The Deck - Richard Chadek III (3 of Clubs Nebraska)
Episode Date: September 11, 2024Our card this week is Richard Chadek III, the 3 of Clubs from Nebraska.When an 11-year-old went missing from a quiet Nebraska suburb in 1986, an entire task force got to work searching for him. But as... days passed by, their hopes for a safe return dwindled, and the unimaginable was confirmed a week after the disappearance. It’s been 38 years since Richard Chadek III was taken in broad daylight… but that doesn’t mean the leads have all dried up. If you have any information regarding the abduction of Richard Chadek in 1986 please contact the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office Tip Line at 402-444-6000. View source material and photos for this episode at: thedeckpodcast.com/richard-chadek-iii Let us deal you in… follow The Deck on social media.Instagram: @thedeckpodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @thedeckpodcast_ | @audiochuckFacebook: /TheDeckPodcast | /audiochuckllcTo support Season of Justice and learn more, please visit seasonofjustice.org.The Deck is hosted by Ashley Flowers. Instagram: @ashleyflowersTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieTwitter: @Ash_FlowersFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AFText Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
Transcript
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Our card this week is Richard Chaddick III, the three of clubs from Nebraska.
In a case where nothing is definitive and everything is suggestive, detectives are facing
the challenge of a lifetime.
Because after 38 years of no answers, they're still hoping for anything that could get them even just
a little bit closer to figuring out what happened to Ricky Chaddock. When Teresa Chattagroom first closed her eyes for a quick Sunday catnap at 5 p.m., she expected
the sound of her 11-year-old son Ricky would wake her up.
He just called saying that he was having so much fun with his friend Tony that he was
going to be a little bit after his curfew.
But don't worry, I'll be home soon, he said.
Except when she did start to wake up about 30 minutes later,
to her surprise, the home around her was eerily quiet.
Now, the first feeling that hit her wasn't panic.
In March of 1986,
constant tabs on your kids just wasn't a thing.
What was a thing, what's still a thing today,
is kids losing track of time.
Or it's even possible Ricky had come home
right after he called,
but when he got there and found his mom asleep,
maybe he thought, well, what's the rush?
And went back out for another ride
around the block on his bike,
or maybe even went back to Tony's,
who only lived about a mile away.
It would have only taken him about 10 minutes
to get from one place to another. Boys will be boys and all of that."
So without an Apple Watch to ping him, Teresa decided to head out to see if she could track
Ricky down herself. There was no sign of him or his bike anywhere on their immediate block,
so she got in her car and followed the route that she knew he took between their house
and Tony's, which included a shortcut through the Omaha National Bank parking lot.
Teresa remembers Ricky liked stopping there
for fun sometimes because it had this money mark,
or ATM machine as we call it today.
He liked to collect those,
at the time they were little card stock receipts
that people would get when they did a transaction at the ATM.
And it was an inside ATM.
And he liked to collect those and he put them in his wallet as if it was money, I guess.
In his mind, it was, you know, money.
Somebody did a transaction to see what their bank balance was and printed on the receipt.
Then he could say, oh, I've got $75 in my account.
When she reached the bank parking lot in search of her son,
something troubling caught Teresa's eye
as she passed the dumpsters in the parking lot.
Lodged between the dumpster and its wooden enclosure
was Ricky's bike, almost like it was meant to be out of sight.
And I backed up and I went, that's Ricky's bike, almost like it was meant to be out of sight. And I backed up and I went, that's Ricky's bike.
Oh my God, that's Ricky's bike.
So I opened the dumpster lid and I'm looking and I'm going, Ricky, are you in there?
Hey, wake up.
Come on.
Let's go.
I'll help you out.
Let's go.
There was no response. And I'm a cop's kid, and I know you don't touch the evidence.
And I looked at how that bike was parked, and I went,
something's not right.
That bike is parked.
Absolutely not touching anything.
It wasn't just that her son's bike was there without its rider.
Theresa knew Ricky wouldn't ever leave his bike behind, and if he did, if he was maybe surprised or forced to.
It's the way it was there that felt so wrong.
She knew her son, her little boy, he'd throw his bike to the side,
prop it up against the nearest large object, which, if he'd been going to the ATM, probably would have been near the front door of the
building, not by the dumpster at the back of the building.
And we actually have an aerial shot of the bank from back in 1986 that you can check
out on the blog post linked out in our show notes for reference.
By this point, I've got alarm bells going off in my head and I'm going, Oh dear, I don't like this. I don't like this at all.
And I started screaming at the top of my lungs,
Richard Frank, get the fard, you get your butt out here now.
You know, the old use all three names on a kid,
they know they're in trouble, so they usually listen.
When Ricky didn't answer to his full given name, Teresa got back in her car, drove home,
and called her dad, Sergeant Bob Chamberlain,
who'd recently retired
from the Omaha Police Department's homicide unit.
In the minute her dad heard what was happening,
he told his daughter to hang up the phone and call 911.
Now.
An officer arrived at her house told his daughter to hang up the phone and call 911. Now.
An officer arrived at her house to take the report shortly after getting the call.
And Teresa had prepared herself to hear what she knew
was so often the response when someone goes missing.
You gotta wait 24 hours before anything can be done.
But whether it was because Ricky was so young,
the way his bike was left behind,
or maybe because law enforcement knew Teresa's dad.
They didn't say what Teresa thought they were going to say.
The officer agreed something was up here, and right away they were thinking foul play.
When we spoke with Deputy Mike Decellis over at the Douglas County Sheriff's Office, he
told us that while he wasn't working Ricky's case way back then,
investigators probably acknowledged pretty quickly
that they would need more resources
than they had accessible to them locally.
I mean, I think that had not so immediately
been determined that it was an abduction.
I'm sure that search teams would have been out
looking at ponds and lakes, you know,
drainage features in the area, sewers, all that, but it was pretty apparent.
Really, you have it right there, day one,
eight hours after the initial missing persons report.
What sure sounds like an abduction.
About 24 hours after Ricky's disappearance,
investigators released a statewide broadcast,
and not long after that, FBI and State Patrol
had joined local law enforcement to create a task force entirely dedicated to finding Ricky.
But you want to know what's maybe more powerful than a missing persons case with three investigating agencies?
A missing persons case with three investigating agencies, plus a grandfather who is a retired homicide sergeant hitting the streets, knocking on every door himself.
As Bob Chamberlain was door knocking away, he made sure to deliver anything even sort of worth
following up on over to the active authorities. Obviously, he's not going to sit around and wait
for somebody to approve over time for someone to go and start knocking on doors. It's his grandson, he's doing that himself. So he notifies Omaha police that he had talked
with an individual at 41st and Valley.
He explains to these police officers that this witness
who he's identified lives at a house that has direct line
of sight more or less to the bank.
Detectives went and talked to this witness,
a woman named Dawn, who did in fact have pretty good visibility of the bank from her house.
And Dawn told detectives that she had seen something yesterday that
didn't originally clock as suspicious, but now it was super concerning.
What Dawn saw was a young boy ride into the bank parking lot,
and she was sitting in the car with a man in the back seat. What Dawn saw was a young boy ride into the bank parking lot on his bike sometime around
5.30 p.m.
And not long after, she noticed a pickup truck pull in behind him.
When the truck stopped, the boy wheeled his bike over.
And while Dawn couldn't be 100% sure of the timing of everything, because she was also
paying attention to her own kid's play out front, she thought the truck was there for
maybe like five minutes.
And during that time, she didn't see the boy actually get into the truck, which she said
was a light to medium blue, maybe a Ford with wood sideboards.
But she said when the truck drove away, she got a glimpse of the driver, and she described
him as a quote, large built white male in his 40s with dark hair, end quote.
And this truck, Dawn wasn't the only one to mention
this blue truck to investigators.
Pretty much all of the key witnesses they spoke to
claimed that they saw a pickup truck that afternoon.
Now the truck was varying in age and mate,
but everyone agreed that it was some shade of blue. Some witnesses even claimed that they saw the truck was varying in age and mate, but everyone agreed that it was some shade of blue.
Some witnesses even claimed that they saw the truck hanging around the area looking suspicious beforehand.
Now Deputy Decellis chalked some of these statements up to confirmation bias.
Because when you start looking for something, or you even just become aware of it, you start finding it everywhere.
So ultimately, while it all seemed promising, there was really no way for
investigators to tell if these sightings were linked to the same blue truck that
Dawn saw at the bank.
But then, a local firefighter who'd been on duty at a station across the street
from the bank came forward and said that he saw who he thought could have been
Ricky and a blue truck in the bank parking lot sometime around 5.30 p.m. on the
afternoon of the 23rd, which would have been right around the same time that Dawn said she saw this,
too. And by this point, investigators were pretty used to hearing similar versions of this same
event from other witnesses, so they started to ask him more and more questions to see if there
was anything unique about his story. And something he said piqued their interest.
He said the boy was wearing glasses and his clothes reminded him of Rambo.
Before Ricky went missing, he was last seen wearing a blue vest and a camo shirt and pants.
Not unusual for Ricky, camo was a large part of the G.I. Joe loving 80s boys wardrobe.
So there was actually a really strong chance that this guy could have seen Ricky in the
parking lot shortly before he went missing.
But more than what he saw, it's what this firefighter heard that became important.
He told investigators that he heard what sounded like a little girl yelling,
Help!
But at the time, he knew there were kids playing nearby, so he figured it was just one of them
kind of horsing around.
Now though, everything had taken on a more ominous tone.
It was entirely feasible that this voice the firefighter overheard could have been that
of an 11-year-old boy.
An actual cry for help.
By the end of that first day, even though none of the witnesses they spoke to could
actually 100% confirm that they saw Ricky getting into a blue truck in that bank parking
lot, detectives felt pretty confident that Ricky had most likely been abducted.
So investigators reviewed the ATM machine's surveillance footage in hopes of getting a
better look at things.
But keep in mind, this was the 80s, so the best they got was this super grainy VHS footage
from the Money Mart.
And as you can expect, it wasn't very helpful.
But there was one clip time stamped at 5 23 p.m.
that stood out to them.
The video showed what appeared to be a kid on a bike.
And I'm using the word appeared super loosely
because if you were to look at it now, you'd
probably describe it more like a dark, shadowy image with no real defining features.
However, based on everything we know that likely went down, you could make an educated
guess that it's maybe the shadow of a kid that they presumed could have possibly been
Ricky.
Detectives also went and checked the activity
from the ATM machine itself.
The investigation included contacting everyone
who used that ATM several hours time span,
investigating any other video
that was available from the bank.
Was this somebody who comes to the bank frequently?
Does staff know him?
These were all things that were investigated
and produced nothing.
Investigators kept asking themselves, how was it possible that someone could just grab Ricky in broad daylight in a parking lot of a frequented bank off a busy road without anyone seeing or
hearing it at all? The only way this made sense would be if someone coaxed Ricky to get into their truck willingly.
So law enforcement turned their investigation to those who may have been within the Chatticks'
inner circle at one point or another.
You know, mother and father weren't together, but by all accounts, it was a good family.
Dad's in the Army Station at Fort Polk in Louisiana.
Just a standard question.
Is there custody dispute?
Would he have come here and kidnapped him?
She said, basically, no way.
I obviously gave them every guy that I'd ever dated.
Now, mind you, my husband was the second guy I had ever dated.
And I think I'd had four or five boyfriends since then.
But there was one guy in particular that Teresa remembered because of some really weird stuff he'd said.
You know, he actually said to me one night,
Well, can't you, can't you put your son back where he came from?
And I went, what, back in my stomach?
What? And he goes, well, yeah, this is the guy I dated.
That was the last night we discussed anything. I said, I think it's time for you to leave.
Major ick. And while we know investigators interviewed at least one of Teresa's male
acquaintances, we actually can't be sure if it was the same guy
that Teresa remembers being odd.
Maybe something to follow up on these days,
but back then, they were moving on.
Eight days later and about 20 miles away,
police's investigation caught one of their biggest leads
they were hoping wouldn't come.
On March 31st, 1986, just a half hour from the Omaha National Bank,
a farmer was out plowing his field in Douglas County when he found Ricky.
He was laying face down in a ditch about 20 to 30 feet from the paved rural road.
I had, you know, five big burly guys all of a sudden in the house,
and I already had an FBI agent in the corner of my dining room.
And he would just sit there all day, just taking quiet notes.
My dad said, we need to talk to you.
And, and I looked at him and I said, this is the serif department.
Oh, so you're bringing in a new department.
Yay.
Thank you.
I'm so appreciative that you're,
I'm still thinking that we're still in the mode of
looking and that everything's progressing and we're bringing in more
departments to help look. And my dad says,
I need you to sit down. I need you to sit down now.
And it dawned on me.
And I knew.
And I started for the back door.
I said, no, no, no, no, no.
And I collapsed to the chair,
about halfway to the back door.
I was gonna run.
I just wanted to go.
And they sat me down at the chair and they made me listen.
And I don't remember a whole lot after that.
After that, it was kind of me screaming in my head,
no, no, no, no, no.
But it was real.
Ricky was found in the same clothes Teresa reported him missing in.
A long-sleeved camo button-up, camo pants, a blue vest,
and maroon Velcro strapped shoes.
Everything appeared to be buttoned up
and in its proper place.
He didn't look disheveled or anything.
And actually, it was more than just not looking disheveled.
Ricky looked damn near pristine.
At the time his body was found,
Ricky had been missing for eight days.
So detectives were expecting to find his body
and clothes in a certain state.
Everything that I've read in these reports
just really indicates clothes were freshly laundered.
You know, he was probably showered.
Like literally all of Ricky's clothes appeared to have been washed, underwear included.
And maybe this was done a little out of self-preservation to clean any forensic evidence off of him.
But detectives wondered if there wasn't more to it.
If the person who took Ricky tried to do whatever sick version they considered to be taking
care of him during the time they held him captive. And this theory gained more traction when they did Ricky's
autopsy.
He was fed something that would be consistent with like a healthy meal, you know,
something you would have on like Easter or something like that.
This was important because detectives wondered if Ricky could have been killed
on Easter Sunday,
exactly one week after he was taken, on Palm Sunday.
Detectives didn't know if these religious dates held some kind of deeper meaning,
or if Easter was even the exact day he died.
But it's something worth noting.
Now I say that they wondered because even though they had Ricky's body,
they couldn't get an exact time of death.
While it was clear to detectives that Ricky couldn't have been killed right after he was abducted,
they still couldn't quite tell how long he'd been deceased.
According to the autopsy report, the examiner estimated that Ricky was only dead for a day or
so before he'd been found. Definitely less than three, but that's about as exact as they could get.
he'd been found, definitely less than three, but that's about as exact as they could get.
They said his body didn't show any signs of obvious trauma, like any gunshot or stab wounds, or even defensive wounds.
And curiously, there were no marks indicating that he'd been restrained either.
But there were visible ligature marks around Ricky's neck, though the hyoid bone that's typically
broken in a violent strangulation was not broken in his case.
And this mattered to the Emmy because it seemed like, and it doesn't even feel like I should be saying this in the same sentence,
but to them it seemed like the killer was quote unquote gentle.
The report claimed quote, the ligature used to strangle Ricky was not applied with any degree of force, end quote.
So all of this still left detectives with a lot of unknowns. Unknowns about the murder weapon,
and unknowns about hard things to talk about. I don't know that there's enough evidence to
ever establish whether it was rope, wire, anything along those lines, but something of a similar
size and shape.
The body was in the early processes of decomposition.
I don't know if swabs were a standard part of the process at that day and age.
All I know is that there was never any definitive evidence of a sexual assault.
Investigators at the scene had taken time to carefully wrap Ricky's hands and feet
in brown paper, though during the autopsy nothing substantial was found.
Except a single dark hair on Ricky's finger that did not look like it belonged to him.
Police were hoping more physical evidence would come from the scene itself, either where
Ricky had been found or his bike that had been left at the bank.
But the bike was a quick bust.
They tried to pull prints,
but Deputy DeChalis says they weren't able
to pull a single suspect print off of it.
We can't even be sure the killer
actually touched the bike or not.
Meanwhile, Douglas County Sheriff's deputies,
along with the FBI, were collecting a bunch of stuff
around the scene where Ricky's body was found.
Specifically, they were hoping to find whatever was used to strangle Ricky.
Going through the property sheets, you know, it's a rural road.
There are farmers driving past with hay bales, I'm sure, all the time.
An extensive search of all of the surrounding roadways was done.
Every piece of string or rope that ever fell off of somebody's truck or car was collected.
There's no way to identify whether or not any of it had evidentiary value.
They pretty much grabbed all the litter around just to be safe.
That included some cigarette butts nearby, hoping they could get something from them if it was possible that they may have belonged to the killer.
Investigators also collected samples of grass and dirt for reference, for maybe potential
forensic analysis.
Plus they got a plaster cast of a tire track nearby, even though it was partially off the
road and not very good quality.
During their search, they also found the backpack that Ricky had on him the day he went missing.
It was located about seven to eight feet away from his body near a tree.
And while most everything that should have been inside was there and accounted for,
there was one thing that was missing.
Something Ricky's killer might still have today.
still have today. The only thing that was never recovered was a wooden box with a latch on it.
There's a very detailed description.
It's something that everyone's always kept in the back of their mind, well, if we could
find somebody who kept this. Detectives were a week or so in,
and they didn't have a whole lot to show for it
in the way of evidence.
A single hair and a missing box.
And Teresa had far less.
As she prepared for her only child's funeral,
she made sure they focused on remembering Ricky
for the fun loving life he lived, not the way he died.
You know, he just, he was a very loving kid, and if he heard somebody like something,
he would go out of his way and spend his own money to get it for them if he could,
and just bring them smiles. So it's always gratifying to know that you raised a good kid.
It's always gratifying to know that you raised a good kid." Ricky was into dinosaurs and Transformers, and especially Legos.
He even kept some in his backpack for when he was ready to build.
Specifically, in that little wooden box.
But what Ricky really loved was G.I. Joe, thus inspiring his signature camo attire.
Ricky would even record himself singing the G.I.
Joe song alongside the TV.
And Teresa was actually willing to share one of those tape recordings that she found in
the basement with us from a long time ago. P.I.J.C. P.I.J.C. P.I.J.C. P.I.J.C. P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C.
P.I.J.C. P.I.J.C. P.I.J.C. P.I.J.C. P.I.J.C. for Teresa and justice for Ricky. Detectives turned to DMV records,
looking for that mysterious blue truck,
while at the same time,
scoping out the Chatticks neighborhood.
Those include known or suspected child molesters.
Obviously, I don't know how long the task force
was up and running.
It's not something that can run indefinitely
when there's no longer anything to be gained from it.
There was a child molester and council bluffs across the Missouri River.
He had the motive, but not necessarily the means.
Then there was a priest at a boys school nearby.
He didn't seem to have any convictions,
but he did have some predatory allegations made against him by a former employee.
The boys school owned a truck that looked similar to the blue truck that keeps popping
up in this story, and the priest would have had access to it.
Now this connection wasn't just made because this school was nearby either.
Apparently, Ricky had actually attended summer camp at this boys' school at some point in
the past.
And before you ask, what allegations Ashley?
Well, I wish I knew, but
unfortunately those details aren't available to us.
And Deputy Decellis couldn't give us the priest's name since he was never
officially labeled a suspect.
I do know that detectives got search warrants for the boys school, but
no evidence was ever found that tied this priest to Ricky's case.
Very few leads trickled in after that one.
In December 1987, about a year and a half after his murder, the FBI came up with a profile
of Ricky's killer.
A profile is always a best guess, not something that should be written in stone and used at
the exclusion of all other sussy suspects.
But in my opinion, they tend to be pretty insightful.
And here were some of the big key takeaways in this one.
The FBI said this was probably a white man in his late 20s to early 30s who was above
average intelligence, maybe even sought out higher education.
His job would likely be white collar, one that got him some respect.
And while he was probably a loner,
he's someone who presents as kind and genuine.
The kind of guy that if and when people ever found out
he did this, they would be shocked
and say that they could have never imagined it.
That same kindness and genuineness
would have come across to police
who the FBI theorized had likely already interviewed him, maybe as a witness.
They said that he'll be cooperative and show affection for Ricky,
because he probably was familiar with him in some way.
And it's very possible that Ricky was familiar with this person in return.
It would explain why he would have gone with him,
why the assailant didn't have
to use restraints to keep him close to a whole week. But at a minimum, this person had the
ability to watch Ricky, even if Ricky didn't know them. They had to know where he played,
his routine. So no matter what, this person was a local. Specifically, someone who lived
or worked near the area where Ricky was taken from. They said he didn't wanna kill Ricky, but because of his roots within the community,
because of the way people see him, he felt he had to.
But make no mistake, they said he wasn't someone who actually felt real love for
Ricky, and that's evidence, they said, by the way he dumped him.
Once Ricky was dead, the fantasy was over.
Once this case went cold and the task force was disbanded,
individual agencies continued to follow up
on any leads that came their way.
Sometimes in coordination with each other,
sometimes individually.
Basically Omaha washed their hands of it
because somebody had to take over and it
was us. And we're talking like in the 2000s that this happened.
You know, it was 2010 that they went and got all the physical evidence so that
could all be maintained in one spot.
When Ricky's case was passed off to the Douglas County Sheriff's Office, there
was an individual noted in the reports that stood out.
According to the Omaha World Herald,
this guy had actually come onto Omaha detective's radars
back in the early days of the investigation,
seemingly around the same time
that the FBI profile was done.
And these suspicions were all surrounding a man
named Charles Miller.
Certain things about Charles Miller
really aligned with the FBI profile.
Job, familiarity with the neighborhood, lived in proximity to the abduction site, check, check, check.
At least until the mid-70s.
You see, Charles was a Douglas County Sheriff's Reserve deputy.
And in the mid-70s, he was released from that position when reporting by Terry Hyland and Nick Schinker says he was arrested for, quote,
contributing to the delinquency of boys, end quote.
Basically, he gave these minors marijuana and let them watch adult films.
And in 1986, the same year Ricky was murdered, he'd sexually assaulted two teen boys in a rural area.
And that area was just less than an hour away from Omaha.
And that area was just less than an hour away from Omaha. He had a home in South Omaha, not particularly close to the bank.
And again, he also had this family farm property that did have a structure on it with an alleged
history of sexual offenses having occurred at both locations.
And that farm was significantly west of Omaha.
Even with all of these things,
plus the fact that Charles failed a polygraph
when detectives at the time interviewed him,
there were so many things
that didn't make Charles the perfect suspect.
Like, did he have access to a blue truck?
Deputy Decellis doesn't know.
What stood out to me about him
was the fact that he was a confirmed pedophile preying on males,
and that he had a rural property with a structure in which a child could have been detained for an extended period of time.
Sometime around 2020, detectives looked to see if Miller's DNA had been uploaded to CODIS.
And it had been, back in 2006.
Now at some point in the years following Ricky's murder,
a DNA profile was able to be pulled from that hair
found on his body.
And that had also been uploaded to CODIS in 2010.
So they were able to confirm
that it was not a match to Miller.
Besides Miller, there was also another guy
that caught DeCellis' attention
as he was going through Ricky's case files for himself,
starting around 2020-ish.
The long and short of what got recorded in the report
is that this individual was just sitting at a bar
and a guy just happened to come in, sit down next to him,
start talking to him about child pornography,
and then makes reference to,
won't commit to saying he said he killed Ricky Chadwick,
but made statements that I interpreted in that light.
I don't think that he ever got any attention.
I think he got missed by the people
who were in a position to recognize it
because they were focused on other things.
But that being said, it's an imperfect world,
and something like this is a lot to manage.
So, Blue Sky, that's what I wish I could do,
is go back and talk to that guy.
But he can't, because unfortunately,
the guy who came forward only partially identified this man.
So detectives don't have a name to go off of.
Ultimately, detectives were just in a holding pattern
for the next couple of years.
Deputy Decellis said scientific standards have changed so much
that current policies don't even allow for their hair
to be run against the CODIS database anymore
because there isn't a strong enough profile for it to be uniquely identified.
That is very partial.
That is maybe 50% of what you would need to upload this
as a suspect DNA sample into the relevant federal systems
that do that.
It is useful for the purpose of comparison
to a particular known suspect.
You cannot rule somebody completely in with five loci. You could rule them
out, assuming that we are considering it as suspect DNA. Because with those few points of comparison,
you may have a perfect match to those five, and then the other ones that we don't know about
might be completely wrong. So you can't say 100% yes. You could say 100% no if a match is definitively not made.
At least to DeCellis' understanding of things,
there was likely some amount of root on that hair,
since there was enough to get a partial profile
to upload to CODIS back in the day.
Investigators held onto hope with that hair for some time.
But unfortunately, the entire sample was exhausted
during testing and nothing remains of it.
So they can't go back to see if they can get a better profile
with newer technology.
And the truth is, we can't even be sure
it belonged to Ricky's killer though.
It's totally possible the crime scene had been contaminated.
Maybe that hair came from someone in law enforcement,
or even a random person not involved in the case at all.
Honestly, with DNA technology being in its infancy at the time,
we're lucky investigators back then even thought to take the steps they did
to preserve what they'd found.
So without the hair, they continued to test evidence that they found at the scene,
like Ricky's backpack. Mostly, they were hoping for some kind of touch DNA.
We sent the backpack,
which had less biological contamination
than the clothes he was wearing,
to a partner agency for an mVac.
As of around 2023, no genetic profile
has been identified from that testing.
Over the years, Teresa has heard so many different theories.
Some she puts stock into, others not so much.
There's just so many unknowns, but nonetheless,
she brings every potential lead to detectives.
But time and time again,
they tell her all of those theories have been ruled out.
But while writing this episode,
I brought one to Tichellus myself.
It's funny how sometimes you don't see something
till you like get it all down on paper.
And listen, it is a long shot,
but it felt too weirdly coincidental
to at least not mention.
And let me know if this sounds familiar to you.
It might if you listened to Crime Junkie.
A man's driving around in the mid-to-late 80s in a blue truck, abducting children around
Easter time.
Then that child is found in a ditch days later near farmland.
Immediately, April Tinsley came to mind.
For those of you who don't know, April was abducted and killed two years after Ricky
in Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Her case went unsolved until 2018 when Genealogy helped identify her killer
as a local man, John D Miller.
I had our reporter connect with Detective Martin,
who's the Fort Wayne detective that helped put John Miller away for
April's murder.
The only public reports I can pull for Miller don't start until 2002, so I have no idea if he had any ties to Nebraska back in the 80s.
Could he have lived there?
I don't know, what did he do for work?
Almost nothing about this guy was reported on after his arrest.
When we pinged Martin, we got a simple answer back from him.
He said Miller was in Indiana in 86.
A little more detail might have scratched the itch for me, but
Decellis still seemed interested.
Although even I'll admit, if you look at the FBI profile and that ends up being right,
there's a lot that doesn't work about John Miller.
Or at least, I don't think so.
I don't know enough about him to really say.
The one other thing the Douglas County Sheriff's Office
did fairly recently was try to pull literally anything useful
from the surveillance footage from back in the day.
Maybe they could enhance, enhance, enhance
like they do on episodes of Criminal Minds,
but this isn't TV.
Unfortunately, the tape wasn't viable after all this time
and all they got was static.
So they only have that
grainy shadowy picture from the 80s to work with. That doesn't mean that leads
have completely dried up. We continue to follow up on whatever leads we get from
the public. Just a couple weeks ago I got an unsigned letter that had initially
gone to FBI naming somebody who I I don't know, I'm
continuing to look into it.
Ricky's mom, Teresa, Deputy Decellis, and the entire Omaha community just want to know
why. Why Ricky? Teresa needs to know why. And she struggled all these years not knowing
what happened to him. I had to go to one of my friends and ask her, am I still a mom?
Do I still get to celebrate Mother's Day?
And she, God love her, she grabbed me up and she said, absolutely, you are going to be
a mother until the end of your days. You are always a mother.
Because I felt like I was no longer a mom.
I was no longer entitled to that because I had lost my son.
It was awful.
But she was so strong and she absolutely, she still to this day sends, be mother, stay card and reassures me I really am a mom.
Teresa says she has this message for whoever may have done this,
or for anyone who knows who murdered her only child.
At this point in time, there is probably nothing that's really going to make me happy about this case. It would make me be able
to sleep a little better to know that whoever did this never went on and hurt another child
in their life and be sure that they never slip up and from this point forward hurt another child and never plunge
another family into heartache and trauma like this person did to my family.
I'd like to know they're off the street.
That I guess would be the most comfort I could take at this point in time.
At least they're off the street and they can't do it to somebody else's child.
There are very few paths forward in this case if someone doesn't decide to finally tell
the truth.
The tiniest bit of information could blow this thing wide open.
So if you know anything, please contact the Douglas County Sheriff's Office tip line
at 402-444-6000.
The Deck is an AudioChuck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis.
To learn more about The Deck and our advocacy work, visit thedeckpodcast.com.
So what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?