Murder With My Husband - 148. Karen Ann Phillips - The Murder Dream
Episode Date: January 23, 2023On this episode of MWMH, Payton and Garrett discuss a case that mystified police when a witness came forward claiming they watched the entire murder happen in a dream. Links: https://linktr.ee/murder...withmyhusband Case Sources: Innocence: The True Story of Steve Linscott (1986, Zondervan Books), by Gordon Haresign www.law.northwestern.edu/legalclinic/wrongfulconvictions/exonerations/il/steven-linscott.html casetext.com/case/people-v-linscott-3 Newspapers.com sources: Chicago Tribune, "Woman found fatally beaten," 6 October 1980, archived (https://www.newspapers.com/image/386793107), citing print edition, p.2 Henry Wood, Chicago Tribune, "Oak Park student charged in killing," 26 November 1980, archived (https://www.newspapers.com/image/386957006), citing print edition, p.8 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, everybody.
Welcome back to our podcast.
This is Murder with My Husband.
I'm Peyton Moreland.
And I'm Garrett Moreland.
And he's the husband?
I'm husband.
OK, before we get to Garrett's 10 seconds,
I just want to talk about something that's pretty cool.
If you are a member of our Patreon
or a member of Apple subscriptions, you actually get ad-free versions of Benjed as well.
No additional fee, we've just looped it all in. So if you've ever thought about
becoming a patron or Apple subscriber, now is the time because you're basically
getting both shows plus the bonus content you get with murder with my husband.
Speaking of which, if you're listening to this on a Monday, then two days later on Wednesday,
there will be three more episodes of Binge, three of them.
That is our second show that we are super excited about.
So if you need more true crime or you need more from just us, go ahead and listen to Binched. For those watching on YouTube, sorry, I am pretty
colorful today. So hopefully I am not blinding your eyes. This is our
personalities in one little show me in all black, get an all color. That's true.
Okay. Are you ready for your 10 seconds? So from a 10 seconds, we are back on the
topic of food. I was sitting there, I got dominoes this week,
and then I also got pizza a couple of days later.
Rough week, don't wanna talk about it, it is what it is.
So anyways, I was sitting there and I was thinking,
you know, like what is the best fast food pizza?
You know what I'm saying?
So, you know, you can't include like,
if you're in New York or Detroit or Chicago, you got your deep
dish pizza, good pizza everywhere.
I'm talking about your chain fast food restaurant pizza.
What is the best one?
I think I've come to the conclusion that it's pizza hut.
There's pizza hut, dominoes, hoppajons, little scissors.
I'm trying to think what else is big. Like mountain,
I figured it's called mountain something. And I know probably on the east coast and other places,
there's other fast food pizzas. Anyways, leave a comment, leave something down below because I'm
curious kind of whatever else thinks. I had both dominoes and pizza hut and my conclusion is pizza hut.
And I don't know, I mean sorry Domino's.
Unless Domino sponsors us, then Domino's is better than Pizza Hut.
My vote I know you didn't ask is Little Seasers.
Little Seasers is good, but sometimes I feel like it just hurts my stomach a little bit.
Doesn't it all hurt yourself?
I guess that's it. Pizza Hut didn't.
That's why I was-
That is true.
I was pretty happy.
Let me know your favorite pizza below,
and I love pizza, my big pizza fan.
I need to know where do we need to go
to try the best pizza?
I feel like everyone's gonna have a different opinion,
so I'm curious to see if anyone agrees on
the best pizza places in, honestly, the US.
Okay, let's get into this.
So our episode sources are innocence
the true story of
Steve Linskitt, law.northwestern.edu, casetext.com, and newspapers.com. Okay, so humans have been
exploring, studying, and debating the significance of dreams since the dawn of man. What do they
mean? How come so many people have the same recurring dreams,
like dreams of falling from great heights or dreams of losing your teeth? And how is
it that some people have dreams that seem to predict future events? These psychic dreams
are known as pre-cognitive dreams, and no one really knows why or how they happen and
how significant they really are. But what if you were a detective investigating a murder?
And someone came to you about a dream that they had
in which they seemingly saw that exact murder unfold.
And the dream took place at the exact same time
that the murder took place.
And that person seemed to know things about the murder
that they couldn't have known unless they were there. That very scenario is at the center of today's story,
which takes us back more than 40 years. It starts with Karen Ann Phillips who spent the
first two decades of her life in North Carolina before moving to Chicago in 1977. Now for Karen, a curious young woman who embraced
new experiences and loved life, Chicago was the next great adventure in which she expected would
be a lifetime full of them. She enrolled in Aurora College and graduated with a degree in biology,
and her career goal was to become a nurse. So she continued her studies at Rush Presbyterian
St. Luke's Medical Center and moved to the Chicago Suburb
of Oak Park in April of 1979, where she signed a lease
on acute studio apartment on Austin Boulevard.
And by this time in her life,
Karen had been introduced to the Temple of Cria Yoga,
which was a wellness and learning
center founded in the late 60s by a self-styled religious leader, Guru, and astrologer.
And the friends that Karen made from Kriya Yoga would soon form her core social circle.
So it basically became her life.
Friends like a woman named Helen, who she met in the
temple's astrology class. Helen was actually a Swami or a priestess in the temple's hierarchy.
So she was a high ranking and very active member. And in her capacity as a Swami, she had a lot
of influence over Karen, convincing her new friend to enter the path to the priesthood herself.
So Karen poured more and more of her money into the temple of Kriya Yoga organization.
In fact, she was even sinking her student loans into the temple and going into increasing debt in the process.
But this is what she believed in. This is what she belonged to.
It's safe to say that Karen had quickly become
a fanatical follower of the temple,
spending much of her money and time there
participating in regular activities like yoga, of course,
meditation and group hypnosis.
So in the summer of 1980, it was during
one of these hypnosis sessions that Karen had a disturbing
premonition. She claims that she came to believe that she would someday, perhaps someday soon, meet a
violent end. So she's in one of these sessions and then she has this premonition.
So are you talking about hypnosis when I was like in a senior in high school and they
all take you, you know, you're all like in a class and some of the classmates get up
and then everyone gets hypnotized.
You know what I'm talking about?
Yes.
You're talking about, I assume we're talking about something a little bit different.
It's okay.
It's not like they all just get in an auditorium, but I'm sure like group hypnosis is very
similar. It's just probably more like religious and spiritual
and they have a leader and whatever.
Speaking of that, I don't know.
This is conversation for another time.
I don't know if I think that's real or not real.
I'm not gonna get too deep into it.
Just like classmates would get up on stage you know,
and they'd be doing things and I'm like,
dude, I know you.
Like, you know, like, nah.
I know you're not actually going to tie.
Yeah, I don't know.
I could be totally wrong.
It's just what I'm going to say for now.
And the one come at me,
because I'm totally open to it being real.
Doesn't bother me.
I'm just curious.
You just are things that your classmates
when you watched it were actually.
Yeah, like I feel like if they would have had me go up there
or have been like, you think they were all fake
dancing with the right exactly 100% anyways let's keep going okay so Karen
gets a premonition that she's going to have a violent end and while still under
her hypnotic spell she discovered that she had been murdered in a previous
life a life in which she had been a nun in Germany.
Now this was something that she found out that she had in common with her temple friend
Helen.
So this is Helen we talked about earlier.
Helen had also been a German nun in a previous life.
So under hypnosis they're like, oh my gosh.
So under the temple's belief system, these two women believed that they were linked across
multiple lifetimes, like they were meant to meet again because in the last lifetime, they
were both nuns together.
So Karen did still have some friends outside of the temple at this point in her life.
She wasn't totally cut off.
And one of the closest of those outside friends was a college professor in North Carolina
named Jerry McDuffie.
Now Jerry was a guy that, to all her Chicago land friends, she referred to as her out of
town fiance.
And when he visited her in Chicago and sat in on some of the temple's classes with her,
Jerry was disturbed by what he observed.
So her one friend who she's like, oh, he's my out of town fiance.
She said joke, but they're close friends.
He comes in to town and he goes to her ceremonies with her and he is disturbed. He tries to talk
to Karen, she says, Hey, I think you should maybe leave the temple and the people associated with it,
but she wasn't having it. The temple was her new family. But Jerry believed he was the older,
wiser, more perceptive of the two of them. And he was also growing concerned about some of the changes
that he was seeing in his friend, Karen.
Or perhaps not changes so much as qualities
that had been lying dormant or hidden back
in North Carolina when she lived near him.
But in the big, bad metropolitan spread of Chicago,
these qualities were now emerging
as a liability out of Karen.
And what we're
mainly talking about here is how naive Karen was. Her ready-willingness to
trust and take things and people at face value. So he was like, basically he told
her, hey, I think that you're being lied to. I don't think any of this is real.
And she was like, no, no, no, this is all real. Jerry thought that the
temple's attitudes toward sex and drug use were too free and permissive and he
felt that some of the temple members represented what he saw as bad elements in
society and that Karen was exposing herself to potentially harmful people and
not just at the temple but outside of it too. He learned about the time that a
stranger from off the street had approached Karen and offered to paint her portrait.
And so she then allowed the stranger to come into her apartment with her alone and paint her.
Okay.
Karen was a confident headstrong young woman who was like many young adults without a lot of life experience who don't see or aren't willing to accept that they may be naive or reckless or inexperienced.
No one really likes to be told that they're naive.
How old is she again?
She's in her 20s at this point.
And when Jerry tells her, Hey, I think you're being naive, she doesn't like it.
And a growing rift begins to develop between Karen and her old friend, Jerry.
So her one friend that wasn't really a part of the temple, she is now fighting with because
of the temple, and this pushes Karen further into the bubble of the temple.
It's hard to feel like you're once out of town fiancé doesn't support your new way
of life.
But this loss of a friend didn't last long, because while all of this was going on, a man
named Peter moved in next door to Karen.
And Peter was new in the building, he lived in the apartment above Karen's.
And in his first few weeks at the complex,
the two neighbors became fast friends.
So now she makes another friend outside of the temple.
Early in the evening of October 2, 1980,
Karen knocked on Peter's door
and asked him if he was up for a game of cards.
He invited her in and from 7 p.m. until about nine,
Karen and Peter played cards followed
by several rounds of mastermind. During the board game, Peter mentioned that he needed
to press some clothes and Karen offered him use of her iron. After they finished playing,
Karen led him back to her apartment where she loaned him the iron and then he returned
back to his unit to do his ironing about an hour later, Peter came back with the iron to return it to Karen. Now when Karen came to the door,
she had the phone receiver to her ear and was engaged in a conversation. So she kind of gestured
a thank you to Peter who was privy to a small piece of her conversation, whoever she was talking to.
She said, don't call tomorrow night, I'll be at the temple. She told the person who was actually Jerry, her ex-friend.
The following day, Karen went to school and had classes from 830 in the
morning to 430 in the afternoon. Her professor observed that Karen
appeared upset that afternoon. And when she asked Karen if something was
wrong, Karen told her that everything was fine. After school, Karen
got a ride
home from a classmate, and then in the evening she went to her usual astrology class at the
temple. Karen hung around the class uncharacteristically late that night. At around 10pm, the
temple's receptionist offered to drive Karen to her car, which was parked about two blocks
away, and Karen accepted the offer. It was dark out. It was late. But when the receptionist asked her to wait just 15 to 20 minutes for
her to tie up loose ends and close up shop, Karen began to kind of grow impatient. She said,
it's okay. I'll just walk. It's no big deal. Half an hour later, Helen, her friend from
the temple, rain Karen's apartment, and Karen could hear her phone ringing from the front
door of the apartment building just as she was stepping in.
So she's coming home from the temple, Helen begins calling, and she rushes into answer.
So she rushes across the hallway to hurry up and answer, and she completely neglects
to close the front door of the building, which was kept locked, like only people who lived
in the building could get in while she doesn't close the door.
She leaves it open to rush into hers. Karen picks up the phone just in time and talks to Helen
for about 20 minutes. Before they said goodnight, the two friends made plans to meet the next morning
at around 11 a.m. to go to the flea market together. Now sometime in the night at around 1 a.m.
Karen's next door neighbor, Muhammad. This is not Peter who lives above. This is Muhammad who lives next door.
Heard what sounded like an argument coming
from Karen's apartment.
He turned down the volume on his TV set
because he was still awake and moved closer to the wall
to try and figure out what all the commotion was about.
Kind of funny because it's funny how you just like
spy on other people.
Right.
I wonder what they're arguing about.
What's going on?
What's going on? What's going on?
He couldn't make out what was being said, but he could hear two voices speaking loudly,
angrily, and there were pounding noises.
Like, there was something clearly going on.
These noises persisted and got louder, so Muhammad walked out of his door and walked to
Karen's front door and knocked on it.
At which point the talking and the pounding stopped. There was silence. He waited a minute, literally counting out the seconds in his
head. And when no one came to the door, he returned to his apartment and resumed watching
TV. Maybe this was just enough to be like, Hey, you're being loud. Yeah, like knock it off.
Yeah. But he noticed as soon as he turned the volume on his TV back up, the loud voices
and pounding kind of started up again. Okay. But rather than get into it with people who were already worked up,
Mohammed just went to bed, just passed right out.
The next morning, Karen didn't show up to the flea market where Helen was waiting for her.
Remember, they had made plans at 11.
When Helen still hadn't heard from Karen half an hour after their meetup time,
Helen grew irritated that her supposed friend didn't even have the courtesy to call
and let her know, hey, I'm running late.
But then, as more time passed,
Helen's unbridge turned to concern.
She began to consider the possibility
that Karen had gotten into an accident
or something she was hurt.
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Helen enlisted her husband Dominic to drive to Karen's place while she stayed home by
the funds.
She's like, you go check on her and all stay home just in case she calls.
And Helen asked Dominic to keep his eyes peeled along the way for signs of Karen's car off the road in the event that it had broken
down or she had crashed. But when Dominic finally did see Karen's car, it was in the driveway
of her apartment house where it had been all along. This is normal. Now knowing that he still
needed to go in and check on Karen, Dominic gained entry into the building, but Karen wasn't answering her door.
He then knocked on the door of Karen's neighbor,
Muhammad.
And told the neighbor what was going on,
how Karen had missed this appointment with his wife,
and they were worried that something had happened.
Did you have you heard anything?
Did you see anything?
And indeed, Muhammad had.
He told Dominic about the strange events
from the night before.
And then Peter, Karen's new friend neighbor
from upstairs comes down and approaches the two men
is like what's going on.
Hearing of the situation, Peter was also concerned about Karen.
Now, there was a window above Karen's front door,
but it was kind of high up.
Nobody had access to a ladder at this moment,
but Dominic has an idea.
He says Peter could stand on Mohammed's shoulders and peek into the apartment to see was kind of high up. Nobody had access to a ladder at this moment, but Dominic has an idea.
He says Peter could stand on Muhammad's shoulders and peek into the apartment to see if they
can see anything.
So Muhammad, who was more sturdily built than Peter, kneeled down and then the second
man climbed up on his shoulders as Muhammad slowly east his way into a fully upright position.
Peter balanced himself as he looked inside Karen's apartment. All I can see he reported
is that the gas burners on the stover on. So yes, but he couldn't see anything else. So Muhammad
lowered himself to the floor and Peter dismounted his neighbor, got off his shoulders, Dominic then
called his wife to report that Karen's car was still in the driveway and they just looked in and
the gas burners were on. So everyone agrees, okay, it's probably time to call police. Like she's not answering the door,
maybe there's been a medical emergency. I don't know where this is going, especially the way
you started this. I have no idea. I don't know what's going on. No idea what's going on.
So officer Kenneth Wise of the Oak Park Fire Department was the first one dispatched to Karen's
apartment and unable to access the apartment from outside the building.
He got a step ladder and forced open one of the windows leading into Karen's apartment.
Now after entering, Officer Wise took only a few steps into the living room when all
of a sudden everyone's fears came true.
Inside of Karen's apartment, he saw lying face down on the carpet in a pool of
her own blood, the battered body of Karen and Phillips. She was wearing nothing but her nightgown,
which had been lifted up and was clinging to her upper body and from what they could see,
24-year-old Karen had been beaten to death. But there was another heartbreaking element to this martyr. Both of Karen's hands were identically configured
with the tips of her thumb and four finger pressed together
into a circle and then the three other fingers loosely
stretched out.
That's weird.
In the Kriya Yoga religion, this is a signal
that means the peaceful acceptance of death.
So this means that Karen was beaten and then
knew she was going to die and put her hands
like this on her own.
OK, so I was going to ask that she put her hands
like that on her own.
Or were they staged?
Or were they staged?
Police think she did it on her own.
OK.
So looking at the rest of the scene,
they noticed that Karen's stereo turntable was still spinning with a prayer record on the platter, a TV set, and a lamp had fallen to the floor evidence that a struggle had taken place before the attacker had subdued her.
Once emergency personnel arrived and the apartment door was propped open, Dominic actually looked inside the apartment and instantly regretted it. Like that's not a scene you want to see.
Horrible.
He dropped to the ground in horror.
Karen was taken to West suburban hospital where she was officially pronounced dead before
being transferred to the morgue for examination.
Now police canvass the neighborhood telling everyone on the block to contact the police if
they remember seeing anything unusual, quote, no matter how silly it might seem.
Meanwhile, a forensic team was carefully processing the apartment
and the area around the building.
The back door to Karen's apartment was locked
from the inside and reinforced with a chain lock.
So it was not likely that the killer had entered there.
Inside of the apartment, there was a table lamp
that had a dried reddish brown substance on it,
resembling blood outside
the building in some bushes, police recovered a tire iron with dried blood and hair
crusted into it.
That was later determined to be the murder weapon in tandem with strangulation.
So Karen also had several non-fatal stab wounds to her head and the right side of her body.
Hairs were collected from the palms of Karen's hands as well from her body and back at the
apartment her bed sheets.
For unidentified latent prints were lifted from inside of the apartment and 15 additional
prints were lifted from the apartment's front door.
This isn't something you get away with.
I mean, there is blood everywhere, there's DNA everywhere.
When you beat someone the death, it's not like some
sly subtle thing.
Right.
At the medical examiner's office,
Seaman was found along with evidence of sexual assault,
a rape kit was collected and an autopsy was performed.
The following Monday evening, detectives, Robert Shionna and Ronald Grego
at the Oak Park Police Station were sitting
with Karen's friend Helen when their phone rang.
Shiana picked it up, and on the other end of the phone, a male voice began speaking.
I read about the murder of the woman in Oak Park in the paper today, said the man.
You'll probably think this is silly, but I had a dream.
Do you want to hear it?
Sure.
Okay.
Said the detective, getting his notepad and pen into position.
I had the dream on Saturday evening, said the man on the phone the same night that Karen
was murdered and apparently it around the same time.
And in the dream, he continued, I saw a man bludgeon someone to death.
She oughta asked, can you describe the man? The
other man on the phone said he was
blonde with short straight hair. He had
fair features and he was square built, not
muscular, but solid. He was about five foot
five to five feet seven inches tall. And
he was wearing a Terry cloth short sleeve
shirt with two or three horizontal lines
across the chest.
We're getting pretty descriptive right now, aren't we?
He keeps going.
The man had brown or reddish pants and he was an easy going guy and felt comfortable with
the person that he was killing.
The man continues, the victim, I believe, was struck while lying down or crouching and
seems to have been hit on the side of the head and possibly on the right hand.
Instantly, I mean suspect number one, right?
I'm sure this is exactly what the police are thinking as well.
Right.
So, the man continues to victim also seems to have not given a lot of resistance.
Maybe she has an heir of acceptance or peace about her death.
An heir of acceptance or peace.
Much like Karen, whose hands signaled the acceptance of impending death.
But something had just changed in the man's description.
The caller now was gendering the victim as a she,
while just earlier in his description the victim didn't have a gender.
He just said a person was blood-gent.
But the man continued on, this attack was unexpected because the attacker was quite calm and a ease
with her beforehand, but then quick and brutal during the attack.
The victim was struck a number of times.
The last impression I have of the attack was the bludgeon, striking bleeding flesh and
a lot of blood flying everywhere.
He also goes on, I want to say the victim was black, but that's not so clear to me.
Now, Detective Shana's interest was peaked.
He wanted to know more about this man that was calling
and why he seemed to know what he knew.
So he tells the man on the phone,
why don't you just write this down
and we'll drop by and pick it up later.
On the other end of the phone,
this sounded fine to the man
who then provided his name and address.
His name was Steven Linsky and he was a 26 year old Bible student at the Emas Bible
College.
Which, I feel like if he did it, he wouldn't have said a come by and picked this up unless
he's just an insane narcissist and he needs to insert himself in that.
Exactly.
Which, I mean mean it's possible.
Well, when police figure out who Steve Linsky is,
they discover that he was one of the people
who'd been contacted during the door to door
neighborhood canvas following Karen's murder
because he lived with his wife and two children
at the Good News Mission in Oak Park.
Now, the Good News Mission was a halfway house
for ex-convicts
transitioning back into society,
but Linske wasn't an ex-con.
He was actually a counselor and provided services on site
where he also lived.
But the address of this mission, which Linske called home,
was also right next door to Karen's apartment building.
So literally the building over.
Linske and his family had apparently moved to town only a month before Karen's murder. So police wasted little time in paying Linske a visit. They're like okay whatever is going on,
he lives right next door to her and now he's called in basically describing the death
and they want to pick up the written statement from him. Some additional details in his written
statement included and I'll just quote it directly
from the note.
As I dreamt, the first stage was very clear, but I woke up as I sensed a change come over
the person, and I tried to shake off the dream and go back to sleep.
I went to sleep again and dreamt of the attack.
After this, I woke up and was very disturbed because of the vividness of the dream.
I thought I heard a noise in the front room of our apartment so I got up and went out and came back
and then went back to sleep.
Concerning the second stage of the dream,
the attack is striking down on the victim.
She is below his waist, then below the knees,
and does not give much resistance to this attack.
Now this next part of the story is different
depending on who you believe.
But the way the story went went as it was later written by
police was they wrap up this and the police officers at the scene read the note then ask Lin's kit
why he hadn't described the murder weapon and Lin's kit reportedly answered that he thought the
murder weapon was a blunt object that resembled a tire iron. Okay. But this conversation was never
recorded and Lin's kit later on would deny that he ever
said this. He said, I never said it was a tire, a tire iron. Anyway, back at the station,
the detectives received the note, read it and discuss it with their colleagues. There
were several consistencies between what Linsky had described in his dream and the actual
crime scene, enough for them to decide to take the discussion to the state attorney's district office.
All parties now involved with the investigation felt it was important to pursue Linskitt further
and bring him in for interrogation.
He has now become Suspect No.1.
So detective Shiana called Linskitt that afternoon and taking care not to let Linskitt sense
that he was a suspect told him that they'd consulted a dream expert
and wanted to talk to him further, get some more information.
So Linsky agreed to come down for the interview and he arrived at the Oak Park Police Station
the next afternoon.
When he showed up, Linsky was wearing a Terry cloth short sleeve shirt with two or three
horizontal lines across the chest.
Just like the assailant that he described having seen
in the dream.
This is weird.
I don't know, keep going.
Well, in fact, Linske overall resembled the man that he set
in his dream.
Linske himself had straight, short blonde hair,
a light complexion in a husky build.
Okay.
So the detectives lead him through the station
toward the interview room.
And as they pass a table where another man was having his Miranda rights read to him,
Detective Grego turns to Lynn Scott
and says, do you see that?
That's routine.
Everyone gets their rights read to them
when they give a statement.
It's a formality that man just had his house burglarized
and he's giving a statement.
This paved the way to get Lynn's get
to let down his guard for when they would read him
his rights in the
interrogation room. And once his rights were read, they jumped right into it. So
let's talk more about this dream, said Detective Shiana who led the
interrogation. Linskitt begins. So Friday was a normal day for me at school. I
worked on my car in the afternoon, then I completed my homework assignments, then
it was evening, and I studied for a bit. And then I talked to some of my
neighbors. My wife went to bed before me at around 1030, and I studied for a bit and then I talked to some of my neighbors.
My wife went to bed before me at around 10.30 and I joined her about a half hour later.
And was she still awake at this time? Ask the detective wondering if the man's wife could
vouch for any of this, like give him an alibi. And Lenskitt said no, she was already asleep.
After they go through some more details about about the dream actually like getting really detailed saying what is the killer sex life like, get into his head, what's his psyche and Linskitt's
kind of going along with it, police tell him, okay, we're very interested in your dream
from a psychic standpoint and we'll need to talk to you again soon.
The next day when Detective Shihanna reached out again to Linskitt, it seemed that Linskitt
was starting to get wise
to the investigator's suspicions.
He just straight up asked police if he was a suspect.
He's like, okay, I know that like I had this dream
and I'm willing to help you guys,
but am I a suspect that Detective
infatically denied that that was the case.
No, no, no, you're not a suspect.
We just need your help.
And can you do that?
Can you lie?
Can you lie?
Police can can yeah.
During an investigation. Okay, okay.
Shana then under the guise of wanting to provide transparency, ask Lin Skit to write down any questions or concerns that he might have and
bring them by the station. Also, the detective added, we'd like
you to help us make a composite sketch of the assailant in your
dream. So early that Friday evening, Lin Skit was back at the
station for another interview.
Sitting down with a police and a sketch artist,
Linsket really squeezed his memory
for the haziest of details from his now weak old dream.
It had been a week since Karen had been murdered.
And the process of this sketch dragged on for an hour and a half.
And when the sketch was complete,
it looked an awful lot like Steve Linsket himself. No, Kim. Which seemed to explain why the sketch was complete, it looked an awful lot like Steve Linskeit himself.
Which seemed to explain why the sketch artist was looking at Linskeit so
intently through the process, like you are basically just describing yourself.
A bit later, the assistant state attorney entered the room to sit on in the interview
as Detective Shionna asked Linskeit to go through his dream yet again one more time.
Which would have been at least the fourth time.
He's now telling police this dream.
Linske agreed but with reluctance.
The detectives kept asking him to provide details of things that didn't appear in the
dream.
How does she know her is Saint Lynn?
They asked Linske it would then be pressed to just outright speculate.
They're like, well how does she know?
And he says, well, that wasn't in the dream.
And they're like, hey, but what would you, what do you think?
And he says, I don't know.
Maybe he came by to pick up something.
Maybe he was selling amware or something.
I don't know that wasn't in my dream.
He sat for a moment aware of how frustrated he was becoming.
Again, he asks, do you suspect me of this crime?
All three men who are present, stammered at the same time and tell it was the
assistant state attorney who spoke up.
We don't suspect you.
They explained that they just needed to eliminate their star witness in case it went to trial.
And Linskebottet.
And while Linskeb was being interviewed, unbeknownst to him, his wife Lois was paid a visit
by two plain close policemen accompanied by the senior assistant state attorney.
They downplayed that her husband was a suspect,
their only suspect in fact,
and used the rules that they were trying
to gain more insight into the case
while also making sure to eliminate her husband.
They asked Lewis about her husband's religious beliefs
and if he ever used drugs,
they learned that Linskitt had once experimented with drugs,
but then had a dramatic conversion to Christianity.
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While they collected more background information on Steve Linskitt, from his wife, police also
looked around the apartment and casually examined the souls of Linsky's shoes.
So basically they're just doing.
Yeah, I mean, they think he did it, which I don't blame them at this point.
I mean, how do you come in?
That's pretty suspicious or someone to be like, Hey, I know exactly what happened.
So Lewis was never cautious or apprehensive while these men were in her apartment because
she trusted the police.
So she had no reason to believe that she was being misled.
She really didn't think that Steve was a suspect.
They just thought he was helping in the case.
But by 10.30 PM that evening,
her husband had been at the police station all day
and she still hadn't heard from him.
So she didn't know what to think.
She decided to reach out to the one person
who she felt she could trust for guidance.
Chaplin Russell Strupp, who was the director
of the Good News Mission where Linske had lived and worked.
Strupp's advice to Lewis was,
tell him to get out of there right away
and not to get involved with this any further.
Like he's helped enough, he said the dream,
that's it, he needs to come home.
Now back at the station and what had turned
into a full blown interrogation, Linske had been
repeatedly denied requests to phone his wife until just before midnight.
When he finally was allowed to call her and was able to connect with her, Lewis told her
husband about how the police had dropped by.
They were probing in his background, asking her questions, snooping around.
She says, listen, I talk to Chaplin Strupp and he says to leave immediately and don't
get further involved. When Linskeh hung up the phone, he announced to the tech
tips that he was done speaking to them and he was going to head home. This is when everything
turned. You're not going anywhere, detective Shiana told him, confiscating his keys and
wallet. The ingratiating tone of the interrogators had now turned hostile. That's when Linzgett realized what was happening.
He realized that he was a suspect,
their main suspect, and he needed to talk to Chaplin Strup.
I don't know, I mean,
I for some reason part of me thinks this guy didn't do it.
It sounds so stupid because it seems so obvious.
I guess let's see where this goes.
So Chaplin Strup shows up,
and he says, listen, they want DNA samples.
And the Chaplin says, then give them the DNA samples.
If you haven't done anything, it will clear you.
You can cooperate and then we will go home.
The detectives then proceeded to grill and skip
for another two hours before putting him into their patrol car
and taking him down to West Suburban Hospital
to collect blood and
saliva samples. So he has been there all day. They're taking these samples because this man is now their prime suspect.
And it was also an opportunity for them to pass by the crime scene so they could point it out and gauge Lin's
gets reaction. And Lin's gets reaction was he expressed that he thought the murder had occurred in the building on the
other side of his and that the actual location was new information to him.
He didn't know it was that building, he thought it was the other one.
But no one was buying a word, he was saying by now.
After getting the samples, they taken back to the police station and Lin Skitt's car was impounded and searched.
So they're like, okay, also we're taking your car.
Collected from the overhead dome light inside the car was one light brown hair. The same color and length as Karen's. Linske was then fingerprinted and although he expected now to go home, he
was taken back into the interrogation room where Detective Gregor told him point blank
that he, his partner and everyone else working the case, knew that Linske had killed Karen
Phillips. So just in this one day, things have now taken like a drastic turn.
He says the evidence you gave us tonight will convict you, but Linske insisted he was innocent.
In fact, he begged them to analyze the physical evidence so they could eliminate him.
He's like, listen, I just dreamed of the murder.
I didn't commit the murder.
Detective Shiana then pulled out crime scene pictures of Karen's battered body and held them up in front of Linske's face.
Linske averted his eyes and turned away. The detective began shouting, playing bad cop,
like in a scene out of a movie. You want evidence he barked? What is that? That's a boot. You said
the guy was wearing a boot. Lin Skit wasn't looking, but he could hear the detective angrily striking
the picture with his finger each time he pointed a detail and described it.
The detective loudly explained to Linsket that he had described almost every detail of the
murder.
Down to a tee.
He's like, listen, why would you think you wouldn't be a suspect?
You described everything that happened.
He then held up the sketch that Linsket had helped create hours early and said, it's you.
You, the look at the sketch.
It is literally you.
But when Linsket looked at the sketch again, he noted that now it looked even more like
himself than it did when he last saw it because the artist had in the hour since added sideburns
a mustache and eye glasses just like Linske.
They had altered the sketch even more to look like him.
They finished up with pointing out that Linske was literally wearing the exact shirt he described
the murderer wearing.
They're like, you walked in here wearing the shirt that you said the murderer was wearing.
So by this time, Linske had been at the police station for eight hours and he'd had enough.
As he got up to leave, Detective Gregor also stood and with his imposingly large frame
blocked the man's exit.
The detectives warned him that the murder would be his bird into bear.
They'd have to live with it.
Trying to get him to confess by continuing to play at his conscience.
She on a lowered his brow and said with disgust,
the chances of you dreaming this dream,
this is not a dream, this is a murder.
Yeah, this is technically impossible.
Right, this was no dream to this girl. This girl is dead and you did it. But Linz
getting sick that he wasn't playing games. He's like, listen, there's nothing I have to
live with. I didn't do this. Like I didn't do this. I have absolutely no recollection
of what you're telling me is actually something I could have done. So then the cops are like,
okay, well, were you sleepwalking?
Have you ever sleptwalked and he's like, no, I don't sleepwalk. Like, I didn't do this.
Does he have a twin? No. Oh, okay. So eventually without a confession or a heart evidence, they
couldn't hold Linske any longer. So they let him leave. But over the next month, Linske
was trailed and kept under constant pressure or from his perspective, harassed.
I mean, they have his DNA, does doesn't matter not i mean i feel like that
right there is
pretty easy right the dna match or doesn't not will get there
on november twenty four nineteen eighty that afternoon lenskitt was driving home
and detectives grego and shana turned on their flashers made lenskitt step out
of his car and placed him under arrest for the murder of Karen
Anfield-Lips. He was cuffed and thrown into the back of the police car and taken back to the station
where he was formally charged with rape, armed violence, and first-degree murder. His bail was set at
$450,000 and he was sent to the Cook County jail to await trial. Now a few months after his arrest,
friends and supporters were able to raise the money to post bond and Linske was freed pending trial, but that trial wouldn't begin for at least another year.
During the trial, among the scant evidence that was presented against Linske, it was noted
that the semen recovered from the victim could only have come from a non-secretor, which
means that the individual's blood type cannot be determined from bodily fluids.
So Karen's rapist and killer was a non-secretor,
and so was Linske, and as we know,
only 20% of the population are non-secretors.
But this was so early on that they couldn't test the DNA yet.
So this is our issue here.
Is they have a DNA?
All right.
And they can match it, but it's not for sure.
A forensic expert called as a witness by the prosecution
also testified that the head hairs found in Karen's apartment
were consistent with lens skits.
And the odds of two similar hairs coming from two different
sources was 1 in 4,500.
And the odds of pubic hairs found near the body
and pubic hairs taken from lens
skit coming from two separate individuals was one in 800.
So they're like, listen, it's,
the odds are good that it was him.
And on June 16th, 1982, a jury acquitted
Steve Lenskitt on the charge of rape,
but on the first degree murder count, Lenskitt was found guilty.
And he was sentenced to 40 years in prison.
But.
But that wasn't the end of the story.
Three years later, the Illinois Appellate Court looked at the case and decided to reverse
his conviction, contending that the proof of guilt was not legally sufficient.
They're like, okay, well, your evidence wasn't for sure.
It was just likely.
And in November of that year, Linske was released from prison after serving three years.
But then in October of the following year, the state Supreme Court challenged the Appellate
Court's decision, arguing that the evidence wasn't fact enough and they reversed the reversal.
But then they remanded the case back to the Appellate Court for consideration and the Appellate
Court reversed the conviction yet again.
All right, give me some, I need some hard evidence here.
Tell me what's going on.
And during all of this, it comes out that at trial, the state knew it was not mentioned.
There were a number of pubic and headhairs found in Karen's apartment and on her dead body,
the indicated that they came from a black male. Now Linsket was not black and they knew
this at trial. Justice moves really
slow sometimes and they ordered a retrial. Then in 1992, with DNA now being a thing in
the world, the swabs from the rape kit were processed for DNA and a profile of Karen's
murderer was developed and the DNA did not match Steve Linsket's. So 12 years after
he was first charged, the charges against Steve Linsketitt's. Okay. So 12 years after he was first charged, the charges
against Steve Linskitt were finally dropped. Though the state attorney did not
outright pronounce him innocent. They just said there's insufficient evidence to
retry him. It wasn't until 2002 that then governor of Illinois George Ryan
officially pardoned Steve Linskitt and cleared his name. So this entire ordeal all
came about because of a dream.
Yeah, so you're telling me that he really had a dream?
Yes.
That's just crazy.
Like he actually had a dream and he didn't do it.
Yes, so stories like this are so frustrating to hear
because Karen, Philips murder could have been solved
if the Oak Park detectives weren't so
serially focused on making a case against Steve. I mean, but come on, like how do you not?
Like, well, his dream and at the time that they charged him, they knew that the hairs
be long to a black male and they still charge, charge Steve. Yeah. A guy whose only mistake
was thinking a dream might be significant enough to share with his local place
I'm gonna help you guys out. Yeah, he's like never again
But Karen Phillips murder is not the only case like this many other similar crimes in Oak Park and the surrounding suburbs
Have gone unsolved in fact if you were murdered in Chicago anytime between
solved. In fact, if you were murdered in Chicago any time between 1910 and yesterday, odds are against your murder ever being solved. Like Louellaville, Sutters, a 36 year old woman
who was raped and fatally stabbed in the head inside of her own bedroom in 1973, just half
a mile away from where Karen Ann Phillips was killed, her case never solved. Or 22 year
old Rita Hopkinson who was raped and stabbed to death in broad daylight
on a train platform in Oak Park in 1978, never solved.
Or here's what you may have heard of.
24-year-old Kathleen Lombardo who was cut down while jogging through her
Oak Park neighborhood one summer in 1984, raped and stabbed to death in an alleyway.
To this day, still unsolved. 24-year-old Deborah Sawyer in 1980 stabbed in the neck and sexually assaulted in
her garage. Magdalena Acosta stabbed to death in her home in 1987. Cynthia
Joan Chemler stabbed to death off a jogging path in 1993. All unsolved all in the
vicinity of Oak Park. In fact, Oak Park's success at solving cold cases
has been very low.
In fact, there's little evidence,
Oak Park and some of the nearby towns
and Chicago itself even work their cold cases.
We don't know why, who can say?
But the current nonprofit that murder with my husband
has the opportunity to donate to is end the backlog,
which is a nonprofit that helps pay for tests to be done.
Tests that can close cases, give answers, and maybe even serve some sliver of justice.
So thank you for listening.
Thank you for being the reason that murder with my husband can hopefully help out with these.
You guys matter and you are helping in the true crime community.
And that is the case of Karen and Philips.
Can you put me in a dream?
I'm just still blown away that he literally had a dream and he didn't do it.
That he dreamed basically the whole murder.
Okay.
Crazy.
But to me, him being similar to the suspect was himself inserting himself in the dream.
Yeah, I guess I guess that makes way more sense actually.
Like he had this dream. himself inserting his I guess I guess that makes way more sense actually
Like way more sense like you had this dream Yeah, but also is this real is this premonition did he dream her murder?
I don't even want to get into that because I'm just so confused. I don't know. I have no idea and
But also poor Steve because the only thing he was guilty of is
Telling police why did she die? But also poor Steve because the only thing he was guilty of is little telling police.
Why does she die?
No, he even knows why he killed her just to rape her.
Like, who was she arguing with?
Right.
Like, we don't even know any of that.
We still don't have any answers.
No, there's no answers to all that.
So what the heck happened there?
That is our case and I guess we will see you guys next time with another episode.
I love it.
And I hate it. Goodbye.