Murder With My Husband - Dear Daisy, I Was Almost Abducted From My Hotel!
Episode Date: July 27, 2023Payton and Garrett read listener submitted stories back to you. Submit a Dear Daisy here: https://linktr.ee/murderwithmyhusband Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
Transcript
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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. And I'm the husband. And this is Daisy.
She's sitting on my lap if you're listening and she is with us because today we are doing our dear Daisy for July.
These are listeners submitted episodes.
It's unlike you're on the prices right?
A new car!
Exactly. Can scared me a little bit, not gonna lie? Well, they won.
They won with their daisies. Oh, okay. Just a reminder, you can submit your dear daisy on any of the
links that we have below because we were always needing more dear daisies. Okay, I'm starting with
the first one from Sophie and it's titled The Van in the Park. Off to a good start. It was 2012 and I had just turned 10.
My cousins had recently moved from Utah to our small town in Idaho.
We lived in a super safe area about 20 minutes outside of Idaho Falls.
While my family lived in the middle of the potato fields outside of city limits, my cousins
had moved into a suburban house that was within walking distance to the town pool and park.
This meant most summer days we spent at their house so we could have the freedom to walk
around the town and find things to do.
It was very normal for us to be on our own and walk back and forth to the house, pool,
or park throughout the day.
It was another hot day and me and my younger two cousins, Emory that was age 10 and Zoe
that was age 9, had run out of activities at their house,
so we decided we wanted to walk to the park that was two blocks away to spend the rest of the afternoon.
My mom always told me to be aware of my surroundings and stranger danger. Literally,
everywhere we went and still to this day, she warns me of creepy people and trusting your gut
when you have a bad feeling. She loves true crime and is a huge fan, by the way. The topic of
getting kidnapped came up and how we would escape.
I had just learned about the Elizabeth Smart case and that was all we talked about.
We talked about how we needed to avoid white vans that didn't have windows in the back.
We even decided to grab a rock and write a message on it just in case we did get kidnapped
we could leave behind a message for our families.
I don't know why we were so focused on getting kidnapped.
Nothing had ever happened to make us feel like this was a real worry.
After gathering our backpacks, the rock and our scooters that we would need at the park,
we sent my youngest cousin Zoe inside to ask my aunt if we could leave.
Then we left down the street on our scooters.
We get to the completely empty park,
still talking about getting kidnapped and decided to fill our pockets with gravel
and pine cones to use as weapons.
We climbed this log house that was part of the playground. Okay, this is actually just hilarious.
Like, the fact that their whole afternoon walking to the park is all about getting kidnapped and
rocks and filling their pockets with pine cones so that they'd have weapons in case they could get
like it's so something I would have done.
Yeah, especially it's like, what's a pine cone going to do?
So when it has a gun, right?
Right.
So she says, we climbed to this log house that was part of the playground equipment.
Deciding this was the best vantage point to look out for creepy men.
Obviously, not even 10 minutes after we got to the park to our horror,
a white van with no windows in the back
pulled into the empty parking lot.
We tried to keep calm and decided that it must be some more people who wanted to play
at the park.
We watched cautiously, but after a few minutes, no one had gotten out.
All three of us had a horrible sinking feeling that whoever was in the van was watching
us.
Together we decided to climb down, find our scootersers and ride home as quickly as possible.
As we started to scoot away, I looked back over my shoulder and saw the van slowly pulled
out and followed us down the block.
We tried to stay calm and not freak out.
This could all be a coincidence.
The scooters were sorry.
What?
I just, this is so like, I know it's not funny because now they're actually getting followed, but just the fact that they were like planning a whole play day about getting
kidnapped and then this van pulls in and they are actually now like possibly getting
kidnapped.
What's up with vans?
Like, you think they would have changed up a little bit, you know, people who are creepy
and have these creepy vans, like let's start going with nice vans just to really throw people off
I did semi trucks
Okay, but I mean even those aren't that nice
I'm saying like let's start getting like luxury vans. You really start throwing people up and like a Honda van
Yeah, exactly like a mini van like brand new 2023. Yeah, like grow up in the Odyssey
We're tired of the old live-an with no windows actually maybe don't do that because now I feel like I'm encouraging.
Yeah.
So, never mind.
Keep going to the creepy vents.
The scooters were slowing us down, so we ditched them under someone's porch and started
to walk run back to the park, still trying not to panic.
We then watched as the van slowed and turned around back to the park, still following
us.
Now we were fully panicking.
This was not a coincidence anymore.
The van was catching up to us.
At this point, we were all in tears
and had switched directions again running away from the park
and trying to outrun the van.
Again, the van did the same.
It felt like cat and mouse
and we were certain we were about to be abducted.
The van caught up, then parked in front of us
and the doors opened.
Fully sprinting down the block back to the park and away from the two men getting out,
we suddenly heard the unmistakable squeaking of my aunt's red van coming down the road.
She pulled against the curb absolutely pissed that we had left.
Apparently when my cousin asked her permission to leave, my aunt had been on the phone and
didn't hear her ask.
My cousin mistook my aunt saying yes on the phone as her saying yes we could go to the
park. But when she saw our faces and our tears she immediately knew something
was wrong. We pointed to the white van parked against the curb and explained how it had
followed us back and forth from the park. She put us in the car and marched up to the
steps of the house that the van had been parked next to. This is what she told us happened
when she knocked on the door. A small girl, maybe seven, answered the door. She seemed
very quiet and very reserved. My aunt described a very sick gut feeling she knocked on the door. A small girl, maybe seven, answered the door. She seemed very quiet and very reserved.
My aunt described a very sick gut feeling
as soon as the door opened.
My aunt asked for an adult and the girl offered
to get one of her uncles.
A man came to the door and my aunt chewed him out,
demanding why he had been following her girls from the park.
The man denied everything and chewed her away pretty quickly.
But she had gotten a good look at the man
and the other man who had come to the door.
As soon as we got home, we opened a computer
and pulled up the city's sex offender registry.
Both men were on the website.
Oh.
Unfortunately, they hadn't committed a crime
by just driving creepily in their car
so nothing could be done.
I'm surprised, like, you're not supposed
to be around little children though, correct?
And there was a seven-year-old there.
Yeah, but I don't know if it's family as well.
Mm, OK.
But it was a very scary experience and shook us all up
for several weeks.
I think it's so crazy that for whatever reason that day,
we were convinced we were going to get kidnapped
and just so happened that we almost did.
Very grateful we were aware of our surrounding
trusted our gut when we felt uncomfortable,
and that my aunt was on the phone when we asked to go
and didn't know we left.
If she gave us permission to leave, she wouldn't have driven to get us and possibly saved us from a terrifying situation.
We never found our scooters again, and I still have the rock we wrote our kidnapped message on.
My mom's sisters and I love the show and always discuss the cases that come out.
Thank you so much for sharing these stories and honoring the people involved.
Oh my gosh, that's hilarious. We'll put this on Instagram if you fall on Instagram
and we'll throw this on YouTube. We feel this on YouTube. But if you're not going to
check it says it's the literal rock and on it in Sharpie, Margaret says we have been kidnapped.
Help sign by their names. Signed or like, let me see, like,
their names. Like written their names like. Oh yeah, okay.
I thought you meant they did a signature.
I'm like, how's someone gonna read that?
That's hilarious.
That's actually really scary.
But I just, I couldn't help but laugh as I was hearing because the amount of times I've
done that exact thing as a kid, like the amount, they basically described half of the
time I played outside, I would just look around and go, am I gonna get kidnapped?
Where would I run? What would I do? I've never done that. Maybe it's because I'm a male.
Maybe.
But even like when Columbine shooting happened every day at school, I just sit and go,
how would I get to my sister? How would we then get home? What would be my plan? No, I've done that.
I have for sure done that before with like public shootings. But as a kid, probably high school, mean you are not the same.
Well, you were like seven doing it. Yeah. I would also do it at night, which is probably why I have some anxiety at night because it started as a little kid.
I would sit and go, if I heard someone break in right now, where would I hide? How would I get out?
Like would they be able to find me?
It's probably our house is like a I hide, how would I get out? Like, would they be able to find me?
It's probably our house is like a... Fort Knox.
Would be like breaking into a bank.
There's like little red lasers everywhere
that someone would have to dodge.
It literally...
I think we need to stop saying that
or someone's gonna take it as a challenge.
I know, they will take as a challenge.
Okay, our next one is sent in by Ashley
and it's titled,
Peyton's going to tell Garrett about us one day.
Dear Daisy, my kids think I'm overly cautious.
They tell me all of the time that I listen to too many podcasts
to which I respond, at least now we all know to stay alert
and what kind of evils are out there.
Like you always say, it's always the ones who say
it could never happen to me.
I should preface this story with a snippet explanation
of where we were one year ago. As a result of being hit by a drunk driver, my husband underwent multiple
spinal surgeries. And we spent pretty much all of last summer in the hospital while he
dealt with a severe spinal infection. So to say that we were excited to take the road
trip to Chicago that we have been trying to take for two years would be an understatement.
Beyond that, we never would have thought
that on our way home we could tack on a last minute
overnight canoe trip in Missouri,
camping on a random riverbank.
I worried about him being able to handle the trip,
but he was not going to allow his back
to prevent us from doing anything.
It was truly a magical day,
navigating the crystal clear waters
of the black river, swimming,
and exploring the beautiful area.
We decided to pitch camp early to give our damp items time to dry in the sun.
It was so peaceful and relaxing with not a single soul in sight.
We were all alone on the riverbank, myself, my husband, and our two kids, 13 and 15 years old.
We started to nod off before dark, completely exhausted from canoeing and swimming in the hot
sun all day. I had downloaded a few podcasts to listen to and fell asleep with voices streaming through
my Bluetooth hearing aids.
I woke with a jolt to voices I assumed were from my podcast and turned it off.
I just nodded back off when boom, I felt something hit the tent and my husband instantly
screamed, hey, I could hear male voices from what seemed like right above our heads.
There was lots of splashing from the river and loud, incoherent conversation. I was still
in a day's barely awake when my husband yelled, no, my heart was pounding faster than ever
before when I asked my husband where his knife was. He waved me off and I wasn't sure that
he was even conscious or aware of what was happening as he is a very hard sleeper, many times
not even
recalling full conversations we've held at night. He had quickly fallen back to sleep as I sat
in terror, literally frozen in fear, holding my breath, praying for safety. The voices seemed to
stay forever, but it must have simply been minutes as I just kept waiting for someone to start
stabbing or beating us through the tent. Every little sound sent shivers down my spine. It was
so dark and because this was a last minute trip, we didn't even have a flashlight.
I'm confused what's happening.
I was alone in my thoughts, all of the worst of the worst possibilities running through
my head.
I couldn't call anyone.
There's no service here.
Where did they go?
Were they lying in wait?
Were they going to pounce any second?
Oh my gosh, one day Peyton is going to tell Garrett about us. How can I protect my kids? Do I have an escape route? It's pitch black. Where would we
go? Could we fight back? My husband's back was hurting from our busy active day. Will
he even be able to make a run for it? Speaking of my husband, did he even have a clue
what was going on? After about 10 minutes, my son, who slept through the
whole lower deal whispered, you good mom? I very quietly said, yeah, I am good,
trying to appear fine when I was anything but fine.
My husband awoke and asked me again if I was okay
and I nodded, trying to convince not only him
but myself as well.
Finally, about 45 minutes later,
I gently woke him up and whispered,
I don't wanna tell you this in front of the kids
and I'm trying so hard to be strong, but I'm scared.
Can we please talk about what just happened?
Being hard of hearing, I needed the facts
and I needed to talk this out so I could have
a better understanding and hopefully calm down.
After comparing what each of us had heard, the group was kayaking the river in the pitch,
black, dark, and pulled onto the riverbank, commenting on our tent, asking was anyone in it.
My daughter said she sat there physically shaking, wondering if her dad or I had heard
it, and waiting for one of us to answer them.
She was not going to let them know a kid was in there by answering.
She could hear them walking on the rocks near our camp when they got no response after
multiple attempts to find out if the tent was occupied, one of them threw a freaking rock
at our tent.
This is what I had felt and what caused my husband to scream, hey, somewhere in all of the yelling
and incoherent talking that I had heard, they had asked if we had any cigarettes,
which was when my husband yelled, no. My husband said that, based on the voices, he thinks it was a family
lost on the river. Eventually, they did go down the river and we were able to sleep, albeit not soundly.
I must have woke up every five to ten minutes to every real and imagined sound.
I have never been so happy to see the sun. While the student had any of the traumatic endings I
imagined in that pitch black dark of night, it really was probably the most scared I've never been so happy to see the sun. While the student have any of the traumatic endings I imagined in that pitch black dark of night,
it really was probably the most scared I've ever been, and I am fairly certain this was our last camping trip for a while,
if not for our entire lives.
Well,
PS, murder with my husband is our family's favorite podcast. We love y'all. Love your show and appreciate how genuine you both are.
Be safe and remember don't throw rocks at tense. That's
genuine you both are. Be safe and remember, don't throw rocks at tense. That's it's so hard because she is hard of hearing. And so she wakes up and she's questioning everything, but
also being frozen in silence like, do you respond? Do you get up? Do you try it? Like that
is just such a tough call. It's also hard because I think people don't realize like,
how scary that is sometimes. Uh-huh.
Like, to the other people, they're like,
we're not gonna hurt anybody who are just messing around, but other people don't know that.
You just woke a family up in the middle of the night pitch black in the tent.
There's crazy people out there.
How do I know you're not a crazy person?
I would have been traumatized.
If that had been me.
Also, that is why I painted and I don't camp yep
To scary. It's not the reason we don't camp paint. Just isn't like camping very much
I feel like if that had happened to us while camping I would have called the cops. Yeah, you probably would have called the cops
But there was no service. Yeah, there's no service. So I don't know.
I would have been shaking in my boots.
Yeah.
The next one is from Tanya and it's titled Spring Break Nightmare.
Dear Daisy, like others, I'm here to share an abduction story with you.
It still gives me chills today thinking about that night.
I fully believe that if my boyfriend at the time had not been on this trip,
my roommate and I would not have come home.
Spring break 2015.
My college roommate, my boyfriend and myself headed off on a road trip from Oklahoma down
to South Texas and looped back around through Louisiana, Mississippi, and Arkansas.
Before we keep going, I feel like, obviously I believe, I believe every one of these stories.
I'm just curious like how many people almost get kidnapped.
Oh, you're a ton.
How many kidnappers are out there?
You know what I'm saying?
I don't know, it's hard.
Cause like I guess what I'm trying to say is obviously
I believe every one of these stories,
but sure there's stories out there that are like
I almost got kidnapped and it was a misunderstanding.
Obviously been in.
I'm not saying this is them. I'm just saying in general. Like how many I think you're a
hater and I'm not not hater. I'm just like there's a lot of kidnappers out there. You
know what I'm saying? It's better safe than sorry. I know I agree. I agree. I think it's
hard to look. I'm coming from a male perspective and it's never happened to me. Yeah. And
I am fully aware of that.
Watch me go to the store today and almost get kidnapped.
I know.
But it still does happen.
For females, I think it's just way more common.
And boys get kidnapped.
I mean, same thing with essay, right?
Yeah.
Like it's just, it's more common for females.
Yeah.
It's not nearly as common for males.
And so I think that's why sometimes it's hard for males to sympathize and like understand like, oh, you didn't almost get kidnapped,
but no, I mean, it happens. Yeah. It's kind of interesting. She says, my story, however,
took place in Houston. We got up super early that morning and hit the road. We took turns driving
the 10 and a half hours to reach Houston that evening. When we got there, we decided to be
super cheap on a hotel. Never do this. So we looked for one
close to a few dancing places we wanted to try. We found a little
what we do. We never do that. Oh, okay, I thought you thought I
just had it my little yeah, I think you said never do this.
So I was some people can't afford. Okay, okay, I should have
said parentheses. That's fine. We found a little one that was very reasonable.
My roommate and I went to check in,
and my boyfriend went to park the car.
The front desk man gave off a very strange vibe,
but didn't feel threatening in any way.
Just gave off a weird presence, but we
knew we were not staying at a hilton.
We got the keys to the room and headed to meet my boyfriend.
When we opened the door to our room,
we were a little creeped out.
There were bright red walls, mirrors on the walls and the ceiling in cert red flags here.
The room was clean enough for some cheap traveling college students and there weren't stains on everything.
The bathroom didn't appear as if anyone had been slaughtered in it,
but there was only one large towel and a couple hand towels.
Obviously not enough for all three of us. watered in it, but there was only one large towel and a couple hand towels. Obviously,
not enough for all three of us. So my roommate and I decided to go ask for more while my
boyfriend unloaded the car. You know, this makes me realize everybody that
listens is like Payton. Yeah. It is a bunch of patents. I mean, besides the
mail. You just thought I was a loans in my family. Besides the mail, that listen, but
yeah, because you would have said the same thing
You were the same thing. Uh-huh. And like old F. No get us out of here right now. Yeah, someone had been killed in the bathroom
I'd be freaking up there with my
flashlight on my phone just looking at the cracks just going do you think that's blood?
You just cameras in here. So we went back to the office and the same gentleman was still there
We asked him if we could get some more towels.
Awkwardly he said he could only give us one more.
Puzzled we told him we needed three.
He informed us that only two were allowed in a room and turned and walked away after
handing us the only towel he would give us apparently.
My roommate and I were a bit confused and very annoyed, but decided we were only here for
one night and we would just figure it out.
After this we all got ready, went out to dinner, and hit up a couple bars and danced.
We got back to our room around 10.30 pm. We wanted to get on the road at a decent hour, so we didn't
want a party all night. Now keep in mind, at this time, the front desk man had only seen me in my roommate.
He never saw that we had my boyfriend with us at the hotel. Also, just going to throw this out there.
I grew up in Nebraska right along Interstate 80, which is a very high-trafficking interstate.
My mother always told my sisters and I about being careful when we went to the mall with friends
because someone could grab you and ship you to Mexico and we'd never see you again.
Oh, we're dating.
I always thought she was just being a little crazy and overprotective.
Her words stick with me more now than they ever did back in those high school days.
Anyways, so back to the story.
We went to bed at around 11pm that night and always quiet around us, but then 2am strikes.
Fire alarms begin to blare in our room.
Lights flashing, screaming alarms, I am startled awake, disoriented and not knowing what is going
on.
All three of us jump out of
bed trying to get our bearings. None of us smell smoke or see flames. My roommate looks out the window
to see what's going on and everything is quiet in the parking lot and no one else is coming out of
their rooms. No fire trucks, no flashing lights outside, no smoke, no flames. She looks at us and says
there's nothing out there. At that moment a boom boom boom boom hits our door and a voice says open up
The hair on the back of my neck stood up
She peered out the curtain again and saw a large man standing there looking around the parking lot and the front desk man standing a few doors down
He hits the door again several times and yells open the door my roommate looks at us and is like, I'm not opening that door.
Hey, where's a boyfriend?
So there.
We all look at each other, the alarms blaring in our ears and lights flashing in our eyes.
My boyfriend says he will open it and see what's going on.
So my roommate and I go to the other side of the room and wait.
He goes to the door, cracks it just a little and says, can I help you?
As soon as the door is open and he says that, the man on the other side of the door says,
oh, sorry man.
And just like that, the man turns and walks away,
the alarm stopped blaring, the light stopped flashing
and all goes silent again.
So quiet like it had just been a dream
and we had all imagined it.
What the f?
Be wielded by what had just happened,
we sat on our bed, we didn't talk much
and just sat there processing the events that had just taken place.
I didn't sleep at all the rest of the night.
Not another sound was heard, but an eerie silence hung in the air.
The next morning, we got moving early and got the hell out of there as fast as we could.
As we were loading our car, I saw a couple families loading up as well.
They didn't appear as if they heard the commotion the night before.
Had we just imagined the whole thing?
I didn't want to be a crazy girl that went up to strangers and asked if they had alarms
and lights going off in their room too. After this experience, we paid a lot more for
hotels the rest of the trip and didn't think twice about it.
That's so weird. I fully believe that had my boyfriend not been with us on this trip,
we would have had a very different outcome. I don't know what this man wanted, but I
know that it wasn't good.
Had the front desk man seen my boyfriend,
would this have even happened to us?
Or because there appeared to only be two girls
in this room where we target?
These are questions I still ask myself today
and now having a daughter of my own,
I ponder how to prepare her
and make her aware of these situations.
I think about my own mother's warnings
and how silly they seem to me at the time. I hope this story enlightens everyone to be vigilant at all times and maybe pay a little extra on a hotel sometimes.
Thank you for hearing my story. Your podcast is one of my favorites and I found you through your mile higher episode.
Love your take on these stories and the respect you give the victims, Tanya.
That's crazy. What happened?
I'm gonna say she's right on the money. You think so? Yeah, they were gonna take them
Is this a shanty hotel?
That's insane. I don't know. It sounded good to me. That's insane. Yeah, where's wrong with the world?
Money, apparently
That's so crazy. All right you guys. Well, that was our last story for this month's deer daisies and remember to write your stories and they can be about anything they can be about creepy things that have happened in your town creepy things that have happened in your house ghost encounters
true crime experiences whatever and we will see you next time I love it.
I hate it. Bye.