Up and Vanished - S1E15: Older, Wiser Fool
Episode Date: March 28, 2017Payne takes a look inside Tara's house and visits Irwin County High School. Could a new break in the case be old news? To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://ww...w.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
experience basketball like never before with bet mgm an authorized gaming partner of the nba
ready to shoot your shot we've made the bet mgm 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. 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
Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600
to speak to an advisor, free of charge.
Atlanta, Georgia
1979
Are you scared?
Yes, sir.
One by one, kids are going missing with no explanation.
A black 15-year-old male who lived in the same area where three other children had disappeared.
There was a real-life monster on the loose.
The city of Atlanta demanded answers.
Inner-city kids get killed.
Unfortunately, nobody cares.
By 1981, the FBI was involved in one of the largest manhunts in U.S. history.
And eventually, they put one man behind bars.
But nearly 40 years later, this case has left more questions than answers in what may be Atlanta's darkest secret.
I don't know today whether he's innocent or guilty.
From the producers of Up and Vanished and How Stuff Works, we present an all-new podcast, Atlanta Monster.
Subscribe to Atlanta Monster right now on Apple Podcasts and be the first to hear it on January 5th.
Oh man, it's going to be a weird walk in the yard.
It's there, right there. Yeah. So that's where her car weird walking in the yard. It's there right there, right?
This is it?
Yeah.
So that's where her car was parked in the car park?
Yeah.
I'm just going to walk up there and...
Where's the front door?
Okay, there's a front door and there's a side door.
Oh, this is weird.
Really weird.
You want to buy yourself?
Yeah.
You going up or not going yourself? Yeah. You doing well for lunch, Uncle?
Yeah. I'm sorry. The End It's love sounding great. $80,000 reward is being offered. Where is Tara Grinstead?
From Tenderfoot TV in Atlanta, this is Up and Vanished, the investigation of Tara Grinstead.
I'm your host, Payne Lindsey.
While I was in Osceola, I drove by Tara's house.
I'd driven by before, but this time, I decided to knock on the door.
I had no idea what I thought would happen, but it seemed like something I should do.
At least once.
I wasn't expecting that.
Hey.
I'm Payne.
I'm doing a documentary
on Tara Grinstead. I have this podcast
I'm doing. I don't know if you've heard of it.
It's actually kind of weird me being in here,
just because I've talked about it so much
I haven't seen the inside of the house yet.
Inside, there was an older black lady
sitting on a couch watching TV
in complete darkness.
Turns out, Tara's house was being lived in again.
The woman was really nice
and didn't mind me looking around for a minute.
My friend Donald was a little more hesitant.
She's actually being really nice to us.
And was sort of lurking in the doorway, halfway hiding. How are you? Yeah, I'm in the door. She
said, come in. I was like, are you sure? We thanked her for her time and then went out to the front yard.
Take care.
From Osceola Police Chief Billy Hancock's description, I knew precisely where that latex glove had been found in your yard.
So it may have been in Pine Straw right here.
In between the houses, but still, why are you going this way?
So we analyzed the area ourselves.
The glove's placement just didn't make any sense.
It seemed to be heading away from where any perpetrator would have parked their car,
almost going straight into the neighbor's yard. If someone dropped it in a rush or an accident,
this just didn't seem to be the likely place.
Yeah, how's a glove accidentally get there?
Get there?
Yep, I'll be honest with you, walking up to the door, that was actually the first time I
was nervous this whole, this whole podcast, that actually the first time I was nervous this whole podcast.
That was the first time I was nervous.
It's just weird.
We'd been to Tara's house.
Now it only seemed right to visit the second place in Osceola most closely tied to her.
The Irwin County High School.
Being at the high school was surreal.
We were greeted by the school's principal.
How you doing, man?
How you doing?
Hey, that's Richard Donald.
Hey, how you doing?
I'm trying to get him to the library to look at some archives, yearbooks.
Yeah, yearbook archives.
Yeah.
We're doing one year, you know.
And we hoped to obtain some yearbooks.
Of course, it had been years since Tara worked here,
but it was still eerie being there.
He was a friendly guy.
He hadn't known Tara personally,
because he started just after her disappearance.
But he let us take some old yearbooks for investigative purposes.
In our hands were pictures of Tara as a teacher
and pictures of those responsible for her death
bound into the same keepsake book.
Shortly after arrests were made in Tara's case, an Osceola judge instituted a gag order,
an order that states the case may not be discussed in public.
Gag orders exist to maintain integrity of an investigation and to ensure a fair trial.
Ryan Duke's attorney filed a gag order preventing law enforcement from speaking further about the case.
But several media outlets filed a lawsuit opposing it.
Our lawyers have filed a motion, a lawsuit against the gag order.
Should be in the court's hand day to day.
Lawyers representing 11 Alive and various other media outlets arguing Thursday in an Irwin County courtroom.
Their case? That a gag order in the Tara Grinstead death investigation prevents transparency and unjustly silences details in perhaps the biggest case this county has ever seen.
The media outlets have challenged the gag order.
The gag order is very broad. It covers many people who are
potential witnesses. It covers people who might have known Tara, for example, and we really don't
know at this point who could be a witness. So it's like a judge preemptively telling somebody,
you can't use your right to free speech. The Constitution frowns on that. Gag orders have to balance, on the one hand, the needs of the defendant to get a fair trial
and an impartial jury, but it also has to protect the rights under the First Amendment of the public
to discuss the case. But this order says to them before they're even on a witness list,
hey, you can't talk about it. And the media has a First Amendment
right. There's a right to a free press. There absolutely needs to be clarity. And I think that
if anything changes, it will be some clarification of what the order meant, maybe a new order that's
not quite so broad. The judge now has the unenviable task of deciding a balance between the First and Sixth Amendment.
Does the public's right to know and talk about this case jeopardize the defendant's right to a fair trial?
I think a person ought to have a right to speak.
This is a free country.
And I don't think any judge could have a right to sit up there and say, keep your mouth closed, you can't talk.
Ryan Duke's defense attorney claimed that the extensive media coverage was posing a threat to his client's right to a fair trial.
He even specifically mentioned the podcast as an example to the judge in the courtroom.
There's been podcasts, there's been international, national, local coverage, and all of this, some of this should be included.
He also presented a huge printout of 79 examples of this unjust media coverage,
many of which were quotes from news articles, and even things that random people said on the Up and Vantage discussion board.
said on the Up and Vantage discussion board.
Exhibits 1 through 79.
This is just an example of the media coverage that we've been able to locate.
It was like copying and pasting mean YouTube comments
made by anonymous people.
I mean, it's 2017.
You can't control what people say on the internet.
There is news made for articles.
I appreciate everybody being here today. And I have not had a chance to people say on the Internet. There is news made for articles. All right, I appreciate everybody being here today.
And I have not had a chance to look at all the exhibits.
I will take some time to do that, of course.
But hopefully within the next week you'll have an order.
The judge says it'll take about a week or so for her to review new evidence in this case and come to a decision.
for her to review new evidence in this case and come to a decision.
Meanwhile, the media attorneys are taking that as an optimistic sign that perhaps that gag order was filed without enough evidence in the first place.
After the hearing, I hired my own attorney and submitted a formal letter to Judge Cross,
expressing my concerns about this gag order.
People have been waiting for details on this case for over 10 years.
Why the silence now?
After a full week, the judge finally made a ruling on this.
And for the most part, it was in our favor.
this. And for the most part, it was in our favor. We just received word that the Irwin County judge has narrowed parts of the gag order in this case. The court will allow documents to be unsealed.
It will also allow witnesses and relatives to speak to the media about the case. This also
permits potential witnesses as well to talk. Basically, I think this modified order was the right thing to do,
and I really think the judge got it right. She referenced that gag orders are not necessarily
disallowed, but they must be narrowly drawn. So what she did is she went back and narrowly drew
this so that it only applies to the parties in the case, people that work for the lawyer's offices,
current and former members of law enforcement who may have knowledge of the case.
Specifically, the judge says that the order does not apply to members of the public
and does not apply to the media.
So this is really a victory for all media, including the podcast.
In fact, Payne Lindsey, the host of Up and Vanished,
devoted 12 episodes to Grinsed's disappearance.
The judge specifically references that in this order.
One thing that stands out to me that's very interesting is that, and this didn't really have to go into the order in my opinion,
she says that it's ordered, among other things, that the people described, like the police, etc.,
cannot mention the possibility of a plea of guilty to the offense charged.
That stood out at me like, wow, wonder why that's in there, because she already said
that any proceedings that may happen in the future in court would not be closed to the
public, so that was a great victory.
But referencing the possibility of a guilty plea, to me public. So that was a great victory. But referencing the possibility
of a guilty plea, to me, seemed like it was maybe just a little bit too much information.
I don't know. It seems that that was just something that maybe didn't need to be in there
because it could have been covered with more general language. But as I've said all along,
I don't expect there will be a trial. But
the thing to remember is that even though the courtroom is now not closed to the public and
court documents are now not going to be sealed unless there's some specific reason in the future
for sealing them, it doesn't mean that a court hearing such as a plea hearing or a motion hearing, has to go onto any kind of public
calendar. It doesn't mean that there has to be notice sent out to the media and the public
beforehand. So hypothetically, if there is some resolution that's reached to this case,
it really would be a very simple thing to schedule it, get it put together very quickly, get him into court, and enter a plea.
And of course, the defense can still stipulate to a factual basis without actually going through
any of the details of whatever offense may ultimately be charged should he plead to one.
Of course, there's no way to hide a trial. If it does go to trial,
there's really no way to hide that. And of course, the public would have the right to be there and to see what happens. But in the event of a guilty plea, it really could be something that could be
put together and scheduled very quickly and very quietly without notice to anybody. Just because
it's an open court doesn't mean there's necessarily going to be people there to watch it. We schedule pleas and other routine court appearances on a moment's
notice all the time. It's just simply a matter of calling the judge's office and saying, hey,
can we do this tomorrow morning or this afternoon or whenever? It's very routine, very simple.
It's very routine, very simple.
And if the parties were to want to do this secretly or mostly secretly, it would be an easy thing to accomplish.
But on balance, I think the judge got it right.
I think that this order is what it should be.
It allows the public to talk about the case. It allows the media to talk about the case.
It lets the family talk about the case. It allows the media to talk about the case. It lets the family talk about the case.
And it doesn't stand in the way of the podcast continuing on to report what we learn about
what happened to Tara. It doesn't stop the podcast from talking to people. It doesn't stop anybody from talking to anybody, except it only limits
what law enforcement and the parties to the case can say about it. One more interesting thing that
this order does is it brings into the class of affected people, the people that are bound by the gag order, it brings Bo Dukes and his lawyer into the coverage of who can't talk.
Now, he's not a party to this particular case where it's the state of Georgia versus Ryan Duke,
but he is specifically referenced in this order. And that is a little bit unusual,
but under the circumstances of this case,
not unexpected. And I think it's something that everybody, the district attorney and the defense
and probably Bo Dukes wanted in the order. It gives them some cover so that they can't answer
questions or can't say things publicly. Other than that, I like it.
I think it's a good order.
Some interesting tidbits in it, but it's the right thing to do.
Think of the last time you bought something to wear,
something to decorate 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.
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.
Get ready for Las Vegas-style action at Bet bet mgm 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.
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.
One thing I've been desperately trying to figure out
is what on earth Ryan Duke was doing at Tara's house that night.
A burglary? I'm just not buying it.
I had talked to several of Ryan's former classmates and friends, but I still felt like I knew absolutely nothing about him.
I knew that unlike his buddy Bo Dukes, Ryan did not have a criminal record.
But what about any other run-ins with
the law? Over the course of 12 years, did he have any at all? Well, turns out he did.
On the night of February 20th, 2010, Osceola Police pulled over a vehicle on the Tifton Highway.
The driver was Ryan Duke. He was speeding and driving without a license.
When the officer proceeded to talk to Duke, he noted his slurred speech and the smell of alcohol
on his breath. Duke denied drinking, but failed the breathalyzer test. He was subsequently charged for a DUI, but was released on bond to his mother.
At 2.35 a.m., approximately three hours after the DUI incident, Ryan Duke's mother called the Osceola police with an unusual request.
She insisted that she wanted to come off the bond for Mr. Duke and have the police pick up her son immediately.
Deputies picked up Duke and returned him to jail.
The reason for Duke's mother's change of heart is unknown.
The family declined to comment.
Other than Tara Grinstead's murder,
this is Duke's only other arrest.
In the days after Ryan Duke's arrest, and for the record, before the gag order was in place,
I got a call from someone on the inside.
Someone who had interactions with Ryan Duke while he was in jail.
This person's identity will remain anonymous, and their voice has been disguised.
He is currently on a suicide watch.
The way that we do suicide watches, stripped butt naked,
and they have nothing but just suicide blanket and a suicide gown that he has on.
I was just kind of playing dumb, and I asked him, I said,
what are you in here for?
playing dumb and I asked him I said what are you in here for? What he told me was that he did something bad a long time ago and that it was a long story. He was in our medical unit and he's now transferred to our special housing unit. He is sitting there on a one onon-one watch. Somebody is watching him 24 hours a day. When he came in for a DUI, he was placed on suicide watch then. He had suicidal
thoughts. There's three levels to the suicide watch. Level one and level two, you're still
naked. You just have nothing but the suicide blanket and a suicide gown.
And level 3, you get your clothes and your property,
but he don't have any property at the time.
He don't have any of that.
And he's eating nothing but like a finger food and stuff right now.
Ryan Duke was currently on suicide watch.
Not only in 2017, but also back in 2010, when he was arrested for his DUI.
I found that really strange.
Was he paranoid of getting caught the first time?
Surely they fingerprinted him when he was arrested.
Was he scared of a match?
scared of a match?
In an attempt to gain some more insight on Ryan and just who
he was, I spoke to another
former friend of his. I had just moved to Tifton, started working UPS. He called me out of the blue one day.
I had lost contact with him probably around March and May of 06.
I kind of lost contact with him.
He was one of those where if he didn't want to talk to you,
you wasn't going to talk to him kind of thing. The next time I spoke to him was around probably December or January of,
January of 06, probably,
because it was just when I moved back in Statesboro.
I got up with him,
and he was living with Bo at this time in Fitzgerald.
I kind of started hanging out with him
because I was working in Fitzgerald,
and he was still very, very close proximity
to my parents' house.
So I would go over and hang out with him and Bo,
and it was a little
different. Bo was a lot more withdrawn than Ryan was. But like I said, I was more flushed
to Ryan than Bo anyway. Whenever we all hung out together, it was me, Jason, Ryan, and
Bo. And then around sometime in 2004, Jason and Ryan had some type of disagreement.
I'm not sure really what happened between the two of them, but they had a falling out.
But I think Ryan never really had a whole lot of money, never really had a whole, you
know, close-knit family life or didn't really have anything, I guess, going his way in a sense, but he
was a real good guy.
Like, he's more than willing to do anything for me.
Like, when I couldn't drive, he would go 30 minutes one way just so we could hang out
and play tennis.
But it just struck me as odd that Ryan would have been, well, was essentially two to three
blocks from where Bo's mom lived
without having a car, and Bo didn't know that he was there.
And then all of a sudden, Ryan makes it official and goes,
oh, hey, Bo, by the way, I need your help.
Like, that seemed really odd to me, and it just didn't sit well.
The weird part to me was that how in the world does Ryan end up over at Tara's house?
I mean I guess with it with Bo's mom being so close and there was a couple other friends that
lived there at the time somewhere around in the area there was like three girls that I know and
they were around the same age so there's a lot of people around his age that graduated with him
that I mean was within a
probably between a half mile to a mile radius of where Bo's mom lived.
Where did Bo's mom live?
From the courthouse. I mean, it's probably a five to eight minute walk. I mean, it's
not far.
That's like right next to Terrence's house.
Yeah, and that's what struck me as odd
is that Ryan would be so close
to Bo's mom's house
without having transportation and Bo not
know about it beforehand
because Ryan lived in
Pleasure Lake as far as I know
at the time was within Pleasure Lake
but he was either in Fishville or with his mom
at the time he didn't have a house
at what I was going on
but for him to be that close to Bo's house
and Bo not know,
it didn't sit well with me.
That's kind of the details that come out about it.
And I don't know,
I've never heard of Terrell before this happened
or didn't know anything about her
except what's been brought out in the news
and speculation and rumors.
I feel like, like I said, with her house being so close to Bo's house
and Bo being the way that he was, like I said,
he had the money to kind of finance things
and wanted people to go along with the party.
I felt like they may have been partying together.
Something happened. Bo got aggressive
and then freaked out
Ryan was there
with him
and
I don't
Ryan was the one to back away from a fight
with his friends
so for him for it to be that
he used his bare hands to kill somebody,
like, I still
don't process that as
truth. Just,
like I say, me being as close as I would,
I'm still waiting for something else to come out
that something else happened
or other people are involved.
So my mind immediately,
I guess,
subjectively puts him, orively puts him right into the seat of being innocent
and being there to help
someone because he was that friend
that would
more or less take a bullet for you
kind of thing and I feel like
that
Bo maybe had freaked
out after whatever happened happened
and didn't know what to do and then convinced Ryan,
well, you were here, they're going to blame you just as much as me.
What do we do?
And then I guess they did whatever they did and it was over with.
Yeah, I mean, that's what everyone pretty much said.
They just are so surprised that if Ryan being charged with the murder and Bo as an accessory after the fact.
And that is just so puzzling to everybody. there was a side of Ryan that nobody knew that was capable of doing this,
or if he wasn't the person who did this.
If Ryan did have or does have that vibe,
the only other person that has seen it will never be able to tell anybody.
When he moved to Fitzgerald, me and him got pretty close.
The whole time I was with him, I never, like, he never even got violent.
We were almost in, like, a group fight because Fitzgerald and I still, like,
we kind of fight with each other, but if anybody else from out of town comes in,
we kind of stick together as a group.
Well, there was an incident one night where I thought we were about to get in a fight
with a group of guys, and Brian, we turned around and he wasn't even there.
Like he wasn't, oh, hey, yeah, let's do it.
Or, hey, I got your back.
Like he just, I've never saw him in a physical application whatsoever.
And when we asked him about it, you know, dude, where'd you go?
Like we thought we were about to have to throw down.
When we turned around and he wasn't there, he was like, oh, I went to talk to Solso.
I didn't know anything was going on.
So I said, for that whole thing to come out, that he did it with his bare hands and was that brutal.
And that's what my wife, like, I was sick of my stomach that night.
I don't see it happening.
I can't believe it.
How was Ryan with girls?
Hopeless or manic, I guess.
He wouldn't get with a girl just to hook up with her.
He wanted a girl that
would want to sit at home
and watch a movie on a Friday
and cook and hang out.
Hey, I listened to this song by
whatever current band he's listening
to and he would
make a little mix CD for her kind of thing.
Like, it was never just straight come out and be like,
oh, hey, I have feelings for you, I like you,
or let's go on a date.
Like, it was more of,
he would kind of make you feel sorry for him in a way,
but, like, oh, kind of, you know, for me,
like, I got a lot of things going on,
but that really wasn't him.
Like, as a friend we i
knew him but his way with girls i mean which i guess in high school everything is completely
different but it's so easy to be like oh hey you know poor me nobody you know no girls like me
and things like that and of course that one catches on where it's like oh hey well you know
you're a cute guy you've got a lot of things you know for you. And that's kind of how he wrote to me.
And, I mean, I hate to say that, but it was just like, that's what it was.
And once I started dating, then he was kind of all about them.
And, you know, hey, you know, I love you.
Let's hang out and do things.
And from what I know of Ryan, I can't believe that he did all this
and orchestrated it himself.
Ryan, I can't believe that he did all this and orchestrated it himself.
As good a guy as he was, he's not that smart of a person to, one, commit the crime, two,
cover it up, and three, convince somebody to be an accessory with him after the fact.
That doesn't fit Ryan at all.
He's not manipulative.
He's very
straightforward.
There's no hidden doors for
Ryan if everything's cut out.
Like I said,
right now if you told me it was 100%,
he did it. We have everything we need to convict
him. So you tell me what your take on it is.
I believe that, I mean, obviously he was there.
He didn't break in because there's whatever,
there was no sign of poor pantry or whatever.
Maybe he got a field search.
She rejected his advances once they were, I'd say they had a problem,
and maybe they were having sex or about to have sex, and something happened,
and she rejected him at that point and made him snap.
Like I say, he's never been a physical person, like ever.
So for him to just up and snap without any provocation is,
like I still can't fathom that.
He, like everyone else, didn't seem to think that Ryan was capable of this either.
Did Ryan just snap?
A fresh voice can speak to you and open your ears and your mind to new views and new perspectives.
The call of the wild, a crescendo of culture.
Listen as a chorus of fresh voices moves you, taking you to greater heights.
Add your voice to the mix and let fresh answer back with perfect harmony in pure Michigan.
Keep it fresh at Michigan.org.
Chantina's going to take me on a trip to the place he's from. From the producer of Megan, Five Nights at Freddy's, and The Black Phone.
Alice! Alice! Alice! Get out!
Now. Many kids have imaginary friends. at Freddy's and the black phone. Alice! Alice! Alice! Get out! Now...
Many kids have imaginary friends.
Ready or not.
Just because you stop believing in them
doesn't mean they're gone.
Here he comes.
And they're angry you left.
Imaginary.
Now playing only in theaters.
Hi there. My name is Alamin Abdelmahmoud.
I am the host of the CBC Podcast, Commotion.
That's a show where we talk about all things pop culture.
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.
I called upon a forensic psychologist named Doug Miller, who has years of experience dealing with all types of alleged murderers.
Maybe he had some insight.
So what is it about the quiet guys?
Maybe it's just what I hear in the news and what you see on TV,
but there's something, a stigma with that,
where it's the quiet guy who you never expected is always the one.
Is that the case for you, or is that just sort of a myth?
Well, I think it may be a myth.
I think the difference is, like, when it's some really aggressive, loud mouth, obnoxious, violent person, it's not so surprising.
But when it's a quiet, sweet person or someone who's just sort of unassuming or not really standing out, it's just more surprising.
And I think maybe that accounts for it. Now, that said, if there is a kind of psychotic process or a psychopathology
that pulls the person outside of society, and what can make someone a loner is that they have
very strange thoughts and people keep their distance. They pull back. In the last episode,
in a call with one of Ryan Duke's friends, he told me about a strange phone call he got from him one
time where he basically confessed about hooking up with some girl. He told me it struck him as odd,
and I thought the same thing. So I asked Doug about it. Hearing that as a forensic psychologist,
it could be relevant. It could be relevant in the sense that it's not going to tell us much
about his frame of mind at the time of the crime, though, if he's evidencing some very
bizarre behavior after the crime, and you can show similar types or the same type of behavior before
the crime, and then really the important piece is showing it around the time of the crime to show
that maybe he was in some kind of altered state one way or another. You don't want to put the cart before the horse, cause before effect.
Now, we are assuming that Ryan did commit the crime
or was at least very heavily involved.
How that affected him and his behavior afterwards,
like I'm aware of the fact that he reportedly has had a drinking problem
for many years.
So that conversation that he had with that friend that you just brought up,
you know, is it a drunk guy calling someone
and just babbling about random stuff that may have bothered him a little bit?
Totally could be.
Or was there some guilt that this guy has been carrying
and he's just trying to relieve himself in this kind of sort of symbolic way
by talking about this other thing that he felt bad about?
You know, whether that comes into play or not in the trial is unclear, this kind of sort of symbolic way by talking about this other thing that he felt bad about.
You know, whether that comes into play or not in the trial is unclear, but just to kind of show you the kind of thinking that can go into that kind of piece of data. What I was alluding to,
what I gave that example as representing is what you might call symbolic expiation.
is what you might call symbolic expiation.
It's a symbolic act that,
it's symbolic in the fact that it may be related to the murder.
It's a brief relief of a confession.
It's an expiation, a release of guilt.
But it's only symbolic because it's actually about something else that maybe another person might not have carried
had they not had the original
the major source of the guilt now you can't talk about it because you're going to get in trouble
if it wasn't just random basically like sure they knew each other but then the question is how much
did they know each other because you ask what that's the magic question what causes this kind
of behavior and of course most people go well was there something going on in terms of an intimate relationship?
And that can be an uncomfortable thing to bring up for the victim's family or just in general.
You know, and people are well aware of crimes of passion.
And when emotion gets involved, and I've worked on other capital cases where a husband, you know, has killed a wife, and the husband was actually very dependent on the wife.
He had a low IQ, and she took care of business, and it was an emotional support.
But the passion took over and resulted in a really grisly murder.
And so these are the questions, but they're only questions.
And I haven't heard anything yet.
And I don't think you have yet that they had any type of real personal involvement.
And I just want to say I really do appreciate your sophistication and sensitivity around all the kinds of tough issues that this all brings up for everyone.
You know, for some people and sometimes for everyone.
I appreciate that.
So there's the relationship thing. And that's kind of an easy one, right?
If that's, like, simple, we got it, okay, this is what happened.
That's okay, yes.
Okay, but let me just take another angle on it.
And, again, this is total conjecture,
but most of us have had, like, a crush on a teacher at some point in our school schooling
yeah and it's conceivable that ryan may have held some kind of feelings that he never communicated
to to tara and um carried that with him and then then, you know, if drugs were involved in the movement of a man's
mind and a man's heart, while under drugs, that thing could have become even bigger or grown over
time. And he may have gone to her in some passionate state as like a person that actually
had a relationship with someone had. and she responded negatively or confusedly at
least if this is the scenario sure and maybe in his you know if he was in a deranged state
that's how the whole thing went down and that's a possibility and you again you know maybe the
psychologist that evaluate him i am pretty sure this will be a case that gets evaluated by a psychologist.
I'm sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And may find out that, you know, or something else.
The other thing is he went to her house.
Was it during a burglary?
Was it merely for self-gain and money?
And then it turned bad and it turned into a murder.
Those are all kind of aggravating circumstances.
and it turned into a murder.
Those are all kind of aggravating circumstances. Another thing is, you know, afterwards, the kind of plantedness,
the way that they systematically covered things up could be an aggravating thing
in that while it was kind of cold-blooded, it was planned out,
they were in their right minds, this was not a random violent act of an impassioned person.
This was a methodical crime.
So all that may come into play as painting this negative picture of the defendant.
One thing that the defense is going to consider is an insanity defense, if there's a possibility of that.
It has to be considered.
It's sort of responsible practice to take a look at that.
it's sort of responsible practice to take a look at that.
And there's just things that seem out of whack about this whole,
the whole crime and who did it and who the victim was, right?
Something doesn't seem right.
Not that any murders were right.
What I mean is that this just seemed, something strange happened here.
Yes.
And everyone's shocked that this guy's been fingered at this point insanity it's not guilty by reason of insanity ngri and there are two standards for that
in georgia and that's operating under a delusional compulsion. And that would be something like, you know, the devil came in
and told me he was going to kill
everyone in Osceola
if I didn't kill Tara.
And so I was doing it to save everyone
and really believing that.
That's a delusion.
It's psychotic.
It's a complete lack of attachment
to actual reality.
The second standard is the inability to distinguish right from wrong.
Psychosis, it's and or the inability to distinguish right from wrong, because if you're operating under delusional compulsion, then you're assuming right is doing what these auditory hallucinations told you, and the belief that the devil is going to kill everyone else.
Right.
But the inability to distinguish right from wrong can emerge from a number of factors,
including like intellectual deficits, momentary states of confusion, other kinds of false beliefs
that maybe don't reach delusional levels. There's a whole range of ideas that, things that can
disconnect someone from their ability to distinguish right from wrong.
It's rare. I mean, our society depends on that ability that we all act in a way that that is right and not wrong.
You know, and sure, people take little privileges here and there with it.
But murder is quite a substantial one.
Now, both of
those standards it's a very very high legal standard in other words there has to be some
serious heavy evidence to support either one of those or both A lot of what Doug and I talked about was just speculation.
But the idea that Ryan may have developed some sort of unhealthy obsession with teachers or just Tara specifically seemed to fit better with the way he's been described to me.
The burglary theory just wasn't cutting it.
While I was in Osceola last week, I paid a visit
to Dusty Vassie over at the
Osceola Star just to catch up
and talk about everything.
I feel like I was woken up by this whole thing,
to be honest. Right. I mean, I obviously
was not expecting anything to
happen like it's happened. Yeah.
Think about where we started. I mean, seriously,
try to picture...
We were right here. Yeah, we were like, picture
the first time I ever came here.
What the hell did you think was going to happen?
Be honest with me. I thought
you'd do like 10 episodes
and then it would be, you know...
Remember that time that there was that podcast
about the Tara Grinstead case?
And that was...
That would be it.
After Ryan got arrested, there was a lot of speculation going around about who else might get arrested.
And I'm sure a lot of people got all of a sudden wrapped up into that, oh my goodness, somebody I care about is getting talked about.
And of course, one person did get arrested too, Bo Dukes.
But that press conference, when it sunk into me that she's really dead,
I felt like lightheaded.
I hadn't really felt like that in my whole life.
It sounds like I'm being dramatic,
but I'm really not.
I was with you and I know exactly how you feel.
I was just overwhelmed.
I was nervous.
I was scared.
I was excited.
I was in disbelief.
It's like,
yeah,
this is a story to me.
Yes, this is a podcast, but I feel like I'm a part of this.
Not just because of the podcast.
I personally feel like I'm part of this.
Well, you are.
I think you are.
That's what's different about it.
It's not what it started out to be.
No.
I was just trying to tell a story in the beginning but now i'm trying to seek justice
beyond just finding out what happened to tara and that's for personal reasons yeah and that's
what's crazy about this whole story i always thought that somebody did murder Tara. But we didn't know.
Oh, yeah, me too.
I didn't know that.
I couldn't come out and say with 100% confidence, but I always thought it.
Oh, yeah.
I think most people do.
But when somebody else, when the GBI tells everybody publicly that this is who murdered Tara,
and there's a face to the person.
And I can see him.
And he looks at me
and we're looking at each other.
When I found out
that she was really dead,
and I don't know,
that's the only,
that's what the difference was.
And that's the thing too,
it's that, okay.
Because there was always,
you know,
there was that small chance
that she's out there.
And I think that's even part of it.
Because when I was driving to work that day, the idea had crossed my mind that they might be announcing that she's alive.
Because I'd heard it was good news.
So I'm thinking, good news.
Maybe they found her alive.
And then by the time the press conference had come around, I'd already heard all these rumors about Ryan Duke being arrested. We already knew that that's not what they were announcing today.
Yeah.
So I was pretty certain that wasn't going to be it.
But when they announced that he was charged with murder, there was a part of me that just, I mean, became really sad.
And that sadness, at times, has turned into anger.
Because, yeah.
What I can say is just in the last few days,
we have started conducting some interviews,
and that led us to Ryan Duke.
Had his name ever come up before this investigation?
It had not. It had not.
This gentleman never came up on our radar screen.
This gentleman never came up on our radar screen.
She sent me the name, you know, Ryan Duke.
I said, yeah, that's him.
Then she calls me and she says,
is this the Pecan Orchard story?
I said, yeah, it is.
Yeah, how do you know?
She said, we heard about this 10 years ago.
The GBI said that his name, Ryan Duke's name,
had never appeared on their radar before,
and that is not accurate.
He has been questioned.
The GBI had the exact scenario that played out two weeks after Terry disappeared.
Since the day of Ryan Duke's arrest, I have heard from more than one credible source that in some capacity, law enforcement knew about this.
Twelve years ago.
I followed up with Dusty again, and this is what he told me.
An hour or two before the press conference started, I got a call from somebody.
An hour or two before the press conference started, I got a call from somebody. This specific call said that there was a party back in 2005,
and I believe Ryan was talking and had said something about killing Terry Grinstead.
So somebody came forward and reported it in 2005
and gave someone in law enforcement Ryan Duke's name.
and gave someone in law enforcement Ryan Duke's name.
I've since learned that it was investigated and that they didn't find anything.
Investigated as in went to the pecan orchard.
I've heard this from multiple sources,
more than one person that makes me believe it's true.
So if that's true,
then why did the GBI say that Ryan Duke was never on their radar?
Or did someone from a local agency somehow neglect to tell them about this?
It is now known to the GBI that some urban county or either a civil law enforcement official
knew about this location just a few weeks after Terry went missing and kept her from the GBI the whole time.
They were having a party at the Pecan Orchard just a week or two after Terry went missing.
And one of the boys got drunk and was talking a lot about what they were saying.
And this person was very uncomfortable with it.
So they went to the Osceola Police
Department or the Irving County Sheriff's Department, I don't know which one, and told
them.
And somebody from one of those departments went out to the pecan orchard, to the spot,
and didn't do anything and didn't tell the GBI.
Maybe they thought there was really nothing to it, and just disregarded it.
Either way, that would be a huge mistake,
sending the entire town of Osilla, and the GBI themselves,
on a wild, 12-year goose chase.
I have been treading very softly in this area,
and I have been hesitant to share anything
until I felt like the information I was getting was indeed the truth.
There is clearly more to the story, and I am avidly investigating it right now.
Who else was at this party?
Who told the local law enforcement about this?
And what was actually done?
I hope that the podcast, like it's done in the past, will help bring those who know
something forward.
At first, Up and Vanish was about figuring out what happened to Tara.
And it's safe to say now that we're much closer to getting that answer.
But beyond just solving the mystery, this is also about justice.
And seeking the truth.
All of the truth.
No matter how ugly it may be.
So with that being said
I'll continue digging
and I would like to encourage anyone else who knows something
to come forward and share that information
we've all heard by now
the many stories from former friends and classmates
of Ryan and Bo
that Ryan just doesn't fit the bill
if we believe what the state is saying
that Ryan Duke killed Tara
by himself with his bare hands, then what are we missing here?
What do they know that we don't?
And trust me, I've thought a lot about that.
And up until this point, I have found nothing at all about Ryan that suggests any sort of plausible motive for her murder.
But the other day, I found something that really got my gears turning.
What I'm about to read you is a Facebook message sent by Ryan Duke to another former teacher of
his on April 27th, 2015 at 622 AM. The message reads, how are you? Just an older, wiser fool, 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.
Ryan A. Duke Thanks for listening guys. Today's episode was mixed and mastered by Resonate Recordings.
You can check them out at resonaterecordings.com.
Be sure to tune in this Thursday for a new Q&A episode
with myself and defense attorney Phillip Holloway.
If you have questions you want to submit, just give us a call at 770-545-6411.
Thanks, guys. I'll see you soon.