Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Crime. Hello everyone, and welcome back to another episode of
Real Time Crime. I'm your host Leo Lamar, and I
have with me oftentimes Dmitri. Hello, often times Dmitri. How
(00:24):
are you? Always? Leah? Always? Leah is pretty good. She's
excited about the hot topics today, not gonna lie. Also,
she's still in Abiza and you may have just met
my hot topic. Yeah, a couple of things. Haven't you
been there for like three months? Have you moved there
and not told us? It does feel like that. But
I am leaving tomorrow for Croatia, Okay, taking a long
(00:46):
round home, got it? Yeah? Yeah, I just have to
get go and check all my offshore accounts. Yeah, and
um met you know, uh, some interesting people here. Yeah,
I don't know. I'm not sure this is my place
to say it, but I did notice that there was
a strapping man in the background a few minutes ago.
(01:07):
And what nationality would you say he was? I believe
that was an Australian accent that I heard. Hilarious British,
But that's fine, was it really? Yeah or whatever? He's
super proper. He's Jewish, He's super proper. Let's delve into
that for a minute. I will say this, I did
first think maybe we were cousins. I was like, I
(01:30):
think we need to check before we can move forward
with this. Okay, So that was okay. I just want
to make sure that that wasn't like, oh, let me
meet him. I think we might be cousins. So he
was both. I was honestly checking to see if maybe
that was your first reaction versus Lee is definitely making
out with this man, you know, I mean, nice, nice
British Jewish man. How many of those are going to find?
(01:51):
He seems very nice, seemed very helpful, super helpful. So
you are making out with him? Yeah, I mean that's
pretty well. I mean I don't want to two assumptions,
but oh yeah, I'm making out with my cousin. So perfect.
Speaking of cousins, ha ha no, no, speaking of family feuds.
We've got some interesting hot topics today. We've got Kelly
(02:12):
Clarkson's ex husband accusing her of spying on him l
O L. We've got, obviously, our Dave Chappelle dramas continuing
on figuring out a little bit more about his attacker.
And then we have this insane case that I'm sure
you guys have all been following about Casey and Vicky White,
although not related L O L. And then we will
(02:33):
finally be rounding out with Devon Duniver today. All right, Dmitri,
let's just dive right into Kelly Clarkson because this is
pretty bad ship. Yeah, it's uh. You wonder how these
kids couldn't make it with stories like this. I always
wonder how kids of stars do it, you know, because
(02:54):
I feel like their whole lives are under a scrutiny,
which is essentially what Kelly his ex husband is accusing
her of doing. So. Despite on an hundred and fifteen
thousand dollar a month spousal support settlement, it seems that
Kelly Clarkson and Brandon black Stock divorce drama is far
from over. Two months after their divorce was finalized, Brandon's
(03:16):
legal team has filed new court documents demanding Kelly has
all of her thirteen CCTV cameras switched off at the
property for the remainder of brandon stay at the Montana ranch. Reportedly,
Brandon feels spied on because he suspects Kelly may have
access to the CCTV footage on the property and wants
them all turned off his legal tam is also demanding
(03:38):
proof once the cameras are disabled, and as part of
the divorce settlement, black Stock was allowed to continue living
at the Montana Ranch through the month of June. Apparently
he could not afford to go to place of his
own the former couple allegedly so, it said in the
article the former couple shares seven year old River and
six year old Remington. Not only is Kelly have to
(04:00):
pay him a hundred and fifteen k a month through January,
she was also hit with a one time payment to
her ex in the amount of one point three mill. Meanwhile,
her child supports Brandon. Isn't astounding forty thousand. You know
there's some money floating around there. So right away I'm
gonna throw out the I couldn't afford another place. Hundred
(04:22):
fifteen thousand a month, isn't. And I know some of
us for the kids, isn't He also like the stepson
of Barbara streisand or something he is I thought, so
maybe I don't want to misspeak here, but I thought
he was the stepson or something of somebody. Yeah, to
meet you do some googling before you make such a
crazy claim like that. Well, no, for what, that's what
(04:44):
we're doing here. Okay, so that's yeah, we make crazy
claims so allegedly steps on of Barbera Streis. And also
how much money do your kids need per month? Not much? Everyone? Right?
And then plus the one point three on top of it.
I mean, was he just like a trophy dad? Husband?
There are a few of us out there, hilarious, just
(05:07):
because you look like a trophy you mean just stone face? Oh, oh,
stone face? That is what I meant, Dmitri, don't leave me. Um. Well,
here's the thing though, I am fine with him not
wanting the cameras on, right, because that could be a
little weird. Um. I don't know what he's doing or
if he just feels like she's trying to you know,
(05:29):
they've already settled stuff, right, so it's not like she
would be trying to gather stuff. She it's a huge ranch,
and their cameras. I don't think that they're in his
bedroom or bathroom. Like what privacy does he need that's
on her property that he feels like it's being intruded,
like who's coming in and out? That he feels like
(05:50):
he needs this extra privacy, Like if there's coming in
and out that she needs the cameras on. Maybe there
are thieves, the reasonable, the whole reason they have cameras
in the first place, you know, yeah, yeah, Okay, Well
here's the thing. So if he's gonna say she has
to turn these off, then he then has to sign
something and say if anything goes wrong, if someone breaks
(06:11):
onto the property, if someone trashes the property, that's on me,
and I'm gonna have to take care of that. Okay,
So I acent agree with that. I feel like if
anything is quote unquote stolen from the property after the
cameras go off, it's going to be an inside job.
Yeah right, okay, okay, sorry. Reba McIntire was married to
Brandon Blackstock's father, literally so far from Barber Streisand no, no,
(06:35):
not so far, because they're both um singers and they're
both famous. So in order to be so far, you'd
have to be like, oh no, this one's a circus
clown and this one works in construction. That's the farthest
you can get. I guess they are both white women.
You got me there, Tomitri, you got me there. So
after what many people would probably consider a massive financial
(06:57):
win for Brandon and this divorce settlement. Do you think
this weird legal move just adds to the bad blood?
And do you think it's going to affect the kids?
I think it's My impression is that this is just
a petty move, like, well, I have you know, if
she's looking at the cameras for what you've already settled,
If he's worried about the cameras and saying turn them
off and she's not, like it's to me, it just
(07:19):
seems like pettiness right now. Yeah. Also, he's already gotten
so much money out of her. Just just let her
watch you do weird stuff, you know what I mean.
It's like she she paid a fair price to watch
the show. Let her leave the thirteen cameras off. I don't,
I don't. I don't know if you I think you're
just saying that. I don't know if you agree with that.
(07:40):
I don't agree with it, but I do think it's
it is very funny. But I just wanted the funny.
I just wanted to make sure. Yeah. Speaking of funny,
let's head back into our fave Dave Chappelle incident at
the Hollywood Bowl. So you guys know that his attacker
came on stage and that he was mangled. This man
left broken in peace. Is a lot of people tackled him,
(08:01):
beat the ship out of him. Right, So Dave's attacker
Apparently Dave met with his attacker by the way, and
he claims he did it for the fact that his
grandma had been forced out of her Brooklyn neighborhood because
of gentrification. And I don't know if you guys all
(08:22):
know this, but recently, apparently Dave was caught quote unquote
being against an affordable housing plan in Ohio, where he lives,
and I think that maybe that there was some backlash
from that, although when you read more into that story,
it's more about the fact that it is a small town,
and it's more about keeping the town a small town
(08:45):
rather than adding so many more homes and having it
be a complete changed atmosphere from where he grew up
in what the town used to be. And he said
he was gonna pull all of this funding from making
a comedy club and all these I mean, look, okay,
everyone's entitled to their own opinion, right, Okay, So that's
why he's saying that he lunged onto the stage, and
(09:07):
I guess made this whole ploy to hurt Dave. I
don't even know if he had an end goal. No,
I mean what was yeah, what was the end goal?
Was he going to then stand up and say, hey,
I don't want to hurt him. I know I have
this fake gun in this real knife. I just want
to raise awareness from my grandmother's Like, it seems like
an excuse. And apparently he's at l A County jail
(09:29):
with Bale said at thirty, which is low enough that
he could probably get out if someone wanted to get
him out of air like Brandon Blackstock exactly. I mean,
he's making more than that per month anyway. Um. And
and also this guy's twenty three. I don't know. This
seems like one of those things where you just find
out later that someone was on drugs or was mentally
(09:50):
ill or I don't know. It just seems like such
a completely out of place motivation. It is, And and
I think if you want to raise awareness, there's there's
other ways to do. Granted, Hinckley Jr. Shot President Reagan
because he was trying to get Jodie Foster to go
out with him, which I mean, digging all the issues
(10:11):
with that one but so there are there are cases
where people do something outrageous to draw attention for something
but clearly not sane. But I don't buy it. I
feel like this was an act. Maybe he was angry
about what Chappelle said, but I don't think he was
raising awareness. I don't think he was doing this for
his grandmother. No, I didn't see a sign that said
gentrification is ruining everything. You know. It wasn't yelling at
(10:33):
when they were beating the ship out of him. No, No.
And I don't see him marching around outside of a
Starbucks near him. You know, that's really the big issue
here is not Dave Chappelle's Starbucks. Sorry, just hanging around
a British man. Just really never mind. Okay, so a
(10:53):
little bit, a little, i'd say things are going well there.
Uh does he live there or is he? No, he
lives in London. Okay, So thanks for coming back to
what's important. Well, so I'm just trying to plan out,
so there's probably gonna be more podcasts from London to Okay, Tree,
It's like you saw right through my plan. Wow, I
(11:15):
could never commit a crime because Dmitri had figured out instantly.
That's right. But as far as this guy that tackled
Dave Chappelle, like if he wanted to go strike up
a deal with the dude with a sign or whatever, like,
you're right, the signs go some somewhere else. This to
me is is I went nuts, and now I'm trying
to to back it off, which drives me crazy because
(11:35):
all these people who do things and say no, no,
it was just this, it's like, you know what you
did it, just own up to it. We have we
don't have enough resources and time to sift through everyone's
back channeling of how to get out of something that
they did. Yeah, it's like if I had to get
out of every time I brought up a guy I
thought was going to be the one on this podcast,
I'd be like, I think my grandma got divorced by him,
(12:00):
mean person, And so now I'm against all marriages, so
I got to talk about them. And the whole reason
I keep talking about conjugal visits is because somewhere in
my lineage someone was in prison, and I find that
hot something here analogy is better. So I think it's
also interesting is that Howard Stern, I don't know if
you heard about this Howard Stern is just popping off
(12:22):
on Hollywood hypocrisy. You know, he does what he does.
So during a recent episode of Howard Stern Show, he's saying,
the guy jumped on stage and attacked Dave Chappelle as
soon as it happened. Did they let him go back
to his seat and laugh and sit next to his
wife and then give him an award? No, they took
him backstage. They broke his arms and hands so bad
(12:43):
they and I quote beat the ship out of him.
Howard says Will should not have been treated differently just
because of the celebrity status, adding that the academy didn't
react properly. But is it the academy or is that everyone?
You know? Because when Dave got attacked, all the other
comedians start running on stage and see any other actors
getting up there being like, oh should I get my
gown dirty? You know, right? And there was no standing ovation. Obviously,
(13:06):
his his reference well, you know, I think we've said
this before. I don't think it was handled properly. So
he's really just adding on to what we've all discussed,
and his analogy or here's his comparison doesn't totally work
because this guy wasn't up for an award at the
Netflix is a joke thing. He was just there. So no,
they didn't send him back to his wife and he
get an award. But the point is made, and that
(13:27):
should Will Smith have had his arms broken and beat
up backstage? No, these guys reacted to a threat to
Dave Chappelle and people because Will Smith was a celebrity.
They didn't see it as much of a threat to
Chris Rock. Wasn't handled in correctly, Yeah, Kristen, Chris, Will
didn't have a gun, Will didn't have a knife. Will
(13:47):
wasn't premeditated, and Will had had a reputation, right, and
this guy was an unknown with weapons, multiple and premeditated
the fact that he was going to do this right,
So that's pretty scary. That's a little different in my opinion.
I wonder if his grandma is proud for the awareness
he rose and gentrification. Yeah, now they're never gonna build
(14:08):
up you know, they won't name it after him. I'll
tell you that did you get what you wanted? Speaking
of getting what you wanted? Is this back to your guy? Yeah,
he's so cute. Speaking of getting what you wanted? Well,
these two people did not get what they wanted. It
(14:30):
was that a good segue, would you say, you know what,
We're on the right road. But then I think there's
a speed bump. But there was a speed bump in
that I did the opposite of the thing that I wanted. Okay,
So you guys have heard about the Casey White Vicky
White no relations story right and escaped Alabama inmate. Casey
White called prison guard his wife wif I just felt
(14:51):
like saying like that when apprehended. Okay. Vicky White died
Monday night at the hospital and Casey is now in custody.
So we've been following this little chase. Florence, Alabama murder
suspect Casey White has been interviewed extensively since he was
apprehended in Indiana on Monday, ending an eleven day multistate
(15:13):
man hunt, and is cooperating with the investigation. So after
escaped in May, Casey White, thirty eight, and Lauderdale County
Assistant Director of Corrections Vicky White, fifty six, were spotted
at an Evansville, Indiana hotel on Monday. They led police
on a car chase in a Cadillac. The crash ended
(15:34):
in a wreck Cadillac. Yeah right, I mean it sounds
it just sounds like fear and loathing in Las Vegas.
So the crowd they were just they were literally just
heading to Vegas to get Vegas married. That's all that
was happening. So the crash ended in a wreck. Vicky
was hospitalized for injuries from an apparent self inflicted gunshot wound.
(15:56):
Official set she died at a hospital Monday night in
a topsy is set for today Tuesday, but by the
time listening to this Wednesday, or whenever you get around
listening to it. The man hunt began on April nine,
when Casey and Vicky, who are not related L O
L fled the Lauderdale County jail. This honestly feels a
lot like me and Adam were like, are we related
or are we dating? Okay. Authorities said they believe Vicky
(16:19):
willingly participated in the escape, which took place on her
last day before retirement. I go further than to say
she willingly participated. I think she planned the whole thing. Yeah,
And do you think that she thought she would get
away with it because she was retiring. I mean, it's
you can't be that bright to think Oh, I'm gonna
(16:39):
I'm retiring soever they think, oh, she didn't come back
to work. No, she's with the dude that she walked
out of prison. She said, I'm gonna bring him, she
told everybody because she was what the assistant director or
deputy whatever, she said, I'm bringing him to his mental
health check at the courthouse or whatever. There was no appointment,
there was no so to think that they weren't going
to like follow up and realize that there were some
plot holes there shows that she was not really thinking
(17:03):
this past the plan of getting him out of there, which,
by the way, as you said, eleven day man hunt, right,
they were gone for eleven days that they escaped where
they find him like six hours away. So maybe you
planned how to get out, but you didn't really plan
what you're going to do after that. Yeah, and can
we call it a person hunt? Okay? There are two
people involved in one is not a man Dmitri Okay,
(17:26):
But I also would like to say, look at all
the just the holes and the gaps in the system.
The fact that there was never even an appointment, but
no one checked up on it. Yeah, Well, and I
think that's because she was the assistant deputy, and so
she told her she was the superior to these people,
and she said, I'm to do this, so why would
they double check? But it was apparently on a day
(17:48):
where everyone was like in court doing that, like everyone
was kind of a sign place. It was perfectly I
think the escape was perfectly planned on her part. It
was just why would you only go six hours away
get as far ways? Haven't you seen any movies like
watch anything with Liam Neeson just just for fun because
he's fantastic, but also he's fantastic, but also you learn
(18:10):
how to escape from jail and then moved to a
different country like everyone else, you know, six hours away
in a motel six. I mean, they had no plan,
that's clear. I think they just thought they would wing it.
I mean, I wonder if she genuinely thought that people
would think that she somehow got captured and was brought
along for the ride, but then she committed suicide. Yeah,
(18:33):
and and like they said, there was no way that
he planned this, Like and by the way, he's just
singing along with it. They apparently they interviewed him after
they caught him, and he's they said, he's very helpful,
like he's and he wants to go back to Alabama.
He's like, no, he signed his waive, the extradition thing.
He's like, I'll go back. She killed herself and he's like,
oh go. But he was like it was good. It
was a good run. We tried. But is there any
(18:55):
world that exists where if we're thinking in a weird
fantasy land, right, It's like, let's just put this in
movie terms. What if he pretended to be in love
with her to get out and it just didn't go
as planned. There were some sort of romantic turmoil, et cetera,
she realized her big mistakes, and then maybe she tried
(19:19):
to make sure he couldn't leave and then it just
ended in this situation. Is that possible. It's possible, And
I like where you're going with that. But my understanding
is that he takes UM medicine for psychotic episodes and
stuff like that, and what he's up I think it's
different UM and what he's in prison for. You're not
(19:40):
in prison. What he's in prison for is pretty violent
stuff and pretty like through fits of rage and stuff.
So it would it be interesting if that was the case, Yes,
But I don't think that's the case. But don't you
think he could be super manipulative? Sure, because my understanding
is that there was also when he was in a
different prison, he became very friendly with with the guar
and stuff like that, so that could be his thing.
(20:03):
There might have there might be more of the story
that we will never know. Yeah, this guy's mother you
this guys six pounds like gigantic, Like Okay, that's not
where I was going with them. No, definitely not where
you were going. Yeah. Um, I'm interested to see how
the story unfold, although I feel like we will probably
(20:24):
not get the truth on this, probably not, although they
haven't released what he's been saying. But it will be interesting. Obviously.
Unfortunately she is deceased and we won't be hearing from her.
But I liken this too. You know this is like
I'm sure you know this. I'm gonna try and put
this in an analogy that that you would understand. I'm
(20:44):
sure you've been hit on by a guy that's like, oh, man,
if I could only be with you and this and that,
and then once you guys got together, it's like, well
that sucked. That's what this is. She's like, man, we're
going to escape for prison. I got this whole thing.
It's gonna be awesome. They got out of prison. She's like,
I don't know, should we just drive to a motel six?
Like nothing, there's no there's no payoff. She really for
everything that she put on the line. This was botched.
(21:06):
This was very botched. This was very botched. This is
like a bad celebrity plastic surgery. Yes, speaking of, I
think it's time for us to delve into our main
case for today. This is this is really heartbreaking. I
(21:27):
actually do hate this story. By the way, shall we
take a break and come back to it. Yeah, I
need to cry before we just really dive into the
dark stuff. Yeah we went from having some fun with stuff,
but this one's a little darker. So yeah, all right,
we'll be right back down. Touch that dial. Hey guys,
(21:49):
it's Cheryl Burke. You know me from Dancing with the Stars.
But guess what, I have a new podcast called Burke
in the Game. It may look like that my life
is full of costumes and whatever, but at the end
of the day, you probably don't know the Cheryl behind
the Mirrorball trophy. I've been really curious about how and
why a lot of my relationships or every single one
(22:12):
really has not worked out, and I can only point
the finger at myself. One of the things that I
want to work on is not being so controlling, Like
I'm so tired of thinking that I can control everything
around me when there isn't enough hours in the day
even if there were. In order for me to really
practice what I'm preaching, I have to turn my life
(22:33):
over to someone else, and what better way than to
turn it over to you, guys. I have to be
able to take accountability, and that's what I'm doing here.
Listen to Burke in the Game starting May tenth on
the I Heart radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you
get your podcasts. I don't know why I keep saying
(23:02):
dial Dmitri, but here we are social sleuths. We are back.
No one has a dial, no one, no one's dialing anything.
I might go as far as to say that you're
too young to we even say that, because he just
feels like the thing you're supposed to say. Yeah, but
you were born in the dial period, right, No, you
were born into the remote control era. Yeah, she's a
remote control baby because she lacks control in every other area.
(23:25):
Of her life. So anyway, let me just mute myself.
Thank you, Dmitri, Thank you. Dmitri wanted to laugh hysterically
and then cry, and then he was very sad about
just everything I've said. In general. Dmitri is still in
a high from going to Tom Cruise's red carpet. That
was fun. Did you make any good contacts, you get
(23:46):
any good photos? You didn't send us any well, because
you were telling me that you were going to start
photo shopping yourself in them, and what is wrong with that? Okay? Anyway,
I'll just laugh. A Getty Image logo on it, like
I was definitely there, even though I was halfway across
the world. Time to get into the case. It just
aired last Friday, So you are watched in you know
(24:09):
what we're talking about? What is this case in? A
five year old girl named Devon vanished from her apartment
and Anthony Harris, then twelve years old, was charged and
convicted of her murder. It was very sad. On June,
Devin disappeared after she went outside to play. After Doniver
(24:30):
disappeared from her new Philadelphia, Ohio apartment, her body was
found in a nearby wooded area. A day later. Harris
and his family lived in the same apartment complex as
their family and helped in the search. Authorities say the
little girl was stepped seven times in the neck. Two
weeks after the body was found, Anthony was brought to
the police station for questioning. At first, he denied he
(24:54):
was involved, but he said the pressure from police got
the best of him. During a hostile interrogation in investigators
pressured Harris to admit to her murder, which eventually placed
him behind bars, despite lacking evidence to verify him at
the scene of the murder. This is very reminiscent of
Amanda Knox and the Italian officials trying to force a confession.
(25:18):
According to Harris's interview with says the investigator, he had
basically told me that if you confessed to this murder,
you can go home. It's like, okay, well, I'm over
here scared, so I want to go home. He was
found guilty, but one an appeal, and his conviction was
overturned in June of two thousand, after the Ohio Fifth
Court of Appeals determined his confession was coerced. Harris, a
(25:40):
former marine, is frustrated the actual killer of Doniver has
not been brought to justice. So this is a really
interesting story because he still wants to find who the
real killer is as well. More than twenty years after
Anthony's conviction was overturned, Devon's murder still just remains a
cold case. Harris ledges that there were some leads in
(26:01):
this case that were never pursued. Some people who were
part of the search parties say they looked around the
area where the little girl was found and didn't see her,
so they believe her body was placed there after the fact.
Other witnesses claimed during the trial that they saw a
man in the area who was wearing a long sleeve
plaid flannel shirt, which they said was odd given that
it felt like a ninety degree summer day. Harris said
he wasn't giving up his drive to help find the
(26:24):
person responsible for her death. I think that this is
a really hard story obviously, and I mean it's really
interesting about miners being interrogated and pressured to confess to crimes,
and or the fact that you know, his mom was
(26:45):
able to watch the interrogation through the mirror but couldn't
hear anything that he was saying. Do you think parents
should be able to hear what their kids are saying
when they're being questioned by the police. I would think
or their lawyer or somebody like you can't have a
twelve year old in there. And then, like as you said,
if if the twelve year old scared and listen, I
(27:07):
obviously don't know if he did this or not. I
tend to believe he didn't. Um. But if they have
a twelve year old there and they're scared and there's
no one else and these guys are just laying them,
just tell us you did tell us you did it.
Tell oh you did this. We know how that goes
in there, right, Hey, you can go home if you
did this. The kids can say I did it because
I want to go home, right. Also, you know kids
(27:28):
sometimes not that they lie, but I think you know,
kids have imaginations, and I think that you're the parent
would want to hear things because if the kid is
not sure about a timeline or saying things that aren't
you know, trying to if someone's trying to place them
at the scene of the crime, but you know they
were actually at the grocery store with their mom at
(27:49):
that time, but they're saying that they were out playing.
You know that could potentially completely throw an entire case.
I don't know. I think that obviously parents should be
able to hear their kids if they're under eighteen. Yeah,
especially these guys are good and interrogators are good at
what they do. Right, So you're you're matching wits with
a twelve year old who may nothing. Nothing makes me,
(28:13):
that's not sure. A lot of things make me angry,
But I really don't like the the thing. And we've
seen it in a lot of true crime stuff where
the police just get something in their head and they're like,
they just drive that home, and meanwhile there's other options
that are missed or other evidence and and things to
look into that just aren't don't get the attention. And
that's the other thing too, is that this boy who
(28:37):
probably didn't commit this murder, right, It's like, did he
have anger issues? Did you like to have to stab
someone seven times in the neck? Five year old? By
the way, and not to not to like this is
sad enough, but think about the size of a five
year old neck, Like what the that's that's some up stuff.
Getting the nice figure like this is a very calculated
(29:00):
you know, and I just can't imagine how this would happen.
And if they're saying that the body was placed there after,
then he certainly didn't do it unless he got help
from adults, because you couldn't have carried her body, and
then where would you've hit it. I mean, it's just
too complicated. Honestly, I'm not saying that kids aren't smart.
I'm just saying that this is really out of the
wheelhouse of a twelve year old. I believe, I think
(29:22):
so too, and you know, and it was overturned. And
but the thing is when you do that, when you
when you're like, oh, we know what it is, and
you just put all your your resources into pinning it
on that person, you're missing all this other stuff, the
the guy in the flannel shirt and ninety degree weather.
I don't know. That seems like something people in Ohio
would do. Don't be mad at me, Ohio or whatever.
Call us on the hotline if you're mad. But I mean,
(29:44):
that's like, maybe that's something, maybe it's not, but there
are there certainly has to be other things that could
have been, you know, looked at. And I don't know
how they did their job, but it sounds like they
for whatever reason, took this twelve year old kid and
was and was like this is it and and just
focus their resources on that and how flims he couldn't
have been a year later it's overturned. Yeah, I mean
(30:06):
sometimes they just fixate on wanting to get an answer
and moving on and they don't even care if it's
right or wrong. It's like you don't care that you're
messing with someone's entire life, you know. So his life
was changed forever, right, I mean he basically that follows
you around. You know, there's and there's no justice to
(30:26):
the story. So it's she's still dead. He his name
is forever tarnished, even though he never actually murdered anyone,
and especially since they never found right. So it's not
like they're saying, oh, he's innocent. They're saying the case
was overturned because of of not enough evidence or whatever.
So he doesn't even have you're right, he doesn't even
have his name cleared from that like, oh he didn't
(30:48):
do it. It's like, oh, he wasn't found, he wasn't
required to stay in prison for it, right, So you
know that there are some people who probably think he
still did it. It's so said, do you think that
there should be some sort of restitution paid to him
and his family for what they had to go through? Uh? Yeah,
I do. I think obviously. I think it has to
(31:09):
be proven. You know, they have to find the killer
or prove that it wasn't him in order to pay
that out. But if that's the case, then I think yeah,
for sure. And his life is his life is completely changed. No, nothing,
I mean obviously, the most heart felt thing here goes
to the family, the five year old in the family
of devon Um. But then his family and if he
(31:31):
didn't do this, that's their lives were shattered and altered
forever as well. So if if he had nothing to
do with this, yeah, there should be some sort of compensation.
I think so too. And do you think that there's
any chance of this case being solved more than twenty
years later? I mean, in my opinion, thank you Leah
asking your answering your own question. In my opinion, it
(31:54):
will just seems like there were a lot of leads
they never followed up on. So unless there's any sort
of DNA evidence, it's going to be impossible. Yeah. Um,
And I've said in my mind a lot of times
I've said, oh, we're never gonna have the answer to
this one, but then for some reason, something comes up.
And nowadays, obviously they're doing so much more with DNA,
and it's that now they like they'll even dig up
(32:16):
graves and find DNA that matches. Are you scratching your
nose with your microphone? I did scratch my nose with
my microphone, and no one needed to know that. But
I do appreciate you calling attention to it. We can
cut that out. I thought you were just it looked
like you were nuzzling up to it or something. I
just thought it was Adam, my British Jewish man. But no, no,
I but I do. I think they can do a
lot with DNA. But is their DNA evidence? You know,
(32:38):
they've been able to solve cases thirty years after the
fact because there is DNA evidence and now they have
better technology. I just this feels this has the essence
of a forever cult case. It's it's very possible, but um,
you never know, because obviously they must have collected and
hopefully held onto evidence from that day whatever she was
wearing where they found her stuff like that, And I
(33:00):
have seen cases where they go back and they they
then matched two evidence that is that old DNA stuff
now that they have the technology, so it is possible,
but you kind of figured they would have done that already. Um,
I don't know. I'd like to think, but obviously there's
some cases that have not been solved that are similar
to that. So it's it's possible. We'll never know. It's
(33:20):
possible we'll never know. All right, you know this is
a really heavy case, Dmitri, So I think i'd like
to go to break before we cover our last hot
topic for today. And as you pointed out, these breaks
are not times for the listeners to go and commit crimes. No,
And I don't know why I was asking you permission
to take a break a break. I don't think anybody
(33:43):
took it that way because you would never social suits.
BRB babes and welcome back to Real time Crime, you guys.
(34:03):
Today's last hot topic. Jesus, this is I mean, what
is going on with our prison system? Okay? In St. Louis,
a corrections officer has been arrested for bringing drugs to inmates.
First of all, it's like I kind of just assume
this happens all the time. If I'm honest, all right,
(34:26):
moving on, I don't know, I never really gave a thought,
but clearly there's there's a bond that gets created between
certain correction officers and inmates and stuff like that. Um
so it's the only human interaction, you know. I feel
like you become attracted to whoever you're around, whether for
better or for worse, you know. And that's why I'm
(34:47):
starting to feel like I shouldn't just have feelings for
the first European man I meet. That's like buying the
first house you see. It's like, yeah, but when you
but when you've been living on the street and you
you know you have good money to buy a house,
you buy it when in Rome, Yeah, you just buy
the house in Rome. So, guys, I'm moving to London
anyway to mean she's dying, okay. So so this officer
(35:12):
was arrested while on duty after she was accused of
delivering drugs to inmates. Guys. This officer had worked at
the correctional facility for four years before her arrest. After
a very long investigation, authorities claim that she brought in contraband,
which included drugs and possibly fentanyl. The inmate she delivered
(35:33):
the drugs too. Is Anthony Chapman, who also faces similar charges,
but he's already in jail, so I mean, I guess
he just stays a little longer. According to authorities, text
messages dating back to October two thousand twenty one showed Coffer,
the corrections officer, and Chapman discussing their plans on how
to transport the drugs, along with footage showing the former
(35:56):
corrections officer interacting with someone in a vehicle and bringing
multiple items to Chapman's sell So, first of all, I
didn't know inmates could get cell phones to text. Yeah,
it's a different it's a different prison system that I
grew up with, right, Okay, I'm like, okay, so it
was my childhood bedroom actually a prison because I did
(36:16):
get text messages in there, um you know, but the
correctional officers there weren't as nice as these. Okay. So
the corrections officers claim she brought the fentinal pills to
Chapman during a police interview. Meanwhile, there were two non
fatal overdoses of inmates in November of last year. Oh okay,
So after she serves four years as a correctional officer.
(36:38):
It's like, how could someone who's so familiar with incarceration
put themselves in a situation where they're arrested and then
placed in jail. Like don't you think that they wouldn't
would want to avoid being the one in jail? It
makes no sense to me. I agreed. And and you'd
also think they would know certain things like you have
to not be thinking this through you're texting with the
inmate and scheduling all this through text message. Not the brightest,
(37:03):
Um No, I mean, you're leaving a trail, there are receipts.
It's I mean, it's like you might as well just
posted on Instagram let everyone know your plans. Yeah, And
I don't know. Obviously, we've done two stories today where
um correctional officers have developed some sort of bond with inmates,
and I'm sure it happens quite a bit more. I
(37:23):
don't know the process for correctional officers and stuff like that,
but if they're like a mental health thing every couple
of years, or you know, kind of like you would
do with a parole board, even though I know they're
not the ones being held, and I'm sure it's a
very difficult job to staff. But I think you almost
have to either move them around or check in on
them and and and make sure that they're not developing
(37:43):
relationships with these inmates. Like maybe I'm I mean, do
you think it's romantic? Do you? I mean? I feel
like these all have to be kind of romantic. I
don't think this was purely a business transaction. I think
that you know, when you're in close proximity to certain
people all the time, you inevitably fall for one or
two of them. Yeah, and you and it's that Florence
(38:06):
stutting Gale thing too. You probably feel badly for these people.
Think you hear their side of the store. You think
maybe they didn't do it, maybe there was a reason
that they did it, or you know, maybe they've changed
their ways, or maybe you don't care. So yeah, I'm
sure there is a romantic element to it. And I'm
sure I don't know that I necessarily find it romantic.
Like if you were to write a rom com and
(38:26):
it was a correctional officer who found in love with
an inmate in this time, I don't know that that
would hook me the way these others do. But I'm
sure there's Listen, there's someone out there for everyone. It's
just yeah, and I found mine. By next week, I'll
have a different guy in the background. Here's the deal.
Is he still there? Because okay, that's good, because what
(38:47):
are you gonna say, Well, you keep talking about how
you're going to move to London and you found your
every day. I just want to make sure I don't
see him tiptoeing out with the suitcase after he hears
these things. I'm actually in prison and he's my is
in guard. No. I just I just think that you
know whether or not you want to consider this a workplace.
(39:08):
This is kind of a don't ship where you eat situation,
and maybe that is exactly what I'm doing here in Avisa.
But you know what, some birds just don't want to
fly free. Yeah I don't. In fairness, I don't see
your situation as the same as this one. You're not
being held because you've done something wrong, Yeah, I don't.
(39:30):
Do you feel like there's a part of you that
thinks that they wanted to get caught. I guess that
always crosses my mind when people do something stupid. But
then I realized that, no offense, there are just some
stupid people out there. I mean, they just get caught
secretive about it. Yeah, it's like they were overdoses, so
obviously there were drugs coming in. Then they have text messages.
(39:53):
It's like, grow up, understand that if you're texting someone
anything at any point, it will be made apparent. Yeah,
don't see the benefit to um to wanting to get
caught on that one unless it's like a guilt thing
and you're like, I've done this and now I need
to get out of it. But it didn't seem like
that's what it was. It's not like they're gonna be
locked up together. It's not They're like they're like they're
gonna be like, all right, well, you guys obviously broke
(40:14):
the law here, we're gonna let them free and you
guys go live. There was no benefit to this unless
it was just getting rid of guilt. But I feel like, again,
there's a different way to do that. Yeah, I I
think that you're right though, I think that they need
to start rotating. Well, maybe it really messes up their
lives because maybe they're they live in somewhere and they
don't want to keep moving around to different facilities, you
(40:35):
know what I mean. Correctional officers. So it's like I
could see why they wouldn't want to continually uproot their
lives every three to six months or six months to
a year, or whatever it is. But maybe they need
to take a closer peak and evaluate making sure no
one's getting too connected to each other. Yeah, just put them.
They don't have to like move to a different state.
These states that we're talking about, I think have multiple
(40:56):
correctional facilities. Just rotate them around. It's kind of like
working at different Starbucks. By the way, Um, I just
wrote down a little note a few minutes ago. You said,
by the way, you're right, Dmitri. So I think we're
gonna use that as one of the social media clips.
Doesn't out of context? Is fine. I just want that,
And I think that's where we're gonna end today, Guys.
I think that's what we're gonna end today, where Dmitri
(41:17):
feels empowered. Oh my god, I forget I got a compliment.
All right, you run off, go have fun with Andrew.
We'll wrap up early. First of all, it's Adam. Second
of all, it might be Andrew next week. Third of all,
I like that me saying that you're right, is considered
a compliment that I mean, I gotta better, I gotta
do better. Dmitri, Well, you start off every episode with
(41:38):
this is sometimes now more than likely more often and
like he could possibly make it. So he's saying I'm right,
it's and then telling me that you didn't have to
ask permission for a commercial break. Trust me, all this
stuff gathers up. So when you say you're right, it
is a compliment and you go have fun with I'm
not gonna keep it anymore. You have fun with Adam, right,
Adam hilarious. And you know if I think that, I
(42:02):
think the listeners deserve to see him. So so, Tara,
our producer, if you want to just add a quick
clip of earlier when Dmitri, when you guys got to
meet him. You know, so be it. So just add
the clip when she goes, hold on, I just want
you to see something. And he walked in and I
just started laughing. I felt bad for him, but I'm
sure Helen, Oh boy, I am a nightmare. All right,
(42:26):
you guys, this has been another episode of Real Time Crime.
I'm Leo Lamar. You can find me at Leo Lamar.
That's right, with two urs on Twitter and Instagram and
TikTok with five hours why I don't know what. I
messed up my TikTok account a while ago. And that's
just where we're at. And of course you can listen
to this podcast everywhere that you find your podcast and
(42:46):
make sure to share it with your friends. And if
you want to slide into my d m s, tell
me which episodes you're enjoying, what you're liking. Maybe if
you want to give me some feedback, like, hey, Leah,
stop laughing at your own jokes. I'm not going to,
but just if you wanted to, I would understand. And Dmitri,
we can find you on the internet as at the
main stream pant pas like your actual names. Um, but
(43:09):
I was gonna say, I think we should do an
evidence episode where we just read some of your d
m s and stuff and read some of the stuff
that people say. Great idea. Yeah. So, now, if you
guys do actually want to d M me, and if
you want me to use your name or your handle,
say that you want me to make it public, and
if not, say it's private. But if you want to
send me anything, if you want to send me a confession,
(43:32):
not like anything actually criminal, but like something weird and funny,
you can send that, you know, if it's like I
want to poot my pants in Central Park and that
actually did happen to me, which is why it was
very specific and the first thing I could think of
the long story. And it's not the only time I
put my pants to be fair, but um yeah, so
(43:52):
so send me some d M s or feedback or
whatever you want. I'll read it out loud on the podcast.
And you, guys, you know, you can also always call in, right,
you know, you can just call on Live eight six
six twenty one Crime So easy. It's eight six six
to anyone. Crame eight six six twenty one. Come it's
eight six six two and two seven four six three.
(44:15):
Adam is going to leave me after hearing this song.
Make sure to follow us at Real Time Crime Pod
on Instagram. We love you so much. Stay safe, good
night friends. All right, you and Adam go play Corrections
Officer and corrections Officer. M Yeah, I'm a nut. Okay
(44:38):
by you guys. It's real time cra it real time
gra I mean, is it actually real time I'm solving anything?
Or is that just the thing we say it's a
thing we say, got it. Okay, see you next week
for more real time crime, only on I Horror Radio.