Murder With My Husband - 192. The 'Jeff Davis 8'
Episode Date: November 27, 2023On this episode, Payton and Garrett uncovers the mystery of the Jeff Davis 8, eight women all found dead under similar circumstances. Was this a serial killer, or does a nefarious scheme underlie thei...r tragic fates? https://linktr.ee/murderwithmyhusband Case Sources: “Murder in the Bayou: Who Killed the Women Known as the Jeff Davis 8” by Ethan Brown WashingtonPost.com - https://www.washingtonpost.com/crime-law/2019/10/11/murder-bayou-how-show-about-eight-unsolved-killings-attempts-expose-police-corruption/ The NY Times - https://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/02/us/02serial.html Biography.com - https://www.biography.com/crime/murder-in-the-bayou-jeff-davis-8-true-story Medium.com - https://medium.com/matter/who-killed-the-jeff-davis-8-d1b813e13581#.f5oc6bevp RollingStone.com - https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-features/dark-truth-behind-8-sex-workers-murdered-in-the-bayou-113264/ FoxNews.com - https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/jennings-8-doc-true-crime InvestigationDiscovery.com - https://www.investigationdiscovery.com/crimefeed/id-shows/5-things-you-need-to-know-about-the-complex-case-of-the-jennings-8 The Daily Beast - https://www.thedailybeast.com/murder-in-the-bayou-were-these-8-women-murdered-by-a-serial-killer-pimpor-the-cops Oxygen.com - https://www.oxygen.com/martinis-murder/murder-in-the-bayou-who-are-the-jeff-davis-8-key-players Cosmopolitan.com - https://www.cosmopolitan.com/entertainment/tv/a29035421/murder-in-the-bayou-jeff-davis-8-true-story/ TheAdvocate.com - https://www.theadvocate.com/curious_louisiana/why-does-louisiana-have-parishes-not-counties-curious-louisiana-explores-the-history/article_4b6aea26-44fb-11ed-abab-df67a488b0d3.html#:~:text=Most%20say%20that%20when%20the,place%20name%20as%20civil%20boundaries. AETV.com - https://www.aetv.com/real-crime/why-do-serial-killers-target-sex-workers KATC3.com - https://www.katc.com/news/acadia-parish/frankie-richard-jennings-8-figure-has-died Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Hey everybody, welcome back to the podcast.
This is Murder with My Husband.
I'm Peyton Moreland.
And I'm Garrett Moreland.
And he's the husband.
I'm the husband.
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You got your 10 seconds. Another year, another Thanksgiving, another year of Turkey talked about this last
year. If you're a Turkey fan, good for you. If you're not, then I feel you.
But actually, Turkey was, Turkey was better this year. It was actually pretty good
Turkey. And something that I think we need to try next year.
And if you're in the fire department
or public safety or anything,
you're gonna hate that I'm saying this
but a fried turkey, a deep fried turkey.
I feel like every year I see those videos
of people deep frying their turkeys.
There's always a lot of stupid people out there
who do it the wrong way and everything explodes
and it isn't good.
But there are some good looking ones out there. Have you seen those? No?
Oh my gosh, you haven't seen those? No. Oh, they get a big like huge thing of oil.
Like a huge bucket, whatever you want to call it. And they take the turkey and they slowly put it in there. They deep fry it for, I don't know how long, 20 minutes. I don't even know how long it would take.
And they take it out and it's just crispy golden turkey.
I feel like we need to try that.
So if you have done a deep fried turkey, let me know, let me know how it is.
And if you haven't and you're against it, I'm sorry.
But I don't know, it just sounds so good.
Other than that, we went on my birthday trip.
Ah, yes, sorry, forgot about Payton's birthday trip.
Yeah.
We did go to Cabo, it was fun.
What do you think?
Oh, it was really fun.
It was so much fun.
It was a good birthday trip.
Payton's real birthday is actually tomorrow.
Tomorrow?
So tomorrow?
Yes, tomorrow, babe.
I didn't know that only knows Daisy's is coming up.
Daisy's is coming up too Daisy's is coming up to her.
This is on Monday.
So the day this episode comes out, this Daisy's birthday.
Yeah, everyone was Daisy happy birthday.
All I know is when we were in Cabo, they were singing happy birthday to me.
And it was so funny.
They couldn't get the candle lit and we it was hilarious.
It was funny.
We did a good time.
It was a good time.
It was a good getaway.
We're back good time. It was a good time. It was a good getaway.
We're back in action.
Ready for a new MWMH episode.
Oh, also before we hop into it, before we hop into it.
We're working on new merch.
We're sorry.
It's been taking so long.
We've been going through just some complications there, but we've figured some things out.
We're hoping to have new merch, hoping in the next week or two. Yeah. So we'll keep everyone updated.
And if we can't get merch launched in time for people to get them before the
holidays, you for a Christmas, um, then we're probably just going to wait to the
new year because we don't want to leave anybody hanging.
Okay, jumping into our sources, we have murder in the Bayou who killed the
women known as the Jeff Davis eight by Ethan Brown, Washington Post, dot com, the New York Times biography, dot com,
medium, dot com, rolling stone, dot com, Fox news, dot com, investigation, discovery,
the daily beast oxygen, dot com, cosmopolitan, dot com, the advocate, dot com,
a, e, tv, dot com, and K, a, t, c, three, dot com. Okay, there are plenty of
reasons why homicide cases don't get the investigations they deserve.
It may be due to lack of resources, lack of funding, under staffing, particularly when
it comes to lower income communities.
And unfortunately, it's a lot more common in cases where the victim is marginalized.
We've talked about this multiple times on the podcast.
People who might have lived with a substance abuse problem or happen to be a sex worker.
And if the victim fits the mold of all three, well, the case is almost guaranteed to get buried
under the files of an overcrowded desk. But it gets harder to turn a blind eye in a case like
today's, when multiple women from the same town and the same inner circle all turned up dead the same way over the course of a few years.
And while some cried serial killer others wondered if those cases might have gotten buried under a
host of excuses and corporate bureaucracy for a darker reason. So it's May 20th, 2005. A man named
Jerry Jackson is unloading his fishing gear on a bridge overlooking the
Grand Marais Canal, just outside of a little town called Jennings, Louisiana. He cracks open
a can of soda, bates his hook, and is about to cast his line into the fresh water below
when he spots something floating in the water. He thinks to himself,
is that a mannequin?
He's just seen a story on the news about how someone was stealing mannequins from shops around town.
But then it dawned on Jerry.
mannequins shouldn't attract bugs,
and this lifeless figure is swarming with them.
So Jerry scrambles for his cell phone, dialing 911, and about 10 minutes later,
is answering questions from the police while watching that lifeless body get scooped out of the
muddy waters below. The woman can't be older than 30, still in blue jeans and a white blouse. Her
body shows a little sign of injury aside from a tiny scab on her scalp.
A toxicology report determines she has antidepressants as well as cocaine in her system. Her blood alcohol
content is a whopping 0.162 times over the legal limit, leading authorities to suspect that
she likely died of drowning or suffixiation. And once authorities run her fingerprints,
they're able to determine the identity of their victim. A 28-year-old Caucasian woman,
about 5'3' and 104' named Loretta Chason, a mother of two and a Jennings native,
who also happened to be a local sex worker. Prior to her death, Loretta had been battling a cocaine
addiction. Her marriage of five years was falling apart, and it wasn't uncommon for
Loretta to disappear for a few days at a time to score a fix. But she always found her
way back home, back to her husband and kids. She tried to clean herself up, go to rehab,
get on the straight and narrow. But drugs always found a way back into Loretta's life.
Her husband claimed the last time he saw her was on May 15, five days before she turned
up dead.
She'd returned home from another bender asking for some cash to buy food.
Then she said goodbye to her two sons, not knowing it would be the last time she'd get
to hug them.
The last time Loretta was seen alive was on the morning of May 17th,
three days prior to her body turning up in that canal.
She was spotted climbing into a truck at a gas station
with a local pimp named Frankie Richard.
The two were later seen at a hotel turned brothel
called the Boudreau Inn.
There she allegedly used drugs
along with two other sex workers named
Muggie Brown and Nicole Gilroy.
Remember those names for later,
but after that, Loretta's trail went cold.
So that was her last day, essentially, that we know of.
Now, I think it's important for me to kind of
paint a picture of what Jennings Louisiana
was looking like during this time.
Jennings is about three hours west of New Orleans,
just north of the Gulf of Mexico.
And according to many,
it's the buddhan capital of the world,
a kind of cajun sausage.
Now technically Jennings lies in Jefferson Davis Parish,
and parishes were essentially like
little religious counties established back
when the French and Spanish occupied the land
there centuries ago. Jennings, at least in 2005, was a town of only about 10,000 people, so it's
not an overwhelmingly large community by any means. Still, there's a pretty big cultural divide.
North of the railroad tracks, you have the upper class, your lawyers, your judges, your business man.
But south of the tracks, you'll find the working class people of Jennings, the oil field
workers, the plumbers, the mechanics, many of whom rely on the industry in the next
parish over, where towering oil and gas refineries pepper the landscape, contaminating food supplies
and leaking toxins into the groundwater.
A whole other issue I won't get into, but if you remember the opening credits from true Contaminating food supplies and leaking toxins into the groundwater.
A whole other issue I won't get into, but if you remember the opening credits from True Detective Season 1,
which was allegedly inspired by this case that we're talking about today,
that's the vibe of Jennings and the surrounding areas in a nutshell.
Grey, bleak, ominous, foreboding, compound that with a drug trade that's been taking over the
local slice of the eye-ten freeway, and suddenly, Jennings sounds like a pretty tough place
to get by, especially because the mysterious deaths didn't stop with Loretta.
Cut to June 18th, less than a month after Jerry Jackson discovered Loretta's body floating
in the murky waters.
That evening, a group of boys were out catching frogs in a swamp off of Highway 102,
just a quick turn off from the famed drug trade route I mentioned, the I-10.
And there, well, they spotted something out of place, a dead body floating closer to the banks.
After the boys called 911,
police recovered the remains of another young woman.
She's black, she's wearing jean cut off shorts,
and she happens to have a deep incision across her neck.
Her hands were also badly bruised
and her face was unidentifiable.
After a few hours of digging,
police identified the woman as 30-year-old
Ernestine Mary Daniels,
another sex worker in the area who's been missing for the last two days.
Even outside of their line of work, Ernestine and Loretta shared a similar history.
Ernestine had her fair share of substance abuse and a failed marriage.
In times of clarity, she tried to get clean by turning to God only to find
the problems bigger than herself.
The biggest difference between the women was, Ernestine had her fair share of racist encounters
around town. After her death, Ernestine's sister Jessica recalled a disturbing interaction
they'd had with an officer while walking home one night. It was back in 2004 when an
unmarked police car pulled up alongside them and began questioning
them about where they were going. The officer then called Ernestine names, bringing up her substance
abuse issues and her line of work. When Jessica stood up to the cop, Ernestine tried to convince her
to just keep walking, ignore his threats, until he made one they'd never forget. He told the sisters
he would kill them the next time he saw them.
When Jessica called the local police station to report the threats, she claimed they just laughed
at her, refusing to file an actual report, which would be so frustrating to be like, hey, I was
walking home one of your cops severely mistreated us and they do not take you seriously at all.
Now after Jessica heard about her sister's death, this encounter
obviously stood out like a sore thumb. A rumor had it Ernestine was dealing with a few other shady
characters on the last night she was seen alive. That was June 16th 2005 when Ernestine was spotted
with two clients, a man named Byron Chad Jones and his friend Lawrence Nixon. Knowing this,
police focused their attention on Jones and Nixon as potential suspects in
her death, and eventually Nixon's wife gave the police a good reason to make an arrest.
She claimed on the night of Ernestine's death, the men came back to her house with a bulging,
blood-soaked garbage bag.
They left the bag out on the porch out back until a white vehicle came and picked it up.
Even their teenage daughter admitted her father came home covered in blood that night. So this is
the guys that she's last seen with. Uh-huh. And now two different eyewitnesses have said, yeah,
they were covered in blood. They had the wedding bag. No, they were two men. Then why did you say
teenage daughter? He has a teenage daughter.
Nixon.
One of the guys.
Yeah.
Okay.
So in early 2006, the two men were actually finally arrested and charged with second-degree
murderer.
What was strange, however, was the Jennings Police Department didn't examine the Nixon
household as a crime scene until 15 months after the crime was committed.
At which point, they claimed the scene quote,
failed to demonstrate a presence of blood,
which like,
duh, it's been 15 months, obviously.
It's a lot of time to get things cleaned up.
What's worse though was after this determination,
police dropped the charges against both men,
claiming they didn't have enough evidence to make a case.
The first girl that died was her family ever,
did they ever suspect that it was foul player?
Did they think it was drugs?
They suspected foul play.
Okay.
So this makes you wonder,
was this just shoddy police work?
Like why wait 15 months?
And then obviously you're gonna have to drop the charges
because now any physical evidence
you had that possibly could tie them is long gone.
We'll learn a small town.
They probably don't care.
They're supposed to you for those who are sex workers.
Yeah.
If they have drugs in alcohol in their system, it probably just seems easy to say, hey,
they had drugs in alcohol and we're moving on.
Yeah.
Or were the police protecting these guys in some way? Like there's just so many questions in what ifs.
Yeah.
Well, come March 18th, 2007, the stack of case files
at the Jennings Police Department was about to get a little bit taller.
That day, police responded to a call about a third body
in the Petite John Canal right on the outskirts of Jennings.
So three bodies in three months?
Well, and it's kind of like, can you imagine living there
in this town of 10,000 people?
Yeah.
And you've just got women's bodies,
just washing ashore.
Like that would be so scary.
It's a little weird.
This time, the victim was naked aside from a gold ring
and a sock.
And I will say the MO is not clear.
There's nothing that's like besides that it's three women
in a small town, there's nothing across so far.
I mean sex workers.
Sex workers, yes.
I mean, I feel like there is an MO.
Sex workers who are doing drugs.
But all of it is so like one slashed across the neck.
Yes.
One might have been asphyxiaated, this one's naked.
There was a tattoo on her lower right leg
of two locking hearts.
She was another young Caucasian woman
who'd been reported missing just a few days before.
Her name was Kristen Gary Lopez.
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Like the first victim, Kristen's cause of death was left as undetermined,
seeing as she had no facial rib or scalp injuries.
Although investigators suspected her cause of death was also likely a fixation.
While Kristen was certainly a bit younger than the previous victims,
she still had a history
of drug abuse and was earning cash through sex work.
I guess if it's one or two people, it's like, okay, coincidence, what's going on, blah,
blah, blah.
But I feel like by the time you get to the third person, you gotta start figuring things
out.
I think technically it also takes three bodies to be clarified as a serial killer.
To get the attention of people, yeah.
So unlike the other victims though,
Kristen was living with an intellectual disability
and had been mostly abandoned by her parents
and left to fend for herself.
By now, it should have been apparent to the Jennings PD
that there was definitely something wrong.
Women aged between 20 and 30,
all of them with a substance abuse problem,
all of them sex workers who knew one another.
Keep in mind, all three of these girls know each other.
All of them found dead in bodies of water
and it didn't stop there.
In May 2007, the body of a 26 year old Caucasian woman
named Whitney Duboy turned up near some crawfish ponds
on Highway 102.
This was not far from where Ernestine's body had been
found. Like Kristen, Whitney was left totally nude. Whitney also had a high blood alcohol content
level and had a history with sex work and drug abuse. Unlike the others, Whitney's face had been
severely beaten before her death. Now, throughout the investigation, there was one name that kept coming up while
questioning witnesses. And each investigation, a man named Frankie Richard, who we already kind of
mentioned, he was said to have been like a father figure to Kristen Lopez was one of the last people
seen with Loretta before she died and was a well-known pimp with a violent past who'd done business
with all of the prior victims.
Which, interesting.
I wonder if the pimp would be killing them,
but I doubted it.
It seems a little too sketch.
Like, he's gonna be the first one
that's gonna be talked to.
Well, and also,
it's like killing your employees.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Sure, he's making money, huh, too.
Right. So Frankie was born and raised in Jennings who after high school tried to make an honest
living by getting a job in the local oil business.
But after a workplace accident left him with a broken back in 1980, Frankie took his settlement
and opened up a strip club.
With the new business came a few occupational hazards like having to navigate the drug trade
that was inevitably passing through his bar.
And Frankie figured it was just easier to join than to beat
the drug trade.
Frankie began dealing himself and offering out his employees
for sex work on the side.
If you can't beat them, join them.
The central hub for their trists was the budro
in a small motel with a bar and
a restaurant just off the itan which of it sounds familiar it's because it's already
come up in this case. By the mid 2000s Frankie was working with a large group of Jennings
women including Kristen, Loretta and Whitney three of our victims. But Frankie claimed
their relationship was more than sex drugs and money. He said he forged a deep bond
with a lot of these women because they shared similar traumas throughout their lives.
He saw them as partners who were trying to slay their addictions together.
Hmm, that sounds, I don't know.
He says they were trying to break the vicious cycle they were in and one day start new
lives somewhere else, which is such a bull crap because it's not what he wants for them because he wants
them to keep making him money.
So he's just saying that to make himself look good.
According to Frankie, the business only was meant to be a stepping stone.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But Frankie wasn't the hometown hero.
He was painting himself out to be.
He admitted to having a violent past, a criminal record, a bad crack addiction.
And while he claimed he saw his women more like family,
he also had sex with them too. Still, it's surprised Frankie went in May 2007, he saw his photo
plastered all over local news channels as a wanted man in Kristen Lopez's death. By the 16th,
Frankie was in handcuffs alongside his niece, a childhood friend of Christens who was also considered a suspect in her death.
It was a girl named Hannah Connor. The police-based Frankie's arrest off of one major piece of
witness testimony. That night before Christen had died, she and Frankie had gotten into a fight while
she'd stolen some things from his motel room. Meanwhile, Frankie maintained his innocence. He claimed
he had nothing to do with any of the women's
deaths, and although he was the last person seen in some of them and got in a fight with another,
he's like, no, no, no, it wasn't me. But instead, he believed that these women had lost their
lives because they'd seen or heard something that they weren't supposed to know and that it wasn't
from him. Now, it's possible Frankie was telling the honest truth because a short time after his arrest, all charges were dropped against
him and his niece. Once again, police stated there just wasn't enough evidence to convict
them of the crimes against them. I mean, how hard can it be? I mean, I say that knowing
it is hard, but it's a town of 10,000 people, right? So I mean, there's got to be,
it has to be someone who's killed someone before.
Like, I don't know, it just seems,
it shouldn't be too hard to figure out what's going on.
And it's not like in previous serial killer cases
that we've done where they're traveling town,
a town, states a state.
Yeah, he's obviously still in that town,
killing girls every month.
And it's very obvious who his victim pool is.
Like you, you probably have
a limited number of women who he's going to pick next. But Frankie had been in rehab
during one of the murders. So they released the charges. This obviously gives him an
alibi. So please, we're back to square one with little to no suspects. And by the spring
of 2008, whoever was killing the women of Jeff Davis was about to claim
their fifth victim.
All right.
It was again ridiculous.
It was Thursday, May 29, 2008, almost a year after Frankie Richards was arrested.
That day, the family of 23 year old, Lakonia, Muggy Brown, received a call about their missing
granddaughter.
Her body had been found.
Muggy was fully clothed, still wearing her peach tank top and denim cut off shorts. She
had several incision wounds around her head and neck, but unlike the others, Muggie was
discovered in the middle of a rural road. So not in a body of water, and her body was
doused in bleach.
Interesting. Alright, so something went wrong.
Muggie's grandmother, Bessie, said she last saw her granddaughter the previous Friday around 8.30 p.m.
When Muggie came to tell her she was going to a friends to have dinner
Only Muggie never came back, which was out of character for her since she had a young son at home as well. Oh, man
Muggie had also fallen into the wrong crowd
Frequenting the budrower in and getting mixed up with substance abuse prior to her death.
She also knew all four of the Jeff Davis victims so far, which maybe why Muggy said what she said to her grandmother before she died.
She claimed she had a feeling something bad was going to happen. She worried she might turn up dead next, which you can't, I mean, of course, the women are thinking this. Because all their friends are dying.
I mean, they're all in sex work.
I mean, and it isn't too crazy to me that they all know each other.
I mean, they're all in the same line of business.
So I just think someone out there is just killing them
because they feel like it.
Like, I don't know if I think they're something they heard wrong.
I just think we have a serial killer out there.
Three months later, at the end of August 2008,
another young woman disappeared from Jennings.
24-year-old Crystal Shea Benoit Zeno.
Two weeks later, a group of hunters
discovered her dead body naked on a river embankment.
Crystal, again, knew the other girls worked with them,
had a substance abuse problem.
Only her remains were so decomposed that an autopsy gave them little indication of how she
died.
Then on November 15th, 2008, the body of 17 year old Brittany Gary was found dead off
the side of another world.
Okay, this is getting to a, this is, this is, this is dumb.
Like how can there be this many bodies and people being killed? And you're in a small town and there's, there's nothing.
And they're all friends. And they're all friends. I come on. Like Loretta, her cause of death
was believed to be a fixation, making matters even more complicated. Brittany Gary was the
cousin of the fourth victim, Kristen Lopez. All right. Her death brought the Jeff Davis head count to a total of seven.
And it wasn't until then, December of 2008, that the Jefferson Davis pair Sheriff, Ricky
Edwards, finally, established a task force to collectively investigate these murders.
Thank you, man.
Seven women.
It only took seven bodies, but there you go.
Finally doing your job.
Edwards announced publicly that it was their
belief that crimes were all committed by what he called a comment offender, which...
Yeah, whoo!
Maybe who's really busy. Good job, good job, good job.
I mean, this was far too little too late in my opinion, especially because the task force had an idea
of who was going to be next and they were still unable to stop an eighth murder from happening. I mean, you know who the next victims are.
Yeah.
Protect them.
Put some police out canvassing the area while they're working.
Like, just do what you can to help.
This is so weird.
That victim's name was Nicole Gilroy, a 26-year-old sex worker
who knew each of the previous victims,
who had a long rap sheet in Jennings, but but mysteriously had most of her charges wiped clean. And according to Frankie
Richard, Nicole knew a lot about what was happening in the city under belly of
Jefferson Davis Parish. Much like Muggy, Nicole was extremely paranoid in the
weeks before her death, refusing to even bother planning her 27th birthday as
she insisted to her mother she wasn't
going to make it to 27.
And sadly, she was right.
About two weeks before her birthday, Nicole's mother filed a missing person's report.
By that afternoon, on August 19, Nicole was found dead along the I-10 highway.
She was the first victim to be found outside of Jefferson Davis Parish.
A toxicology report showed she'd been under the influence
of cocaine and pain killers.
And while no trauma could be detected,
they suspected her cause of death to be
asphyxiation as well.
With one more life taken, the women were now known
as the Jeff Davis 8.
The task force cried serial killer,
despite the fact that serial killers rarely go after a group of people who all know one another or stay in the same state.
Yeah.
Plus the way that the police were handling the case gave many Jennings residents cause for concern.
Family members of the victims told the Jennings Daily News that they were never once contacted or questioned by law enforcement about their loved ones' death or death disappearance.
So it just stops at eight.
Like there's eight people and he's like, okay, I guess that's enough.
Well, obviously it's it's caused a bit of attention. By now it's now in the media.
People are calling them the Jeff Davis A.
So we just taken a break.
Well, and I think it says a lot that the family members are like,
we were never even questioned.
Yeah. That means police aren't even taking the time to get to know the victims.
No one did anything. Yeah.
Loretta Chasin's husband, Scott, asked the same question we did. Why the heck did it take seven
victims for them to finally start a task force? And when you look at the history of both the
Jennings Police Department and the Jefferson Davis Sheriff's Department, it's no secret they've
both been steeped in scandal and corruption before this wasn't the first investigation.
both been steeped in scandal and corruption before this wasn't the first investigation. That was a little weird.
Outside of the Jeff Davis 8, there were 12 other homicides in the area that had been left
unsolved since the 1990s, which for such a small place is kind of insane.
It's considered not only a very high homicide rate, but an incredibly low clearance rate,
particularly for smaller communities like
Jefferson Davis Parish. Those who lived in the parish their whole lives also said it was
a well-known secret that the police were heavily involved in the local drug trade.
Interesting. Which proved to be more than just gossip when in March of 1992,
men robbed the Sheriff's Station, sealing back 300 pounds of confiscated marijuana.
That's hilarious. See how they just robbed the station so easily. the sheriff station ceiling back 300 pounds of confiscated marijuana.
That's hilarious. Yeah, they just robbed the station.
Well, so easily, so easily, but get this, it was said to be an inside job
performed by the chief deputy sheriff and oh my gosh, surprise,
surprise, our old friend Frankie Richards.
So they just gathered up all the marijuana and then robbed themselves.
In 1993, the sheriff, Dallas,
Cornmeal, pleaded guilty to improper dealings with inmates and using public funds to buy
cars and guns for personal use. So in 1993, the sheriff pleads guilty. In 2000, a Jennings
officer killed a fellow cop and his wife inside their home and then shot and killed the responding
police officer in October 2003, eight female Jennings officers filed a sexual violence and
harassment lawsuit against several male officers.
Everything is falling apart.
Then in 2013, the evidence room was robbed again of cash pills, cocaine and marijuana,
this time by a former police chief named Johnny Lasseter. So the hits just kept on coming in.
They all seemed to point back home to themselves.
They need to completely gut the entire force.
Yes.
Knowing all of this, Jennings residents were beginning
to suspect that the people who were meant
to be protecting their wives and daughters
may have actually been the ones leading them to their deaths.
Or killing them.
Yes.
See, all of the Jeff Davis 8 had something else in common.
A detail that I haven't mentioned yet.
They all reportedly worked as informants for the police department.
Interesting.
Okay.
Typically, in regards to what was going on in the local drug trade at the time.
So they were informing the police, but as we know, the police are also involved in the
drug trade.
Yeah, that is an amazing sense because the police are involved in it.
So why would they need informants?
Maybe because it's like a little mini war going on.
This whole thing is so twisted.
Which if you think this would also explain why many of them were paranoid in the weeks
before their death because not only were they sex workers, young women,
they were also like, I'm an informant and these, all these women were informants.
Some of them were also interrogated about the other women
and then showed up dead themselves.
For example, Muggie Brown, the fifth victim,
was brought in for questioning about Ernestine Patterson
after she died.
There were also rumors that Muggie had spotted
LaReta's body in the canal
before it was reported to police by Jerry Jackson.
Kristen Lopez was also questioned by police
in regards to LaReta's murder.
Now, wouldn't you think if your witnesses were turning up dead, you do something more
to protect the people coming in to give statements?
I mean, it is literally the police's job to protect and serve.
Barbara Gilroy, Nicole's mother, thinks her daughter might have actually witnessed the
police themselves committing a crime and that's why she was silenced.
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Tim's and Bailey's anytime, anywhere at participating restaurants in Canada. But all of these whispers are just the tip of
the iceberg because apparently there's some evidence to prove that a corrupt
police officer might have been to blame for these women's deaths or at least
helping to cover them up. So after Chris and Lopez was found dead on March 18th
2007, a chief investigator for the
sheriff's office named Warren Gary, which this is the third Gary brought up in this
case.
Good thing my name's Garrett and not Gary.
They're all different, but this one is the chief investigator.
He bought a truck.
He bought a truck.
Yes, but it was not just any truck.
It was a Chevy Silverado, one that was sold to him by an incarcerated woman named Connie
Ciller
Who happened to be a close associate of Frankie Richards which read flag because cops really shouldn't be buying things from inmates
Number one like this is a little weird, but to make matters worse that truck according to witnesses was seen picking up
Kristen Lopez on the day she disappeared.
And one witness claimed to see blood inside of the truck before it was sold.
Only Warren Gary didn't keep the truck for long.
He bought it for about $8,000 on March 29th, got it cleaned up, inside and out, and then
resold it for $15,000 on April 20th.
Now no one at the Sheriff's Department seemed to care that Warren had bought and possibly
destroyed a potential piece of evidence.
Like this is a truck that is part of the investigation and your chief investigator goes and buys
it and flips it.
Not at all.
In fact, Warren was then promoted to become head of the evidence room.
Now there was one Jennings Police Officer named Jesse Ewing who thought, this all sounds
a bit unprofessional to say the least. Like, we have all these girls missing
and then our chief investigator purchases a truck
that's supposedly a piece of evidence, cleans it,
and flips it, and then gets promoted to head of evidence,
which he might have potentially disturbed one piece of evidence.
So Jesse's like, this is a little weird.
Buying things from inmates is a problem in itself. So he interviews some of the people that knew Frankie and the woman
who sold him the truck. And they tell him, oh, yeah, they offloaded that onto Warren
Gary so he could help them destroy evidence. So they just outright say, yeah, he was helping
destroy evidence. Okay. Yep. So Jesse takes this information, hands it to a private investigator who hands it over to the FBI.
It almost seems fake. Like this is so obvious, it can't be real. Right. Only Jesse isn't praised for
this revelation. So he goes and hands it over. And he's not praised. He's punished. He's arrested
for obstruction and mainly for handing that info over to a PI first rather than the next chain of command. So he gets in trouble for not following
Chain of command. Yeah, but they gave it to the FBI, correct?
Eventually. Yeah, but Jesse's career in law enforcement is over after this. They fire him. Yeah, yeah, and that truck was never tracked down as evidence
There could have been hair blood or other DNA in there that might have gotten police a step closer to solving the deaths of eight young women.
There's got to be, there's got to be a chaining command.
Like if you're entire department is corrupt, like where do you go?
I, I don't know.
I don't know either.
The state is my guess.
I don't know enough about the chaining command and police force.
You know how that works.
But after Warren Gary got rid of that truck, no one saw the thing again, which makes you wonder. Was the police working alongside Frankie Richard in some way,
protecting him, for some reason. Like, why fire someone who comes forward and says this is weird?
Yeah, I'm sure they're making them a ton of money through drugs.
After all, it seemed he'd been working with them since the 1990s when they first rated the
evidence room together, so maybe their ties ran deep. We also have to take into account the fact
that Frankie had a history of charges being pressed against him
only to have them dropped later on.
And I'm not talking about drug possession or things like that.
I'm talking about rape and murder charges
that just vanished from his record.
Even more mind-blowing,
someone has claimed Frankie had a key to the task force office
that he would just come and go day and night.
Now, why would the best and honestly only real suspect in the case get a key to a police
office?
Yeah.
Like, he's a pimp.
That's weird.
So even if there was no coverup on behalf of law enforcement, this case points to an
equally large problem, that in some cases, police just refuse to take an investigation seriously when their
victims are low income, have substance abuse issues, or are forced to resort to dangerous
occupations like sex work.
Which is a huge problem when sex workers, in particular, are a lot more likely to be targeted
in a murder.
According to a recent study, over the last decade, sex workers were the victims in about
43% of murder cases.
And unfortunately, authorities are struggling to spend the same time and resources on them
as they would on someone with more money and influence.
One resident named Mary Drake said what we're all thinking in a 2019 documentary, claiming
quote, you can go out there and find 9 or 10 people for a murder of one man in Lake Arthur
in a couple weeks time, but you can't find the murderer of eight women over a certain
amount of years.
What does that tell you?
It's self explanatory to not be concerned about who murdered these women and to not give
their families closure.
It's just wrong.
Also, wait, what's going on at the police department?
Like did they get investigated like what's going on at the police department? Like did they get investigated?
Like what's happening?
It's, I mean, it goes all the way back to 2013
and they might have swiped and cleaned house or whatever,
but even now, there's still eight women whose deaths
are unsolved.
Wait, so there's still people working
at that police department that were there
during this entire corruption?
I mean, I'm not for certain.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure if they cleaned house.
That seems insane.
That seems insane to me.
And I'm not necessarily calling them out, but kind of.
Like I just think that maybe we should look at the Jeff Davis.
There should be some responsibility that's taken.
Yeah.
And if it's like, hey, if there were people in law enforcement who were, maybe't commit these murders, but, but we're trying to protect people who had a hand in it,
or we're being shady with evidence, look into it, let's get it solved, let's figure it out.
It's hard. I mean, if the police department is still corrupt over there, what do you,
I don't know, like the FBI would have to get involved at that point. Yeah. Which I'm surprised they
didn't with eight deaths.
But like you said, it's probably because they're sex workers.
If it was eight deaths that weren't sex workers,
FBI probably would have gotten involved.
It's also like, that's insane.
No one wants to point out the flaws in their own system.
For sure, yeah.
We should be doing, but no one wants to do it.
So that is the story of the unsolved just,
just a day to say.
That's not solved.
Someone go solve it.
I know.
I wish I could go solve it.
I'd probably get killed while I'm trying to solve it.
So I'm not gonna go do it, but.
Whatever was going on, I'm just gonna say it now.
There was some shady drug.
There was some crap going down.
And I think that no matter what was happening,
even if the women's deaths were completely unrelated
Someone somewhere along the line covered things up. They were 100% related. They were
All right, you guys that is our case for this week and we will see you next time with another episode. I love it. I hate it. Goodbye
Bye.