Sword and Scale - Episode 239
Episode Date: May 1, 2023Fire fighters responded to calls leading them to Chattaroy Road in Colbert, Washington during the early morning of May 26, 2015. Rushing to the blazing scene, they quickly learned this was no... ordinary fire. A deceased female had to be dragged from a hole cut into the home, but where were the other three family members who lived there? One answer was found in a fire fighter’s helmet lying on the ground, and it didn’t belong to anyone on the current force. Instead it belonged to Lieutenant Terry Canfield. Everyone loved Terry, and no one would believe he was wanted dead - except for one person. His daughter.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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Sort and scale contains adult themes and violence and is not intended for all audiences
Listener discretion is advised
I'm almost at the end of my career and I want to stop helping people one emergency at a time
I want to get out there and
Be a catalyst in changing people's lives and if this helps helps you, you're welcome to it.
And that's this.
Don't take this life too seriously.
But don't ever take it for granted. This is season 10, episode 239 of Sword and Scale, a show that reveals that the worst monsters
are real.
We have a great show for you today, and we're going to get right into it.
But if you haven't already, consider joining Plus.
It's our premium service, with over 135 exclusive episodes you simply will not hear on the regular feed. It's available right now at swordandscale.com slash plus. Live and let live.
It's much easier said than done.
The premise is extremely simple.
Live your own life and stay the hell out of the way of others so they can live theirs,
presumably the way they want to as long as they're not hurting anyone.
The premise may be simple, but practicing this concept can be altogether different because
it requires self-regulation, control of ourselves rather than our environment.
Ironically, sometimes we can't control ourselves. We lash out and we project this need onto others
closest to us, and begin controlling them
instead of letting them live their lives the way they want to Have you ever woken up in the middle of the night, like round through your form in the
morning and you just can't go back to sleep?
Happens to me, all the time.
Maybe you were just startled during a bad dream or maybe the Z-quil or Ambian wore off. And now you're
wide awake and plagued with intrusive thoughts that just will not go away, like an endless
loop.
Why does that particular timeframe seem to be so common for people being disturbed from their slumber.
Folklore would suggest that the time period between 3 and 4 in the morning is the
witching hour, or the devil's hour.
This is the early morning time slot when evil roams the earth.
In Colbert, a rural area just northeast of Spokane, Washington, deputies and firefighters
were awakened on May 26, 2015, when they were summoned to the scene of a fiery house
and barn at 20 East Chatteroy Road.
The chaos and carnage were quickly attributed to Arsene, the handiwork of an unknown demon
prowling the area.
Responders continued pouring in and one noticed something in the grass.
Lying just outside the burning home and red flames, the green grass nestled an object
every fire person is familiar with, a flash of reflective tape on a firefighter's
helmet. It appeared they had already lost one of their own.
This fire was suspicious from the time that firefighters arrived on scene when they got
here they found two separate structures on fire including a barn.
Neighbors started noticing that something was going on
across the road when they awoke to noises
and saw a large volume of smoke.
One neighbor rushed to the scene to offer his help.
He said about a quarter to two.
He's heard popping noises.
Looked out, saw the fire.
Got over there, the barn was inflamed,
and the house had started on fire.
Naturally, he was alarmed,
so the neighbor began urgently knocking on the door
to wake anyone in the home.
He even tried to kick the door in,
but it would be trained personnel
who discovered the first body.
This was the body of Lisa Canfield. It would be trained personnel who discovered the first body.
This was the body of Lisa Canfield.
She was a mother and wife and lived in the home.
Her slim corpse was lying in the back bedroom and would not be easy to retrieve.
Firemen first needed to cut a hole in the bedroom from outside the house before dragging Lisa's
mostly intact body through the hole and onto the grass.
One of the deputies reported the grim scene.
Upon arrival, I received limited information about a deceased female victim Lisa canfield
found by fire personnel in the burning house.
Hostel Lisa appeared to have been stabbed several times.
Leesys' body was lying in the backyard
with a yellow blanket covering her up.
I was also told Leesys' husband,
Terrence Terry Canfield was missing.
I went over to examine the body
and saw the female victim.
She had a piece of cloth stuffed into her mouth.
She had what appeared to be knife wounds
to her hands and wrist and bruises to her chest area.
There were puncture wounds on her chest below her neck.
There were also burn marks covering the body.
Lisa was found completely nude, lying on her back.
Telltale defensive wounds covered her hands and wrists, and although severe burns damaged
her lower legs and feet, Lisa did not seem to have died
by fire, but by unnatural and violent causes. As for the firefighters helmet lying in the
yard, it belonged to Lisa's husband, Terry, Canfield. And together, they owned the barn, the home, and the property in general, as well as some
horses and several dogs.
Terry was still missing, but detectives would soon discover a badly charred body in the
barn, along with a third victim.
We do know that the fire occurred at Lieutenant Canfield's residence, and we do know that we're not able to contact Lieutenant Canfield.
So I think the community at this point is really holding to breath to see if a result from the autopsy today determines whether or not any of the three bodies belong to a lieutenant canfield. He had a lot of tenure on the department, had a lot
of experience, like the sheriff's experience, he was an instructor, he did a lot of things off-duty,
like that, he was out in the community doing programs, he was actually even a comedian.
59-year-old Terry was very active in the community and allegedly had no enemies.
and allegedly had no enemies. Questions arose with regard to his marriage and Lisa, and a female neighbor and friend
had some answers.
She explained that she and Lisa were best friends of 10 years.
Just the night before the fire, she was at the home of Lisa and Terry having a few drinks. She not only insisted there had been no arguments that night between husband and wife,
but that Lisa and Terry were madly in love with each other.
There was no way anything bad happened between them.
At that point, the neighbor walked away sobbing and attempted to regain her composure.
The search for Lieutenant Terry can't be continued. The point, the neighbor walked away sobbing and attempted to regain her composure.
The search for Lieutenant Terry can't be continued.
Police were sharing what little information they had about the victims.
He said Terry just recently had major shoulder surgery and he knew Terry wouldn't be at work.
I asked if he or anyone else might know where Terry was but he answered no.
By this time the barn that was on fire was mostly burnt to the ground. The house was still being put out by firefighters.
Lieutenant Bean said they did an initial sweep of the house and didn't find any other bodies,
but they said that they needed to do another more thorough search. He also stated it may be possible
the Terry may have been in the barn and it would be a while before they could go through that debris.
The Terry may have been in the barn and it would be a while before they could go through that debris.
Later that afternoon when the flames were doused and the smokes subdued, the remains of two
other victims appeared from the ashes.
Terry Canfield and his 24-year-old stepson John, who also lived in the home.
District 4 firefighters were actually the first people to notice this blaze was no accident.
When they stumbled upon the first two victims
as crews fought the fire, they wondered
why the residents hadn't been able to escape.
Some parts of their home like this bedroom
never even filled with smoke.
Unfortunately, Spokane firefighter Terry Canfield
may have not been able to use one of those guns
to defend himself because of the Lieutenant's recent shoulder surgery.
Terry had just undergone shoulder surgery, making him an already wounded target for the killer.
All three bodies betrayed gunshot wounds indicating they had not died from smoke inhalation, and
further confirming suspicions that a killer was roaming Spokane
Was this killer a stranger looking for valuables or money?
Or was this someone familiar?
Some monster with a vendetta
It had been a long time since Spokane was
Spooked quite like this and in fact the last time something this horrible happened there,
sort of scale put out an episode about it.
Well, you know, stranger, stranger murders are very rare in Spokane.
I think what Joseph Duncan did to the Groney family was the last time we saw a stranger
to stranger killing of this magnitude.
If this was just a home invasion robbery
that it's likely those weapons that you saw
being taken out of the house would have been stolen
so for at least for now.
It appears that these victims somehow knew they're killer.
The fires were winding down when someone very unexpected
pulled up to the property.
While deputies continued to extinguish blazing flames from two fires,
cordoned off the area as a probable crime scene and take pictures of the buildings,
carnage, and rubble, a fourth resident of the Canfield home frantically approached
wearing a nurse's uniform.
This was Amanda Constable, Lisa's other child and stepdaughter to Terry.
She immediately quizzed officers as to the whereabouts of her parents, begging to find
out if they were still alive.
Since the bodies of her stepfather and brother were reduced to grey powder and ash-y bone fragments,
they had not yet been found and identified.
That left the mother, a female's deceased body, had been carried outside the home.
The reality set in, an Amanda crumpled to the pavement where she sat on the wet asphalt soaked with water from the fire trucks.
Stunned and in shock, Amanda was sure she knew what had happened.
Her immediate explanation was that the fire occurred due to a faulty or out-of-date electrical system
that was reminding them with blown circuit breakers.
The maintenance was long overdue.
Quizzi and unsettled, she couldn't provide herself with the answer to how the barn caught on fire.
She didn't yet know Arson was suspected, but when given this information, she also could
not explain who would want her parents dead. In the early morning of May 26th in Spokane, Washington, 29-year-old Amanda Constable just
finished working an extra shift as a nurse.
Amanda was tired and anticipated that she'd climb into bed as soon as she arrived home,
where her parents and brother also lived.
Instead, she was greeted with sirens, lights, and smoldering flames.
There was no bed for Amanda because it was burned in the fire along with her family.
She wanted to believe faulty electrical wiring caused the fires, but Amanda had to face
facts after being told the bodies had been shot to death. The major crimes detectives did apply for search warrant
and that has been processed and they are now going through the scene here to collect evidence
and with the forensic unit to make sure that we get all the information to find out what happened here.
Today detectives asked Colbert area residents to be on the lookout for any possible evidence
that may have been discarded around their property or to recall any cars they may have seen
in the area the night of the fire.
So now detectives think that their suspects are on the run and may be trying to discard
some of the evidence that ties them to the crime scene including burn clothing or some
of the things they may have stolen from this home.
The detectives are asking that if you've noticed something so suspicious, particularly if you live in this area, I've seen people dumping things
in dumpsters. No one could have predicted that evidence would lead them to a politician.
Roy Murray, 30-year-old tall and skinny, was a clean-cut veteran with a brown-haired buzz cut and nondescript face, wearing typical
man-type glasses.
Frankly, kind of nerdy-looking.
Not necessarily what you would think of when conjuring the image of an army vet we served
with valor, earning the bronze star for helping a VIP escape from a complex ambush.
He was severely wounded at the time.
After serving in Iraq, Murray was active in politics for a number of years.
In 2011, he was nominated to run for an open state senate seat.
He lost.
Murray just happened to be Amanda Constable's husband.
Only three weeks earlier, Amanda moved back into her parents' home due to a change in
job location from Lewiston.
The town her husband still lived in.
Amanda's brother had moved back in after a breakup with his girlfriend.
Amanda's brother was staying at the house
and the last text message that he said was at 0, 0, 16
and the shots rang out 14 minutes after that.
And then there was another neighbor
that actually heard the fires said when they went off,
it's he testified that it sounded like loud,
very loud whoosh, type of a sound that like loud, very loud
whoosh, type of a sound like a big bonfire being lit and he heard two of them
about 30 seconds apart at two in the morning and then he went down this
driveway and looked and saw that there was fire over there and then he ran
back up called 911 and then he proceeded out to the property
to try to see if anybody was inside the house and tried to get an answer but it didn't
get one.
But the fire department showed up shortly after that.
This was prosecutor Larry Haskell as he recalls details of this triple homicide.
To put it into perspective, the shots were heard at 12.32 a.m. but the
booms of explosive fire were not heard until two in the morning. The night of the fires,
Amanda should have been home except a worker called in sick leaving Amanda to cover for
the next shift. She got home at 3.30 in the morning as it was. She had worked in overtime.
The fire didn't get set until 2 o'clock
in the morning. So the state's
theory and and I used it in closing
argument was nobody hangs around a
scene in which they've committed three
murders and waits 90 minutes before
they set fire to the house and leave.
Unless they're waiting for somebody.
After moving from the wet pavement to an ambulance, Amanda was given a blanket,
and her thoughts began to collect and make sense. Just then a weird look came over her.
She hated to have this thought, but officers should check in with her husband.
The husband she was trying to divorce.
He was never physically abusive with her, but her parents didn't like him very much.
And that feeling was mutual with Roy.
She added that he had a history of several arrests and tends to get very angry,
very fast. In fact, Murray was arrested just after he lost the state senate race.
He was one of three candidates contending for a vacant state senate seat. Murray had just been
arrested the month before in Las Vegas on gun charges and was addressing
the ordeal with county commissioners.
Oh, decisiveness, dependability.
Murray didn't get the position and months later he was arrested again.
According to court documents, Murray took a gun into the wall of Walla V.A.
Canesovich says that to his knowledge every time Murray has had contact with law enforcement,
he has been armed.
Murray had a veritable obsession with weaponry. When Amanda was interviewed, she confirmed
he owned several guns included the much feared AR-15 style rifle, which he named Puppy.
Now, there's nothing wrong with having weapons, guns to protect yourself and your family,
even the AR-15.
But if you give it a name, then you're kind of a weirdo.
Just putting that out there, folks.
Amanda said that he would never touch his ammunition, and instead would wipe each round off prior to loading them
in the magazine.
Now, that's very weird, isn't it?
Murray told her this helped him shoot and scoot, leaving no DNA.
When she met Murray, Amanda thought he was cute and tried to ignore his extreme opinions
about the government.
Awkward and sometimes angry, Murray sometimes needed Amanda to act as a buffer between him
and her parents.
He recalled one night her mother playfully tried to push Murray over.
His response was to put her in a headlock.
He was very gold driven and very hopeful.
He just had big dreams.
I would try to buffer his jokes or make excuses for them being inappropriate.
He had very strong opinions and felt the government would eventually fall and the preparations
were needed to come out on the right side of that.
Things kind of came and went.
Guns, body armor, magazines, vestupe put equipment on, tactical gear, goggles, gloves, gun cleaning supplies.
We went camping one time and it was like practice for if you ever had to survive.
Survive was what Amanda was able to do, and her family was not on the night they were obliterated.
And that was only because she graciously took an extra
shift, something she rarely had to do. She quickly fingered her estranged husband Roy Murray
as the culprit. An evidence at the scene seemed to corroborate her suspicions.
But those two deliberately set fires did not destroy the 22 caliber slugs found in the
victim's bodies or the bullet casings painstakingly recovered in debris.
Detectives on the scene also used trained canines to sniff out any possible sources of
arson.
Gasoline was concluded to be the accelerant.
Interestingly, Murray had a Facebook page. Well, that's not interesting,
since just about everybody has one, or had one. But Murray posted a few songs there on May 25th,
2015. One of them is Acute Spanish Lullaby. Look it up on YouTube if you want. It's called Gasolina.
Look it up on YouTube if you want. It's called Gasolina. The media is actually a song recorded in Spanish and if you translate the lyrics they talk about gasoline
and defeating and controlling people and interestingly enough,
the tech does now believe that a container of gasoline was used to start these fires
in the hopes of concealing these crimes.
Now the media may have been making a huge leap by connecting this song to the fires.
I mean, if you were to look up gasoline in urban dictionary, you'd get a whole different
take on the song.
Anyway, whether posting this song as a deliberate precursor to the fires or not, it was weird,
and the song itself is weird.
Not only was gasoline part of the equation, but a minuscule detail about gun lub would
later prove to be monumental in this case.
The most pertinent and specifically in this case was the science surrounding the discovery of the nanoparticulets from a new generation of gun looper
kit that was being tested by an inventor at the time that was shared with Mr. Murray and also
was discovered on some of the shell casings that were recovered at the crime scene.
They met at a conference that puts together inventors and potential marketers, and I'm not
sure exactly when that happened, but they got together and got to talking, and the inventor
he had indicated to us that he was originally thinking of the lubricant for really large
engines like jet engines or generators and that sort of thing.
And Roy Murray, who was much more interested in firearms, convinced him that it would work
well, possibly as a gun lubricant.
And so that's why and kind of how that conversation got started.
On top of the evidence collected and, and he hints Roy Murray may have given, the suspect
whoever he or she was was spotted.
We spoke with a deputy on the scene.
He was unable to commit to an interview with us, but he did agree to record his account
of what happened three days later on a stakeout.
On May 28th, 2015, I was assigned a crime scene protection at 20 East Shadow right between
1800 and 0100 hours.
At 2240 hours while I was observing the house, I observed a shadow figure in the garage
at the address approximately 50 feet from where the initial cramp had occurred.
Initially, I thought that the light from my spotlight had hit a tree and casted the shadow in the garage.
As I started to shift my spotlight back towards the front of the house, my finger hit the switch and the light turned off momentarily.
When the officer's light came back on, he was stunned to see a shadowy figure wearing all black,
running east toward the neighbor's driveway.
I announced my presence and drove my patrol car up to the neighbor's driveway to attempt to cut the subject off.
I exited my vehicle and attempted to locate the subject in the open field to the south of the residence using my flashlight.
After a couple surveys in the field and no subject being seen, I started back from my vehicle.
Upon reaching
his car, he decided to give one last look, shining his light into the pitch black field.
He witnessed a dark figure emerging from the grass.
The subject started running southbound. I announced my presence once again in radioed for backup.
I told this batch that I was in pursuit of the subject. The male appeared to be around 6 foot 2 inches tall in between 130 and 140 pounds.
The tall, skinny fugitive was wearing all black and seemed to know the area fairly well
since he was running through a field much faster than your average person would.
The terrain of the field was very rough and uneven.
I stumbled multiple times while attempting to catch up to the subject. wood.
Unfortunately, the officer was unable to keep up with the agile suspect, and ultimately
lost sight of him.
With only circumstantial evidence but a strong lead in the direction of Murray, investigators collected
what they had and called him in.
When it came time for detectives to interview Murray, he told investigators the night of
the fire he was camping with friends near the police river, but wouldn't give the names
to collaborate his alibi.
There was much more to come though. It now looked possible that one or more of Murray's camping buddies may have been the murderer,
or even that politics was once again at play.
Then on Saturday, detectives asked Murray to drive from Spokane to Lewiston for a second
interview inside the sheriff's office, and that's when Murray told deputies that Colbert murders were actually committed by the committed by someone other than
Murray of course but we're gonna let you hear for yourselves in this
interrogation audio it started with a female professional partner and her snitch. He's been to now swear many and Lisa Terri-Ruling.
And he's also been to Hercules, where I think she is right now.
I've talked to her recently, but I've called her right now.
That's her.
So, I'm thinking of these entry.
Yeah.
I know she is a ceilist and I know I know a ceilist and a girl friend because you guys are working together.
Some sort of relationship.
Who is the partnership?
Who is the secret?
The secret.
Okay.
And you think that she thinks she's like a...
The secret of the EA?
Or the secret of the EA?
I don't know.
And your concern for her is that we are concerned for?
And because this other person that was a snitch has been to her house and into Terry and Mrs. Arthur.
Yeah.
And who is the other person of this niche?
Um, Armand, Cassandra.
Armand?
Ah, I asked her out and I was supposed to, he was J.F. 21.
Is he, uh, I'm guessing, the Middle Eastern guy in Pogany? Yeah, he's about 64. That's a lot of intelligence to get my dumb brain around.
But Roy went even deeper, bringing none other than Russian spies into
play. So I was sitting there about two thousand six, and I was like, oh, boy, that was a real honestness guy.
And I've now, you know, probably,
let me go, I got the help.
I can't help it out, so it's a bit of a little break.
So I got the multiple,
from another Russian target,
that have been involved in this common war here.
They've got this team's additional physical strength,
so you guys can deal with some of it.
And I know all the people.
So I got to get some army intelligence.
I've got to get to like FBI.
This is going to be a mess.
You've heard the term red herring. I take it.
In forensic debate, a red herring is a statement or piece of information unrelated to the actual
subject and is meant to throw the opponent off track.
Well Roy Murray was slinging a whole net full of red herrings at detectives.
I mean, the guy was practically a fisherman, and it's stink of rotten seafood.
He was probably hoping that his intelligent gibberish
would intimidate them, and he was wrong.
Next up was the Mandy was a secret operative
getting intel on me, explanation.
This dude watches a lot of louder with Crowder, apparently.
I was just approached back and it,
while I don't even started by any adult who she was,
it far enough it means.
I think the committee tells us very well.
So we have to get involved in politics.
Back in 2009, just having a meter, I. I think she's trying to promote me, also to involve
the relationship and the agent.
And I would like to explain why I don't think that's one of the
members that she has to be working her time.
It's a manly thing I have to reject.
Murray meandered his way through the interrogation, as he sat in a long table in a forest green
t-shirt and jeans, always giving the proper gesticulations to a company, his many details,
even if they didn't make sense. At times, he couldn't configure any more scenarios and would say things like, sorry, I'm racking my brain.
Things are just starting to click.
I think it was somewhat, you know, since they worked in intelligence
and he seemed to know something about a Soviet group,
a Russian group called the FSB,
it never really made a lot of sense to detectives
and made even less sense after the fact that
you know the story changed as it went along so they never bought into it. They did go to where he
said he was camping and they did some investigation there and they couldn't find any evidence
with a park pass or anything like that or anybody that's seen anybody that looked like Roy Murray. So, there wasn't a lot of credence given to the notion that he was down there at a campsite,
and of course, they were never able to talk to anybody else that would be able to confirm that.
He began naming agents who may be involved, all of whom in one way or another were somehow connected to the slaughtering of Amanda's family and
decimation of her home.
What made it difficult for detectives was that Murray actually had a background in the military,
and some of this just might be true.
So they kept sifting through the debris.
This time sorting fact from fiction coming from Murray's wife. Murray was, of course, concerned about her
in more than one way. So how would man be involved? If he was like that, I mean, say you're a coup, someone built their unit, they gave
you a trust, they gave you a change of certain information for whatever reason you give
to the private parameters, they're more constructs, you know, like a right answer. But then you bring that back to you.
And then I'm actually working for it.
It's a man I did.
And we think you're a fisherman, and that's what nobody tells me.
So, um, who would make a head contact with you?
You know, the man recruited her or being both.
And why was recruited her?
What information would he?
What kind of asset information would she be recruit to her? What information would he, what kind of asset information
would she be able to provide?
I had just started getting
known in politics within about
a year after we met.
I was at a LNC,
a PCO election,
a district leader was on the slate to be
a senator.
I was at the entire
four political office. So they would have used her to get direct information about to be considered as an entirely foreign political opera contest.
So they would have used her to get extra information about you.
They have to watch you.
And there were a couple of operations set up.
I'm not sure if that was my guy.
So somebody wanted me either burnt slightly
and pressured or even trying to herpes from politics.
Fascinating as Murray's geopolitical saga was, detectives needed to accomplish the goal.
They were instead allowing Murray to take them down a long and winded tale, and they desperately
wanted this terrible movie to end.
You know how you invest a lot of time into watching a movie that you
know from the start isn't grabbing you, but you can't stop watching until almost the end
when you finally say, fuck it, this is dumb. And by then you've lost at least an hour
of your life that you're never getting back. It's kind of like listening to lore. The detectives were getting to that
point with Murray. So, those are the reasons I work for you guys from around the floor. And then what I want you to do is, as much as you want to,
just fill your guts off this side of it so that we can hear that side of it.
We need to give you all the way so that you can keep your alteration of the door.
Because you're hearing our honest, actually established.
I'll come back to me established, you draw up here this morning from Lewis and voluntarily to meet with us, right?
And you know, you're not in custody at this time, correct?
OK.
You know what your rights are?
What do you tell us from the beginning?
Let's go to the 20th.
What are your rights?
What are you doing?
Who are your West?
What kind of things do you tell us?
25th is.
25th is the name before the incident.
Tested the memorial.
The incident.
Tested the memorial.
That's one more of the Monday. OK. 25th. the day before the test move more early. That's one more of the Monday.
25th.
What happened all the while?
I was wondering if my computer was fine.
I kind of set up in Los Angeles.
But kind of the day I've linked to anything.
Went to Dayton, went to
dating into the big rising shop, went to Safeway,
and they're right about two men in Colby.
And we've been asking around doing the paperwork on the horse,
so we talked about that green and yellow mixture on, not testing, no
at all. But yeah, it's pretty easy to say, so I feel important. So we, yeah, she's, I
guess not better than thinking it's not getting better too. And we're healthier apart Hmm.
Now they were getting somewhere.
Divorce you say?
Amicable?
Healthier?
Apart?
You say, perhaps, maybe?
Sounds like a live-in-let-live situation.
According to Murray, that is.
He continued laying out the day, saying that after talking to Amanda, he went and hung out
with his friends before heading home.
He then diverted the topic to someone else who could be the culprit, a militia extremist
he described as shit. But Murray didn't feel he had the capability to
carry out something like the killings and the fires. They were getting
somewhere, but it definitely seemed like Murray was constantly usurping
control, deliberately distracting and confusing the detectives. I mean he's
the smartest guy in the room, don't you know?
Is there a higher RTS structure for the
more like don't you call it, do whatever the fuck you want?
There's nobody in charge of working for the other room.
Now, if I have this clear, so I understand.
Well, the thing is, the car is empty.
Okay, so you got Bobby here, and then you're telling me that Bobby's got some snitches, It was so difficult to get a god damn straight answer and sort through the twisting timeline
that the detective resorted to a whiteboard.
At least he didn't have a map with the pins and ropes connecting everything, I guess.
Like a teacher trying to establish dominance in the classroom, pay attention students,
that only lasted for a few minutes before the whiteboard was no longer effective at all.
Frankly, he ran out of space on it, and detectives were running out of time. anything suspicious and having a few of you be in tail where you can fall where you follow here to see you. You know, you see crazy I don't even know where you're
standing, how old are you, so you know you're not being followed. That's pretty
novel. Yeah, if the I was following me for a while, but pretty sure was going to be
I, wait was it pretty sure? Well, somebody followed me to WSU on Tuesday.
On the back of the day, I was a touchman.
Very much the lowest time you've ever talked to me.
And I came up this way, I had a way to touch me and the part right in front of the old bouquet
between there and K house.
So, I'm...
It's one of the things you're on the phone.
I mean, I didn't, for that.
I mean, I don't worry about it too much I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. It's totally like an action movie.
White van, FBI, being followed, attempts at intimidation, fires, families annihilated, but every possible
lead had to be ascertained as fact or fiction.
So detectives went to the site Murray said he was camping just before the fires, and there
was no evidence that anyone whatsoever had been there.
Next, they started tracking down people people matching the names Murray gave them.
This chase was ridiculous.
One male named Bobby said that his brother Lucas had information of value, but Bobby didn't
want to give out Lucas' phone number.
He wanted to be in control, so he contacted Lucas.
While speaking with Bobby, they learned that he had, in fact,
lived in Russia and was part of the Russian military. After finally locating Lucas, Lucas's
mother came onto the scene and informed police that Lucas and Bobby were not brothers, but
had known each other since pre-high school. She added that Robert is a little bit
mental and never had anything to do with Russia. When detectives checked Murray's phone,
no calls had ever been made to either one of these contacts.
And after the interview, it was found that there was no probable cost for a Ratsmister Murray for three counts of
first-prey murder in reference to East-East-East.
So what would make someone wipe out an entire family of his wife even if he didn't want a divorce?
Was he crazy? Like his wife Amanda emphatically stated the night she pulled into her home to find everything she loved was gone?
Was it simply an act of control?
Murray was unable to let go of Amanda and decided to wipe out everything that stood in the
way of their marriage.
Or did PTSD cause Murray to lose it after being triggered by something or someone. Whatever it was, this scrawny, nerdy killer already had a reputation
to know him was to be terrified of him.
A lot of people have been reluctant to testify because right now there's no guarantee
that Murray is going to be convicted.
Friends and even ex-family described Murray as a man obsessed with guns.
Someone who had often contemplated the steps he would need to take to get away with murder.
Murray called it shooting and scooting.
A man at Constable is so afraid of Roy Murray that today she asked the judge to let her take shelter in the witness stand before Murray was led in a court.
There are a lot of people who are actually very afraid of Roy Murray.
All the witnesses that testified were very afraid of Roy Murray.
All the witnesses that testified were very afraid of Roy Murray, I believe.
Most of them said it, and they said that if you guys don't get him the first time, don't
be thinking you're going to be calling me for another round because you'll never find
me.
It is no wonder witnesses didn't want their faces shown in court.
If this well-armed Doomsday Prepper could take out an innocent family because things weren't going his way,
what else was he capable of?
Residents of Colbert were in fear for their lives. Amanda and Roy Murray were married only a few years before Amanda began noticing controlling
and obsessive behaviors.
She also maintained that Murray had PTSD from his war experience in Iraq. As a veteran, he suffered injuries and was, in fact, diagnosed with PTSD.
Amanda wanted out of the marriage, and her parents were encouraging her to follow through
with a divorce.
She moved back home with her mom, dad, and brother, not realizing that she should cherish every moment of the days leading up to May 25th, 2015,
because those days would be her last ones with them.
That morning she finished an extra shift as a nurse and arrived home to a chaotic scene. The home and barn were on fire.
A woman's shot-up corpse now covered in a yellow blanket.
A deceased male found in the barn
and another found in the house,
all of which were her family members.
She immediately pointed to Roy Murray.
Between 12.30 and 2 o'clock,
but fires didn't get sent until 2 o'clock in the morning.
So the state's theory, and I used it in closing argument,
was that Mr. Murray, who did not know that his wife,
she normally gets home about 12.30 in the morning from her shift.
And on this particular occasion, she wasn't there.
And she got home at 330 in the morning as it was.
She had worked in overtime, and Mr. Murray didn't know that.
So the states there, he was, nobody hangs around a scene in which they've committed three
murders and waits 90 minutes before they set fire to the house and leave
Unless they're waiting for somebody
Roy Murray lay in wait as if he were still at war
Ready to ambush the enemy
But in this case the enemy consisted of three innocent victims
Speculation suggested that Roy's PTSD was to blame, but spocane veterans were
not happy about this conclusion. Here, Dr. Quinn Bastion, Navy veteran and chief of behavioral
health services at Mann Grandstaff VAMC addresses misconceptions about PTSD. PTSD starts with a trauma, something so horrifying, something so awful that it just won't leave you alone.
I want to be really clear about one thing. PTSD does not cause violence. As someone who works for
the VA trying to help veterans every day, it deeply disturbs me when PTSD is brought up whenever
there's a tragic event in the community. PTSD does not cause violence. We know that there are risk factors that cause violence
and PTSD is not high on the list.
At the top of the list for violent behaviors is evil,
pure evil.
Prosecutor Larry Haskell told us
that detectives close to the case voiced their opinions.
Well, the only thing that I can say,
and it wasn't brought up at trial or anything like
that, but of course, you know, we have a lot of discussions with law enforcement as we
prepare for trial.
And we had talked about, you know, some of these behaviors and some of these allegations
by Mr. Murray about involvement of, you know, secret agents and the FSB and that sort of thing.
And one of the detectives told us that in his opinion, and again, he's not a trained medical person
or anything like that, he said, you know, Roy is just diabolically evil.
With all the paranoid ramblings by Roy suggesting secret government involvement, Russian spies
and snitches, it would seem reasonable to assume that Roy may have had other mental health
issues.
Prosecutor Larry Haskell explained why this was probably not the case.
Well, I only get to know what the defense allows me to know about that.
I never heard Mr. Murray speak other than from the interviews that were recorded that
were played for the jury.
There wasn't any obvious indications to a lay person anyway, or certainly to the police
that he was suffering from any mental disabilities. And what the defense knew, they kept to themselves,
but I know I've been doing this job type of work now since 1998.
And I can say that they will not hesitate
to bring a revised code of Washington 10.77 mental health
stay if they suspect that their client is disabled to the point where
they can't assist in their defense or possibly didn't know right from wrong at the time
of the commission of the crime.
There you have it.
Roy Murray is very likely a sane but controlling an evil monster.
Despite his attempts to manipulate the narrative, the evidence was everywhere,
pointing directly at him. After getting a search warrant from Murray's
car, detectives found a Walther P-22 semi-automatic handgun, a box of 22 caliber cartridges, and
blood stains on the driver's seat and floor mat.
At his house and in a shed on Murray's property, more guns, a dozen cellphones, flares, gas,
and many more pieces of evidence making him the culprit.
Although this case was largely circumstantial, two items were essential in linking Roy Murray
to the scene of the crime.
Number one, the special gun loop that no one but the inventor and Murray had access to.
And number two, a gift from Murray to Amanda.
The estranged wife actually couldn't remember the name of the inventor, but remember the name of the inventor's wife.
And she was also to determine what items were missing from the house.
And it was determined that there was only one item that was missing from the house,
which was also helped to tie the case to Roy Murray.
It was a Taurus 38 revolver that he had given as a gift to his wife, and he had expressed
displeasure with her on a previous occasion that she didn't take good care of it, and
he was missing from the house. Interesting that this was never about the money,
given that $3,000 was not missing.
But because Murray was pissed off about the way
Amanda treated the gun he gave her, he stole it,
right after luring her father to the barn and shooting him,
returning to the house to shoot her mother
and brother and torching the place.
Thanks to some good detective work, investigators were able to uncover Roy Murray's deep dark secrets.
For a while there, it looked like Roy Murray had committed the perfect crime.
Three innocent people executed in and around their home, the killer setting a fire to cover his tracks.
With no DNA or fingerprints, Murray's public defenders
asked the jury to acquit their client in what
was a very circumstantial case.
But prosecutors said everything about this divorce
gone bad, implicated Murray as the sole suspect.
Despite hearing four weeks of testimony,
it only took 12 hours of deliberations
for the jury to find Murray guilty, including attempting
to murder his now former wife Amanda.
She was in court today and embraced
the detective who brought her
extra justice.
Murray killed her little brother and
today John Constable's father thanked
prosecutors for their hard work.
This same jury also found the existence
of aggravating factors in all three of
these murders, which means Roy Murray
will now spend the rest of his life in prison.
Murray sentencing now scheduled for January 12th.
The trial took place in November of 2016, and it couldn't have come soon enough for Amanda Constable.
Murray sat motionless and showed little emotion as the judge handed down three life sentences.
Friends and families of the victims
cried as they learned the man convicted of killing their loved ones will spend the rest
of his life behind bars.
Amanda could not have known that her decision to save herself from Roy Murray would cost
her her whole family.
The fear that my family and the people around us experienced, wondering if the monster was just around the next corner, trying to find places to hide.
Terry and Lisa can feel its family found themselves together again, with their two adult children returning to the nest after failed relationships.
Terry and Lisa were said to be madly in love with each other, according to everyone who knew
them.
Terry was an outstanding human being and role model, which made the irony of finding
his firefighters helmet on the ground beneath flickering flames, all the more bitter sweet
on the night of his death.
Terry was able to leave a legacy in his daughter Amanda.
And he also left a legacy through his wisdom in a video he made about his personal philosophy.
Hi, Terry Canfield here. I was watching a video by Brendan Bershard at the High Performance Academy
and he challenged us to make a video that might help change lives And so here's my video and just to give you a little background on me
I've been in the fire service since 1979. I'm a fire lieutenant. I've been a paramedic since 1981 and I don't say that to impress
But to let you know that before the fire service. I've never seen a dead body
And since I've been in the fire service. I have literally been in the presence of thousands of people dying.
And that makes an impact on you.
And I wanted to share what impact it's made on me.
And that's to remind me, reinforce that we are multi-dimensional beings.
We live in the physical world, our physical bodies.
Everything on this side of death is in this body.
And I've been in the trenches trying to deal with injuries
and illnesses for 30 years. We're also mental creatures. We need to exercise our minds as much as
we exercise our bodies. That's what separates us from most of the other animals. We're emotional
beings. And I put these on a scale of ascending order. Emotionally, that's more important to me than physical or mental, because that's the
color of life.
That's what makes life what it is to us.
That's the depth.
And if life to you is just a black and white movie or sepia, you need to stop dying and
start living.
And lastly, we're spiritual beings.
There is something on the other side of death.
I believe that with every atom in my body.
I'm almost at the end of my career
and I wanna stop helping people one emergency at a time.
I wanna get out there and be a catalyst
in changing people's lives.
And if this helps you, you're welcome to it.
And that's this.
Don't take this life too seriously. But don't
ever take it for granted.
Roy Murray took life for granted. Not only the lives of the family he stamped out with no remorse, but his own life as well. He survived war and
the severe physical and mental injuries that it caused only to end up in
prison. That's because he could not exercise control over his anger and his
need for vengeance. If he couldn't have Amanda, no one could. Not only did he refuse to allow
Amanda and her family to move on with their lives and the way they wanted, but he refused to allow them
to live at all. The family's ashes were buried and Amanda's life will forever be altered. That's going to do it.
Thank you for joining us.
We have a new show called Sword and Scale Nightmares.
It's available on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Please check it out if you can.
Thank you so much and stay safe. In my, uh, this is Tony calling from Costa Mesa, California, and I wanted to leave this
voicemail not really for you, but for all the other listeners out there, here you go.
Um, I've got a couple, um, points that I want to make, but for all you guys out there
who are listening to Sword and Scale and listening to it. Any other app
other than the Sword and Scale app you are doing it wrong. Go to the App Store,
download the Sword and Scale app you guys. It's an amazing job building this app.
Got all of the features inside the app. It's amazing. And leave me to my next point.
Get Sword and Scale plus. Sword and Scale plus is amazing. If you guys need to get it, it's so worth it.
It's one of the best subscriptions, not the million subscriptions that I have right now.
Go get Sword and Scale plus. Don't waste any time. Love you Mike.
See you soon when you're doing family to hear more stories.
Alright, bye. Thank you.