My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark - 18 - Investigateighteen Discovery
Episode Date: May 28, 2016Karen and Georgia's favorite murders this week are creepazoids Lawrence Singleton and Franklin Delano Floyd, and boy, do they fucking suck. Plus lots of small (murder) talk and personal stori...es plus all the staying sexy and not getting murdered you've come to know and love. Enjoy, murderionos!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Okay.
Right?
I can, I can match your volume.
Can you match up here?
Yes.
I was going to sing, but you don't.
You don't want that.
I just don't want that.
Oh, you don't want to sing?
What the fuck?
Oh, yes, you do.
Don't make me sing.
I'm mad at it.
Elvis is getting the fuck out of here.
Everyone's a good singer when you sing like that.
That's true.
When you sing like a jingle, sing, you're good.
Watch your hand on the...
Oh, shit.
You're already doing it.
Okay.
Maybe we should get, like, mic stands.
Hold the mic like Marilyn McCoo.
Who's that?
The host of Solid Gold.
You're too young.
I get what you mean, but I don't know who.
It's Dionne Warwick.
Well, I held it like this, too.
We were just pinching it.
That's what I got.
Guys, are we on?
No, that whole thing was the opening of the show.
Oh, good, good.
For sure.
Quality.
That's quality shit right there.
Maybe don't...
We're trying to make sure that our mics, or let the sound quality is legit.
What do I sound like?
He...
You sound amazing.
Maybe don't...
Maybe let's not...
Let's try not to touch the cord, too.
Jesus.
I know.
Rules this week.
Could you please sit up straight?
Yeah.
Maybe stand on one foot.
I was definitely way too loud at the beginning of last episode.
I've never noticed that.
I cried in my car because it sounded so obnoxious, but I did...
That was the day I had a pour over coffee.
Oh.
Cold brew coffee.
Oh, fuck cold brew.
I think maybe a little lower.
Okay.
Because you look so uncomfortable.
I am uncomfortable.
Hang out.
I've never noticed a weird...
Like I've never noticed it weird, but I'm busy laughing my ass off at us when I listen.
So you look so uncomfortable.
Get comfortable.
Just be aware.
I think you're fine.
Okay.
Yeah.
Guys, has everyone happy?
Let's...
Okay, so we're gonna take that whole part off.
No, we're not.
Welcome to my favorite murder.
Behind the scenes.
Behind the scenes.
Behind the crime scene.
It's the...
This is the director's cut of my favorite murder.
You know, a minute ago, I wrote something down and I was like cracking myself up by
it.
Yeah.
You want to know what it was?
Yes.
Okay.
Because...
Oh, well, I guess we shouldn't have truce the show.
You just did it.
I did.
I did.
And they know our name.
I'm Karen Kulgarov.
Yeah, that's the voice you're listening to right now is Karen Kulgarov.
They're like...
I think you have like a gravelly sexy voice.
Yeah, I was trying to make it sound kind of sexy.
You stay sexy.
Yeah.
And I try not to get murdered.
Right.
And you're the murder voice.
I fucking...
My voice, man.
I sound like a cartoon character.
Like a bull...
Like the little like female bully cartoon character.
Be careful of what you say because our voices sound very similar.
They totally...
People talk about it all the time.
I know, but people have a hard time.
I appreciate that.
Okay.
So I was going to say we should...
We have to do what's it called when you like do a wrap-up in the beginning?
Housekeeping.
Housekeeping.
But I said maybe instead we should call it crime scene cleanup.
That's what made me laugh.
That's what made you laugh so hard.
Well, you know what...
You know what?
This is the problem of having self-esteem is you just think you're very funny all the
time.
Yeah, you're getting a real big head.
There's so many problems with having self-esteem.
Right.
This is one of them.
It's just...
It's a spiral of liking yourself and it's disgusting.
It is...
It never goes well.
No.
You need an intervention eventually.
You are definitely driving toward a brick wall.
But I'm...
But I think I'm doing a great job driving that car.
That's right.
You're like, check this out.
I'm shifting into third, boom, reality hits.
Yes.
But I am good at stick shift.
Me too.
Yeah.
My father taught us, it was very important that we learned how to drive a stick, not
lug the engine, not grind the gears is very important to him.
I don't even know what any of that means because I never did it.
No, that's not sure I used to grind the shit out of that thing, but I knew how to drive
it.
Well, that's good.
Yeah.
I think that's such a badass lady thing to know.
You know what?
It's just a pre-requisite because then any situation that you're in, if you get into
a car, it doesn't matter what car it is, you should also learn how to hot wire cars.
You always have a way out.
Well, here's another thing.
Did you watch the movie with, here I go again, with Kirsten Dunst, where it's the end of
the world?
Yes.
Okay.
So like none of the cars start anymore because they're all electronic and computerized.
And so once that shit cuts out, you're going to have to fucking hot wire 72 dots in.
That's right.
And get the fuck out of there.
And guess what?
It's stick shift.
It's stick shift.
If you get on a hill, you don't have to hot wire it.
You take that emergency break off, you throw it into second, you start rolling down the
hill and you pop it into gear and it will go.
I used to drive it, have a little Vespa and you'd have to do that all that run, like give
it a running start.
Yeah.
Which was terrifying.
Yeah.
Fuck yeah.
Yeah.
You got a standard shift, everybody.
This would be an end of the world podcast.
Also it's much easier.
It's one of those things where like, you know, when you're a little and you did not a tell
time and you're like, this is impossible.
I'm never going to learn it.
When I was little, you mean recently, it just takes me an extra beat.
Yeah.
It's a thinker.
Yeah.
You got to think about it.
But yeah, driving a stick shift, it's an H shape, H formation, first gear, top of the
H, second gear, bottom of the first stick of the H, the middle part is neutral.
And you're going into third over at the top of the second stick and you know what?
When it comes down to it, I mean, if you're getting, if you need to get the fuck out of
there, burn up that first gear and just fucking just go, just go throw it into second because
actually you can lug it a little bit in second, but you get, you can get more speed.
This is a very real thing I have pictured in my mind right now.
I feel like we're helping one person every time we do every time, but also just get some
like dude who might even like you a little bit, who would be willing to spend a half
an hour in the CVS parking lot with you and just drive a stick shift around.
Sure.
Ten minutes of that is giving him a hand job as a thank you.
Yeah.
It's just your hand.
Yeah.
Gross.
That's disgusting.
No, I mean, you gross.
What's wrong with you there?
All of that should get cut out for sure.
Okay.
Now starting now.
Hi.
Welcome to my favorite burger.
We're the worst people.
Stupid.
We're the best people.
We're the, look, we're just trying to help you.
You know, and relax after a long day of work.
Yeah.
We're doing it.
I don't work, but we're doing it.
You do.
I kind of work.
I had therapy today.
Oh, that's work.
It is.
How was it?
Great.
My new therapist is, I guess she's not new anymore, but you know when you, the, the times
I'm like, my therapy is the best is when I go in there being like, I don't know what
the fuck we're going to talk about today.
I'm doing great.
Yes.
I'm feeling good to like, I don't have a thing to like bring to her.
And then it's like the best day of therapy.
Yes.
Because it kind of blindsides you.
Yeah.
Something comes out and then you're like, holy shit.
Because it can lead anywhere.
As opposed to like, here's this problem.
Right.
You need to help me walk through it.
Right.
It's like, it's the background to what, to when you do bring her a problem.
She's going to be like, here are the little things you've already told me when we didn't
have anything to talk about that are, that are the reason you're doing this fucking thing.
So things can dawn on you when you have days like that, where you're talking and then you
go, wait a second.
That's why I got so upset.
For real?
Yes.
You can.
I was going to say, what was it?
It was all sex stuff.
So I, I'll tell you after about the fucked up porn I'm into, but I don't want to talk
about it on the book.
Is this our rated X?
We haven't really gone into sex that much personally on this, on this podcast.
I feel like that is not a necessary thing.
That's not our area.
I feel like there's probably plenty of podcasts that do that.
Even that handjob joke was very off color for us.
There's got to be high schoolers listening to this.
Oh, they love handjob jokes though.
Oh yeah.
Okay.
They know what handjobs are.
That's, are you kidding me?
I don't fuck.
They're like snapchatting them left, right and center.
That's all they do all day.
Um, housekeeping.
Housekeeping.
Okay.
So this is available at my favorite murder shirts.com.
They're only available till June 1st at which point they're the orders are going to be fulfilled
and then we're going to come out with a new shirt probably like the beginning of July.
But these is the last time for the time being that you really get this shirt.
Yeah.
So you should go get one.
We promised that the first person we see wearing the shirt, we will hug and then murder
because wouldn't that be funny?
Yeah.
That's the ultimate prize.
And then, uh, thank you to the moderate.
Okay.
So on the Facebook page that we're madly in love with that we're now up to 8,000 people.
It's nuts.
Now it's growing exponentially.
It's my, it's my home.
Like I'm so in love with it.
It's where I go first thing every morning.
I really do.
I, it just makes me, it makes, it's made Facebook not awful.
Yeah.
It's the best.
It's all Facebook is to me.
Yeah.
I want to thank the murderators.
Yes.
The murderators.
Right.
Georgia made that up earlier.
I was really proud.
Thank you.
Ari and Alex are our main, our main murderators and they are fucking killing it.
They're the OG murderators.
They are.
Yeah.
From the beginning.
Original murderator night stalker, Elena, Jesse and Kristen, but with an A and I just
want to make Kristen.
Chris Dan.
Chris Dan.
But you, but you're all fucking, I thought it's all women.
I love that it's fucking.
And I think some of the second phase murderators are European, right?
So that like around the clock up on it.
Yeah.
I think one might be in Australia, right?
And I think one might be in, let's, I imagine her, um, somewhere in Scandinavia.
Oh, go on.
Right.
Oh, and then, then a lighthouse in Greenland, she just, she only has a, she has to ride
a bike to get internet connection or like a stationary bike.
She's just like doing it.
Thank you so much, girl.
What a sacrifice.
No, she's found us.
Um, there's also besides the shirt, there's a lot of, um, there's a lot of people on
the Facebook page that are making like that are just going off the rails and making their
own crafts.
Murder crafts.
We love.
There's a girl who's making cross stitch, uh, like, which I love when cross stitches.
I have one that says, um, bitch, please with like flowers coming out of it.
Like I love when I like that.
So her, her, this is, is her name flossy or is the other girl's name flossy?
I don't know.
But one's name flossy in that I love that name so much.
It's genius.
Okay.
One girl is the girl who's cross stitch.
You can get, um, stay sexy.
Don't get murdered either.
There's like an at gain one.
Here's the thing.
Fuck everyone, which I clearly need to buy.
Um, she is killer cross stitching, which killer killer with a K cross with a K and then stitching
on Etsy go buy her shit.
There's an Indianapolis, which proves me wrong that I thought nobody lived there anymore.
Yep.
She does.
She does.
And good for her.
And we're, you guys, thank you.
You're fucking the listeners.
You guys are.
You're killing it.
And then I think it's, if, if cross stitchers name is not flossy, then flossy is the one
that's making the metal stamp, right?
Pendants.
Right.
Who I don't think hasn't Etsy yet, but she's going to, but she put a picture up on the
Facebook page.
And they're awesome.
They're the best.
Stay sexy.
Don't get murdered right on your key chain or wherever you might want to put it.
Right.
And I feel like.
Yeah.
That's going to be the next shirt too.
You got to be.
Yeah.
Got to be.
People are clamoring for it.
Yeah.
We are going to get an official design going and release that mother.
I'm feeling a little emotional recoil from telling my period story.
I think it was a mistake.
We can cut it out.
So stop talking about it.
Okay.
Bye.
Cause then there's going to be no, like recall, I'm going, oh, actually let's leave that
part in because they'll know they fucking missed and they're going to, what is she talking
about you guys missed?
Oh, I, one more piece of housekeeping.
Um, I have a comedy show at the improv lab, which is in Hollywood at the improv.
There's a, they have a smaller room next to the main room called the lab and a Wednesday,
June 8th at 10 PM, mine and April Richardson show business class.
She's a friend of the show.
We'll be there.
You, you might know her from go base side, the great podcast go base side.
We have a comedy show there.
And so come to that.
If you feel like it, we would love to have you.
Um, it's super fun and it's just a bunch of different people.
I know guy Branham's going to do it.
J wine garden is going to do it.
Um, Chris Fairbanks is on it.
I believe Jamie Lee, uh, from girl code will be there.
Lovely.
And, uh, and I'm going to come.
It's my birthday.
It's Georgia's birthday that night.
Be in the audience.
Please don't kill me.
If you're around, don't kill Georgia during my show.
I'll get really mad at you.
Has anyone?
Yeah.
And my tombstone saying June 8th to June 8th.
That would be cool though, but not this year.
Oh, sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
It's a boring year.
I thought your point was different.
No, it was.
Don't do that.
Sorry.
I misunderstood.
I got to get back on, on, on your wavelength.
Hey, I'm Mike Corey, the host of wonder is podcast against the odds in our next season.
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You guys missed a great period story.
Oh shit, guys.
It was disgusting.
Should we get into the murder?
A favorite murder.
Oh, sorry.
I don't know how to sing as I mentioned earlier.
They didn't know that was.
Oh, here we go.
Guys, here we go.
I'm going first this week.
I think you're first.
I think I am.
I'm going to get cuddled in.
Yeah, I'm going to have this half a glass of whiskey.
Drink some of your whiskey.
I wish I could.
I drank all mine already before you were 30.
It was up.
Yeah, 1997.
I had my last.
Shit.
God.
I was good at it.
My therapist told me that we're doing an experiment where I'm drinking two glasses of booze a day
just to see how it goes, so I'm allowed to have two glasses of booze a day.
No more, no less.
Yeah.
We're just like seeing how this goes.
So it's almost like.
What if you don't feel like it?
Oh, no.
Then I still have to force it down.
Yeah.
And this is clearly like this was two glasses of whiskey and one big cup.
Well, that's fun.
Does that count as one?
It does to me.
And there you go.
If I was your therapist.
Hell yeah, girl.
I had this realization when I was trying to think of this week's because I get very like
when I look at the Facebook page, there's so many good cases and there's so many people
over your passion about the cases that are their stories or just ones they like or think
are fascinating.
There was a guy that tweeted me a case.
His at his Twitter handle was at Arkansas year, so it was almost like Arkansas lawyer.
And it was a case of a guy, I think his name was Bobby Lee Foster or Bobby Joe Foster who
killed his own mother, Edna and decapitated her and put the head in the local church and
then took the eyes and mailed them to Eisenhower.
What in the actual fuck?
Yeah.
It was crazy.
But so I was kind of into that.
Thank you for sending that.
I love it.
I mean, you know, but I had a realization that when we were talking about our kickoff
murders, the ones that got us kind of into it, I realized that factually and date wise,
I had an earlier one than Diane Downs and it because it happened in the Bay Area.
And it's this Lawrence Singleton attack on Mary Vincent and later murder of.
So I'll just tell you about it.
Let's unpack.
Let's unpack this.
It happened in 1978.
So I was eight years old and this was on the news.
It was like in 1979 is when he went to trial and all the stuff happened and it was on the
news every night.
My parents were livid.
They talked about it all the time.
You must have just been.
You were there too.
Yes.
Because it was we watched the news together as a family every night before dinner.
I feel like there's nothing more harmful for a kid.
Yeah.
No one knew.
I know.
It was back.
This was the late seventies where no one knew what was good or bad for children.
It was all just like, eat your cereal, go outside, try to survive, come home and then
we'll watch the news together.
It was a generation away from children, after children being coal miners, you know, it was
that weird time in between coal mining and children being carried their entire lives
until they get to college, essentially.
So I'm the last of the last of that generation.
I lived.
So here's the story on September 29th, 1978, a man named Lawrence Singleton who was a merchant
seaman, always a bad job that Richard Speck was a merchant seaman.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
It's bad news.
I think it's what happens when you're like super fucked up and but you're so fucked up,
you don't want to join the army.
Right.
So you're like, oh, I'll go out on a ship for a while with a bunch of dudes.
So he picked up a 15 year old hitchhiker named Mary Vincent in Berkeley, California.
Mary had run away from home.
She lived in Las Vegas.
Her parents were getting divorced.
It was all fucked up.
And she had friends in the Bay Area and relatives.
So she made her way up to the Bay Area, but she was homesick and she'd been on her own
for a while.
She had a boyfriend that was bad to her.
She left him, ran away.
She just wanted to get back home.
Sweetie.
So she is hitchhiking in Berkeley and a van pulls up and there are two people hitchhiking
behind her.
Just so you know, there's Mary Vincent herself tells this story on an episode of I Survived.
It was season four, episode one, and it is epic.
I know you don't like survivors.
I fucking love survivors and things like this where you get the firsthand account of something.
This story is also insanely fucked up.
I guess if there, if she's, it's been that long, I can deal with it.
Right.
And she's in, it's when they can tell their own story.
They're not, you know, that they're able, they're in charge of this narrative and they
can tell you what happened.
Yeah.
And like when it's a grizzled fucking bartender, like cafe waitress and she's like, this, this
is what fucking happened to me.
I can deal with it.
But when it's like some college girl whose life is ruined.
No, you, well, because here's the thing, the saddest part about it, but the truest part
about it is it happens to a lot of people.
So when you have one woman sitting there going, A, B, here's what happened to me, A, B, C,
D, you not only get the don't fucking hitchhike, keep your eyes open, pick up on context clues.
You have all that, but you also have survive and you can survive and you can come out the
other end and help other people.
And it's okay to, it's okay to tell your story.
Like you don't have to keep this huge secret.
There's other people who have been through similar or worse.
Yeah.
And you have to tell your story.
Yeah.
It's part, that's part of healing.
Right.
So a lot of what I have here is basically her first hand account.
Holy shit.
So the van pulls up and there's two hitchhikers behind her in Berkeley, 78.
And the guy that's driving the van says he only has room for one person and says it's
Mary.
Well, the two hitchhikers behind her go, don't get in that van because they can see
into the back of the van.
The whole thing is empty.
There's plenty of room.
But if a person is saying he only has room for the young girl, they go, don't take that
ride.
But she was so tired.
She just wanted to get home.
So she was like, and he looked like a grandfather.
Oh, really?
Yes.
He's this big pot belly kind of grisly old guy.
He was like in his mid sixties at the time.
So she's like, what's that guy going to do?
So she gets in and she's really tired.
She's been walking and hitchhiking for a long time.
So she says, I'm, I'm trying to go back home to Las Vegas.
He says, I'll give you, I'm going to Reno, but I'll give you a ride to Los Angeles, which
is that, that right there.
What?
That doesn't make any sense.
It doesn't make any sense.
Why?
So she settles in and she falls asleep.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
She wakes up and they have gone east and not south when she finally sees a sign.
They're somewhere out in Patterson, they're somewhere out by Modesto, they're, they're
on the other side of the five.
There's a lot of, for people not from here, there's a lot, especially in the seventies
there's a lot of no man's land.
Yes.
A lot of, especially in the central valley, which is where he drove her out to, it's just
all empty rural farmland roads, little hills with a oak tree on top.
There's nothing.
So, so she notices that they're going east.
She freaks out, confronts him, says, what the hell are you doing?
He says, I'm sorry.
I'm an honest man.
I made an honest, honest mistake.
Let me just turn around.
He pulls around, he turns around, starts going down the road and he says, sorry, I have to
go.
I have to relieve myself.
He pulls the van over.
She's getting nervous.
She realizes this is now a bad situation.
It's nighttime.
He's down relieving himself and she looks down and realizes one of her shoes untied and
she thinks to herself, if I have to run for some reason, and I could outrun this old
fat guy, but if I have to do it hurt, she's like, I gotta tie my shoes.
So she gets out of the van too.
She bends over to tie her shoe and she blacks out.
He hit her in the head with a sledgehammer.
She wakes up.
She's tied up in the back of the van after our sledgehammer hit.
She wakes up.
She wakes up.
So he just conks her out.
Yeah.
She doesn't like, thank God.
She didn't die.
She's, when she wakes up, she's tied up and she's naked and he starts raping her.
He rapes her all night and into the morning and the whole time she's, of course, crying.
She's 15 years old crying, whatever and saying, just set me free.
Please.
I won't tell anyone.
Just set me free sometime in the morning when he's finally done.
He pulls her out of the van, unties her and says, you want to be set free.
I'll set you free.
He picks up a hatchet out of the back of the van, cuts off her left arm.
She's screaming below the elbow.
She's screaming, freaking out, going crazy.
She grabs him with her right arm, going freaking out.
He takes the hatchet and he starts hacking off her right arm.
What the fuck?
But the craziest thing to me is as you're telling this, I'm like reminding myself that
she survived, but it doesn't fucking sound like she's going to.
I know.
I know.
It's, it's crazy.
So she is holding on to him, but she falls backwards anyway.
And that's when she realizes that her right hand has been, her right arm has been chopped
off.
Oh my God.
So she's all, of course, in total shock, confused, losing blood, looking.
And this is the most fucked up part of her story.
There's more fucked up than that.
This is, it goes, it peaks in fucked upness right here.
Holy shit.
She sees him.
She's looking and like, she can't understand what just happened.
And she's looking at him and he is flicking his arm like this.
He's flicking his arm out.
Yes.
No.
She looks and her right hand is still holding on to his arm.
Oh my fucking.
Ew.
I just got, I gave myself chills and I know this story because you had your hand in like
a claw just now.
I did.
I did it.
So she passes out or she like kind of goes limp.
Sure.
She's bleeding obviously profusely, losing blood, lightheaded, laying on the ground.
So she just goes limp cause she just doesn't know what to do.
No.
She's now in the presence of a monster.
He thinks she's dying or dead.
He drags her body over to the railing and throws her over a 30-foot cliff.
On the way down, she breaks four ribs and he drives away.
Now later on, when the police catch him, which they, I'll just let you off the hook now,
the police catch him and they put together that the reason he did that is cause he thought
she'd be dead and they did, he didn't want them to be able to, um, get her fingerprints.
Did they, okay.
Who found her?
How did she get found?
I tell you now, please.
So she's down in this fucking ravine and she's laying there and she's losing blood like
crazy and she wants to go to sleep.
But she said that there was a voice in her head saying, you cannot go to sleep.
You have to get up so they can catch this guy.
So she puts her bloody stumps in the dirt and the, and makes a mud pack so she stops
losing blood.
Oh my God.
On both, on both arms.
And then she starts crawling back up the ravine 30 feet.
It takes her all night.
Oh no, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
That was the morning.
He dumped her over in the morning.
So she crawls back up the ravine, it, it takes her all day.
She finally gets up to the top of the ravine and back onto the road at night.
And then she starts walking naked, covered in blood with two stump arms.
She walked for three miles.
Oh my God.
The first car that came up was two dudes in a convertible and they saw her and they
fucking sped away.
Nope.
Yep.
Yes.
And she said herself in this, I survived, she goes, I looked like something out of a
horror movie.
She's like, I didn't blame them at all because she, it was, I mean, beyond something you'd
see in a horror movie.
And on a far away, like a deserted road in the middle of the night where there's no,
this is out where there's no street lights, there's your, like she said she was walking
by the light of the moon.
It was totally pitch black.
And in my mind too, it's like these two dudes are married men and they're gay lovers and
they're, they're like on a clandestine, you know, romance thing.
And if they stop to help her, they have to call the cops.
They're going to get caught together.
Yep.
That's just in my head.
That's like, that's very plausible.
So like, hopefully these aren't monsters.
These dudes.
I mean, here's what I'm sure of.
They carry it with them to this day.
Yes, they do.
Imagine leaving a person like that.
And then they read the newspaper the next day and they're like, look what we did.
And she could have died.
They could have saved her and then she could have died.
But here's who did save her.
She walks a little further.
A couple who was on their honeymoon, who took the wrong exit and is driving around trying
to get back to the I-5, which is close enough so that Mary heard the noise of the I-5 all
day and was like, I just have to get back up because there will be someone.
If I walk toward that sound.
So that's how she guided herself back toward civilization.
These people grab her, put her in the back of the truck and say, we're going to get you
help.
And she said she heard them speeding so fast you could hear the tires screeching.
They get to a phone.
Can I say real quick what half the people listening that the murdering knows?
Yeah.
Dream honeymoon.
Exactly.
Like what else are you going to do if I can play canasta?
Well, because imagine you, you're like, Oh, I've married.
I love him so much.
He's the man for me.
Now if the man for you was one of those guys in that convertible, who was like, we have
to get out of here.
You'd be like, you get out of my life forever.
I bet they're still together.
100%.
Yeah.
They get her, they get to that pay phone, they call and they air left her to the hospital.
Oh, it wasn't even an ambulance situation.
They were like straight in.
So oh, honey, the relief.
She must have felt, oh my God, and to be saved.
So she, sorry, I'm on the next page already because yours, by the way, I won't ever know
you're like fucking telling this.
You're not even looking at your notes because this, because I remember this happening when
I was little and my, I remember my mother being so livid and she would talk about Lawrence
Singleton, this disgusting piece of shit.
She would talk about him all the time because I'll get into it.
I have to go fast.
Was all this, was all these, were all these details on the news?
No, but it was, it was a man who raped a girl, chopped her arms off and threw her into a
ditch.
That's enough.
That was plenty.
Yeah.
Because you can't, that's when it was like, oh my God, that could happen.
Totally.
That's real.
Even the word rape.
I think about like couples in, in fucking sitcoms didn't sleep in the same bed.
Right.
Exactly.
Well, I'm not from the fifties, Georgia.
Oh my God.
I mean, I mean that the Brady Bunch was the, so, oh my God.
So she lost over half the blood in her body.
Wow.
But it, from her hospital bed, she described a picture of him so accurately to the police
sketch artist that Lawrence Singleton's next door neighbor saw it and immediately called
the police.
And even though she was friends with him and like knew him for years, she was like, that's
Lawrence Singleton.
That's my next door neighbor.
She's one of us.
So, yeah, that's exactly.
So, and I do have to say this in the article that I found that it, a piece of information
from for some reason in the line, it said housewife and bowling expert.
Wow.
I want her life.
They really described her to a tee.
I really, I want that life.
That's a pretty good life.
So they arrest Larry sing Lawrence Singleton nine days later.
I like to call him Larry, Larry.
And when he was questioned, a singleton told the police that Mary was a $10 horror that
that he was passed out drunk in his van and that his other friend, Larry is the one that
attacked her and that there were two other hookers in the van at the time.
What a fucking monster lunatic.
So she testifies against him in court.
I had a girl with two prosthetic, her two prosthetic limbs on, she'd already been fitted
for them.
She was still a teenager.
I mean, that's, that is a hard thing to do on its own.
No, listen to this, as she walks out after testifying against him, he whispers to her,
if it's the last thing I do, I'll finish the job.
I was hoping she'd say motherfucker or like something at him.
No, no, poor girl.
She ran out.
So in March of 1979, a San Diego jury convicts him of kidnapping mayhem, attempted murder,
forcible rape, sodomy and forced oral copulation and gives him the maximum sentence at the
time.
Can I guess?
No.
Go ahead.
Sorry.
I'm just keep interrupting.
No, no, no.
Seven years.
14 years.
For all of that, for all of those crimes combined, the maximum legal sentence was 14 years.
That's like almost how old she was.
Yes, that's exactly right.
So the judge who had to pass that sentence said, if I had the power, I would send him
to prison for the rest of his natural life.
So along with the particularly gruesome and callous aspects of the crime, the case became
totally notorious because he was paroled after serving eight years in prison.
I just can't.
Okay.
So this is when shit went off because that's when it started on the news every night.
This guy got paroled and it was like my parents talked about it.
People talked about it in the grocery store.
It was like, how is this happening?
And you know what happened is in 1983, they passed a work incentive law kind of quietly
passed it so that they could reduce prison overcrowding where a day was cut off your sentence
for each day that the prisoner spent working at the jail.
Or you could make pot legal and get a bunch of fucking prisoners out of jail.
That's exactly right.
And make the murderers and rapists go there for fucking ever.
Why in God's name would you have a work incentive law applied to attempted murderer rapists?
Well, this was back when they were like rape and it was probably her.
She probably asked for it.
She was probably a $10 whore, motherfuckers.
So they announced that his release date, this is Ed Martin, who is the associate warden
of the California Men's Colony in San Luis Obispo, where he was serving his time.
His release date, Martin said, if there's continued good behavior and work and no change
in his programs will be approximately April 28th, which was eight years, four months
of time.
And every one of the barrier went bananas.
So here's what happened.
They try to parole him to Antioch, California.
And the mayor protests the Department of Corrections.
And so acknowledging the public outcry, the Department of Corrections agrees not to release
Singleton and Antioch.
So they try to place him with relatives in Tampa, Florida.
People rise up in Tampa, Florida.
And the Tampa chapter of the guardian angels, which was a big thing in the 80s.
For them, they lead these protests and eventually a Florida officials reject the prolly.
So like he can't go back to Tampa now.
If you're a fucking, if the hell's what is it?
Hell's angels?
No, the guardian angels.
What are they?
They were this.
Oh, they were there.
I thought you meant the hell's angels.
They were basically when in the 80s, when crime was crazy, it was basically at the end
of the recession, when things were kind of shady, it was like back when New York was
a total dump.
The guardian angels were this group of basically what do you call them, like, uh, like mothers
against drug driving type of thing.
No, no, no.
These were, uh, I can't think of the term for it.
It was time, by the way.
Like we're not in any hurry.
It will be.
It's just long.
And I just want to get to the whole thing, but nobody.
Thanks cocktails.
Listen, take your time.
Everything's fine.
No, but it was the.
They were like, um, when you're like a citizen that's taking long to your own hands, what
are those called?
Like a, um, citizen taking on here.
So they basically were like, we're taking back the streets.
So they would go, they wore red berets and shirts that said guardian angels.
They all knew karate.
They all, they were all like muscled out dudes and they would ride this subway at night
to make sure that like vigilante.
There it is.
Um, they were, they were total vigilantes.
And they basically were like their own gang, but a positive gang.
So they just made sure like that people didn't get attacked on the subway and every city
started popping up with their own, um, group of the guardian angels.
Um, eventually, of course they dispersed because I think they took things a little too far
right as it usually happens.
But anyway, they did, they actually did some good stuff in the beginning where people there
were, there weren't enough cops and there was just a lot of crime.
So, uh, so he has to come back from Tampa, Florida, which is where his family was, but
they, Tampa was like, go fuck yourself.
And you know, Florida's kicking out.
You're probably a big, pretty big piece of shit.
Um, so then he, uh, where did he go?
So then they try to release him in Martinez, California.
And, and, which is also in Contra Costa County.
So the Contra Contra Costa County Board of Supervisors and four city council members
when a temporary restraining order from a superior court judge, barring the department
of corrections for placing singleton anywhere in Contra Costa County, quit bringing that
motherfucker back here.
He's not allowed and can happen.
So, um, so now they try to place him in San Francisco, but, uh, police chief, police chief
Frank Jordan at the time, he's, um, told that, that they're going to bring singleton to San
Francisco for a couple of weeks and San Francisco, um, wins a temporary restraining order barring
him from San Francisco.
So then, uh, they take him to Redwood city secretly, but reporters find out that he's
there in a hotel and protesters surround the hotel and the department of corrections has
to pull him out of this hotel, um, and get him out before the protesters rip him apart.
What a bummer to be one of those cops and be like, I fucking hate this.
Yeah.
I know.
Piece of shit.
So now, um, uh, a quarter of appeals overturned that restraining order saying that Contra Costa
County and San Francisco couldn't have him there.
So then they try to place him in El Cerrito, but, uh, which is not in Contra Costa County,
that's a little bit further north, I think, but the Contra Costa County officials find
out that they're going to try to place him in El Cerrito and they tell the El Cerrito,
they tell the press in El Cerrito.
So then protests begin there.
So basically now everyone's telling everybody they're trying to place this piece of shit
in the North Bay and everybody, so then they try to put him in Richmond, but the mayor
finds out and the officials are all like, fuck no, get him out of here.
Um, then they try to bring him to a city called Rodeo, which I've never even heard of before.
Um, doesn't even exist, but people find out and a mob of 500 people gathers around this
apartment and, uh, they actually have to take him out in a bulletproof vest and he's
escorted out of town by the sheriff's department.
So it was, this is kind of that thing where, yes, this is the kind of the worst story ever,
but also the greatest story ever where like just the citizens were like, no dude.
Like maybe that maybe legislature says what, that you can get out of jail, but we say no.
So they move him to Concord, 175 people gather at the hotel where they're keeping him there.
Finally the governor says, put a trailer on the grounds of San Quentin and he can live
there until his parole is over.
Love it.
Jerry Brown, uh, George Duke major.
All right.
Um, so that's what he has to do.
He has to live on the grounds of San Quentin until his one year parole is up.
Then he's free to go where he wants and they don't even, they're not even a track.
Well, then there's just kind of nothing they can do because nothing's in the system about
him.
So he goes back to Florida, um, and when he gets there, they find out that he's there.
People protest.
A car dealer offered him $5,000 to leave the state and a homemade bomb was detonated near
it.
Um, the house that he was staying in, even, but no one was injured, unfortunately.
In 1997, a neighbor calls the police after seeing Lawrence Singleton attacking a woman
in his home.
And when the police arrived, they find the body of 31 year old mother of three Roxanne
Heinz.
She's also a sex worker, but I wanted to say the mother of three part first so that people
care.
Yeah.
So that they know that she was so hard up for money that financial problems made it
so that she had to do this.
And then, uh, she got stabbed 12 times in the face and chest by this piece of shit.
And when he answered the door, he answered the door to the cops with his shirt open and
blood all over his chest.
So they, how many cold cases that can be attributed to him?
Like, so there's no way that it was one in 78.
Well, they say that the reason that he got parole the way early like that was because
he didn't have, he didn't have, um, priors.
Yeah.
He didn't have, which is not to say he didn't do anything.
But he didn't, he didn't have a record still.
I think cutting off a girl's arms and leaving her dead is like worse than your prior for
like aggravated assault or whatever.
And I think you're right.
It's not, that's not a first crime at all, especially when you're 60, you know, like
you're starting that, you know, yeah, no way.
Uh, but also if you're in the merchant Marines, God knows what he did in fucking Malaysia or
some place where nobody, you know, you can do whatever you want.
The Vietnam vet, the fucking half of those killings are for him.
Okay.
So Mary Vincent goes to Tampa to, uh, appear at his sentencing and tells her whole fucking
story.
Good girl.
She describes her whole attack, the whole, the, the toll that the ordeal has taken on
her whole life because of course it's been, you know, a terror and she's, you know, she's
gotten her life together a little bit, but of course she just lives in constant fear.
Yeah.
When she was, when he was paroled, like she was doing fine and going to art school in
the Pacific Northwest, then he got paroled and she fell apart.
Of course.
As he said to her, as she left the courtroom, I'm going to finish this.
If it takes the rest of my life, I'll finish the job.
Like, yeah, why isn't that considered when he's, when they, they think he's going out
for parole.
So, uh, the jury deliberated for one hour and he was sentenced to death because good old
Florida.
Good.
Um, unfortunately he died of cancer in the prison hospital, um, instead of being, uh,
fried, you know, we're very, we're being very vicious in this.
We really are.
And this one, but, uh, his, apparently what he said in, uh, when he was sentenced, he
said he did, he denied mutilating Mary Vincent.
He still denied it.
Not killing her, just mutilating.
No, no, no.
Mary Vincent is the girl whose arms he chopped off.
Yes.
He denies doing that.
He said about the stabbing of Hayes.
I'm sorry about the death in this case, I'll have to carry it on my conscience the rest
of my life.
The death, the death and the narcissistic move of this is sad for me, the Diane Downs
move.
Um, so just to wrap it, Mary Vincent did win a $2.56 million civil judgment against Singleton,
but she couldn't collect because he was unemployed in poor health and only had $200 in savings.
There's not.
So she did eventually get married.
She moved to Orange County.
Um, she has two sons and she started the Mary Vincent Foundation to help victims of traumatic
crime.
Oh, sweetie.
Yeah.
Oh, that poor girl.
Isn't it crazy that like she would have been better off stealing a car and getting a misdemeanor
than, than hitchhiking?
You can't trust old men that look like grandfathers.
And here's another thing I was thinking about, like when he, she had a bad feeling.
He stopped to pee and get out of the car.
The thing about that is, is like, if you have a bad feeling, do what you need to do and
apologize for it later.
Like steal the car and drive the fuck off.
Apologize later.
If it turns out he wasn't going to kill you.
Right.
Trust your gut.
Yeah.
If you don't want to go off at a bar because he's giving you the creeps, but you don't want
to be rude, blow him off and apologize later if it turns out that he wasn't a creep.
Cause if he's not a creep, it won't be a problem later.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's intense.
I know.
It's crazy.
And if you want to see it, you can, you can watch on iSurvived at Mary Vincent tell that
story yourself.
I might have to start watching that.
And the thing is about true crime, she says that I really don't like, um, reenactments.
There's no reenactments.
Oh, okay.
People telling their story and they do, they start the, a segment with a picture of where
it actually happened.
Yeah.
And it's all straight to camera storytelling.
Okay.
It's pretty brilliantly produced.
That's why I like it.
No, I did that.
I can totally do that.
Yeah.
Yeah, I know.
That was a big one.
Yeah.
Let's all take it a collective breath.
Yeah.
Anyone needs to use the bathroom, go use it now.
Um, all right.
My favorite murder.
Okay.
So I was scrolling through the Wikipedia page of mysterious disappearances as one does
before bed.
Sure.
When you have insomnia.
And I came across a really interesting case I had never heard about and there's so many
twists and turns and weirdness about this that I was intrigued and really excited.
So I'm going to tell this a little bit out of order.
I'm going to leave the exciting thing to the end because the whole thing is fucked up
to begin with.
So this is the murder of Sharon Marshall by Franklin Delano Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
the Lloyd, which is like no wonder you're a murderer.
He's so close.
It's almost like making sure your kid's a narcissist by naming him almost after a president.
Yeah.
All right.
So in 1962, this guy, Franklin Delano Floyd was 19 years old.
It's the worst name.
It's the worst name.
Let's just call him Floyd was convicted of abducting and sexually molesting a four-year-old
girl in Georgia.
Yeah.
Piece of shit.
Disgusting.
He received a lengthy prison sentence and within one year he'd escaped the prison, robbed
a bank.
It was arrested, he served 10 years, released on parole because apparently four is not young
enough to be in prison forever.
In one month of freedom, he was charged with assaulting a woman and he got away.
So in 1990, his wife, Sharon Marshall, was found dead in a suspicious hit and run.
All right.
So this is where it starts.
He had sent his wife, Sharon, on a late night shopping trip for baby items because they
had a child together.
Oh, good.
Have a child with a baby rapist.
Right.
I don't know if she knew that or not.
So she was murdered on her way back to the motel they were spending the night at.
She appeared to be hit by a car yet there was a blunt force trauma to the back of her
head, enough to cause the death unrelated to the car accident.
So after she dies, her child, Michael Hughes, which Floyd was a clear suspect in, kidnapped
the kid.
He was the two year old son, Michael Hughes.
I'm sorry.
That's not true.
He put their two year old son into foster care and fucking high-tailed it out of there
because he was a suspect.
The kid goes into foster care.
The foster care parents love him and decide to start adoption proceedings for him.
He like thrived there where he got there.
He was just like so developmentally delayed because this guy was a piece of shit.
And Floyd was arrested on a parole violation.
And then as part of the adoption process, the kid had a DNA test and it was compared
to Floyd's and it turns out that Floyd is not the real father to this little kid.
So when he's released from jail, he tries to regain custody and he can't because he's
not the dad.
And then on September 12th, 1994, this fucking dude comes in to the elementary school where
this kid is staying, holds, has a gun, takes the kid by force, gets him the fuck out of
there, steals his kid.
You should see these photos of him.
He's such a creep, not the kid fucking Floyd.
So two months later, Floyd is arrested in Kentucky and the kid is not with him, hasn't
been seen since Floyd tells like different stories, some that he had drowned the kid
in the motel bathroom after the kidnapping.
Others say that he told them that he murdered the kid in the same manner.
So he had admitted that to a couple of people.
Another person claims he saw Floyd bury Michael's body in a cemetery, which is like, how do
you witness that?
And then you don't tell anyone till the cops, I don't know.
In his most recent contact with the FBI, Floyd's admitted to killing Michael by shooting him
twice in the back of the head.
He told them where to find Michael's remains, but it's been two decades since then and they
haven't found anything.
So that's the story of Sharon, the mom and Michael, the kid.
Okay.
Super shitty all around.
Yes.
And so the third incident is the murder of, let's see, what's her first name?
Shit, I don't know her first name.
Oh, Cheryl Ann Camasso.
So at the time of her hit and run death, Sharon is a stripper, but I mean, before I say that
I want to say that she went to college, she was going to be an engineer.
She's a very smart person.
I think something happened with her crazy husband.
She's making money stripping, you know, it's not like nothing's wrong with fucking making
money stripping.
And that's her career, but anyways, in 1989, one of Sharon's co-workers disappears.
She's 18 years old, Cheryl Ann.
Someone had witnessed a angry confrontation with Floyd.
And the co-worker?
Yeah.
Floyd and the co-worker, Camasso, Cheryl, let's call her Cheryl.
So Cheryl disappears in 1989, Floyd and Sharon get the fuck out of town.
It remains unsolved until her skeletal remains were found by a landscaper in Florida in 1995.
And she was a citizen Jane Doe, no one knew who she was when the remains were identified.
And then in March, a year, the same year, a mechanic in Kansas finds a large envelope
stuffed between the truck bed and the top of the gas tank of a truck he had recently
purchased at auction, which is like, here we go, let's go.
He finds it.
God, I mean, just finding things stuffed in places is my dream.
Yeah, for sure.
Like, you know, where I think you can find them is when you go into like a weird bathroom
and there's the seat, the toilet seat holder, I think people like shove drugs and money
for drugs in those as like, I'm going to go in the bathroom and shove the drugs in there.
I'm going to come out and you're going to put the money in there because I've heard
that before.
You don't mean in the toilet tank where the water is?
No, that too.
But in the where the where you pull the toilet seat cover off the wall.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Behind the paper covers.
I see.
I think I'm going to put in a private bathroom.
No.
I think I meant this pink, the pink furry cover that like your grandma puts on that matches
the bath mat.
You know, when you go into a gas station and they have the pink furry cover or like some
of this leopard print, you know, those fun, those fun gas stations, kicky.
So the mechanic finds this fucking amazing find and signed.
He finds 97 photos in the envelope, including many photos of a woman who was bound and severely
beaten.
Oh, no.
They trace the place, trace the truck back to Floyd, of course.
And the investigation investigators compared the photos of the injured woman with commesso
as well as evidence found with her remains and the clothing was similar to what she was
wearing.
So furniture and belongings in the photos that were identified as Floyd's.
And the medical examiner had compared injuries seen in the photograph to the cheekbone that
they had found at this deal.
I mean, this, this, uh, the remains Jane Doe.
So they were consistent.
She had died from a beating and two gunshots to the head again, two gunshots looking at
a pattern.
A kill shot.
And was he in the army?
Oh, really?
Uh-huh.
Kill shot.
Huh?
I didn't know about that.
Uh-huh.
Two shots?
Two to the back of the head.
That's a thing?
Yep.
That's how you just take someone out.
And then you actually even look at them in the face.
And well, and also just, that's for sure.
So it's one, one, there is a possibility some could weirdly live now to know.
Yeah.
Oh, right.
Okay.
So, you know, he, so Floyd has tried and convicted for this girl's murder, thank God, Kamesa's
murder on the, based on the photographic evidence found in the truck.
Other photos found in the truck though, show sexual abuse of Marshall, who was his wife
who died in the hit and run.
Right?
I mean, yeah, this weird thing, his wife, but the pictures start, and this is where it
goes, is the pictures of Marshall and being sexually abused started at a very early age
when she's in her childhood.
What?
Right.
Okay.
Sexually explicit poses of various ages, starting around four of his wife.
Age four.
Yeah.
Of his dead, now dead wife.
What the fuck is going on?
Uh-oh.
Turns out, Floyd met a divorced woman with three daughters and a son in 1970.
74, when Sharon is like four.
In the late spring of 75, Sandy, the mom, is arrested in Dallas for writing a bad check
for diapers.
And some people on the internet, like, how did that happen?
Did Floyd take out all the money from the account and send her on a shopping trip and
the check, you know, like maybe that's even set up?
When she, she's in prison for, or jailed for 30 days, while she's there, fuck, and Floyd
disappears with all three sisters and the infant brother.
He had, Floyd had been left to care, which don't ever leave your children in the hands
of a boyfriend.
I don't care how fucking cool you think he is, no, don't, don't.
No one with the name Floyd, first, middle, or last, please, no.
When she's released, she sees that the fucking children are gone.
He had put two of the daughters in foster care.
She finds them there, but Suzanne, I'm sorry, but Sharon and the little boy are gone.
And she, she tries to file a kidnapping charge.
Okay.
Here's the most fucked up part of the whole fucking thing.
The local authorities say that as to stepfather, Floyd had a right to take the children.
Hi, 1974, you fucking piece of shit, okay.
So Floyd raised Sharon as his daughter since early childhood.
And if you go online, you can find a photo, like a portrait of him with her as like a
four year old on his lap, DNA testing to determine her paternity went after she died and covered
that she was not his daughter.
And he gave a number of inconsistent statements regarding how she came into his custody.
He told everyone that he had rescued her when she was abandoned by her biological parents,
which is probably what he told her as well.
The problem is that the little boy was never, no one knows what happened to him.
So it's not likely that he's doing well.
So the earliest known record of her after that of Sharon was when she was registered
in 1975 in an Oklahoma city high school.
And if you look at her high school photo, she's clearly not high school age.
I think he was kind of trying to fudge some stuff.
And like she was too old.
She's very young.
She looks maybe too young.
Yeah.
She looks junior highish.
So I think he was like trying to throw someone off or something like that.
Try to establish her as being 18 as soon as possible, right?
And registering her under an alias.
They had a ton of aliases.
Let's see.
So they suspect that Marshall was born, that Sharon was born in the late sixties kidnapped
between 73 and 75.
Then they, they leave town again, she becomes his fucking wife.
Then I mean, it's not even like cool that she gets to like then figure out who she is.
He fucking hits and runs her and kills her with a car.
And wait, sorry.
Was that, did he do that because she, was there some overt reason?
We don't know.
Maybe he found out that her son wasn't his because go back to the kid that was in foster
care, who he kidnapped at school.
Right.
Right.
It turns out that the DNA testing proved that it wasn't even his kids.
So she might have been sleeping with someone else.
She essentially cheated on this person that she didn't even want to be with in her first
place.
And maybe he was even whoring her out, like, you know, making money out like, so we don't
know what happened.
But that wasn't his kid.
That sounds like a pretty good motive to me.
Fuck.
Yeah.
That's insane.
Wait, what happened to him?
Okay.
So he's still alive.
No.
Yeah.
He's like the creepiest motherfucker you've ever seen.
He's in jail, though, please.
He's on death row.
Thank fucking God.
Jesus Christ.
I know.
Um, he's on death row for the murder of, um, the, um, Camusso.
Oh yeah.
So.
Oh, cause they found her body in those pictures.
Right.
So thank God, like they weren't like, well, she was a stripper, so he only gets four years.
Like she's not, he's on death row.
Um, he's still under investigation into the kidnapping of, uh, her son and the mother Sharon.
Yeah.
And like after, after Sharon died, they did DNA testing on her and found out that she
was the missing child, that this poor fucking woman who dated a piece of shit.
Oh my God.
To help her raise four children that she was dealing with on her fucking own.
And then, oh my Lord.
Yeah.
I, what in the fuck?
I mean, I've never heard of this before.
It's crazy.
And he's still alive.
I, when, so sorry, once, like, when did she get hit by a car?
She got hit by a car.
When did he hit her with a car?
Right.
And a sledgehammer.
Exactly.
He, it was a hit and run in April, 1990.
Oh fuck.
Yeah.
So like Reese, I mean, I guess I was, for some reason I was picturing that this was
like the fifties.
Right.
Because it seemed like the kind of time you could get with that's insane.
So in 1990s, he hit and run, took the kid by gunpoint.
These poor, you know, this poor foster parents who were trying to adopt this poor kid who
was thriving in their home.
They were fostering him and they wanted to adopt him because they cared about him so
much and they are stuck.
Well and also this piece of shit takes him and then eventually kills him.
Yeah.
Like just leave him with the foster parents.
But I mean, that's like, that, that's the monstrosity of whatever that guy is.
Narcissism.
I mean, Narcissism, but just like the, like violent pedophile.
It's like the, the highest strata of in hell, basically.
Yeah.
A violent, insane pedophile.
It's so crazy.
What?
It's so hard to think of a brain and a thought process and a mind that deviates that far
from your own.
Like I can't even picture it.
It makes you wonder, I mean, can they picture what being normal is like?
Are we normal?
What is normal?
Well, it's not that guy.
No.
I'll tell you that right now.
Yeah.
That makes me want to start up a vigilante club called the New Guardian Angels.
No berets.
That's not cool.
Berets are stupid.
I don't know.
What do we have?
We need a thing.
So upsetting.
Um, it's actually funny because so I'm, I'm listening to this book on tape or this audio
book that I've been listening to forever called, um, no stone unturned about necrosearch
who uncovers clandestine graves.
It's this great book about these people who, who find buried bodies and like when I'm driving
in the car, cause I get stressed out when I drive, I put that on or I put a murder podcast
on and then when I forget my book or don't listen, don't have time to listen to a podcast,
I put on like NPR and then or the news and like immediately I'm like, I can't, this is
so awful.
I can't deal with it.
Like I even fall asleep sometimes to that, to like murder stuff.
And it's, I think I, I think that's part of realizing, um, why I love murder and these
stories so much is that the real world and what's really happening and what I have absolutely
no control over is so terrifying and there's no control, but you cannot walk alone at night.
You can, you know, carry pepper spray with you.
You can make sure you keep your doors locked.
My doors are not locked right now.
I just looked over.
Uh, well, but every, um, it's because every murder story that you read and all that information
you gather informs you so that you know a little bit more next time.
Right, but you can't do anything like that China is, is, is being armed with nuclear
weapons.
You can't be like, well, next time I'm not going to hang out with China.
Yeah.
I think they've always had nuclear weapons.
Right.
But like, what are you going to do about that?
Right.
Right.
That's just posturing.
That's the thing is, what are you going to do about that?
Nothing.
No.
And that's terrifying to me.
But in this, you can be like, if I ever get into a situation, you know, you, you, uh,
it's just being able to have your like, your guard up better every single time.
Yeah.
And if something does happen, you know, you, uh, you at least tried or had some control
over it somehow.
Right.
You're informed.
Yeah.
Oh, it's so crazy.
I know.
That guy, they should kill him tomorrow.
Franklin Delano Floyd.
Piece of shit.
Peace.
This is the, um, my favorite murder piece of shit series, Larry Singleton and Franklin
Delano Floyd.
We didn't mean to do a theme.
Top two.
Yeah.
That's, that's a magical theme.
Here we are.
What if we just start matching up on like, like wavelengths of pieces of shit?
Well, that was crazy.
Yeah.
It was a wild ride.
Um, well, anything to wrap up with?
Um, I don't know.
Go buy a T-shirt.
Yeah.
That'll make you feel better.
After that.
Shit show.
That should be better.
Just plugged our T-shirts at the end of this like awful thing.
What choice do we have?
I know.
Um, oh, keep sending us your hometown murders, even though we haven't read them, the number,
the numbers game on that one is much more narrow because, um, you know, we sometimes
don't even read them, but we are starting to make minis and, uh, having fun with them
there.
So we will get to them.
We're making many episodes of your hometown murders.
I have to say, I, in reading them, the ones that I do, when they have a really good subject
line, when it's not just hometown murder, it's like, motherfucker gets buried or like
some funny thing, I'm more likely to click on it.
Um, also when they're short and succinct, just get to the point.
It's key because yeah, and it's like in any good story like that, just include the facts
that matter.
Yeah.
Um, you can still be quippy and funny and all my like, and surprised and be yourself,
but I would say if you're passing up, um, the six paragraph mark, we're, um, it's going
to be, we're going to have a tough time with it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We can give people guidelines.
Yeah.
I like to call them guidelines.
Yeah.
Guidelines.
Guidelines.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And we're going to make, I think we're going to try and do many episodes, many, so it's
each week.
You know what blows my mind is that there are just so many and people are just so excited
to tell them.
I know.
Cause no one's ever asked them.
Asked them.
No one ever asked them before.
Yeah.
Well, and also because you'd realized like you don't, uh, I've asked friends, uh, and
they're like, no, I don't wait a second.
And then they remember three.
Yeah.
Cause yeah, it happens a lot.
Totally.
Yeah.
And I think that's really your identity.
Rate review and subscribe on iTunes.
Please.
Oh my God.
You guys, we've gotten, we're in the top 10.
It's crazy.
Of comedy.
We're in the top three.
We're in the top three of comedy.
That's nuts.
That's insane.
And it's because people rate review and subscribe.
Yeah.
That's, you guys are doing it for us.
We appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
Yes.
And, um, it's fucking awesome.
It feels powerful.
I feel like I can get away with murder.
I guess, above all, stay sexy.
And don't get murdered.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.