Murder With My Husband - 248. The Dark Web Killer - The Murder of Amy Allwine
Episode Date: December 23, 2024In this episode, Payton and Garrett explore the mysterious murder of Amy Allwine, uncovering a shocking tale of deception, hitman websites, and a staged crime scene that changed everything. Newser.co...m - https://www.newser.com/story/254562/he-allegedly-went-from-ashley-madison-to-dark-web-to-murder.html StarTribune.com - https://www.startribune.com/cottage-grove-man-killed-wife-after-failing-to-hire-assassin-prosecutor-says/470749333 CoinTelegraph.com - https://cointelegraph.com/news/bitcoin-ethical-hacking-leads-to-solving-fbi-murder-case TheTimes.com - https://www.thetimes.com/culture/tv-radio/article/kill-list-review-fascinating-true-crime-without-the-grisly-leering-6rvtdvkwp Metro.co.uk - https://metro.co.uk/2024/10/16/found-a-hitmans-kill-list-phoned-let-victims-know-late-21807287/ TwinCities.com - https://www.twincities.com/2018/01/31/amid-sensational-allegations-cottage-grove-man-convicted-of-wifes-2016-murder/ Fox9.com - https://www.fox9.com/news/convicted-dark-net-killer-claims-innocence-i-couldnt-have-done-it Caselaw.findlaw.com - https://caselaw.findlaw.com/court/mn-supreme-court/114641490.html CBSNews.com -Â https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/stephen-allwine-sentenced-to-life-in-prison/ RepublicanEagle.com - https://www.republicaneagle.com/news/public_safety/allwine-receives-life-sentence-for-killing-wife-staging-suicide/article_1add634a-beb8-56e3-8a33-25553937d603.html The-Sun.com - https://www.the-sun.com/news/5593478/hitman-hire-website-murder-documentary/ SecurityNewspaper.com - https://www.securitynewspaper.com/2022/04/11/5-members-of-yura-a-murder-for-hire-operation-on-the-dark-web-are-arrested-platforms-such-as-besa-mafia-cosa-nostra-and-crimebay-shut-down/ Oxygen.com - https://www.oxygen.com/crime-time/trial-begins-former-preacher-hire-hit-man-stage-wifes-suicide Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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You're listening to an Ono Media podcast.
Hey everybody and welcome back to our podcast.
This is Murder With My Husband.
I'm Peyton Morland.
And I'm Garrett Morland.
And he's the husband.
And I'm the husband.
That was a little weird.
Why?
Oh no, I just said it differently than I normally do.
Well, Garrett and I prepared a little special something for you guys for the
holidays. So here we go. Three, two, one.
What are you doing?
Jingle bell, jingle bell, jingle bell rock.
I was not informed about this. Nobody told me about this.
Oh.
Did I, did I, did I miss the memo?
No, I just thought about doing that
right before we pressed record.
It was good though.
I thought you were gonna send them
to do the Mean Girls dance for them.
Oh, I was going to and then I got tired.
What's your favorite Christmas song?
Probably Jingle Bell Rock.
To be honest, I know it's so-
Really?
I know it's so cliche.
Yeah, I like that.
I like, here comes Santa Claus. Here comes Santa Claus right down
Yeah, like that one, I don't know frosty the snowman
I like that one, too
You got weird ones
Those are very normal. What are you talking about? I like it. What is yours or what are yours?
Mmm-hmm see that makes me depressed. I
Don't even know if that's my favorite. I just really want to sing that. Um, what's my favorite? What's my favorite?
What's my favorite? What's my favorite little drummer boy a litter litter little German that one's good, too
That's a good one. That one that one hits you right in your fills
Happy holidays.
If you're celebrating holidays, if you're not.
Happy murder day.
Happy murder day.
Happy murder with my husband.
If you're watching on YouTube,
I'm sorry, the lighting is off.
We usually have blackout curtains right there.
They are not there right now.
So our set looks different.
Doesn't look great,
but we're getting it fixed as quick as we can.
Thank you for being here.
And Peyton and I are probably just at home
next to the fireplace hanging out
while you're listening to this.
And we love you all.
Okay.
You have 10 seconds for this amazing, beautiful episode. Honestly, I don't have anything crazy.
I think for the most part, I hope everyone's having a good holiday.
I hope that you feel loved today.
And if you don't, Peyton and I love you.
You are loved.
You are loved. Hopefully that is good enough.
Daisy has not been a great dog today.
So that's been kind of making me a little angry.
But that's okay.
We all have bad days. That's what I got for my 10 seconds I don't really have
anything crazy oh I do have something crazy Peyton don't know it yet but in
two days I'm giving her a gift two days why two days no two days from when this
comes out I will be giving her a gift.
I think she's gonna be really excited about it.
I think you guys are all going to love it as well.
What?
I'm so confused about what it is.
Peyton has no idea.
I can't say it.
There is more I can say,
but I can't say anything more than that.
Who is it?
Because I don't wanna give it away.
It's nothing bad, right?
It's nothing bad.
It's something amazing.
Something amazing, I guess.
There is somebody else that knows.
In my family?
You will never, ever in a million years guess.
You're scaring me.
It's not gonna be bad.
It's gonna be great.
Is it a dog?
I'm excited for you guys to see it.
It's not a dog.
And on that note, let's hop into today's episode.
Okay, leave us all hanging.
I will, I have to.
All right, our sources for this episode are newser.com, Leave us all hanging. Well, I have to.
All right. Our sources for this episode are newser.com,
startribune.com, cointelegraph.com, thetimes.com,
metro.co.uk, twincities.com, fox9.com, caselaw.final.com,
cbsnews.com, republicanegle.com, thesun.com,
securitynewspaper.com, and oxygen.com.
So you can find absolutely anything on the internet nowadays, from old video games dating back to your childhood,
to that obscure song you heard once and never thought you'd find again,
to, of course, more nefarious things like weapons, drugs, honestly, on the internet, you can even find murder for hire.
But the wild and scary thing about the internet, especially thanks to the
help of unregulated currencies like Bitcoin, is that it can all remain pretty anonymous.
Now, you never know who's soliciting these services. It's hard to find out who is buying them.
And most of the time people have no idea that they are the target.
So if you piss off the wrong person, all it takes is a few clicks of the mouse and a quick
Bitcoin transaction to land a bullseye on your back.
Which I don't know.
This is what we're going to be on the case today.
Can I say I do have a decent knowledge of cryptocurrency?
I will say that is true,
but kind of like not true at the same time.
I'm just gonna sum it up really easily.
Everyone has a wallet basically, right?
And that wallet has an address.
So if you do figure out who owns that address,
you can then basically track it.
You can track things from there.
What if it's just like a fake address?
If it's sent to another, there can't be a fake address.
It's gotta be a real address, right?
So it can go to another address and then you track it
from where the address originally came from,
where that's going from there,
then when it's going from there,
and then when it's going from there.
I've worked with cryptocurrency quite a bit.
Granted, I'm still learning.
There's a lot of things I might have wrong,
so someone wants to correct me, go ahead.
But it is interesting that
It is true. It's like if you know what he knows whose address that is then yes I mean it can stay hidden but that address can be tracked like as far as
You have to put in some information. They'll fold them. They'll just figure out
They know someone sent it right because that address is still linked to whoever sent that so if they figure out whose address that is
I mean game over interesting. Anyways, just thought I'd let everybody know that I guess sent it, right? Cause that address is still linked to whoever sent that. So if they figure out whose address that is,
I mean, game over.
Interesting.
Anyways, just thought I'd let everybody know that.
I guess I just like, okay, this is very off topic
and I'll say it really fast.
I just don't even understand the concept of Bitcoin.
There's a lot to it.
Cryptocurrency.
Yeah, there's-
It just doesn't even make sense to me how-
There's a ton to it.
But I guess we do the same thing with money, kind of.
We just print more money.
Isn't that kind of what they're doing with Bitcoin?
They just dig more Bitcoin.
Welcome to the United States of America.
But it's just confusing because like,
Yeah, it's confusing.
We just created another currency.
We'll do an episode another time all about cryptocurrency.
No, if you want to find out about cryptocurrency, go ahead and watch our Twitch live streams on Thursdays at 5 30 PT. Garrett will
be talking all about that. Plus not sure, but yes, yes I will come watch me. So anyways,
all that to say you could possibly hire someone to kill someone in your life and then pay them
Bitcoin and might not be able to track it.
And that is seemingly what happened to the victim in today's case.
43 year old mother, Amy Alwine, at least this is what everyone thought happened at first
glance, but we're going to obviously get into it. So the year is 2016. We are about a 30 minute drive southeast
of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
It's a suburban area known as Cottage Grove,
which is like the cutest name for a little city, you know.
It's where 43 year old Steven and Amy Alwine
have called home for some time now.
The couple actually married 20 years prior back in 1996.
They were college sweethearts who met and fell in love
at a Christian university.
And to most people as life went on,
they seem to live a pretty typical middle American lifestyle.
Quiet, content, happy.
Steven was a freelance IT expert.
Amy owned her own dog training business.
So there were always tons of furry friends in this couple's orbit.
Both were deeply involved in their local church, the United Church of God.
So much so that Stephen actually became a church elder, someone who gave sermons and
offered guidance to other members of the congregation,
like counseling couples in their marriage in times of need.
So the Allwines were seen as good people.
They'd even adopted a little boy back around 2006
that they named Joseph, who now in 2016 is nine years old.
And Joseph was everything to mom Amy. Those who knew Amy said she lit up like
a Christmas tree anytime there was a mention of her adopted son Joseph. She would go to the ends
of the earth for Joseph and the family that she had built. But in November of 2016, the all-wines faced the absolute unthinkable. November 13th, 2016. That morning, Stephen was
working from home in his basement office like he often did. And around noon, he went upstairs for
his lunch break and he ate lunch with Joseph and Amy. But that's when Amy told Stephen that she
wasn't feeling well. So she was going to head upstairs to lay down, maybe just take a nap, rest for a bit.
And Stephen said, okay, I will wrap up my work day so I can watch Joseph.
Now around 1 p.m., Amy's dad comes over to help them finish some project that they were
working on in their home.
But around 2 p.m., Amy says to her dad, Hey, can you take Joseph
over to your house for a bit so Stephen can take me to the doctor? So her dad says, of
course. And Amy says, we'll be by to pick Joseph up no later than 5 30 PM for dinner.
Now when 5 30 rolls around, Stephen is the one who swings by Amy's dad's house. So he's alone to get their son
Joseph. And when her dad is like, Hey, how did the doctor go? Like what, what did they
say? Steven is like, Oh, um, Amy changed her mind about going and she just stayed in bed.
So after a little bit longer conversation, Steven and Joseph get back in the car and
go home at around 6 50 PM and.m. And they go inside their house
and when they get to the master bedroom to check on Amy,
they find her on the floor.
She's in a pool of her own blood
and she has a gun beside her.
She has been shot on the right side of her head.
So Stephen, the husband calls 911 and he tells the dispatcher,
Hey, I'm pretty sure that my wife has died by suicide. Now this call is pretty disturbing
and also memorable to the operator for a few reasons. One, because Joseph is heard in the
background asking his father why his mother would do that to herself. Oh my gosh, it's horrible.
So obviously we're not going to play it, but he's only nine years old.
And then Joseph, the son asks Steven another odd question on the 911.
Also, I don't know.
I guess I'm not going to speak to it.
I was just going to say.
It's every parent's different.
You compare a parent parent however you want,
but wouldn't you like take your kid out of the bedroom
and be like, hey, let's not,
like, this is not something for, I mean,
I think it's pretty obvious.
That's not something for a nine-year-old to see.
In the heat of the moment,
you're not thinking clearly, obviously.
I wonder if it was more important to get on the phone
with 911 to possibly save her than to take measures
to get the kid out of the room.
It's just, you just don't want a nine-year-old to see that.
That's horrible.
Well, the other odd thing that you can hear
in the back of the 911 call is
Joseph asks his dad, Steven,
are you going to remarry?
Now kids say weird things.
As a nine-year-old.
Especially in moments of distress,
but it's actually Stephen's reaction
to the question that sticks with the operator. Like as she's on the phone, she's like, what
the because Stephen, the dad who was calling to report that his wife has died by suicide
and him and his nine year old son just stumbled upon it, laughs at his nine year old son's
question and just says, I don't know, buddy.
So meanwhile, Sergeant Gwen Martin hears the dispatch call
come over her radio.
And when she hears the address and that a female has died
by suicide, she has this sinking feeling in her stomach
because she knows that address.
She knows who lives there.
In fact, Sergeant Gwen knows Amy pretty well.
She taught her in an eight-week course recently,
one that teaches civilians about emergency services
and law enforcement.
This was a topic that Amy had become interested in.
So Sergeant Martin had literally just seen the victim two weeks earlier.
Okay.
And to her, to Gwen, Amy seemed like someone who was planning for the future.
She was definitely someone who would do anything for her kid.
So this Sergeant thought Amy showed zero signs of someone maybe battling with suicidal thoughts.
Now, obviously we never know,
but she just was stunned, I think as most of us would be.
But she also knows in this line of work,
you can never be certain what sort of demons
someone deals with behind closed doors.
So unfortunately, Sergeant Martin is also
one of the first people to arrive at the crime scene.
And some of what she sees that day
kind of validates these thoughts
of hers that, I just don't think this is suicide. Now, when she first sees Amy, she's lying
face up on the floor and her pants are partially unzipped. And then she notices a smell. There is something cooking in the family's kitchen.
Amy had a pumpkin roasting in the oven.
Sergeant is like, who puts dinner in the oven?
And then decides to go upstairs and die by suicide.
Which I get that, but also-
Again, it's a hard-
I don't think there's a correct way to-
Or guidebook.
To do that. Yeah
Yeah, but I get this I get the suspicions. It makes sense, especially with how weird the call was you're like, okay something's off
It's also the cops job to question. I know right like they're investigating
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So once forensics get involved,
there's even more that doesn't add up to this story.
The gunshot wound to Amy's head, it's on the right side,
but the gun is resting on her left arm.
There's also no blood spatter or gun powder on her hands, which if Amy was
the one to pull the trigger, she would have both. And then cops realize there's a few
drops of blood in other parts of the primary bedroom, which makes them wonder, did someone
move her body here and clean up the actual crime scene?
Now sure enough when they do a luminol test they discover that the room had been recently cleaned
but was covered in blood stains and
Footprints ones that led from the primary bedroom to the mud room and bathroom on the main floor and
primary bedroom to the mud room and bathroom on the main floor.
And then to Joseph's bedroom.
How do you make it so that doesn't happen?
What I'm trying to ask is how do you hide that? Just lots of bleach. Is there a certain chemical to mask it so it isn't so it's not shown by the.
Yes, there is something I think it has to do with if the,
like the grout is has been recently sealed it
the blood won't get into the grout.
Well what if it's on wood?
Like what if it's hardwood?
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
I think about that or not sure.
No because when they luminol test you can see blood like splatters and like pools.
Yeah.
Even if you did clean it up.
Like I wonder if there's I'm sure there's a'm sure, I'm sure there is a certain chemical.
It's probably just something that you have to specially buy. Yeah.
So unless you plan out everything methodically,
also the way blood is and how it splatters, it's, I'm sure,
I'm sure it'd be extremely hard to get. Yeah.
Sometimes there's only one drop that you miss, you know? So, um,
I also think it's safe to say that,ives are like, well, you can't die by suicide
and then clean up your own crime scene afterward, right?
So by the following day,
they already have an autopsy report on Amy's body
and they find Amy had died somewhere around 3.15 PM that day.
I just love how we can figure all this out like this.
Right.
But they also find evidence
that is inconsistent with suicide,
mainly because Amy had scopolamine in her system.
And this is a drug that is used to treat nausea.
And not only was it about 20 times the regular dose,
Amy did not have a prescription for that drug.
So how did this large of amount of this drug
get into her body?
Now, typically in cases like this,
the first person that you're gonna suspect is the husband,
but this becomes a little more complicated for detectives.
For starters, Stephen kept saying that he wasn't home during Amy's time
of death that day. And while I'm not sure where he claimed to be, there were other witnesses who said
they saw an anonymous vehicle speed away from the house shortly after her time of death. So the
husband is saying, I wasn't home at that time, 3 15 PM. And the neighbors are saying, we also saw an unknown vehicle leaving around that time.
Plus, Stephen seems cooperative.
He's willing to go down to the station for questioning,
not to mention there's something else
that the police have to consider
once they get to know Amy and her past.
Because Amy had actually been approached
by the FBI the past spring.
So Amy was already in law enforcement radar.
But the FBI, why the FBI?
Because the FBI was doing an investigation of their own, completely
unrelated, and found Amy's name on a dark web hit list.
Holy crap.
Okay, so back around scary.
Would that be to have the FBI show up your door and be like someone put a hit
out on you?
That's wild.
I mean, now you understand why maybe the husband isn't the first suspect.
Yeah, so back around May 31st, 2016, this is about five months before Amy's
death.
She was called in to the Cottage Grove
Police Department to speak with them and the FBI. And they asked her the one question
that no one ever wants to hear. Amy, do you know of anyone who might want you
dead? Do you think she told her husband about this or went without him knowing?
I'm sure you know the answer. She's keep going. I always make that a rhetorical
question for now. So it turns out the FBI had just learned about a murder for hire site on the dark
web called the base mafia. And so they had received a giant cache of data, including email
exchanges between base mafia and their clients. So basically the FBI uncovered this, this dark web
hit list place that you could hire. So they, they have this website, they have the clients,
and then the everyday people who were on the hit list. Now, it's important to say that the clients
didn't use their real names, obviously, but the people on the hit list, it was their real names.
And Amy Alwine was one of them. They also had the username of the person who had ordered the hit on Amy,
and it was someone named Dog Day God. Now, something I learned from this story was you
cannot just access the dark web through Google. You actually have to have some special software
to access sites like the base of mafia. What's interesting is this technology was actually created by the
military to hide their secrets on backdoor websites. So it's sort of ironic that the
military created this loophole in on the internet and now it is used for so much illegal activity.
But the base of mafia is a whole other level of dark web criminals. The site claims to
be operated by an Albanian mafia, but it seems like it's run by this evil overlord, a guy who
goes by Yura. And basically Yura and his website will recruit anyone who's up for the challenge,
meaning they literally post invites for perspective killers to essentially
send in audition tapes to become hitmen for this dark website.
Holy crap.
A quote from one of your videos on the site says, if one searches online for, and I quote,
shot dead on street, one will find plenty of news about people being shot dead in the
street by unknown people that shoot and then leave.
Those are our hit men.
We will be waiting for you to come place your orders and then get rid of your problems.
Gosh, I can't, I can't believe that's real.
And literally on this website, there is a menu of item options from $4,000 for a basic
killing to 10,000 for a shoot and run.
And then something as high as $50,000 for a shoot and run, and then something as high as $50,000
for a high profile sniper murder.
They say it depends mostly on how challenging
the job will be to pull off.
Like if the target has a bodyguard,
they're gonna charge more.
And by the way, on this website,
you cannot pay with a visa.
The only currency they accept is Bitcoin
because of the anonymity, meaning it isn't tied back to anyone's name or IP address.
By the time the FBI discovered the Beasa mafia,
they already had a list of 282 hits on this website
that had been ordered across 60 different countries.
I mean, there's like 17-year-old girls in Canada looking to kill ex-boyfriends on this
website.
Literally, anyone can log on and with a few clicks of the keyboard, it's boom, revenge
at your fingertips.
Oh my gosh.
What?
But Amy, this woman is seemingly harmless.
She's been happily and faithfully married for the last 20 years.
She's a working mom who makes YouTube videos dancing with her church elder
husband. Who would want this woman dead and for what? Well, it turns out the FBI got those answers
through the leak. There was 60 pages worth of correspondence between Dog Day God, this is the
username that took the hit out, and the baseasa mafia. So this had all started back in February of 2016, actually Valentine's Day to be exact.
That's when Dog Day God first reached out to the Beasa mafia saying, I am looking to
hire you for a hit, but what is the recommended way to convert cash to Bitcoin anonymously?
After a few more emails were sent back and forth negotiating a price,
Dog Day God agreed to send over $12,000 in Bitcoin for the hit job, and they finally revealed their
target was a woman named Amy Alwine. The words they used were, I need this B word dead, so please
help me. The message continues, said that Amy had stolen clients from this person's dog training business.
But it suggested the betrayal went far beyond that because the email also implied that
Amy not only was stealing clients, had been sleeping with the business competitor's husband.
All right. So it sounds like there may be another wife involved, but let's see.
They even offer up the perfect opportunity for the hit to
happen. They told the base of mafia that Amy had an upcoming business trip to Moline, Illinois.
And we have actually been to Moline, Illinois in the podcast history before. And I pronounced it
Moline. Okay. And everyone told me little Peyton, it is Moline.
So I'd like everyone to know it is Moline, Illinois.
They even give them the hotel that Amy is going to be staying at, a
description of her car and the route that she would likely take.
And on top of that, they offer up ways they would like for Amy to be killed.
Oh my gosh.
They want it to look like an accident
and they don't want the son or the husband
to be harmed in any way.
Now, clearly nothing happens to Amy
during this business trip, as you know,
but this exchange continues for the next four months
as Dog Day God works with the base of mafia
to help coordinate other options for this hit.
They give them daily updates on Amy's movements
when she was at the grocery store,
the gas station, heading out of town.
I mean, Amy has a full-time stalker
who's now trying to take a hit out on her.
So when the police sit down with Amy in May of 2016,
they uncover all of this, they pull Amy in,
they're like, lady, you are in trouble.
And she is of course shocked about the whole thing.
She tells the FBI, I've never had an affair.
She offers the FBI a couple names of people it could be,
but she's like, I don't know anyone in my life
who fits this description.
Steven, her husband, even asks the police,
is there any way they might have gotten the wrong Amy?
But apparently, Dog Day God had even sent base a mafia pictures of Amy. So there's no confusion, they gotten the wrong Amy, but apparently Dog Day God had even sent BESA
mafia pictures of Amy.
So there's no confusion.
They have the right Amy, which is why the FBI says to the all wines, we think you should
take these threats seriously.
And they have to because they don't stop once the FBI gets involved.
In July of 2016, five months before her death, Amy receives two anonymous emails,
presumably from Dog Day God.
They say quote,
Amy, I still blame you for my life falling apart.
Here's what is going to happen.
I will come after everything else that you love.
Here's how you can save your family, commit suicide.
So why not do it now and save them?
Oh my gosh.
I mean, that's terrifying.
It's horrible.
That would be so scary to get that email. So Amy does the right thing. She shares these emails with the FBI who begin interviewing
suspects, including some of Amy and Steven's work colleagues. They don't find anything mainly
because that email from dog day God was untraceable. So they tell the all wines, the best thing for them
to do now is get a home security system, install a few cameras, buy a gun.
But Amy is living in absolute fear at this point. I mean, she's afraid to even be in her own home.
She's worried someone is going to come in during the night and kill her.
So now you can see why all of this is especially scary. When in November of 2016, Amy Alwine dies by suicide. So naturally, her
friends and family are furious with the FBI and local police. They're like, you
were warned that she was gonna be killed and you did nothing. She was just alone
in her house. Even though they claimed they had increased security patrols in
the area to keep a closer eye on her,
she still was killed.
And so to many, the hired hitman possibility
makes a lot of sense.
Not only did people report cars fleeing
from the neighborhood that day,
the mastermind of the Beisa mafia,
the guy known as Yura,
actually releases a video on the site after her death
and says-
Her being killed?
Yeah, and he masks, no, not of her being killed.
He masks his voice and his face and he says,
hey, this website should be taken seriously
because we are responsible for Amy's death.
We took that hit out.
But even if BESA mafia carried out the hit,
it still didn't answer the question of who ordered it.
So far, many of the names that Alwines had given the it still didn't answer the question of who ordered it. So far,
many of the names that Alwines had given the police just didn't check out, which is why they
also haven't totally ruled out the possibility that maybe Stephen, the husband, was somehow involved,
especially because of how he acted the day his wife died. Not only did he have that odd
conversation with his son on the 911 call where he laughed and they talked about remarry Well, he also seemed a bit too calm when he came in for questioning
Plus as police dig further into Amy's case over the following days
They find one really incriminating detail. Remember how dog day God had to pay for the hit using Bitcoin
He bought Bitcoin didn't he? Well in order to do that the user had to send a
34 character wallet code to do that, the user had to send a 34-character wallet code
to make that transaction.
This is kind of something Garrett was talking about earlier.
And that same exact wallet code
was later found on Steven's computer.
Yeah, see, yeah.
So it's not, you can definitely hide yourself,
especially if no one ever finds that you own that wallet
There's no name on it. But if someone does game over they can obviously gonna search the husband's computer, correct?
So they learn all of this and they're like, okay, so the husband Stephen Alwine was dog day God
So the question was at this point, why would this church elder want his wife dead?
Here's a little detail about Stephen and Amy's church. Not only did they not believe in divorce,
if a church elder was ever found committing adultery, they would be asked to leave the
congregation. He was cheating on his wife. Well, this was something that was definitely problematic
for Stephen who had been seeking out affairs
over the internet for the last two years.
He was actually doing this on the site Ashley Madison,
to be exact, which ironically he learned about
while offering marriage counseling to one of the couples
at his church.
For anyone who doesn't know, Ashley Madison
is a popular website that rose to fame in the mid 2000s that
encourages extramarital affairs so anyone was a dating website
No, so you can get on create an account and it's literally to cheat like everyone on there is stepping out on their marriage
I literally thought it was I mean
Have a good thing. I don't know what it is. it was a dating website. That's crazy. Yeah, so-
It's kind of like GoDaddy.
When I wasn't old enough to know what GoDaddy was,
I was like, that sounds like a porn website.
Later on, I'm like, oh, it's just domains.
Yeah.
Kind of funny.
So actually, there was a huge leak from Ashley Madison's database in 2015,
which is not good. This is not the website that you want to leak because it threatened millions of users. It ruined a lot of
lives, a lot of marriages. So whether or not Stephen was involved in the leak, I
actually have no idea, but it's very possible it scared him into making some
pretty rash decisions because this just happened a year earlier. A bunch of
people who were using this site get leaked and he's using this site. As a Fizz member, you can look forward to free data,
big savings on plans, and having your unused data roll over to the following month,
every month. At Fizz, you always get more for your money. Terms and conditions for our different
programs and policies apply. Details at fizz.co.uk to give them a gift that is truly unique. Terms apply.
Now, I'm not sure if Amy knew about the at least three different affairs that he was having.
But I do know that Stephen realized there was no way to actually be with any of these new women
if his church didn't allow him to get divorced.
So maybe Stephen had to come up with a different plan.
Maybe he needed to have his wife killed so he could go on and be a free man, which was
when Stephen possibly took to the dark web and stumbled upon the base of mafia.
Maybe he thought it was an easy way for him to walk away with his hands clean.
So maybe he forked over the Bitcoin, around $12,000 to be exact and
then waited and waited and waited and talked to this website. But there's also the possibility
that he was met with every single excuse. They would just keep making a new plan, a
new plan. Steven would send more money. Obviously we know nothing was coming of it, which is
why probably in July of 2016, Dog Day God emailed Amy themselves, remember,
and told them that they would kill her whole family if she didn't kill herself. But when
Amy went right to the FBI with those emails, maybe Stephen realized his plan wasn't working
the way he expected it to. And it seemed like the base of mafia, this website on the dark
web that he had paid, they were never going to pull through. And Steven wasn't wrong.
You know why?
They took his money.
The entire website was a scam.
This website on the dark web was a con to make money off of pathetically desperate people
who were trying to get someone out of their lives for good.
That's so why.
That's honestly, for the first time. I'm kind of glad that they were
scamming everybody because one, they weren't killing people and two,
they were scamming people that wanted to kill other people.
And here's the thing Robin Hood, maybe Amy's death actually promoted this
website because the website made a video in 2016 after she died saying, look,
but it wasn't even them. Yes, it was.
But they said, look, we took a hit out.
We are someone took a hit out on her and we did it.
Look, she's dead.
So it was all a marketing ploy.
Why wouldn't they take the credit?
It legitimized their fake business.
Now, I guess it never occurred to Steven that $12,000
for a hit was suspiciously cheap.
Like that does feel very cheap,
but it was low enough for them to rope in the cash.
And if they were paying with Bitcoin,
there's no way he's ever gonna see that money again.
Now, once Steven finally figured out that he'd been scammed,
he was already so committed to the idea
of having Amy killed that he chose a new path.
He's like, I'm just gonna do it myself.
But again, he actually used the dark web as a tool.
So this is where I'm getting into what Stephen actually did. This
time, when he realizes, hey, this website is not going to
kill my wife. He goes online and begins searching for drugs. And
he found a site called dream market. And for one reason or
another, he decided to purchase a large amount of scopolamine.
That's the anti nausea medicine that was found in her system,
which in large doses can make people loopy,
disoriented, even compliant.
And remember, Amy had 20 times the normal amount
in her system when the coroner did her autopsy.
So on the afternoon of November 13th, 2016,
or in the days leading up to it,
Steven had begun slipping Amy that large dose
in her food or drink,
which was why Amy felt so sick that afternoon
when her dad came over.
Now, once the dad took Joseph
and the son was out of the house,
it seems Stephen took advantage of the state
that he'd put Amy in.
He grabbed the gun the family had bought
to protect themselves from this hit,
and Stephen then used that gun to kill Amy and stage her death as a suicide.
Now, maybe others think that Amy had decided to protect her family from those
mysterious threats after all.
Not with all the evidence that shows she didn't shoot herself.
Right now, Steven denies all of this.
He insists, no, no, no, no, no, I didn't do this.
It has to be whoever took the hit out on her. There was no way he would ever do anything to his wife and leave his
son motherless. However, as we know, there was a lot of evidence to suggest this was
another lie.
So there's a lot of things I find ironic in this case, but maybe one of the biggest things
is that Steven was an IT guy. He should have known how to cover his tracks, at least when it came to computers, right?
And yet his computer was some of the best evidence
against him.
For example, Stephen had a browser set up on his computer
that could let him access the dark web
as well as on his phone.
So he was definitely accessing it.
Dog Day God first contacted the base of mafia
on Valentine's Day.
Shortly after sending that message, Steven's computer showed him Googling how to use Bitcoin.
And remember the first message was, how do I use Bitcoin?
The following day he was looking up Amy's itinerary for her business trip to Moline,
Illinois, and figuring out what drive she would take to get there.
Now remember that message was this exact information.
On March 6th, Stephen downloads a picture to the family's desktop. It's of Amy on their recent
trip to Hawaii. Oh my gosh. And that's the picture that we take the email. That is the picture that
is sent. Okay. Days later, there's an email from the Beissa mafia to dog day God explaining how to
purchase Bitcoin and that he should then report that money stolen to his bank
to cover his trail. Now, immediately after, Steven calls the Cottage Grove police and says he's been
a victim of a scam. So while police couldn't exactly trace Dog Day God's IP address, it's
detail after detail like this that basically proves this was happening from Steven's computer.
So unless someone is repeatedly breaking into his home, accessing his computer and keeping up this charade for months leading up to Amy's death,
it has to be him, which is why he's finally arrested and charged with second degree murder
in January of 2017. However, once he got in front of a grand jury, those charges were escalated to
first degree murder because everything is screaming pre meditation, right? So there's an eight day trial and Steven is like, Hey, I didn't do any of this.
I mean, there were plenty of female friends in her life who had access to their
home and computer.
He's like, someone had to have been coming in and, um, using my computer.
He also was like, the police did such a bad job.
There was also this hit out for her.
But as we know, after years of doing this show,
the simplest explanation is often the most likely.
So after the eight day trial,
the jury deliberated for six hours to conclude
that Stephen Alwine was guilty of first degree murder.
Yes, sir.
At his sentencing, the judge gave Stephen an earful
before handing down a sentence saying, quote,
you're an incredible actor, a hypocrite,
and a cold calculating killer.
Then he was sentenced to life without the possibility
of parole.
Now, as for the base of mafia and their scam website,
the FBI has since traced the website
to a location in Romania.
And as of 2022, at least five members
of the fraudulent organization have been arrested
and are facing charges like murder, organized crime and money laundering. But the website and
others like it are still operating in corners of the dark web today. And that is just the reality
we live in. That's so wild. And that is the case of Amy Alwine. That's so sad. Amy was just a good mom. Because they couldn't get divorced.
It's just so ironic.
It's just so sad.
It's so ironic to me too that you're having three affairs.
So you don't want to be with your wife anymore
because you want to be a member of this church, right?
You want to be an elder of this church.
So your solution is to murder
one of like the most important commandments.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, it just like, I know the reasoning from the murder is because you want to stay at church.
That just like doesn't even.
Yeah, it's just hypocritical.
Yeah, it's crazy how much it happens.
Yeah. All right, you guys, that was our episode for this week.
We hope you have an amazing holiday and we will see you next time with another episode I love it I hate it
goodbye