You're Wrong About - D.C. Snipers Part 2
Episode Date: February 3, 2020Mike tells Sarah how a nice Jamaican kid became the disciple of a mean American adult. Digressions include Tonya Harding (of course), “Sliding Doors” (again) and Anne of Green Gables (Sarah has an... English degree). Mildred re-appears just after the hour mark. We are unable to conceive of a content warning comprehensive enough for all the horrors contained in this episode. There is less crying in this episode than the last in this series, but only slightly. Continue reading →Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere else to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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I bet the ASMR community would really like to have like a you're wrong about mouth sounds out takes real
Welcome to your wrong about the podcast that you need therapy to get through
Jesus did you see that on twitter the other day? No one of our wonderful listeners said that they were a big fan of our
Ann and Nicole Smith episode, but that they needed
Therapy to get through it. Oh god. I mean, I guess that's a good thing, right? It's I think it's neutral
I think it speaks to you know, just think about what your tastes are and
And if that's not what you want then then that's okay
And if you need to take a break and be in therapy for seven years and return that's fine
I mean we've been making the show for less than two years. So I don't think that exact scenario is what played out
But 18 months sure
I am Michael Hobbs. I am a reporter for the Huffington Post and I'm sarah marshall
And I'm researching a book on the satanic panic and we are on patreon at patreon.com slash you're wrong about
And we have some tote bags that we are going to sell you about how capitalism is bad because
Life is an ironic trifle. It's going to be all goth merch from now on. This is where we're going to do black light posters next
Yes, because I'm ready and today we're talking about the dc sniper part two
I have no idea where any of this is going
I I'm I'm completely lost and you are gonna have to
Take me to the next thing because I don't even know what question to ask you
I guess we should start by talking about what we talked about last week. Yeah, do you want to catch us up?
Yes, so last week we talked about the life of mildrid Muhammad
And going to the store one day and meeting a guy named john
and the relationship becoming abusive and the abuse
Increasing and his control of her increasing
And then we talked about john
Kidnapping the kids that he and mildrid had together and that he did not have custody of
and her searching for them and having absolutely no luck
In her efforts to find them
And living in a women's shelter as she
Got her life back together after john kidnapping their children
And what do you remember from the dc sniper shootings about lee boyd malvo?
He's a accomplice. I mean all I know is that he was much younger that he was a
You said in the last episode. He was a 17 year old boy. Yeah, and when john was 41. Yeah
Yeah, and I wish I could remember if I was surprised when I found out that one of the
Perpetrators was a teenager. So before we start I want to make a kind of meta comment on this episode. Is that okay?
I don't even know what a meta comment is. So
Sure, so my meta comment for this episode is that everything that happens from now on basically
Everyone is an unreliable narrator
It's like a flannery o'connor novella
When lee malvo is arrested in 2002 right, you know when they find out that he and john are the ones doing the
Sniper shootings. He confesses to all of them. He says I did 100 of the shootings
And then nine months later. He says the only reason he said that was because he wanted to spare john the death penalty
And so he was so kind of brainwashed indoctrinated by john at that point
That he just took all of the responsibility for everything so that john would get off
Free and I can see a 17 year old believing that the same way that joey
Butifuco was known to say to amy fischer according to her memoir kids don't go to jail
Which she believed yeah, and he's so brainwashed at that point that he
introduces himself to police officers as john lee mohammed
Wow, wow their identities are so fused that it's not clear if he sort of knows the difference between
The story he's telling in reality. Did john mohammed have the tiniest cult that we've ever seen
I mean this seems like a cult of one. Yeah, it's a single serving cult. It's like a sugar packet. Yeah
And then in 2006 three years later lee confesses to four extra murders
And says that sort of on the way to dc before the sniper shootings
They killed a bunch of extra people
Then this is kind of a weird detail in 2010. He does an interview with
William shatner. What? Yes. What are you one upping me for a celebrity cameo?
Is this what this is?
William shatner. Yes. Why in the 2000s?
William shatner had a show on a and e called aftermath
The show had a pretty good idea. It was returning to historical events that have been
Misremembered by the population and telling them in their true form. Oh
I can almost imagine it as some sort of audio series did we just steal William shatner's idea? It's it's extremely possible
Wow, and on that show lee says that he killed 42 people
Huh, which is no one has ever been able to verify those are henry lee lucas numbers
Yeah, you know shatner doesn't push him for specifics. It's only a 20 minute long interview, right?
They want to say that he killed 42 people. Yeah, they don't want to do an episode that's like
We really don't know because that's hard to do a promo with and a lot of these murders that he's confessing to
Some of them it's not clear if there's even a body
And is he confessing to known murders that are like open cases or does he say like I killed someone of this age?
And in this location at this time and they match it to something both
He's he confesses to a murder in la that nobody has been able to find an you know an unsolved murder during that time period in la
It's just we killed someone
It could mean that they killed a homeless person or killed somebody where it looks like it was
Something natural. Yeah, and then there's others that he confesses to where it's people that were shot from far away
With a rifle, but there's no evidence like one of them is in clearwater florida
And there's no evidence that lee and john were in clearwater florida at that time
There's another one in texas where there's no sort of bus tickets or any other record that they were in texas
It's just someone who got shot with a gun from far away
There's also in 2012 he does because it's the 10 year anniversary of the shootings
He does a three hour long interview with the washington post
In which they specifically ask him
Was there ever any sexual contact between you and john and he says no no no nothing
Then the next day he gives an interview to matt lauer on the today show and he says that john was molesting him the entire time
And so what you find over and over again in this story is
You find different versions of the truth both of which sound plausible
Yeah, like it's plausible to me that there would be sexual abuse and he wouldn't come forward about it
This is something that we're extremely familiar with on the show
But then it also sounds plausible to me that he just responds to a question
And he just sort of spins this story because there's there's no other evidence of john
Sexually abusing anybody and there's no evidence from mildred's book of this
Like no one else has come forward no one else has described anything borderline from john
And so the idea that he could be
Making that up is plausible and the idea that he's not making that up is plausible too
Right or the idea that he feels like maybe this didn't literally happen
But I need to express a degree of control that he had over me
Then I have not been able to adequately express by talking about emotional abuse or whatever else was going on
I don't want to like come down on either side of or either version of the story
Well, how could we possibly know exactly?
I mean, none of us will ever know and this is one of the things that I think is
To not make this entire episode super tedious of me saying like this timeline is wrong or like this fact is disputed
I just want to sort of get out of the way now that all of the information we know about liboyd malvo comes essentially from a single book
That's written by a woman called karmita alboros. Who's a former social worker?
She's jamaican and li is jamaican as well. And so she starts speaking in patois to him and they get really close
They spend hundreds of hours together
but it's also
really notable that karmita alboros is a
mitigation consultant hired by his legal team
Because his legal team is now in a ongoing legal case
About sort of juveniles and life imprisonment that is going to be heard by the supreme court
When is that going to happen? Do we know this year? We're finally doing a current event. I know this time
I knew it would happen
And so there's no evidence in this book that karmita has made anything up or that she's acted unethically in any way
But you have to acknowledge her structural
Incentives right her structural incentive is to identify mitigating factors for his crimes
Can you talk about what mitigating factors are actually for people who don't sit around thinking about legal stuff all day?
I feel like you would know this better than I would my understanding of it is that if you're a mitigation specialist
Your job is to talk to people who know or have insight into the life
Of this person and to try and humanize them
You know, yes, they did these things
But if you look at everything that they've experienced and and what has been
Searing them towards this fate. Maybe you will be able to show mercy to them. Yeah, exactly
And so because karmita is a mitigation specialist for lee
She's not interested in john at all. So there's very little information in this book about john
She doesn't interview mildred. I mean, that's interesting because john is such
I would imagine would be such a big part of the mitigation of lee's crimes because he's
I would imagine from all the criminal minds. I've been watching the dominant party in this unsub team
Absolutely, yeah
And another structural weakness in the information that we have about lee is that karmita is also not interested in the crimes
Because you don't want to talk about the crimes
So much exactly and so yeah, this book has massive inconsistencies that lee says that he's in louisiana until september 24th
But the first shooting related to the sniper tax is on september 5th around dc
He says they bought the blue caprice in october. They actually bought it in september. I mean, there's tons of these
Little facts related to the crimes that are totally inconsistent. Yeah, so it's worth noting that she's not on a fact finding mission
Yeah, I mean she is but like she's not on a logistical fact finding mission like the
Details of the crime aren't the goal of this. Yeah
And so the narrative kind of breaks down and what you have is lee's
Recollections of the crimes
That don't really match reality and don't match sort of the paperwork and the the records that we have
So we have like this weird collot like this is an interesting story for the lack of
Perspective from directly within it. Yeah, I just want to be really transparent about that that
I've read five books about this now and i'm trying to put together the narrative in a
Chronological order, but things are all over the map like different. There's different dates for when people arrive in different countries
Things are in the wrong order. I mean even with okay. There's a fair amount of inconsistency like people different sources are saying different things
It's really about something substantial
Yeah, yeah, but even something as obsessively ironed out
As the okay simpson trial in which everything that happened was recorded
And there's still a wild amount of inconsistency. This is the caveat for any story we tell
To that extent it's just really obvious in this case
Which is good because we it's the obvious cases that make us realize how common this kind of inconsistency is
I just I mean the whole time i've been researching this i've been having this kind of like
You've been very uncomfortable for a while, huh?
And also i'm i don't want to stop us every two minutes to be like
Oh, the government of antigua says it's may 20th, but mildred says it's may 22nd
Like i don't want to i don't want to do that 50 times this episode
So like i'm mostly just gonna try to kind of go with what my gut tells me is the most convincing version of the narrative
Okay, and be like here's what i think is is probably like as close to the objective truth as we can get based on my own
Reckoning yes as so many of the subjects of our shows. We're doing our best. I'm doing my best to put this together in order
That's all I can that's all I can vouch for. I hope that people are picturing just two kato kalins
recording this show
But one of the things that's that we should start with is that one area where there is
blanket consistency between biographies and journalistic investigations and the manhunt books is that
Lee malvo had a
horrific childhood
And in the same way that the portrait of abuse that we had last episode where it wasn't physical abuse
Was different than the narrative we're sort of used to hearing
Lee's narrative is also different in that his father
Was a source of love and protection in his life and his mother
Was a force of violence and terror in his life consistently
This is a excerpt from karmita's biography of lee lee's mother is named una
Stacy ann lee's cousin observed una beating malvo. He could not have been more than six years old
Una was hitting him all over his body with a belt and despite the fact that malvo's nose was bleeding
Una did not stop
Marie recalled her daughter running to her to tell her that una was murdering lee
But when she went to leave the shop and try to stop the beating una turned on her and she had to leave
so
There's this dynamic in the house where his father is taking him out to play his father is taking him on bike rides
His father is taking him out for ice cream, which according to karmita
This is not something super normal for jamaica where it's a relatively patriarchal society and men are not
expected to spend a lot of time with their sons
That we have lee's father leslie who is uncommonly
Gentle and sort of this counteracting force to his mother
Who's capricious and cruel and karmita even mentions this in her book
This is she's interviewed una lee's mother quite a few times
In many of my interactions with una james. I have experienced her moods myself
We could be having a reasonable discussion and then without warning
She would spring to her feet and begin railing against everything and everyone around her including me
She would lash out at the government for not stepping in to get malva away from muhammad
Then in the same sentence, she would lash out at malva blaming him for the problems
She faced and stating that she wished she had aborted him. Wow
So just like anger looking at something to be directed at basically and also these these big mood swings
So one of the most consistent
Features of lee's childhood is inconsistency that she'll be nice to him
He'll ask her question
You know the way kids do like why is the sky blue whatever and they'll be having a perfectly nice conversation
And then he'll ask another question and she'll be like, why are you so stupid?
And she'll hit him in the head and send him to his room without eating
There's no way to predict these things
There's an incident where he wants to become an artist and his mom is like, yeah, sure that sounds great
She buys him all these colored pencils. She buys him paper. He's drawing when he's a kid
He's like eight or nine and then one day she comes home and she just says being an artist is stupid
You should be a doctor instead and she takes away all of his drawing supplies and paper and stuff
Oh my god
This is kind of what he comes to expect in his life that there's never going to be any emotional consistency
Yeah, so when he's six his parents break up
His dad has gotten a job in the cayman islands. No dad. Don't go. I know
and he's spending more time away
And lee's mother becomes convinced that he's cheating on her
And they start fighting more apparently this culminates in they have a huge fight about why are you cheating on me?
She says he's gambling away all of their money
Which I think is partly true actually that he does have a gambling problem
But they have this big fight in which he hits lee's mother and she picks up a machete and chases him out of a house
I just thought at least she didn't kill him with the machete
And then I was like no one's childhood biography should involve the phrase at least she didn't kill him
Right true like that shouldn't be the at least of your life
Yeah, and so basically he leslie lee's father leaves moves to a different part of kingston
And so he spends all of his time at this point just waiting for the holidays
Because that's the only time that he sees his father is once a year when his dad comes back
Although una asked malva what was wrong. She would not listen to his explanation
He recalled that whenever he explained that he just wanted to have his father around
His mother would slap him across the face angrily for even mentioning it
He felt despair
He was unable to understand why his father had not yet returned to save him early depression had begun to set in
This is uh this part sucks, but we have to do it. Okay
I got a blanket so I can be nice and cozy while you break my heart
I'm sorry. I I want to say that like oh, it's gonna get better, but no it does not get better
It's just a really dark story all the way through of course
It's not gonna get better because we know that the end game is that he becomes a serial killer
Yes, or at least a helper of a serial killer unclear, but like yeah
Yeah, so like we're just gonna we're just gonna get to the end and that's the goal here. Nothing is gonna get better
That's the point. That's what we're learning. Yeah, he's eight years old at this point
Basically the only
Friend that he has is this stray cat which starts coming to the house. So he starts taking care of this cat
He names it charlie. Oh god. I'm not gonna like where this is. I know I know I know
I had to cut out a couple lines because it gets really bad
Malvo recall that charlie urinated on the bed
Una screamed like malvo had never heard her scream before then he recalled she hit him in the head until he bled
She insisted that he get rid of the cat and threatened that she would not stop beating him until charlie was gone
He recalled feeling tremendous anger toward his mother, but he was not able to lash out at her
Malvo recalled that he got charlie placed him on the steps and hit him with a broom
Malvo said that whenever charlie returned to the house, he had to hit him until he went away
After the cat stopped coming to the house malvo who had been potty trained from when he was one year old began to wet the bed regularly
Oh god
We also get the inevitable
Hint that una grew up in a house just like this
So after carmena tells the story of the stray cat. She says
Significant as well is that malvo was unaware of the memories his cat stirred for his mother
Marie laurence una's sister remembered that she and una had shared a cat as children
They were very poor and could not afford regular toys. So despite their father's objection. They got a stray cat
Their father's reason for not wanting a cat in the house stemmed from folklore that cats are like vampires and suck the blood of children
Thus they had to hide the animal from their father when their father found it in the home
He killed it
We cried so hard because we really loved the cat Marie recalled
And there's other hints too that una grew up in a house exactly like this
Well, I mean that's and that's how you learn how to take care of a child if that's how you're raised
And and if you don't have the emotional resources to question that or or heal
This is just like the echo of abuse that we see in so many stories, right? Right. This is why trauma is hereditary. Yeah. Yeah
And so what happens now? This is when lee is nine
There begins this pattern where his mom
Keeps trying to leave to get him a better life
So what happens is she emigrates to a place called st. Martin, which is like a tourist island two hours flight away
where there's higher paying jobs and
She just leaves lee with a neighbor and is just like I'll send back money every month. Can you take care of my son?
here's you know, here's money for food and
This happens a number of times that she convinces kind of a random person to take lee
And then you know, she promises to send money back and then after a couple of months the money stops
So whoever lee is with starts either
Abusing him or sort of making him work off the debt. This is awful. By the way
This is like reading like a charles dickens novel. Yeah, it's like I keep thinking of a series of unfortunate events where
It's like a new thing happens and you're like everything's gonna be fun and then it ends up worse
Right. And then once you learn the pattern, you're like great. What new trauma will this bring?
Yeah, because this is kind of the cyclical nature of trauma too that like of course his mother who is
Bad at parenting is going to give him, you know, put him in situations that will lead to further suffering for him
Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. First. He's with this woman whose husband is really abusive to him
Then he moves in with una's sister
Things are going fine for a while then
Apparently there's an incident where he goes to a community center and he gets in like a debate with other boys
lee wants to go to flight school because his father gave him a flight jacket when he was a kid
And so he's become sort of fixated on becoming a pilot
And he's like reading books about flying and aircraft and stuff at night
And so apparently he's at this community center and there's like a debate breaks out
Like the way that it does among boys like this plane is faster than this other plane
Like the kinds of things that kids get about before the internet. Yes fairs beats. Yes. Yeah, battle star galactica. Exactly
And so he basically like wins this argument against the other boys because he's he's such a nerd about airplanes
And then these other boys are bigger than him
And so they beat him up and they make him walk home naked. They steal all of his clothes
Jesus
This is awful. He gets home and then una's sister
And her husband smack him around for going to the community center in the first place
They were like, well, you shouldn't have been there. You should have come home after school anyway
God
And then he tells his mom like I don't want to live with them anymore because this is a nightmare
And then his mom beats him because why are you complaining about this? And now it's a big hassle for me. Oh my god
This is the series of unfortunate events style narrative of everything in his life that just everything makes everything else worse
So after that he ends up moving in with a woman named Simone Powell who's 21 years old. She's a school teacher
She's the daughter of una's aunt
So his cousin I think that makes her he's unis. Yeah, she's his second or first cousin once removed
First remove something. Is that it? It doesn't matter. They're related
Yeah, and this is like maybe the first positive
Caretaker that he's had in his life
He's keeping a journal at the time
And so this is what he writes Simone had a parenting style that was the complete opposite of any approach
I had ever encountered we sat down and she asked me what I expected from her
She saw the look of astonishment on my face
Then she explained that she had certain expectations of me and vice versa
She did not believe in corporal punishment and she would not engage in it
She said things to me that I never thought I would hear when I was wrong
She explained where I was wrong when I did well. She commended me on how well I had been doing
She gave me as much time as I needed to question her and I in turn actually comprehended what she was saying
How old is he at this point? He's 11 now. Wow. So he's been through
A lot in like this five year long like because it's been five years since his dad left
So this like yeah, love void of almost half his life too
And he finally has some level of consistency in parenting and some level of just
Emotional adulthood around him where like hey, we're gonna come up with a deal and when you do this
I'm gonna punish you but I'm gonna be nice to you when you you know get good grades or whatever
And like he's never had that level of consistency in his life before
He's also an extremely good student at one of his elementary schools
He's literally the the top student when karmita goes to jamaica to interview his former teachers
One of them in 2003
Is still using a chart that lee made in her class because the graphic was so good
And also all of his teachers say that he's wildly intelligent and
Just like a nice kid that as soon as he finishes his homework
He'll walk around and help out all the other kids not in a like
I'm smarter than you braggy kind of way, but in like hey, how can I chip in?
he's just like the sweetest kid and so
He's at this like dumb prep school at the time that like he's not for the first time in his life
He's not getting good grades and he doesn't really like the kids and the kids aren't really like him and it's far away
And so simone is a school teacher
So simone moves him to the school where it's like 10 minutes to walk away
They walk to school together in the morning so he can hang out with her during the day
He starts getting straight a's again
And you just know where like where this is going
That one night simone gets a knock on the door
And it's lee's mother
And she storms into the house and says why did you steal my son? Why have you taken my son away from me?
And so even though she's not living in the country
She's gotten it in her head that like moving him
From this prep school to this slightly more modest school is some sort of betrayal
And that she has to take lee back
Well, like she sees it as something that a parent does because if you're someone's mother then you are the person
Who knows what school they should be at. I mean, but you can see where that reaction comes from and then
And how nothing good can come of it. Yeah, and then it metastasizes into this big ugly thing that
Apparently she's storming around simone's house and sort of look look how small his room is and look how dirty his clothes are
And look at the way that he's living and you know, why didn't you tell me you were moving him to a different school?
And simone is like I didn't have an address for you
There was no way for me to notify you
You created a situation where your child would bond with someone else and now you can't stand it
Yeah, and yeah, you've stopped sending money months ago
And what's really interesting and I think like I I see everything in the story is a metaphor
But this is just such a perfect metaphor that you know immediately as soon as there's that knock on the door
lee understands
That his mother is going to take him away. Yeah simone keeps trying to
Apply logic to the situation. She's like no no no once we explain that we tried contacting her and we couldn't and your grades are really good
She'll be fine with this like it's it's it's working well like she's she's appealing to reality
Right, she's like no this is this is objectively good and soon she will see that this is objectively good
The jury will understand the dna evidence. Yeah, exactly
And so lee understands how his mom works. He's like no, it doesn't matter what's true
Yeah, it doesn't matter what the reality is all that matters is her emotional state
And she doesn't hear what you're saying. She knows yeah how what you're saying makes her feel
Exactly what we're dealing with and so karmita actually goes to jamaica and interviews simone about this entire experience
And this is from her book malvo told her that he wanted to be with his mother and he would never need her again
It was like a stab in my heart. She said I could not believe it was the same child that I had grown to love
Saying those hurtful things
Unknown to simone malvo denounced her because he was forced to by his mother
Right away airbud. I know
He packed his clothes, but he left one item a favorite shirt among her clothes
I left that shirt, which was my favorite hoping that she would understand. He said it's like broke back mountain
The only real love in this life is just like someone
All alone smelling a shirt
Simone recalled finding the shirt among her dirty laundry, but thought that it was just left by mistake
Not until years later during the course of my investigation. Did she learn why malvo had left it behind?
Wow, Simone recalled that after una removed malvo
Simone sought counseling to deal with what she saw as a rejection of everything she had done for him
She remarked that it was so painful for her that she vowed not to have children of her own
Oh my god
The next time simone saw malvo was in court when she went to testify on his behalf. Oh
That I know that there are so many
kinds of sadness in the world and there's so much happening at any given second, but
That shirt story it sucks dude and like that being all he can do and her not understanding what's happening
It's like I know it might be the saddest thing I have ever heard
I know like at this moment that certainly feels true to me. I mean, you know, it's it's uh,
because the fact that like there's so much
actual love there and that the circumstances are so
Awful that they yeah take away the ability to express it and then there's this like tiny spark that can escape
And then it just has to die. Yeah, it's too much. It's too much. Yeah, and so
Una takes him away from Simone and puts him in a boarding school puts him back in this
Preppy school where he's not getting as good a grades. Well boarding school is always good news only good things happen there
Although weirdly the boarding school because you expect it to be super bad, but the boarding school is actually fine
It's just that he doesn't know anybody all the other kids are going home on weekends to see their families
And he doesn't have anywhere to go
So the owner of the boarding school talks about him just sort of sitting and looking out the window all day
Yeah, that's like the story of the young Scrooge
Charles Dickens was good at knowing how like you don't need to have like a one-to-one ratio of
Pain to meanness for it to make sense because like in the christmas carol
It's like, you know what made Scrooge this way everyone else went home for christmas and he had to read. Yeah
So after six months a year at the boarding school his mom gets deported from st. Martin
She gets caught there and comes back to Jamaica. What has she been doing?
Do we know what she's been doing for work there? It's actually like some of this is
Like her argument in all of the interviews that she's given about him is that
Everything she was doing she was doing for him. So she works her ass off like she she owns a restaurant at one point
She's selling juices on the street to tourists
She's I mean she she really does work her ass off and her whole thing is that I wanted him to have a good education
She says all of the discipline all of the you know
Pushing him to be in this prep school was all so that he could sort of get out of the situation
That she was in of just constant toil and constantly being on the hustle to try to get out of poverty. Yeah
Sure, I mean
Right like you can you can be a good entrepreneur and a bad parent and you can care about your child in a way that
leaves you
Still without the ability to
Do day to day parenting in a way that is helpful or safe for them
And also that you know looking back over like a very you know a bundle of potential regrets that you have
Yeah, you know just look at everything that has happened and been like well
I was doing everything altruistically and so
Eventually she comes back to Jamaica. She takes him out of the boarding school and he moves in with her
She starts building a home
There's a point where she finds a box in his room of love letters to his girlfriend
How old is he?
He's 13 at this point and he has like a really cute relationship with this girl that they're holding hands
They've had this whole thing where they're going to save themselves for marriage like they're both Christians
And they're like we want to have a pure relationship
So this entire relationship appears to consist of writing cute notes and holding hands
Like it doesn't seem like much else is going on and una finds the cards
And immediately goes into a rage like he's never seen before because you know
Why are you writing her cards and you never wrote me when I was in st. Martin? Yeah, what?
And again like people didn't always have an address for her right like he wouldn't have been able to do that
And also she's super mean and it's not it's not like if he called her she'd be like oh, hey, sweetie
How was your day like of course he doesn't call her right?
She's abandoned him in this random boarding school or with like abusive families that he barely knows
There's an accidental trend we're noticing here about the kind of volatility of people who on some level know they've like fucked up
A relationship beyond repair and are like no that can't happen right? I have to force it to not happen somehow by
Ruining it further. Yeah, and like how dare you respond reasonably to the situation that I've created
Yes, and so
After she finds these cards
She beats him with a belt so bad that he falls unconscious
That one of the neighbors has to come and pull her off of him and he just wakes up in the bed the next day
Like he doesn't even remember the beating stopping. That's so horrible to think about. Yeah, and so
This is where
Carmita in the book and also various psychologists court-appointed psychologists say
This is where he really starts dissociating. Yeah, and so this is from a psychologist that
Examined him as part of his trial
From that point on Malvo kept to himself
He said that he fell into a kind of melancholy mood and went with the flow
If his mother was in a good mood and detected a change in his attitude, she would hug him and ask him what was wrong
Why was he not talking?
However, a couple hours later, she would tell him that he was the worst thing that had ever happened to her
He remembered that simple conversations ended up with his being struck because he did not answer in time
The beatings were relentless and after a while he did not even feel the blows. He just removed himself
Another thing that his teachers and his friends start to say at this point is that it's
impossible to tell at any time what Lee
thinks or feels
Because he starts bending himself to the emotional needs of other people
So if somebody else is mad, he'll sort of act mad with them. Like, yeah, that's bullshit
If they're really happy, he'll be like their jubilant friend
In interviews with his teachers, Carmita finds again and again
That people are like you couldn't tell he was feeling because he had to know how you were feeling first
And then he would reflect it back to you
It's sort of like what do you need me to be and I think yeah, that's a symptom of growing up with this
Hurricane of a mother where he never knows what her emotional state is and so he just has to bend to it at all times
Yeah, and then and if going into a situation with your own mood already in place like that would be a very dangerous thing to do
Because you don't know if that's gonna upset her and then if that happens god help you
Yeah, and so you just have to wait to get a sense of where she's coming from and then do your best to appease that
And then if you learn how to do that
In your most essential, you know in first and most fundamental relationship
Then like of course you're gonna be likely to do that with everyone else. Absolutely. Yeah
And this I mean this is something that characterizes him for the rest of his life
And it's it's the same dynamic that he has with john too that we've seen from mildred
That john has this emotional volatility where you can never tell what he's gonna do for minute to minute
Yeah, and this is something that makes lee feel like he's at home. Yeah, or as tania harding once said
My mom hit me and she loved me. Jeff hits me. He loves me. It's just the way life goes. Yeah, that was what she knew
Yeah was abusive relationships like that that was her experience of relationships to a tremendous extent
Yeah, that's that's lee's experience of love
so
At this point, he makes a kind of a half-hearted effort to kill himself
He says hey mom, you're not gonna need to bother him with me anymore
And then he wanders outside and makes a noose for himself on a tree
She pulls him down
And then of course slaps him for you know ruining her day or whatever
She eventually again, she she leaves for antiqua
Which is another sort of touristy island that is more affluent than jamaica
So she's gonna go there and try to earn more money
She leaves him
With again like a nice lady like there's this teacher at school named miss maxwell
Who sees what's going on with him and sees how smart and nice he is and is like
Why don't you move in with me instead of going back to this boarding house? And so
karmita, of course interviewed her
When some maxwell begins tearing up as she talks about her time with lee in the summer of 1999
I remember saying to him would you like to move in with me and my family and he said really miss
I could see in his eyes. He was very excited and I took him in food clothes everything
We were speaking about adopting him and he gets close to her husband. Who's a really nice guy
They're growing vegetables in the backyard
They're relatively affluent apparently and they live in like a pretty big house. He has a room to himself
and
Just as he's settling in his mom writes to them and says he has to move to antiqua with me
So again, miss maxwell the next time she sees lee is when he's in prison for the dc sniper shootings and
This also appears in karmita's book that she actually flies up there to spend time with him
I want a movie about all of these poor
Mother figures of this boy
Going to washington to have to see this child that they almost
You know had a chance to permanently intervene in the life of and then having to you know
Probably not being able to talk to him except behind glass. I mean, it's yeah, that's incredibly
There's just so much happening that we don't hear about I know
Wow, so this is from this is from karmita's book
He shared with his former teacher that john muhammad's hold on him did not begin in the united states
But earlier in antiqua
He recalled a moment when muhammad told him three words that he longed to hear from his parents but never did
Good job son
By the way, where's his dad has he
Lost touch with him. What's going on?
So this is one of the saddest things about this that his dad is in
Jamaica this whole time
Yeah, and una has asked the father if he can take lee
But he says no i'm i'm in and out of the cayman islands too much again. He's from a poor country
He's trying to earn more money and so he's working his ass off and he's in another country a lot
Lee's suspicion is that his girlfriend doesn't want a kid in the house and doesn't want to compete with him
It's not clear sort of what evidence there is for that
Before he leaves for antiqua
He goes looking for his father. He knows the place where his father hangs out
He goes to the park where his dad plays dominoes
And apparently just sort of shows up one day and is like hi dad
and
And his dad is you know really happy to see him and like introduces him like hey, this is my son
Isn't he a great kid to the other guys at the park and then
Lee doesn't really have the courage to ask his dad like hey, can I move in with you?
And his father doesn't really have the courage to just let him and so they just kind of make small talk
And then he wanders away
One of this really interesting vanity fair interviews the father in i believe it's 2004 for this article
He admits that after several years on his own
He didn't want to engage una again if he allowed lee to move back in with him. She would have become a regular part of his life
And so
He doesn't want to have this woman in his life anymore. Yeah, and also that you would be able to tell yourself
I'm sure the situation is fine for him. You know what I can't see. I don't know about maybe
Yeah, and also, I mean, I think he's acting pretty selfishly, right? I mean he's lee leaves his son
Yes with this woman that he knows is abuse like he's seen literally the scars on his son
And so it's a pretty chicken shit thing to do
Carmita interviews him too and she says at our meeting leslie's eyes were read from crying
He recounted the first five years of his life with malvo and una
Ma'am, my boy was a good boy until that man took him over. It's that man. Why my son did this he said
As he spoke he clenched his fists and every vein in his face stood out
He asked for a few minutes to control his emotion and then he broke down and sobbed
So he did a really chicken shit thing and he it sounds like he's felt really really really bad about it for the rest of his life
Yeah, I think it can also be hard as a kid to have the knowledge or the feeling that
Someone does love you that you do have, you know positive
Experiences with this kind of parental figure or a literal parent
But that that love is somehow not enough for them to immediately intervene in your life
Yeah, I feel like that can feel worse at times that it's like tantalizingly almost
There and you're like if you're not this like wildly unstable person
And if you are capable of loving me consistently then like why have you been here this whole time and you haven't
Done anything about any of this like why am I not worth that?
And also lee, I mean it creates this weird mix of yearning and anger
Where lee misses his father and wants a father in his life, obviously
But also like fuck you dad. You left me. You left me in this nightmare for years
And so yes, he he experiences this is this huge rejection and he wants his father back
But he's also deeply deeply angry at his father right these two things are with him for the rest of his life
Yeah, so before we go to antigua. I just want to do a little interlude. I'm ready. It's cold here
The last person killed in the sniper attacks is named conrad johnson
And in all of lee's various tellings confessions unconfessions versions of this
He admits that he killed conrad. He's he's very consistent on this and one of the sort of cosmically sad things about this is that conrad who is a
Bus driver in dc at the time when he shot is a jamaican immigrant
his mother left jamaica moved to the united states left him with his aunt
And this is an excerpt from one of the manhunt books that we'll talk about more next episode
Conrad joined her when he was about 10 years old
According to his mother sonia wills a more loving child you could not find
Miss wills said that although she had five children
She was mother to many because conrad was the kind of child who would bring home boys
He felt needed the sense of direction. She was able to impart
Conrad was married and had two children of his own
He was a loving husband and father to his family and a wonderful son his mother said
She later told me if only malvo had looked conrad in the face before he had killed him
He would have seen the perfect father. He had been searching for
And it just sucks. It's like yeah two people reaching across this horrible divided each other
Yeah, and also that you know, that's the whole point of
Sniping right is that you're doing it from a great distance
And then if you're doing this, you know as a in a non militaristic fashion
But as as a murderer then that has to do with not wanting to see the face of the person I would imagine
I don't know and not and not wanting to consider how things would have been different
You know if he'd come across conrad instead of john
Yeah, so anyway, just a little cosmic sad sliding doors michael hobbs cry machine at the end of that
You love sliding doors. You talk about sliding doors a lot
So now we're going to go to antigua and we're going to switch perspectives to john
Okay, do you want to catch us up on like where john was last time we saw him?
Yeah, he had taken their three children for a custodial visit like a
Was it a day visit or a weekend weekend that they were doing weekend visit?
And then when he was going to return them he much like bob Shapiro bringing oj into custody was like, uh
Just what we're going to be an hour late. We're going to be two hours late and then
Disappeared right we know that from milderth's perspective john and the children have vanished and that she is searching for them
but we don't know where they've gone and
Yeah, that's that's where we've got so it appears
That when she paged john and he said like oh i'm at an electronic store. We'll be back in 45 minutes
They were at the airport. Oh and he was putting the kids on a plane to antigua
So custodial trafficking if you if you will, I mean, it's a family kidnapping
Yeah, I mean as we mentioned last episode like hundreds of thousands of these happen every year
It's it's the most common way that children are kidnapped. Yeah
So john is probably at the airport when he's calling milderth saying we will be back soon. I'm at an electronics store
I'm looking at a tv right now. Yeah, and I said something wrong last episode
I said that john's mother was from antigua
This is something that shows up in press reports
And in various books about these crimes john's mother was not from antigua. It's actually completely random
That he went to antigua the only reason he went to antigua and not whatever belgium or some other place
You're the only one who wants to go on vacation in belgium
True
He had a friend in tecoma whose car he had fixed whose cousin
Was a travel agent in antigua and was like, yeah, she didn't get you deals on plane tickets and like
It seems like you can stay with her for a while because she has a spare room
So like you and your kids can fly down there and john's like, yeah, okay, so it's just it's happenstance
Yeah, like he he doesn't care about antigua
But what happens once he gets there is he starts forging documents
Apparently he got into this by trying to forge birth certificates for his kids
So he could fly with them like he's been planning this kidnapping for a while
Wait, what tell me about the dot the flying documents
So did he need birth certificates so that he could get
Passports for them or what it what was that? So what appears to be the case is that he started
looking into this
When he wanted to get his kids out of the country without anybody knowing right like getting them flying on fake names
So his wife wouldn't be able to see see the records of where they had flown to and then
It seems to be that once he realized basically how easy it was
He started doing it as a business model because
The minute he gets to antigua
He starts setting up this business where there's a ton of jamaican immigrants in antigua who want to come to the united states
and so he can somehow
Get us birth certificates us id's
And he forges them id's and then they fly through Puerto Rico or Guam
Where a lot of the border guards don't speak english as a first language and so people with jamaican accents
Can get through like oh, yeah, i'm from Detroit. I was born there and the
People who speak spanish as a first language like can't tell that you're covering up a jamaican accents
They're like, oh, yeah, sounds good
And so right the government of antigua actually put together a task force report on john's business model
And the consensus is that he was super shitty like he wasn't really bad at this like at forging
Yeah, I mean he okay
He tries to get a job in antigua as a high school track coach and he forges a letter of recommendation
From a olympic runner
And apparently it's just like cartoonishly bad like the quote unquote signature of this olympian
It's just like a child's scrawl
Of just printing out his name. Yeah, like if you want to be convincing you can just do a scribble like that's more believable
Yeah, come on
But once he realizes how basically easy this is he starts selling us identities to jamaicans for $1,000 to $3,000
Wow, that's a lot of money
Yeah, yeah, geez and the way that he gets a passport for himself and his kids from antigua is
He enrolls his kids at a school in antigua and immediately starts dating the principal
And convinces her after only knowing him for two months to sign an affidavit
Saying that she's known him for two years and like vouching for him
There's a teacher at the school and he charms her and gets the information of her mother
Like birth date whatever and puts it on a birth certificate a fake birth certificate for himself
He has quite an effect on women like what is the basis of this? Does he have a gland?
That emits a pheromone or something like that like as we just talked about with oj simpson
I feel like this might have something to do with if you are constantly
Looking for marks you will find them
And then you know the same kind of simple things will tend to work on a lot of people
And also maybe it speaks to how women are socialized. It's amazing that he's so reliably able to get what he needs out of women
I mean people on the island talk about him as you know, he's fit. He's attractive. Is he handsome?
Yeah, I was just gonna ask
Yeah, I mean he they first of all before they know his name they call him the runner because he runs in
Booty shorts wearing nothing else like goes jogging every morning. And so people see like there's this fit dude jogging around the island and
He sort of becomes known and then you know as he starts going into shops chatting with people
He's really charming. Like he's he's this military guy. He spins this whole yarn about how he's like a military dad
With a background in antiqua, whatever. Oh, so he tells people his mother is from antiqua and that's the source of that
So that's what that's why he says he's there
I mean a lot of people on the island talk about like there were no signs that he was a weirdo
It was like he was a nice guy. He was great. We loved him. Like we didn't see any bitterness
We didn't see any resentment. This was when he was still capable of hiding that stuff
Well, yeah, and also that he would you know do well in relatively superficial relationships and kind of acquaintance type
Community stuff, you know, because people often talk about serial killers being paradoxically good neighbors
And it's like yeah, like if you interact with someone
at a mailbox like there's not a lot of
margin for things to get complicated, you know and intimacy is what breeds complexity
But also that you know here he is and he has I think possibly maybe a sense of like a fresh start and like
Yeah, you know would would be in in the best possible frame of mind for a little while
Although who knows how how good that is. Yeah
I mean it does start to fall apart because at the same time once he sort of establishes himself in Antigua
He starts flying back and forth to Tacoma
So this is when he shows up outside the shelter to harass Mildred
He's like gotta make a business trip to go threaten your mom's life. Yeah, like be good
And he's leaving the kids with kind of random people and for like weeks at a time
The kids are just expected to sort of go to school
But he's not like he's not being a responsible father at this point
Yeah, and he does have like a weird thing with kids a lot of people on the island
Talk about him as being he has this kind of military vibe
And so as he like walks into stores and stuff
He'll talk to the kids and be like stand at attention son
And if kids mess up he'll be like he'll be like drop and give me 50 like in this kind of jokey sort of way
But also like he seems kind of like fixated on people's kids
But also if you make the same joke constantly then it's kind of a tell
Yeah
Yeah, and when
Eventually when he goes back to the United States with Lee
He tells a bunch of people
Hey, do you want me to take your son with me like I can bring him back
I can get him a us passport and people are like
No, I don't I don't want to give my son to a random person
Like he does have a weird thing with like kind of recruiting kids
And I don't know if like that has anything to do with the accusation of sexual abuse
Or if that's just like he sees them as vulnerable and easy to take advantage of right
And you could see how the latter could be true without the former, but if both were true then
Yeah, you know, they would be related. I'm going to show you something now
Okay, so I'm sending you a picture of lee at this age. This is lee at age 14
14 that's young. Do you see it? Oh wow
I mean first of all, this looks like it could have been taken in 1930. I know right. Yeah, it's black and white
And it's kind of like faded. Yeah
And so he's he looks pretty small. Yeah, he looks like a skinny kid. He does not look like a strapping adolescent
He's wearing dress pants with a knife crease in the front
And then they're belted and kind of cinched they look like they're a little bit too big for him
And then a shirt that also looks too big for him. It's like how everybody dressed in the 90s
But it's like it looks like these clothes are for a bigger person. Yeah, and they're like blousing out around him
He's holding a book. This is school uniform. Yeah. Yeah, and he's
Yeah, I just looking at the camera. I just kind of like dead on into it just like with kind of a lack of
Expression, it's the look that you would give if someone called your name and you like happen to look at the lens
Right as the picture was taken like there's no sense of like him conveying any emotion or anything being conveyed to him
And he just looks so young. I just can't get over how he looks so young
He looks very small. He looks very childlike. He doesn't look like an adolescent. He looks like a child
Yeah, and when you think about in two years, this guy is going to be in the back of a trunk of a car
Shooting random people. It's like this is a child. Yeah, I mean he has little Oxford shoes. Yeah. Yeah
So since Lee has moved to Antigua, he's been there about nine months by the time he meets John
He moves there. He moves in with his mother and you will extremely believe this. She leaves almost immediately
She moves back to st. Martin shocker. I mean, it's like a pattern. It's like she has to reassure herself that
She still has him and then she she goes away again. She basically leaves him in like the backyard shack
Where they're living
She stops paying the electricity bills
She stops paying the rent. So his landlord is trying to kick him out
This is a 14 year old boy. Like this is the boy we see in the picture. Yeah, children should not have landlords to whom
They have to answer that's a belief of mine. He talks about sort of like slinking around
So the landlord won't see him like he kind of sneaks into the house and out
He mostly sleeps in an abandoned house
Because it's next to a street light and he can read by the light
He doesn't tell any of the kids at school like none of the kids at school
Know that he's basically just staying in like a cinder block square
I don't know where he's showering
But like he's showing up to school in his uniform seat like holding it together
But then behind the scenes
He's shoplifting CDs and then copying them and selling the copies for money. Like that's how he's getting by
That's really smart to figure. I mean if I were 14 years old and taking care of myself
I don't think it would come off with that. He's getting by
And just before he meets john una moves back
to Antigua
He and his mom move in with this guy named thomas into apparently thomas is like a nice guy like whenever you see nice
Men in the story. It's like yes. Thank god
He's helping them set up like an import-export business for clothes that
Una will fly to st martin buy a bunch of clothes and then come back to antigua and sell them
Which apparently is like doing well
So just before he meets john things are starting to look up like he's on an upswing
And so he meets john in an electronic store john is there with his son little john who is 11 at the time
And they're playing on a flight simulator and of course because lee wants to become a pilot
He sort of sits there fixated by this man and this boy and he's treating his son really well
Okay, put cream on me and he didn't try to make a move. Yeah, exactly
And his mom is now trying to move to the united states
She hears rumors that john can get her papers to the united states
So they go over una's like hey, let's let's you know
We need to stop by this guy's house that might be able to get me papers to the united states
They show up and it's john like the guy that lee has seen in the electronic store
It's so weird thinking about
Knowing all that we know about both these people thinking about the meeting. I know
It feels like wrestlemania, you know of like in one corner. They really mean mom
And in the other corner this really mean husband
And so john sets una up with papers to the united states
And as this process is happening lee starts just going over to john's house to hang out
This is this is like classic una that in december of 2000
She tells both thomas and lee. Oh, I got to go to st martin
I'm gonna buy a bunch of clothes come like this is these are routine trips that she makes
She's like, yeah, I got to go to st martin's tomorrow
And then a couple days go by they don't hear anything and then she calls and says i'm in florida
I've moved here and so
like
Okay, una great. What what are we supposed to do with that?
And so lee is now living in the home with this guy thomas who's dating his mom
But his mom is gone and lied to him about it. And so after a couple days
Probably because of the stress he ends up getting rheumatic fever
Which apparently just sucks like is just awful. He's bedridden. What is it? What are the symptoms?
What what are your room?
Rumors apparently it's like your joints like every joint in your body hurts and you just have like a terrible fever
There are so many joints in your body. That's so many places to hurt
So john stops by lee's house and sort of sees him in this state and apparently just like lifts him up
And carries him outside puts him in a cab and says you've come into my place until you're better
And so
For the next couple days, you know, this is the honeymoon period of their relationship that
John is a really positive influence in lee's life. They start hanging out more
He eventually moves in with john just because like there's no or really else for him
Like john is no more random of a dude than this guy thomas that he's living with anyway
So he's like i might as well live with his other random dude, right?
I mean his whole life has been a succession of random caregivers. Yeah, so he's like, yeah, sure
I'll move in with you guys. So it's not like this is a red flag. Here's a description from the book
After this rescue lee and john went everywhere together
They were like disciple and guru mohammad spoke and malvo listened
Finally malvo had found someone in whom he could confide
He shared his life story how his mother had taken him away from his father when he was young and how that left a void in his life
He recalled how mohammad listened intently malvo told of his father's refusal to take him when he wanted a place to stay
He shared with mohammad the brutal beatings that he'd suffered and that he felt unloved and abandoned
Malvo heard of mohammad's abandonment by his father and loss of his mother
mohammad related that he too had been raised in an abusive environment by his grandfather
And this part is like super infuriating
And he suffered a similar fate as leslie his wife cheated on him and took all his money
destroying the business they had built together
It's like
Fuck you john like just tell the truth part. Yeah, that's fine
I fucked up
But of course he has to tell himself that right that mildred is you know doing all this office stuff to him and he's only responding
Yeah
You know to to get his I don't even know what but I I know that I feel like based on everything
We've seen of him so far in this just like wildly counterfactual
behavior that like he is expressing what feels
Like an emotional truth to him because how dare mildred have any agency how dare she survive him
How dare she escape him if that's not what he wants like that's a betrayal, right?
And also like cheated on him, which there's no evidence of it took all his money. He took all of her money
Yeah, who's the one who's cheating in that role?
Who's the one who's like having an affair with their therapist and started a dojo
On the spur of the moment
It's just pure resentment, right that like he thinks of himself as the wronged party
Yeah, so
This is when lee and john get really close. They almost immediately start referring to each other as father and son
He starts taking care of john's kids. They're 11 eight and nine at this point and so
Lee starts helping out with cooking. He starts taking kids to the movies
He really does become part of this family almost immediately
Yeah, well, you can see him being really ready to join a family and as soon as one appears where there's a spot for him
Like snatching that up. Yeah got a strike while the family's hot
So he really I mean this is the first this is the closest thing to a family has he's ever got
This is what happens when people join cults like if you've never been part of something and if you've never been
Embraced by a community or by a family and you are then like that's so incredibly powerful and that's so hard to leave
Even if that stuff starts happening
one thing that's so interesting is this
The ideology that will eventually
Curdle into we have to kill everybody starts out as this ideology of personal empowerment
So almost immediately as lee and john start forming a relationship john starts delivering these lectures about
You know, you have to train your body train your mind. You have to read things go to the library
You have to do a hundred push-ups every day. I mean, there's there's this kind of
Personal betterment self-help book kind of thing that will eventually be
Extremely ugly, but at this point is kind of like sure. It's just boys being boys
So you're not going to catch me doing push-ups
Slippery slope to serial murder
So this is this is from the vanity fair article
As every ground force general knows the most malleable killing machine on earth
Maybe a teenage boy desperately needing to belong to something greater
beginning in january of 2001
John muhammad and lee malvo began to explore just how malleable the 15 year old malvo was
At first aside from malvo's early and easy conversion to muhammad's version of islam
The goal of their work together was the simple quiet human quest for personal righteousness and improvement
They never talked violence the lessons being taught and learned were about honor and discipline and personal virtue
So like he has this like personal philosophy and he wants a disciple
And what is his personal version of islam by the way? Tell me about that. I mean, it's it's very pick and choosey
I mean there's because it's like a terror attack
His relationship with islam of course gets scrutinized by the media more than anything else
I mean, that's all I ever heard about. Yes, certainly when this was in the news
It's obviously a huge part of his identity, right? Like he changed his last name to muhammad for a reason
But they're also, you know lee talks about them. They go to the library. They read up on buddhism
They go to the bahai center
They're reading up on hinduism like they're kind of doing this grab bag thing and
mildred says
That his version of islam one of the reasons he was into it was because he thought that it gave him a reason to
Control her because he thought it was going to be like women should obey men
That's a big selling point for a lot of religions as far as men are concerned
It really draws them in and he's not I mean
It's not clear that they're doing the five prayers a day. It's not clear. They're doing ramadan
John continues to drink alcohol throughout their relationship
So it's not it's not clear that john is like using it to change his behavior at all
It seems like what he's doing is he's casting around for ammunition
That feeds his resentments his the narrative of his life that he wants to tell because they're not
Going to mosques at this time. They're not like they're not doing the stuff that you do if you're a devout muslim
It's just he's reading a lot. He's listening to a lot of tapes by luis ferrican
He has this weird thing where he's obsessed with playing tapes at night
So he does this for his kids too
Where he'll have like an audiobook of like the autobiography of malcom x and he'll put
Headphones on them before they go to sleep and play it for them all night. Like he he thinks that like wow
This is how people learn things. That's weird. It's weird, dude
That you like subliminally give them. I mean, it's not the weirdest idea. He's ever had but yeah, it's pretty weird
He later on makes malvo read the entire the art of war out loud
Into a tape player and then play himself the tape of himself reading it to me like that book
I don't associate it with people interested in violence. I associate it with people interested in day trading
That's just sad the whole thing this this this honeymoon period ends when
First john gets arrested in antigua where again, he's not that good at like faking papers
Like one one of his games is he'll go to the airport and show his id and get the boarding pass
And then he'll give the boarding pass to somebody else because you know, they don't like check your
Id again when you get on the flight, right? So at one point there's a stewardess
She lives in antigua and she's like, oh, I know john
I see he's on the manifest and he's sitting in like seat 7a and then she goes over to seat 7a and it's a random lady
These are these are not like watertight plans that john is coming up with at this point
So eventually this sort of stuff starts to pile up the authorities arrest him
He he spends two weeks in jail and then he somehow escapes by just like walking out one day that like
In this government task force report
They don't want to say because like the antigua government doesn't want to admit like how
Incompetent they were basically
But it seems like one guy was just late for work that day
And then there was only one person working in the entire jail and just like forgot to lock his cell after him or something
Like it was something like
Really janky and john just left. Oh boy. And later on on one of these trips to the us
He gets stopped by the us authorities because he's trying to board a plane and they're like
You know, you've been flagged at this point and he can't fly anymore
So this is actually when he changes his name
There's actually something really interesting about this that
Everyone talks about him changing his name is like some sign that he's this like super devout muslim
But it seems like he actually did it so that he could get on a flight back to antigua and get a new passport
I mean, he could have changed his last name to anything and he changed it to mohammed
So clearly that means something
But like you often read in these old accounts that he and mildred together
Change their name when they found islam and it's just not true
She changed her name
To hide from him and he changed his name
So that he could get on flights again
And it's a coincidence that they both changed their names to mohammed
Yeah, because I think that certainly based on the american narrative that we have had of these crimes so far
We there's a distinct lean toward anything that can be interpreted as
Terrorism suggestive or related like we're gonna really
Focus on that. So I guess kind of putting all the all perspective possible into it. I think is important
Yeah, but what's really interesting about this period is that when john disappears
lee takes care of his kids
So it goes on for I think it's almost a month. Wow lee is like trying to continue the business
He's taking the kids to school this poor kid. He's like ann of green gables or something
Yes, no one just wants him for him
And so this is when their little
Antiguan adventure ends that john basically
Realizes the writing is on the wall for his business model his time in antigua
He changes his name. He flies back to antigua on may 20th of 2001
And then a couple days later. He takes the kids
He takes lee lee flies on the name of lindberg his son with his first wife
And they all fly to the u.s
Together and one of the most amazing details about this
Is that they've only known each other for six months, which I'm sure is a long time actually by his standards
How many good
Presences have been in his life for longer than that and it just seems he just gets on a plane with this essentially random guy
Because that's the least bad option at that point and with without proper documentation
If he were to go off on his own like he's dependent
I mean, it's it's actually interesting thinking about what what did john want with lee at this point, right?
What was his plan like what was he saying they were going to do that's the thing
He doesn't have a he doesn't have a plan at this point because
He he doesn't have the burning rage at mildred that he eventually will have so you don't think he's motivated by
Wanting to settle a score with mildred at this point not yet
Okay, interesting, but that's the next chapter of the story. Oh god
So we're gonna now turn to mildred and catch up with mildred
So, yeah, where did we leave mildred? Where is she?
Well, we heard about mildred living in the women's shelter
Or I believe about a year. Yeah, I actually got a detail wrong last episode that I want to collect
I said she was there for more than a year. She was actually only there for eight months
So she was at febe's house for eight months and then she moves to to the bc area. Yeah, is she in maryland?
Yeah, she's in clinton maryland. Yeah, okay. Yeah, all right. So she moves in with her sister in clinton maryland
And is out of the shelter kind of back in a life more resembling what she knew before and
And focusing on looking for her kids basically. Yeah, and also just like picking up the pieces of her life
So at this point she's gotten a job
Doing admin at a domestic violence NGO
So she's already moving into becoming a domestic violence advocate at this point
So this is an excerpt from her book
She says it was 4 35 p.m. August 31st 2001
I was sitting at my sister's house in maryland and writing in my journal when the phone rang
I answered it was detective mccarthy. He said the words. I had waited 18 months to hear miss muhammad. We've got your children
Wow, what the detective tells her is that john left antigua with the kids
He dropped lee off in florida
He then took the kids and went to bellingham washington, which is a city
up very close to the canadian border
And he almost immediately moved him and the kids into a homeless shelter called the lighthouse mission
The director of the lighthouse mission a guy named al archer who becomes very important later
Sort of was helping john out was like, oh, hey, there's this guy with three kids
Like it's extremely rare for a father and three children to show up at a homeless shelter and need a room
So he's like, huh, this is kind of weird
He helps john enroll the kids at school under their own names. No, so
john has enrolled the kids in schools in bellingham under fake names
and
When the director of this homeless shelter starts helping john fill out paperwork for food stamps
It's immediately flagged simply because there's not that many
Men with three kids kind of bouncing around washington state
And so because mildred is so good with the paperwork. There's a flag on
This guy has kidnapped three children if you see a man with three children
Let somebody know and check it against this record that mildred has filed
So as soon as he applies for food stamps, then they start asking questions
Detective mccarthy goes to the kids school
And he pulls them all into the principal's office. He says, hey, what are your names?
They give these random fake names. They're like charisa and andy
and then
He sort of looks at them
And he says are those your real names?
And there's this long pause and all three kids start crying and they're like those aren't our real names
That's the trafficking training, right? This is like the one
Trafficking case we've ever encountered. Yes. Wow. So basically immediately they
Transfer the kids to a child protective services agency in tecoma. They find out that it's mildred
They get mildred's contact information
And so in there's a book called sniper that comes out in 2004 that interviews the detective
And so he tells the story of the phone called to mildred from his perspective
He says he dialed the phone. Mrs. Muhammad picked up. He tells her the news
They found my babies. They found my babies. She screamed
McCarthy put each of them on the line to talk to her when he got back on the phone. She said god bless you. God bless you
And so there's a really there's a really cute conversation
In mildred's book where he puts the kids on the phone and she talks to them
And so like she's of course just like doing all of this through tears at this point
She says to liba got on the phone first. Hi mommy. She said it was like a dream. I couldn't speak
I hadn't heard her voice in 18 months. Oh my god. How are you doing? She asked
I'm good. I said
You want to talk to my sister to liba asked? I said yes
And she passed the phone to selena. Hi mommy. This is selena. Guess what what honey? I'm nine years old
I know that honey. I said, what are you doing eating cheese pizza? She said she sounded as happy as the little girl
I remembered
Right
Unless it happens to us. We can't imagine not hearing um our child's voice for 18 months
Right. This is what she's you know, she she thought she was never gonna hear from them again
And I mean keep in mind she also all she knows is that they're out of the country
She doesn't even have like hints like they could be dead at this point. Like she doesn't know
anything
And so she gets on a plane the there's a custody hearing the next day in dakoma
So she talks about how she has to borrow money from friends to go to the airport and buy a super expensive next day plane ticket to dakoma washington
She gets there. It's the first time she's seen john in 18 months too. Wow. Do you remember her friend isa nichols?
Yes, the woman who he who worked with them when they had the we come to you the mobile
Mechanic place. Yeah, and who was like you should be following
Normal business practices for a small business and he did not like that. Yeah. Yeah, someday
We're gonna do an episode not about abusive relationships. I hope
But not today
So this is infuriating. So this is for millard's book
They start the custody hearing millard's sitting there with isa and some people from phoebe's house and some other sort of supporters john is there alone
The judge says this is an emergency custody hearing
We are here to decide where the children of john and millard will reside
Judge what is going on john asked he was talking in the voice
I had heard so many times over the years the sweet innocent voice that convinces people
He does not know what is happening when he knows exactly what is going on
We are only here to decide who will have custody of the children the judge said
Judge I don't understand john said again. She told me to take the children because she didn't want them anymore
She knew where I was she could have contacted me at any time
I couldn't believe he had said that but I shouldn't have been surprised
The judge explained to john that I had obtained a writ of habeas corpus to have the children picked up when they were found
Are you telling me? I'm never going to see my children again judge john asked
Mr. Williams
You have to file your paperwork because the only thing we are here to decide today is who gets the children
And according to the paperwork. I am awarding custody of the children to mrs. Williams the judge responded
Basically millard has filed paperwork saying she has the right to these kids and you don't and you haven't filed any paperwork
So the children go to millard. That's it. And how does he respond to this?
Not well
I mean he kills a bunch of people in a sniper attack in dc. Ultimately. I mean, this is
Everything comes from this. So is this what he decides he needs to get?
This is why he decides he has to kill millard because she's been giving custody of the children
This is what this is what really does is that she took the kids from me
You know, it's it's it's an escalation of the version of this that he had already told lee that you know, she bankrupted me
She's cheating on me. She took away the kids and now she really took away the kids
And so
He he later refers to this as his 9 11. What this becomes this huge fixation in his mind
That's really amazing to describe that event as having that scale of importance in your life
Because you're really saying like there is before and there is after and I was just living my life and then this
Horrific event just crashed into me. I mean the level of innocence that you're claiming for yourself in that
And of course no acknowledgement of his own part in this right like
Maybe I shouldn't have kidnapped the kids
And then he just took the kids to antique what and she didn't know where the and he made a death threat against her mother
And like he knows what went on in that marriage even if he can't admit it to anyone or himself
And so the way that I think of this event is that it it just plants this little tiny seed
Right that then becomes this massive
Redwood of resentment. So it's like he's ready for something to
Adolize this kind of reaction and then is your is your rate of it that makes sense too. And so
After this order comes down. I mean it's like a five minute hearing right? It's like she filed paperwork. You didn't boom
She gets the kids
You know Mildred is sort of slinking out of this courtroom with her friends around her because she does not want to bump into
John right it's the closest they send each other physically and so
Apparently there's sort of an L shaped hallway and she's kind of at the elbow
and
She turns to her left and she sees John walking toward her
Like determinately
And apparently she just immediately kicks off her shoes and just runs down the other
hallway. She's like fuck this and just like
Dashes out and all the women with her dad
They're just like all of them see John and they just like run to the exit
And apparently as they all get to the end of the hall
She turns back and John is looking at her and he mouths the words. Gotcha
What yeah, like I'm still I still have the power to terrify you
Yeah, it's awful and she just bursts out the emergency exit and she's like take me to my kids
Yeah, where are her kids during this? Are they being held by the family court? Yeah, they're they're at cps
There's like a cps facility where they're being held. Okay, but it's in Tacoma. So she goes immediately and picks up the kids
So she goes to this facility and she says
Right then I heard two high pitched voices scream mommy
I looked at the building and saw my girls running out the door toward me. I was crying so hard
I tried to see them, but I couldn't see clearly through the tears
Issa came over and told the children how long I had been looking for them. The girls cried and both kept saying we missed you mommy
We missed you. I hugged them and cried. I love you. I said
We love you too. Mommy the girl screamed
In the car to liba said mommy daddy said he was looking for you and couldn't find you
Oh my god
And I mean just to like dwell on this for a second. Yeah, please let's dwell
We need to we we have this sort of societal construction of parental kidnappings as if they don't matter, right?
There's like yeah, there's real kidnapping stranger danger kidnappings and there's like a couple whatever family kidnappings
Whatever we're not willing to take seriously the things that happen within a family
Which is very weird and it's you know a lot of
Mildred's book this whole like most of the second half of Mildred's book even before she gets the actual sniper shootings
Is about trying to put her family together that john only had the kids for 18 months, right?
Which in the course of a whole life is not a huge amount of time
But if you're nine, yeah, and they still kind of think that she left them
They they think she might leave again because that's what john's been telling them the whole time
And so she talks about how her kids follow her to the bathroom
And they'll kind of just look at her sort of stare at her as she walks around the room
They don't want to let her out of their sight and also
Her relationship with john her her oldest kid little john
Is never quite the same because he kind of resents her for taking him away from his dad
That he never quite gets over it that you know, she has these conversations with him where she's like, you know
He left you with families that didn't treat you super well
He had you living in a homeless shelter
You know, you you didn't have like toothbrushes and clothes when I found you like these were not good conditions
But it's still in there somewhere of why did you take me away from dad?
Everything was going fine. And so the the ripple effects of these kidnappings are really profound
Yeah
Yes, and also I guess the fact that you know, I mean there's
The betrayal of someone taking your children to a place where you don't know where they are
If they're safe or who they're with or if you'll ever see them again
I mean that itself is so much to think about and then
The fact of you know, you're back and you're reunited and this is kind of the end of the story where like if this were a tv
Movie, there would be like a freeze frame
And then there would be like a song by pibo brison
But the real aftermath of it is that you've also suffered this betrayal of like someone is
Harming the trust that they have in you as their parent that trust has been abused
as well and like that would be
So painful and also that you would have to just accept like you know
Things are different between us and we can't make them the way that they were and like we're gonna heal
But like it's it's different now. I mean and just
Having to accept that I think would be really hard
And there's this really heartbreaking scene where a couple months after she gets them back
They're back in dc at this point
And they ask are you and dad ever going to get back together?
And she has to sort of walk them through I mean she doesn't want to say anything negative about john
She doesn't want to do the kind of scorched earth stuff that john did to her
But also she has to be really firm with them
That no we and dad are never going to get back together and they were not
Under the impression that they had been kidnapped like the kids don't know that they were taken against her will
And has john said that mildred just
Vanished and that he's looking for her and he can't find her
It's not clear what he told them about why he's in antigua
But apparently he told them consistently that like your mommy knows where we are
And I don't know why she hasn't come yet. It's very yeah, your mommy loves you. It's weird that she hasn't written you
It's weird that she hasn't come here. She knows where we are
He's done a lot of poisoning them against her in this year. It's not like this is a guy with a lot of tact
And so I just think it's it's worth taking really seriously the extent to which these family kidnappings are a real
source of pain in people's lives for the parents and the kids
yeah, and that like there are certain forms of harm that a
A stranger cannot carry out as well as a family member like if you want to like really
Passively destroy the trust between a mother and a child like yeah
There's nothing like a family member for doing that, you know, that's there are certain crimes that I think are
I'm using the term crimes generally here like emotional crimes
There's forms of abuse that can be carried out
So much more powerfully by people who we trust
Yeah, and we just have a hard time letting that into our world view. Yeah, and so
After mildred takes the kids with her. John does not know where they go. John does not know what her new name is
He starts searching around he gets a lawyer and
Everyone in his life at this point says that this is a breaking point
So Robert Holmes, who's a friend of his in Tacoma who eventually will call the FBI about john
This is from one of the news reports afterwards says his longtime friend and army buddy Robert Holmes
I think after his kids got taken away. John had a nervous breakdown
I'm not a professor or a doctor, but john changed in a million subtle ways after his kids were taken away
He'd spend all days some days crying all he could think of was getting his kids back
There's also a guy named Earl dancy who's this kind of dirt baggy gunnut guy that they hang out with in Tacoma
This is from Muhammad's trial
Dancy testified that Muhammad loved his children to death and was upset when mildred Muhammad disappeared with them after she won custody
Asked about Muhammad's feelings toward his former wife. Dancy said he said he loved her at one time
But that changed he said she caused him to lose everything and that he was going to fix her
Oh my god, so we've got this pain and anger
Starting to coagulate. This is just so similar to oj and nicole to me
And it's helpful because it's you know a different angle of what seems like a similar
To me what seems like a very similar situation where you are kind of sitting in the wreckage of like all that you've done to your own life
And everything that's ever happened to you and all this stuff that you know, that isn't your fault
But then you know that your life is and blaming it all
On just your ex-wife
You know and yeah somehow
If you could destroy her then like you would be fine. Yeah, and so john moves back to bellingham
He moves back into the lighthouse mission shelter
in this
fugue angry resentful state he
Asks lee to come and join him in bellingham. Where wait, where has lee been before that?
Yeah, so lee lee is living with his mother in fort meyers florida
You know when john dropped him off there was kind of this battle of wills between john and his mother una
Where john was basically saying lee should come with me because i'm an american citizen
And if i legally adopt lee then he can go to college
He can get all kinds of benefits that the united states offers
Whereas una and lee at this point are both undocumented immigrants
And so he's never gonna have a secure existence with you
Why don't you let him come with me?
And una says boy should be with their mother. There's no fucking way. He's going with you
This is one of the few moments when the immovable object that is una is helpful and its ability to stop the unstoppable force that is john
Yeah, briefly. Yeah, so she she wins the argument and lee moves in with her
And so at this point it's been around six months that he's been living with her in fort meyers
But every friday at 4 p.m. He and john talk on the phone
So they have stayed in pretty close contact and in october of 2001
john asked lee to come and join him
And so this is lee's description of john asking him to join him in bellingham
I heard the tremor in his voice lee. They took the children. I was able to identify with that loss
I had never seen him indecisive and I had never heard that much pain
He spoke to something in me that void that yearned to be filled. I wanted to have a father love me like that
I wanted to know that someone cared as deeply for me
When he said he needed me to help him get back the children so we could once again be a family
It opened up the floodgates for the kid who ran away to his father five years earlier, but was rejected
He says there's three reasons why he leaves una to go join john
First mohammed said he needed him to help get the children back
Second mohammed said he would help him get into college
Third mohammed seemed to melville to be far more logical than his fist shaking mother
Yeah, right and I mean he also has a lifetime with his mother to observe her behavior and he's known john for six months
Yeah, and john has not really been abusive to lee. He's just been like
Do a bunch of push-ups hang out and listen to tapes at night like john has never hit him
John has never john has not been as inconsistent as una has john has never forced him to beat a cat
Yeah, I mean like there's so much horror in his relationship with una. Yeah
So
There's a weird detail here that I want to dwell on because I've been obsessed with it for
More than a week now. Okay. So lee tells the story of going to bellingham from florida twice
To a court-appointed psychologist
He says that una actually wanted him to join john
So much that she actually bought him the bus ticket to bellingham
She then changed her mind and was like, no, no, you're not going to join him
But then he snuck into her room in the middle of the night took the bus ticket and went to bellingham
That's the story he tells the psychologist
To karmita who's writing the biography of him
He says he snuck out in the middle of the night went to a payphone
He called john john wired him money for a bus ticket to bellingham
And then john gave him these detailed instructions of he should book them under different names
Every layover he should stop for like seven hours and change clothes do this kind of secret agent stuff
So that nobody could track his movements to bellingham
So what's interesting to me about this is that there's two different stories both of which are kind of specific
Right, they're not just like I bought a bus ticket and I went to bellingham. They reveal something about character
And these are both people that trust him and that he trusts right that this is a psychologist that he spent dozens of hours with
And this is karmita who he also spent dozens of hours with so these are two trusted people
and so
To me this explains a lot about his personality
That lee gives people what they want to hear right that we've seen that he's emotionally malleable
And so it would not surprise me if he got a sense
From the psychologist that he wanted to hear about una that he wanted to hear about his mother's capriciousness
And that's why he took the bus ticket and then maybe karmita
Was asking him like a line of questioning about john and so he put john at the center of that story
And then constructed two pretty specific narratives or just emphasized parts of narratives
You know, maybe both of them are true. Who knows that makes sense to me
Like this is one of the things that makes it a very difficult crime to unravel and also
Difficult to find out what really happened because both of these stories are completely plausible
And the truth is based on the temperature of the room. Yeah
And so this to me explains a lot of the
Confessions that lee does when he's in prison the re confessions the d confessions what he tells to william shatner
That when he's first arrested for the dc sniper shootings, he confesses to all of the shootings all 13
He then recants and says that he's only responsible for three of them
And to me
I actually find it plausible that he did all the shootings
Partly because john's control over him was so strong and just he's smaller than john
And he can fit in the back of the car more easily and john doesn't seem like he
I mean based on everything we've heard about him to this point, you know
I'm no expert on him, but I have heard like two hours worth of his behavior with his something
And uh, yeah, he does not seem like someone who would be
Curled up like getting charlie horses in the trunk of a car if he could make someone else do it
Yeah, and he and that he wants to be the one who's cooking up the plans
and
doing this like
serial killer dojo with one student that he's running and he's the boss and like the boss doesn't do the work
Yeah, yeah, and so yeah, we have we have no idea
We have no way of knowing whether lee did all of the shootings or none of the shootings
And I think we'll probably never know simply because lee is such an unreliable narrator of his own story
I mean one of the things that I think is a really important detail of this is that this woman karmita
Who's interviewing him as part of his defense team and then writes the biography of him
She talks about how within a couple weeks of them forming their relationship
He starts calling her mom and he starts saying i love you mom in all of his letters
So he's like a little he's like a subatomic particle looking for an atom to just like woosh into
Yeah, I mean she talks about how
He's sort of so emotionally immature even you know, this is years after the crimes take place
Yeah, prison doesn't mature people interestingly. Yeah
But he doesn't know how to relate to people outside of this sort of totalitizing frame, right?
It's like I don't know you or
You're my mom. Yeah, and so this is where I think we should leave this episode lee is on a bus
to bellingham
And like a lot of the people we've covered on this show lee is a person who is making an extremely bad decision
For reasons that make perfect sense. Yeah at this point
John has not hinted that they're going to commit any violence john has said we're going to get our kids back
But lee has no idea he doesn't find out for another nine months
The extent of the actual plan that he's signed up for how old is he at this point? He's 16
Yeah, I mean I think just also the desire like even if there are our hints or even if there are things that he's like
Oh, that doesn't feel great
The need to believe that like this father figure who like wants you and like wants you because you know
He knows that you're easy to manipulate and he can get what he wants out of you
But like who cares he wants you someone wants you like
You're not going to rumble that right like it's going to have to be like pretty bad before
I think you would even think about
Leaving that because it's like, you know
Your life is a tundra and this is a warm cabin. Well, this insight gets to the
slight twist at the end of this episode
so
What we learn later is that
John is full of shit
What we find out as more forensic evidence comes in and as the trials take place
is that
John was setting up lee to take the fall for these crimes. Oh my god
Lee starts talking about whenever they're planning any of these crimes in the run-up to the sniper shootings
John always wore gloves when he handled any of the guns any of the laptops lee didn't
When they were doing the shootings and they're dropping tarot cards and handwritten notes
He makes lee write all the notes so that his handwriting will be on everything
He also makes lee call the cops because there's this sort of cat and mouse back and forth thing
Where they're calling the cops and all of those phone calls are made by lee
Is his assumption that they're going to be looking for one person
And they'll find lee and be like here's our one person and then they just won't believe him about anything
He said, I mean, that's actually one of his better plans in terms of plausibility and the reason why lee
confessed to all the murders when he was arrested was because john told him to
They had literally rehearsed what he should tell the police. Why does that feel so bad to hear?
Like everything is already so terrible. Why does that I know?
Uh, that's really bad though. That's like
I mean, of course he's doing this. I'm not surprised. It's not
There's no reason to be shocked by this but it's just it makes it all worse
Like it's one thing to
To kill 17 people
But it somehow is worse if you're then like roping in this child and then making him take the fall for you
Like that makes it even worse somehow which is amazing because he really would think it couldn't
Couldn't get any worse, but it does but I think I mean I want to stress just like we did last episode that when we talk about
john having plans
I think it's also
Worth while to remind ourselves that mildred said last week that john has a habit of making plans and never following through with them
And so right I don't want us to fall back into this idea that like he's calculated and you know
He had every note of this planned out like he was joker from the dark night or something
And we all played into his hands. This is a guy with a huge amount of trauma
He's got a huge amount of ptsd from whatever happened in the military
He's later diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. This is not someone who is
orchestrating this whole thing from some sort of
Air traffic control tower. This is someone who makes these plans and just does things randomly
Do you think we overestimate how difficult it is to murder people?
Like do you think we want to believe that serial killer is like a really skilled trade?
Well, I mean, I think this is why it's important to have sort of both of our little twists in our last two episodes
Leading into next episode where we're going to talk about the actual sniper shootings
And the actual events do not look like john's plans for the events
So I don't want to get into this over determined
Like it was a chess game the whole time kind of thing because a lot of the stuff they end up doing is pretty dumb
And like not well thought through at all. I always return to the l woods argument my version of it, which is, you know
Healthy people don't kill a bunch of people
They just don't right to be like someone who's has a plan and they're firing on all cylinders
And they you know, they they know what's going to happen in advance or they at least have everything kind of squared away
Like that suggests sanity. Yeah to me. Yeah, and like I don't equate sanity with being a serial killer
There's this really interesting scene where karmita the woman who's writing this biography about li she's interviewing him in prison
And she tries to confront him with the fact that this is all clearly full of shit
So she says on my next visit to malvo. I decided to engage him further about the motives for the killings
He had allowed himself to be convinced that the killings were to obtain money to build a utopian society with 70 boys and 70 girls
However, I and other members of the defense team felt that it was all a ruse for muhammad to get his children
It seemed likely that muhammad's wife would have become another victims of the shooting
And muhammad would have emerged as the grieving spouse who then regained custody of the children
Malvo would have become the fall guy and been directed to take his own life
Malvo had already acknowledged that the only reason he had not done so
Was that muhammad had not given him the order
However, when I presented that theory to malvo, he scoffed at it. That's impossible. He loves meldred
He would never kill her and furthermore. We knew where she lived. We watched her come and go
If he wanted to kill her he could have done so many times
My dad respects women he intoned
I reminded him that he was awaiting trial for the murder of lynda franklin. He respects them
But then he kills them. I asked malvo was silent
I mean, you know, aside from all the trauma aside from everything else. He really doesn't have the intellectual
maturity to see
Like this guy's full of shit like everything he's saying. None of it's true. Look at the thing 16 year olds believe. I mean
as we've been saying
A teenage boy being asked by someone who is an authority figure who he calls his father
To take part in something bigger than himself and being sold this bill of goods and he's like, yeah
Yeah, that's what people do at that age. That's literally what that age. That's what happens
So it how much of it comes down to what what is offered to you, especially if nothing else is
All I know is that it always starts with push-ups
I feel like this has become a very anti exercise program, which is largely my fault, but
Sit it's all about sitting. Nothing ever happened to somebody who just stayed seated. I mean, I'm fully reclining right now