My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark - 14 - You Sexy Motherfourteen
Episode Date: April 29, 2016Karen and Georgia tackle their favorite 1990s murders, featuring serial killer Joseph Naso and the death of Sherrice Iverson in Nevada.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and Cali...fornia Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Okay, we're recording. Okay, good, because we should do a podcast. I mean, we've had like an hour of
deep conversation before this podcast even started. Yeah, we had to really connect and
put some stuff on the table. It was important. Aire some dirty laundry, not even like Aire some
daren. I think every episode I'm going to terribly sing a bad song. That'll be my new thing. Do you
mind? No, because every episode you sing a good song. My notebook is so far away. Georgia just
stood up and it looked like she was starting to do stand-up comedy. We're both laying on the couch
and then she jumped up and like took a pose. I was like, can I make it to this dresser and get my
notebook? Oops, without. And then yeah, it looked like stand-up comedy. Because those are your notes
from your, you're watching your show with the famous lawyers. Hey, let's get right into it. Okay.
I was trying to do a long introduction, but now I can't remember their names. By the way,
this is my favorite murder. Oh, hi. Yes. Hi, guys. With Karen and Georgia. Welcome to episode 14.
That's Karen. I'm Georgia. Yeah. Do you want to give a shout out real quick before you even start
to the name of that? Because we have like, we started, we started naming the episodes weird
things and now we're just like on it. Now we're just trying to make each other laugh. And when we
think of it, it's just a pump, basically a pun contest. The teens are hard. The teens are pretty
tough. And last week, 13 going on Murdy is the episode title that my friend, Owen Ellickson,
DM'd me on Twitter and basically just said it was right after the number 12 dropped. He just
DM'd and it said next week should be 13 going on Murdy. That's all he said. Yeah. There's no way
it's not going to be. Can we have a contest for like, so we don't have to think of them anymore?
Like people writing us. Sure. Like 14. What is 14? What if we just open this whole podcast up and
have other people do it? It's all moderated. It's all moderated by other people. It's moderated,
produced, and talked through, researched, and then performed by. Yeah, that'd be fun. But it's
back here in Georgia. Yeah, we'll still own it. We'll own the copyright. Speaking of, I just bought
the rights to Michael Ramsed's adorable drawing. Oh, yes. Of my favorite murder. The one, if you
see the drawing of the two of us lying, it's a cute little cartoony drawing of us lying prone
with like murder weapons around us. That's the one on the Facebook page. Yeah, Michael Ramsed,
who's like this fucking incredible, like incredible artist drew it just for fun because he's a nice
guy. Thanks, Michael Ramsed. And I was like, Hey, can I buy that from you so we can make t-shirts?
So in the next few weeks, hopefully. Oh, yeah, because we've got some spec t-shirts, right?
Yeah, there's already a mock up of the t-shirts. It's like, it's happening. You guys, you can
have a t-shirt. Pretty soon. We'll all wear t-shirts around town. Yeah. And if we see you,
we'll murder you. Yeah. That's how we'll know to murder each other. That'd be amazing. What
was hoping turns into a craze cult where everyone just murders each other. What's that cosplay
thing where you like, there's people, like, if you're wearing a certain thing, you have to murder,
you have to like tag that person, but it's pretend murder, and then you're out of the game. Have
you heard of that? Um, is it Dungeons and Dragons? No, it's close. Is it LARPing? Yes. Is it live
action role playing? It's LARPing. How does she even know that? Is it the Renaissance fair? I love
nerds. I research their shit all the time. I want to know what they do on the weekends. LARPing.
What a grand idea. Live action role playing. Do you know that? That's so cool. Yeah. Well,
we're nerds too. And you did something on the weekend. We're murder nerds. Murder nerds. I did
I did do something. I went to see, uh, String and Buting. The ticket of the weekend. Everyone was
talking about this show. Did I say that right? I think so. Okay. So they were the defense attorneys
for Stephen Avery from Netflix, making a murderer. Um, who, of course, if you saw it, you fell in
love with them and, and, uh, are obsessed with them as I am. They're good men trying to do good in
it in an unjust world. Yeah. Defense attorneys as a whole, I think are good people. I hope so. You
know, I mean, I wouldn't want to park next to them in a Trader Joe's parking lot in general. Right.
But that's an LA lawyer thing. I like that they're defending his right to a fair trial. They're not
being like, he's innocent. They're like, he, this is, you're doing these things wrong. You're doing
everything wrong. State of Wisconsin. Like they're, they're, what I've, what I took away from this,
and I was like, this might be stupid. I'm so sick of my, of making a murderer. Like we, I have
read about it to death, like other theories and shit. I was up on the show, like hardcore. Like,
I was like this, I don't want to fucking hear audience questions about the cat getting burned
for fucking two hours, you know, in an uncomfortable chair. I spilled a half a glass of wine on myself,
like right when I walked in. Oh, good. Cause that's what I red or white. Oh, red, of course.
Perfect. Why would I spill white wine on myself? And you were wearing your white lace blouse?
Yeah. It was, and I started screaming. I was Carrie. So you were trying to make it as difficult
as possible from the outset. Yep. And then what happened? It was excellent. If you have a chance
to see it, everyone go like it was a real, if you're interested to crime and, and law,
law. Fascinating. A couple of things I wrote down. Guess how many, okay. So witnesses who are
exonerated because of, because of, they were wrongfully convicted. Guess what out of 10,
how many are overturned because of witness misidentification? So how many out of 10? I just
said, I almost just said the number. It's 11 out of 10. Well, eight. Is it some crazy high
number? It's seven, which is still a lot. I shouldn't ask people that because it's like,
it's like, if it's higher than I'm like, Oh, well, sorry, I always ruin our games like this
by overshooting. And then it's like, well, it is still pretty high though. Yeah, that's crazy high.
So seven out of 10 overturned convictions are because of witness misidentification.
Yeah, they say eyewitness identification is one of the least reliable forms of
what do you call it? Of testimony? Sure. Or I feel like by the clues, what's the word I'm looking for?
Uh, evidence. That's right. There we go. We have a true cram podcast. We should know these
nouns. I feel like by 2050, they're going to be like, how fucking antiquated was like 2010 and
before that they fucking were relying on witness testimony? Yes, for sure. Well, because at that
point, there will be so much CCTV cameras in every corner of our lives. That is a fair point.
That's probably what it will be. How do you feel about CCTV? I like it. I don't know. I don't.
It's fine. I mean, I understand why people have a problem with it. But the idea that you think,
and maybe there'll be a dystopian future where we live in some terrible government state where
they watch everything you do. And it's all, you know, 1984. But for right now, that's how you
fucking find the guy that walks up and hits someone on the back of the head and puts them in their car
before anyone knows what happens. I feel like if you're a true crime fan, you agree with that.
And I feel like if the laws are fair in general, then CCTV is okay. You know what I mean? If laws
are like, you can't smoke cigarettes and they're arresting people who are smoking cigarettes on
CCTV, you know, like once the laws get a little fucking crazier, then which is like, you can't
really tell. So yeah. But I just for now, anytime I watch a British, British procedural, I'm always
like, well, they're going to get this on CCTV. There's no problem. Like my it's it's such a it's
such a comfort to me in my old age. The fact that they rely on like bank cameras, like that they
that, you know, when you see those that are like the bank camera caught the street for one second
and saw this car drive by and that's how they knew this person wasn't where they said they were.
Yeah, like if you're going to rely on that, and that's going to be admissible, throw a camera up
there fucking listen, I want to be safe. Who I mean, are people is it just not wanting to be
monitored and not wanting to introduce the concept of a police state like that? Yeah, but like,
it's already happening. It's I think keeping citizens. And it's almost like I feel like people
do less horrible things outside if they know they're being watched. I know that's so naive.
I think we're both, I think everyone in this whole conversation, whether they're forward
against it is being naive. Because if they don't think the government is already fucking following
every single thing they say, yeah, they're stupid. Right. But if we think it's going to be okay that
that closed captioning or closed captioning brought to you by I don't want deaf people to
know what anyone is saying on parenthood. Speaking of, have you watched the new season of happy valley?
Yes, I have. I had to put closed captioning on because it's so when the sister talks,
you don't know what she's saying. What are it's a British procedural drama you guys should watch
fucking great. It's so good. I think people have talked about it on the Facebook page. Yeah.
But yeah, because I'm not done with the season. It's great. I won't tell you anything,
but it is Northern England, I believe. My Lord, what are they fucking saying?
It's the craziest accent. And they said it's borderline Jordy, I think.
What's that? It's a part Welsh or something like that. It's a crazy British accent.
Let me see if there's something else from that. I wrote a couple notes, but I had had red wine by
then. One out of five, so seven out of 10 of the overturned convictions are from witness
misidentification. One out of five overturned convictions come from jailhouse informants,
which is like, yeah, dude. Yeah. If you're giving someone a fucking lenient, what's it called?
A sentencing? Lenient sentence because they're informing on someone. But you know what I do love
is I love when they plant a cop as a prisoner and get that shit out. Yeah. So then nobody,
there's nobody benefiting that could possibly be lying. It's a lock. Right. And if you're stupid
enough to tell your cellmate, which like so many people are stupid enough to tell their cellmate.
Well, they can't help it if they're that certain personality, the psychopath and the narcissist
and all that. That's what I find so fascinating is that it really is not every single killer is
like that, but there is that there's a certain pattern, especially like, like murders that make
no sense, like murders that aren't of like, that aren't domestic abuse, that aren't like personal,
are these people are fucking crazy. When it's not out of quote, passion, which I hate saying that
word because killing your fucking spouse isn't passion. It's just, it's just pure evil. It
should be called hysteria. That's really what it is. Yeah. That's that's that that is accurate.
It's a man going hysterical. I read a thing recently. There's a chopper. Do you ever think that
when you there's a helicopter over your house, that it's like, there's a loose criminal and
they're going to park or wait, that's why I moved out of Silver Lake because there was helicopters
in my like the searchlight in my backyard every night. I was like, I can't handle it.
It's dumb. Crimes of passion and crimes of love, like you can't call it that. And the same way
that someone I read recently that was like, you can't call, don't call it unconcentral sex,
because sex is sex and rape is rape. And use the word rape. Right. They so often use sex. Yeah.
They use euphemisms like in journalistically. Yeah. When it's like when they're like, oh,
they assaulted a child, you raped a child, save the words together so that people understand
what happened. Right. Molesting is like such a vague term. Yeah. I remember there was that that
documentary about that one priest who was like just sent from fucking church to church. Oh, that
that documentary is one of them. I think about it all the time. I wish I'd never watched it. Well,
there's one kid in it who's like, like he's you can tell he's like became a drug addict was so
fucked up off it. And he says, that guy didn't molest me. He fucked me. Like he says that.
Yeah. Yes. That's right. That's exactly like people don't talk about that. I'm so sorry for
listeners who are listening with their children. Well, there was one woman who said she was
recommending it to her children. But I was assuming it was because they were all adults.
Right. One would hope one would fucking hope. Um, yeah, no, it's all of that. I feel like that's
there's just waves of change because so many people have voices these days that people get to talk
about this enough so that it does affect change. But yeah, there's nothing that makes me angrier
than it was like accused of a sexual assault of a minor where it's like, why are you rewording
child rape? Yeah, so strange. Yeah, they did it. They need to get called what they did. But
have you seen any of that news about Dennis Hastert going to trial? He's that Republican,
I think he was the speaker of the house and he's been molesting boys and raping boys.
I why I just did it myself for years. Well, he was a wrestling coach in Illinois. It's just
the craziest story, but he was one of the lead people that tried to get Clinton impeached when
he had that affair. And meanwhile, fully raping boys. Somewhere in his head that makes sense to
him does. It has to. Otherwise, how do you live your life? Like, I feel like if you and I killed
someone, we would be, if you and I stole something from a grocery store, we would be like so
rack, whatever, steal, shit, I don't care. Like, you know what I mean? Like, if I like,
well, we have consciences. These are people who like are sociopathic or they're so,
they just want what they want. So that they rationalize everything that they do. That's
the bullshit that these guys that are that these old guys that have been in power for so long,
they're used to it. And you see these other Republicans defending him by saying there's
one that said, I think it was Tom delay. Is that is that who it is? I don't know anything about
politics, but he said we've all we've we all have personality flaws. Oh, that is not a personality
it is not it is not it's a there's no excuse. I think it's I think it's become so normal in our
culture that like there are molesters out there. And there are. Yeah, but I feel like that more
and more there's like it just makes me think now we're going off on the craziest tangent, but it
makes me think of like the Franklin Credit Union scandal where for so long, the people that tried
to report that they were like, you're out of your mind, you're talking about government officials.
Well, now these government officials, it's in the light of day. All of these rich, white,
old men who have been telling everybody how to live and what their value is for years and years
are fucking the monsters of the highest order. It's crazy. It's the people who are
are underrepresented and fucking striving just to make their families have a good life. You know
what they say that like that are the good people is what I mean. Sometimes they're not. Anyways,
they say that like if you want to get into politics, there's a part of you that's a narcissist to
begin with. Yeah, like you can't want to get into politics without having a little bit of fucking
narcissism. Sure, which makes sense to me like I don't want to lead a bunch of fucking people. And
bull and be a professional bullshitter and be on the take and lot basically just lie to people.
Yeah. So you can get to where you want to get. Yeah. Into a place of power. Like who wants to
be in a place of power? Well, and also what that power means, which it seems like the more we
learn about it, it means that you go off to like Bohemian Grove and sacrifice a six year old to
a big wooden owl and shit where you're just like, sorry, what? That's a rough episode. If you guys
want to hear more about this, what we're talking about, listen to the last podcast in the last
episode Bohemian Grove Bohemian Grove and then what was the and the Franklin Credit Union that
the way those guys did that and researched it is amazing. It's like a two or three parter. There's
some shit that's hard to listen to like they get into the shit. They get into it and there's a
couple because they also have one that's like Satanism in the government because they did a
whole run about like all the satanic panic in the 80s and all that shit and how these things that
were once considered conspiracies are actually proving to be 100% true. Well, it just sounds
so ridiculous and obvious. It sounds like we're jellybee off of being like, no, the government
is bad. I'm like, the government is Jerry Brown. You know, it's like, how was that?
That was dead on 1% of our listeners were like, yes, she nailed that. The other ones don't know
what I'm talking about. So good. Wait, anything else from the you? It was at the Ace Hotel you
tell you say? Yeah, it was there. Well, it wasn't they have this like feet up. Where are you pointing
up? They have this like gorgeous theater at the Ace Hotel that they like fucking they stole. That
was like a gorgeous theater to begin with and Ace Hotel was like, this is what I wrote because I
love my little like crazy notes. False evidence, the most dangerous tool the cops use, said Strang.
False evidence is the most dangerous. He was these dudes were like, is he the smaller one?
Dean Strang. Strang is a smaller one. The other one looks like the eagle from the Muppets.
And Dean Strang is like this sensitive poetry teacher that's just trying to
catch a break and can't believe like I'm just trying to teach you kids about poetry and you
won't listen. And like, I mean, these guys can't make a ton of money. And I mean, they're just
justified. They're so admirable that they are, you know, like what the things they were saying
about how they're used to not they used to not allow like even recordings, voice recordings in a fucking
interrogation. Oh, wow. Which is like, it's common fucking sense that you would if you were a cop,
you would want this to be recorded at least audio. If not video, my cat is just smelling
everything about you right now. I love it. Because you're not doing anything wrong. And so you
should it's the same thing with the fucking closed captioning. Yes, that's right. But I mean, I was
going to say, you know, in the it immediately made me think of like LA confidential where it's like,
you can't record it if you're not doing it on the books. And if cops are caught, you know, they
there's always that mentality of by any means necessary, you got to get this perp. But that
leaves out, you could be wrong. And that's the problem that that people I think that get into
power like that, they lose the ability to question their own judgment, they lose the ability to be
wrong. Right, they're just like after that, what they think is quote unquote, the truth. And it
has to be their truth, because they have to win. Well, that's false confessions. And they talked
about Brennan Dassie, the nephew in making a murder who got you know, who can quote, confessed.
And like, half of his testimony isn't, isn't video, you know, half of the shit that happened
between them. And there's no parent there. And there's no lawyer there he should. That should
should have all been stricken from the record. Like that should not have been entered into
anyone's. What is the word? Entered into evidence. Evidence is the way did we miss the word evidence
twice in the true crime. Wow, guys, episode 14 is a real roller coaster 14 14. We don't
got it for 14 the bell tolls. Nope, dude. Yes, don't do that. Do not condescend to me.
Okay, right on our Facebook page or tweet at us what number 15 should be, please. Yeah,
please. But know that, but you're now in the realm of comedy writing. And so you might get
your feelings hurt. Just know that insult. We were going to we're going to read the worst ones
and go with the best one. And we're going to name first, last and middle names. Oh, it's
going to be a blood bath. We will not do any of that. Imagine we just turn. We never even make it
to episode 20 because we turn on everyone in our cell huge bitches. What if we turn this podcast
into a podcast called what if we just keep it's just a shit ton of conjecture for an hour and
10 minutes. What if we had to say it like that? Like what if no, what if like no, you don't even
know you don't what if just keep going higher. Yeah, let's do that. All right. Should we do our
did we do all of our house cleaning? Do we have any corrections? I feel like for a corrections
department like a murder enema like I just feel good right now. I got a true crime enema. That's
good. I know that'll clean you right out. I mean, not just whoosh, you know what I'm saying? Wow.
Do you want me to go first this this year? This year. So this theme, this theme is the last
week we did 1980s murders, which was like easy for both of us, I feel like. Yeah. And then we
were like, we're going to do 1990s murders. And then I feel like both of us today were like,
what the I can't find a 90s murderer. I can't I was like, I can't find one. I don't have the
will to live. What did I do to my eyebrow? I did I have a lot of eyebrow problems this weekend. I
can't I did something to my right eyebrow. It's not filled in right now. So you can see it. I just
did some bottom plucking. You know, if I am about eyebrows, it's got an arch. It's got a nice arch.
This over here is okay. It looks like you're like, you're being like inquisitive all the time. I
constantly want to know something that I don't know my brow today to be like, Oh, I understand
to someone and they're like, are you mad at me because I have Botox? I was like, maybe I need
to lay off the boat. Are you mad at me? I was like, no, this is concern. You just can't tell
because I have fucking, what are they called? I have just like chemical botulism in your muscles
in my forehead. You know what? And you do. Girl, you you're wrinkle free. I because I can't live
another day with wrinkles. No, I don't care. Well, you're on that TV. I tell you,
there's nothing worse. There's nothing worse than seeing what your how your face does on
HG. Oh, HD, HDTV. Oh, man. Take a look at your face on HDTV. Tiny House Hunters Wrinkles,
the worst kind. I we got, we were drinking and watching like you live in what like it's some
like, and I was screaming at the TV as I do when I drink and watch TV and smoke about how
everyone has a trust fund and go fuck yourself. Like I was angry at these people. Why does they
were do but fucking that's what you think about as you're fucking for like they're what do they
live in? Is it like we turn this fucking TV into like a six story open concept? Fuck you.
I wish I was here for that. Just screaming. Yeah. Well, there's they they think they intentionally
cast kind of awful people so that you want you hate watch it because if you like the people,
then you're just watching people buy shit and that's or like consider buying shit.
Yeah, but I live with someone and so them here having to hear me scream at the TV about fucking
about the only way you could have you could live like this is with a trust fund.
Yeah, they like you need to mention that up top. Hey, I'm Mike Corey, the host of Wunderers podcast
against the odds. In our next season, three mask men hijack a school bus full of children
in the sleepy farm town of Chowchilla, California. They bury the children and their bus driver
deep underground planning to hold them for ransom. Local police and the FBI marshal a search effort,
but the trail quickly runs dry. As the air supply for the trapped children dwindles,
a pair of unlikely heroes emerges. Follow against the odds wherever you get your podcast.
You can listen ad free on the Amazon music or Wunderer app.
Well, also to watch people buying like second homes on the beach. There's those ones that are
like beach comers or whatever where I'm like, pardon me, I drove by, you know, six homeless
people literally laying on the sidewalk on my way over here. And these motherfuckers are buying
a fun second home. There's only so much everyone needs. Like you need to meet a basic maximum
of shit. And the rest of it is you being an asshole. You're not going to be any happier in
the Bahamas. No, it's it won't work. You know why? I'm going to go to your fucking estate sale.
And you're going to be in a home and I'm going to buy your shit. Oh my God, this is getting
deep. This is going exactly where I need it to be. Finally, we're taking down the real monsters
of this world, the people on HGTV. I mean, I'm happy for them. No, you know what,
lots of love going out to them. Here's what we always say. Do do Lizzie's wishing them well.
Oh, Lizzie is. I just you got to come from a place of love. Lizzie Cooperman. Love her.
Lizzie Cooperman, legendary comedian. She's fucking amazing. Good friend.
You want to go first or me go first? I'll totally go first. Please go first.
First of all, somebody tweeted this on the Twitter page at my fav murder. If you'd love
to join us over there. I think I got locked out somehow on my phone and I can't figure out how
to get back. You keep doing that. I do it and then I don't try to fix it. That's my thing.
You try twice and you're like, fuck this. I'm like, no, you know what, fuck it.
But somebody did tweet this and it made me realize because someone said something about
murderpedia. I think they were just mentioning it, but they could have been saying, I am on to you
how you use that of all in all your research, which I absolutely, I don't think they were,
but they could have been because I absolutely do. And murderpedia just as a recommendation,
if you ever want to know about a killer, it's this amazing website where they have compiled
tons of articles in one spot. So you can read like local newspaper articles about the person that
you are researching. And there are links to every article. Can you tell I'm furring my brown anger
right now? You cannot. But I also don't have my glasses on and I'm wearing a French sleeve
t-shirt. So I'm slightly uncomfortable because I have an intense farmer's tan.
There's so much going on in this apartment. We should get someone to paint it.
Ali says this apartment is like a YouTube channel. And so it's really hard to pay attention to
anything in here because there's just like cats and like cute vintage things. It's so true. It's
kind of aqua. It's very aqua. It's like, it's like, if you had a seizure issue, well, you do. Oh,
shit. No, no, it's fine. If you were caring. I haven't in years. And I wouldn't in here. It's
pleasing. Okay, good. I'm glad. So anyway, I get all my research off Murderpedia. Probably should
have said that. Probably should cite research. But you know, whatever, we're doing a lot.
Credit credit here credit there. So here's what I looked at. I was trying to do I literally looked
up my space murder just to see if there ever was one. And there was what it didn't happen in the
90s. Somebody actually committed a MySpace murder in 2003, where I was like, you're a day late in
a dollar short, Mr. MySpace hanging onto MySpace way longer than needed necessary. I also, because
somebody suggested on the Facebook page, looked very lightly looked into the Swedish black metal
murders, or nor of Norway, sorry, nuts. Oh, summer in Sweden. And I thought, oh, that'd be kind of
funny and interesting and whatever. It's so dark. Yeah, it's just a culture of people who are all
turned out, right, like, crazy each other. I don't want to support those people. I just, it's, here's
the one thing I will say about it that I do support part of the the reason they started burning
churches, because they have some amazing really, really old churches. But they were burning them
because they had a kind of like, really oppressive Christian culture in those countries that really
fucked up a lot of people. And so that I support. But did they think it through in that way? And
like, this is what the message we're sending now is probably just a bunch of fucking, I mean, 20
year olds. It's hard to say because the stories I read around, like there was church arson, but
then it went into like, stories that I don't even want to repeat, because they're just, it's just
dark for darkness sake. And then they would like record it or they record, you know, it's crazy
shit that it's just like, I don't enjoy any of that because it's like, we want the intricacies
of fucked up things that have happened in the past. We don't really want to like highlight,
highlight people doing things to get attention. It's that's a real fuck you dad feel to all
of their crimes. So I was like, eh, yeah, we did that with to ourselves. We don't need to fucking
talk about it with other people. Exactly. Also, you can there's like tons of really good books
about it. And you can go in down into that. But that's also the part of it. I'm not interested
in the gore. Yeah, I mean, I like the story I like learning about the psychology. The gore is just,
you know, whatever. I like acoustic folk rock music murders. And I'm like, when someone from
Peachwood Sparks murdered someone, have you ever heard of the Austin City Limits murders?
They're insane. All right, so here's what I landed on. Okay. And this this I think this guy has it
all because I tried to look I was trying to look for someone that something that would spark a
memory where I'd be like, Oh, I do remember that. And I liked it. So I was looking at San Francisco
murderers or San Francisco serial killers. Oh, of course, the zodiac is all over that shit. And
you can't get past it. Night Stalker a little bit too. Richard Ramirez was up there for a while.
But then I stumbled upon a killer named Joseph Nassau. And so this story has a little of all
the things that we like. And it pulls in a murder we've already talked about that he might be
responsible for. Oh, shit. There's a lot going on. But here's what basically what happened. When
this guy was 76 years old, his parole or probation officers did a random visit at his house in Reno.
And because he was like, it was some weapons violation or whatever. And so they got to search
the whole house because he had weapons and ammo. And they found hundreds, if not thousands of
photographs of nude women who are posed in very unnatural positions, who appear dead or unconscious
with mannequin parts and lingerie strewn about in every picture. So the cops like find this stash,
and then they're like, holy shit, we got to really search this house. And they end up finding
newspaper clippings with the identification of women, like identification that he shouldn't have.
Like, clearly, it's starting to look like serial killer. What do we call them? Evidence? No.
I'm just going to keep whenever we forget something. So serial killer, when they get a
pride, when they get a thing. Yeah, that's what's surprise. Oh my God, why? Why is this happening?
What does it call when they walk? Oh, not a token token. Is it a token? It's a token. Let's call it
a token. Everyone knows what they're looking for. Yes, it's just a little stupid. That's how you
get found out, bro. Exactly. But also, and he and he also did it the best way of getting found out.
He kept a rape diary. Absolutely. Don't do that. Well, here, we're glad he did though,
because he had been doing it since the 50s. Holy shit. And he had these, it was every little
interaction he would have with a woman, he would write down in that, in it leading up into these
rapes were in his bizarre and strangely casual phrasing of like, picked up a hot redhead,
she really fought me a lot of that kind of shit. Yeah. So they go through the years they're going
through, then they find they stumble on this list of 10 women, names and locations. And they start
to put together these names and descriptions of these women and locations are starting to match up
to missing women in the same town. Can I say that's my dream, like I'm in the wrong, that's my dream
job. Is what? Matching that shit up. Being a detective to find those things. Yeah, I'm in the
wrong fucking profession. Go on. You mean eating dessert on TV isn't, isn't giving you the same
feeling? Shockingly. I don't feel fulfilled and that I'm contributing to society. What if you
were a detective, but you still, you had to get even more Botox for some reason, you felt the
pressure in your, because I was giving too much away to what are they called to criminals? And
I'm like in the room with them, I'm like, no way. Like, no, you have to get Botox. So you stop,
fill your whole face. Yeah. So basically, they start lining these things up. This guy has been
raping and murdering and dumping women's bodies since the 70s. So they were like,
these are real. These are real. And they basically end up whatever the within the
within the same country version of extraditing is they move them, they take them from Nevada into
California, because some of these murders happened around San Francisco, basically. And what they
come to find out is that Oh, and he referred to his hit that rape journal as his dream diary,
detailing his fantasies. And he said that he used the word rape loosely, quote, like how guys talk.
So, so what they start to realize is he's lived in close proximity, like in the same city as
where these women have all been taken from and dumped. He's wherever it's happening. He's,
he's lived in the same place. I love when they make those connections. It's like a puzzle piece.
And it takes a shit ton of legwork of like interviewing people and yes, fascinating. It's
so it must be so fucking satisfying. Yeah. So it turns out the other thing that's a detail that's
taking place as they as all these facts and evidence on furls is that the women have double
initials, same first and last name. We talked about this initials, which is the same as the
alphabet murders. So these are the the women that we're talking about here. It's in 80s and 90s.
But in the 70s, there were a series of child murders called the alphabet murders in
Rochester, New York, or around there. Yeah, you talked about it. So it was little girls between
the ages of 10 and 12. And they all had the same first and last initial, which I have to you.
I would be totally have been at risk. So Carmen Cologne age 10 was found in November 18 1971
in Riga, New York. Wanda Walkowitz was 11. She was found April 3rd in Webster, New York. And Michelle
Manza was 11. And she was found in November 28 1973 in Macedon, New York.
And did they find that he was living there then? They found out that he is a New York state native.
And that he was visiting the area in he was fitting visiting relatives in that area at the
same time. But they say that the two cases are not connected. Because these in the 70s,
these little girls were prepubescent. And these other women are older and probably prostitutes.
Yeah, he only wanted to murder, he wanted to murder women of a certain age, not what the fuck.
Yeah, it's like, when you murder a child, people get more outraged about it. So he stopped doing
that because people because it was like more obvious people were all over that right. So
there's like, well, why don't I murder I can't murder children anymore because
it gets too suspicious. Also, he's old at this point. So he was arrested when he was 77. These
murders happened when he was in his mid to late 50s. So and also he probably can't get around
little kids as much. But you sure can hire a prostitute anytime you want. Like it's there's
a logic problem that I have with it that's so irritating. Because there's and there the other
thing was there was DNA found on the last little girl, Wanda. How is there no DNA on the other
ones? It seems impossible. Well, they're there, they're, he's proven to have killed these four
women that were on his list. And his DNA is on them. But they did find they don't have any DNA
on these little girls from the 70s, for the alphabet murders, except for one on Wanda. And
his DNA doesn't match what was found on her. Except for my thing is test it again, do something,
look further into it. Because it's impossible to me that before there was DNA testing that
like every single murder, like before people thought about leaving DNA, aside from fingerprints,
that there has to be a DNA on every crime scene, you know what I mean? Like, and it was just handled
wrong or wasn't taken or it was lost or it was destroyed and or it's too old. Yeah, you know,
like, before we thought about these things. It's just amazing that that was recently,
actually, DNA DNA is as new as the OJ trial. Totally. It's crazy to think about that. Totally.
But they did save some things. But it's like, yeah, if this if her body was found
on in 1973, then maybe you're going to have some problems with that DNA. But like that,
everything else, the cops are saying, yeah, there's those other things are just a coincidence. Well,
is it a coincidence that one of his victims in 1978 was also named Carmen Cologne? Are you
kidding me? The same exact name as the first victim in the Rochester ones? Same exact name.
I wonder if sometimes psychological profiles that we make, that's like, like psychologists and
detectives make of these like, this is what the person is like. This is what they're into,
this is what they're after, this is how they are, are like detrimental because it makes them,
it makes them narrow-sighted. Yes, the word like near-sighted or far-sighted, flawed in their
sight, problematic evidence with seeing evidence. Yeah, because totally that how could that these
are so many coincidences you've they have now written off for coincidences. Can't write that
shit off. It's crazy. So the bodies that of the grown women, which this was only seven years later.
So the last little girl or less, because the last little girl Michelle in Rochester was found in
1973. Well, in 1977, Roxanne Raghash was found in Fairfax, California, which is like 15 minutes
away from Petaluma from where I grew up. You guys have all the murders. We have tons of,
nor cow baby. But this girl was only 18. Yeah, that's not an adult. It's, I mean, and also
they were saying she, they assumed she was a prostitute, but there was no proof of it. Her
parents said she was not. And so it's just a weird police theory. This is a perfect link. This is
only five years later. And this girl is like basically his bridge into older women. It's just
and the word prostitute, it's so, it's so like definitive that this person has been selling
their puss on the fucking sidewalk. Like that's what that means. You know, like that's what you
picture. Yes, instead of like, maybe she was on drugs and like dating a lot of people. But like
maybe she was wearing hot pants because it was fucking 1977. But that doesn't make her a quote
sex worker. It's a human being that got killed. Yeah. I mean, and yeah, and it's that thing of
it makes very clear of like the problematic parts of the word prostitute because it immediately
makes you go, doesn't matter. Yeah, doesn't count. She lived a, she lived a high, high risk
lifestyle, high risk lifestyle. So that's what she gets. Right. Well, so okay, so this girl was
Roxanne Roxanne was 18. And she was dumped by the side of the road strangled and nude on January
10, 1977. Carmen Cologne, the second one, the older one in California, was found August 13, 1978
on the Carquinas Highway. And she was 22. She was 30 miles away from the first victim. So it was
clearly he's in that area. Then in 1981, the body of Shirley Patton, who doesn't have the same
initials, but she was also 56. And she washed ashore near the Naval Depot in Tiberon.
And Nassau managed the place she used to live. And he also had a photo of her. And he was considered
a prime suspect, but then gave investigators elusive answers and was never charged any time in the
next 30 years. Duh, bro. Like to speak in the fucking NorCal terms. Duh, bro. Duh. And then the,
a woman named Pamela Parsons in 1993 was found in Yuba County. She was 38. And
she also lived near him. And then a woman named Tracy Tafoya was found dead in 1994
in Yuba County. She was drugged, raped, strangled, and her body was left near a cemetery.
So he, this guy had pictures. He had descriptions of them, like all the shit. It was just like a
lock. He represented himself in court. Of course, I'm sorry, but that means you're fucking guilty
of shit. It means you're guilty and it means you're crazy. And so of course, he was convicted of all
four murders in 2013. He's in jail. He's, I think he's a, what do you call it, up for the death
penalty, but I couldn't find whether or not he's gotten it yet. But that woman, when he was being
tried, the woman who he raped, one of the early rapes in, that was in Berkeley, she was waiting
at a bus stop and he picked her up and raped her. And when she went to the police and she said this
in court, which is, I just couldn't get out of my mind. When she went to the police to report it,
they said, um, they told her that they thought she was just trying to make her boyfriend jealous
by making up this story. Can't even. I so that's what we're coming from. That was 50,
almost 60 years ago. And this is where we are now. I mean, like, that's the kind of thing we're
like, we're coming from a dead stop of cops, not even listening when people are like,
repeated rapes in this entire area. There's a reason people have gotten this old piece of
shit has been getting away with murdering women for years and years.
But gets me in every, in every case of serial murders or multiple murders or, you know, even,
I don't want to, I don't want to say that you have to be murdered to be important,
like rapists, you know, because that is devastating to her entire life is when,
is the people that are subsequent to them, to the rapists and murders getting paroled early,
the people after this person should have been caught or was caught. That's on.
That's on the state. And that's on the judge and that, you know, like,
you mean like the victims afterwards? Yeah. Yeah. Like that is, those are the people that like,
fuck me up. Is it like that should have been fucking stopped. And the family of the victims
that it happened to beforehand, they must feel guilty that, you know, this person didn't stay
in jail or this person was never caught. And even though they were like, here's all this evidence,
like, it's nightmarish. It's just ridiculous. It's just, it's, it's, because when it's so
cut and dried, like this man had all the evidence in his home. Yeah. He got, he's going to jail
for the rest of his, you know, very short life, hopefully. But like that it went on for years.
If those parole officers hadn't done that search, nobody would have ever known. Those people would
have just, it's the same thing about like child abuse cases where they're like, where they're,
the child protection agency is like, nope, they're fine and like close a case. And then the kid dies.
And it's like, this is on you. And there's no, there's nothing you can say that gets you out of
this. Like, I don't care if your boss was this way. I don't care if you had a huge caseload.
But like, well, the problem is they don't, that kind of shit, people, human life is undervalued.
Right. So they don't pay people who are supposed to be protecting those voiceless people enough.
And they have, they have too many, even though you're right. No, no, I'm wrong. There's,
there's no, there's no excuse. It's just like, but we have to start putting money to the things
that are important services for people who need help, as opposed to just fucking like,
everything just goes to the one person, we can't get into this shit. This is just crazy.
I feel like I'm going to get in trouble for saying that. And I think that social workers
are trying so hard and they're working against a bureaucracy that is undervaluing them. And I
fucking, I'm sorry. Well, I think, well, no, I think probably the point is that it's this,
this system is to blame the system that's supporting, you know, that one person having 30
caseloads. Yeah, it doesn't even make sense. You're right. I feel like I feel like I want to edit
that out because I feel like a dick for saying that. And, and teachers should be paid more.
I mean, you know, let's, now we're, let's get rid of it. So that's a, that's our friend Joseph
Nassau, the great NorCal and possibly I really, I, I'm going to say it like a detective. I like
him for those alphabet murders in the seventies. Oh yeah, I get it. Like you like him. Oh, I like
him for it. Like cop style. I agree. I thought you'd like that too, because we've talked about
that. No, I do. I like it. I like you for liking that. What's yours? Okay. So, because you're from
the year 90s kid, right? Yeah. And this one happened when I was 16. So in 19, in May of
97, right before I turned 17. And so this, this thing that happened, this, the person who did
it was someone that like, I would have dated. And I remember, I remember it happening. He was from
Southern California, the person who did it. And the girl was from orange, the girl he killed was
from Orange County. And it was such a like, I would have hung out with this guy, you know,
like this guy would have been my friend, and it made me realize that the people you think
are cool because they're one of you, you don't know who they are at all.
And I'll get into it. But so May 25, 1997, Jeremy Strohmeier, who was 18, and David Cash,
his friend who was 17, they were at the Prima Donna Resort and Casino in Prim, Nevada,
which we've all been to, it's the casino with the giant roller coaster right before you drive
into Vegas. Yes. It's fucking cool because it's like, it's like going into a Denny's from the 80s.
With a roller coaster that goes through the restaurant. Right. Yeah. And it's just like,
it's like Knott's Berry Farm. It's just like quaint. And it doesn't mean to be, you know.
So they're there. They're from Long Beach. At 4am, Strohmeier begins to make, quote,
playful contact with seven year old Cherise Iverson, who was roaming the casino alone,
which is something that I did. Like my dad took us to Vegas on regular occasion, not really,
but he took us a few times and was like, go play in the arcade. And you just fucking walked away.
But he didn't do that at 4am. No, not at 4am. 4am is, yeah. So the dad was gambling and drinking.
They told him to keep a closer eye on his daughter and he ignored them and told his son
to go watch the kid, which is like, my parents were divorced. If like, I had gotten lost,
my mom would have killed my dad. Like, yeah, I get it. And like, it's, it was
from the killer being my age to the kid being, you know, something in that situation is like
understandable. So Strohmeier, who's being playful with Cherise, they, he leads her into
the women's restroom. And while in the restroom, they begin to begin having a playful wet paper
towel fight, like jokingly, like he's playing with this, this 18 year old guy is playing with
the seven year old girl, like their buddies, you know, and like, when you're a little kid,
you like want to make friends with the older kids. And then he leads her into a bathroom. And
then his, so this is not that like, this is really troubling to me is that the friend,
last name is Cash, he walks into the restroom to look for his friend Strohmeier, and he peered
over from a neighboring stall and saw Strohmeier restraining the girl and threatening to kill her
if she didn't stay quiet. Cash told the police that he tried to get Strohmeier's attention by
calling his name and tapping him on the head. And Strohmeier stare at him blankly. So do you
know what cash did? He walked away. Yeah, he left, which is so troubling to me. Like it's more
trouble. It's more troubling those murderous fucking kid whose dad was in prison and his
mother was a schizophrenic. The fact that this fucking guy walked away, he ends up,
he strangled, he molests and kills her. I don't want to say in a way because it's like,
he, it's so troubling. They find out who he is by putting surveillance camera surveillance video
up and people from his high school and long teacher like that's this dude. They surveillance,
the cops surveillance his house and identify him. He runs away and he ingests a bunch of drugs and
writes a conflic, you know, a suicide note, pretty much confessing to it. Like there's no question
during any of this and the trial that he did this. There's no like, maybe he didn't do it.
Like he clearly did this. So let's see. So his defense attorney who represented the Menendez
brothers. Yeah, weird. The woman. Yeah, Leslie Abramson. He, this, so it's Jeremiah claimed he
was high on alcohol and drugs at the time. I didn't remember committing it. And, but apparently he
hoarded pornography, including pornographic images of children and admitted fantasizing about
sex with young girls. And in a chat room, which God remember those, he wrote, I fantasize about
having sex with five and six year old girls all the time. They couldn't prove the message came
for him. But right before the trial, hours before it was going to start, he entered a plea on his
behalf. So his plea that he was guilty to four charges, first degree murder, first degree kidnapping,
sexual assault on a minor, on a minor with substantial with substantial bodily harm and
sexual assault on a minor. That's your plea. Like if that is a first degree murder and kidnapping
and is your plea, you are a fucked up individual, you know, like manslaughter isn't what you go for.
Right. Like you go for a fucking first degree and you, and you plead guilty to it. So he was
sentenced to four life terms, one for each of the crime he pleaded to, he pleaded guilty to,
to be served consecutively. So this motherfucker is never getting out. Do you think that he did
that just to get it over with? Like he, he knows he's guilty. He's just basically he's coming in
saying, this is all the shit I did. Let's just get this over with. I think it was a death penalty.
It was a death penalty case. And he had confessed to it. There was like the confession was admissible
in court. It was a death penalty case. I think he knows he would have gotten death for this.
So this is his way of staying alive. Okay. So the post trial shit's really interesting to me too.
So Jeremy Strohmeier is just appealing the shit out of it. It really bothers me
that this guy is so clearly guilty. There's no conspiracy. There's no fucking
question. His friends saw it. His shitty friend saw it. There's like, there's fucking surveillance
tapes, but he keeps appealing it instead of fucking. This is what I don't understand about
sociopaths is like, just admit your guilt. Like, no, they can't let your, let the family heal
from this. They don't care about the family. They don't care about anybody. Don't make them
testify every four years. They don't care about those people. But they can't lose. They can't,
it's about getting anything you want all the time. It's the sociopathic mind is so fascinating.
Because they don't, there is no mercy and there is no logic beyond how do I get what I want.
There's no fault. No. Well, what's interesting is that the fucking David Cash,
so Sharice Iverson's mother demanded that Cash, the friend, be charged as an accessory,
which like fucking clearly, no, authority stated there was not enough evidence connecting him
to the actual crime. So he never got prosecuted. And I remember like frequent news updates of
like him going to Berkeley and his fellow students being like, get this fucking kid out of here.
Wow. He got into Berkeley. Yeah. So he would, this wasn't some dipshit. No, these were like,
these were like hacky sack college kids, both of them. These were like skater college kids
that like we would have been like, like flirting with, you know what I mean? Like,
so, but here's what cash says in the weeks following Strowmire's arrest, he says quote,
quote, I'm not going to get upset over someone else's life. I just worry about myself first.
I'm not going to lose sleep over somebody else's problems. Like he took no responsibility for
this. So like, he didn't do it, but he's clearly a sociopath as well.
Either that or he's in such an insanely deep denial because it's yeah. Yeah, that makes sense.
It's like, that's like saying, it's not my problem where it's like, you just, it's a 100%
your problem. There's no, you can't just deny your way out of it. And I fucked up goes so far.
You know? Yeah, but that's like, I should have done something. I'm sorry. It goes so far.
But that's not who you're dealing with. I know, I know. And then listen to this shit. This is
the craziest shit to me. So his parents were his adoptive parents. They adopted him as an infant.
This is cash or no, this is Strowmire the killer. Yeah. In 1999, they sued Los Angeles County and
it's adopt adoption workers for $1 million claiming that the social workers deliberately
withheld crucial information that would have stopped them from adopting him as an infant.
Specifically, they claimed that they were never told that Strowmire's biological mother has severe
mental problems, including that she suffered from Schizophrenia and had been hospitalized more than
60 times prior to Strowmire's birth. Shit. However, they state that they continue to support their
adopted son. So basically, they were like, he's not ours anymore in the most like indirect way.
Like, they're basically like, this isn't what we asked for. Except for it was totally fine up
until that point. Yeah. If he had had any wins, they would have been like, it's because we raised
him right. Yeah. I mean, I don't want to talk shit on adoption, because I think it's fucking
amazing. And I would totally do it. And like, but this is your kid, you can't sue the fucking city
for a million dollars because something went wrong when he was fucking 17. Well, also, this is just
this seems I would love to know like what what kind of like a tax bracket of people were talking
about. Yeah, because it's like everybody's running to talk about how it's not their problem. It's
not their fault. It's not their problem. It's not their fault. It's like, sorry, you guys are ground
zero. Yeah, you touched his fucking head. You saw him raping a child. Nobody 100% your problem.
Nobody wants to take any responsibility for any part of this. That's crazy. So frustrating, like
like remorse is something that you we can all we can all connect with. Remorse is something we can
all like understand and feel even even if it's shit that we would never do. It's like, I fucked up.
I was, you know, thinking wrong. I was crazy. It wasn't right. And like, yeah, that doesn't get you
out of punishment. But it goes so far for so many things. Yeah, but you're talking about you expect
something from people who are fucking child rapists and killers. These aren't these aren't
noble moral people in any way. Think of the kind of parents that would sue the city because their
son was a murderer like those 17 years too late. You couldn't have raised your kid right if that's
your first fucking instinct. Yeah. No, it's no good. I totally remember that story. And I'm it,
you know, I'm really glad that you didn't talk about details because I feel like there was a
time where I knew the details of what he did to her. And I am glad I can't remember it right now.
I remember the news that I remember seeing the surveillance footage on the news. I just want to
like talk about this girl and how awful it was for her. And like, it's just so
like the person at the fucking center of this, while these people are fucking getting their
appeals and suing the city and saying that like they walked away because they couldn't
deal with what was happening. Yeah. And you know, none of it is fair to this fucking kid who
didn't understand that father. That's a hugely problematic family. Anybody that's up at 4am
at a casino, they didn't. So why doesn't that guy have a room or a car that those kids can be in?
Like, it doesn't make sense. Why are you taking your kid to Vegas to begin with? But yeah. And
then also four in the morning, no child should be awake. Like that's that should there should be a
system in place where if you work at a casino and it's past 2am and you see anyone that looks
younger than 18, there's immediately there's we name names we need, you know, we need driver's
licenses, we need action to be taken. Well, the I mean, the end of it is that there's a Cherise
Iverson bill introduced after this that provides a fine and possibly jail time for anyone who
fails to report a crime of the nature that led to the creation of the bill. So like, unless
like if someone dies and you don't tell on them, basically, you could get fined, which is like,
fuck you. And then there's increased security in Nevada, casinos, Nevada, and also they've increased
security in their arcades and casinos, which is like, well, your security guards could be fucking
perverts. So that doesn't really do anything. Don't trust anyone. Yeah, I mean, you got to tighten
up your game. There's not kids in casinos do not mix. I don't care what Circus Circus has told you.
My dad took us to Circus Circus as a kid and was like, go play fucking video games. That's what
it's built for. Meanwhile, what the fuck? Like it's that there's nothing about that that makes
sense. In the in the thing we talk about a lot, which is like, I should have been killed mode.
Yeah, I should have been kidnapped. I mean, I was a really cute kid. But like,
you were pretty precious. I've seen pictures. Pretty darling. I should have been kidnapped and
killed. Oh, yeah. Yeah. And I would have been if I was like, we had kittens in the van. I'd be
like fucking kid. And even now I'd be like, kitten. Maybe next week should be that could have been me.
Yeah. I have that's the one I wanted to do today. And I was like, I'm so excited. I got my 90s
murdered. And I was like 1985. Let's do that next week. Okay, next week is like, I should have.
That should have been me. This could have been me. This could have been me or should have or
whatever should have been. Yeah, this will be no this. No, when I write my autobiography and lie,
it's going to be me. This totally almost could have maybe happened to me.
Oh, I have a I have Glennis's story, but we've gone so long now. I feel like
should we save it for next week for next week? Let's let's have a let's have a memorial real
quick. Yeah. So somebody wrote on the Facebook page very earnestly, which I understand the
day that Michelle McNamara died. They posted a thing kind of saying Karen, Georgia, you need to do
an episode special episode about Michelle McNamara. And I understand where that was coming from.
But I guess the thing I need that person to understand and everybody to understand is Michelle
was a real person that I knew. And she was a friend. I've been friends with her husband for
almost 30 years. It's not the kind of thing that's very easy to turn around and be and podcast about
us if it's some piece of news. It's for me, it is a personal loss. I mean, in the way that
I have a friend who is now a widower with a seven year old child, it's it's such a massive tragedy.
And Michelle was such a brilliant woman. She was such a talented writer. She was so into
everything that we're all into. And she made such great contents. She she was an author,
she wrote these really cool articles, you can find her old blog was called true crime diary,
which we've talked about on the podcast before. But she also it's very easy to find her the
article she wrote about the Golden State Killer, which was her terminology that she she renamed
the East area rapist and the original Night Stalker the Golden State Killer. And she was writing a
book on it. And it's just it's such a massive loss. And it's such a real thing that's happening
in our lives that it's not something that we can just kind of turn around and and present as if
it's something distant, because it's not so we I loved Michelle and and I love Pat and then it's
it's just a incomprehensible tragedy that is the kind of shit you just never want to happen.
And that happens. So hug the people that you love, tell the people that you love that you love them,
live the life that you want to live and and just be cool to people, I guess is what I would say.
That was beautiful. Let's end it on that. And thanks for listening, guys. Thanks, guys.
Well, always stay sexy. Always stay sexy. Bye.