True Crime with Kendall Rae - The True Crime Story Behind “When a Stranger Calls”
Episode Date: October 5, 2023This is the real story of a crime that inspired the movie When a Stranger Calls. Donate to NCMEC through my campaign! https://give.missingkids.org/campaign/kendall-rae/c438796 Check out Kendall's ot...her podcasts: The Sesh & Mile Higher Follow Kendall! YouTube Twitter Instagram Facebook Mile Higher Zoo REQUESTS: General case suggestion form: https://bit.ly/32kwPly Form for people directly related/ close to the victim: https://bit.ly/3KqMZLj Discord: https://discord.com/invite/an4stY9BCN CONTACT: For Business Inquiries - kendall@INFAgency.com
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We'll get back to your podcast after this break.
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and if you haven't seen the movie,
I'll give you a quick rundown.
Basically, there's a babysitter at this house,
and while she's babysitting,
she keeps getting calls from a stranger,
and they keep saying,
...
...
Bobby?
Have you checked the children? What?
Hello?
Have you checked the children?
Hello?
Have you checked the children?
Hello? It's me. to check the children. The Children's Day Hello.
It's me.
And I won't give away what happens in the movie,
but it's very scary.
But today I'm going to tell you the true story
behind when a stranger calls.
However, I will let you know that it is quite different.
Oftentimes when movies are based on a true story,
they are often dramaticized a lot.
And that is definitely the case here. It really is not that similar to the movie.
But it is a very interesting case, and I think you guys will have a lot of thoughts and opinions on this one,
so let's get into it. So this is Janet Christman. She was born on March 21, 1936 in Booneville,
Missouri. She was the oldest daughter of Charles and Luna Christman and she had a younger sister named Rita Christman Smith
and also a newborn sister named Cheryl Christman.
The family lived in Booneville for a while,
but eventually they moved to Columbia, Missouri.
They were known as a really nice family,
really good people and they were known in their community
for owning a restaurant, which was called
Ernie's Cafe and Steakhouse
and they lived in the upper floor of that building.
So at the time that all of this happens, Janet is 13 years old and in eighth grade.
Just at the age where someone may start to babysit or maybe do mom's helping.
Like I said, Janet was a very nice well-liked person.
She was very good in school, and she was also highly involved in her church.
She was even in the church choir, and she had a great singing voice.
She was also very smart, and in her spare time she liked to play the piano so just mellow, nice girl.
Janet was also known to be a very hard worker because growing up her family sometimes struggled
and that really taught her to work hard in life and to earn the things that she wanted. So Janet
was a normal teenager living a normal life up until March 1950. So it was a
Saturday evening, March 18th, and that night her school had like a dance party for the students.
I guess just a dance. Janet was originally planning to go to this, but she got an offer to babysit,
and she couldn't turn down a babysitting job, and she really liked to babysit as well. She actually
only babysat for these two families. Her parents were very protective of her,
so they only let her babysit for people
that they trusted and knew.
And the two families are the Romacks and the Mewers.
And on this evening,
she was going to be babysitting for the Romack family
and for their three-year-old son named Gregory.
The parents' names were Ed and Ann,
and they were really fond of Janet.
They really trusted her as well and really liked her.
And like I said, Janet was excited to babysit
because she liked kids,
but also because she wanted to make some money.
She was actually saving up for this burgundy suit
that she wanted to wear on Easter.
So Janet showed up at their house around 7.30 pm
ready to babysit.
And their family lived in a really rural area,
very isolated.
Their address is 1015 Stewart Road,
which is directly on the outskirts of Columbia. So as you can imagine, this house is very isolated. Theradris' 1015 Stuart Road, which is directly on the outskirts of Columbia.
So as you can imagine, this house is very dark
and would be a bit scary to babysit at.
I think I was always freaking myself out
when I was babysitting.
It didn't really matter where I was, honestly.
At the time this family only had one kid, Gregory,
but Ann was pregnant with their second
and so they really wanted to have some me time
before she had the baby
and so they were very excited to go out on this date night. And when Janet arrived, they showed her how
their son really liked to fall asleep to the radio at night. I actually always did this as a kid
radio Disney super annoying. And I wonder why I have to fall asleep with the TV on to this day.
We'll get back to your podcast after this break.
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with the help of Roger Sports and Media.
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And then Ed shall Janet how to use his shotgun,
how to unload it, load it, how to use it, everything.
Pretty much gave her a quick gun lesson
and then put it by the front door just in case anything happened. As they were leaving, they told her to make sure the
door was locked, obviously not to let anyone in, if anyone came to the door to turn on the porch light,
and then they left and went on their date. So the weather was already bad that night, but throughout
the evening, it started to get a lot worse. The temperature was in the mid-20s and they were
storm, sleet, hail. So
it's quite a spooky night to be babysitting at such a young age out in this
isolated house. So then at 10.35 that night a frantic call came into the police
department of a woman who was just screaming in sheer panic and she was saying
come quick. The officer that had answered the call was named Ray McCowon and
unfortunately there was nothing he could do in this situation because back then
they did not have any sort of way to trace the call easily. It's kind of wild
thinking about how much things have changed. It definitely makes you feel very
grateful for modern technology in these situations but back then it was a very
complicated process to trace a phone number and get an address.
It could take hours. And what was crazy is they didn't even have a switchboard to trace this phone
call back at the police station. The switchboard was somewhere else. And there was no one working
the switchboard that night. So there was nothing anyone could do because the call was cut short
before he could even ask for an address. So imagine being this guy, you just got this frantic call, clearly someone's in horrific
trouble and you can't do anything to help them.
You don't even know where they are.
That night, Anne and Ed had actually gone out with the other family that Janet would babysit
for the Mueller family, so they were all together and they were at the Moon Valley Villa.
And she decided to call back to the house
and check on Janet, see how everything's going. I mean, her son's pretty young. The baby sitter's
pretty young. Just wants to make sure everything's going good, but no one picked up the phone,
which initially freaked Ann out, but she thought maybe it's possible that it was off the hook.
She shared herself that everything was probably fine and went back to join the group. And then they
ended up spending a few more hours out thinking everything was fine.
And they actually stayed out until about 1.15, they finally headed home and got back to the
house at 1.35.
Now, when they got home, they immediately noticed that the porch light was on, which they
had left off and told Janet to only turn it on if someone came to the door, which automatically
concerned them.
They also noticed that all the front window blinds
are open and that seems kind of strange to them.
So they start heading to the front door
and they're fiddling around looking for their keys.
When all of a sudden they realize the doors are already unlocked.
And this concerned them as well
because they told Janet to keep the door locked.
And maybe you're not thinking the worst at that point,
maybe they're thinking that she had a boy over to the house or invited a friend over or something like that. But then they
walked in and saw a horrific scene. Janet was laying right there when you opened the door on the
living room floor, on the shag carpet, and a pool of blood covered in bruises, clearly not alive.
Not only had she been murdered, she had also been sexually assaulted.
She was found with her legs spread apart
with one slipper on her foot.
She had a really serious head injury.
She had clearly been hit with some type of blunt object.
Not only that, she had multiple puncture wounds,
but from a mechanical pencil.
I have never heard of that in a case.
There was also a cord that was cut from an electric iron
that was tightly wrapped around her neck,
so she had clearly been strangled.
And their landline phone was found off the hook,
laying on the floor, just a few feet away from her.
So she had clearly made that call to the dispatch
right before she was attacked.
So of course, as soon as they saw Janet,
and runs upstairs to check on her son and luckily Gregory was found
Completely unharmed actually still fast asleep. So of course they immediately called the police and this was a pretty crazy case for back then
So they were multiple detectives there and bloodhounds were there as well and inside the home
There were clear signs that Janet had tried to fight off her attacker
There were blood smears and fingerprints found in the walls
of the living room and also near their back door,
which had been left open, actually.
The bloodhounds were able to pick up a scent
of the attacker and they were actually able to track it
all the way up the street about a mile before they lost it.
So they think this person was on foot
and then they also found footprints near the back window
of the house, which had been shattered.
And it was shattered with a garden hoe
that was normally kept inside of the house,
which is very odd.
So one thing that really complicates this case
is that the house was located in an area
that had police departments from two jurisdictions
overseeing it.
So departments from two different jurisdictions
showed up and they had completely different opinions on what happened at the crime scene. The main
thing that they disagreed about was how the killer got into the house. One jurisdiction thought that
Janet let them into the house because she may have known this person. Maybe it was someone that
she was friendly with, someone she trusts. This theory is backed up by the fact that Ed had told her specifically to turn on the porch light
if someone came to the door.
So it makes you think that someone came through the door,
but that doesn't explain the window.
They also don't think Janet would have opened the door
for someone she didn't know.
Also that shotgun was completely untouched.
And if Janet was really scared
and a stranger came to the door,
she probably would have picked it up. So chances are it was someone she knew and they attacked her in a surprise way.
The cord that she was strangled with was cut from an iron. That is normally stored in the sewing room.
And that's also where the pair of scissors were taken from.
Police thought that this was strange, that the person knew exactly where to get the items that they need within the house
and made them think that maybe they were familiar with the house and maybe someone that the family knew.
But the problem with this theory is there was a piano
right underneath that window
and it had just been shined and waxed.
It was in really good condition
and it didn't look like anybody had walked on it.
There weren't any smudges, there weren't any dents,
there weren't any fingerprints.
I mean, nothing.
The piano seemed kind of untouched
and you would have to get on the piano
in order to get out of that window.
Some people think that that window was actually smashed
on purpose to make it look like someone had entered
in through that window,
and that they even put a garden home next to the window
to complete the scene.
And this could have been done to throw the police off,
maybe deter them from collecting evidence
from the front door area.
I mean, it's a possibility that this was staged.
But some people think that the killer did enter
through the window.
So you'll have to let me know what you guys think
on that one.
But because these two jurisdictions could not agree
on what had happened, this really messed up the investigation.
So obviously a case like this back in the 1950s really shook the community. They were freaked
out. Hearing that an eighth grade babysitter was murdered, raped, and that the person was
still on the loose. Everyone was really freaked out. So law enforcement ended up working
around the clock trying to solve this case. They even performed searches in the surrounding
areas, hoping to find clues, talk to as many people as they could. They really reached out to the
public and asked locals to call if they knew anything that could help them solve this case or
had any information, or if they knew anyone that was acting a bit suspicious. And they also
interviewed Janet's friends, family, anyone who was in her life and tried to paint the best picture
they could of her and see if they maybe knew anything or had a good lead. And during this process,
they formed a list of potential suspects. Their strategy was just bring as many
people as they could in, talk to them, and question them, and hopefully one of them
will be the person who did it. However, it became very clear, very quick, that
this police department had a serious racial bias because
pretty much all of the men that they brought in were black. And they didn't even have a good reason
for bringing most of these people in. For most of them, it was just because they were black.
So this whole process was pretty fucked up and it didn't really lead anywhere.
So for the most part, nothing like this had really happened in this town, nothing this bad.
Except for four years earlier, there was another girl who was murdered and raped
pretty much the same way that Janet was.
Her name was Mary Lou Jenkins.
She was also home alone,
and she was only a mile away from the house
that Janet was babysitting at.
And it was pretty much the same situation.
Her mother came home, opened the door,
and found her daughter,
sprawled out on the living room floor dead.
And she was also strangled with an extension cord.
And it was around this time that a man named Floyd Cochran,
who was a 35 year old trash man,
was arrested for savagely murdering his wife.
Once placed on out about what he did to his wife,
they took him into custody
and he willingly admitted that he did it.
And given the timeline,
the Boone County investigators figured that there was a good chance
that he killed Mary Lou as well. So they interrogated him for over 10 hours and they claimed that he made
incriminating statements that were essentially almost confessions that he killed her as well. It was
definitely kind of a sketchy confession and there was no actual evidence connecting him to the crime,
but he was sentenced to die on September 26, 1947
for killing his wife and Mary Lou.
But a few hours before he was executed,
he took back his entire confession about Mary Lou.
They found out that he had clearly been forced
into giving a false confession,
but at that point, the case had already been solved for years.
So they started thinking that maybe the person
who killed Janet also killed Mary Lou,
and maybe they're still out there.
So as the police continued to talk to the family
and to friends of the family and people that knew Janet,
one name kept popping up and he eventually
became their prime suspect and his name was Robert Mueller.
Robert Mueller was 27 years old at the time
and he was very good friends with Ed Romack.
They went all the way back to high school.
So if you would definitely be someone that is familiar with their house,
Robert had served in World War II as an army air corpse captain.
And he later returned to Columbia, Missouri and looked after his father's
restaurant, the Mueller Virginia Catholic.
And one thing that pretty much everyone they talked to you said about Robert is
he was known for carrying around mechanical pencils.
But when they talked to Ed and Ann, they both said that Robert was a bit of a creep. Ed said that
Robert had mentioned to him several times some creepy sexual stuff, including the fact that he
wanted to have sex with a virgin. And obviously Janet knew Robert as well because she babysat for
the Mueller family. And Ed said that Robert had actually made
comments to him, very inappropriate comments, about Janet's body. Keep in mind, Janet was
13 or younger when he made those comments. Also, Anne had told Ed several times that she
just felt uncomfortable around Robert that he was creepy. And if that doesn't make you
feel weird enough about him, he was also a part-time tailor. So it's kind of interesting that the killer used an ironing cord and scissors from the sewing room.
And then Anne told police that the day before Janet was killed, Robert had come over to her house to help her fit address.
And she was very, very uncomfortable after this because she reported him lightly touching her breasts and kind of grazing over her and fondling her essentially but trying to not be obvious about it.
And even said to place that she described Robert as a man who used his hands,
not his words. And on the morning of Janet's death, Robert had actually called her and asked
her baby said his kids that night, but she declined because she was babysitting for the
Romack family already, but he knew that she was going to be at the house.
But you're probably wondering, how could this be possible?
Because Robert was with the Romack family.
They were at a party.
So there were plenty of people around,
and it really wouldn't be that obvious if he just slipped away.
And then they found out that hours into the party, he did slip away for two hours.
And he told some people that he was going to go talk to a doctor that was going to tend to his son in the middle of the night. So they went to the
dude's doctor and they found out that he did not meet up with him that night. So
this is making Robert look pretty sus. But he managed to make himself look even
more suspicious because the morning after Janet was murdered he called Ed and asked
if he could come over to the house
and help him clean up any of the blood or the crime scene.
Which might seem like a nice friendly thing to do,
but here is the problem.
He was not even told that Janet was murdered.
Nobody was.
He only people that knew about it so far at that time
were the Romacks and the police.
Ed thought this was very strange
and so he decided to talk to him further about it
and get this shit.
Robert started telling them his theories as well.
He said that it's very unlikely
that someone came in through the window.
He thinks it was someone that Janet knew,
someone that she was friendly with and trusted
and that she probably let them in herself.
He specifically said that the easiest way
for someone to get in that house
would be to come to the door and say,
hey, Ed sent me over here to get some poker chips.
And if it was someone that Janet knew
or thought that the Romax knew
that she would just let them in.
So all this circumstantial evidence is pretty overwhelming.
It seems very obvious that Robert did it.
So in May of 1950, they compiled all the evidence
they had against him and went to his house.
But rather take him into custody for a proper interrogation, they decided to take him out to a local
barn. It was way out of city limits where no one could hear and they interrogated him all night.
After talking to him, they were still very suspicious of him and he agreed to take a polygraph test.
So he was transported to the state capital where he took the polygraph test and he agreed to take a polygraph test. So he was transported
to the state capital where he took the polygraph test and he did pass. But here's the thing,
lie detector tests are not reliable completely. They can work, but also sometimes they just
don't work and there's ways to trick them, especially back in 1950. Polygraph tests have
improved a lot since then and it's quite possible that he was able to just mislead the machine.
But because he passed a lie detector test, the police decided they had to let him go.
But they ended up bringing all the evidence to a judge, and after the judge looked over it,
they arranged a grand jury to investigate his case.
However, because the two jurisdictions had completely different ideas of what had happened that night,
the jury was presented both theories and
essentially they couldn't decide and because of this Robert Mueller was never
charged and not only that he sued the police. He lost but still afterwards he relocated to Tucson, Arizona and in
2006 he passed away at 83 years old and he never served any time for Janet's death,
even though it's pretty obvious it was him.
Unfortunately, in the 80s, Anne passed away,
and Ed got remarried, but he also passed away in 2016.
Luckily, Gregory was unharmed that night,
and he grew up to be a successful person
and ended up settling down in Alaska.
The Christmas family was devastated,
not only that they lost Janet in such a horrific way,
but that there was never justice for her. And now it's been over 70 years, and we still have no
justice for Janet. Pretty much everyone in the situation believes that it was Robert Mueller,
including the Romack family and Janet's family, but they will probably never get that justice and
will never get the answers as to what really happened that night. It's very, very they will probably never get that justice and will never get the answers
as to what really happened that night. It's very, very sad and it makes me wonder if they
could just have come to an agreement on what could have happened in that house and presented one
solid theory. Would they be able to get Robert behind bars even if the theory ended up being
slightly off? I mean, it's a complicated situation. I understand it's hard and both theories are possible,
but it's just so sad that because one couldn't be a great
upon that justice was never served.
It kind of blows my mind.
That is gonna be it for me today, guys.
Thank you for joining me for another episode
and make sure you follow the show on Spotify
and Apple Podcasts.
It really does help me out.
If you wanna watch the video version of this show,
you can find it on my YouTube channel, which will be linked,
or you can just search Kendall Ray.
I will be back with another episode soon,
but until then, stay safe out there.
you