Something Was Wrong - S21 E6: (2/2) [Emma] Choose Peace
Episode Date: August 7, 2024*Content Warning: Sexual assault, rape, assault, sexual harassment, substance abuse, substance use disorder, physical abuse, domestic violence, gambling *Sources:Center for Substan...ce Abuse Treatment. Substance Abuse Treatment and Domestic Violence. Rockville (MD): Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (US); 1997. (Treatment Improvement Protocol (TIP) Series, No. 25.) Chapter 1—Effects of Domestic Violence on Substance Abuse Treatment. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK64441/McNeely J, Adam A. Substance Use Screening and Risk Assessment in Adults [Internet]. Baltimore (MD): Johns Hopkins University; 2020 Oct. Table 3, DSM-5 Diagnostic Criteria for Diagnosing and Classifying Substance Use Disorders [abc]Mehr JB, Bennett ER, Price JL, de Souza NL, Buckman JF, Wilde EA, Tate DF, Marshall AD, Dams-O'Connor K, Esopenko C. Intimate partner violence, substance use, and health comorbidities among women: A narrative review. Front Psychol. 2023 Jan 27;13Professional, Cleveland Clinic medical. “Substance Use Disorder (SUD): Symptoms & Treatment.” Cleveland Clinic, my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/16652-drug-addiction-substance-use-disorder-sud. Accessed 25 June 2024. “Substance Abuse and Addiction Statistics [2023].” NCDAS, 2 May 2024, drugabusestatistics.org/“Substance Use Disorder.” Johns Hopkins Medicine, 31 Jan. 2023, www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/substance-abuse-chemical-dependency. *Resources:Free + Confidential Resources + Safety Tips: somethingwaswrong.com/resources Faces and Voices of Recovery (nonprofit) https://facesandvoicesofrecovery.org/ Learn About Treatment for Mental Health, Drugs, or Alcohol https://www.samhsa.gov/find-support/learn-about-treatmentQuick Guide for Clinicians https://store.samhsa.gov/sites/default/files/sma15-3583.pdf SAMHSA’s National Helpline https://www.samhsa.gov/find-help/national-helpline SAFE Project (resource for help) https://www.safeproject.us/about-us/ Shatterproof (nonprofit) https://www.shatterproof.org/ Vine https://www.vinelink.com/#state-selection Follow Something Was Wrong:Website: somethingwaswrong.com IG: instagram.com/somethingwaswrongpodcastTikTok: tiktok.com/@somethingwaswrongpodcast Follow Tiffany Reese:Website: tiffanyreese.me IG: instagram.com/lookieboo business@tiffanyreese.me The SWW theme Song is U Think U, by Glad Rags. The S21 cover art is by the Amazing Sara Stewart. 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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Thank you so much.
I'm Dan Tuberski.
In 2011, something strange began to happen
at a high school in upstate New York.
A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms, and spreading fast.
What's the answer? And what do you do if they tell you it's all in your head?
Hysterical, a new podcast from Wondery and Pineapple Street Studios.
Binge all episodes of Hysterical early and ad free on Wondery Plus.
Something Was Wrong is intended for mature audiences, as it discusses topics that can be upsetting,
such as emotional, physical, and sexual violence,
rape, and murder.
Content warnings for each episode
and confidential resources for survivors
can be found in the episode notes.
Some survivor names have been changed
for anonymity purposes.
Pseudonyms are given to minors in these stories for their privacy and protection.
Testimony shared by guests of the show is their own
and does not necessarily reflect the views of myself,
broken-cycle media, or Wondery.
The podcast and any linked materials
should not be construed as medical advice,
nor is the information a substitute
for professional medical expertise or treatment.
Thank you so much for listening. You don't know anybody until you talk to someone. When he was first arrested, that feeling was just incredible.
I wasn't happy that he was going to get in trouble.
I felt still at fault and I felt bad for whatever reason, even though he did all these things.
But I finally wasn't living in this crazy fear.
And it did still take me time to not look over my shoulder
and to sleep well,
but that phone call when Kiba got arrested,
it was just the best.
When they first arrested him,
it was really confusing actually,
because I didn't really know what that process looked like.
I would go onto the dockets a lot online
and try to follow it.
The state hooked me up with this prosecutor
who was incredible.
He would keep me in the loop and say,
okay, we have a pretrial set for this state.
I would get so nervous knowing that the state was coming up
and then it would be continued
at the request of the defendant for ongoing discovery.
And so then a new date would be set for a month later. There is a fear to it of what is
going to happen, like the fear of the unknown, and they want a continuance
again. So then it just keeps pushing down and sometimes it would be pushed a month
later or three weeks later. And they had so many continuances for this ongoing discovery. From November to the last pretrial was May 20th of 2014.
And then they finally had the trial on June 3rd of 2014.
My home state flew me in as a witness.
And I was going to give my statement. The day that I got into my home
state and we went to the court, my mom was out of the country at the time. My aunt was
around, so I flew in and stayed with my aunt. She took me to court. Her neighbor was a prosecutor in a different area, but it was kind of helpful
to have someone that knew the building and everything. It was really scary because I'm
going to see him. I can picture like exactly where we parked walking in and we were just
looking left, right, left, right. When you're out of state, it doesn't feel like he could
send someone after you. But being there, I felt like he would do anything to not get in trouble.
That was really scary walking in. And then I remember sitting in this little area with
my prosecutor as he prepped what was happening and told me that they're doing a plea deal, but that they're going to call the victim
to share their statement. What's crazy is I don't remember reading that. I purposely
didn't even look over to the left where they had him, but I know he was there for that.
But then there's this part of me was like, was he even in the room? Because I have no memory of it,
which is also scary. They pled guilty for lesser charges on some of them. I think that's where the
Florida one got dropped and maybe some got pushed to a misdemeanor. But it was also like, why did
you act like you were going to go to trial and I'm here now? They made them
subpoena all these witnesses. And I remember the judge was angry at that. Like, you wasted
everybody's time just to plead guilty the last second. I remember him asking if he was
sober, and he admitted no, he was not. And so they immediately took him back into custody
until his sentencing, which was about a month later.
You went to the hearing, you gave your witness statement, then you went back to Florida
because you were doing like the halfway house. And then your aunt went to sentencing on your behalf.
Yes. My aunt with her neighbor, again, the prosecutor,
they went to the sentencing to hear what was going to happen, which she ended up recording.
Your Honor, just to recap of the events that occurred here, it was a domestic fight that
resulted from an argument that had just started up. The victim was removing herself from the
apartment they shared. She was violently thrown to the ground and resulted in a broken collarbone.
Collarbone required surgery, plates, screws, scarring.
The victim, I think there's an overall theme throughout this entire event at Sphere.
She was fearful when the defendant took her to the hospital.
She didn't make any report when they did the sitting next to her.
She was fearful for the next four or five months that she had fired afterwards where
she was receiving threats and essentially being terrorized by the defendant.
When I was aware of this information, I told Mr.
Three things, I said you're gonna need some money to get her and
you're gonna have to go to respond.
We need to surrender you to the police. Please have no contact with ****, it's gonna make matters worse.
Mr. **** unfortunately followed one of my advice.
And as I stated,
perceived to shoot himself in the form of text messages and phone calls.
If your attorney wants to make this about poor b****. He's so bipolar.
He can't put him back in, Judge, it's not gonna help, I say.
What you are demonstrating here today is that when you're not out being an idiot,
that I'm cleaning this up, okay?
Because when I talked to the guys at the bar, they used a slightly different adjective.
If you weren't being such a difficult, destructive, selfish idiot, okay?
You're here discussing this with me calmly, rationally, you look good, you think it clear,
you're not manic. Right?
So what comes first?
I mean, is B- here because he's so mentally unbound?
I don't think so.
I think B- is here because B- has been an idiot for life.
Here's the big thing.
He can do whatever the hell he wants to do.
And in terms of personal responsibility,
eh, he just shows up in court every once in a while
and blames it on his mental illness.
And it's bullshit, starts with.
You are a violent guy.
Well, you know, when you take meth,
and you keep yourself up 72 hours straight,
and you're drunk, and you just lost all your money
at the casino, and you're hanging around
with this woman who's doing drugs with you, there's plenty of opportunities for conflict with us, right? You're living at the
low end, at the semen of society and this is where you've chosen to live your life
for a reason are you. That's what I see here when I see this report. You can give
an opportunity after opportunity to clean up your ass.
You know, you've been in drug treatment,
you've been on probation a number of times.
You know what the message is.
You can't use, dude.
You can't use any minor off-duty substance.
But what you do is you do exactly what I said you do.
You're using it not daily, or that, or code, or certainly
booze and pie, right? You're so out of control that you're notorious here in the s***. You
got your picture on the casino and they do the law enforcement work that we don't have
to amend the power for the person, and they arrest you.
The judge went off on him, like, basically went down this long list of all these things
he had done, all of his record. And he has an extensive, extensive record. Like there's
multiple prior domestic violences, fraud, unlawful restraint and violating his PO. And
the judge was just like, we've sent you to prison before. It obviously didn't help, but
at least you're off the street. And Joel tried
to say, I have these mental health things. And the judge was just like, you guys want
to claim that you have ADHD, but you were just on drugs and you're just a bad person.
And his attorney was like, I told him that we could help him if he just stopped contacting
her and he didn't even listen to me. And so that shows that he has some sort of mental health issue and he just needs help because he wouldn't even listen
to me as his attorney. But the judge didn't take that the same way. He just put him in
his place. My aunt and her neighbor were terrified. They said that he looked back as if looking maybe for me or for my family and made eye
contact with my aunt. And it just scared them a lot. He's got these black eyes. And so they
were really scared. When the judge also was listing off his entire criminal history, going
through all of these prior charges he had, it just
put it all out there of how bad this person was. They said that his family was behind
him and it was also odd to see that he had his whole family basically supporting him.
They know that he's been arrested before and he's been to prison before and they've stayed by his side all through that. To be honest I think they're in La La Land.
It's not even the vibe of like well maybe he can get better. It's like he
didn't do this. They would write these letters on his defense when he would try
to get parole and they're all online like on docket, you can read a lot of them. And it's just like, he's a good person and he means well.
And it's just obvious they don't know him.
And so it is hard because these are other women.
I think it's his mom and his grandma.
And I don't blame his family for having his back because, you know, a lot of people would argue that's a good family.
But there is also a reason he is the way he is.
I do believe that part of that is from how he was raised.
Even his mom on our way to the emergency room after he had thrown me down, she's like,
oh my God, you're going to get arrested again.
Don't go with her.
There's just zero ownership. My aunt contacted me
and said, he's going to prison for four years. But I remember she really didn't want to talk
at all. She's like, I'm going to send you over the clips that she recorded. I think
she was just spooked out and just didn't want to think about it anymore. I totally understand
that.
She was wiping her hands clean of it like here I did my part and he's going to prison.
No one had ever dealt with anything like this in my family. Obviously, I'm very lucky. Like
no one in my family has had to go in front of a judge or defend themselves or anything
like that. And so it was just a very new experience. And a lot of
times, I think even just going to a courtroom is really scary. Even if you go for a friend of yours,
everything about it feels so heavy. I had to write this statement and they have you fill out this
paperwork. A lot of it's like victims compensation. You know, a lot of people need money for therapy,
or people will come after for the hospital bills and surgeries and everything. I didn't want anything from
him, but they do ask, what would you like his punishment to be? And that's a really
hard question to answer. I believe that people can change because I have. And my biggest
hope would be that he changes and grows. And so I know that our
prison system isn't the best for that, right? I said whatever the judge thought was appropriate.
They did give him the max for the charges that he pled guilty to. He did get the max
of four years. There's two menacing by stalking. One was null. And then
there's an intimidation of crime victim or witness. And that one says null, which I think
with the plea deal, he did not get intimidation. But he did have a misdemeanor menacing by stalking,
domestic violence with a prior charge, and a felonious assault. I felt sad for him, but I also kept telling myself,
I hope when he's in there, he's going to change and learn from this and be a better person.
So I definitely, through those four years, was very optimistic and hopeful. I told myself,
when he gets out, I'm not going to have to deal with this anymore.
Those four years, when he was in prison, it's the real time that I got myself together.
I got my first nursing job and started using my nursing degree, and I moved to another state, and I got my first apartment.
I lived in a la-la land where I didn't think about it at all.
It was definitely inside of me somewhere that came out with therapy, but it was just out of sight, out of mind.
I had been thinking about it so much.
I think my brain just was like, we're done.
We're not even gonna think about any of this.
Fortunately, I did not get contacted from prison,
even though I was told they can have access
to phones sometimes.
I was not contacted, and so I really was able
to go on with my life in a valuable
way for me.
I'm a registered nurse and I have my bachelor's.
I just never worked until after, but it was easy to move states having a nursing license.
I'm really lucky I never had a record of anything happening.
There's no charges on me.
And so it was relatively easy to get a job and start working when I went to
school for. So that felt really good. I had another surgery at the end of 2014 where I got the plate
in my collarbone removed. That was a big deal too because from when I had my first surgery
for like a year and a half, they had this plate in my collarbone and it was so visible.
You could see the outlines of it.
And that was really hard for me too,
because everyone's like, what happened to your collarbone?
And I feel like getting that out was a huge deal.
I still have a scar and I can still see it,
but not every time I look in the mirror.
I signed up for Vine and that was helpful
to have. They notify you when they're released. I had them text, call, and email me because
I was so afraid the system wouldn't work. It's kind of hard to trust it. There was one
point where they moved facilities for him. I guess sometimes they just move people around depending on
what programs are available or where they're at in their prison sentence. They alerted
me that day. I remember it coming across like he is no longer at this facility and your
heart just drops. You're like, what's going on? And it's so scary. So I was like looking
into things and a lot of times online, like it won't
show right away. And so I was calling that prison and trying to find information. And I finally had
gotten a hold of someone like a secretary basically from the prison he was at. And they were nice
enough to at least tell me, no, he's just moved to this facility and it's going to take time to get
it online. He was trying to get parole. There's a whole thing you have to do online to get parole. And
every so often you can apply for it or whatever. And so he'd write these letters and they were
public. At first it was like, I'm doing so well and I would do really well outside of prison
because I've done all these classes and I've gained so many tools and
I'm a better person. But there was never like any ownership of what he actually did. It
would say something that a day goes by, I wish I would have handled things more rationally
or I'm very sorry and take full responsibility. But then it would just go on this whole tangent.
It was like these little snapshots of him still not okay or not really getting
it. I guess those are like signs I should have seen like, okay, when he gets out, he's
not any better. I have an email from the Vine service on March 2018. This email is to inform
you that Joel is approaching the end of the court sentence and is scheduled to be released within 30 days.
The release is currently scheduled to take place
on March 31st, 2018.
This date may change depending upon a number of factors.
You may want to call the Vines Service as the date gets near
to find out if it has been changed.
You'll be notified again before the offender's scheduled release date.
That was really scary, because like I was saying, I was living like this didn't happen.
So it kind of gets thrown back into your face and now you have 30 days.
You don't know what's going to happen.
I was doing online searches of myself and when you looked up my name, for instance,
you could see what hospital I was working at.
And so I had to contact the HR at my hospital and say, hey, I need this information removed
and attach his criminal record on that and his mugshot.
I had to also tell my manager, we had a meeting
and I told her because he can just walk in basically.
I was also really sensitive
because people would call our hospital unit
and say so-and-so there.
And a lot of times I think unless something happens to you,
you're just like, oh no, they don't work today.
They'll be back on this day, or they're just at lunch.
It's too much information.
You just can't give information about people help.
I remember there was like a day someone called for me
and one of my coworkers was like,
yeah, someone called for you
and they said they'll just call back later.
And I was like, well, who was it? And they couldn't give me any information.
Most likely, it was probably like a patient's family member or someone.
But like it could have been anyone and it could have been Joel.
So those feelings definitely kept creeping in again.
The apartment complex I lived at, I gave them a mug shot and it felt really embarrassing.
But like you just have to do everything to protect yourself.
And no one was rude about it or anything like everybody was super supportive. I got a follow-up from the Vine saying the same was to inform me he's been released from custody as of April 3rd,
2018 and that he may have been released under supervision of adult parole authority.
At that point I called the number they gave me and was able to get the number of the parole
office.
It was like tons of phone calls just to like find out what was going on.
Because I had no idea what happens when someone's released.
He had a parole for about a year.
I think there was a month left of it.
And I got this notification that I was tagged in a picture.
You click that link to who it is and it was him.
I'm Dan Tuberski. In 2011, something strange began to happen at the high school in Leroy, New York.
I was like at my locker and she came up to me and she was like stuttering super bad. I'm like, stop f***ing around.
She's like, I can't.
A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms and spreading fast.
It's like doubling and tripling and it's all these girls.
With a diagnosis the state tried to keep on the down low.
Everybody thought I was holding something back.
Well, you were holding something back intentionally.
Yeah, yeah, well, yeah.
No, it's hysteria.
It's all in your head. It's not physical. You're, oh my gosh, you're exaggerating.
Is this the largest mass hysteria since The Witches of Salem? Or is it something else entirely?
Something's wrong here. Something's not right.
Leroy was the new dateline and everyone was trying to solve the murder.
A new limited series from Wondery and Pineapple Street Studios. Hysterical. Follow Hysterical on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of Hysterical early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
She struck him with her motor vehicle.
She had been under the influence that she left him there.
In January 2022, local woman Karen Reed was implicated in the mysterious death of her boyfriend,
Boston police officer John O'Keefe. It was alleged that after an innocent night out for
drinks with friends, Karen and John got into a lover's quarrel en route to the next location.
What happens next depends on who you ask. Was it a crime of passion?
If you believe the prosecution, it's because the evidence was so compelling.
This was clearly an intentional act.
And his cause of death was blunt force trauma with hypothermia.
Or a corrupt police cover-up.
If you believe the defense theory, however, this was all a cover-up to prevent one of
their own from going down.
Everyone had an opinion.
And after the 10-week trial,
the jury could not come to a unanimous decision.
To end in a mistrial, it's just a confirmation
of just how complicated this case is.
Law and Crime presents the most in-depth analysis
to date of the sensational case in Karen.
You can listen to Karen exclusively with Wondery+. wonder E plus in the wonder E app Apple podcasts or Spotify
He had changed his
Facebook profile picture to a picture of me and him when we were together and
That was really fucking creepy. I remember just seeing that and time stopped.
This guy just did four years.
He served his entire sentence, and you're on parole now.
You have to be good.
It makes zero sense.
I told his parole officer, like, hey, this happened.
But also he was like, well, they didn't really contact you.
We can't really do anything necessarily, but yeah, this is weird.
Let's keep an eye on it.
So that was February.
And then in May, he had changed his profile picture again, but it was like the same picture, but he updated it.
So that was kind of weird as well. June of 2019, a little over a
year that he was actually released from prison. He didn't
show up to a parole meeting, which I think they were monthly.
So he's getting these monthly drug tests and you have to show
up for parole and he had skipped that. There was another notification
service. It wasn't Vine. It was like almost through the parole office. They notified me
that it was a guilty to escape charge, which I believe is a felony. And he was sentenced to
go back to prison for seven months.
He was on the run again during that time, but fortunately was not contacting me.
Like, I think he was really just hiding out.
That's a scary time because if someone's skipping their parole,
they either use drugs, they're not well.
I just appreciate that someone was looking out for me and wanted to let me know.
It's the worst
to have to call like my mom and say, he didn't shop for his parole and trying to explain
it all and it's stuff I don't even understand myself because I don't even have the full
story. You know, and telling like my significant other and it's just this huge cloud over your
relationship as well. You feel bad that's not what they signed up for. And you're just
kind of like a sitting duck in a way. Did he leave the state? Is he coming for me? And it was just another really scary time where
then I'm again, like looking over my shoulders and acting really off. They caught him relatively
quickly. He skipped parole, went to prison for seven months. And then when he got out for that
one, I kind of like dropped off from being the victim of his crime because now he had a newer crime. I don't even think
he had that long of parole after. It almost like shortened everything. It was basically
at that point forward, I couldn't call up and be like, yes, I'm the victim on that case
and I need information. I was just like not part of it anymore, which is scary, but also kind of good in a way to like get away from having that constant tie to it. I really was lucky
for a while after that I didn't get any contact from him for a while. You know, every so often
I would look up his name on the court records to try to see what was going on. And I went
to look it up one day, and there's like these
new charges. And I opened it up. It was rape, gross sexual imposition, attempted endangering
children. He had to register as a sex offender online. And so I could also look that up.
And under victim, it said juvenile male.
Information isn't public, but you can make your own conclusions with that.
I wish there was a way for victims from the same person to opt in to talk.
I know that would never happen and it would never be safe enough, but just to like validate
each other.
Because there was at least two other women who had charges of domestic violence against him as
well before me. And so now there's this next person, it was just sickening. I knew the
guy was twisted, but that's just a whole different level. I remember feeling guilty about also
feeling that maybe he moved on from me finally onto someone else.
He's hurt someone else now. At least he's not so obsessed with me anymore. I struggled a lot
with knowing that I didn't want to have sex with him. It wasn't your standard picture of rape,
but that's what it was to me. It was just validating because
that was part of it too. We didn't go for that charge when my case was going on. I think
he went to prison for the rape in 2021 at some point. He had gotten out. I was notified
again. This email is to inform you that Joel has been released from supervision. Therefore, this case is no longer
being supervised by the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction. So he got out August 18, 2021.
And then a year after that, approximately on September 23, 2022, he was no longer under
court supervision. One month later, October 26, 2022, is when I get the message from him on Instagram.
My profile has been private since all of this happened. I obviously did not accept it, but he
says, Emma, I wanted to apologize to you for pushing you down and hurting you, then intentionally
exacerbating the entire situation. I'm truly sorry. It has haunted me for many years
and I have been stuck with the dichotomy of not saying anything or finally one day apologizing.
And I obviously chose to be direct. I had to. I see you have a cause you're caring for.
Let me go handle Las Vegas first. I've been prepping for this endeavor my entire life.
I will then donate a very large sum of money. I have been prepping for this endeavor my entire life. I will then donate a
very large sum of money. I have wanted to help people out in various ways myself. I just would
never think to know what to do when I'm ready. Keep going, Emma. You're a smart girl with passion.
Again, I apologize. I'm truly sorry." It was like out of the blue. That was at 316 AM.
I'm truly sorry. It was like out of the blue.
That was at 316 AM.
I remember waking up and seeing his Instagram handle
and then reading it.
It's just terrifying.
Why are you contacting me after all this time?
The way he puts in there,
I see you have a cause you're caring for.
So he's obviously looked me up.
He knows where I live. I volunteer now at a domestic
violence center. I'm also on the board of a sober high school. I don't know which cause
he's talking about, but he knows one of them somehow. It felt like a threat in a way. It
was like, I know where you are. I know what you're doing. I'm still up to my same
old shit. And once I'm done, I'm going to help the cause that you're helping or something.
It was odd. I just ignored that. And that was October. And then two months later, December
12th, 2022, I get another one from him. This one was 6 48am. And so the first one was an
apology and it was maybe just a guy
that's not mentally super well, but he's trying to get his thoughts out there. And then I
get this. And also the fact that it was at 6 48 a.m. He didn't just wake up and write
that he's been up the whole night, you have to assume, right? Saying, happy belated birthday. I'm a lucky Sagittarian.
My Venus is in Scorpio.
It was devastating at first.
Not understanding the dark side.
My focus is awareness and I'm creating my purpose.
Unfortunately, I'm so good at poker that I have to use that as my edge.
I love poker.
The theory, the practice, optimal gameplay, etc.
I hope you get me a charity to donate
to. I hope you get these. I have some projects coming up. Pittsburgh, DC, Atlanta City, casinos.
I'm going to walk in and take their money. I'll send you a link when I get it going.
10 years, dot dot dot. Wow, dot dot dot. I'm lucky to be alive and grateful to have the
opportunity to express myself, dot dot dot, wow, dot, dot, dot. I'm lucky to be alive and grateful to have the opportunity
to express myself, dot, dot, dot, peace.
And the 10 years he means is since your relationship ended?
Yeah. The tone, it looks just like other messages he had sent when he was on the run with his
warrant. Same tone, the same threats and the creepy undertones of it. At that point, you know,
I've been two months since his last message. And so I'm like, is this what it's going to
be now? And I didn't really have anyone to report that to because he was no longer on
parole. It's really hard to know what to do because you can talk to other people, but
they don't really understand what you went through. Everybody's situation is different. And I have huge respect for people that are willing to report it. Because when you
get the stuff in record, then at least if not you, the next person will see it. That's so powerful
to like stand up for yourself and say, I'm not going to deal with this and you're not going to
do this to me. I've thought about that and I've considered it so much.
I called the court victim advocates office.
It was this girl who helped me
when this was all going on originally.
And I was able to say, I know your name,
I have your number, you helped me before.
And you never really get a chance to thank people.
A lot of times they're faceless
and that was really a cool moment.
She was talking to me about it too, like, yeah, he's contacting you and you don't really have a protective order,
but the judge ordered zero contact for life. So he technically is breaking that, but it's a lot
harder when you don't have a protective order to really get a charge. Even if you have a protective
order, honestly,
it's hard to, nothing might even come out of it.
He's gonna know that I've read it.
He's gonna know that it affected me some way.
It's just gonna reopen this whole thing.
And at that point, he had like two charges
after the one with me.
I just didn't wanna be that last charge he had again.
But it's hard because I think a lot of people,
if they keep hearing you complain about something,
it's almost like you don't have the right
to be upset about it because I'm not doing anything
about it, but there's so many reasons why
I can't really do anything about it
or that it makes sense to me.
I'd rather him not even know that it ever got to me.
I'd rather him sit in himself and think,
I don't know if she's ever gotten a message from me.
I don't even know if it's getting through to her
versus knowing that he can still get to me
and reopening that box.
Not only that, but now I'm trying to get him in trouble again
and he's obviously up in the middle of the night.
So I'm assuming on drugs and there's so much risk that comes with that.
Everything when I first went to the police, when this all started and going through that again,
and how scary that time was, it really deterred me. And I hate to say that because I don't want
anyone to be deterred from going to the police and having someone be held responsible for
what they did. But I had already done that. And so it's like, what am I really going to
get out of this? I just have to choose peace for my life right now. And it's not something
I'm willing to take on. But it's also like, it's not even a lot of evidence either. At
that point, there's two messages on Instagram and one saying sorry, kind of,
and the other is saying happy birthday in the weirdest way. My father passed away on March 26.
I know that there was one year I think he sent me something like, oh, I read the obituary. I know
he knows that date significance. He would bring that stuff up a lot, trying to act like we
had something in common. I don't know what his dad died of. He's always been like, Oh, my dad abused
me acting like we both didn't have our dads or something, even though our dads were totally
different people. And he'd make comments about that, which was so insulting. That's so personal
and just making it about him. He'll go a year and a half or however long and then
send another. You get to a point where you're like, if he's going to come do something,
just fucking come do it. Good luck. I've made these plans in my mind, like what would happen
if he actually got to me like in a parking lot or something. And I've gone through entire scenarios.
My fear is he does something to my family to get to me. I don't want to
necessarily report that he's still contacting me because now I'm poking the bear and he
may go after my family. Like right now, I don't see that he would go after my family
because his tone is, it's odd, but at least it's not anger and hate. If you read through
all of his messages and everything that he has sent over the years,
they're all over the place. You have to read between the lines. And a lot of them did say
stuff like, I know you're a good girl. And I know you know how to do the right thing.
I don't know what he wants out of it. If I'm going to reply and be like, oh, I forgive
you. Yeah, everything's fine. This year in March 16th, 852 PM, Emma, your dog is beautiful.
I sent you a letter over a year ago.
An apology, period.
I'm sorry for manipulating you.
I loved your look the minute I saw you.
I'm sorry I was an abusive, narcissistic piece of shit.
It would be weird, period.
But you're a good girl, Emma.
You tried to help me in our small time. I forgave myself.
I hope you forgive me. I will be the change. You look nice." And that was it.
This one actually came from a different username. And so I didn't open it right away. I opened
it I think almost 24 hours later. And I was confused confused at first like who is this? And then I clicked the
profile and it's him. Every time it's just your heart drops for a second. But it doesn't affect
me the same way as they used to. Part of that is just the amount of time that's passed. Part of me
felt good because all he can see is my profile picture, which is a very old picture. He's making
references to that. That's also nice to know that he doesn't know old picture. He's making references to that. That's also
nice to know that he doesn't know me now. He's just seeing that picture back then and
not making comments to what I'm currently doing like he used to write about. So it doesn't
feel as much of a threat. But when I get this, I feel obligated to tell my family that I
got it because I don't want to keep them in the dark about that because
they went through the entire situation with me where they're getting threats, they're getting
weird phone calls and messages. Having to talk about it with my current boyfriend as well,
it's the worst honestly. When I got this one, I actually was out of town. All I did was sent
a screenshot of it to my boyfriend and I said, hey, I got this.
I'm fine. I really don't want to talk about it. But I also think you have the right to know about
it. So I just wanted to share it with you. And he's so awesome. He's just replied, thank you.
Let me know if you need anything. It's really nice one to have someone that accepts what's going on
is there for you. I don't want to talk about it a lot. I don't need to talk about it and let him interject himself into my life. So it's nice to be able
to share it with someone and not have to dwell on it. And we haven't brought it up again
since I don't want it to be the center of everything ever again.
Yeah, you deserve to move on and flourish and focus on the things you're doing now.
However you decide to navigate it going forward is up to you.
Something I have to tell myself constantly is I have the power over what I give my energy
to and how much of it.
Of course, things are going to catch us off guard, things are going to trigger us, things
are going to pop up and we need to sit with those emotions and feel those things so that
we can process them and move on.
Right?
Like he could send me a message and it would throw off my entire day and I wouldn't be
able to sleep.
Then you also feel like, damn it, like, why do I still let him have this power over me
when I'm not even in a relationship with him anymore?
And so then you start feeling even worse about it all because it's like you're allowing
him to do that.
Not anymore.
That's not going to be part of my life anymore.
We're healing. We're moving forward.
I love that he doesn't even know if I've read it.
And in my mind, I can just pretend I've never read it.
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The people I went to rehab with, the majority of people relapsed and some died.
I'm sure there are other people who stayed sober other than me, but from the day I went
to rehab, I never used or drank again.
The main reason why I'm sober today is because of this whole situation ship with Joel. Whenever I think
about, oh, it'd be fun to have a glass of wine or you smell weed everywhere these days.
But it's like, my immediate thought is that I will lose everything I have. And there's
this fear of ending up right back in another situation like I was in.
And not that I blame drugs and alcohol, like I made those decisions, but the person I am when
I'm using is not the person I want to be. I have a huge gratitude for all of this because it got me
sober and I definitely was an addict before I met Joel.
I'm an addict after I met him.
But if it wasn't for him,
I don't know if I would have gotten sober
and I don't know if I would have stayed sober.
I think a lot of the way I live today,
it's appreciating these little things,
like when you have a loving guy next to you
or healthy relationships and what those look like
and being able to communicate your feelings without raising your voice, how to cope the loss of someone
or how to get through difficult times sober. I have 10 and a half years sober. I did it with the 12
step program. One of my friends from one of the programs one day called me and he's like, Hey, there's the school and it's like a sober high school and I think you'd be an
awesome board member. And so I just started doing this. And basically if students are
having an issue with substances or drinking, especially these days with a vape pen and
stuff they can do like during school, it It's incredible. For me, I was definitely drinking
and smoking weed in high school. My bad habits, I'm sure, started there. You don't learn as much
when you're not sober and your brain doesn't develop the same way. I wish this would have
been here for me too. Because even if these kids leave high school and they drink in college again
or whatever, at least they know it's there. They're exposed to relationships or sharing their feelings and it's another safe place.
A lot of what we do is fundraising because a lot of people come from homes where it's not something
they can afford at all. And so like to be able to go there for free, you get a lot of foster kids.
And I'm really grateful to get to be a part of that and see it growing because it's still small and we're still trying to get it bigger so that we can
help more people because it is such a problem.
I so appreciate that you shared that and I'd love to hear a little bit more about the nonprofit
that you work with now.
I kind of felt like what am I doing with my life?
And I would talk to my therapist about it and she's just like, anything that brings you excitement or passion, go for. So I kept seeing the name of this place
and hearing about it. I finally just pulled the trigger and sent a message to be a volunteer.
It's a domestic violence center and it's a one-stop shop, which I thought was so cool because where
I'm from, it wasn't really like that.
There was a court advocate, but at least what I knew, there was nowhere for me to go. And
I didn't know anything. Where I'm volunteering currently, you could walk in the door, you
could safety plan, you could get a protective order and we'll file it for you. A advocate
will go with you to court. There's group therapy, there's counseling,
there's a pantry where you can get clothing, a court outfit. There's detectives in our building.
You just go there and it's everything you need. And you don't have to run around town.
It's just such an amazing place, honestly. I love it so much. I've loved being there and I feel so
honored that I'm even allowed to volunteer there.
I wish I had something like that when I was going through all this because I think it would have
helped a lot. It's funded with grants and tax money. Those dollars just go so much further.
I feel like the local law school, they'll get some of their students to do a free law day.
And so they'll come over and anyone can show up
and get help, you know, if they're dealing with something
or different churches even will do a volunteer drive.
And it's really awesome to find a cause
that you can directly see where it's going
and how they're being helped,
that it's actually helping so many people.
It's just a safe place.
I know where they're coming from and that fear,
and so when they're calling and they're scared
and they don't know what to do,
and we're going to help you and it's going to be okay
and you can hear them exhale,
it's been really healing for me as well.
A lot of the people who work there or volunteer there
have gone through situations,
and they're all different.
But it's also sad because there's so many people that need help and so you see just so many people come in the door
every day and it's a huge problem but you just have to be able to support
people. These things used to be these huge secrets I would carry of that I'm
sober and went to rehab or that I went through this domestic violence situation
and stalking situation and I can't tell anybody to going to these places
and being in these environments where I can freely share it
and not worry about, for instance, like in nursing,
if I shared that I'm a drug addict,
you lose your job or you get put on probation,
or people just watch you differently
and treat you differently.
Whereas at these different places, I can just be me.
It's been
incredible to start this chapter of my life where I'm able to just be myself. There's
this tax incentive. So in this one, they did basically like a cent tax or something, but
it paid for this park and we're going to get a new building. I think they're going to break
ground in the next year, which is incredible because the building is a disaster.
The toilets are flooding every other day and there's gas leaks.
It's really run down.
So it'll be a lot better of a building, easier for people to get to off a bus stop, for instance.
The first relationship after you go through something like this, and I feel like sometimes
it's not touched on as much.
I was probably not ready to date again or just wasn't healed.
I dated someone, I want to say like a year and a half relationship and it was extremely
difficult.
I had huge trust issues.
I was getting text messages and phone calls.
I didn't tell them all the details, but every time I would get certain texts, it's like,
you want to let the person know because they're kind of in the line of fire just by knowing you. That relationship
did not work for a lot of reasons, but I also didn't know how to control my emotions and
the stress that I had and was taking it out on him. With Joel, that relationship was just
screaming and aggression and physical. I don't know that got drilled into me that that was
a relationship somehow just even though it was so short that I took that to the next
one. And so it's just like relearning how to have relationships with people and not
looking at them like they're Joel or they're the guy who hurt you. It's really hard to
trust people after something happens to you like this.
That relationship ended.
He was a great guy and I'm honestly like so grateful that I had him during this time.
After that relationship ended, I moved to another state to be near my sister and I got
a job.
I was there maybe a year and then I met my current boyfriend. We just had our seven year
anniversary. It's been a journey through it. It was really hard still at the beginning.
I still had trust issues. And then this was overlapping with different times. Joel was
released from prison. And so anytime, if he was released from prison or parole or whatever,
it just would cause me to like go into these holes.
It's almost like you freeze and you can't talk
and it affects you so much.
When he got out of prison, I had started with a new therapist
and I purposely looked up someone who did EMDR and tapping.
She's just the best.
We would have these sessions
and all this stuff was just coming up that I didn't remember.
The mind's really crazy how you black so much out.
There's different ways I acted
that you could trace back, basically.
I'm still learning and growing.
In this current relationship, we moved a lot slower.
I think we moved in together after, like, over three years.
We worked through problems.
The yelling was still something that I did at the beginning of the relationship.
If I got in a fight with Joel, like it was this huge back and forth.
I would yell at my current boyfriend and he just wouldn't even respond to it.
He would like walk away and wouldn't have it.
And basically I'm not going to be with someone who treats me like this.
So that was like what I'm doing is not okay. You can't treat people like that and you can't just
keep using the excuse of well I went through this horrible thing and that's why I'm the way I am.
This chain of abuse, I don't want that in my life and I'm not going to have that in my life.
And so fortunately my current boyfriend, he's just so patient with me and learning and he was able to like move past
that with me and he saw I was doing the work. God, it took so
long to feel like really, really secure. But once we got there,
it's just a really awesome feeling. I'm so lucky that I'm
with someone who appreciates everything about me and even the
bad things about me.
I just really appreciate how candid you are about the situation because we're imperfect as human
beings. While there's never an excuse to abuse someone, we can still reflect on ourselves and
the things that coexisted within that. But that's growing up, right?
Right, and just so it never happens again.
This has all taught me a lot.
I know what I don't deserve from someone,
and if anyone treats me any way like that,
I have no problem leaving now.
Over 10 years ago, I was a very, very different person.
If I raise my voice at my boyfriend now, I feel very bad about it.
I apologize.
I talk to a therapist.
I try to change.
Whereas with Joel, he would be like, you made me angry because you did this or well, you
were texting this guy or you went to the casino and you act like you never even
want to see me. And every time he did something, it was because of what I did. There was no owning
it. It's really healing. And there's been times I've heard things on your show where I've never
felt like anyone's gone through that, that I've gone through or everybody seems like they're so good and they
never deserved it and there's things I did and so to hear things similar it's huge if anyone could
get anything out of it. The me that this happened to I see her as this separate person almost like
this little girl who didn't know who she was and was experimenting and growing and grieving and hurting and not comfortable,
which a lot of people are going through and these things happen.
You feel like you deserve it and you put yourself in the situation,
but no one deserves to have someone else hurt them or follow them around or threaten them.
Thank you so much for all of your time, energy, and your thoughtfulness,
your bravery, and your vulnerability sharing with myself and the podcast.
Thank you.
Next time on Something Was Wrong.
Whenever Dad's in the picture, it's like when they open the door in horror movies and lightning strikes,
that's what it was like whenever he would come home. We just hated being around him.
She definitely didn't feel like she had choice, and she did try to leave.
The theory is that she was packing up, trying to leave, and he didn't like that,
and he shot her.
When she pulled me into the office,
I think I was just so broken.
People had asked me before and I would just lie,
but in that moment, like, I was done.
Thank you so much for listening.
Until next time, stay safe, friends.
Something Was Wrong is a Broken Cycle Media production, created and hosted by me, Tiffany
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