The Deck - Ada Haradine (3 of Clubs, Indiana)
Episode Date: October 4, 2024Our card this season is Ada Haradine, the 3 of Clubs from Indiana."The Deck Investigates" returns with Season 2, delving deep into the perplexing case of Ada Haradine, a 40-year-old mother of two who ...vanished without a trace from her Elkhart, Indiana home on a seemingly ordinary Wednesday afternoon in May 1985. Over 14 gripping episodes, we'll meticulously reconstruct the events leading up to Ada's disappearance, explore the initial efforts to find her and the myriad of suspects and theories that emerged in the wake of her vanishing. The investigation takes a dramatic turn when Ada's remains are discovered three years later in a wooded area 12 miles from her home, transforming a missing persons case into a homicide investigation. As law enforcement scrambles to make sense of new evidence, the focus shifts to surprising potential suspects, including Ada's neighbor. Through exclusive interviews with family members, law enforcement, and key witnesses, "The Deck Investigates" grapples with questions about the challenges of pursuing justice decades after a crime. Join us as we peel back the layers of this baffling cold case, reexamine old leads, and shine a light on overlooked details in the quest to finally answer the question: Who killed Ada Haradine, and why? Listen and follow to Season 2 of The Deck Investigates on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts! Find more of The Deck Investigates on social media.Instagram: @thedeckpodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @thedeckpodcast_ | @audiochuckFacebook: /TheDeckPodcast | /audiochuckllc The Deck Investigates is hosted by Ashley Flowers. Instagram: @ashleyflowersTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieTwitter: @Ash_FlowersFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at (317) 733-7485 to share your thoughts about the case, discuss all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ada Haradine was a quiet woman who lived a quiet life in a quiet neighborhood with her
family.
It was the kind of neighborhood that lulls you into believing it's immune to evil.
Yes, a mother six months before and 50 miles away in Argus, Indiana had been attacked in
her home in front of her girls and taken away by a crazed killer still on the loose at the time.
But if that news even reached Ada in Elkhart, Indiana, it surely felt a long way off
as she worked outside in the yard one warm May day in 1985.
A next-door neighbor waved to Ada. Another passed her on his afternoon walk at 310.
She opened the mailbox and there was a ski magazine that had come.
As I'm pulling out, backing out of the driveway,
she holds up the ski magazine like,
you know, summer's coming.
By 320, Ada was gone.
Nobody's seen anything, and there were people out that day.
Everybody says, oh, yeah, it was a nice day,
really warm, and we were out.
I seen her in the backyard. I talked to her across the fence.
Just seemed so out of whack.
I mean, that's not the type of neighborhood
where you get abductions.
It was a high dollar neighborhood.
A lot of influential people live there.
Everything was as it's supposed to be.
Your purse was there.
All of those things.
Nothing to indicate that there had been
any sort of crime or struggle there.
We hadn't been there too long when the main detective
from the Elkhart Police Department came in.
Immediately, his reaction was not one of concern,
particularly.
He said, oh, they probably had an argument,
and she just went off someplace.
And all four of us said, no, that's not Ada.
She's not like that.
Our problem was we didn't have any idea
what had happened to her other than she wasn't there.
As the people were interviewed,
we realized that we didn't know anything.
It's hard to have a direction when you're directionless.
They basically told us a few days into it,
we don't have any good suspects in this case.
I think we kind of resolved ourselves to the fact
that it happened and I just prayed and prayed and prayed that somebody would find her body.
It took three years, but some ten miles away in a densely wooded area, someone did eventually find Ada.
My dad said, we've got some news about your mom. I need to talk to you about it.
And he said, they found your mom's remains.
And it floored me.
I think part of you always thinks
you're going to see her again until somebody tells you
you're not.
The mystery of where Ada had been was finally solved.
But finding her only compounded the questions.
Questions about what happened the last day she was seen.
The noise in the house has always bothered me.
And I always thought it was somebody in there,
and they got caught, and they couldn't get out.
So they had to sit up there and wait,
and then whatever happened, happened.
Questions about how Ada ended up where she was in the condition they found her.
If she had clothing, where's her belt buckle?
Where's the eyelets on the shoes?
Where's the buttons?
None of that stuff shows up.
So you got to assume she's probably naked at that spot.
And questions about what was really happening in Ada's life before someone took it.
I always thought we were a perfect family. And you know, they all they get, nobody's
perfect. No family is perfect.
The facts are strange.
This case is full of weird stuff.
The players, even stranger.
Obviously it's still unsolved.
But again, all we can do is try.
Well, I think it's wasted effort, not effort.
In my experience, digging in and asking questions has never been a wasted effort.
And it certainly wasn't in the case of Ada Herodot.
Season 2 of The Deck Investigates is coming soon.
Follow the show so you don't miss new episodes on Friday, October 4th.
Available wherever you listen to podcasts.