Up and Vanished - Case Evidence 04.17.17

Episode Date: April 17, 2017

Take a deeper look at the evidence as experts discuss new developments in the case.  To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy ...Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Get ready for Las Vegas style action at BetMGM, the king of online casinos. Enjoy casino games at your fingertips with the same Vegas strip excitement MGM is famous for. When you play classics like MGM Grand Millions or popular games like Blackjack, Baccarat and Roulette with our ever-growing library of digital slot games, a large selection of online table games, and signature BetMGM service. There is no better way to bring the excitement and ambience of Las Vegas home to you than with BetMGM Casino. Download the BetMGM Casino app today. BetMGM and GameSense remind you to play responsibly. BetMGM.com for Ts and Cs.
Starting point is 00:00:39 19 plus to wager. O-N only. Please play responsibly. If you have any questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, please contact Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to any operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. In today's episode, we'll be taking a deeper look into the mind of Ryan Alexander Duke,
Starting point is 00:01:05 the man charged with Tara Grinstead's murder. By now, we've talked to several of Ryan's friends, who have enlightened us on his behavior over the years, but we still haven't been able to find a solid motive for Tara's murder. A few episodes back, we discovered a Facebook message that Ryan Duke had sent another former teacher of his that seemed very peculiar. And we also learned that shortly after Tara's disappearance, Ryan told one of his friends that he had been having night terrors and couldn't sleep. Today I'll be speaking with Doug Miller again, the forensic psychologist we had on a few weeks ago. The last time we met, I had very little information to give
Starting point is 00:01:41 him. But based on what we did know at the time, Doug offered a theory that maybe Ryan had some sort of obsession over Tara, or maybe even teachers. Today I'm meeting with Doug again, with new information that may or may not support that theory. This is Case Evidence. To recap everything, Ryan Duke had sent one of his former teachers a Facebook message on April 27, 2015, at 6.22 a. 22 AM that said this, how are you? Just an older, wiser fool
Starting point is 00:02:29 seeing how you were doing. Gotta admit, thought you were sexy. Things aren't great for me, but it's okay. Life is the singularity we all share. If this is the last we speak, I want you to know you're a wonderful teacher and a kind person. Thank you for allowing my stubborn self to learn. I wish you the best. I shared this message with the forensic psychologist, Doug Miller, to get his thoughts on it. Hmm. Ironic, right?
Starting point is 00:02:59 Yeah, potentially meaningful. Is this something that, like, the prosecution would use to prove their point if their narrative was he had an obsession or something like that with her? You know, you could say it's one data point that supports that position. It may be enough to raise that story for a jury. Now, I imagine that more will come out if that's what actually happened. It was just an idea that we kind of tossed around that maybe he thought there was a relationship there and it you know it could have been an innocent sort of thing but he took it too far and they weren't on the same level when it came to what was going on there but 10 years later if he let's just say if ryan duke did kill tara what does that make you think seeing that 10 years later? It's consistent with him potentially having a crush that was maintained
Starting point is 00:03:50 and him acting from an emotional place. This is 10 years later, but the crime occurred when he was 20. He was about 21? 21. Yeah, it's a guy who seems to hold on to things. This line, if this is the last we speak, I want you to know you're a wonderful teacher and kind person. Whether that was something bad's about to happen or if she didn't respond and return. Look at the time.
Starting point is 00:04:19 Oh, in the morning. 6.33, so it's either he woke up early. Or was up all night. Up all night, yeah. Yeah, to me, this is a guy reaching out for the potential of a relationship. He's threw in there, gotta admit, thought you were sexy, huh? I mean, that's a come on. And it seems like he's reaching out and has some feelings for her.
Starting point is 00:04:43 And this was a high school teacher? Yes. Yeah, that's a long time afterwards. So it does fit that story that he may have held on to some hopes about being intimate or having a relationship with Tara. Because you're used to sort of sympathizing with some of these people or empathizing with them, it makes sense. I mean, if you do something professionally and you deal with these people, you sort of learn to understand on a different level. It doesn't mean that you agree with what they've done or that you think it was right, but you can sort of see where something may have gone wrong to make them who they are or something.
Starting point is 00:05:17 Yeah. Basically, the jury and people in general want to understand what's happened, including from a psychological standpoint. And usually that comes together in a case. And you can tell the story that really seems truthful, that actually captures what actually happened. Once that happens, if you're a compassionate person, then you're going to have some understanding and even some relationship to say, well, I could see how that would happen. Whether you still feel that it was heinous and horrible or you may have some sympathy just depends on, I think.
Starting point is 00:05:53 It goes back to the mitigation on the defense side versus the aggravation on the prosecutor's side. Definitely there's two possibilities, two interpretations. You've gone to an interesting level of depth in terms of psychologically. Now, for that to be supported, in other words, the notion that there was an obsession, now, that could be painted in two different ways, too. You're thinking like a psychologist, and you're making a hypothesis that there would have to be more information for it to be convincing. Like you said, this is one data point. So now you have that piece of information. You might want to start looking at that. That said, the prosecution could use it. This is a man who's prone to obsessive ideas that, you know, when intoxicated or otherwise turns into some very negative behavior.
Starting point is 00:06:48 And I think whether it works for either side depends on how it's presented and what more of the details of the facts and the evaluation of Ryan himself reveals. Right. To me, it just seemed extremely ironic. And the fact that he's been charged with the murder of a former teacher, and we find a very peculiar Facebook message to another former teacher basically saying he's got a crush on her. Yeah, it's like you see two points in a story, but it's like near the beginning and sort of near the end. What's going to fill then?
Starting point is 00:07:24 What is the actual connection? Is there one? But that's something that I would hold on to if I was evaluating him and want to understand more. And one thing I've definitely found from talking to people who knew Ryan is that the Ryan today is not the Ryan who he was 10, 12 years ago, by a long shot. He is completely different. He has changed a lot over a decade. Can you say more about how? Well, you know, first just looking at him, he looks really unhealthy. He's had drinking problems, I've been told, over the years. And his friends just kind of described him as slowly kind of turning miserable.
Starting point is 00:08:04 Yeah. And I've seen both, and I absolutely agree with you. And so, you know, everyone could come up with maybe a thousand explanations of how that might happen. And he had some substance abuse issues maybe prior to the murder. So that may not be an introduction of anything new, but he may have gone down this path. Now, plugging it into this narrative, assuming that he did commit the murder, that this deterioration in him mentally, emotionally, spiritually occurred due to the impact of him having committed this murder. him having committed this murder. We don't get the feeling that this is a guy who's just a cold-blooded killer that murders someone then goes on with his life. I don't think that's what's being told here. This isn't sort of psychopathic, just cold-hearted person. This is kind of a regular quiet guy. And so it does still, you know, it fits that narrative. And I think that's what you're kind of hitting on here. And remorse isn't really supposed to be something that's too heavily
Starting point is 00:09:13 considered, but the defense will, if that's the story that emerges, that this really greatly impacted this guy, that he was a victim to his own emotionality and his own mental weakness. And this was a crime of passion, if it turns out like that. But it affected him greatly and really wounded him on a deep level that affected the rest of his life in a very negative way because he felt so bad about it. I think regardless of what it does to him or for him in the courtroom, the general public likes to know, does he feel bad about it? Is he remorseful? Yeah. And the general public's going to be on the jury. And those are the ones that you're telling the story to. Think of the last time you bought something to wear, something to decorate
Starting point is 00:09:59 your house, something for your family or friends. What if each time you made a purchase, you got a little something back? With Rakuten, you can. You can earn cash back on just about anything you buy from over 750 stores. If you've ever bought electronics, home decor, fashion and beauty, or booked a trip, well, you could have got cash back. But don't worry, it's not too late.
Starting point is 00:10:23 It's free and easy to use, and you get cash back deposited into your PayPal account or sent to you as a check. Earn cash back at stores like Sephora, Old Navy, and Expedia. It's the smartest way to shop, plain and simple. Start your shopping at Rakuten.ca or get the Rakuten app. That's R-A-K-U-T-E-N dot C-A. or get the Rakuten app. That's R-A-K-U-T-E-N dot C-A. Experience basketball like never before with BetMGM, an authorized gaming partner of the NBA.
Starting point is 00:10:55 Ready to shoot your shot? We've made the BetMGM experience more immersive and fun for all types of basketball fans. Being on the sidelines is one thing. This season, experience basketball on the foul line exciting state-of-the-art live tracking technology and dozens of sportsbook selections await you at bet mgm sportsbook tap into every game on your mobile devices get up off the sideline and drive to the basket yourself no matter which team starts popping off you'll find out why there's truly nothing like laying up a w with the king of sportsbooks. Visit BetMGM.com for terms and conditions.
Starting point is 00:11:26 Must be 19 years of age or older. Ontario only. Please play responsibly. If you have any questions or concerns about your gambling or someone else close to you, please contact ConnexOntario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge. Shortly after Tara was murdered, Ryan Duke confided in one of his friends that he was having night terrors
Starting point is 00:11:51 and he couldn't sleep. And it actually got so bad that he had to check himself into a facility. I wanted to get your take on what causes night terrors, what exactly he may have been talking about, and if there could have been any relation to what happened to Tara and how he was feeling about it. Yeah. And again, there can
Starting point is 00:12:12 be lots of causes to night terrors. Anything from eating pickles before bed to being traumatized. What is a night terror? It's really an extreme nightmare. It's something where you are having a tremendous fear response, usually to the point where you wake up because your adrenaline's going, your heart's racing, you're sweating. I mean, you're like in a terrifying situation in your dream, and you wake up terrified. Usually people wake up. Now, sometimes you don't wake up,
Starting point is 00:12:44 but that's kind of a general description of a night terror. Kids have them for sort of unexplainable reasons. They can be mysterious. They can be associated with physical illness, like a fever. So lots of things can cause them. So one of my areas of expertise is post-traumatic stress disorder. And one of the ways I assess severity of trauma symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder is recurrent nightmares that are related to the trauma. So the night terrors are one thing. The question is, what's the content? Exactly. And because, you know, I've worked with people that have night terrors and PTSD, but maybe the night terrors don't seem related to the trauma. And then it's a question
Starting point is 00:13:34 of whether they actually are or not. And so that begins to be one of the questions in this case. Now, grief and bereavement can often look a lot like trauma. So when we have a major loss or we have a lot of guilt about something we've done, that can look a lot like trauma as well. And you can have night terrors about that. And you can have intrusive thoughts. And there's a whole set of symptoms. Anyone can Google PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder, and see what those are. But it gets more severe when night terrors are more frequent or even regular. And
Starting point is 00:14:11 then if someone's having flashbacks where they're reliving the trauma, that's about the severest symptom on that list. Yeah. He didn't explain to his friend exactly what he was thinking or if he was dreaming or having flashbacks of anything. He just said that he didn't explain to his friend exactly what he was thinking or if he was dreaming or having flashbacks of anything. He just said that he hasn't been able to sleep. He hadn't talked to him in a while. And he said, sorry, I've been having night terrors and not being able to sleep. So I had to go get checked out for a little while. That's why you haven't seen me for a little while.
Starting point is 00:14:39 My first kind of gut reaction, you know, and it would be something I'd want to consider and look at the data. This is a guy that had a huge secret. He murdered someone and he's holding it secret. Yeah. So he's not telling people, but he might be having these symptoms. And so people then attribute it to other things. Who knows what happened? As we have this level of information, we are using conjecture. You keep getting little pieces and eventually we're going to have this level of information, we are using conjecture. You keep getting little pieces. And eventually, we're going to have this story. Eventually, have a very satisfying, and I think a sense that we have the truth is going to be there. So by wondering about the trauma, the truth is in the details.
Starting point is 00:15:23 And we know what else is in the details sometimes. Right. So as far as PTSD goes, are nightmares and night terrors, are they sort of symptoms of PTSD as well? I mean, how does it manifest itself? Very often. Yeah. Especially in the months and even years following the trauma, they're more common, but they can go on for a lifetime. And it's one of the first symptoms I ask about because,
Starting point is 00:15:53 again, it nails at least a moderate severity to the PTSD. Other things are avoiding the associated stimuli of the trauma. So he might have avoided her street. He might have avoided the pecan orchard. He may have stopped hanging out with his buddy. If he was traumatized, then being reminded of anything that reminds him of it creates a state of great anxiety and overwhelm. And it brings up the images, the memories, the feelings of the incident. And those become intolerable and overwhelming and a great strain on someone's resources. And a lot of people that do have trauma, anxiety is one of the characteristics of PTSD. They'll turn to drugs to self-medicate and reduce their anxiety. So while we're focused on this, in PTSD, people avoid associated stimuli.
Starting point is 00:16:56 When they're exposed to it, they experience arousal like anxiety and panic, and they want to get away from it and escape all that. That's another set of symptoms in the PTSD. Nightmares, anxiety, as I already said, intrusive thoughts. So like you just be having, hanging out, maybe fishing and a thought of it comes into your head and causes that type of disturbance and anxiety in you. So disturbing intrusive thoughts are another symptom. And this is where you get this kind of tortured image
Starting point is 00:17:30 that might fit the actual photographs that you were describing of his deterioration over the 10 years. He was tormented and tortured by what had happened. Will you rise with the sun to help change mental health care forever? Join the Sunrise Challenge to raise funds for CAMH, the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, to support life-saving progress in mental health care. From May 27th to 31st, people across Canada will rise together
Starting point is 00:17:55 and show those living with mental illness and addiction that they're not alone. Help CAMH build a future where no one is left behind. So, who will you rise for? Register today at sunrisechallenge.ca. That's sunrisechallenge.ca. Hi there, my name is Alameen Abdel-Mahmoud. I am the host of the CBC Podcast Commotion. That's a show where we talk about all things pop culture.
Starting point is 00:18:18 We talk about what people are watching, what people are listening to. We get into everything from celebrity beefs to TikTok trends. And look, we're not afraid to get a little controversial. We're talking about things like the Oscar snubs or is Drake really a hip hop artist? Commotion with Elamin Abdelmahmoud, available now on Spotify. Hey, how's it going? I'm Nali Furtado and I'm bringing the party to the 2024 Juno Awards. Join me in Halifax for Canada's biggest night in music with performances by my friends,
Starting point is 00:18:52 The Beaches, Maestro Fresh West, Charlotte Carden and me. It's a party you're never going to forget. Don't miss the 2024 Juno Awards live from Halifax. Sunday, March 24th at 8 Eastern on CBC and CBC Gem. What is the fundamental difference in the person that shows these symptoms of deterioration, PTSD, guilt, remorse versus the person who doesn't? Well, what you're hinting at is kind of the spectrum of psychopathy. And that includes antisocial personality, where there's a lack of concern or regard for other people or the impact of their actions. And they tend to be very self-serving and see other people more as like objects to obtain gain and benefit than as kind of the normal valuing of human life that other people will have. One way to understand
Starting point is 00:19:55 that is just a matter of kind of emotion, compassion, and heart in the person that is affected and a lack of those, a lack of compassion, a lack of regard for others in the antisocial and psychopathic spectrum disorders. You know, antisocial and psychopathic individuals don't relate in a compassionate, sympathetic manner to other individuals. And so they can perpetrate against them and feel no guilt or remorse or regret. They don't deteriorate. They'll go on to the next victim or just like, you know. Be the same 10 years later.
Starting point is 00:20:33 Yeah. Yeah. And, you know, the way you look for that, you look at criminal history. You look at if you're a psychologist or a person that works with people, you can sometimes sit across from them and just feel a difference. When I was driving here, I was thinking about other things I could ask you. And I was just wondering, do you have like a sense when you sit down next to somebody that this guy might be a murderer or can they fool you easily? Is it
Starting point is 00:21:03 different every time? Very much. Now, that's not going to mean anything in the courtroom. And I use it, as I said, like another data point. Well, this doesn't feel right. No, someone could feel really cold because maybe they had a bad day or maybe they're afraid or maybe. So as a practitioner, you want to use your reactions. And some of us, a lot of us are trying to use ourselves as tools in terms of understanding. I think it's where some of the greatest insights and aspects of being a psychologist come in is that kind of intuitive sense that all needs to be backed up and you can't be biased by that stuff. You really have to look at the data. You really have to look at the information.
Starting point is 00:21:51 And psychologists don't go on the stand, particularly in these kinds of cases or pretty much any case in court and say, well, I was kind of had a gut feeling about it. Yeah, it doesn't work. That's just not going to go over well. In practice, that stuff is used, but it's not relied upon in terms of making conclusions. I think most of the people listening to this may have had an experience where they may be sitting across from a person or interacting with a person and there just seemed to be a coldness or a a sense that something may have been missing in terms of an ordinary type of relating and warmth certainly but some things even maybe beyond that and then there's other people you
Starting point is 00:22:41 sit across and you feel like they're you know know, they're like your Aunt Mildred, so to speak. Or they're just these warm, compassionate, caring persons. I mean, I can see in your eyes that, you know, I think you're a pretty compassionate person. We haven't talked a whole lot. Right. But I think we could see that in each other. Are you ever fooled? I love that question.
Starting point is 00:23:04 And my standard response is, I believe I can be fooled by anyone. And because I believe that, I think I'm fooled less than someone who thinks they cannot be fooled. If you believe you can't be fooled, you're a fool. Yeah, exactly. And by knowing that things that your impression or even the data that you get may not be accurate. And validity is a huge issue in all of this. And getting enough of a substantial picture of a person in terms of not only the test data that psychologists use, not only our gut feelings that we may have used initially in the case, but in terms of third
Starting point is 00:23:47 party reports, a general consistency across data lends validity. The answer is, yeah, I can be fooled. And I think I'm fooled less because I know that. Just in general, from what we learned last time we talked, do you feel any different about things now than you did last time with less information? You know, it's still a small amount of information relative to when I evaluate someone. We happen to be in my office right now, and all of this is just one case. Oh, damn. So I have, you know, about a 10, 12 inch stack of records. Some of those are four or eight pages compressed onto one page, front and back. And you never know when a piece of
Starting point is 00:24:36 information is going to come up. So there's really a small amount of information, but there's something that's starting to form here, which is, you know, sort of this emotional crush theory, we'll call it, or maybe just the crush theory. Again, it's a small amount of information, but, you know, even you reacted saying like, this kind of seems to fit that. That's how you started this interview. This seems to fit that sort of explanation. I think you have a sense about this case, about who Ryan is. And I affirm that he doesn't, in my opinion, with the limited amount of information, doesn't seem like an antisocial guy. Right. So then this is a guy that may be motivated by his emotions. And then this other little Facebook message comes up.
Starting point is 00:25:28 Also, his deterioration over time. That's a tricky one because what is a person who would commit a murder like? I've come to find that there's a surprising range to that answer. I'm sure. there's a surprising range to that answer. I'm sure. That they aren't necessarily completely dysfunctional, deranged people. I can't say I feel differently.
Starting point is 00:25:54 I feel about the same. Okay. Now, there's a little data about this teacher and him potentially having crushes on people. I'm getting a little clearer about the chance that he was traumatized perhaps by the murder itself or aggrieved or guilt-stricken to the point of feeling bereaved and showing symptoms of trauma or complex bereavement, which can look a lot like trauma. So those directions seem more realistic. I think the audience is on edge, and I am.
Starting point is 00:26:31 I really would love to evaluate this guy for this purpose. I'm just curious about this case. And I think that's when we're going to start really getting some of the meat, in this case, to affirm some of these stories. Some of these stories. It is interesting that we touched on that possibility of the, that he entertained some kind of emotional and passionate fantasy about his teachers. So we can't, we brought that up, but then this Facebook post comes up and I know when you saw that,
Starting point is 00:26:58 Oh man, this doesn't look good, but yeah, I definitely was wowed yeah so to hold that as a hypothesis that now has a little bit of data that may support it and there's a lot of dots that have to get filled in so for example if that was the only data point and you're sitting on the stand in front of a jury and the whole courtroom. And you said, yeah, this was obviously a passionate, emotional thing because, look, he made this Facebook message. That wouldn't fly.
Starting point is 00:27:35 But it's pointing in that direction now. It's something that needs to be explored and see if that's part of what happened here. Thanks for listening, guys. Today's episode was mixed and mastered by Resonate Recordings. You can check them out at resonaterecordings.com. By the way, if you haven't yet, you can follow Up and Vanished on Twitter and Instagram. The handle is at Up and Vanished.
Starting point is 00:28:01 And be sure to tune in next Monday, April 24th, for episode 17. Thanks guys, and I'll see you soon.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.