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June 14, 2023 36 mins
On July 3, 1929, police officers walked into the house located at 3587 Saint Aubin Street in Detroit. Inside, they found a man named Benny Evangelista dead, seated behind his desk. His hands were neatly folded in his lap as though in prayer. Upstairs they found Mrs. Santina Evangelista and their four children dead as well. Benny was known as a mystical healer and many people in the community sought his help. So why would someone want to kill the entire family with an axe?

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
This podcast contains adult content. Some of the themes or
topics may include information on murder, kidnapping, torture, dismemberment, maybe
some demonic content with information on positions and paranormal activity.
This podcast will also include explicit, horrible, and foul, socially unacceptable,

(00:29):
totally uninhibited adult themes language. So if you're easily offended,
if you're easily triggered, then I highly suggest you turn
this off now, and if not, just keep in mind
parental discretion is advised. Welcome back to this episode of

(00:52):
Mysterious Circumstances. I am your host, Justin. Today we're going
to be talking about the nineteen twenty nine Detroit occult murder,
also known as a Saint Auburn Street massacre. Before we
get going, I do not have any new Patreon subscribers
to think, but I do have some live show news.
This will probably be the last year I do live shows.

(01:15):
If I do, it'll be a rare occasion, or it'll
be somewhere really cool in Indiana that I like, maybe
the Boone County Jail Distillery or Randolph County Asylum or
something of that nature. But as for now, this year
will be the last year I do live shows. So
July fifteenth, Buffalo, New York. This is gonna be a

(01:38):
really fun one because we have a special guest, Tyler
Allen from the Mind's Madness is going to be there.
Tyler's not doing a live show, he's m seeing the event.
It's going to be me Hillbilly Horror Stories and the
Brohio Podcast. July fifteenth, Buffalo, New York. Next one up
will be August nineteenth in Detroit, Michigan. And it's not

(01:59):
actually in Detroit. It's in a little suburb outside of Detroit.
So don't think you're gonna, you know, go there and
get killed or anything like that, because it's on the
outskirts of Detroit. That will also be hill Billy Horror
Stories in Brohio there. Ticket link is in the description.
And last, but definitely not least, this is probably one

(02:21):
of the bigger ones that I've done, and it's local
to me. Downtown Fort Wayne, Indiana, September two at the
historic and haunted Bell Mansion. This is gonna be an
awesome show, and it's not just a show, it's an
entire event. You're gonna go there, You're gonna get a tour.
You're gonna get a meet and greet with me, Jerry

(02:42):
and Tracy from Hillbilly Horror Stories. Then you're going to
get three hours worth of live podcasts, and then from
ten pm to two am is a paranormal investigation of
this place. It is three stories high, huge basement, fifteen
thousand square feet. And if you get your tickets, which
we only have fifty tickets for this, just so you know,

(03:05):
so if you're sitting there like, oh, I'm just gonna
wait till the last minute, you ain't gonna get a
fucking ticket. Yes, tickets are seventy five bucks. Because of
all the shit that's involved with it, I will say this,
if you think that's too much, do a paranormal investigation somewhere,
you know, depending on where you go. So you're gonna

(03:25):
pay that much just for that, and it's gonna be
really awesome. I'm super excited about this because I'm local
to it. I didn't even know the damn place was
there until like three months ago. But it is an awesome,
awesome venue. It was a funeral home for like almost
one hundred years, I think ninety three or ninety four years.

(03:46):
It is a pretty badass place. There's a lot of
paranormal investigators that have gone there. There's some shit on
YouTube about it and stuff like that. And as if
that wasn't enough, so we're going to do a raffle
a couple of weeks before the show, and two of
you ticket holders with a guest of your choice are

(04:07):
going to be staying the night, all night long in
the Bell Mansion with me, Jerry and Tracy. The Bell
Mansion also has equipment that you can borrow and buy
and use stuff like that. So it is going to
be bad ass. I cannot express that enough. And for

(04:29):
the very last live show that I just might ever do,
and the fact that it's the only local live show
that I've ever done, it is going to be awesome.
I also have some reviews to read at the end,
But with all that behind us, let's go ahead and
get on with the show. Benjamino eventually was born in Naples, Italy,

(05:02):
in eighteen eighty five. Him and his older brother Antonio
immigrated to the United States in nineteen o four. The
two were ready for a better future, which in the
early nineteen hundreds we had a lot of immigrants coming
in from Italy and Sicily and Ireland as well, and

(05:22):
like a lot of immigrants back then, he americanized his
name to Benny Evangelista instead of Benjamino. Him and his
brother had originally settled in Philadelphia, where they lived together
for a little while, and while in Philadelphia, Benny became
interested in the occult. In nineteen oh six, he claimed

(05:43):
he started receiving visions from God and he was a
self proclaimed divine prophet. His brother, as a devout Catholic,
was extremely disturbed by Benny's mystic visions, which were not
very Catholic in nature, and the two had a huge
falling out and Antonio, by his own account, disowned Benny

(06:08):
and sent him to York, Pennsylvania. While in York, he
got a job on a railroad construction crew and he
became really good friends with another immigrant from Naples named
Aurelius Angelino. The two men began exploring the occult as
a team and investigating the world of dark magic and mysticism.

(06:33):
That is until nineteen nineteen when something went wrong with Angelino.
He attacked his family with an axe and killed his
twin sons, who were four years old. He crushed their
skulls with a club while they were sleeping, and after
he did that, he carried their bodies out to the
front yard and hacked and cut them apart with an

(06:55):
axe and a knife. And there were people gathered outside
that said there was flesh and bones scattered everywhere in
the front yard because Angelino was arrested right there in
his fucking front yard. After all this, now Angelino's wife
and their other two kids, they ended up getting away

(07:15):
and were safe. Now. Angelina was sent to the Fairview
State Hospital for the Criminally Insane in nineteen nineteen. And
it is unknown if something happened to basically make him
go crazy and turn into this murderer, but whatever the
cause was, Benny was very, very spooked by what had happened.

(07:40):
So he tries to distance himself from his friend and
his crime and decides to move somewhere new, and Benny
decided on Detroit, Michigan. While in Detroit, Benny worked as
a carpenter and he started getting into real estate and
eventually became a landlord. He started getting more prosperous. He

(08:03):
had a little bit of money, started getting a reputation
and stuff like that, little name for himself, and he
decided to settle down, and he married a woman named
Santina and decided to start a family. And because he
did well for himself, he ended up moving his wife
and children into a house at the corner of Saint
Auban and Mack. It was a very large and comfortable

(08:27):
home for all of them. So, now that he's settled
pretty comfortably into this new life in Detroit, he returns
to his interest in the occult and Benny became a
self proclaimed mystical healer and spiritual leader, and he was
making a little bit of money on the side to
support his household doing this. The basement in his home

(08:49):
was transformed into a ritual space with a kind of
altar that included knives, bottles, jars, all kinds of stuff,
and this is where he would have sermons. He would
charge visitors and nickel to enter the basement and see
depictions of the gods of a religion that he had created.

(09:12):
Benny's depictions were pretty convincing in reality, they were just
homemade paper mache some wood wax figures hung from a
ceiling by some wires. He called these planets and figures
celestial planets, and he even created a giant eye in
the center of these planets that would light up, and

(09:35):
it was said that if you were walking by and
cocked your head just right, you could see inside the
basement window and see Benny's a great celestial planet exhibition
is what it was called. But what people could not
see from outside in the basement is the altar where
Benny practiced his rituals, and he was known for setting spells, hexes,

(09:59):
dealing with potions and herbs and spiritual remedies. He would
perform chants, dances, and animal sacrifices for paying customers for
the purpose of either cures or curses, and this would
be for either mentally or physically disabled customers. He would
charge ten dollars for his services or psychic healings, which

(10:23):
was around the amount that you would earn when you
were working for two days in a local factory, So
ten dollars back then was roughly one hundred and sixty
to one hundred and seventy dollars. Not only that, but
he self published a four volume bible that he called
the oldest history of the world discovered by occult science.

(10:46):
And in this four volume bible, he described himself as
a prophet and Benny claimed to have produced the book
through a series of nightly trances which began in nineteen
oh six, and he refed to this Bible as the Sun.
And there were copies of this Bible stacked everywhere around

(11:06):
this room. I know, shit's getting weirder, right, trust me,
it gets way weirder. So a lot of people in
the neighborhood and the Italian immigrant community, they came to
Benny for cures and potions and curses and everything like that.
And there were a lot of these people that swore
by his methods, but some people called him a cult leader.

(11:27):
There were others that claimed he had overcharged them for
things like love potions and promises for cures, and a
lot of customers were disappointed at the lack of effects,
and they felt like they had been ripped off or scammed,
and that Benny had stole their money. So he had
made several enemies, and it was mostly the people who

(11:48):
believed that they were being ripped off by him. So
let's go ahead and move on to the day of
the murders. July third, nineteen twenty nine, ten thirty am
a man name to Vincent Elias, who was a client
of Benny's had come to the home to discuss a
real estate deal with him, and he noticed that, even

(12:09):
though there should have been four young children inside, the
home was extremely silent. So this Vincent Elias decides to
go into the basement entrance, and he thought that Benny
was down there in the basement working or doing whatever.
And he knocks on the door and there's no answer,

(12:29):
and he thought Benny didn't hear him, so he just
walks in. Now, Benny was definitely in the basement, but
what Vincent Elias saw down there scared the absolute fuck
out of him, and he ran and he got police immediately.
Almost the entire Detroit Homicide Division was dispatched immediately to

(12:50):
this crime scene. And here's what they found. When they arrived.
They searched the house and took notes at some of
the weird shit that they found. The police found Benny
seated at his desk, hands folded as if in prayer,
but with no head. He had been completely decapitated, and
the head was lying on the floor near his feet

(13:10):
and surrounded by three framed photographs of a child in
a coffin. It was later found that the child in
the coffin was one of Benny's kids who had died
a few years prior to this. Now, after seeing the
body in the ritual type arrangement, the police decided to
go upstairs to look for the rest of the family,

(13:32):
and then they find out that everybody else in the
house had been murdered as well. Upstairs, they find Benny's wife, Santina,
in bed with her youngest child, Mario, who was eighteen
months old. Her head was almost entirely severed and the
baby Mario's skull had been crushed in. The three other

(13:53):
children in the house, Angelina who was seven, Margaret who
was five, and Jeanne who was four, were found across
the hall in their beds, and like their brother, the
girls's skulls were crushed and one of the girls had
their arm partially amputated at the shoulder. So the cops
keep searching around for shit. They find several pieces of

(14:16):
women's undergarments down in the basement, each tagged with the
name of its owner, so the police say that Benny
was indulging in practices of voodooism or devil warship. Now,
as the newspaper reported, such garments voodooism has it can
lead to the finding of a missing person when they

(14:38):
are properly handled by one verse in the mystic arts
of that belief. Police failed to keep newspaper reporters and
dozens of gawkers and onlookers who gathered around the house,
and they were contaminating this entire crime scene, probably destroying
a lot of potential clues. But we do know that

(14:58):
there were no signs of a struggle or robbery. No
trace of a weapon was found in the home, and
the only real evidence from the crime scene was bloody
footprints leading away from Benny's body and a single bloody
fingerprint on a doorknob. And to make matters even more difficult,

(15:19):
most of Benny's neighbors and clients were recent Sicilian and
Italian immigrants, and they were extremely reluctant to provide information
to law enforcement at all. And judging by Benny's own
records and the collection of personal trinkets and shit like
that that were found in the home, it proved that
hundreds of people had come to him for his services,

(15:42):
but only about a handful of these people questioned, ever
even admitted to knowing who he was. And because of that,
it wasn't long before rumors spread that Benny's occult dealings
had caused his death. So let's talk about the next stay.
July Force, every police squad in Detroit was ordered to

(16:03):
join in a city wide search for the killer. Police
initially investigated a connection to a murder of a mother
and her three children two weeks prior, but the connection
was not valid. They even posted a reward of one
thousand dollars, which is the equivalent of seventeen thousand dollars today,
and that was posted by the Detroit Police Department on

(16:26):
July sixth. A couple days later, the funeral was held
and a crowd of about three thousand curious residents packed
the streets. Police were really hoping that they could find
a suspect at the funeral, and they even arrested one
man who was acting really weird and strange and nervous,
but he was released shortly after his arrest. And then

(16:50):
we fast forward to March of nineteen thirty. The AP
published a report with the headline eyewitnessed to brutal Detroit
acts murders. So laying finally turns up and the eyewitness
was a fucking dog. Here's what the report read. The
witness is a shaggy brown mongrel dog which belonged to
the children of Bennie. The animal disappeared at the time

(17:14):
that Benny and his wife and the four children were killed,
and in the course of routine a record was made
of the dog's license number, but the dog was not found.
There was a woman who reported that a dog with
a nineteen twenty nine license number had come to her home,
and when she learned who had owned the animal, she

(17:34):
decided not to adopt it. After that, the case went
completely cold. But we do have some really interesting theories,
and before we get to those, let's go ahead and
take a little bit of a break. You can either
hit that fast forward button or use this time to
go get a drink. I will meet you back here
in a few like I had mentioned. Because of the

(18:00):
Italian immigrants in the community, they refused to speak to
the police or admit they even knew the Evangelista family.
Officers ended up turning to Benny's physician and lawyer for
information about the family. The physician painted a very compromising
picture and described Benny as an insane religious fanatic. Then

(18:23):
Benny's lawyer informed the cops that Benny had also gone
through several recent lawsuits which were related to his real
estate business, and as lawyers said, the cases were so
mild that they didn't seem like a reason for a
violent family annihilation. After all of this information is gathered

(18:45):
and the police are working us for a while, they
eventually developed three theories for what may have happened to
this family. The first theory was that the family had
been killed by the Italian criminal society known as the
Black Hand. Notes were found threatening Benny. The most recent
letter was six months old and warned this is your

(19:08):
last chance now. It seems really unlikely that Benny took
the notes very seriously, and whoever was trying to extort
money from him was more than likely some kind of amateur,
and the theory was quickly disregarded because the Black Hand
at this point in time in nineteen twenty nine, was
a thing of the past. It had already evolved into

(19:31):
what is known as the modern day mafia. The Black
Hand was just outdated. Even if it was they were
more into extortion, they really weren't into any kind of
dealing with a cult shit or even murdering an entire family.
That was just not their mo so that brings us

(19:52):
to this second theory, and that is that a man
who did business with Benny was the killer. And this
is way more plausible. So a local forty two year
old man named Umberto Techio had visited the evangelist at
home on the night before the bodies were found. He
was making the final payment on a house that Benny

(20:13):
had sold him. So Techio and his buddy Angelodpoli had
visited the house the night before the murders, and they
were brought in for questioning the next day when an axe,
a keen edged banana knife, and a pair of suspiciously
clean work boots were found in the barn behind the
boarding house where they lived. Now, Techio and Dapoli claimed

(20:36):
to know nothing about the murders and denied any involvement,
and they both stated that nothing unusual happened during the
visit and that they had gone out drinking after dropping
off the last payment of Techio's home to Benny. Now,
a lot of people I read that thanks to the newspapers,
a lot of suspicion was put on Techio, and it

(20:58):
was not the fucking prejudice against Italian immigrants. It wasn't
the fucking newspapers. It was because three months before this,
Techio got into an argument with his brother in law
and killed him with a fucking knife, and he was
deemed to have acted in self defense in that incident,
And with a lack of confession and evidence, Techio eventually

(21:22):
was removed as a suspect in the Evangelista murders, But
because of him killing his own brother in law three
months before this, it really did give investigators a reason
to make him a prime suspect, and because of the
shit that was found behind his fucking boarding house, and
he ended up dying a few years later in nineteen

(21:45):
thirty four. By this time, the Detroit police seemed to
have invested a lot of their time in the pursuit
of Techio, which makes sense, but the brutality of the
crime really doesn't make sense, know what I mean? Like,
is this dude, why is this dude just going in
there and just fucking doing this? That part does not

(22:06):
make sense to me. But now looking back almost one
hundred years, the nature of the crime itself, it seems
like the most damning evidence is against Aurelius Angelino. You
remember that name, right, So here's some shit that I
did not tell you earlier on in the episode. The

(22:27):
third theory is that Benny's friend from York, Pennsylvania, Aurelius Angelino,
is the one who killed him and his family. Angelino's
murder of his two sons with an axe was very
similar to the scene in the Evangelista home, and six
years earlier, in nineteen twenty three, Angelino had escaped from

(22:48):
prison and was never seen again. He had actually escaped
twice before this, but he was found and caught and
taken back. And the belief was that maybe Angelino went
to each other de Troit to seek revenge. I know
you're asking yourself, why the fuck would he do that? Well,
the cops got this theory because there was one strange

(23:09):
detail of the Angelino case. There were bloody fingerprints that
were discovered in Angelino's home after the murders, and those
fingerprints were found to have belonged to Benny. Now, the
murders seemed to most closely match the crime Angelino committed
back in York, and it's not hard to imagine Angelino

(23:32):
just slowly making his way to Detroit and tracking this
fucking guy down. But did Benny end up framing Angelino
back in the day, Angelino, who would have been wrongfully convicted,
he finally escapes and goes to seek revenge. It's pretty
wild too, because it was like three months after Angelino,

(23:57):
after the murders of his family or as two sons happened,
his wife petitioned to have him bonded out, so he
actually was like bailed out on fucking parole or whatever,
and he was out of the asylum until he was
actually convicted. Now, if his wife like fully believed that
Angelino fucking killed their two twin sons who were like

(24:19):
four years old, took him out to the front fucking
yard and like chopped and hacked him up with an
accent a knife, why in the fuck is she getting
this dude out of jail, you know, or out of
the insane asylum for that matter. What we do know
is that after Angelino's escape from the State of Pennsylvania's
custody in nineteen twenty three, there is no further record

(24:41):
of his existence. Nothing's found in Detroit or anywhere else.
Pretty wild shit, huh. So here's some other different, smaller theories,
one of which is Angelo d'poli, one of the guys
I had mentioned earlier in the second theory. He was
arrested the day of the murder because he had that
blood covered knife, but police couldn't connect him to the family,

(25:05):
even though a shilloweded neighbors told the cops that he
was a frequent visitor at the home. Another one is
three years after the murders in nineteen thirty two, a
man nicknamed the rear Axel murderer confessed to the crimes.
His name was Robert Harris, and police initially thought that
they had solved the crime, but after they started investigating

(25:28):
his claims that he was the one who did it,
they found out that Harris was totally bullshitting them and
just trying to take credit for him some more interesting facts.
The night before the murders, on July second, Benny had
made a call to the watchman of a house that
was being demolished. He told the watchman that he had

(25:49):
purchased all of the salvageable lumber and would arrange for
the wood to be picked up and delivered to his home,
and the plan was that Benny would meet the truck
the next morning to pay the delivery men, and the
delivery men ended up being a no show. Benny had
planned to have the money to pay them the following day,
but there was no cash found in the home Following

(26:13):
the murder. Police were never able to locate the name
of the delivery company, but suspected that money was possibly
a motive in the murders. Here in the current time,
several years ago, the Benny evangelist a home on St.
Aubin Street was demolished, and all that remains now is

(26:34):
an empty lot that has never been used again. And
there are some of those out there who say that
particular site is haunted. People will report hearing disembodied screams
every now and then, and they say that a headless
man walks the lot and then vanishes. So there you

(26:56):
have the Saint Aubin Street massacre, also known as the
nineteen twenty nine Detroit Occult murders. Let me rattle off
some sources before we get to reviews. We have historic
Mysteries the Detroit Occult Murders, a big article written by
Lauren Dillon on June seventeenth, twenty twenty two. We also
have click on Detroit dot com. Ken hadded and that

(27:20):
was published in June of twenty twenty two, we have
the Associated Press on July third, nineteen twenty nine. We
have only in Your State posted in Detroit November of
twenty twenty by Sophie Boudreaux. And then we have American Hauntings,
the Evangelista Occult Murders. And then we have a book
titled Detroit Occult Murders. And this actually details a string

(27:44):
of murders between nineteen twenty nine and nineteen thirty one,
all centered around Saint Aubin Street. So if you did
find interest in this episode and you want more shit,
get a book called the Detroit Occult Murders will not
be disappointed. So let's go ahead and read some reviews. Oh,

(28:07):
here's a good one. We got two stars from Canopy Top.
It says what news, what articles? Was Zodiac solved or not? Okay,
tell me you didn't listen to the fucking episode without
actually telling me you didn't listen to the fucking episode. Also,

(28:29):
there's this really fucking cool thing called Google Search. And
if you type in certain words to this and hit
the news button and then the sort button, what it
does is it pulls up news articles related to the
words that you typed into it. I know, it sounds

(28:50):
so fucking crazy. It's like we're living in like the
year three thousand right now or something. But can it
be top Listen to the fucking episode. Read the motherfucking articles.
I what do you mean? What articles? You type it in?
There's a fucking hundred of them, dude, from literally all
over the fucking globe, So you're fucking moron. Appreciate the

(29:12):
two stars though, but uh god, I hope you don't
have a fucking podcast anyway. Here we go from America,
we got rhiannon one twenty five five stars, says Love.
I love this podcast. I've been listening since August of
twenty twenty two, and I didn't get into podcasts until then.

(29:33):
I found MC looking for John Dillinger content. This was
my first stop and haven't left since. I love the
well placed f bombs, I love the outside of the
box thinking, and I love the content. I have recommended
this podcast to many many people, from one Hoosier to another.
Keep on keeping on, justin, That's what I'm fucking talking about. Yeah,
I tell you what, there's not too many times I'll

(29:54):
fucking too my own horn, but I know a fuck
load about John Dillinger I've actually done it reviews on
another podcast about that. Well, hopefully you make it to
the live show in Fort Wayne. And don't fucking wait
to get tickets. We only got fifty of them, dude.
And just so people know too, seventy five bucks. Oh
it's too much. I get that it's a full day

(30:15):
of ship. But actually, if you pay with PayPal, you
can fucking make like little payments and shit, so it's
pretty cool. Next one we got is five stars, says
Sophie's Mom three sixteen twenty three. Excellent podcast. I love
this podcast. Justin does a great job with thoroughly researching
his topics, and even if I've listened to other podcasts

(30:35):
who covered the same subject, I always learned something new.
He has a casual, friendly storytelling style. Say that five
times fast. It feels like having a conversation with a friend.
Don't listen to the haters, keep doing what you do well.
By God, Sophie's Mom. Fuck, yeah, that's what I'm talking about.
Thank you very much for taking the time to leave

(30:58):
that review. We got five stars. Rocky Mountain Bob, I
want to say it, says wow, wow, Wow. I am
in my fifties and have never listened to podcast. I
had a road trip and decided to try one out
and thought it would be like an audio book. I
was completely sucked in to Justin's conversation and am so
impressed by his genuineness, his knowledge that would only come

(31:22):
through hours of research and preparation, and his complete professionalism.
There's some days I'm way more professional than others. I'll
tell you that once. I specifically enjoy feeling like we
are just sitting at a table drinking a beer while
he is just telling me a story. I'm hooked. I've
been listening now to Blood and Dust too, besides mysterious circumstances,

(31:45):
and listened as much as I can and sometimes repeat episodes.
I've tried a few other folks out, but keep coming
back to a Justin creation because I compare everyone else
to him now and they just don't stack up. If
I had tried out anyone other than Justin, I probably
would have clicked the show off. I'm so thankful for
the great entertainment and intellectual stimulation you are providing your listeners.

(32:08):
If you ever come towards Charlotte, North Carolina to do
a show or investigation, let me know I'll buy you
a beer or five. Lol. A grateful fan, Bob J Well,
I tell you what, Bob, God damn it. Probably I
don't know, man. I mean, if I can arrange a
show with a couple other podcasts out there, I'd probably
do it. But as of right now, I probably won't

(32:30):
do any live shows. But that does not mean that
one of my future investigations with the Cold Case team
I'm on might not take me out there or Charlotte
is actually a super easy trip. It's cheap by plane,
not bad to drive either, so I just might have
to stop out there. I'm down for those five beers

(32:53):
for sure, as long as you're gonna be drinking with me, dude.
All right, Next up, we got do Die Man nineteen
seventy nine says love it. I just recently found this
podcast while looking for episodes about Jesse James, and now
I'm hooked. Justin is an amazing host with enough humor
and personal opinions sprinkled in to keep it fun. Dude.
I always tell people, man that Jesse James fucking series

(33:16):
one of my favorites, one of my absolute favorites. But
fuck that research was insanely hard and if you look
in the news in that part four where I told
you guys where the fucking treasure, the KGC treasure was,
I even told you guys. I was like, this is
the only documented fucking place that Jesse James and the

(33:37):
KGC are known to be in the same place at
the same fucking time. I told you guys to look
for bent fucking trees and markings on the wood. And
guess what they fucking found in Ohio. Go Google search
that check it out. Pretty wild. Shit is so awesome,
and uh believe that is all we fucking got. Let
me hit the UK, nothing new there since last year.

(34:02):
Let me hit Australia real quick, see what they got.
Nothing since twenty twenty one. And then Canada, Oh we
got one from five to twenty four to twenty three.
Summer Breeze makes me feel fine. I fucking love that song.
By the way, five stars, great content and delivery. Keep

(34:23):
up the good work. Why tell you what, Summer Breeze?
Thank you very much. That means a lot to me.
It really does mean a lot that all you guys
take the time to leave those five star reviews. That
helps me get seen by other people who might not
know who I am out there, and even if you can't, like,
I don't have iTunes, so I can't leave reviews for anybody,
including myself, but just spreading the word, you know, say, Hey,

(34:47):
yeah you like podcasts, check this fucking guy out. Oh
you want to know about John Dillinger or baby Face
Nelson or Jesse James or Billy the Kid or Doc Holliday,
check this guy's fucking podcast out, or even lesser known
unsolved crimes, which I do have some of those coming up.
Like I said, trying to get back on a regular

(35:08):
schedule here and so far it's so good. I also
do have a really fucking long episode coming for a
Patreon as well. I just got the notes organized last night,
so that will be out momentarily until next time. I
will see you folks on the flip side.
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