting.
Chris's mom and Mackenzie stepmom,
like after the verdict was read,
they hugged each other in the courtroom
and both of them told each other
that they were sorry for the others' loss.
Oh, my whole body broke my heart,
but it's also just like such an example
of like a wonderful people they have.
Yeah, that's just like for her stepmother
to sit there and say like,
I'm sorry for your loss when her son is still alive.
And you've lost your daughter in such a gruesome manner.
Maybe at the hands of her son and you can say,
like I'm sorry for your loss too.
Wow.
That's like, that's some like
high level humanning. High level human. Like that's like above level human beings right there.
Now we're able to do that. Don't yet. We're not done. We're not done. What? So about a year later,
Chris Wilson tried to withdraw his guilty plea saying that he didn't understand at the time the consequences when he entered the plea deal, and he said he entered it involuntarily. His request was denied.
Oh boy. But he might be able to be released from prison in 2023, and he still maintains his
innocence. And so does his mother, Kathleen, who I saved this for the end. She said that at the time Mackenzie was supposed
to have been murdered, Chris was out with her buying a plate of cupcakes. Okay, and she said,
it's interesting to me, the trial of public opinion, the way they've portrayed my son and Tessa,
it's so tragic that number one people are so judgmental. And number two, if they lived in Seattle, they would not have been looked at twice.
But because we live in Wenatchee, they do stand out a little bit more.
And then Mackenzie's father Reed said that he hung this beautiful wind chime in the
front yard and that whenever it goes off, he likes to think that it's Mackenzie talking
to him, which I immediately immediately just like wanted to cry.
Oh my God, that just like hit me like,
I know.
I know.
And he said, I still think about her as though she's still around.
Of course.
Like that was his little girl.
Oh, I feel so bad.
It just feels so bad for him.
Like her mother and her stuff.
Her whole family.
It's just, that's horrific.
It's horrible.
Wow.
But you might be being released in 2023.
Wow.
Because this happened in 2010, so.
Yeah.
I didn't even think of that.
Because it seems like it's such a recent thing.
I know.
Like, when you're talking about it.
Because I was like, wait, how is he going to be really
sent?
I'm like, oh, shit, it's almost been four years.
Because when you said 2010, I was like, wow,
so this is recent.
Then I'm like, no, no, that was 11 years ago, which is insane.
Yeah, but wow.
I have, I don't even know.
So guys, what do you think?
Yeah, I got to know what everybody thinks.
I didn't get to listen to the episode yet, but I also saw that they covered
this case on the first degree.
I was just going to say, I think they covered this yet, because it seems familiar.
So now I want to listen to what they think.
Yeah.
I try to listen to episodes after the fact,
so that my mind doesn't get all jumbled up with him for me.
Yeah, exactly.
I'm giving you my point of view.
Yeah.
And then now I'm gonna go listen to 78 podcasts
because I would like to know.
Because I need to listen to things.
Yeah.
Like, I gotta know.
It's interesting.
Wow.
That's really horrifying. Yeah. I feel for her family in such a big way.
Yeah, but we hope you keep listening and we hope you keep it weird. Just stop this weird. Yeah, don't hurt people.
Yeah, don't hurt people, yeah, please. 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 Add Free with Wondery Plus and
Apple Podcasts.
Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondery.com slash survey.
and add free with Wondery Plus and Apple podcasts.
Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondery.com slash survey.