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Small Town Murder

#509 - Almost Got Away With It - Idaho Falls, Idaho

This week, in Idaho Falls, Idaho, a double murder scene looks to have ties to the occult, when "Satan Loves You" is found, written in one of the victim's blood. But detectives quickly begin to think it's less like ritual killings & more like cold blooded executions. Is it satanic maniacs? The married boyfriend of one of the victims? The worm farming, gold chain wearing husband of the other? Maybe her boyfriend? A bicycle may hold all the answers!

Along the way, we find out that country music performers can sometimes look like Gordon Ramsay, that loads of gaudy gold jewelry is an odd thing to wear to farm worms, and that just because something is written in blood, it doesn't make it true!!

Hosted by James Pietragallo and Jimmie Whisman

New episodes every Thursday!

Donate at: patreon.com/crimeinsports or go to paypal.com and use our email: crimeinsports@gmail.com

Go to shutupandgivememurder.com for all things Small Town Murder & Crime In Sports!

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Also, check out James & Jimmie's other show, Crime In Sports! On Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, Wondery, Wondery+, Stitcher, or wherever you listen to podcasts!

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Duration:
3h 1m
Broadcast on:
18 Jul 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

This week, in Idaho Falls, Idaho, a double murder scene looks to have ties to the occult, when "Satan Loves You" is found, written in one of the victim's blood. But detectives quickly begin to think it's less like ritual killings & more like cold blooded executions. Is it satanic maniacs? The married boyfriend of one of the victims? The worm farming, gold chain wearing husband of the other? Maybe her boyfriend? A bicycle may hold all the answers!


Along the way, we find out that country music performers can sometimes look like Gordon Ramsay, that loads of gaudy gold jewelry is an odd thing to wear to farm worms, and that just because something is written in blood, it doesn't make it true!!


Hosted by James Pietragallo and Jimmie Whisman


New episodes every Thursday!


Donate at: patreon.com/crimeinsports or go to paypal.com and use our email: crimeinsports@gmail.com

Go to shutupandgivememurder.com for all things Small Town Murder & Crime In Sports!


Follow us on...


twitter.com/@murdersmall

facebook.com/smalltownpod

instagram.com/smalltownmurder


Also, check out James & Jimmie's other show, Crime In Sports! On Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, Wondery, Wondery+, Stitcher, or wherever you listen to podcasts!


See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

(upbeat music) - Hey everybody, just gonna take a quick break from the show and tell you a little bit more about one of our favorite things ever, audible. - Oh, audible.com or that app. - The app is great in a mommy app, constantly listening to audible helps your imagination soar. Whether you listen to stories, motivation, expert advice, any genre really that you like, you can listen to and you can be inspired to imagine new worlds, new possibilities, even new ways of thinking. This can unlock a lot for you. Audible makes it easy to be inspired and entertained as part of your daily routine. You don't need to even set extra time aside. That's what's great. There's more to imagine when you listen. And I'll tell you something that has set both Jimmy and I's imagination soaring. And that is the Lewis and Clark journals. We're both really into these right now. - Unbelievable. - And as an audible member, you can choose one title a month to keep from the entire catalog including the latest bestsellers, the newest releases. New members can try Audible free for 30 days. Visit audible.com/smalltownmurder or text smalltownmurder to 500, 500. That's audible.com/smalltownmurder or text smalltownmurder to 500, 500. Now back to the show. - Ready to start talking to your kids about financial literacy? Meet Greenlight, the debit card and money app that teaches kids and teens how to earn, save, spend wisely and invest with your guardrails in place. Parents can send instant money transfers, automate allowance and more. Plus keep an eye on spending with real time notifications. Join more than six million parents and kids building healthy financial habits together on Greenlight. Get your first month free at greenlight.com/wondery. That's greenlight.com/wondery. - To stop a serial killer, you must think like one. That was the insight of psychiatric nurse, Dr. Ann Burgess as she studied the patterns of serial murderers and their victims. The new Hulu original docuseries, Mastermind, to think like a killer offers a fascinating portrait of Burgess who became the mastermind behind modern serial killer profiling. Her techniques and expertise took her deep into the minds of some of the most notorious serial murderers from Ed Kemper to Ted Bundy, a must watch for fans of true crime. All episodes of Mastermind to think like a killer are now streaming only on Hulu. - This week in Idaho Falls, Idaho, a seemingly satanic murder scene turns out to be the doings of a very small petty person. Welcome to small town murder. (upbeat music) - Hello everybody and welcome back to small town murder. - Yay! - Oh, yay indeed, Jimmy, yay indeed. My name is James Petrogallom here with my co-host. - I'm Jimmy Wissman. - Thank you so much for joining us today on another wild crazy episode. We're heading out to the Northwest this week, Idaho. Idaho never lets us down either. It's one of those-- - It's a terrific, terrific shit hole. - It's just potatoes, Mormons and interesting murders. That's all you got going on up there. And I'm very, very interested. We will get to that. Before we do, head over to shut up and give me murder.com. You should get there because we have tickets for sale live. - Oh, yeah. - You know, September 20th is our next live show. - That's awesome. - Mini-apolis State. - It's big. - It's the, it's a beautiful, huge, wonderful venue. It will be our biggest show ever if you sell it out. So get in there and get your tickets right now. Well, there's still good ones left. And then the next night, I don't know if it's sold out yet or not, but maybe a couple tickets left at the PAPs in Milwaukee. - Maybe, yeah. - Boston, Austin, anything with it, Austin in it. OKC, KC, we're doing, we got, we said only cities that rhyme or have similar names. It's all we're doing this year. Terry Town, New York, we got in there too. And I think that's it. So get in there, get your tickets. And over to the website and you can check it out and see for yourself. Shut up and give me murder.com is how you get that. So definitely do that. Also, you'd want Patreon. Let's say, let's say you're listening to our shows. You like this show, you like crime and sports. You're listening to your stupid opinions and you're like, I'm all out of shows and I want more. We have so much more for you. - I can overwhelm you. - On patreon, patreon.com/crimeinsports is where you get all that, hundreds of back episodes, bonus stuff you'll get immediately. New ones every other week, one crime in sports, one small town murder, you get it all. That's how we do it. We just give you everything we got here. Throw it on the table. This week, what you're gonna get at patreon.com/crimeinsports is for crime and sports, which you'll have access to. We're gonna do something very fun. We're gonna talk about the two most penalized hockey games of all time. - Oh. - Okay, so it's just fights for the entire game. We're gonna watch the videos and watch all the fights together and laugh our asses off. - Oh, I love it. - That crazy hockey, it's insane, dude. These games are crazy, so I can't wait to do that. Then for small town murder, something we've been wanting to do for a while and has been requested. We're gonna do what we like to call internet salad, which is what we do before the show starts and we talk about just whatever's on current events and whatever's going on and those are usually, that's the most fun we can possibly have and it's so funny and we're like, "I wish people could hear this." And we're like, "Why don't we just record that part?" - They can. - And you can hear it. So hear us talk about more current stuff. It'll be a lot of fun. Then we'll go back to weird stuff the week after that, but patreon.com/crimeinsports and you get a shout out at the end of the show. - Oh, you bet. - Jimmy will certainly mispronounce your name, but he really wants to get it right. That's the thing. You can feel his need and his want. It just doesn't work for him. That said, we got to do the disclaimer. It's a comedy show we got going on here. It's a comedy, we're comedians. We're going to make jokes. That's why it works here. Also, people are going to die. - Oh, for sure. - Yeah, there's a tasteful way to do it though. That's the thing here. We never make fun of the victims or the victims' families. - Why is that, James? - Because we're assholes, but we are certainly not scumbags. So that's how that works. And if you are on board with that and you're also not a scumbag, you're going to have a great time. If you think true crime and comedy should never, ever, never go together, you might not like the show or you might like the show. Either way, you know what you're in for. So no complaining later. That said, I think it's time, everybody. Here we go. I don't care where you are right now. I don't care. Let's say you're driving a gravel truck. That's what you did. I'd like you to pull whatever lever makes that go up. Drop every three tons of gravel on the car behind you. Get out, stare in, make sure they're still alive. And then shout. ♪ Shut up and give me murder ♪ Let's do this, everybody. - Okay. - Let's go on a trip, shall we? - Yeah. - We are doing it going to Idaho Falls, Idaho today. - For the locals? - For the locals, yes. It's a South Eastern Idaho down in that quadrant over there. It's about four hours too boyzy. So not. - Boy, is that a ride. - It seems like a long ride too. 'Cause you like go down. - It's a whole fucking steak. - And then up again. It seems like a big smiley face you're making with the roads. And it looks like a long time. Three hours down to Salt Lake City. So it's actually closer to that. About an hour to Sandpoint, Idaho, which is our last Idaho episode, Mystery of the Fake Dad, which was a weird episode. You should certainly go back and listen if you miss that one. This is in Bonneville County. I'm gonna say Bonneville 'cause that's the car. So. - I believe that is correct, yeah. - Once Pontiac names a car after it, that's how it's said, sorry. (laughs) It is. - There's a Cadillac El Dorado and they didn't say that yet. - No, that's why I will never say it the way they say it. 'Cause Cadillac. - This would be Pontiac Bonneville. - Yeah. John Wayne made a movie with the name. Wasn't El Dorado's El Dorado. So it's El Dorado, everybody. Very Mormon here, by the way. It's like 70% Mormon. Therefore, their motto is. - Oh. - motto is, quote, can I tell you about the joy of, ah, shit, they slammed the door. That's the. - Hello. - Hello. (laughs) - Oh, okay. Their motto is, that's their motto. Ding dong. - The motto is listening to your doorbell app ring. - Well, the dogs bark. - Yeah. - So a little bit of history in this town. 1864 is when this became like a settlement where people started coming to. So a guy built a guy named Matt Taylor built a timber frame toll bridge across a narrow black gorge of the river, basically. - Oh. - And it was downstream from the ferry. So the bridge improved travel for people so they didn't have to go all the way to the ferry. And then of course, there was a lot of miners coming through here and people seeking gold and, you know, all that kind of thing. This was after the gold rushes. So originally it wasn't known as Idaho Falls. It was known as Taylor's Crossing. Matt Taylor's the guy. - Oh, because that's the guy that built the bridge now. But postmarks indicate by 1866, it became known as Eagle Rock. (laughing) Exactly. - Fantastic. - Which is hilarious. There was an island out that the ferry went by were approximately 20 eagles nested. So they called it that. Then later on, they switched to Idaho Falls 'cause they were like, yeah, let's do that. - I don't even know if there's a falls here. - I don't think there is. I didn't see any anyway. I mean, maybe there's a little one somewhere. - There might be, yeah. - No, you should do out there, build a falls. That's what you do. - Dig a deep trench in the Snake River, make it fall. - Wherever the welcome sign is, put a big falls next to it. So people know either there. In 1949, the Atomic Energy Commission opened the National Reactor Testing Station in the desert west of Idaho Falls. - Oh, is that the site? - On December 20th, 1951, a nuclear reactor there produced electricity for the first time in history. Like useful electricity that you could like power shit with. - It was up there. - It was up there. They had built more than 50 unique reactors built at the facility for testing. So they were all different setups to see what would work. On January 3rd, 1961, unsurprisingly, this became the scene of the only fatal nuclear reaction incident in US history. - Wow, what about that? - It occurred at an experimental US Army plant and yeah, due to poor design and maintenance, a single control rod was manually pulled out too far from the reactor. This can cause horrible problems. - Congrats, Idaho. - Good job. They just stuck a potato in there. We're like, hey. - Wug it up quick. - You want to be a Mormon? No, it won't. It's not listening to reason. I don't know what's happening. And I guess at that point, the reactor became critical, which led to a destructive power excursion. And people who were in there, when this happened, they tried to fix it and that didn't work either. So as the steam expanded, a pressure wave of water forcefully struck the top of the reactor vessel where two guys stood. - Oh, so drowned him? - The explosion was so severe, the reactor vessel was propelled nine feet into the air, hitting the ceiling and then going back to where it was. One man was impaled by a shield plug and lodged into the ceiling. He got stuck to the ceiling by something. - Is he the one that died? - I think he is, possibly. He died instantly, they said. - Yeah, yeah. - Other men died from their injuries within hours. Three men were buried in lead coffins because they were radioactive. - It's not the, holy shit, the way it sounded was one person died. This is horrific. - That's terrible. Three people died, everyone in the room died and one of them was stuck to the ceiling by a fucking hunk of metal. Like a no arrow stuck through it. - So let's see what people think about this thing. Maybe they like a little bit of, they like to have knocks at the door. They're lonely, they want company and they like the air to be a little bit tingly with something. - Is there a college here? - I think there's one nearby, but it's not the main thing. Idaho Falls is a pretty big place now. It's grown a lot recently. Here's five stars. I've always loved Idaho Falls. Ever since my family moved here on my 12th birthday many, many years ago. We don't know how old this person is. They could be 16, they could be 73. We don't know. - That's awesome. - I love how family friendly it is with lots of culture and love for everyone. - Culture, get the fuck outta here. - If you consider going to the Mormon church culture then there is culture. - Chili's is not culture. - Applebee's is not. A strip malls generally aren't culture. Here's three stars. I'm not sure how to answer what I could change about Idaho Falls or what I like about Idaho Falls. It's a good town. I have no specifics is what they just said. I don't know what I would make better or I don't know what is already good, but I do know it's okay. - I don't know what I don't like 'cause I don't know what I like. - That person is very confused. What do you want for dinner? I have no idea. They've never had an idea. Here's two stars. It's a beautiful place. The only issue is that the Mormons from the area are known to be very rude toward those who aren't Mormon. In that area? First of all, Mormons are never rude. That's one thing I'll give them. - You don't think that's rude? - You can spit in a Mormon's face and tell them to go fuck their mother and they'll be like, all right, miss, you know. Okay, they'll smile at you still. That's, they try to kill you with kindness. That's one of the things they do. I can't say about it. - But they'll go find their Mormon friends and talk Mormon shit about it. - Oh yeah, yeah, but I don't care what they're doing in their little Mormon circle. That's fine. (laughs) That's all right. And as long as they're fake to my face and I don't have to deal with them, it's fine. - It'll dress funny. - And too many people are starting to move in and it's taking up farm/country land. But you of course are fine to be here and take up any energy. - You're allowed. - Nobody else though. One star, if you wanna move to a city that's run by teenagers, Idaho Falls is the place for you. - How is that right? - It's not run by teenagers. From terrible hygiene to rude interactions, this place has it all. - Yeah, and Mayor Grayson's a real dick. - Rude smelly people and Mayor Johnson sucks my cock. He beats me at fucking Call of Duty and then calls me racial slurs over the fucking P.S. - Mayor Grayson and his brother Ruger. - Oh man. - And his 38 brothers are dicks. - Dicks, almost everyone you run into will be acting as if the end of the world is near. Most people won't smile and say hello, even if you do first, enjoy. - Okay. - So enjoy this place. And finally, one star again. Idaho Falls is by far the worst town I have had the unfortunate experience to live in. - Why did you? - I'm gonna put a your stupid opinions line in here. If I could give it zero stars, I would. - Why did you move that? - They hate it. If I didn't have to live here, I wouldn't. This place is overrun with meth, a sex slave kidnapping ring. - What? - Drug dealers, the list goes on. - The last person just complained about Mormons. This person's like, it's sex slave kidnapping, meth addicted drug dealers, that's all it's here. - The other guy, that's utopia, if it weren't for the Mormons. - Yeah, as I mean, so very different ideas of what this place is. - Wow. - This is not a good place to live than I for one can't wait to get out of this place. If it's the last thing I ever do. (laughing) Make a better life for me and you. Let's do this. - I'm more fascinated with the guy that's okay with the sex slave ring. - He's fine, the other guy's fine. He's just annoyed by rude Mormons. (laughing) This is the only, out of all the reviews, is the only one that mentions sex slave kidnapping rings by the way, so. We don't know. - I'm sick of pepper. (laughing) - I think this person might be insane, that's possible too. We never know. (laughing) - A little paranoid. - We never know who's writing these reviews and that's the point of the reviews is like, oh, who knows? - It's so good. - There's more about the person who wrote it than the person and whatever they're reviewing. So, people in this town, population right now, 64,399. - Wow. - A little bit bigger than we normally do when our murder happened, it was about 40,000. That wasn't that long ago. And it was like, - I'd been there in fucking 2006, nowhere near this. - That's, yeah, it's grown a lot. - That's crazy. - Especially the last 15 years, it's really, like, since the housing, you know, fall out, like 2007, eight there. Since then, it's really popped. - Wow. - More females than males, it's about exactly normal. Weird part is so many stats are exactly the national averages of things here. It's like the American quintessential town here. Median age is just a little bit lower, 33.6. And that is because of the obscene number of people under 18 that are here. So many children, 'cause Mormons, and that's why. So, lots of fucking people go. I mean, which is good if you run a sex slave kidnapping rank. There's a lot of material for it. Otherwise, it's, you know, not great. Just tons of kids, unless you have kids and then you want more kids. - The inventory is a plethora. - That's great, it's huge, it's huge. The married population's a little bit higher than normal, but not normally as high as it is for this high of a Mormon population. Like in Utah and certain places, it's usually 60 something percent here, it's 52%. Divorce rate is actually higher than the normal here. - Really? - Yes, the widow rate is lower somehow though. So, people are living longer. - That is interesting. Everybody I know there that lives in that area, every one of them are divorced. That makes sense. - Yeah, I think they go there after their divorce. - Go there after they get married to get divorced. - Put the pieces back together, take them apart or something. Unemployment rate here is 3.4%, which is insanely low as low as a thing could get. Median household income here though, not great. Normally it's almost 70,000 here. It is $57,412, so a little bit low. Cost of living here though, 100 is regular here. It's 94, so not that low. And the housing is actually right around the national average, $344,700 is the median home cost. - That's fucking steep. - It's steep on 57 grand a year. It's gonna stretch you. And in case you have everything all set up and you're gonna come here, suppose you wanna start your own competitive sex slave kidnapping ring or a meth lab. We don't know what you got going on. We have for you, the Idaho Falls, Idaho Real Estate Report. (upbeat music) The average two-bedroom rental here is actually much less than the national average. It's 980 for a two-bedroom, so that's not bad. Here's a three-bedroom, two-bath, 924 square foot trailer. It's a trailer. It's not more we can say about it. It's corrugated steel sides. It's nicer on the inside than on the outside. It looks like it's gonna be that real dingy carpet with those floors that if you walk the whole fucking trailer shakes, you've been in those trailers. It's not that. Yeah, it's not that though. You get inside, it's nicely done. It looks like somebody did a really nice job of remodeling it in 2005. It's like the kitchen is to everything's 2005, but it's nice and clean and decent. Weird carport thing. It's a carport, but the sides also, it's closed in. - Oh, they closed it? Okay. - But there's no door. So it's just an opening and it's all corrugated steel. Looks like a hot box. Looks like your car's gonna be 7,000 degrees in there. - It's just to keep the fucking snow off of it. - That's all it is, yeah. And make it a little warmer to start it up when it's cold, $85,000 for that. So, affordable. Here's a five-bedroom, three-bath, 2,632 square foot place here on 0.26 acres, so not a huge lot, but decent-sized yard. Nice, inside though, kind of dark. It needs some windows, it's very dark. All the pictures are dark. A lot needs to be redone. The carpet doesn't look wonderful. You're gonna move in and you're gonna spend 50 grand getting this place how you want it if you're, you know, picky about that sort of shit. Semi-finished basement, not bad. Strange two-story shed out back. It's a shed, but it's two stories and there's a little balcony coming off the second story with a ladder climbing up to it. Let's just go sit out on the tiny balcony of our shed for a while. Who the fuck does that? It's weird. Three hundred. That's a bird's nest, look out for cops. It's, babe, it's facing the woods. What are you looking for? It's $325,000 for that, so that's kind of your average house here and it's a nice, big, good-sized house. Here's a six-bedroom, 4.5-bath, so not even a tea bowl for every be-hole, but you do have room for a lot of be-holes, 70, 212 square feet. Holy. That is three good-sized houses. That's nice. That's shit. 4.42 acres. It's a huge, beautiful house. It's nice, it's nice on the inside. It's got a nice outdoor basketball court. It's got a stream on the property. Beautiful landscaping, nice mature trees. Very nice. $2,425,000 for that. $2 million is living southeast, I know? $2 million, almost $2.5 million. Oh my god. Who, things to do while you're trying to fucking pay up a $2.5 million mortgage. Someone, your children into the sex slave market. Hiding your children from the sex slave ring, kidnapping ring here, you can go to the Eastern Idaho State Fair, everyone. Yes, you can. Hit it. Yeah. 2020, they are back and bigger than ever, they say here, with entertainment along with food, which is the primary reason many people attend the Eastern Idaho State Fair every year. Yeah, for fried shit. They're gonna fry, insert the blank of weirdest thing ever and then I'm gonna try it. Now they put a powder sugar on it. It's fine. Why not? Just a motorcycle spring. That's all. We're in. We're gonna do it. So it says that they're gonna come there. They have Indian delay, Indian relay races. I don't know if those are Indians running the race or there's some kind of. I think it's a three-legged race. Okay. Nighttime grandstand acts and also eating contests. And what? Livestock. Eating contests. Oh, no. I don't. From the pictures, it looks like kids eating contests too. Yeah. So there's gonna be some kids throwing up in the car and the way home back there. And livestock as well. And now here are the grandstand events. So these are the nighttime grandstand hot shit events here. This is what they're advertising. Truck calls and demo derbies. I already know that. Well, there's a bull riding championship, a pro rodeo. The pro rodeos, actually, they're three different nights. One day Tuesday, Wednesday, or pro rodeo days. It's a big fucking deal, James. The demolition derby is on Saturday, of course. Yes. Gotta have that. So I mean, this is fun stuff. The demolition derby. That's fun. Yeah. The rodeo I can do without because I smell shit. It's just shit. I just smell shit. If there was no other people there, I would go, but I'm not sitting with shit kickers and all smelling shit. I'm not doing it. I won't have a good time. I guarantee you. I just root for somebody to get hurt. It's a good time. That I'm okay with. Yeah. Yeah. Then Craig Morgan will be there. Hell yeah. More country, it says, with special guest Matt Stell. Okay. I don't know. Craig Morgan does not look like a country singer, though. He's fantastic, James. He looks like... Singes the Redneck Yacht Club. In this... Oh, Jesus. Fucking Christ. Oh, boy. He looks like... He looks like Redneck Gordon Ramsay in his picture. He looks like... He does not look like a country guy, but then there's also the Western truck and tractor pole. Yes, sir. I guess that's for Western people. And you can enter your own shit in that, James. Oh, can't wait. I'm preparing it all year, Jimmy. I got it ready. Then there's, you can see Journey. More hits. So Journey, but I think it's like Journey Journey with the new singer. With the... With the Filipino boy? Yeah. With the Filipino child, but they... I don't want that. They got to protect him. Very good napping ring, obviously. So got to watch out for him. And then finally, of course, the main headliner here for it all, Jeff Foxworthy will be here. Get the fuck out. So if you'd like to see some demolition derby and hear jokes from 1988, it's all there for you. Jokes and the music with Johnny. It's all of the... Yeah. If you want to pretend like it's 1987, we got you covered. No problem. It's all in. So crime rate in this town. We weren't interested in property crime exactly at average. And I mean it's like statistically on the nose and then the weird part is perfect. Violent, well it's, you know, at the national average, I don't know if that's perfect. Violent crime, murder, rape, robbery, and of course assault, the Matt Rushmore of crime also exactly average. They do it. I don't know how they did it, but they'll... Don't kill him. We're at the number. Stop raping! You're going to fuck up our number. You put that kid back. Put him back. You have kidnapped enough kids in the sex slave rings this year. I'm sorry. We have a quota and a limit. Sex. It's kidnapping rings. That's all that's there. It's it. It's hilarious. Nothing else there. Frank Morgan plays it. He's going to play it and fucking blow that shit up. So let's talk about some murder here. Okay. Here we go. Let's start out hot here and then we'll figure out, yeah, put the pieces back together. Why don't we? January, I'm sorry, July 24th, 1989, 7 a.m. This is in Idaho Falls, 939 South 45th East Crowley Road. That's what it is. That's a weird way to South 45th East Crowley Road makes no sense to those are two different roads. How do you get there? I don't know how you get there, but that is how this happens and this is a guy named Roy Leavitt comes here 11, I guess, L E A V I T T. Yeah, that's a lot. It's L E A, though. He wants it. It makes me makes me want to say leave it so I know it's I know it's Leavitt. Don't tell me about names. Listen to the end of the show. This guy's trying to tell anyone how to pronounce names. I'm just saying that's tattooed on my back. I know how to pronounce that one, but you but we know to El Dorado is El Dorado and fucking this one is that's what I so I'm not saying it's what's correct and what's not. I'm saying you're probably correct, but we don't know if that's ever correct. What's correct? What's right might not be right here in this situation. God damn it. So Roy Leavitt here, he arrives at this house at 7 a.m. And a few minutes early, then he should have been he's going to be there about 715, but he figured he'd get there early. He is supposed to take his friend Rita. Rita is our EEDA, by the way, Rita, not Rita. Yeah, I know. Shit is right. And it's it's a lot. Rita Roundie is her name too, which makes it sound like she's like a satire of Ronda Rousey as with all I hear is Rita Roundie and she comes in, Hey, I'm this person. It's like the cartoon fucking version of that. So she just keeps getting kicked in the head over and over again. That performance career was over with one fucking kick. Yeah. Well, she she made one money that most people did in that that kick made her a cattle farmer. It made her get millions of dollars from WWE is what it made her get. Oh, yeah, she went there after they gave her millions to go. She made bank. Yeah, that was a her that kicking the head was the most greatest business move she could ever take part in in her life here. So he pulls in this guy. He pulled into the driveway behind a white Subaru, which is Rita's friend Betty's car. Right. Okay. He's supposed to drive Rita to the airport. That's why he's showing up now. Okay. Okay. Now he goes to the front door rings the doorbell. The door is open screen screen door shut and locked. It's been very, very hot. No, it's Jan. It's July. It's been extra hot. So a lot of people have been leaving their windows and screen doors open at night to get some air, basically, because this is a brick house too. So it gets hot. It stays hot type of deal. So he wasn't surprised the door was open. Any figure that they would be inside because Rita would be ready to leave for the airport. So he rang the bell a few more times and nobody responds. He's like, what the fuck here? You know, Jesus Christ doesn't see anybody in there goes around to the back door. The double sliding patio door was open and the screen door was closed. So open sliding glass door and screen door open for air cross breeze happen in here. And nobody, this was an absolutely not abnormal thing to leave your screen doors and stuff open. Here's not a high crime area, especially in 1989. Nowadays, obviously she'd be hiding from the sex slave kidnapping ring, but at the time didn't exist or at least it was unknown. So he calls out both of their names and nothing gets silence here. The windows and screens are locked. So he's like, what the fuck? And he knows Rita's always, he's going to drive her somewhere, especially for a flight. She's going to be standing on the front doorstep with her suitcase when she pulls up most of the time. So he's like, what the hell here? So there's no what to do. He walks back to the front of the house and notices that Rita's car is there, Betty's car is there. And they said, if the girls weren't home, they didn't take off in the cars. So they said, maybe Rita decided not to go to Las Vegas, he said, because that's where she was supposed to go. But he said she would have called me. She wouldn't have me coming over here in the fucking morning for nothing. Like who does that? You know? Yeah. He said he saw them the night before he was over the house visiting about 730 the night before. They never said any plans were changed. So he assumed it was on. Hey, everybody, just going to take a quick break from the show and tell you about an awesome and an absolutely safe sponsor, SimplySafe.com, S-I-M-P-L-I, Safe.com. It's one of our favorites because it's the one thing we use every day. It's we have the systems on everything we have. So we're always interacting with this and loving it. And think about this. Let's set the scene for you. Imagine a burglary at your home, terrifying, right? Yeah. 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So he stood in the driveway for a few minutes and figured out what the hell to do. He looked up and down the road. He said, maybe they took a morning walk, you know what I mean? Who knows? No sign of anyone on the road. He said, "Oh, they're probably sleeping in there." Or maybe they're in the back of the house packing and can't hear the doorbell, which is a pretty shitty doorbell if you can't hear of any bedroom. And your mind just starts racing, creating all kinds of scenarios where they wouldn't be here. That's, yeah. So like I said, he looked up and down the sidewalk, nobody coming. So then he went around back and he said, "Okay, the screen door is unlocked in the back." So he goes, "Oh, I'm just going to go in there and look around. They can't hear me. I'll go at least in the living room and shout for them." You know what I mean? Sure. So he does. He goes out. He calls their names. You know, he's from Betty, Rita. No answer. No answer. So he goes toward the back of the house where the bedrooms are and he's like, "What the hell's going on here?" So he steps into the bedroom hallway there and he looks and you can see into a bedroom from there. Right. And he sees Betty in her bed peacefully sleeping. Oh. Out cold. Wake up. Yeah. So he's like, "Oh, no, Betty could keep sleeping. She's not going to the airport." Rita's got to go to the airport. Yeah. That's the thing. He's also knows Betty quite well as we'll talk about, but he and both of them are married, by the way, also. Betty is married. Betty and Rita? No, no. Betty is married. To somebody else. And so is our friend Roy here walking around. Oh. So leave it or leave it. So he notices Betty sees her, then he takes a few more steps and sees Rita sitting up in her bed. He's like, "What the fuck, man? I'm yelling from the living room. These two are sleeping. What the shit?" She sees her in her bed, her head's tipped back against the bedboard with her neck kind of protruding forward. Like if you fall asleep on a plane, one of those. Yeah. That embarrassing situation you don't want anybody seeing you in. Yeah. One of those. So he said, "Oh, fuck." And then he said, "Why does she have a red bandana across her face?" Like, "Oh, dude. What's going on? Why does she have a red bandana on?" And he said, "Oh, no." He thought right away because she wasn't, she looked like she was in a weird spot. He thought maybe she had a heart attack because recently she'd been going to the doctor for some heart issues. Yeah. So he said, "Oh, my God. Rita had a fucking heart attack." So he turns around and runs into Betty's room where Betty's sleeping and starts shaking her. "Betty, Betty. Wake up. Breeding needs help. We got to help Rita." And nothing from Betty. She doesn't. She's not moving. She's not doing anything. And he goes, "What the fuck?" So he's yelling in there. And then he starts seeing, at that point he notices there's a large amount of blood under Betty's head, he says. Her color was very gray and blue and he said, "Oh, shit. She's fucking dead here." You know what I mean? Is she an older lady? No. No, no. She's 47. Okay. 47 and her friend is 49. Rita's 49. Betty's 47. So not like they're, you know, 68 or anything like that or even 75, 85 where they might just die in bed at night. Well, my aunt was just here for Thanksgiving and she is 85. She died in your house. No, no. She was sleeping on my couch and I thought she was dead. Oh, yeah, yeah. And 80-something-year-old woman falls asleep and you're like, "Oh, my God. What's happening?" Oh, yeah, yeah. They look terrible. My grandmother, we always, we thought she was dead for 10 years straight every 10 times of day when she falls asleep. She'd always wake up though somehow. Yeah. What was that? It's crazy. The transformation that happens as soon as they lose consciousness. She's like, "Oh, my God. That's a dead body." The Italian grandma wasn't going out in her sleep though. That wasn't happening. No. She was painfully awake and aware when she was dying. It was the only way to go. So he's seeing this and he didn't touch her. He went in to start shaking her and then realized it was up and didn't shake her. So he said, "Oh, my God. What the fuck?" So he ran for the phone in the kitchen because it's 1989. That's where the phone is and he dialed 119 instead of 911. He was so flustered. What does that call? Dyslexia. That is called paranoid dyslexia. Let's call that and find out what that is. It is amazing. And he could barely, couldn't get his hands, he was shaken and everything else. So 911 answered and he said, "I need the quote as I need the police and an ambulance. It looks like there's been a murder to people," which is very strange. Number one, usually, and this is a, they do long-term studies like the FBI and police departments and homicide people do long-term studies of 911 calls made by people who they found out later were the murderers and made by people who weren't the murderers. And they notice very distinct differences. One is that normally when someone is calling for actual help and they've had nothing to do with it, they normally lead with the address. They normally, immediately, they're like, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, address first. Yeah. Because they need help and they're trying to get help. And then they're giving details short. People, or this one's someone bloody, they're bloody, it's hurt. They need help. Like it's that. Not, they don't make diagnoses or generally they don't say, "I think there's been a murder." That's not, it's a weird thing to say, and two people. So the dispatcher was trying to get an address and more information out of him and he's not being very helpful, right, on the phone. He's all flustered. And then he blurts out in the middle of the 911 dispatcher trying to ask him questions. He blurts out, quote, "It's written in blood on the kitchen. It says, 'Satan loves you.'" Oh my God. Written in blood in the kitchen. So that's what he said. So he said he walked around the center aisle on his way to the rear of the house. And he said, as he came in, he'd noticed some red substance and some bowls, but he thought that Rita had been canning red jam because she can stuff. So he didn't even notice that it was anything was written because he was looking beyond that. You know what I mean? That's what he says anyway. He said, "Only when he came back to the phone, did he notice the writing?" So the dispatchers like, "Great, address is what we need here." Where are we going? You could say, you could say, "Allian's just landed in the yard." Terrific. We don't have a fucking address. You're not? No one can help you. House is on fire. Wonderful. Great. Should we look for smoke? Or are you going to tell us where it is? You got it under control? Yeah, you got it yourself. So they're continuing to ask, but then he interrupts again and said they're both in their beds and there's stuff all over the house. It looks like there's candles and blood written on the stuff Satan loves you. That's his exact quote, written on the stuff Satan loves you. They said, "Are you absolutely sure neither one is breathing?" The dispat, none of this is important. They don't care about that. Yeah. The thing is get medical. Do we need medical help? What's the address? These are pertinent factors. My job is send people. I don't know how to do anything else with that. When the cops get there, go, "Hey, look at Satan loves you," is written right there. But until then, it's not important. So it's very strange. And then the dispatcher asks, "Are you absolutely sure that neither one is breathing? Let's start there." And he says, "I didn't check their pulse, but there's blood everywhere." So this 911 call is really useless as far as a lot goes here. I mean, he's got no information that's helpful other than there's people and you should come here, wherever this is, possibly. So let's find out about these people, our deceased folks, and find out and we'll find out also if maybe Roy is on the up and up or what here. So let's talk about the Hales family first. This is Betty's family. Betty Lou Hales is her birth name here. Plural name. Yes. H-A-L-E-S. So it's plural, more than one. Betty Lou is her name. Her dad was in the Navy in World War II. She was born in 1942, so like right before he went off to war, came back. Yeah. She's born to California where she's born in Long Beach because he's in the Navy, which makes sense because there's naval shit there. Yep. And he's got a wife. This is Betty's mother. Betty Lou's mom is Dorothy, and Betty Lou's got a sister named Joanne, who she's very close with, and a brother named Dan, who's the younger brother. So they were very happy, obviously. The dad was home from the war, and he's a building contractor. The dad, Joseph, is his name. Betty is born June 12, 1942. So my birthday, just decades earlier, so we share a birthday, though, me and Betty Lou. So the dad builds homes. He's a contractor that builds homes, so he's a home builder. So good business, too. Very cool. They're not struggling this family at all. He began to buy homes in need of finishing or remodeling, and then flipping them. How about that original flipper? He was doing that in the '40s. He was flipping houses. Wow. Wow. So original. There wasn't a lot of houses to even flip back then. Like, after the war, we had to build fucking so many hundreds of thousands of houses in this country, because we need houses. Yeah. And that's kind of when the American dream of that became a thing of, like, buying a house. Yeah. That's what they did. They started building, like, Levitt Town, which is the place in Long Island, which was a big suburb. They built, and that was like the model of, hey, you can build track housing, all the same house. No one cares. Just do that. And that's how that happened. So Jo does all sorts of shit, though. He's an expert carpenter, a cabinet maker, a plumber, an electrician. He can do all the work. Yeah. Thank God he didn't take that, man. That's awesome. And he kills Nazis. This guy's great. He does. He fucking rules. He's like, hey, fix that up. Yeah. No, it's all 220 now. It's going to be 220, 221, whatever it takes, you know what I mean. We do that. That's all nice. No, no, I fix that leak and everything. And I killed three SS officers in your backyard. I didn't like the looks of them. Yeah. Okay. I like this guy. Not too bad. Guys and leather jackets. Don't know if they were SS. I just don't like leather anymore. It said no. Leather in a hat. You're not buying it. Boots up to your knees. Good luck. You're going down. I dropped out of a tree. I cut their throats. That's how I did it. I'm sorry. I had to do it. So it wasn't the most lucrative way to make this living, but it got him a good living and he liked doing it. He enjoyed fixing up these houses. Yeah. He really liked it. So Joanne, in 1952, Joanne is 16 already. That's the older sister. And she marries a guy who they'll be married forever and they'll be very nice to Betty over the years. They're always Betty's refuge, Joanne. Whenever things aren't going well, she can go to Joanne's and they'll take her in and like live, let her live in a different world for a while here. So yeah, the parents weren't happy that Joanne was getting married so young. But later on, I think they married until they both died. So seem to work out. Yeah. That's what I think here. Now Jo, dad, he likes the areas outside of L.A. in California. He likes that. Yeah. It's only California. He likes that. Yeah. Yeah, he's into it. Weird. So he said the high country of South Central California, though, he likes. Oh, yeah. Yeah, in that area. Shit, yeah. Yeah. By the way, this is a book. A lot of this comes from a book that will give you the title of at the end of this thing and everything here. And that's what he likes. And he found a house there and he could remodel it and in Crestline is the name of the town where he can remodel a house and they can live there. So he found the perfect setup there. So they move there. Obviously, Betty's not thrilled about this. And she's 16 at the time when they move a couple of years later and Dan's 14. So nobody's really thrilled about nobody wants to move in the middle of high school, but they do. And Betty meets a young man during all this. She meets a young man named William L. Gray, Bill Gray. He was born December 4, 1939. So he's about three years older than her. And he's originally from North Dakota, which is very strange because he talks like a Bowery boy, like from the twenties, he said, he'll say like, so I says to him this, like that's how he talks like his quotes. So I says to him this and then he says to me, this, it's so funny the way his verbiage is. It's very strange. Yes, I says. So his early life was pretty average. Apparently he's a sick kid, always getting, have an accidents sickly. Second grade, he had a broken collarbone and a broken nose in a fall. By the time he was in sixth grade, he had pneumonia for the seventh time. So he's really just not a healthy kid here. His family left North Dakota when he was 14 and they moved to Crestline, California. He's got a sister, the state of North Dakota and all that kind of thing. Now they, his parents are Bill Sr. and Sarah is his mom and they opened and they operated a small grocery store in Crestline and Bill worked in the store on the weekends and you know, all that kind of thing. And it was pretty good money for the family and his dad also sold insurance. I don't know if it was out of the grocery store or what, but they ended up there laying an upper middle class existence here from this. They're doing pretty well. His parents are, they don't on him hardcore because he's sickly. So I mean, his mom, anything he wants, he gets and anything like that. And everybody says to when he's younger, if he didn't want to do something, he could just say, I don't feel good. And they'd be like, Oh, no, honey, you know, you need to rest. Let me make you something. Lay down. That is pretty dope. That's awesome. That is. Yeah. That's awesome. That's a good card for anything. I don't know. I'm just not feeling great. When I was a kid, they gave me some weird old country remedy and then tell me it worked and you're healed. And now go outside because we don't want you to hear him. Get out of here. Yeah. Get out of here. There you go. Ginger ale and olive oil. Have at it. Now go do back. Yeah. Go to get out. Get outside. Oh, man, fuck me. So now while still in high school, Bill begins to start his own business actually, which is pretty ambitious for a high school kid, it's cutting firewood for local residents. So yeah, it's a good business for someone in school because we get firewood and the kid who brings it's like a college kid. Yeah. Also a body somebody because I don't want to do that shit. When he comes and loads it all in our wood shed and shit, I'm like, you couldn't. There's not enough money you could pay me to do and it's like not a lot of money. Yeah. It's a few hundred dollars. I'm like, Oh my God. That looks like it took you. It would take me a month to cut all that. And then you had to carry it to your truck, put it all in, then take it all out and stack it nicely in my wood shed. So I wanted to take them aside and go listen, young man, you're doing it wrong. You need to charge way more than this because I'm shocked at the low amount of money I'm paying you. I pay them like double like as a tip because I'm like, there's no way. The amount of work that it takes to do it. We pay them a fortune. Yeah. Because why? It's crazy how much work he puts. I can't do that. You can't do that for that little money, dude. I mean, I can certainly split wood. It just would take so long. I can split it. And then the next day I can fucking sit there because every part of me is sore. Also, I'll split it and then in a few days I'll go load it to exactly. That's what it is. I split wood like last year. My neck was so fucked up because I have a bad neck anyway, it was all fucked up for a while. I was like, Jesus Christ. All I did was split some wood. This is ridiculous. They've got little machines that you can buy for home that'll, that'll split them for you. It's also when you put on the wall and like pull it down and it splits them like that. Yeah. There's different ones, but we'll just pay this college kid. So before you get a stump and a mace, yeah, just, ah, there are a lot of dynamite. So he does tree removal as well. Oh, wow. Yeah. So his father bought, Bill's father bought a truck and other equipment that he needed for jobs. So his father was like buying him shit here. Tree removal was in high demand. So he picked up some jobs and he discovered though that this is really hard job. Anything with trees is difficult. They're heavy trees. Yeah. Real heavy. That's the problem. A lot of physical work. They're really deep. Oh, sawing them, cutting them, carrying them, pulling them from the ground. Fuck that. The nice part about what he's doing is that he's creating him a more product, more product to split and turn into firewood. That's how that helps. But cutting a tree down is not easy. It's not easy. You got to do it. To make it fall the right way. All that shit. Not break the person's house page you. So Bill just got friends from high school to do the work and then he made less profit, but he didn't have to work. So subcontract it. Yeah. Perfect. And don't do a goddamn thing. He was really good at getting other people to do work for him. That was basically his talent at 17 and his father would keep buying more equipment and Bill would just tell his crew where to go and then collect the profits. Yes. Quite the business model. Joe Hales, the Betty Lou's dad, hires him to cut some trees and do some yard work and some wood stuff. He's been hired to clear timber from their yard and he right away spots Joe's daughter, Betty Lou. Oh, likes Betty Lou. Bill's three years older than Betty, but you know, that's not back then. That's not a big deal in the 50s. Not so bad. No, like we said, she could be 14 in your cousin and it was like, I don't know. He's got his own business back then. Nobody cared. It was weird. What are the ages here? Are they 17 and 14 or are they 17 and 14 going on 18 and 15, which back then they were like, yeah, they're both in. They're both high school. It's fine. Which I mean, if you're going to put kids in the same school, you have to expect them to hook up. A couple of them are going to like each other that you don't, you don't like the age gap. How do you get animals in captivity to produce? Fuck and put them in the same cage and you're putting them all in the same cage and going, now you don't go out with these ones here and then you stay away from those. Oh, okay. So they do that and bill strikes up conversations with her and go takes her out a little bit here and there, but very, you know, to the soda shop and to the, you know, places like that. Nothing crazy. They're not like hanging out all the time. A year later, the hell sell their house in Crestline and buy an apartment complex to remodel down in Long Beach. Wow. Yeah. So they're stepping it up a little bit. Betty was happy because her sister had moved there, her married sister. And so she got to go see her sister more and Bill didn't care either because he would just drive from Crestline to see Betty wherever she was down to the beach. I mean, I don't know, I'll stay here. If Betty was at home, he'd drive there. If Betty was at her sister's babysitting, he'd just go over there wherever she was, he'd just pop up. There's Bill again. So he knew we wanted to marry Betty from the beginning and Betty wasn't quite sure of him. But over time, Bill grows on. She warmed up. Yeah. He grows on her. He hangs out and hangs around, hangs around. And he, I guess after he's like a junior in high school, he asks her to marry him. And she said, well, not now, obviously. And he said, no, no, no, later, yeah, but later, you know what I mean? But the thing that they said was the parents Joe never graduated from high school, Joe hails dad. So he said, that was a mistake of mine to drop out of high school to work. Oh, and he said so because he went into the army in his late 20s. He was, you know, later on, yeah, yeah, he was, he didn't go when he was 18 or something. He went in the war in his twenties when he could process what murder was. Yes, he was like, I want to kill Nazis. I don't just think I want to kill Nazis. I know it. I know it for a fact. So he was, he wanted at least his daughters to finish school and Joanne didn't. Joanne went off and got married. So he wants Betty Lou to finish fucking high school. It's a big deal, but two weeks before her graduation, which is the day after her 18th birthday. So June 13th, 1960, right, they go off Bill and Betty take a trip with Bill's parents down to Las Vegas issues, 18. So now she can go in and the casinos and stuff and they allow it. They allow Bill's parents are there and apparently they knew that this was going to happen, but nobody told Jo and Dorothey, no, nobody told Jo and Dorothy. So yeah, they were a little taken aback on this basically. Yeah, but this was one of those things. What do you want? Do you want to not go to work today or school today, Bill? Okay, you can stay home. Do you need tree equipment? No problem. I'll go get it for you. You want to ride to Vegas so you can marry your fucking barely 18 legal girlfriend? No problem. Get in the car. You don't feel good? Get in. We'll drive you. So in the early years of their marriage, Bill seemed to get along fine with Betty's family. They'd had no big issue with him other than the fact that he was not making a terrific living and they wished he would find a career other than the tree business, which isn't it's fine if you have like a big giant business and a lot of employees and all that kind of thing. But if you're kind of slapping it together and piecing it together like he is, it's not really the best way to go. Now his sister, her sister, Joanne's husband, Dick had begun a commercial landscaping business, which he was trying to build up. So they were doing okay, but not terrific. Now Betty, on the other hand, never had any money. Bill gave her any money that she had. He gave it to her and gave her a certain amount. She didn't know what he made. She didn't know what the bills were. Nothing. Betty has no idea what's going on here at all. And he would give her just enough to cover bare necessities of food for the house and things like that. So yeah, it was it was interesting. They end up having a daughter here, the grays, you know, Bill and Betty here. They have a daughter, Sarah Lynn is her name, I assume, after the after his mother is her name. Yeah. She's born April 21, 1963, and then less than two years later in '64, they have a son named Jeff, two kids real quick. So now Betty's a mother and her sister also has two kids. So now they're always hanging out and spending time together and, you know, they have little kids and all of that. By the way, the sister has no girl. She only has boys. So little Sarah Lynn gets spoiled with fucking dolls and dresses and the sister can't wait to do that. Well, thank God for all the spoiling because whenever they have a get together, she's fucking bored. Yeah, very, very. So Betty is very naive. Very naive. She knows shit about money. She has no idea what's coming into the house. Nothing at all. He controlled the checking account, paid the bills. She just thought knew they were poor. That's it. It's all Betty knew. Oh, we're not doing great. Not doing great. Like Joanne would like her parents would slip her money now and then her sister Joanne would, you know, take her out and go, I'll get you that dress or I'll get you whatever and, you know, it's on me, it's my treat, that sort of thing. They knew she needed help. Joanne says, quote, Betty kept her kids clean and neat. She was an excellent housekeeper, but they always looked kind of shop-worn. They looked poor. Even though they're clean and neat, they looked like clean, poor people. There's some threadbare on the elbows and knees, faded hand me downs, that sort of thing. This is the only newer, nicer clothes they had were what either me or my mother bought them. That was it. And Betty never spent anything on herself. If she had any money, it went toward the kids in the household and she never complained about this though. She doesn't know any better. She just thinks this is fine. She said that I never heard her complain about Bill. She's always supported him no matter what he was doing. So that's, that's kind of how it goes. Bill is very controlling though in more terms than just the money. He is every thing she does, he's involved in it and he has a say in it and she doesn't really get to do what she wants. She had to ask Bill about every little thing she wanted to do. Like if she was going to be late coming home from her sister, she was like, "Oh my God, I'm going to be late." Like she'd freak out, grab the kids, rush into the car, peel out of the driveway, like I don't know, like she was, yeah, like someone was robbing a bank and she was going to stop it. She was scared, her sister said, quote, "I thought, give me a break. Everyone should be allowed some leeway in their lives, but you couldn't talk her out of it." She wouldn't even make a phone call to tell him she would be late or ask for a little extra time. When it was time to go, she packed up the kids and went, "Buses leaving, let's go in the car." This is racing the clock all day. That's crazy. I guess he has had some tirades against her search. That's why she's afraid of that. And her sister said basically, "It's easier to just deal with it and comply than to have to deal with the rage that comes from it." Everything that she bought has to be prior approval from Bill, but Bill could buy whatever he wants. He can do anything he wants here. Of course he can. Yeah. She'd have to do a whole presentation of why the one kid needs new underwear, and then he would, you know, achingly dole out $2 for new underwear. You know what I mean? It was ridiculous. If there was any change left over, he took that into account the next time he gave her money for groceries. He goes, "Oh, well, you should have $1.50 left from that too, so you can add that to this, so I'll give you a little less than I was going to give you." Here's 10. Take that dollar, make it $11.50, pick up some food. Oh my God. He's a moody fuck too. No one knew if he was going to be pleasant or pissy or anything. You couldn't tell. Everybody said that just out of these dark moods, he would just give people these dirty looks, even the kids for anything. And Joanne, the sister, said his eyebrows would turn down and those black eyes would stare right through you. I didn't want to be around him any more than I had to. It was obvious that he didn't care much for me either, and he doesn't-- Come on, if you want a cough on the guy, right? Yeah, yeah, take that. He's sickly shit. You need to immune system, motherfucking-- You know, immune system having fucking bitch ass, take that. And she's like, he doesn't like them too, because he calls the sister that rich bitch all the time. Her rich bitch sister, because her sister's a-- she has good money after a while. She's doing fine. She does well, and he takes it as, oh, helping my wife and kids is throwing it in my face type of thing. Oh my God. He won't give her a shit, so what do you want? Then there's a time when-- this is wild-- Joanne and her husband, they bought a wooded, unimproved lot, and they were going to build their first home on it. Hell yeah. They needed to have some trees removed. By then, Bill had sold off most of his tree cutting stuff, but he'd been working some odd jobs and all that kind of thing. So the brother-in-law, Dick, he gets bids from different tree removal companies. Bill hears about this, and he goes, what the fuck? I want the job. Don't take bids from people. And Joanne didn't want to do it, but Bill was like, they need money. They're struggling. We're always giving the-- instead of just giving Betty money for shit, why don't we-- Well, let's let him earn it. Let him fucking work for it, at least, at least he can do something. And so she said, OK, why not? They're family. What the hell? And Dick said he didn't expect Bill to beat the lowest bid. There's big companies in there that can do that, but he was prepared to pay in a medium to hire range for it somewhere in the middle range to pay Bill. He was happy to do that. He said it's not a big problem for him, and it would help their family. So Bill gets the job. He does the work and then sends the Bill in the mail, and the Bill is three times more than the highest bid that he had ever received for this job. Three times more expensive than the most expensive bid. 80 grand. I was like 80 grand to remove five trees. And by the way, remember when I was complaining over Christmas about the tree removal and how much it cost me, and this guy turns me upside down and shakes my pockets out and all that, literally within two weeks of saying that guy dropped dead. Did he really? He fucking died, straight died. We called the company back to do something with another tree or put some trees and then Sarah was like, Hey, where's so and so? And they're like, Oh, he died. We're like, Huh? Oh, yeah, he's been dead. We're like, what the fuck? He's been dead. Like, Oh, okay. My bad. I feel bad now. My wife found out his wife, his ex-wife's divorce attorney died, and he called the opposite. They were like, I'm sorry. He's died. He hung up and called back. They're like, I'm sorry. He died. They're like, we just told you he died. Yeah, just like you're on your side. That's fucking funny. It just sounds great to me. Can you say it one more time? Oh, man. So this triple price bill, Dick says, what the fuck, bro? You fucking charge me. This is crazy. You're charging me three times as much and Bill said, Oh, well, you know, Betty and the kids and I need the money and blah, blah, blah. Three times. So Dick ends up paying it just because he's like, Wow, whatever, maybe this will shut them up for a while. So Bill continues to drift from job to job. He tries a heavy equipment operating for a while, spent some time working in the quality control division at US rubber. That sounds fun. Is all I make sure the tires are done right? I guess so. You check them out. Kick them a couple of times. Dan, Betty's brother works there and got him a job at that point working in the heating and air conditioning field that's, I guess, that's so he goes into that. And Bill started night classes to learn the sheet metal trade. Oh, so that's not easy stuff. That's a hard job. That's hard work. That's all day hard work. When he eventually got that job, he, they were talking about the construction. He was the talk of all the construction workers around town. Everyone's talking about him. Hey, I'm Ryan Reynolds at mid mobile. We like to do the opposite of what big wireless does. They charge you a lot. We charge you a little. So naturally, when they announced they'd be raising their prices due to inflation, we decided to deflate our prices due to not hating you. That's right. We're cutting the price of mint unlimited from $30 a month to just $15 a month. 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He's never around and he's jerking off. He's probably in the bathroom. He's in the board of bodies, fucking smoking. There's that guy. I was going to say that guy is one of us. If we were both on the same job, they'd fire us both because like we can have two of you. You two would just be one. You're just sitting over there giggling, making fun of everybody. You can't do that. You have to actually work. Is this guy ever pick up an hammer? These two are useless. So he would call and sick all the time and even when he got there, the co-worker said they wouldn't see him all day and then they'd see him like a punch out time. Where the fuck have you been all day? He's just taking off. Why are you in line for the time clock? You were here today? You were here? At one point, they discover him like sleeping under a staircase, like away from the job or in an area, just standing in an area where no one was working, hanging out, sitting on a bucket or just smoking cigarettes and no one complained. No one complained to the boss. They just were like, "These fuck this guy's crazy." I can't believe he's doing it. Just ignore him basically. He'll get fired eventually and he's very, he's got a real threatening attitude too. He's a real like, "What do you fucking say to me? Type of guy." Very angry guy and so they're like, "It's not worth it. Who cares?" He also told people in mind their own fucking business all the time. In conversation too, he was always a real braggard of how tough he was. Somebody would say they had a big problem with somebody else. He would say, "That would never happen to me. Nobody would dare try that on me." He said, "Boy, I'd go over there with my gun and blow him away." Then he'd say, "You want me to go over there and take care of it for you?" Then he'd be like, "No, no, no, no." "Come down, psycho." Yeah, or like he'd talk about like getting in a beef with someone wherever the fuck at the grocery store and he'd say, "I fixed them but good." One of those fixed them good. He'd say, "Or I sure put the fear in them and I told them where to get off and all that kind of shit." You know, the guy didn't want any part of me and he ran away. He's always one of those guys. He always, no benefit of the doubt, no fucking quarter. He's just coming at you all the time. Yeah, it's Bill at one point here, Betty again, very naive. Never question anything Bill did or said. That's how it works. Her dad growing up was working and would be out of town for two weeks at a time working on houses and stuff like that. For her, for a guy to go away for work was normal. When Bill would just take off and be gone for a whole weekend, she thought he was working. Meanwhile, he'd be staying at some motel somewhere. To do what? Well, we'll find out. But one time she said she knew where Bill was going and he was staying somewhere through the weekend. So she said, "Let's go surprise dad to the kids. This is going to be great." So they found the bathroom window open in the motel room. So they opened it up and she shoved little Sarelyn through the window to go unlock the front door. Yeah. No one was there. They opened the front door. Bill's not there. Bill gets back. He's alone, actually, which is surprising as hell. We all expected him to be in bed with the skankiest of prostitutes at this point. The worst. The worst. The worst. The worst. The worst. The worst. The worst. The worst. The worst. The worst covered in sores. Just somebody that was terrifying to poor Betty, but instead of going, "Oh my God, hey, guys." He was furious. He was hating her. He was like... Front of the kids? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. The kids. That doesn't matter. So they ended up, she took off with the kids. And at that point, she started being suspicious that he was seeing someone at these motel rooms. Why else would she be so mad? He's acting differently. He seems sneaky, more controlling than he ever was and all that kind of thing. What is he hiding? It's very weird. But Betty ends up finding out one of his coworkers, I guess, somehow thinking he was doing a favor for Bill, who Bill was out of town on a job when the paychecks came in. So the coworker took Bill's paycheck and gave it to Betty, figured she could go deposit if they could get the money in the bank earlier. And this is the first paycheck she'd ever seen, maybe married for over 10 years. She'd never knew how much money she made. And she told, I don't know the amount, but she told Joanne that she was like, what the fuck? He's making good money. This is, I'm living like we are poor and he's making good money. He, you know, fucking, oh, squeezes $10 out for me and we have, this is ridiculous. So she's pissed. At that point, Bill, rather than being chastened by the whole thing, is furious at the coworker and threatens to kill him. You ruined my life. You gave my wife my paycheck, I'll murder you. How dare you? The guy's like, let her know what we make Jesus Christ. And back then though, that's a big deal guys didn't tell their wives that like even I read the ball for the Jim Bowden book, the old baseball book memoir from 1969. And he said that one of the guys wives found out that they get paid for spring training, found some money in his pocket because they had all, they all told their wives, we don't get paid for spring training and we would, they'd take that money and keep it for themselves and buy like a boat or something. And they said they found out so the guy had to tell her, yeah, that was a new, in the new contract. It's just this year that started. Meanwhile, it's been for the last 10 years. He's been playing. He's been doing it. It's what guys. I had a friend, I had a friend in their 60s that they were married and she said the secret to their relationship was that they keep separate bank accounts. She doesn't even know how much he makes. Well, do they both work and both have, yeah, they both have their own thing that would be different. But this is like she was a housewife. Right. And you only get the money, this guy hands you like, Hey, what the fuck bro, I at least want to know how much we make, you know, so Bill does not get fired by the way. Really? Yeah, even for this. He screamed, he even shouted at his boss because his boss tried to intervene and just go, Hey, what's going on? And he said, you gave him his, you gave him my fucking check. It's partly your fault, partly your fault. He said, I'm the man in my family. My wife has no business knowing how much money I make. And he was hurt shouting at his boss. His boss, though, doesn't fire him because his boss is in the middle of selling the company and he doesn't want any disturbance or disruption. So he's like, I don't give a shit, get just till the papers are signed. I don't care. What the next boss worry about this? Yeah. He said he's the new guy's problem. I don't fucking give a shit here. Bill figured he was going to lose his job anyway. And so he was just going off. So Bill ended up going off and he figured that he'd get fired for this. So he takes off that day. And then the next day, when the owner opens up the shop, he finds some tools and equipment have been stolen. So this guy goes, hmm, let me just see where this is. Takes a ride over to Bill and Betty's house and finds all of the missing items in the garage. It's all sitting there. That's ridiculous. So the guy, though, he didn't want to make a stink because the sale was three days away from closing for the company. So he just got his shit back and brushed it under the rug and said, good, Bill, we'll come back now. And I don't need him. And he never calls the cops or anything like that. Yeah. So Bill, later on, will tell everybody that he made a deal with this guy to buy the equipment, but the guy reneged. That's what happened. It wasn't his fault. He didn't steal it. It was just a, you know, yeah, and he was telling Betty this and Betty felt terrible for him that, oh man, this guy did us so wrong, you poor guy. So Dan, the brother-in-law, Betty's brother, found out about the brother-in-law's burglary after that. And Dan had left his job and was basically not in the, he didn't work in construction anymore, so he hadn't heard much about Bill. He was planning to start his own heating and air conditioning business in California because there's a lot of construction going on in California at the time. So Bill said, please, please, please let me be your partner. I have cash to invest in it. Now Dan needed money to start the business up. So he grudgingly, big grudgingly let Bill invest and be a partner. So now he's partners with this guy. So basically a room in Dan's house was used as the office and Bill said he was going to do the office work, but Dan said it was impossible to get him to actually do the work and stay there. He just wanted his paycheck. Dan's wife was going crazy. She had to be in the house with Bill there all day and she couldn't stand him. He would like send her to go get coffee and like expect her to like cook him lunch and shit. He'd be like, what are you making me for lunch? And she's like, pardon? I'm gonna make a new shit for lunch. And then she would like have to make him food. I don't work here. Yeah, make your own, this is my house. So then Dan argued, Bill said that he needed a secretary. Meanwhile he's barely there. Dan said we can't afford it, we don't need it, but Bill hired a secretary. The problem is it's the woman, he hires a woman and it's the same woman that all the construction gossip said he's been fucking for months. So he hires his girlfriend essentially, Dan then said, look, Bill, you can buy me out or I'm going to buy you out, but we're not going to be in the same business anymore here. Yeah, Bill said I'm glad to sell you the comp, sell you my half and name some crazy price. Dan says, I'm not going to do that, sorry, not doing it. He said, you don't have a contractor's license, Bill, what the fuck are you going to do with this business? Like, I do, so I can just start another one, I don't need you. That's kind of how it broke off and Dan ended up buying Bill out for a much lower price. Dan just said I just wanted him out of my life, I couldn't handle it anymore, just I needed to get rid of him here. And so the family now ends up moving to Fontana. Oh. Yes, they had a house they were living in, Betty was, and they ended up losing the house. It was right near her parents where they had the house in Crestline and they ended up losing the house, but Bill convinced her that it was his idea to sell the house because he has a better idea. Oh, what's this idea? We're going to buy a worm farm, what is it with worm farms? Dude, how often, this is the second time in two weeks, a fucking worm farm has come up and you didn't even know there was worm farms in existence when the first worm farm came up. And now it's all we're talking about. It should be called worm farm murder now, it's all worm farms. I mean, that was, that was, it's a ridiculous business venture. That's why it was dumb and dumbers of this business venture. Oh, that was the fireworks patreon with the worm farm that was being used as an illegal fireworks factory. That was hilarious. And in dumb and dumber, that was what they were going to do was start a worm farm, but apparently it's not a terrible business. It's just a, not a hard business, I guess, because it's not lucrative. Yeah. Well, if you have enough of them, it is though. Yeah. If you're running a bait shop near a lake, sure. Well, I guess around there, there's a lot of lakes and bait shops. So if you're in a place where there is a lot, I guess it's a good thing. Yeah. There are worm farms. So it has to be viable. Otherwise, you wire people, they just like digging up worms. What are you people? What the fuck are you doing out there people? Why would they be doing it? I hope that's not why there's got to be a case study per market that the certain amount will work and then one too many in the whole thing falls. Oh, I thought you were going to say we need to study who's worm farming and the percentage of them that are actually doing this to make a profitable, a profitable business and the other part that is just doing it because they like worms for some reason and they really know like that swear to God, that's where you're going for illegal fireworks or that's the other thing here. Bill's a big time fisherman and he said he knows his worms. Yeah. So they end up moving to Fontana, California to raise worms. Wow. That's what they're doing. It's a shitty place, a shitty house in a terrible fucking neighborhood, a terrible area. In Fontana or run down crime ridden shithole that's their biker gangs like to hang out in Fontana. That was a bad place. Back in the day. Yeah. The house was small. It was a shithole. It was falling apart. There's a big shutout back that housed the dirt worm beds. That was in shit condition too. But yeah, it was Betty's tried to make the most of it. She told her friends that you don't need a fancy place to raise worms. Yeah. So it was very interesting. They somehow managed to get Sarah Lynn and Jeff into a private school. I don't know how worm money or they borrowed it from the parents, one of the two. Bill loved it because he could hunt in fish more often now because he's just raising worms and not actually working. Betty though, didn't like it because it was kind of shitty and dangerous and it's nothing like her old place with her parents living next door. Now they said there's a lot of tackle and bait stores in the mountain roads up there because there's a ton of lakes and they're always looking for bait. So this is actually decent. Bill set up a bunch of clients and had a daily delivery route that he would do. Sustainable. Yeah. So, you know, he would just do that and the whole family would package and count and put them in their little styrofoam containers and those things breed like crazy, dude. Oh, they fuck like nuts. Yeah. It's I had no idea how many they make. They make so many. Yeah. So you cut a worm in half? You got two worms now. There you go. Clothes up. They're wild, man. He would do this and go along. It was pretty soon though. He would start telling Betty, you need to learn the route to these deliveries. I can't do this every day. I waited for worms to fuck. I mean, I'm tired and he was just lazy. So he's always lazy and he would tell her, yeah, I don't feel good like he did with his mom. So that's how I worked with her too. Betty would make shitloads of worm deliveries, but she's out in these like middle of nowhere mountain roads and she does it every day. So anybody paying attention would know that by the end of the day, she's going to have a bunch of cash on her. Oh, yeah. So she starts to get worried that she's going to get robbed on one of these mountain roads because she's like one of these crazy fucking hill folk are going to rob me when I'm on this road. So Bill gave her a gun and taught her how to use it. That's the solution. So armed and day out, not, I'll do it. It's, hey, Betty, learn how to shoot this gun at the guy instead. Take this six shooter, man. Yep. And he's got a ton of guns. He's got to always been collecting guns and he's a really good shot too. Really good shot. He's he always taught his kids how to use guns and he's big on like firearm safety and all that kind of shit. Like teaching the kids, all that stuff. 1971, he's got a lot of health problems here. Yeah. He's making the deliveries one day, but hadn't come home for dinner and Betty's waiting for him. And you know, she's, this happens all the time, by the way, even though he's having health problems, she'd make dinner. He wouldn't come home. She'd sit there. He wouldn't come home till after midnight. She'd be like, is he out drinking? Who knows? At one point, one of these nights though, he doesn't come home till the middle of the night and he says that he lost control of his truck dodging a coyote on a narrow road. Yeah. And so that's what happened. So he's in the hospital for 16 days recovering from bruising and severe pain in his head, neck and back. And there was problem as though there's internal bleeding that causes his spleen and one kidney to be removed. He wants that dick. Yeah. And then the remaining kidney was slightly damaged. Oh no. She's got one slightly damaged kidney and they said that a couple months later, they said that further deterioration and they couldn't assure Bill that his kidney wouldn't fail completely sometime in the future and he's going to die. So because if you're, if it's working well, one kidney, you can get along with just fine. But if it's fucked up, you can't, it's not going to work. So I, and the insurance that they had paid all of Bill's medical expenses and replaced the truck. That's good. So he learned a little lesson about insurance that time. Holy shit. Insurance rocks. Look at this. It fixes our life. So he said, no more worm farming, all done, too labor intensive. It is hard to watch worms, fuck, you know, I want to move somewhere else. It's very restless. It's heard of all this worm porn on there. Oh man. I have to keep putting it on. It's like, it's like in a fucking bar, like in a shit bar. There's just a bunch of screens with worm porn playing. So he wants to move to Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Okay. That's where he wants to move back then. Not expensive. At least he's got big dreams. Yeah. That's not expensive back then. It was just a cowboy shit hole in the middle of nowhere. Now it's one of the most expensive places on the face of the earth. Right. It's hard to get to. It's fucking out there, man. Yeah. And that's kind of, it's remote as the thing because it's for rich people and skiing and all that kind of shit. It's in the tee time out. So they visited Jackson Hole and Betty wasn't quite sure about it because, you know, she's still within driving distance of her family in Fontana and she wants to be there. But they think maybe they need to, he's like, listen, we need to break the cycle. We need to do this. So let's try it. And they said, what the fuck? Why not? They said, no matter how long they raise worms, they're never going to have shit to show for it. They're always going to barely get by Jackson Hole House. That's not sure. You're not going to be a millionaire with worms. So she said, fine, she'll do it. Jeff didn't mind the kid. He's 11. They're kidding. He thought it would be cool. Sarah Lynn's a teenager. She's not real happy about it. But they're going to go. They're going to do it and Bill promises. Give it two years. If you don't like it, we'll go back. Okay. Two years. Fair enough. Yeah. By the way, Bill has figured out how to get a loan even though he has terrible credit. And he said, listen, if I, as long as I can get some earnest money, some down payment, I'll get the loan. And she's like, how are you going to get a loan? And he figured it out. And he just used his father's collateral and credit rating because they have the same name. Oh, wow. So he just said he's his father and used his social security number. Nobody. Nobody asked a question. Yeah. Yep. He's got the same name. Probably got the on the ID. Just shows me ID, puts on his dad's social security number. It shows up same name, different middle name. Got the money. They have a different middle name, but they don't know. That's not on your ID all the time. And I get I have gotten confused by, you know, agency with my father and we have a different middle name, same shit. So they think they're dealing with William R. Gray and he's William L. Gray. And that was that. So he could do it and he's done it before and he'll do it again. So and Betty was like, why would anybody give us money? Give us money. Yeah. Exactly. But less than three months after this, he said they're moving there and he wants to and he got this loan out of nowhere, the worm shed burned to the ground. Oh, everything. They lost it all. Bill woke Betty up in the middle of the night to tell her that he smelled smoke and they went out there together and discovered the shed was completely engulfed in flames. Oh, no. And Betty had been sleeping soundly and didn't know what Bill was doing before that she assumed he was sleeping too, but she didn't think he like, you know, burned the shed down or anything like that. Joanne though was like, your husband totally burnt your shit down to get insurance money to fucking put a down payment on this house. Where else is he getting it from? The sister said, from everything I heard, that farm wasn't worth much of anything except the insurance. They couldn't make a decent living with it because I know they were getting money from my parents and Bill's parents all the time. Then it burns down and it's well insured. I said, Betty, don't you think this is a bit too coincidental? You can't sell it. It's worth practically nothing, probably way less than what you owe on it. And one night, boom, it burns down. Now you've got the money to go to Wyoming. Don't you think that's a bit much like good news. It's not a single worm with armed figures. All of them got out. We sold them all. They're done. So the Fontana police department, though, said they suspected arson and the only possible perpetrator is Bill. So who else would burn down a fucking worm shed? Who cares? Rival worm growers? I mean, I don't think that's a thing. Send in a worm message? Yeah. So the, but they never were able to prove their suspicions. So the insurance company paid off. The fire remains on the Fontana police records as an unsolved arson. So it's, it's an arson on the file, but they were never able to prove it. So the payoff since not only did it destroy the worm shed, so the, they get the money for the structure, but it's also their business. Right. So they get more money. So now Bill has all the money he needs to go to Jackson Hall. And when he goes there, he goes, what is the one business scummy enough for a guy like me, a former worm farm and lazy asshole is mean to his wife and scamming money from the system. Who the hell with the terrible immune system? What kind of a place could I do? I know what I'll be. I'll own a pawn shop. Is that right? Never been a more perfect, perfect mix of fucking medium and content ever. Incredible. It's perfect. So they moved there in 1978 and, and they're, they find on Main Street jeans pawn shop. And they renamed it Gray's pawn shop and they bought it. And it was later be Gray's pawn shop and teaks and bail bonds as well. And they're doing bail bonds and bail bonds. So yeah, um, Sarah Lynn and Jeff helped out with the pawn shop and Betty helped out too when the shop is busiest or when Bill is feeling lazy or I'm sorry, sick is what he says. This will make you long for the days that you're flush with cash driving down a rural road all alone. No shit. This is dangerous. Delivering worms. Yeah. And fire or firearms, very popular pawn shops, Bill applied to the ATF for his federal firearms license so he could buy and sell guns and he got the license and allowed him to take and use firearms as pawn items, but also to sell new firearms as well. Bill loved this shit, man. He loved it. Oh man, because he could get guns for cheap and he less liked having guns and playing with guns, but also he could add really cool ones to his personal collection now as well. It's awesome. He loves playing with guns. He loves it. So he's doing looking at them and fucking dick and you can't play with them. Yeah. He's got a hundred guns. You know, shooting a hundred guns. All it's I know playing with them. You know what I mean? With 99. You got one. You got one. Yeah. Through the building in 1982, they take out a second loan so they could move and expand the business. He convinced the bankers that he could make a large balloon payment in three years on this. Oh, Jesus. Business was good now, a better location, larger shop. And he said thought he could really make it work. So he moves his business to 560 West Broadway on the main street of town, which is probably very high rent now, you know, and he added a fishing tackle department as well. And a large line of camping equipment, a music department, and even more jewelry. He's a one man, Cabela's guys. He's everything and jewelry. Yeah. It's one thing they don't sell a Cabela's or like gold chains. You don't think they got what do you want to bet they got a rainbow trout necklace or neck. I'm talking like bling shit though, like real stuff now that I can't get like a death row pen in a Cabela's. You know what I mean? But on a pawn shop, I just might be able to get one. Yeah. That's what I'm saying. Yeah. He also expands his gun department, which he felt was the most important part of the store, which it's tools and guns are your main heartbeat of fucking those pawn shops. Those survive every fucking recession. Yeah. People always need those. Whereas jewelry, you know, ebb and flow here. Now they can actually afford a house for the first time he could legitimately purchase a house without even using his father's bullshit. So incredible. They buy a brand new two story home at 435 Stacy Lane, south of downtown. And now they're like doing great. Betty's fucking proud of the home and sure, you know, it's just there. They couldn't be better here. They have friends, none of them like Bill. She has friends. She has friends. Well, they have friends. And then once once they realize that Bill's an asshole, then Betty has friends. She's so nice. They don't lump her in with him. Yeah. So she makes a friend named Janice Robie and her. She has a daughter who's close to their daughter's age and, you know, all that kind of thing. Betty and Janice were best friends. They would talk to each other and do all that shit. In the early 80s, the couples would go out together for dinner and dancing. Yep. They even on, you know, cold nights, they'd just play cards. Sure. But the more they were around him, Janice's husband didn't want to hang out with Bill anymore. And that's the issue. It's like my fucking joke of being stuck in the backyard with the guy and go, "Oh, you like sports?" And it's like, "What the fuck else are we going to talk about?" It's the same thing. Nice. And you hate baseball. Thanks for coming. Great. Perfect. Yeah. Yeah. Because I told the true story of the one guy went through everything and he goes, "I lacked NASCAR." And I went, "Great. Perfect." I actually liked it. We went through every sport, movies, TV, fucking books. I'm like, "What is this guy into? It's just NASCAR." That's it. And I was like, "I'm stuck with this man for the next three hours. I can't get away from this." Yeah. Fuck. Shit. So the two ladies go, "I drink more of my beer and eat more of my food." Come on in. Yeah. No. No, I'm putting more shit on the grill for you. You just stay right there, away from the heat, though. Wouldn't want you to break a sweat. Don't worry, I'll cook for you. I got this. That guy I'll never see again. We got all of this. That guy I'm hopefully will never see again. I'm not absorbing your name. You fucking jerk. Don't care anymore. I don't care anymore. So yeah. That's how it goes. The ladies become close friends. Bill, owning the plunge shop gives you access to a lot of weird things. Yeah. Bill becomes a gaudy douchebag weirdo. Oh, he's one of those? I love that guy. I love that guy. I love that guy. Every person. Every person. Yeah. Half the jewelry pawn there. He's wearing at all times for safekeeping or something. Oh, shit. He's that guy. Yeah. Everything like honest person is for sale as well. Yeah. The guy that owned that big yellow one on that, that's exactly what you're talking about. It's the guy. Right there. He's got like three watches on. He's like 58 wearing Janko jeans. I'm like, who is this just like a chest full of them? You're like, are those all the necklaces you bought today? That's sideways driving a Bentley, like who the fuck are you? I buy used guitars, man. Okay, great. What fuck are we talking about? I guess fucking crazy. So and Bill becomes a bigger asshole, by the way. Of course. Now he's even more like pushy and intimidating with people because now he's got like a whole pawn shop. It's like his little kingdom. He even tells people that he's a bounty hunter. Okay. He tells stories of tracking down bail jumpers and bringing them back at gunpoint and, you know, big comfort. He didn't do any of this. He just told people that. Yeah. He'll be like, you like that gun? Yeah. It's a good price for it. Let me tell you what I did with it. Last week, I was checked, brought a guy back at gunpoint on that thing. Yeah, it works out. He was real scared of it. They said in this book, they say, by the way, I'll give the name of the book. It's called the book is called When Greed Turns Deadly by Dixie Murphy. I don't want to forget it, so I'll just give it now. So the book says, quote, decked out in his gaudy pawn shop obtained gold and turquoise watch. It's huge to gold chains and bracelets. He never ceased to brag of his wealth and prosperity. Even that could be ignored by considering the source, but few people who spent much time around the grays were comfortable with the foul language bill used. The more so his habit of always putting Betty down in front of them. His nasty mean vulgar remarks struck at the very core of their sensitivities. Betty would try to laugh it off and make excuses for his behavior. But inwardly, they knew she was hurt. Yeah. And it's not just Janice and her husband wondering what the fuck's going on and why you're letting this guy treat you like dirt. There's neighbors directly across the street, John and Dee Dee. And they were like, what the fuck? Dee Dee said, when I first met Betty around 1984, we gradually became really good friends. Bill totally had her under his thumb. I mean, she would have dinner on the table the minute he walked in the door. If she was working with him, she came home just a little bit before Bill, so she would be sure to have dinner on the table when he got there. If she came over for a cup of tea, you could see her driveway from where we had tea. And if she saw him come home, she would bolt and run for the door, saying, he's going to be mad at me. I don't have dinner on the table. Like Archie Bunker, basically. Yeah. He walks in. He wants where's dinner? He said, sometimes Betty and Janice and the neighbor would go to the elks club to play bingo. That's what they do. And if they wanted to stay for a drink afterwards, she would say, nope, can't do it. Bill's going to be angry if I'm not home when I should be, when I should be. Her friend said, sometimes I would think this woman is nuts. I'd never put up with a man like that. Okay. Now, Bill does have a couple of friends or lackeys is a better way to put it. Yeah. He's got a guy named Jack Hurley, number one. And Jack Hurley is a, according to the book, a typical cowboy boot Levi wearing valley rancher at a small ranch in Bonduront, Wyoming, which is 35 miles away from Jackson. And so he's got like a small ranch and Bill would use him for certain things. Then he's got a guy named Lee Brown, who's a guy who's from Alabama. And he had worked on these different cattle ranches and got divorced, went to work for the US Forest Service. He worked at the Snake River campgrounds as a driver for float trips. And Lee and Bill met through the pawn shop and they became friends and Lee is very good at fixing anything. So anything Bill has, he can take it to Lee and Lee will fix it and then he can sell it for more. Lee's a driver of a bus that drops off drunk people to go float on inner tubes. He's a scumbag. Well, here's the quote from the book, the general consensus of those who knew Lee was that he was a little slow mentally. That's what he is. He's a little slow. He could hardly read or write. But he was a loner and Bill just kind of took him in. And so he's kind of his only friend. He'll do anything. Yeah. Lee gets involved in some of Bill's bullshit at one point when he's working for the parks department or some shit like that, the forest service, a snow machine belonging to the forest service ended up in Bill's garage. Wonder how that happened. Fucking snowmobile. It's a 400 pound machine. So those are so expensive. There's very, yeah, the forest, US Forest Service had it. It's not for him. Then there's another time when Bill had a Jeep and he claimed his Jeep was stolen, collected the insurance money when the Jeep was found stripped of all usable parts at the bottom of a cliff on Teton Pass. Lee had helped strip it, then followed it in another vehicle to the pass where they pushed it over the side. Yeah. Lee was the guy who knew how to strip it and he knew what was important out of there. So Lee basically was stuck with Bill at this point. Sarah Lynn, the daughter, had suspicions that her father trashed the Jeep even though he said he didn't. He said it was stolen. She said he wasn't upset when the Jeep got stolen. Normally he would have thrown a fit. Nobody dared to take anything from my dad. Then he made a remark that the insurance was worth more than the Jeep was. At one point his dad was telling Jeff overheard, the son overheard his dad talking in the shop one day and basically told him, told telling his friend what he did. So Bill made up some story about the insurance company being at fault and actually they owed me some money and Jeff was like, what are you fucking? No. Yo, you money? I'm not. What do you, what do I look like? Mom? I'm not. No. You didn't pull me out of the house when I was 14. I am no better. Well, the float trip driver, I'm not dumb. I know. I can, I can cipher. I'm lettered. And Bill said, well, just don't tell your mother about that. Yeah. And he was like, all right. You transcribed this conversation, dad. Jeff's like 12, by the way, or 14, or he might be older now, he's a teenager now. So then Bill gets more injuries, by the way. He said that quote, I was getting ready for the hill climb on a real lively snowmobile and lost control. Oh my God. I ended up with a steel plate down here under my knee. I have compound fractures and I believe 11 or 13 places. I'm just, I'm just chock full of nuts and bolts. I don't know how you go through the skin. That's impossible. Compound fracture. Yeah. It's impossible. Your leg would, they would have found it in a tree or something if that was the case. There was no way it would have stayed attached to you. 11 or 13. What? That's crazy. 11 or 13 means two. Yeah. That's one. One, probably. So Betty helped out. She nursed him, tended to his every need. She'd open and close the pawn shop. She, you know, all of this shit. She had a huge extensive recovery period and she, he, he could have done shit from the pawn shop. You can do it from a chair, most of it, but he didn't want to. He just let her do everything and he'd hang out at home. Knees hurt sitting home, Bill's mother, again, she would come and visit Sarah and she would just like act like Betty was there to serve her. The book said she seldom bothered to get dressed and she lounged around watching soaps on television, expecting Betty to wait on her hands and foot. She never touched a dish, made her own bed, nor offered the slightest help with food preparation or chores. They said the book said Sarah had a tendency to be a little on the lazy side like her son, but you know, now Betty's working all the time too. They said, uh, Bill's well had, make her own bed, nothing and Betty didn't complain about it, but Bill did. Bill, the, the book says he instructed his family to watch his mother for she had a tendency to take things from the house. She's a lazy thief. She's stealing from her own kid. Watch out kids. Grandma might fucking take your fucking journey tape. Watch out. Be careful. Grandma Butterfingers is coming to this. Wow. Sticky fingers. Nevermind Butterfingers. Sticky fingers. Yeah. Grandma stickums coming over. Watch out. Jesus, on one occasion after Sarah packed to leave, Bill instructed his children to go through her suitcase and remove the items that he knew his mother had solid. Go get all our shit back from Nana. Yeah. Literally go into her suitcase and take all the shit out that she stole. Please. Oh my God. That's crazy. Then one night or one morning, 543 a.m., a half mile south of the hardware store, the Virginian Lodge burst into flames. By 7 a.m., the fireman had it under control. However, about 150 motel units were completely destroyed. Oh, no. Then at 6.50 a.m., graze pawn shop burst into flames, Bill and Betty's pawn shop. There's a fucking flamethrower in town. Yeah, they're a half mile apart, so it then spread to there. Bill was in the pawn shop when the fire first broke out, according to Bill, according to the Jackson Hole Guide, which is the newspaper. It says Bill Gray narrowly escapes, read the headline, followed by a picture of the burned out building, and they said that luckily the Virginian Lodge fire had been contained enough to where the firefighters could turn their attention to the pawn shop, although it's completely gutted, which with major damage to the building, only a small section of the pawn shop remained standing. Okay. Well, it was originally, by the way, that was, yes, okay. So then that same morning, they found out that a hardware store had burnt down as well. Really? Yes, it was at 4.04 a.m., Jackson Hole hardware. So there's just fires all over the place that morning. Now, the pawn shop was the last of these three to start. It was 4.04 or 4 something on the pawn shop. The, I guess, an hour, they heard about the fires, Jeff and Bill's father and son were going fishing that morning. They were getting ready to leave and heard the sirens. So out of curiosity, because it's a small place anyway, they went to see what was going on, and they found out that then while they were out, Bill said he was going to stop at the pawn shop and get some extra tackle for their trip, some lures. He told Jeff to wait in the car, he'd only be a minute. Within a few minutes, he came running out of the shop just seconds ahead of the shop, exploding. It's going to blow like Henry Hill running from the parking lot in the beginning of Good Fellows. Like that's what happened here. Cadillac's exploding behind him. The pawn shop erupted in flames while they stood there and watch. So that was the last of it also. They said it was possible. A lot of these, these fires were started by book of matches with a match in it that's sideways so it burns down and then lights the whole thing and there's a shitload of gasoline. This is good timing for Bill, fortuitous. The balloon payment on their small business loan was due soon. And that would have ruined them because they didn't have the money for that. Thank God for this fire. So now within a couple hours of all these fires, the Ramada Snow King Resort and the Pioneer Cafe, somebody tried to light them on fire as well. So they had some evidence here. They found lit cigarette, a lighted cigarette burned down to set off a book of matches, which then ignited containers of gasoline. That's what they found at this site here. This gave, you know, obviously in arson, it's a fuse they may hear because of time to get away before the fire explodes here. The cigarette burned out though before it could set the matches on the fire. So that's the problem. They found as much as, or they felt as much as 30 to 50 gallons of fuel was used in the five fires. Holy shit. That's so much gas, 30 to 50 gallons. That's like filling your car up four fucking times, basically. That's six or ten, five gallon, that's a lot. That's so much, so much. They said that neither gas stations nor distributors checked in the entire valley remembered selling that amount of fuel to any one person at all. So, and nor had any residents responded to like someone stealing fuel from their ranch or something. None of that shit. The fire chief said whoever did this was very angry. The person had thought out the method very carefully. Everyone who investigated these arson's felt that Bill was responsible for at least his fire, but the fire chief said I didn't think health wise he could have started the others. Yeah. And he's so lazy. That's a lot of fires. That's what I mean. Like, I would be mad at a guy if they were that lazy, but then started five fires of a few lazy fuck, why don't we do that in an hour? Come on. Ridiculous. And so there's no reason to check on his past or anything like that. They just go, okay, insurance company pays off and the pawn shop rebuilt bigger and better and they had money to spare. Wow. So it all worked out great. That he doesn't know that, but yeah, fun thing about about the pawn shops is you could claim there was anything in there. Anything. Yeah. Get a baby's arrest. You can't say there was a. AK-47s in there. And a very old Monet in some. Yeah. It could be anything. We had Jimi Hendrix guitar in there from Woodstock. He signed it. He had his fingerprints on it. That's it. It was the National Anthem guitar, priceless. So by the way, in the house, Bill is in his chair the whole time. And Betty has to do everything. He starts to get real, just angry. Yeah, if Betty forgot to put the salt out, he would yell, "Where's the goddamn salt?" Like he's an angry Jimi Buffett fan or something, he's fucking pissed off. So Betty would get it. He'd drink his milk and then he'd say, "Well, goddamn it. If you can't, can't you see my glasses empty? Get me some more milk." He would yell at her. This is very, very weird, very strange. One morning, Betty, I guess, one of her friends confronted Betty after Bill left and said, "My God, Betty, how do you put up with this?" And Betty just laughed and said, "You know, everybody tells me that. Even Bill's friends when they come over, I guess I'm used to it. I just don't even notice it anymore." You know, everybody seems to ask me that. Weird. That's because it's fucking crazy that you're putting up with this shit. It's fucking nuts, man. So Bill has major kidney problems here. He has to go on dialysis in 1987. Oh, no, it's dying. It's not good. Yeah, he's got this bag that basically filters fluids in and out. He's got a big fucking piss. It's not the piss. It's something else too. It's yeah. They say that, well, here, a permanently implanted catheter hose was inserted into his stomach. Four times a day, he would attach a bag of dialysis solution to the catheter. The solution would drain into his abdominal cavity. When the bag was empty, he would fold it up and tuck it under his clothing. His body wastes and excess fluids would pass from the blood through the solution residing in the stomach, cleansing and filtering the blood. So they would... Jesus. It's its own kidney, basically. Yeah. And so after several hours, the bag would be lowered to blow his stomach so that gravity could then drain the waste-filled dialysis solution back into the bag. When it was full, a new bag of solution was attached and it would start all over again. So... So uncomfortable. That's a terrible description of life. Every time he had to do it, it was about every six hours, he would have to... it would take 30 to 40 minutes to fill the cavity and then he could go do what he wanted to do. For about six hours and he'd have to do it again. So it's four times a day, seven days a week. Cleanliness is the most important thing, no infections. He also loves Vegas. He has that happening and he's going to be. Oh yeah, he doesn't give a shit. He loved it. He loves to gamble. They said in the book, they said, "Bill would deck himself out with all the jewelry he could wear." Usually, two gold neck chains, several gold bracelets and an exceptionally large turquoise watch. When Bill... this is '87, '88. When Bill saw the picture of a man's spinner ring... We're talking like annoying rims from 2007. He had to have it at all costs. The ring was a gift to Dick from Joanne, the brother of law and sister of Betty. But Dick thought it was too gaudy and wouldn't wear it. So Joanne sent a picture to Bill asking if he could sell it at the pawn shop. He said, "Fuck yeah, you could sell it to me, bitch." It's an oval-shaped diamond that floated on the mounting and with movement, the diamond would spin and that would flash brilliant sparkles in all directions. It's the gothiest thing ever. He's got a fucking disco ball on his hand. What the fuck are you doing? Wow. That is ridiculous. He thinks he's like a rapper this guy, so... Oh shit. We all have that long nagging home to-do list full of annoying things that need to be fixed. You have drained, hole in the drywall, or the AC not cooling. But now you're able to get it done. Meet Front Door, the one-stop home repair and maintenance app. Front Door lets you video chat with experts in real time so you can diagnose the problem faster, fix it yourself right then, or Front Door will send you a list of local pros to come out and help solve the problem. Now it's easy to cross things off your to-do list and enjoy that feeling of done. Get unlimited video chats with an expert for $25 a year, download and try Front Door for free today. Hi, I'm Laszlo, director and producer of the new audio fiction series A Better Paradise, written by Dan Hauser, the writer and creative director of the Red Dead Redemption and Grand Theft Auto series. A Better Paradise is a story set in the near future, about the creation of an ambitious and advanced but addictive video game world, led by inventor and psychologist Dr. Mark Tyburn, played by Andrew Lincoln from The Walking Dead. As the company and project fell apart, the game world and the superintelligence within was left abandoned, dormant and undiscovered. Until now, things have evolved. Listen to the first episode right now and make sure you follow A Better Paradise on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and everywhere you listen so that you'll never miss an episode. And that's all part of his gambling costume, he goes to Vegas wearing all his shit. So remember Larry Leroy-Roy Levitt there? Yeah, I do, yeah. Okay, well, this was, they meet him through Fanning Wholesale, which was an account of the pawn shops. And as the pawn shop flourished, Roy Levitt was good friends with them because they were doing a lot of business together. He would call the pawn shop on a regular basis, Roy Wood, and over the years, he and Bill struck, had a friendship and they would go to lunch, they'd go fishing trips sometime. They took their wives to go wild asparagus picking. I don't know, that was an activity, that seems like work. Went on a float trip down the Snake River, only fucking, only well off, only well off fucking white people would be like farming is a, like, not farming as a living. It's a farm for fun. It's fun. Well, let's do stoop labor for fun. That's hilarious. Only rich people do that shit. So they went down a trip down the Snake River and all that kind of thing. But their friendship was based on the working relationship, mainly here. Now Roy said, I always thought he was abusive toward Betty. In my presence, he called her a bitch using four letter words on several occasions. He would sometimes get irritable and ignorant with his customers too. But sometimes he was really cheerful and pleasant. Guess it depended on how he felt and he given Jay. So now we'll enter the other victim that we found in the beginning, Rita Lorraine Roundy. So she's born in 1940. She worked for Fanning Wholesale. That's how they all met. As she's got a job there and she worked for a sporting goods retailer before that. She is from Utah and that's kind of her thing here. She has two older sisters. She's the youngest by like 15 years though, which is weird, so she's always the baby. And she's from a very poor family. Really? Yeah. Very poor family. She grew up, even though her grandmother lived a half a block away, she would basically live at her grandmother's most of the time. Her father was a miner who worked long hours and didn't make a lot of money. So they also raised rabbits and chickens for food and her mother canned vegetables and fruit given by neighbors who had extra to share. So they would have food. In the 50s she was living like this? Yeah. In the 50s. It sounds like Charlie fucking bucket. 1839 shit. Yeah. So they said more often than not to get meat, her dad would poach elk or deer. And you know, when it wasn't in season or whatever. She said dad almost got caught when he was cleaning a couple of pheasants and the gay warden stopped by. Thank goodness the warden was an old friend. I guess dad knew it was against the law, but without that food we would have been darn hungry because we didn't have any money. So yeah, everybody, the older sisters get married to get the hell out of here and Rita just hangs out with her dad and goes hunting and fishing all the time. She's also real good with a rifle or gun, excellent and a good fisherman too. So she moved to Provo, Utah, got married in 1960, got divorced in 1977. She had three kids and she moved to Tucson for some reason when she got remarried. Yeah. Got remarried, moved to Tucson and you know, did that. They end up, she ends up getting divorced again and then gets married again and divorced again in Denver. Good Lord. So yeah, she's trying to figure it out here. According to the book, it says quote, Rita was a large woman, big boned and on the heavy side, get very attractive. You would hardly notice her weight because she had good taste and clothes and was always nicely dressed. Yeah, I've seen pictures of her. You don't go, oh, look at this fucking fat brought. She just looks like a, she's like a bigger head and like bigger bones and that's a good bone is a good way to try to fasten any way of writing that. You wouldn't notice it. Well, then why did you write it? Hardly notice her weight. She don't get it wrong. She's a fucking pig, but you would barely notice it. That's how it comes across, right? That's why the line's in there. I could have said it. I thought the, I thought it was written strangely as so bizarre to write. Man, dark brown hair surrounded a narrow face with deep dimples on each cheek. Her smile was radiant and infectious. And of course it was because she's dead. Chubby people can be fucking gorgeous. Why are you writing like this? Nobody has better fucking smiles than chubby people and chubby fucking happy person looks like they're full of fucking joy and snickers, joy, that's what I mean. Joy. Yeah. So a lot of the employees at Fanning, she's one of the older employees there. A lot of them called her mom because they were like in their early twenties and she's in her forties. So Roy introduces Rita to the grays and Betty and Rita become very good friends, obviously. Whenever Betty was in town to pick up merchandise for the pawn shop, they would go to lunch and they'd go shopping and, you know, all that kind of shit, basically. Bill and Betty had stayed overnight at Rita's home and Rita had spent weekends with the grays and Jackson Hole early in their friendship, you know, Bill liked Rita, Rita liked Bill. She and Bill were friendly, a little bit distant because the girls are, you know, the ladies are friends, but whatever. But she didn't like Bill's attitude toward Betty, demanding foul mouth, yelling at her, controlling her, everything. It's just weird, man. It's just a fucking strange setup. You're like, why is she just taking this shit for so long? One time there's a visit and it becomes kind of gets out of control. I guess Bill needed his thing cleaned as Catherine Hole cleaned. So Betty would clean it. She would do all this shit for him. He had taught her how to cleanse it and care for it and everything like that. He announced it was time for her to wash out his wound and she accidentally picked up the wrong thing. She put the right it down to get the solution, but he lost it like she was going to hurt him. And he said, you dumb bitch, you dumb fucking cunt, you stupid bitch. What the fuck do you think you're doing? God Lord, man. So Dee Dee, the neighbor across the street said, what the hell are you doing? God damn it, Bill. Don't talk to her that way. This woman's trying to take care of you. You can't do it yourself. You're lucky that she'll do it for you, honestly. So again, Christmas '87, the dialysis was not sufficient to keep Bill's system clear of waste. His ankles are swelling. He's sleepy all the time. Now he's got to have supplemental dialysis on a machine, so he's got to go to the Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in Idaho Falls twice a week. It's deteriorating and they place him high up on the waiting list for a donor kidney. Really? He's going to get one. Now, in addition to everything else Betty's doing, she also has a cake business on the side. Really? She makes like fancy, yeah, like in shapes of things and like, yes, it's fucking, it's crazy. She does that. She's up till midnight baking cakes and five in the morning decorating them. She called it Betty's cakes and she created funny birthday cakes, beautiful wedding things and other bakery items. Her friend Janice said she'd make cakes in half and make it look like the Bible. She'd make a Bible cake somehow. Everybody loved her cakes. She was a great artist. This is her like calling here, it sounds like. So one day Roy came into the shop on his regular Tuesday visits and Roy mentioned he's headed to West Yellowstone to cover an account for salesmen and Betty had been saying, man, I'd love to visit a place like that. That sounds beautiful. So Roy said, why don't you come with me? What's wrong? Bill actually said, why don't you take Betty with you today? She could use some time away from here. Yeah. So Roy was like, sure. He's called her a cunt. Yeah. I called her a cunt. So that's going to be ringing in her ears for she'll probably be quiet for about half the trip, but she'll come out of it. And even Betty was like, okay, she was like, this is weird. So she made him stop to take pictures when she saw any kind of cool shit and she's happy and they had a nice day. Betty then was in Idaho Falls to pick up merchandise from Fanning's, the story works at a few weeks later. And it was the lunch hour and Rita was gone, but Roy was there. So she said, why don't you take one of your best clients to lunch? So he said she was left basically to run the whole nine yards. She was doing everything. She was keeping up her housework, doing her cake business, running the store and tending him, being a nurse to him. Yeah. And all that time he was running her down like how she didn't know how to do nothing. And when she started to cry, I put her arms around her and hugged her. I put my arms around her and hugged her. She said, oh, Roy, by the way, I haven't done a Roy. She looked at him and said, Roy, oh, Roy, it's been so long since anyone has held me and comforted me. At least you seem to care. Uh oh. She began to call me more often. And I was really beginning to care for her a lot and really look forward to Tuesday so I could see her. All right. This isn't good, Roy, Roy. So by the fall of '87, it's a full-blown affair, we're trying to keep it secret from everybody. The only person on Earth that knows about it is Rita. Really? Rita, later on, he'll tell Joanne to the sister, but Rita. And Rita said, I will, because that way Rita can cover if anything happens, if Bill thinks she's up there and he calls and they're out, you know, whatever. She knows what's up. She won't say like, oh, yeah, she's with Roy. I don't know. They've been in the back room for a while now. I don't know what's going on. Oh, let me go. Oh, the door's locked. I don't know. She won't say that. Sounds like everything's fine though. She keeps saying. Oh, yes. Oh, yes. Oh, yes. Maybe he's always trying to convert people to Christianity and I heard her call God several times in there. Oh, God. Oh, God. Yes. So that's usually I think maybe she was accepting Christ in her life at this point. I did knock on the door and ask her to come to the phone and she did say I'm coming. So hold on. She actually said it. I think she's going to be very fast because she said it like three. She said, I'm coming. I'm coming. I'm coming like very fast and loud, progressively louder. She'll be here in a sec. I'll just leave the phone off the hook. She swore to God. She said, oh God, I'm coming. If she's told God she's coming, she'll definitely be at the door in a minute. So give it about two minutes. I'll put her on the line. Betty in 1988, she starts having a lot of bleeding and has to have a hysterectomy. Oh, no. Her and Bill are at the in the hospital at the same time for a while. What has Roy done? He rearranged her guts. He took that shit apart. He broke her uterus. Long dictor broke her ovary as ghost face killer once said. So once she gets healthy, she worries that Roy is going to find out because Roy about or I'm sorry that Bill didn't find out about Roy, Bill, by the way, can like their phone lines because if they're home and the bail bonds line rings, they need to answer it. So it all gets connected together. Oh, no. Bill can pick up a line in his house and listen to any phone call of anything from work from anywhere. So that's what he does. And so she knows that he does that and she's like, fuck, don't call me. She tells Roy, I'll call you. You don't call me Roy Roy said she'd send me notes and then she wanted an answer back. I told her I wasn't much of a note writer. You don't know how to have an affair. This guy is terrible at it. Not much of a note writer. Are you much of a fucking dick sucking and receive receiver? Is that part of it? Right? A note. Stupid. What do you want? You want her to suck your dick, but you don't want to write notes. You're like, you're like strings on a attached pussy that we're talking about here. Why a nice pen, fucker. Yeah. No birth control, either. Hiss direct to me. She's cleaned out in there. Yeah. You can shout in her vagina and get an echo back. Sorry. You can drop worry free, not just fucking buy yourself a sweet pen. Come on. It's stationary. But it seemed to be important to her. So I'd pick up and I love you type card and send it up and send it up in the freight, like in the stuff. When I didn't get down to pick up a card, she would ask me to send her a note anyway. And I'd say, okay, I'll try to come up with something. You can't come up with I miss you. Jesus Christ. I never kept any of her notes and cards, but it didn't surprise me that she kept mine. You know how women are sometimes the littlest things mean a lot to them. You know, they are like children is what he just said. You know, women are sentimental and shit sentimental and fucking dumb. You know what I mean? They're feelings and shit. These dumb bitches. Dumb gash. You know what I'm talking about. Right. No, fuck. Okay. He said she gave me her picture. And she told me she had kept one of me in her wallet. I think it was one of the ones she had taken when we went to West Yellowstone. And this was all X's and O's and all this type of shit. The problem is the marriage is going downhill here. Bill is getting meaner at her. Bill told her at one point, you sleep on the couch, Dobby, who's the dog, is a better companion than you. You fucking cunt. He told her. Yeah. So, she just loved to be in the room and be like, you boy Roy's tagging her, you dumb tat. He destroyed my fucking uterus and ovaries to the point they needed to be removed. You boy Roy gave her a hysterectomy. They just took the parts out. He basically treated me like a game of operation where my nose was never not lit up and read. She, you know, so that's a big problem here. So his sickness had curtailed their sexual activity because he wasn't really into it anymore here. Roy said this is about his wife. I didn't want to hurt Ladina's feelings. That's his wife. Plus. Oh, yeah. They were hanging out together as couples. Plus I did not want to hurt my boys' feelings because he's got the teenage children. And I wanted them to be more or less on their own before I left. I really dreaded the day I would have to do it, but we were talking about waiting a few years. So I kind of put telling them out of my mind. I thought I would wait until she got her divorce, then I'd get mine. Yeah. And by the way, there's times though, at this point, she's gaining a bunch of weight. And so is Bill. Bill is only 570 blows up to 230, which is big. And Betty ended up gaining a shitload of weight too. So much she wanted to gain, or she wanted to lose 60 pounds. She's always very thin. And Roy said he didn't care. And she said, if you love me like this, this isn't Betty. This is a depressed woman living in a shell. I've never been this heavy. I'm going to show you what I really look like. I'm going to lose the weight. And she does. She gets down to 115 pounds again. Shit. Yeah. And now Bill, they describe him as he's wearing the same thing. They said he tries to cover his weight in the one piece coveralls he wears every day. The coveralls and men's sandals worn with socks, where Bill's trademark and seldom would anyone see him wearing anything else. His hairline was rapidly receding on top, but he still had ample hair on the sides. This is directly from the book. This is not a shot at you at all. Quote, "As with a lot of men that start losing their hair, he'd grown a full beard." Yeah. Yeah, we do that. The dark brown beard also helped disguise the acne scars left when he was a teenager. Oh, no. Now in his upper 40s, the gray color of aging was beginning to appear in his hair. He ends up getting a kidney transplant. By the way, Betty volunteers to give him a kidney. Get the fuck out of it. She doesn't get any nicer. She's like, "I'll give you a kidney." Why not? And he ends up getting a donor who was a 19-year-old person who died because he gets their kidney. And he doesn't even have to pay for it because he had applied for indigent county aid and they paid for all of it. So Betty's writing notes to Roy, signing them BLL, which is Betty Lou Levitt. Oh. Yeah, because they're going to get ready to get married as soon as they, you know, whatever. Bill bought Betty a brand new 1988 Subaru station wagon. Okay. And Betty said it's the first thing that she's ever had that's new and hers, so she likes it. Bill almost killed the pizza guy one night. Really? Yeah. He said, "Betty and I were watching television. It was about 9.30 in the evening when we heard this noise. It sounded like somebody tried to pull the front door off the hinges. The dog started barking. I jumped up immediately, ran over to the closet and grabbed a pistol. Ran downstairs, flipped the light on and told the dog to get him. There was nobody there. I couldn't see anybody. But what I found was a pizza deal on the doorknob, a fucking coupon, two for fucking $11 medium pies and he's freaking out. I left a fucking bogo for me. This is ridiculous. He said, you know, like coupons. Well I was furious because I went down there to protect my property and all. Was he furious? Did he get a chance to? Yeah. I didn't even get a chance to kill anybody. It's just... I did a lot of pizza though. He said... He's thankful. You would have gone to prison I think. I would hope so. Yeah, I would hope so. He said, "So I called the pizza place. I asked for the manager and told him what happened. I says, I says, I says, you people are nuts. You don't know how goddamn close you came to getting killed. The manager said that Bill threatened to quote, "Fucking blow me away." If his employee ever came back, he'd go down to the pizza place and shoot the manager. Wow. So, that's what he does. He talks mad shit to everybody. That's like his whole thing here. Always. Like somebody said that their ex-wife was a lot of money and costing them a lot in alimony and he told them, "Well, that would never happen to me. I'd hire a hitman for $1,500 and have her knocked off." $1,200. His friend said, "Don't say stuff like that. I don't even want to hear that stuff. $1,500 is not enough by the way as we know. That's cop prices. You're going to jail, bud. Jail prices." She went and visited her family, her sister, Betty, does, and when she comes home, there's a lot of trouble. Bill said, "I approached her. We had relations the night before, relations, and I snuggled up to her and said, "How about a little?" That's how he asked her sex, "How about a little?" She withdrew and asked her what's wrong, and she said she wanted a divorce or that she thought she wanted a divorce. We worked that day and went out to dinner, and I asked her if we could talk. We talked a little about how we would handle it, and I said that I wouldn't quit trying. That's what he said. She ends up, by the way, finding a love note from Roy on the floor in the bedroom. She knows she files shit away very carefully. He found it. He found it. Plus, this whole time, he's going through her wallet to find out how much money she... He has a ledger of yesterday, she had $42, and today she has $38, but I didn't see a receipt for anything, and she only bought... It's insane. He has a love and shit. No, it's Jesus. Fucking crazy. It's goddamn crazy. One night, Bill caught Betty with a couple of boxes, and he said, "I noticed that things were missing. When she came home from work, she brought two empty boxes. She went directly downstairs. She filled the boxes." She starts to store stuff for leaving. She gets a safe deposit box where she's putting cash in there, and if she gets a couple of loose diamonds from the pawn shop, she'll throw them in there. Anything worth money, coins, things like that, rare coins. Meanwhile, she's hanging out with Roy. She'll tell Bill, "I'm going up to Idaho Falls to go camping with Rita," and Rita would be camping with her boyfriend somewhere away from them, and she'd be in the tent with Roy. Got it. That's how it goes. It's interesting. Bill said he was trying to win her back and treating her like a queen. It's too late. She's riding the queasenart, man. Yeah, she likes what happened to her insides. Betty's doing all this. July 1989, Betty heads to Idaho Falls to stay with Rita, and that's when July 24, 1989, 7 a.m., Roy shows up all of this happens. Oh, she notices the car, he walks inside, he sees them, calls 119, all that shit from the beginning. We know what we're talking about here. Satan loves you. Okay, cops arrive, sheriff's deputy and a sergeant get there, and Roy comes rushing out of the house, flagging them down. They said he was extremely excited using rapid stuttering speech. "I can't believe what he found." Look him into the house via the patio door, showed them the women, what happened to them. They said they called the deputy, picked up the phone to tell the dispatcher. By the way, picking up a phone at a crime scene. Idiot. Perfect. Nice job fucking ready is the guy from the Nicole Simpson crime scene who picked up the fucking phone and called the station. Listen, we don't have radios around here, we got to use the phones. That's unbelievable. So go to a neighbor's house, it's not a crime scene, you fucking morons. So he picked up and the phone to tell the dispatcher that we're here and advised the dispatcher said another ambulance is on the way, but the cops said that won't work. Ambulance is too late. And the dispatcher said, "Yeah, it didn't sound like it, never mind." So there was that. They find a series of strange prints embedded in the carpet. So therefore they go around these prints. Two officers secure the scene, Roy is pasted hanging outside, going back and forth. They noticed a similar footprint in the gravel near the parking pad in the rear of Betty's car, pointing that Roy pointed it out. So one of the officers found a box in the garage and placed it over the print to protect it from people that are going to be coming, crime scene, people and all that. So Levitt said that he'd see, he said, "I feel like I've seen that type of shoe print before." So the cop first notices the absence of any type of struggle or attempt to flee by the ladies. Neither woman had been given an opportunity to fight. The detective instantly felt that these were executions, very cold blooded and very premeditated. Yeah. They said whoever they were looking for had not killed in a moment of spontaneous anger nor had they come to torture, abuse or rob. It was a quiet, clean kill, both of them. They said Roy shouted to the dispatcher that there was blood all over when he was on the call, but other than the likelihood of the words on the center island, which he hadn't even talked about yet, there's hardly any blood. It's kind of behind them in the bed. They're not in pools of blood. There's no brain on the walls, none of that shit. They feel like they've both been shot with a nine millimeter. They think it's right away. They say Rita's king size bed was located in the left center of her room against the north wall facing toward the door. The lot of mirrors on the west wall. Investigators determine only one shot had been fired. The bullet entered above Rita's left ear, passed through her head, exiting in the right side above the ear. She was sleeping. Whole brain gone, smashed into the mirrored wall, bounced off the mirrors and was found under the bed. Oh, found the bullet. Found the bullet. Several particles, which appeared to be bone fragments and flesh were lodged in and surrounding the hole in the mirror from the bullet. Investigators could not find the expended shell casing in the death room, though. The wall heater located on the west wall was eventually totally dismantled in every room into the room, searched and the shell casing was never found. So it's either a revolver or he took it with him. So they said Rita had been sitting up in bed when she was shot. Her legs crossed, her arms crossed at the wrist, resting on her lap. She was wearing a nylon short sleeve nightgown. The bedcombers were pulled up over her lap, and as were some papers, she'd been working on and prepped for her business meeting the next day. In Vegas that she had to go to. The blankets on the side of the bed nearest the mirror wall were pulled back as though someone had thrown the covers back and stepped out of bed. You can pull them back. When you take them off yourself, Rita's head was slammed back against the headboard, tilted slightly to her right, causing her throat to protrude grotesquely forward. The red bandana that Levitt thought he saw was actually blood that had settled around her mouth. All other blood had drained down the back of the headboard. There was no spattering of blood on the wall behind her head, nor was there blood all over the bed, indicating that she hadn't lived long enough to move and scatter the blood. She died quick. They said they were confident she fell asleep while sitting up reading and was not aware someone was in the room. Had she been awakened, she would have either turned toward the intruder or had been shot in the facial area or turned away and been shot in the back of the head. No one would let someone put a gun to the side of the head and shoot them if they move around. So they said the killer had the time and the patients to place the shot fairly close to her ear and at a rather straight angle. Wasn't a quick thing. It was measured. The room had not been disturbed. Nothing's been stolen. Dresser drawers are closed, ungone through. Okay. Betty was lying on her stomach, her head on the pillow, and her head turned to the right. Her right arm was extended upward across the pillow. Her left arm straight down on her side. She was nude from the waist up and wearing just underwear, which will find out that's how she sleeps always, just underwear, which is pretty fucking awesome. That's hot shit. Okay. That's excellent. So the covers were tossed over her from the shoulders to just above the knees, leaving her head and legs uncovered. The investigators feel the covers have been placed over her after she was shot. Her feet were in a position unusual for someone sleeping on their stomach. Normally, if you're on your stomach, your legs would have been bent slightly in the direction of the head, one slightly ahead of the other like you do. Seldom does one sleep on their stomach with their legs straight out. But if they did, the feet would also be straight out and flat, somewhat separated. Her legs were straight, her heels were together, and her toes were pointed straight down. Yeah. That doesn't happen. It's like someone doing a ballet move. It's not natural. So that's weird. This indicated a great degree of tension. They weren't so certain she had been asleep when she died. Rita was more likely to have been shot first. Betty made it when awakened by the sound of the shot, forced to lie back down and then shot. Someone told her to lie down like that and then shot. So the gun appeared to have been fired from just inches from her head. Contact wound practically. The bullet entered the back of her head and exited into her pillow. There's a large concentration of blood under and around her head that trailed down the left side of her body. A portion of the blood alongside her body had been smeared outwardly as though something had been dragged or scraped through it. One shot fired, no shell casing. So there's that. Her suitcase, which was packed for a one night stay with her friend, was lying open on the floor in front of the closet, like in a hotel. So they go through everything, basically they can't find shit for evidence in this house. Nothing. The only fingerprints they found belong to Roy and the two women. That's it. So they don't find shit. They find more footprints. We talk about these weird footprint patterns. That sort of deal. But the main thing they find is in the kitchen, the weird shit there. The prints not complete. They're not great. So the third series of prints was discovered on the throw rug in the hall bathroom. The toilet seat was in the up position as a man would normally leave it, indicating to the investigators that killer was male and he took a leak. Also they found a cigarette, an ashtray with nine cigarette butts in it and neither of the women smoke. In the house? In the house. So each on the countertop, basically the island, each saucer, they had these saucers. Each saucer contained red wax and a small base metal of burned down candles. And the words "Satan loves you" had been printed on the countertop between the saucers and capital letters. A steel wool scouring pad with dark brown stains was found in the sink. The detectives concluded that the scrape marks in Betty's blood had been made by the killer scraping the blood into a book, picking up her blood to use it. The fucking brillow pad and then doing that besides the writing, a connotation of six saucers with red candles in three rows was spelled out 666 also. So there's that. They said this is not satanic. This is the only thing satanic about the murders are this written here. The detective said that was easy. It was lacking a lot of what would have led us to believe that. We dismissed it as a means to throw us off track. The key though was using Betty's blood. Whoever the bad person went to kill, Betty gave it away. We were sure it was targeted at Betty. If the killer would have been that smart, he would have used Betty and read his blood and he would have made a star on their forehead, the upside down star. Then we would have believed it. He literally said that they used both and put a star on their foreheads. Then we would have said satanic, then it's in or he would have put blood all over the place. Dismemberment or mutilation would have been another clue to Satanism, not just a hitman thing here. The mafia doesn't kill you over Satan. Also two partially filled liquor bottles of liquor and a glass sauce are containing nine cigarette butts on the kitchen table and Roy said neither woman smoked. So a search in the basement yielded several of Rita's hunting rifles and an unlocked cabinet. All of her guns are there. None of them have been fired recently so her gun wasn't used. They interview Roy at the police station because they're like, "Oh, the guy that she's having an affair with that called up and acted weird." And found the bodies then acted super fucking weird. They said they'll get back to him later though because they just asked basically, "How do you know these people and have you had sexual relations with these women?" And he said, "No, not good." A married guy, that's what we do, yes. No, no, I don't know anything about that. When they go to go to Bill, they say, "Look, he always carries a gun and he's jumpy." So be cautious when you go to him. He almost shot an advertate. He almost shot a pizza boy. Yeah. He said, the cops said, "We came in until Bill. He needed to talk to him. A couple of customers were about to leave and Bill went immediately to the door and locked them out and locked the front door and let them out and locked the front door. They talked in the back and they said, "Sit down." He sat down. He was told Betty was dead. She and her friend had been murdered in Idaho Falls. They said immediately he started wailing, a high-pitched whale, "Oh, oh, no, no, oh, no, not Betty. Not Betty." And the cops are like, "That's wrong. That's a weird behavior." He said, "Reactions to a notification vary so much, but the quickness of the reaction is suspicious. It takes people a few seconds or even minutes to register what the fuck you just said." And a lot of times they go, "Betty?" What? No, no, no, not Betty. Why? No, no, no, but she's no and they do that kind of thing or they're like, "Wait a second. I understand." Where is she? Oh. It takes them a minute. Vegas. Or they just deny it, deny it. They have to go, "No, no, it's true. That make it sad." That's very weird for that to happen. So then they said, "The relative of a homicide victim usually wants to know and needs to know, you know, what happened? Were they shot, stabbed, strangled? What the fuck happened? Build didn't ask any of that shit." Didn't ask you. Nothing. You didn't ask how? Shit. Instead, he said, "Oh God, the only thing I've ever been proud of is my marriage and children. Why did these things keep happening to me? What's that old saying if it wasn't for bad luck? I'd have no luck at all." He said that. He said that to the cops. Ah. Let me tell you about my work farm. He said, "Unbelievable. Why did bad things, why did these things keep happening to me?" They were like, "Okay." He said, "We're just so sad when we're going to eventually sell this place and we're going to sit back and clip coupons and enjoy the time we had left." What? And then he said, "I hope they catch them bastards." Oh, plural. Oh yeah. He comes down to the station, then they bring him down another time and again, he's just said, "I was home Sunday night, fell asleep by 1045 or 11." He goes, "Woke up at 8.30 in the morning, drove to work." He said, "I had to do some drug, some blood tests and I drove to work." He said, "I can't think of anyone who would want to kill either of these people." Well, Betty especially, but Rita did have a boyfriend who was married and he thought Betty had mentioned that they'd been having some problems, so look at Rita's boyfriend. Oh, Rita's got a boyfriend too. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, definitely. Bill was cooperative and friendly and everything else, took them to the pawn shop, let them take ammunition from the case, fingerprints, hair samples, whatever you need. So they talked to Roy again and they're like, "Roy, what's up with that?" And he said, "I was just a listening post and I helped her with her problems." She told me how she was lonely and wanted it to be held and that's when I fell in love with her. And by the way, I thought you meant intimately, they said, "The last year or so I got to know her real close." And he said, "By real close, you mean intimately?" And he said, "I don't know what you mean by intimately, but I would have to say," and the cop said, "Did you have sexual relations with her?" And he says, "Yes, I loved her very much." It wasn't intimate, it was pig sex. I fucked her internal organs out of her. They call me the fruit ninja. Oh man, you know it. So he says he was going to get a divorce, actually. He was planning on it and he said that he was going to do it and Betty was going to get a divorce and they had a plan and he loves her and he said the night before he was surprised to see Betty over there because she was supposed to come on come the next day and we planned to go to lunch but she was there Sunday night. He said, "I sat on a kitchen chair and Betty sat on my lap and then I had to go home though because I had to clean out some camper shit." They said, "Did you ever at any time suspect in your mind that Bill might suspect you of fucking his wife?" And he said, "No, never crossed my mind." They said, "Did you ever stop to think what would happen, what the consequences would be, how Bill would react if he should find out?" And he said, "The only thing I thought about was if it came to that situation I'd lose an account." No, is everybody has no context of anything, and he said, "That's all you'd lose an account." And he said, "And lose a friend in everything." And they said, "What do you think Bill would do now if he found out?" And he said, "I don't really don't know, I don't know, shit, that's rough." And I, no idea what this guy's capable of, fastening. So, they have no physical evidence, basically, except a Salem-White cigarette package and an empty Mountain Dew can with the pull tab missing. Pull tab, okay. That's it, it broke that off like some people do. Now Rita's boyfriend is C.J. Walker, and he has threatened to kill Rita in the past. Oh. Yeah. He's located in Seaside, Oregon. And the sergeant said that he personally knew him, the seaside police, and said that he'd be very surprised if Walker killed someone. He thought he could possibly kill on the spur of the moment, but he doubted he could form the intent to kill and follow through it. Yeah. He might. Yeah, he said he was a loudmouth and very opinionated, and he drank too much all the time and came across like a tough guy, like to wear camouflage and combat boots, and was always reading Soldier of Fortune magazine. Again, that pops up too. So crazy. Yeah. He also, you know, they say he had told people he did mercenary work and all this shit. Yeah. Real blow hard. But C.J. passed a polygraph and had an alibi. So eliminated. Nothing in his life. Nothing. No. He never did any of that. Roy also passes a polygraph. Oh. Levitt passes a polygraph. Yep. There's Roy. There's Ladina, Ladina, who is Roy's wife, who they also, they polygraph her. She gets to know about this now. She passes. And also another one of Rita's men that she had been seeing on and off was Howard Wilson, and he also passes. Look at her. Her children were eliminated because they were in Utah and had nothing to gain from their mother's death. Her insurance would barely cover her funeral, generally have anything. So they said that Betty was the target. And Roy as the worst alibi. Yeah. That's not good for Roy. And that's when they hear about Steven Macley, a security guard for the Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in Idaho Falls where he has to go every once in a while. This guy had learned about the double homicide on that Monday. And he said, hold on a second. I saw some shit this morning that, okay, he said, I worked till 11 PM on Sunday, seven a.m. Monday, about three a.m. He finished checking the South parking lot, parked his car at the emergency entrance and was about to go inside when he saw something. He said, coming from the North toward the hospital was a single light bobbing up and down. He said, what the hell is that? So he watched the light came in the parking lot. He could see it was a bicycle. So he went around the building to see the rider pull up to a 1971. It's a scout carry-all or scout international carry-all. International scout. Yeah. International. So it looks like it. It's a first SUV. Yeah. Yeah, that's all it is. Yeah. So he got up to it on a bike, put the bike in the back and get in the front seat. So but then it didn't leave right away. So he said he saw the guy lay down like with his legs extended out the driver's door. So he said, maybe this guy's trying to hot wire and steal the car. Stealing a scout. So he goes up and approaches him and the person sat up and closed the door. He said, roll the window down and he did. The man slumped down in the seat and peered out over his glasses. He said, he could see the man was sweating profusely and out of breath so much so that it prompted this guy to ask her if he was all right. And he said, he's okay. He just been riding his bike a long way. So they asked for his name and he gave one but Macley didn't write it down and he can't remember it. So when asked for identification, the guy showed him a medical alert bracelet on his right wrist but the light was too dim for him to read it. So this Macley describes the man to be in his late, anyway, he had a key so he wasn't hot wire in the thing. So he said, all right, I guess whatever. Late '40s, early '50s, pop marks on his face like acne scars. He said he could remember him having very little hair although the only source was his flashlight which he didn't shine directly on the person's head. He thought the man was wearing a dark colored jumpsuit or coveralls. The vehicle was described as an older international type van with a big box windows lowered to the ground gray or olive green. I wouldn't start on the first try on the second it started but was running very rough. His vehicle had my omen plates. And they said that's what made this guy call the cops because this car had my omen plates and the news said that this woman that was killed was from my omen. So he said I just didn't know if what I saw would be any help but a cop saw the same person. Oh, yes, a cop, Greg Black, a patrolman, said at 3.05 AM, five minutes later, he'd checked out some kids in an area not far from the hospital. From there he drove south on Channing way toward the hospital where he noticed a man on a bicycle riding in the same direction. So it was five minutes early. He said that Channing way had several street lights. He observed the man in dark colored clothes with salt and pepper beard, wire rim glasses about 50 years old with a middle age spread. It said, what does that mean? His ass is big. He didn't remember seeing a light on the bike as he had looked straight across at the rider and past he passed. The man was sitting more upright than a person would be hunched over the curled handlebars of a 10 speed. So he thought it was an older style bike with what he thought would be a chrome front and a dark back. He didn't notice anything else about the bike. He said though the rider could have a backpack but he wasn't positive. But this substantiated Macley's, it's his first, they thought maybe he was just making it up. But now they're like, oh no, a cop psalm too. So that's very, very interesting. The travel all by the way, they found out an olive green 1971 international travel all was parked on the side of the pawn shop when a patrolman got there. Oh, he's got a scout. No plates on the vehicle. So the officer returned to the station and notified the Idaho authorities of the fine. He took a camera and went back took several photographs and recorded the vehicle identification number. There'd been no mention to this guy of a bicycle. He didn't even know about it. But he went when he went looking through the vehicle around it and the picture got developed, they set up bicycle could be clean seen in the windows of the travel all. So yeah, scene throw through the windows of the travel wall, leaned up against the wall of the pawn shop right there outside of it. So they're like, this isn't great. So yeah, he was like, oh shit, Roy Levitt said, I didn't suspect anybody because in our world it's just not done, you know, so I really didn't suspect anybody. But before the first night was over, I had to think it could have been Bill. I told the detectives those footprints look familiar. I'd seen that up in Jackson. I said, it looks like Bill Gray, we went ice fishing and Bill was wearing these shoes and he kept slipping. And I said something like those shoes sure are slippery and he lifted up his foot and showed me the knobby soul and said, yeah, when I bought them because of this knobby tread, I thought they'd be good in snow and ice, but they're not worth a dam. Exactly. And it still has them still has them. So they're investigating Bill, obviously, they talked to him again, they read him his rights. And he said, I know Rita, but I don't know Rita. If you know what I'm saying, I think Rita gets around a little bit. So like could be anybody. She's a whore. Is that what you're saying? She's a bit of a skank. So she could have pissed off anybody. This is a 78 page interview that we're definitely not going to go into. They said any type of mannerisms, anything like that from Rita, we should know about Betty's depressed and all that. And he said she was on a diet. She was a pretty big gal. She got up there pretty big, got up there pretty big. They said, did you notice that she was losing weight? And he said, there was no secret about it. Thought it was great because she's been heavy before. She's always been very trim. When we lived in California, she got very heavy. She went on a diet and got down skinnier than when we were married. She stayed that way for years and we moved here over a period of time. She started putting on weight and it just kept coming and coming. She said, I know she'd got up to like between 240 and possibly 260. Jesus. The most she ever weighed was 175 by the way. Yeah, he's an idiot. He's like 260. Yeah, like a heavyweight wrestler kind of, you know what I mean? Bup Rock Lesnar size, something like that. She got down to 105, man. To lose 155 pounds would be crazy. So yeah, he said that he, you know, had went home and they said, do you own a bicycle? And he said, I had a bicycle. I haven't ridden a bicycle since I screwed my knees up about four years ago with the snow machine. He said, so I, you know, I don't have a bike and so he said he got home 330 Sunday night. He didn't go anywhere, sat in the recliner. He said he rocked up the heating pad as high as it would go and that's it. So anybody want to kill Rita and Betty? I have absolutely no idea. Betty never heard anybody in her life until I found out she was screwing around. And the cop said, that hurt, didn't it? That cut you. And the cop, and he said, you don't have to ask that. Do you? And the cop said, I know when you first found out, Bill, how did you feel rage hurt? And the cop said, I didn't believe it. I told you you were full of shit when, because he's saying that they told all about the fair. He didn't know. And the guy said, not from me from Janice. And Bill said, when I heard it from you, I was pissed at you. He fucked up there acted like he never heard it from Janice. The cop said, but I'm asking, how do you feel when it was actually told to you by someone else? And he said, I was infuriated, not sad, not hurt, infuriated. They said, you were pissed, right? You were angry. And he said, yes, as a matter of fact, when I talked to you, I think I told you I was done crying, but I wasn't. I don't think I ever will be. I loved her so goddamn much. Uh huh. Yep. He said, there is a reason for me to go on, though, and that's my children. If it wasn't for them, I wouldn't be sitting here talking to you. I'd be with Betty. Okay. And they said he couldn't think of anybody that would do this. Nobody would ever hurt my wife. They said, did you kill her? And he said, does that deserve an answer? Nope. Wrong answer. Wrong answer. How does he how does he not know that that's a bad answer? So there's an FBI guy there and he said, I expect one. Yeah, I'd like one. And Gray said, no, I did not, which is again, uh oh, guys who say says, so I says to him this, they don't say I did not in normal conversation. They said, would you be willing to take a polygraph? He said, I think it's horseshit, but yeah, I just got to clear it through my doctor. Okay. So that's what they say about all of that. It's fucking, then they ask him about us. Do you have a medical alert bracelet and he goes, Oh yeah, I do. It's right here. I do. There's like 12 of those in the country in the 80s. That's what I mean. It's kind of you fall it and you can't get up. They said, what do you think about the person who killed her? And she said, and Bill said, low life scum sucking son of a bitch, I guess. I said, what do you think ought to happen to him? And Bill said, I think he should be hung. And they said an eye for an eye and he said, get damn right. That's what it says in the Bible. Okay. Cause he's so religious. This guy is really concerned with God feels about him. He called the woman a cunt last week to a bunch of people here. So did December 1990 comes up? No one, nothing has happened. No one's fights. They've been a year and a half. They don't arrest him because they don't have proof. They don't arrest anybody else. So his kids, his own kids, yeah, sue him in a civil suit for wrongful death of their mother. Wow. They switched over and believe that he did it. First Sarah Lynn was defending him and then she said, fuck this shit. So they sue him. And in the civil suit, the prosecutor said he only has to prove bills guilt by a preponderance of the evidence. It's not a shadow of a doubt. It's like 51 49. So he said, I don't think based on the evidence that I've seen that Bill Gray can ever be and that he ever will be charged with a crime. That's what the, that's what the attorney said. So the children seek a total of $277,516 from four insurance policies issued between 59 and 87, 1959 and 1987. It works. It's a preliminary injunction against it. Then in March, 1992, they settle out of court. He settles. Wow. That means he said, I killed her if you settle. Yeah. Right. There's no, then they get the piece of evidence they needed here. What is it? They never found the travel all again. When they went back to the pawn shop, it was gone. Really? Yes. So they found out about Jack Hurley. Remember Jack Hurley? Yeah. Buddy, the rancher there. Well, they found out that he goes to his ranch about 35 miles away and bond around there. And they say, if he's trying to stash something, that's where we'd look. So they took a light plane out there to the ranch and founded among the fucking farm equipment backed into shit. He buried it out there. Check the Vin, same one they take in the night before the travel all was, was registered to a Ron Mitchell, which was just a made up name. What? Yes. That's fucking crazy. And basically Ron Mitchell's address on the registration was PO Box 3706 and the post office box was registered to Jackson Hole Security Patrol care of William L. Gray, his father, how about father? Gray later, when probe deeper and was buying and selling automobiles, they found 14 registrations all transferred to PO Box 1871, his pawn shop, the travel all was the only one to be registered to the other thing. How about that? Yes. So late March, 1992, a grand jury in Ditesville for murder. And now they can't find him. Where'd he go? They go to 435 Stacey Lane and he ain't there. His attorney said he went for a much needed vacation. Well, where'd he go? And he said, well, if I speak with him, I don't know where he is. But if I talk to him, I'll tell him he should probably turn himself in, but he said he's on vacation. And they said the lawyer said gray has lived here for two years and eight months as a prime suspect. He didn't go anywhere. He left the state many times and came back. Then when he finally gets exhausted and has to leave, they indict him, right, you know, how it goes. So he's arrested in New Mexico. Where? He's fucking in New Mexico, for some reason, without incident and booked into the Bernal Leo County, Mexico, New Mexico detention, how about Mexico? Yep. They a dozen officers descended upon him with weapons drawn as he sat in a motor home outside at a Presbyterian hospital in Albuquerque. And they said we had information that he would shoot it out if approached. So he observed him and then got right up to the vehicle, but he didn't resist. So they don't keep him in jail though. They put him in a private sanitized cell because of his medical thing. Then they realized they can't keep a jail sanitary. So they literally send him home on house arrest to a private home in Idaho Falls. Nobody knows with, of course, a bracelet, you know, an anklet there. In 1993, they taken the trial. The prosecutors want the death penalty. He have his defenses. There's no fingerprints linking me. No other physical evidence. You have this carry all you saw a guy on a bike and all that kind of shit. His up his doctor opined that because of his poor medical condition condition, he couldn't have rode the bike. The bike ride was 3.6 miles in each direction. 7 miles, 7.2 mile round trip. And Gray also explained that he bought the travel all for someone as part of his pawn shop business, although that person was never found. He also says someone else was the real killer, most likely JW Dyer who is Rita's previous boyfriend or Houston Riley, her current boyfriend or CJ Walker passed the test so not him. The defense claims also that Betty and Rita were lesbian lovers. And that probably pissed off when a reader's boyfriend's, even though they were in separate beds, they were lesbian. Rita's incorrigible. So fuck anybody. Can't you do she she just humps like fence posts. You can't do the fuck, man. They said while Satan is mate might practice astrology. That's the other thing. The defense introduces evidence that Rita was connected to satanic activities. He said no, most notably an interest in astrology and tarot cards. Yeah, she's a crystal girl. So yeah, I'm a Leo, which means I'm in the same. They said the prosecution said well, Satanists mate might practice astrology in other forms of divination. So do people who are not Satanists, hence the fact that the pope of the satanic church practices divination does not mean does not make it any more probable that a person who practices that is a Satanist, then does the fact that John Paul the second pope John Paul the second skis doesn't make it any more probable that a skier is Catholic. So that's what they try to introduce here and they said that was irrelevant. The judge also ruled conversations between roundie and her married boyfriend, Houston Riley, which she would tape Rita. She would tape these conversations. They said it's unusual to tape such conversations because they would expose him to disgrace if his wife's wife ever found out, but they could be circumstantial evidence that Rita was blackmailing the man and that might make him angry enough to kill her. And the evidence is not allowed into court. Yeah, oh, it is ruled admissible. I'm sorry. It isn't. Wow. Statements not allowed into trial are Betty stated that Bill was looking over their telephone bills and checking the outgoing telephone numbers. Another one is Betty said that she was decided to divorce him because yet she had talked to his doctor and his doctor was upset because Bill was abusing a good kidney that he had received a transplant from. Oh, man, and another is off now. Yeah. Yep. And also statements by Rita that she was fearful of her ex boyfriend that he was a mercenary that he followed her around and repeatedly telephoned her and it threatened to kill her. Those are hearsay, not admissible. Yeah. Okay. Also a photo lineup. They say they only used five pictures instead of six pictures and photo lineups when when yeah, Bill, when the officer and the security guard picked him out. So that's a thing. Also, the cops, the cop testifies the 18 saucers containing melted candles yielded three fingerprints all belonging to Rita. The candles didn't match those seized in the search of Bill's house. So you got them somewhere. The sergeant who's trained in ritualistic crimes testified that there were elements lacking to make him believe the killings were part of a satanic ritual. And they said none of that, but they also said none of the prints belong to gray. The cops said it was his opinion that someone wore gloves, probably surgical gloves to not do any of this. And by the way, he keeps boxes of surgical gloves at his house because he has to have to have. Of course, because he was doing that clean thing. Yeah. But anybody could get those. Sure. Yeah. Um, so there's that they said DNA couldn't be done on the hairs because they didn't have follicles. And it's 1993. They said it was possible, but improbable that Betty or Rita transferred those hairs. They say they're similar to bills and they said, well, she came from the fucking house. She could have had his hairs on her, which is fair. That's a fair argument. Bill testifies for hours. It's like eight hours of testimony. He testifies for. We come to a verdict. It's a three week trial. The jury has 20 hours of deliberation. That's pretty fast. That's that's a law. That's not actually that's slow or that fast. That's pretty slow. Yeah. 20 hours is a long time. Yeah, that's a couple of that's a couple of days because they're not doing that all straight. Yeah. That's like three days of deliberations and they find him guilty of murder and burglary. Wow. They solely on the travel trailer of the travel all and the comp seeing him with the travel all and the bison. That's it. No evidence. No other. What do you mean? Tuck. Oh, because he broke in. Oh, got it. Yeah, yeah. Took their souls, I guess. I don't know. So during sentencing, they say Betty's murder was probably motivated by jealousy from a husband of her affair with a man. And they said that he had no personal reason to take Rita's life. He said Rita's mistake was to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. This is the judge. It was a consciously conscious list killing of a human being called him a cold blooded pitiless slayer and said, you're so called good character. Do not outweigh your crimes. You, sir, may fuck off not the death penalty, but two life sentences without the chance of parole. Wow. Fucked. Um, in 1990, 70 appeals and they're talking about it's all about the photos, the photo lineups and the different statements that were allowed or weren't allowed. The photos. Here's a quote from the appeal. Similarly, the difference in size and color composition of the photographs in and of themselves do not render an array unnecessarily suggestive. Macley reported seeing a man who looked over his glasses and was red in the face and only Gray's photo showed a ruddy complexion and reading glasses. So they're saying that it's not fair. The old guy should act. One guy had glasses on. Yeah. Not good. Failure to strike a juror for cause because one juror wrote in her questionnaire that she had formed an opinion regarding his guilt as a result of the information received from the media and they went, no problem. Get on the jury, which is wrong. That shouldn't be like that. But that's 1997 Court of Appeals upholds the murder. Okay. The whole thing. Okay. February 2002, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. This is right before the Supreme Court here. They overturn his conviction here, by the way, in the newspaper, it says the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned Gray's conviction for the 1989 killing of his wife Betty and her alleged lesbian lover read around. That's what it turned into. They weren't even fucking close to lesbian lovers and it 10 years later, that's just alleged lesbian lover is how they are described. This is somebody said it. Her whole life is broken down to being the alleged lesbian lover of this other lady. That's so fucked up. That's fucking sad. So they ruled that his rights were not violated when he could not present hearsay evidence as he wanted to present the evidence from Rita that she was scared of her boyfriend. Idaho law allows the introduction of hearsay evidence before jurors. Generally hearsay evidence is gossip or rumor in Gray's case. The appellate court found that the trial judge allowed important hearsay for the prosecution but didn't do so for the defense. But later that year, December 2002, the United States Supreme Court strikes down the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling and is told to fuck yourself right back off again. So there you go. Bill is sent back to prison in November 16, 2010. Bill dies in prison at 77. Well, son of a bitch. There's that 2017 on the case with Paula Zond at a little documentary on this thing. Betty Lou is buried in Idaho Falls. I'm sorry. She was cremated. I know if she's cremated, the location of ashes unknown, her family probably has him. And then Rita was buried in the Fairview, Utah, in Fairview, Utah, the Fairview Upper Cemetery, which is she lived there for a while. I don't know if kids live there or what. So there you go. That's Bill Gray. You know he did it, but I don't the court case was weak. That's a terrible. Yeah. How the fuck do they blow that? It's wild. I think he knew that Betty knew and I think that was her crime. I think she knew for sure. And he was very well aware of that and she was going to die whether she was there or not. You know what I mean? She was going to get her too. That's right. He was there to get everybody I think. Yeah. He thought she was up there fucking her boyfriend. Yeah. I'm going to go kill everybody. We'll see how that goes. I'm going to get all three of them all. Yeah. So anyway, there you go everyone. That's small town murder for this week crazy fucking story. If you like that story or at least think it's interesting, it's a terrible story. But if you like it or like the way we told it, tell the world about it, get on whatever app you're listening on and give a review. Also shut up and give me murder.com September 20th, Minneapolis state theater. Get your asses in there. Make it our biggest show ever like selling out. Right. Can't fucking wait to. Minnesota is such a great crowd too. That's going to be so much fucking fun. And then again, the pap's the next night. We are spoiled that weekend. True. The pap's in Milwaukee that night. Purple tickets left also OKC, Austin, Boston, Kansas City, Terri Town, New York for tickets left there. Get your tickets now because they're going to go fast, especially coming up close to the date. So do that also patreon.com slash crime in sports is where you get all the bonus material. This week is no different this week. We're going to talk about here for crime and sports. We're going to talk about you have access to this, by the way, anybody $5 a month or above, you get every fucking thing we put out. We're going to talk about the two most penalized hockey games in history, which is a really fun subject. It's hilarious. We're going to talk about that. Just all fights. We'll watch the videos and react to them. It's going to be so much fun. So yeah, then for small town murder, this is like a midsummer like light air here, but they're funny. Funny as fuck. Then for small town murder, we're going to do something we're going to call internet salad where we are going to go and do what we do when we're just hanging out, which is looking shit up going. Did you hear that? Holy shit. Fuck that guy. And make each other laugh. Make each other laugh hysterically, serve with us, everyone do it up. We'll meet you at the shore. So get in there, patreon.com/crimeandsports and you get a whole, you know, back catalog and a shout out at coming up in one second, follow on social media at small town murder on Instagram at murder small on Twitter at small town pot on Facebook. Yeah. Jimmy, have you with the names of most wonderful fucking people in the world who are loving their content and making us very, very happy people hit me with them right now? This week's executive producers are Jeanette Pemelae on pay me loan. I don't know how to say it, but I always see your name. Yeah, she's wonderful. She's going through it. Anonymous finger also. I don't know who that is, but that's very funny. Other producers this week are Lindsay, Selig, Bo, Halstrom, uh, Peyton with no, oh, I think it's Peyton Meadows. I think that's who that is. Or it's just. Oh, okay. That's Peyton Meadows. Howard, of course, Sarah, Eglie, Eglie, Rebecca, Hargreaves, Hargreaves. It's probably Greaves, uh, Janice Hill, Lisa B Scott, Loveless, Matthew Orchard, Sydney with no last name. Kathy Sweet, Maggie, so Katie Bonner, Brian Duffy, Russell, shake Camille with no last name. Cody Mitchell, Kathleen Love, Sarah, Nicholson, Blake, Bratou, Christoph, Hernky, Lisa Sutherland. Did I say that already? I feel like I said that already. I didn't say that. Sounds familiar, but maybe not. No. Maybe else. I don't know. Uh, Beth Raines, Jimmy Z, like the clothing. Remember that shit? Oh god. 90s target. That was a good time. God damn that fucking woody with the same thing on the back. Oh yeah. Uh, Taryn Lackey, Sarah, Sarah, Mount Mountain, uh, Bjorn Gorek Magzino, Christina B, Mariana B, Patrick Walter, Phil Baresa, uh, Brian Call, crawl me. It's crawl. Yep. Joanna, uh, Posa Gay. Posa Gay? What? Uh, uh, BTS, probably not them, but that's the letters. Uh, Jody would know last name, Susan would know last name, Eric Gelles, Gelles, maybe P Christ. Okay. He Christ. Stormy, Noel Jean, uh, Schultz Carter, Brock, Andrea would know last name. Relly, Relly, Renova, uh, Hannah Warnock, Jason Boat, Brie Taylor, uh, Amber Hanson, uh, in, uh, in, uh, in, uh, in, uh, in, uh, in, uh, in, in, uh, in, uh, in, uh, that's a fun one. Uh, Tammy Rock, Tammy, Tammy Roberts. Joshua Fuller, Maria Strom, Danny Altevers, uh, Kate Dobbs, Kathy Infernary, Infernary, Infern, yeah, uh, Rich would know last name, Rebecca would know last name, Joshua Goodall, uh, Joe, Julie Kaiser, Kaisar, not the Kaiser, uh, Cameron May, Neil Bennett, Sandy C, Ashley Hewett, uh, Brian Yigay, Cinnamon Bun Bun, Heidi Fitzgerald, Jessica Hayden, uh, Dan Evans, Allison Roberts, Kayla Massengale, Massengale, not the Gill, you get it, uh, uh, being 96, she did, uh, Carol Watkins, L and the letter S, LS, Amanda Petrie, Megan Dubby, Dubby, uh, Mamie, Mamie Darwin, Mamie Darwin, maybe, uh, Cindy Spies, maybe Speece, uh, TJ and his puppy, April Hennes, Hayden Matos, uh, Neil, Nalay, Vander, Vander Myron, uh, Elyn, Elyn Tomron, Hogsett, Hogsett, I don't know, it's fucking probably Swedish, what, what was Elyn Nordigren, whatever that lady was, that's where they are. Nord, Norway? Oh, that, well, she, was she Norway? Norwegian, Norwegian, some Norway, somewhere around there. Yeah, very, very blonde and hot, uh, Thomas, uh, Thomas Coerts, uh, Dustin would know last name Gabriel Lopez, Leanne Hudson, Kathy Jackson, Tischkapel, Michelle Craig, Troy Gaylord, Pooty Tang, Susan Clark, Madeline B, Julie McPooty Tang on board, what a movie. Once you get Pooty Tang on board, the rest is great, everybody. It's, it's all downhill from there, Brent would know last name, Beth Beaver, Sandy Smith, Noah Benjamin, uh, whoa, whoa, Jim, Jim, nine, GRK, Aaron Smith, Tony would know last name Lindsey Meijer, Liz with no last name, Leanne Miles, Caitlyn S, Brandy Sellers, great, great grant, Tracy, uh, Michelle Miller, Michelle's back. She's terrific. For the lady from, uh, Blackstaff, she's great. I remember her. Yeah. Oh, and his, oh, and his owner, Megan Wilson, Bonnie Cartes, Aaron with no last name, Lois with no last name, Susan Deutsch. Nope. That's Sean Deutsch. Sorry, Sean. Go buy Susan from now on. That's your new name, Sean, uh, Jerry W. Exxon Jr. Um, uh, Elizabeth Penny McLenten, Todd Runberg, Adelaide at Edget, Edget, maybe Edget, uh, Troppism, Troppism, Kyle Keel, Batney, Batanian, uh, G13, Mickey A, Fiji would know last name, Brandy Kelly, Colton, Adam Zachary Beach, Jason would know last name, Michael H. Sarah Jamie, Jason would know last name, Jennifer O'Malley, Ali W. Eric Turner, Juniper and Eric, Jeremy Osborne, Ashley Buckholt, Amy Coonsaman, Coonsleman, Coonsleman, uh, Nicole C, Benjamin Osborne, Osborne, Bridget, Bridget Kaiser, another Kaiser. That's a lot. The Kaiser talk today. I know I want a sandwich on the roll. Uh, Joel Rice, Stuart Reed, Teresa Costello, Jamie would know last name, Aaron Aggie, our Kristen Thomas Kyle would know last name, Tucky's mom, Missy would know last name as a Zito loves, uh, what is this, I see, I see toe that loves his my cheat map cheetah. I don't know what the fuck that means Joshua Ochaltree, uh, ochaltree Sharon, Sharon with no last name, leave a up mace Gravina. I don't know what that is. That's probably a fucking code. Matthias, bro for something, just a minute to a crime, uh, breathing, uh, Damian ivory, Ava, cockaram, cockaram, cock your own ham, uh, Tucker, uh, crook and crook, crook and bird. What the fuck? Zachary Downs, Chris Peebles, Dana, Duker, Williams, Elwood, no last name, Sarah T. Sharon Clark, Ashley, Minton wadda wadda, wadda jean, secret sauce, Wanda jean. All right, Ken Reynolds, uh, Lily, I've spent his not time on that. Lily, Malik, Lily, Malik, uh, John H. And also every person that don't it's on Patreon or PayPal, you guys are amazing. Thank you. Thank you everybody. Thank you so much. We are just blown away by the support. Thank you so much for everybody that does that or even if you've ever thought about it, we appreciate the fuck out of you. So thanks for doing all that kind of stuff. You want to follow us on social media, shut up and give me murder dot com. Same place to get those tickets, drop down menus to all the links for everything like that. Follow us. Yup. Get the ticket. Get the tickets first though. Hang out with us. Keep coming back. We'd rather you get tickets and follow us. So yeah, do that and keep coming and hanging out with us. And until next week, everybody, it's been our pleasure, bye. If you like small town murder, you can listen early and add free now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts. Prime members can listen early and add free on Amazon music before you go. Tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey at Wondery dot com slash survey. From Wondery, I'm Indra Varma and this is the Spy Who. This season we open the file on Oleg Pinkofsky, the spy who diffused the missile crisis. It's 1960 and the world's on the brink of nuclear war. However, one man in Moscow is about to emerge from the shadows with an offer for the CIA. His name is Oleg Pinkofsky. As a Cold War double agent, Pinkofsky wants to supply the US with the Soviet Union's greatest nuclear secrets. But is this man putting his life on the line to save the world? Or is he part of an elaborate trap? Know the Spy Who on the Wondery app or wherever you listen to podcasts, or you can binge the full season of the Spy Who diffused the missile crisis early and add free with Wondery Plus. [MUSIC PLAYING]