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November 12, 2021 15 mins
This is the introduction to Season 2 of The Swediana Project.
From 1999 - 2003 there were five victims. Each victim was stripped nude and their bodies were dumped in or around bodies of water in rural areas. Investigators eventually drew a link between the victims and concluded that the same person or persons had killed them. Then they started looking into other cases, then cases in other areas. Now, we have a lot more potential victims that fit the same description and manners of death. Let's not forget to mention, the women that are still missing.
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Episode Transcript

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(00:12):
Welcome everybody to season two of theSwedienda Project. This season is going to
be a little bit different than seasonone because it's going to work out a
lot better. It's going to bea lot more thorough, There's going to
be more conversation. I have anew co host who will be joining me
after the first episode. We alsohave the help of local people from Lawton,

(00:35):
Oklahoma and the surrounding areas. Wealso have a couple private investigators working
with us, which is a hugehelp. So before I give this introduction
to season two and what we're goingto be talking about, I do have
to give a brief explanation of theabrupt end of season one. Season one

(00:55):
was plagued with difficulties. I didthe Jennings eight because actually a person who
has become a very close friend ofmine wanted me to cover the cases.
That person as a family member toone of the victims. So once I
got the podcast going, we keptrunning into problems. First of all,

(01:15):
my original co host and the persondoing this with me dropped out. Not
to mention the fact that my podcastkept getting flagged for inappropriate content. I
don't know by who, and Idon't know why. So every time I
would drop one, two or threeepisodes, it would get flagged, it
would get shut down. I wouldhave to fight anywhere from three to six

(01:40):
to eight weeks to try to getmy podcast up again. And it was
basically me waiting for an email tosay, Okay, you're good, it's
not inappropriate content, which we alreadyknew. We were discussing, you know,
some unsolved murders with a lot ofsuspects, involved a lot of common
ground between all the victims and allthe suspects. So the fact that it

(02:05):
kept getting flagged was a headache callin itself. And then I had other
family members of victims coming out accusingme of exploiting the cases for money,
which was obviously not the case.Anybody who knows me knows I've been podcasting
for almost six years now. Ihave two other successful podcasts, Swedie Anna

(02:25):
Project. In the Jennings eight cases, I didn't make anything off of those,
and I got the well, youhave ads at the beginning and the
end, and it's like, yeah, those are dynamic ads. Like if
I don't put those in my networkwill not let me upload the episode.
Those have to be there. That'sjust the way it is, so Unfortunately,

(02:46):
there was a big difference between certainfamily members of victims, which I
get that I understand. I'm notout here to exploit anybody. I just
wanted to help and to be honestwith you, the only reason I covered
the Jennings eight case was because afamily member of one of the victims asked

(03:06):
me to do so. I originallywas going to cover a wrongful conviction case,
something that I had actually been workingon and invested probably three months worth
of time into. And when thatperson asked me to look into the Jennings
eight, I was like, ohmy god, like something's going on here.
You know, we gotta do somethingabout it. We got to bring

(03:27):
attention to it now. Granted,not here to disrespect any advocates or victims
or family members of victims. I'mnot here to do that. All I'm
trying to do is help. Becauseeven though I can't pay people for interviews,
you know like showtime documentaries can,which there was a big one on
the Jennings eight is what very welldone documentary, Very well done. I

(03:51):
can't pay people. I have aregular job, I have a family,
I have two other podcasts. It'sjust not feasible for me to do that.
But at the same time, Ihad a podcast that was reaching every
corner of the earth. I don'tthink people realize there are some countries that
don't get show time. There aresome countries who had never heard of the

(04:13):
Jennings eight case. With podcasts,you have the ability to reach those people.
I was bringing more attention to thesecases in other countries and other facets
and other people for that matter thathad never even heard of these cases before.
And that's all I was trying todo, is trying to bring attention
to it. So the very abruptending to season one was caused by a

(04:36):
lot of variables, a lot ofproblems with as soon as I'd upload an
episode, it would be up andthe episodes would stay up. But when
I would go to upload another oneis when it would flag me. And
it's there was a lot of stuffinvolved. Now I will say this going

(04:58):
forward, I'm not abandoning the Jenningseight case. You know, if you
see an episode pop up on yourfeed with the old logo from season one,
you know that it's going to beregarding the Jennings eight case, whether
it's an interview, news anything,like that, breaking news anything. And
that's because I still advocate for thosecases. I'm not just going to abandon

(05:21):
them. The main thing is ifthere are people out there who don't want
me to report on those certain cases, whether they are family members of victims
because they think I'm out here exploitingthem for money or whatever the case is.
Like set, I didn't make moneyoff of any of that. I
like said, I have a regularjob, I have two other successful podcasts.

(05:43):
I don't need money off of this, just trying to help. But
if whoever or whatever kept flagging mycontent at the end of the day,
if I'm going to be looked atas that type of person, then that's
fine. Because the Jennings eight doesdeserve attention. It deserves a lot of
attention because there's still stuff going ondown there, to the point where people

(06:08):
still will not talk about it.From Jennings, it was so hard to
get interviews because of that fact.People still fear the police down there,
and they fear the police involvement downthere, and that's not going to go
away. But on the other sideof the spectrum, there are a lot
of other cases that deserve as muchattention that don't have showtime documentaries that don't

(06:31):
have books, that don't have this, that and the other. And with
season two, when we start lookinginto the murders of sex workers in and
around the Lawton, Oklahoma area,and then we're going to start connecting the
dots to all these This is crazyAnd the best part is I have help

(06:54):
from local people in the area.I've been getting fed information for the last
three to four months about this,and it's hopefully going to shed a lot
of light and bring a lot ofattention to some unknown cases out there that
are quite possibly connected in the workof more than likely some kind of serial

(07:15):
killer or a small group of peopleall working together on this. I don't
know yet. You know, that'sjust speculation on my behalf. But that
being said, Swedianna Project Season two, we're going to be hitting Lawton,
Oklahoma. And here's why. Therewere five to seven deaths of sex workers
who worked the same road in lawIn, Oklahoma. It's cash road.

(07:41):
These victims either knew each other orhad the same mutual friends. According to
authorities, these deaths started in nineteenninety nine and ended in two thousand and
three. According to me, thesestretch all the way to two seventeen to
the present day, there are stillpeople going missing and unsolved homicides, even

(08:05):
up until the time of this recordingin November of two thousand and twenty one.
You can look into it yourself.Look up missing Girls Lawton, Oklahoma,
and it's going to blow your mind. Now. From nineteen ninety nine
to two seventeen alone, they're fifteendeaths directly related to Lawton, Oklahoma.

(08:31):
Six were ruled a homicide, thoseare unsolved, five were undetermined, those
are unsolved, eight of which ofthose fifteen were sex workers who worked the
same road in Lawton, which isCash Road. Four of these victims were
last seen leaving the same group homein Lawton, Oklahoma. Two out of

(08:54):
those four victims were found in amass grave in New Mexico with other victims,
seven of which are still unidentified,and it was a big mass grave.
Nine women and girls are still missingand they were all last seen or

(09:15):
from Lawton, Oklahoma. Then wehave nineteen potential linked cases from the surrounding
areas including New Mexico, Arkansas,Texas, Mississippi, and the list goes
on. And to add to that, we have nine Jane Doe cases,
two of which were ruled undetermined,one ruled homicide, not much information on

(09:41):
the other ones. We're going toget into those two. This is going
to be a big season. We'regoing to have interviews, We're going to
be discussing these cases. We're goingto be getting in depth. There is
a list of suspects, there's alist of theories. We don't know what's
going on, but we at thesweete Anna Project are going to try to

(10:03):
give you all the information that wecan so you guys can formulate your own
theory on what you think happened.And above anything else, we have to
get this information out to the public, so feel free to share the episodes,
share the information. Go to theFacebook page sweete Anna Project, you

(10:24):
can hit the Instagram page Sweetie AnnaProject. You can email me sweete Anna
Project at gmail dot com. Wewant to get this information out there.
We want to get some kind ofresolution going. There is a lot of
connecting of the dots that we're goingto try to do. There's a lot
of stuff going on in Lawton,Oklahoma, and we need to get to

(10:48):
the bottom of it because these womenare dying, they're disappearing and it doesn't
really seem like anybody cares. Andlike I said, even after seventeen to
the present day, we still havemore cases to cover. So you can
join me every Friday morning at tenam as when a new episode will drop.

(11:11):
The last Friday of the month isgoing to be a dark week,
so technically you'll be getting three episodesa month. That other week I will
be using to gather interviews, recordedit everything else for the following week or
two, and basically get all myaffairs and information organized and in order.

(11:33):
So I hope you join me onFridays at ten am let's try to figure
out what's going on. And forthose of you who are just starting this
podcast, I am your host andwelcome to The Sweetie Anna Project, Season
two. Welcome to Lawton,
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