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November 17, 2025 34 mins

As Niko Quinn grieves the loss of her favorite cousin and Lamonte McIntyre stands trial for a murder he says he didn’t commit, buried secrets about the lead detective in the case begin to  surface. 

US resources for Violence and Sexual Assault: https://rainn.org/   

International resources for Violence and Sexual Assault: https://nomoredirectory.org/   

US Suicide & Crisis Helpline: https://988lifeline.org/  

International Suicide & Crisis Helplines: https://blog.opencounseling.com/suicide-hotlines/ 

 

The Girlfriends: Untouchable is produced by Novel for iHeart Podcasts. For more from Novel, visit https://novel.audio/

 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Nikki, the host of The Girlfriend's Untouchable. I'm
so glad that you've chosen to listen to this story
about my hometown, Kansas City, Kansas. But I just wanted
to give you a heads up that this episode will
touch on some difficult topics including violence, murder, suicide, and
sexual assault. And there are a handful of cus words too,

(00:23):
So if you or someone you love has been affected
by any of the themes in the show, we've left
some links in the description that offer resources and support
take care of yourself. The summer of nineteen ninety four
felt like it would last forever. The days were either
marked by glaring sunlight or the kind of thunderstorms that

(00:46):
cloaked Kansas City in an ominous fog. But the weather
paled in comparison to the grief casting a shadow over
Nico Quinn's life in the months following her cousin Danielle's murder.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
It was like it was a dark cloud over us
all and nobody really didn't say too much about it.
Everybody just drank. I thought by drinking that it would
make me forget or make me feel like it's a.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
Dream, But it wasn't. After the brutal shooting, Nico had
been relocated to a housing complex, but she was surrounded
by the men she thought were responsible. Nico was trying
to move through the grief by spending time with her
family when she got an unexpected call.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
My cousin called and was like, Hey, this white lady
came down here and two white men.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
He told her that at least one of them was
a police officer. I said what he said, Yeah, I
got a card here for you. I got two of them.
You need to come down here and get in touch
these folks. And I'm like, all right, bo, I'll be
down there.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
So I drove down there and got the cards and
it was terrim word Head and Galuski's car.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
Glupski is the police officer investigating Danielle and Donnie's murders
in Terra Moorehead in nineteen ninety four. She's an assistant
District Attorney for Wandotte County in Kansas City, Kansas. Nico
drives across town and makes her way to the DA's office.

(02:25):
It's a brick building with a circular drive. She walks
through the glass lighting doors and makes her way down
the hallway until she finds her seat.

Speaker 2 (02:34):
I was sitting here waiting on her. She made me
sit there in that waiting area for maybe like hour
hour and a half.

Speaker 1 (02:44):
Eventually, Nico is shown into a conference room.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
It was just a table and chairs in there, a
white room and pictures and documents on the table.

Speaker 1 (02:57):
Seated on the other side as a smartly dressed woman.

Speaker 2 (03:00):
She was skinny, had a suit on like a blazer, heels,
She had blonde hair, a pointing nose, a long chin.

Speaker 1 (03:13):
Assistant District Attorney Tara Moorehead. Nico had no reason to
be afraid of her, but she remembers more Head laying
photos out in front of her. They gave her a chill.

Speaker 2 (03:24):
These pictures was the crime scene.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
Of her cousin, Donielle's murder.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
Half his face was gone. I told her, I don't
need to see them pictures because I've seen it when
it happened.

Speaker 1 (03:38):
There are other pictures of Mennica recognizes.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
Pictures of my cousins and then of my uncle.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
And a photo of the boy they arrested for the
double murder, local school kid, LaMotte McIntyre.

Speaker 2 (03:53):
And that's what she started telling me, that they had
all the evidence. Knowing that Lamon did it. They had
his clobe, they had the gun, they had all this
the same Rigamunrod that Gluski told me. She asked me,
wasn't not tired of losing my loved ones and don't
not want somebody hell responsible for killing my cousin? And

(04:16):
Lamont did it? I said, we know who did it.
And I told her Monster.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
One of the dealers who had allegedly attacked Danielle just
stays before his murder.

Speaker 2 (04:28):
At first, she tried to draw me in like she
was my friend or like she cared. And she said, well, no,
we got evidence. We know this guy did it. We
have the clothing, we have the gun, we have all
this evidence. And I said, we don't care what you got.
So when she showed me the picture of Lamont, I said, no,
he didn't do it, and she said her little spill,

(04:51):
and I left and I went home.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Nico was confused. Why were they so insistent on saying
that LaMonte McIntyre was the killer. According to Nico, Moorehead
called her back into her office once the date for
the preliminary hearing was set.

Speaker 2 (05:14):
So I had to go up there again and sit
with her, and same thing same spiel about who did it.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
This time? Nico recalls that Morehead looked at her and said, you.

Speaker 2 (05:31):
Love your kids, right, Well, if you don't do what
I tell you to do, I will go get your
kids and I'll throw you in jail. Do you want
to see your kids again? And then that's when the
venom came out. I call her a cobra. She went

(05:52):
from being this kind person to being Eveline in two
point two seconds when I didn't give her or tell
her what she wanted. Oh God, why got I?

Speaker 3 (06:09):
God?

Speaker 1 (06:12):
I'm Nikki Richardson from the teams at Novel and iHeart Podcast.
This is the girlfriend's untouchable and I got you a day.

Speaker 4 (06:26):
God, I'm a.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
I got you a episode two, So help me, God,
I got you. And in June nineteen ninety four, seventeen
year old LaMotte McIntyre was in handcuffs. Instead of getting

(06:58):
ready to go back to school, he was stepping into
the county courthouse because he had been charged with a
double homicide.

Speaker 5 (07:06):
So I had a pluminary here and come up.

Speaker 3 (07:08):
That's the hearing where they see what kind of evidence
they got on you to bound you over a trial,
or if there's enough evidence to hold your charge of
whatever you say you charged with.

Speaker 1 (07:18):
Overlooking the court was a public gallery. It kind of
looked like a row of church pews facing the direction
of the judge. The prosecutor eighty A. Tarr Moorehead sat
on one side, and the defendant McIntyre and his attorney
sat on the other.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
I had all my family behind me, and my father,
my uncles and my cousins. Everybody was there. That was
my first plamb there here. That was my first time
in that situation.

Speaker 1 (07:45):
Lamont had watched films and TV shows set in court rooms,
so he thought he knew what to expect. He thought
he would hear the prosecutor deliver a compelling argument followed
by some kind of evidence tying him to the crime.
But that's not how it went down.

Speaker 3 (08:01):
But plumin in hearing was like it was a play
and I was the only one that didn't get a script.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
There were glaring plot holes, like the fact that the
prosecution didn't appear to have any physical evidence.

Speaker 3 (08:11):
I didn't have no way of trying to identify what
was going on with me. It was just happening and
I couldn't stop it, and it was just confusing.

Speaker 5 (08:21):
And my lawyers like, is anybody can put you in
the scene the crime.

Speaker 3 (08:23):
I'm like, man, listen, I don't know the scene of
the crime, and it is nobody can put me in
nowhere because I don't have nothing to do with it.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
According to the prosecution, there were two witnesses who could
Lamont watched on as a black woman in her early
twenties walked into the courtroom. She looked nervous and kept
her head down. The judge turned to Lamont and.

Speaker 5 (08:47):
He said, do you know this lady? I said no, I,
oh no the lady.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
That lady was Nico Quinn.

Speaker 2 (08:53):
I was very nervous because I've never had to sit
there and do anything like that.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
It was Nico's first time seeing Lama in person.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
Only time I seen Lamont was on pictures. And when
I first seen him physically and I seen him at
that table, I said, this dude is too tall and
his ears is too big. He couldn't have hidden them
ears under that head.

Speaker 1 (09:20):
Nico knew the prosecution was going to ask her to
pick out the man arrested on suspicion of murder, but
now that she's seen Lamont in real life, she knew
for certain that he wasn't the man who had shot
her cousin. Nico had to find Tara Moorehead and tell
her that this was all a big mistake. In the recess,

(09:42):
she went to go and find the prosecutor in her
room nearby. Morehead wasn't alone. There were police officers in
the room, but Nico still opened up about her reservations.

Speaker 2 (09:54):
I said, the person that killed my cousins, you could
see this much of they head over the car. They
was the tall person. That was a short person that
killed him. And I kept telling her that, and she
pushed for that Lamont was the one, and the other
detectives kept saying Lamont did it. And I can tell no,
he's too tall and his ears are too big. That

(10:15):
was always my rebuttal to her.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
According to Nico, Moore had didn't want to know.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
That's when she threatened me again that she was gonna
throw my black ass in jail. She'll send the police
to go get my kids, and I'll never see him again.

Speaker 1 (10:32):
Moore had allegedly threatened to charge Nico with contempt of
court if she didn't comply.

Speaker 2 (10:40):
She crossed her hands like this, and she looked over
at the officers, and she looked at me like, would
I say, what did I just tell you? And I
cried because I was upset. If I didn't say, Lamont
killed my cousin. I will not see my kids again ever,

(11:05):
And like I tell her, you can throw me in jail.
All that matters to me is my children. The only
love I had was the love for my children, and
I was not finna give that up for nobody.

Speaker 1 (11:21):
When the recess ends, Nico is called in the court.
She glances over at Morehead. Her head is spinning. The
woman before her is wealthy, respected, and well educated. Who
was going to believe a twenty one year old single
mother from Quendero over an assistant district attorney.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
I was young, I was in the streets. I wasn't
educated on the law. I wasn't educated on a lot
of things. I had street smarts, but I didn't know
that this woman could legally do this to me.

Speaker 1 (11:58):
After what feels like a lifetime, Nico's called to testify.
She stands up and walks across the room, each step
heavier than the one before.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
I walked so slow up there because I didn't want
to do it.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
She puts her hand on a Bible and the oath
is read out.

Speaker 2 (12:20):
Do you swear to tell the truth or not? But
the truth? So help you God, I said, I do.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
Nico looks across the courtroom sees Lamont, his family, the
police officers and more.

Speaker 2 (12:33):
Had she asked me to point to him on this day,
didn't you say this person killed your cousins? And I
looked at her because I never said that Lamon killed
my cousin. Never. She put her hand on her hip
and she looked at me. She looked over the detectives

(12:53):
like I can send them right now to go get
your kids. Everything in me was saying tell the truth,
tell the truth, tell the truth. And I know it
wasn't nothing, but the Holy Spirit tells me to tell
the truth. But at that time I didn't understand those feelings.
The only thing I could see was my children. And

(13:16):
did I want to be explaining twenty plus years letter
to my children that I chose to tell the truth
to lose y'all. I'm praying Father, forgive me, forgive me.

Speaker 5 (13:37):
She looked up at me and she pointed at me
and said, that's him.

Speaker 2 (13:42):
I said, yes, on this day, that's who I said.

Speaker 3 (13:50):
I felt like I was dreaming. At that moment, I
felt like that wasn't me sitting there. I felt uneasy,
felt weird. It's like I was watching somebody else's life
unravel like that.

Speaker 5 (14:03):
It wasn't mine.

Speaker 2 (14:05):
Lama was looking at me like I didn't do it,
And when he stood up, I just cried. I just cried,
and I asked God to forgive me because I just
ruined this man's life.

Speaker 1 (14:23):
Another witness takes the stand, Nico's neighbor, the one who
called out Lamont at the murder scene.

Speaker 5 (14:31):
She come on the stand. Don't look at me.

Speaker 3 (14:34):
She sits down, and the judge asked her, do you
see the man in the court room the committed the crime.
For the first time, she looked up at me and
pointed at me. And I was looking at her like
so she can get a good look at my face,
like do you see? And she seen me and pointed
at me and said that's him. And that's when I said,
oh man, something's going on.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
The courthouse erupts.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
My whole family was like going crazy, like what's going on?
Some day line was going on.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
Lamont's family had gone into court believing in him, but
with two witnesses to the crime testifying against him, The
room takes on an uneasy atmosphere.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
They were shocked, I think after they seen the preliminate hand.
Most of my family probably lost hope and faith in
me after that, because after that it was like they
probably believed I probably did do that.

Speaker 1 (15:22):
But there's one person in the room who refuses to
doubt Lamont's innocence, his mother Rose. As she watches the
courthouse descend into chaos, she's reminded of a memory she
had tried her best to forget, a traumatizing event from
her past that she thinks is coming back to haunt

(15:44):
her because years earlier, Rose had got caught up in
the clutches of a predator, and it looks like that man,
that police officer, has been following her and her family
all along. You. It's the late eighties in Kansas City, Kansas.

(16:28):
Rose McIntyre is a devoted mother of five, but she
also loves going out into the town to dance and
let loose with her boyfriend Greg. After a fun night
out at a local club, she and Greg park up
on the side of the road. Rose sees a figure
approaching them. A flashlight shines through the window of the car.

(16:48):
It's a police officer. Rose says. He showed them his
badge and told them his name, Detective Roger Glubski. Rose
has given permission for her words to be read by
an actor as she describes what happened to her next.

Speaker 4 (17:09):
Detective Glupski ordered me to get out of the car
and come back to his car, which was parked right behind.
I was too scared to say anything, but Greg became
very upset, saying to Gelupski, what are you doing? This
is my girlfriend.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
Detective Gulupski threatened Greg, telling him that he would get
arrested if he didn't shut up. Terrified and not knowing
what to do, Rose followed Gulupski's directions to go and
sit in the passenger seat in his unmarked police car.

Speaker 4 (17:41):
Glupski told me I was a nice looking lady, then
made clear that he expected to get sexual favors from me.
I felt frightened and powerless. He told her that if
she didn't want Greg to be arrested, she had to
meet him at the police station the next day. Told
me to come late between nine and ten pm, and

(18:03):
I did as he said. I was stunned and terrified,
but I felt powerless to say no.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
So the next evening, she drives across the city and
down Minnesota Avenue to the Kansas City, Kansas Police Department.
It's a big brick building with marble pillars at the
entrance and tall windows up above. An officer who was
minding the desk buzzed her in.

Speaker 4 (18:31):
Kilyupski's office was right by the door, and I went in.
He shut the door behind me. Gellupski then sat down
behind his desk. He began talking and told me he
liked black women. He said he could make it hard
or make it light for me, and that things would

(18:51):
go better for me if I complied. At that point,
he slid his chair out from behind the desk and
turned the lights out. According to Rose, Glupski sexually assaulted her.
It's horrible. She's too scared of how he might retaliate

(19:12):
to try and fight back, but she feels a flash
of hope when she notices the office door opening. A
crack of light enters the room. I saw a white
uniformed officer in the doorway.

Speaker 1 (19:27):
For a moment, it seems like somebody might intervene, But.

Speaker 4 (19:31):
When the officer saw Gallupski and me. He simply backed
out and shut the door. Gelupski never stopped what he
was doing, and the officer himself did not act surprised.
Although there were other police around, no one came to
my assistance.

Speaker 1 (19:46):
Eventually it ended Gallupski let go, but Rose's ordeal wasn't over.

Speaker 4 (19:54):
He told me that he wanted an ongoing sexual relationship
with me. As soon as as Klyupski said I could leave,
I left. I was terrified and sick to my stomach
and wanted to get home as fast as I could.
I felt dirty and totally humiliated. A man who had
total power over me had treated me like a whore
and forced me to submit to his sexual desires. I

(20:16):
kept what happened to myself.

Speaker 1 (20:18):
Rose couldn't tell her boyfriend because she worried that Kolyubski
might arrest him if she spoke out. She was too
scared to tell her friends and family because she feared
what might happen if they ended up on Glupski's radar,
and she couldn't report what had happened to the authorities
because Gallupski was the authority.

Speaker 4 (20:41):
After that awful day, Klupski harassed me for weeks, often
calling me two or three times a day. He told
me that he wanted me to come back to his office.
He wanted to do it again with me, and wanted
me to be his woman. I dreaded Klupski's calls and
continued to fear him, but sometimes I would talk to
him on the phone just to play k him so
he would not force me to come back down to

(21:02):
see him at the police station. He had total power,
and I was terrified that he would try to force
me again to provide sexual favors.

Speaker 1 (21:15):
After a few months of what Rose recalls as near
constant harassment, she found a way to break free. She relocated,
changed her phone number, and tried her best to move on.
She focused her energy on being a good mother to
her children and dedicated her time to rebuilding her life.

(21:36):
After a few years passed without seeing Gelupski, Rose thought
she was in the clear, but then in nineteen ninety four,
he forced his way back into her life by arresting
her son Lamont. Lamont's preliminary hearing took place in June

(21:59):
and the case to trial in the fall. It was
a harrowing experience for him and his entire family, but
the process was especially tough on Rose.

Speaker 4 (22:09):
I sat in the hallway the entire time. Both sides
had named me as a witness, so I was not
allowed to be.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
In the courtroom, but neither side ended up calling her
to testify.

Speaker 4 (22:19):
So I ended up being isolated for no reason. Sitting
in the hallway during the trial was horrible. I felt
very scared and worried.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
The trial lasted four days and then the jury went
to deliberate. After what felt like a lifetime of sitting
in that hallway, Rose was eventually allowed back into the
courtroom to hear the verdict. The room steals to silence
Lamont stays in his position. The jury comes back into

(22:52):
the room and sends their representative up to the front
to reveal Lamont's fate.

Speaker 5 (22:59):
When a jury came out with a guilty verdict, I screamed.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
I was just screaming, like, y'all got the wrong person
on y'all convicting the innocent person. I didn't do anything right.
I started yelling and I felt somebody grab me real
tight from behind. I was shocked and I turned around as.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
My mother, Rose throws her arms around her son.

Speaker 3 (23:24):
She was grabbing me, and she was holding me so tight,
and she was crying, and I felt her pain.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
Back then, Lamont didn't know anything about his mom's past
with Gallupski. To him, they were just the cries of
a mother about to lose her son. But there was
so much more to ross pain. She'd spent years worrying
about what Gallupski might do to her if their paths
crossed again, but this was so much worse. Her seventeen

(23:57):
year old son was being marched away to a prison cell.
She was overcome by grief, but there was another emotion
making its way through her body, a sickening sense of
suspicion and then guilt, because the more she thought about it,

(24:17):
the more she began to wonder had Detective Glupski used
his power to target her son as punishment for her
decision to break free I Got You. It's nineteen ninety

(24:50):
four and La Motte McIntyre is on his way to
prison for a crime. He says he had nothing to
do with Nico Quinn, who'd been intimidating into testifying against him,
feels awful. She's sure he's innocent, but in trying to
protect her children, she's been forced into help him put

(25:11):
someone else's child behind bars. She walks around Kansas City,
overwhelmed with guilt and despair.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
I remember walking down Seventh Street. I remember that route
like it was yesterday, and I passed the store and
the guy at the store was asked me how I
was doing. I was like, he's okay, yeah, I just
want to go home. I got home and I remember

(25:46):
my youngest son greeting me at the door, and I
kind of, you know, kissy. I walked upstairs, closed my door.
I wanted my kids to see me, and I just
sat on the bed and I just cried. And I

(26:07):
had some prescription of antidepressant that the doctor had gave
me because I couldn't sleep, and I took a hand
full of and I heard stop and it scared me,

(26:33):
and I stuck my hand in my mouth and I
just started throwing up because I thought about my kids,
and I heard the Holy Spirit say, who's gonna fix it?
If you die, Who's gonna fix it? And from that

(26:53):
day forward, I worked on trying to make my own right.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
La Mott had been convicted on two witness statements, including
nkos not solid evidence. She thought that recanting her testimony
might help fix things, so she went back to the
person who she says coerced her into giving it, the
assistant district attorney.

Speaker 2 (27:22):
I said something to Tarry Morehead about what she was
doing to me wasn't fair and it wasn't right. And
she asked me, who was I gonna tell? Who's gonna
believe me over her? Is what she told me. And
that feel like somebody knocking all of the error out
of you for her to tell me that, because I'm
looking at her being a white woman, been a prosecutor,

(27:45):
and me a black girl, who gonna believe me?

Speaker 1 (27:57):
We reached out to Tara Moorehead and her lawyer to
ask her about Nico's claims of witness intimidation. She did
not wish to provide a comment. Back then, Nico wasn't
ready to give up hope. She thought that if she
could find a way to understand the legal system, she
could help fix things.

Speaker 2 (28:16):
I would read a lot, I would go to the
library and look at different legal books and try to
find out a way. I talked to so many different
people on how I can go about trying to get
Lamart home.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
Nico was a mother, so she couldn't help but imagine
the pain that Lamont's mom, Rose McIntyre, was experiencing.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
I remember when she used to work at the liquor
store on Tenth Street, and I would go down there
and I would talk to her. Sometimes I would see
her walking up and down Gwin Gurl late at night.
I will follow her just to, you know, kind of
make sure she would say or whatever that nothing happened

(29:02):
to her out there. And I just would cry because
I felt like I destroyed this woman's life. And all
I could do was ask God for forgiveness and wanted
to make it right.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
After being given two life sentences, Lamont was sent to
a prison called Hutchinson Correctional Facility, a large state prison
in Kansas.

Speaker 3 (29:30):
I cried and I sat there and I just couldn't
believe I was there, and I couldn't leave. I was stuck,
and that just convicted me of two murders. I didn't
know how to process that. I was sad and I
couldn't get out of it. I didn't know what to do.
I knew what to think.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
He called home to talk to his mother.

Speaker 3 (29:47):
My grandmother asked the phone, so I said, with my
mother as she said she's not here, and she started crying,
and I'm like, what do you mean she's not here?
She said, she's in the mental hospital. So my mother
had a break down.

Speaker 1 (29:59):
She couldn't take Nico went to visit Roads when she
got out, I was telling her what happened, and then
me and her begin having a relationship.

Speaker 2 (30:10):
We would talk more. I would be down there trying
to help her, you know, get dressed, or if she
was having a bad day, trying to help her get
with She. We was always together and I'll try to
make her laugh, and we had a real good relationship
at that time. And I would just pray for her.

(30:32):
I would pray that God would take that pain away
from her, that he would give her some type of
strength to continue to go through this. I just wanted
to make things right with her.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
Nico recanted her testimony again, this time and a sworn
affidavit so Lamont's lawyer could argue that he deserved a
new trie. When that motion was denied, Nico began her
own campaign.

Speaker 2 (31:05):
I'll start seeing little things on TV about, you know,
people's family members getting murdered, and they would go to
Mantel Williams Queen Latifa.

Speaker 1 (31:15):
It was the nineties, long before an online petition or
social media campaign could draw attention to a case of injustice,
So Nico wrote letters to the most famous people she
could think of, hoping one of them might be able
to help put a spotlight on Lamont's case. She kept
Rose updated.

Speaker 2 (31:34):
When I would talk to her, I would tell her, Hey,
I'm writing Oprah, I'm writing Jenny Jones, Ricki Lake Paruto.

Speaker 1 (31:44):
She sent a bunch of letters, but nothing came of them.

Speaker 2 (31:48):
And I just felt like our story would never get
out there. Nobody would ever know what happened in Kansas City,
Kansas and what we went through. When we was going.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
Through, Lamont was defeated, felt guilty, and Rose was inconsolable.
Each of their lives had been devastated by Roger Glupski,
but what they didn't know at the time was that
this was just the beginning and they weren't alone. Glupski

(32:21):
had many, many more victims, and his methods were darker
than they could have ever imagined. But they were going
to get to the bottom of it, fight for justice,
and finally uncover the truth. Coming up on the girlfriends Untouchable,

(32:46):
the Roger Glupski thing popped up in my lawyer's face.
My phone immediately started ringing people saying, Hey, I know
that guy, I know what he did to this person.
This is horrific, This is horrible.

Speaker 3 (32:57):
He did not receive a fair There's only one reason
why you do that, to protect corrupt cops.

Speaker 1 (33:16):
The Girlfriend's Untouchable is produced by Novel for iHeart Podcasts.
For more from Novel, visit novel dot Audio. The show
is narrated by me Nicki Richardson. It was written and
produced by Rufarro Masarua. The editor is Joe Wheeler. Our
assistant producer is Mohammed Ahmed. The researcher is Zaiana Yusef.

(33:39):
Production management from Shuri Houston and Joe Savage. The fact
checker is Fendel Fulton. Sound design, mixing and scoring by
Daniel Kimpson with additional engineering by Nicholas Alexander. Music supervision
by Rufarro Masarua, Nicholas Alexander and Joe Wheeler. Original music
by a Manager Jones. The Girlfriend's theme was composed by

(34:03):
Amanda Jones and Louisa Gerstein. The series artwork was designed
by Christina limcol Story development by Olivia Smart and nel
Gray Andrews. The voice of Rose McIntyre was read by
Ebanie Janelle. Novel's Director of Development is Selena Metta. Willard
Foxton is novel's creative director of Development. Max O'Brien and

(34:25):
Craig Strachan are executive producers for novel. Katrina Norvell and
Nikki Etour are the executive producers for iHeart podcast, and
the marketing lead is Alison Cantor. Special thanks to Will
Pearson and his special thanks to Carley Frankel and the
whole team at w M E.
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