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Monday, July 1, 2019

People That Vanished And Were Eventually Found Alive: Brenda Heist, Back From The Dead.

It was February 8th, 2002, forty-three-year-old Brenda Heist and her husband,  Lee, lived in Lititz Borough, a small Lancaster County town in southeastern Pennsylvania. They were going through an amicable divorce.They had two children together, a eight-year-old daughter named Morgan and a twelve-year-old son named Lee Jr. Brenda worked as a bookkeeper at a local car dealership. She was trying to get her own apartment by applying for government assistance, but didn't qualify. 

Brenda had dinner defrosting and was midway through the laundry when she left to take her kids to school. She was feeling depressed, overwhelmed, and distraught, so after she dropped of her kids at school Brenda drove to a nearby town and parked her car in a bus station lot. From there she walked to a park where she sat on a bench and cried. Two strangers approached her and asked her if she was alright. 

Four days later, police found Brenda's car parked in the bus station lot. The police assumed that she was abducted. Days went by without any word from or sighting of Brenda. Detectives began to think that she may have been murdered and her disappearance turned into a homicide investigation. Lee became the number one suspect.

Despite being under suspicion Lee tried to maintain a positive relationship with his children. “There were people in the neighborhood who would not allow their children to play with my children,” Lee said. Lee had to quit his job and because of this he eventually lost his home.

After several years, investigators cleared Lee Heist of wrongdoing in the case. 

In 2008, the Lancaster County Major Crimes Unit began investigating Brenda's disappearance as a cold-case murder. 

In 2010, Lee petitioned a Lancaster County Court and had Brenda declared dead. Now Lee was able to collect on Brenda's life insurance policy. He also remarried.

It was Friday, April 26th, 2013 and Brenda had been missing for 11 years. 54 year old Kelsie Lyanne Smith surrendered herself to the Monroe County Sheriff's Office because she thought that there were warrants out for her arrest. She told the Monroe County deputies that she was at the end of her rope, and tired of running. She informed the officers that eleven years ago she had walked out on her family in Lititz Borough, Pennsylvania and that her name was Brenda Heist.

While Lee and his kids were wondering what had happened to Brenda for the past 11 years, she had been safe and sound in Florida. 

It turns out that the people that approached a distraught Brenda sitting on a park bench were hitchhikers and after listening to her troubles, they invited her to go with them to Florida. She took their offer and spent two years in Key Largo, Florida where she lived under bridges and ate from garbage cans. She then moved into a camp trailer with a man she met on the street and for the next seven years Brenda lived with this man in Key West. They both worked as day laborers cleaning boats and doing odd jobs.

In 2011, Brenda's relationship had fallen apart and she was back on the street.  She worked odd jobs and hung out on the beach. 

In December 2012, under her alias Kelsie Lyanne Smith, Brenda got a job as a live-in housekeeper for a family in Tampa Bay. A few months into the job, a police pulled Brenda over for driving with an expired license plate and found drugs in her car. She served two months in Jail on the drug possession offense. 

After she was released, she went back to jail for a few weeks on an identify theft charge. After that she lived in a tent community run by a Florida social service agency. 

This brings us to April 26th, 2013 and Brenda's surrender. The Florida authorities called Sergeant John Schofield at the police station in Lititz Borough. They informed him that Brenda Heist was not dead, and no longer missing. 
Brenda's children were college students now. Her daughter was 20 years old now. Morgan was shocked that her mom had abandoned them and said that Brenda had been a good mother before she disappeared.  Morgan said that Brenda doesn't deserve to see her and that she has no plans to see her mother. Morgan hopes one day she can forgive Brenda. "I hope to eventually forgive her one day for myself, not for her," she said.
Brenda's son, who is 23, doesn't want anything to do with her either.

Lee said that he doesn't see where it would do any good for either to see each other ever again, but he is working on forgiveness.

On May 3, 2013, Brenda was sent back to the Santa Rosa County Jail on various theft related charges.

On June 11, 2013 a judge in Pensacola, Florida sentenced Brenda, known in the Santa Rose court system as Kelsie Smith, to one year in jail in connection a probation violation. She pleaded no contest to failing to check in with authorities after leaving the Pensacola area following her release from jail in April. She'd been on probation for using someone else's identification during a traffic stop.


After her release Brenda moved in with her brother.

Cold Cases That Were Solved: The Triple Murders Of John & Anton Schuessler and Robert Peterson.


John Schuessler was born on November 30th, 1941. He had blue eyes and brown hair. He weighed 100 pounds and stood 5 feet 3 inches tall.  He acquired serious injuries in an auto accident. His mother had noticed a personality change after the accident and he seemed dominated by other boys of his age.

John's brother Anton was born on November 13th, 1943. He had brown eyes and brown hair. He weighed 90 pounds and stood 5 feet and 1 inch tall. Anton would always tag along with John. 

John and Anton's parents were Eleanor Holz Schuessler Kujawa and Anton Schuessler Sr.  Anton Sr. grew up in Germany and was the operator of a tailor shop.

John and Anton both liked bowling. Their father would take them often.

Robert Peterson was born on February 11th, 1942 in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois to Dorothy  and Malcolm Peterson. He had blue eyes and brown hair. He weighed 110 pounds and stood 5 feet 3 inches tall. Robert liked sports. His father  was a carpenter and Little League coach. In the fall his father was taking him bowling twice a week. Robert was bright, assertive and seven years older than any of the other three Peterson children.

In early 1955, Robert played hooky three times. When his parents questioned him, they told police, he said he was in the garage and basement and other places. They asked him if he was with anyone and Robert seemed afraid.

That was probably a normal kid thing that Robert did. He was probably afraid that he would get whomever he was with in trouble. However, it is possible something not right was happening.

On October 10th, 1955, a personality and aptitude test was given in Robert’s and John’s room at Farnsworth school. One of the questions was “Do you know anybody who is trying to do you harm or hurt you?” Robert and John were the only ones in the class of 30 who wrote “Yes“.

I wonder if they really looked into why they answered yes. Was it a bully or someone more dangerous they were afraid of?

On Friday, October 14th, John had gone to the Faetz & Nielsen alleys with the Robert and his father. 

The next day all John, Anton, Robert, James Schemitsch and Richard Padal bowled at the Natoma Lanes.
It was Sunday, October 16th, it had rained heavily earlier that morning and light showers were expected on and off for the rest of the day.

It was 1 p.m. and 14 year old Robert had dinner of fried chicken and mashed potatoes with his family. After dinner his father went out to clean the garage. 

13 year old John and 11 year Anton had returned from 11 a.m. mass at St. Tarcissus church and sat down to a chicken noodle soup lunch at 1:30 p.m.

John and Anton loved chicken soup. They were at the table when the phone rang around 2 p.m. John answered the phone and discovered it was Robert. They talked about going to a movie and Mrs. Schuessler heard the names of two northwest side theaters. 

Sunday was movie day for the Schuessler boys. They usually went with two 10 year old neighbors, James Schemitsch and Richard Padal, bur hey had gone Sunday driving with their families.

John and Anton put on their blue Cubs jackets. Anton’s jacket had lost the “U”. Anton got on his bike and John on Robert’s, which had been left at their home the day before, and they went to Robert's house.

At the Peterson home, John and Anton found that Mrs. Peterson had called the Loop theater where the Disney nature film, The African Lion, was playing. She found out the show was 1 hour 45 minutes long and the price would be 50 cents. Robert had $1.50 and the Schuesslers $2.50 left from bowling the day before.

It was now 3:30 p.m. and about 53 degrees outside. Robert’s put on his black White Sox jacket. Mrs. Peterson leaned out the front door of her home at 5510 Farragut and watched the three boys walk eagerly down the street toward a Milwaukee av. bus stop. Robert was in the middle of John and Anton. 

Numerous sightings of the boys were reported around town, but there was only one where they were positively identified. It was about 7:30 p.m. and the rain had been falling lightly since about 5 p.m. Robert, John, and Anton arrived at the Monte Cristo alley, 11 blocks east of the Kenneth intersection in Montrose. They stayed there for about half an hour, but did not bowl. 17 year old Ernest Niewiadomski and his sisters 20 year old Leona and 10 year old Delphine were bowling. They knew the Schuesslers boys so Ernest stopped to talk to them.

It was Anton's first adventure to the Loop without an adult. He told Ernest of going there, seeing “The African Lion“, and travelling there by bus and rapid transit. Ernest had asked them if they were going to bowl.“Not unless you pay for it“, one of the boys replied without further explanation.

The bowling alley was crowded. Two witnesses recalled a gang of tough-appearing young men, led by a black-haired man with long sideburns, seated behind the Niewiadomski children. A few minutes later Leona noticed Robert and Anton go to the bathroom, where they were for about five minutes. When they emerged, Robert called, “Let’s go, John“, in a purposeful way and all left. They seemed somewhat tense and eager to Leona and did not appear to be going home. Leona believes they were on something they considered an adventure. It was about 8 p.m. and the three boys wandered out into the dark.

Again there were sightings of the boys, but non could be positively confirmed. 

It was about 8:30 p.m., John and Anton's parents became restless and worried about their boys, Around 10:30 p.m. they decided to call the Petersons. Mr. Schuessler asked Mr. Peterson to pick him up, as he had no car and the two went to the police station. They arrived at the station shortly before midnight and found a sympathetic listener in Sgt. George Murphy. The sergeant began calling Loop theaters and alerted the downtown police and sent message on the missing boys to all the stations.

The fathers drove to the Loop and checked theater exits. They left about 2 a.m. and returned to the station where Murphy made more checks and asked police districts to check various routes which might be taken by the boys. Also, Murphy, without telling the fathers, alerted the sex bureau to the case.

Mr. Peterson took Mr. Schuessler home at 3:30 a.m. 

The next day, Mr. Peterson was at home with his family and Mr. Schuessler went to his tailor shop. At night Mrs. Niewiadomskis mother sent Leona over to tell the Schuesslers they had seen the boys in the Monte Cristo. The fathers began searching the bowling alleys in the area. 

It was now Tuesday morning, it was a cloudy and the noon temperature was about 52 degrees. 50 year old liquor salesman, Victor Livingston, decided to eat his lunch outdoors in Robinson reserve woods, a forest preserve along the Des Plaines river and due west of the city area where the boys disappeared. 

He turned his car south from Lawrence av. into a blacktop parking lot 100 feet east of the river. He took out a sandwich and glanced at the foot-high grass. There had been a 30 minute shower the night before.

Directly ahead of him he saw something which he thought was the lower part of an unclothed tailor’s dummy. Feet toward him, it was lying in a shallow ditch.

He got out and saw it was a body. This made him ill, so he returned to his car, and drove away rapidly. He reported his discovery at a nearby tavern. A few minutes later men were looking down into the ditch.

Sadly, the body was Robert’s. He was lying stomach down, head jammed against the east side of the ditch. John’s body was sprawled on his side to the north, one leg under Robert. Anton was on his back on the south, hands folded restfully across the lower part of the chest, and with the legs under Robert’s body. All boys' bodies were naked, smeared with dirt and had their eyes and mouths taped shut. It was obvious that there had been no attempt to conceal the bodies.

An unpaved drive leads from the north side of Lawrence near the lot entrance. The more exposed lot was selected to avoid leaving tracks.

After a brief examination at the scene and the identification of the boys, their bodies were removed. The postmortem was conducted at 4 p.m. in the County morgue. The findings have been reevaluated so often and so much conjecture has been added that they are confusing.

The cause of death was suffocation. Robert had been garroted with a long, flexible object, as the strangulation bruise extended around his neck. There was an unexplained horizontal fingernail mark on his throat. Bruises and a vertical fingernail mark on Anton’s neck disclosed hands had strangled him. A peculiar mark on John’s neck suggested a judo blow. There was
 no evidence of sexual molestation, but that has not been ruled out by police.

Examiners could not find any marks indicating the boys’ wrists or ankles had been tied. It was decided that rigor mortis had come and gone, indicating the time of death 16 hours or more before.

The wounds and bruises on the bodies also have become the subject of controversy. One argument is over whether one of the boys had a broken nose and another a broken jaw. The coroner’s pathologist at that time said there were no such fractures.

Fourteen small wounds were found on the left side of Robert’s head. There seemed to be four parallel patterns, one of four gouges, which might indicate a four pronged instrument had been swung at him four times, with not all the prongs striking each time.

Single heavy blows, apparently with fists, had caused large bruises near the right eye of John and the left eye of Anton, and behind the left ears of both. Anton’s right side had another bruise.

Three of the knuckles on one of Anton’s hands and one on the other were torn, as if he swung at a person and struck some intervening object.

Black smears on the soles of their feet indicated they had been walking in their bare feet. Dirt and blood smears suggested they were naked before they were murdered.

One medical expert has suggested that the blows, the tape applied in near suffocating manner, and the later strangling indicate an irrational overdoing of murder typical of maniacal fury, the brutal passion of a man subject to sadistic rages but normal at other times.

The time of death has been debated. The examiners found several ounces of partly digested food in the stomachs of the Schuesslers but nothing in Peterson’s.

This tends to place the time of the Schuessler’s death at shortly after they disappeared Sunday night. Robert probably was killed sometime later.

Anton’s folded hands were interpreted by some as an expression of remorse by the killer. However, it has been pointed out that some other person, who came on the bodies and lifted an arm to seen if they were dead, might have placed both arms in the position of rest.

The bruises on the faces and heads of the Schuessler boys suggest that a powerful man, much taller than they were, struck each first on the face. Then he grabbed and turned each boy, striking again in the back of the head to propel his victim thru a door. The Peterson boy’s head wounds suggest a weaker, frantic flailing of a weapon by a shorter assailant. 

Robert’s father was weeping as he left the morgue after he had identified his body. He cried, “O Robert, what have they done to you?” John and Anton were viewed by their father, who had to be helped to a car, saying, “If you have any kids, you know how I feel.” 

Services were held for John and Anton Jr. in St. Tarcissus church,  and for Robert in the Jefferson Park Lutheran church.

Less than a month later the Mr. Schuessler died of a heart attack while going through electric shock treatment for depression at the Forest sanitarium and rest home in Des Plaines. His wife Eleanor said, “Everything there was to live for is gone“.

During their investigation, police obtained reports of three cars parked outside the parking lot in the forest preserve and possibly five inside between 7:15 a.m. and 8:30 a.m. the day the bodies were found. One of the cars that were parked inside the lot was a light colored station wagon with wood trim. and two men were standing behind it.

47 year old Edward Rolfes said that he and his deaf-mute brother, Herman, had slept in their truck in a connected lot 300 feet from where the bodies were found. He said that they had been there all of the night before the discovery. He said that he drove back about 10:30 a.m. with his daughter to show where he had slept. Neither saw the bodies. But they saw three young men in a weathered blue Ford enter as they drove out. Edward's story was supported by lie detector tests. 

Fingernail scrapings of Robert's were analysed. Scientists found and identified several tiny fragments of an unusual nonmagnetic stainless steel.

There was a flake of material from Robert’s right foot that weighed only a millionth of an ounce. The speck was found to be a substance similar to casein glue and containing bits of lime, dolomite, sand, and other materials.

Police then surveyed metal working places. They visited 2,000 shops in a large area of the northwest side and the adjoining county area.

A series of parallel marks on John’s back could have come from the trunk mat of a 1942 to 1951 Packard. Police compiled a check list of 12,000 owners of such cars.

More than 44,000 people with some kind of information about the murders were interviewed. More than 3,500 suspects were questioned.

On December 28, 1956, two young sisters, Barbara, 15, and Patricia 13, went to the Brighton Theater on Archer Avenue to see an Elvis Presley movie, Love me Tender. On January 22nd, 1957, their naked bodies were found behind a guard rail on a country road in an unincorporated west of Chicago. Their bodies like those of the Schuessler-Peterson boys had apparently been thrown out of a car. However, the girls had not died of asphyxiation, instead their deaths were thought to have been caused by secondary shock due to exposure. The investigation into their deaths led to nowhere as well.

In 1989, ATF agents were investigating the February 17th, 1977, disappearance of Brach's candy heiress Helen Brach. This led to two Chicago stable owners, Silas Jayne and Richard Bailey, that were involved in serious criminal activity.

The ATF were told by informants that horse trainer, Kenneth Hansen (one of Jayne's employees) had boasted of committing John's, Anton's and Robert's murders and had threatened others that they would "end up like the Peterson boy." A second informant had told the FBI of Hansen's confession in the 1970's, but no action was taken.

Hansen was convicted in 1995.

Hansen was 22 years old at the time of the boys' murders. Supposedly he had met the boys while they were hitchhiking after having last been seen at the Monte Cristo Bowling Alley, which about eight miles from the Loop theater. Hansen lured them into the Idle Hour stables, claiming that he wanted to show them horses. When Robert discovered Hansen sexually abusing the Schuessler brothers, Hansen attacked all three and killed them.

Jayne discovered what Hansen had done and was enraged but he realized that the murders on his property had the potential to ruin him. He helped put the bodies in a station wagon, and disposed of them. 

Neighbors had reported to the police that they had heard screams from the stables on the day the boys disappeared, but it was not followed up on. 

After winning a second trial from an appeals court, Hansen was convicted again in 2002. He was sentenced to 200 to 300 years in prison. He died at Pontiac Correctional Center on September 12th, 2007, still proclaiming his innocence. 

According to a detective who worked on the case, Kenneth Hansen had preyed on hundreds of boys before his 1995 arrest and conviction for the murders.

Sunday, June 30, 2019

Cold Cases That Were Finally Solved: The Murder of Jessica Keen

Jessica Lyn Keen was born on September 24th, 1975 in Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio to Rebecca Keen Smitley and James Keen. She was 15-years-old an honor student and a cheerleader. Everyone loved her. Jessica composed music and wanted to become a singer or an actress. She also had a huge passion for animals. She was planing on studying Zoology when she got to college. 
Things were going great for Jessica and then she met 18-year-old Shawn Thompson. Soon after she quit cheerleading. Her parents objected to her seeing Thompson. Jessica's grades started to suffer because she would skip school to see Thompson. Jessica and her mom began arguing a lot and couldn't stand to be around each other. Her parents didn't know what to do so they placed her, so on March 4th, 1991 they placed Jessica in a home for troubled teens called "Huckleberry House".

For the first few weeks that Jessica attended counseling at the Huckleberry House, things seemed to be going well. She was making peace with her mistakes and owning up to the problems that she had caused.
On March 15th, Jessica had a bad argument with Thompson over the phone that ended their relationship. After she departed Huckleberry House to go to the mall. Jessica was last seen alive at the bus stop at around 6 p.m. This was the day before she was going to be released to go home.

At 11 p.m., bed checks at Huckleberry revealed that Jessica hadn't returned. Jessica's mom was contacted and she was so concerned that she put in a missing persons' report with police. Jessica's mom thought that maybe she was with Thompson.
After being missing for two days, Jessica's body was found at the back of Foster Chapel Cemetery, 20 miles from Huckleberry. She had been raped and bludgeoned to death. She was wearing a mangled bra and one sock. She still had on her ring and watch, but a pendant with the word "taken" was nowhere to be found. Jessica had duct tape around her hands and her head covering her mouth.

Investigators believed that Jessica was abducted from the bus stop or coerced into a vehicle, raped, and held for at least six hours. Then sometime in the middle of the night on March 16th, she escaped from her attackers and ran towards the cemetery. Evidence showed that she hid behind several tombstones. One of her socks  her knee print was found behind one of the tombstones. Also, one of the tombstones had her blood on it along with a big crack.

It is surmised that she saw a light from a farmhouse and while running towards it, she slammed into a fence post. This allowed her attackers to catch up with her. They raped her, beat her to death by hitting a tombstone against her head. This would explain the blow to the forehead and the evidence of rape that was discovered in her autopsy. The autopsy also showed that Jessica had no alcohol or drugs in her system.

Initially, the police directed their focus on Shawn, but he and several friends had left for Florida during the time that Jessica was killed, and DNA evidence cleared him in the case.

Crimestoppers anonymous and police together put up a reward on information in Jessica's murder.
Jessica's parents put a cross with her name on it where her body was discovered.

Jessica is buried 7 miles from the scene of her death, in Sunset Cemetery on Rt. 40 in Franklin County.

"I try to imagine her as older. . . . I dream about that, envision what her life would have been," said her sister, Heather. "But she'll always be just my little sister."

Chantal Lewis was Jessica 's best friend. "She was a very beautiful person," Lewis said. "She had this sparkle in her eye. You knew she was gonna be something."

Seventeen years later, based on DNA evidence taken from Jessica's body, Marvin Lee Smith was arrested for her abduction, rape, and murder. He had been charged with assaults against two Columbus women and was out on bond when she was killed. He eventually was convicted for the two Columbus attacks and served nine years in prison. Since he was a felon, he had to submit his DNA, which led to the match.

In 2009, Smith confessed to Jessica's murder to avoid the death penalty. His details from the confession matched with that at the crime scene. He also confirmed that he was the only person responsible. Smith revealed that he had used a seventy-pound tombstone to strike her over the head. In February 2009, he pled guilty to aggravated murder, kidnapping, and rape, and was sentenced to life in prison and will not be eligible for parole until 2038.

Cold Cases That Were Finally Solved: The McStay Family Disappearance

Joseph McStay was 40 years old and lived in Fallbrook, California with his 43 year old wife Summer and their sons Gianni (age 4) and Joseph Jr. (age 3). Everybody loved Joe, the boys were full of life and Summer was an amazing mom. She was very protective of her kids. Joe owned and operated Earth Inspired Products, a company that built decorative fountains, which he ran from home. 
The family would spend their free time surfing and hanging out at the beach. 
On the morning of Thursday, February 4th, 2010, Joe was talking on the phone with his dad, Patrick. He informed his father he was going to meet with a business associated around noon, so he had to get going. Summer spent the day overseeing the renovations being done on their house and planning for Joseph Jr's birthday party that weekend.
At lunch time Joe ate at a Chick-fil-a in the local mall. He had talked business with Chase Merrit. This was the last known sighting of Joe.

Later that night, at 7:47 pm, a neighbor's surveillance system  caught the McStay family's 1996 Isuzu Trooper driving off. In the surveillance recording, who was in the vehicle could not be seen. 

At 8:28 pm,  Joe's business associate, Merritt, received a call from Joe's phone, which went to voice mail. Merritt later told police that he ignored it because he was watching a movie. Joe's cellphone pinged a tower in Fallbrook. This was the last call made from Joe's phone.

On February 9th, Dan Kavanaugh, who managed Joe's business' website, contacted Patrick to inform him that he hadn't been able to get a hold of Joe or Summer for days. Patrick lived in Texas, so he called Joe's brother, Michael, who lived near Joe.

On February 10th, law enforcement was notified about the missing family. Officers went to the McStay's house, but did not go inside. The doors were locked and the police said that they didn't find anything suspicious so they left.

Merrit says he decided to go over to the McStay's house to check things out for himself. He drove past the house and saw the family's two dogs, Bear and Digger outside. 

On February 13th, Michael drove to the McStay's house to see what is going on. Merrit met Michael there and they both climbed inside the house through an open window. Eggs were rotting on the kitchen counter and coffee grinds were scattered about. There was popcorn on the couch and clothes were thrown everywhere. Michael decided to wait a few days, to see if the family would show up before calling police.

On February 15th, Michael contacted the Sheriff's department, who went to the house to investigate and immediately notified homicide as per policy. The officers didn't seal off the residence, they simply locked the house back up and left to go get search warrants.

In the meantime, Joe's mother went to the McStay's home and cleaned up the kitchen. Investigators also let Joe's family and friends remove some items from the home. 

Authorities also had put out a BOLO on the family's Isuzu and instantly got a hit. It had been impounded from a mall near the Mexican border, between 5 and 5:30 p.m., four days after the family had went missing.

On February 19th, the officers returned with warrants to fully search the home. They discovered that a week before the family disappeared, there was a search on the family's computer about getting passports to Mexico.

Summer's sister stated that her passport was expired

The McStay family had left their computers and the kids' stroller behind.

The McStay family had more than $100,000 in bank accounts, with no withdrawal of funds, and their accounts were untouched after their disappearance.

If the McStay family was going on a trip or running away or what have you, why didn't they empty their accounts?

Investigators also uncovered surveillance footage from the evening of February 8th, that showed a family of four resembling the McStays walking across the border into Mexico around 7 p.m.

If that had been the McStay family crossing the boarder, what did they do for an hour and a half before they crossed the boarder? 

There was no surviellance footage of the McStay family from the mall, the bank or any of the stores between there and the border.

Why would the McStay family park their vehicle and walk over the border in the dark?

Patrick said that Summer was fearful of Mexico and would never take her kids there. He also stated that he was sure the people in the surveillance footage was not the Joe and his family. 

Patrick was upset how the case had been handled so far and the direction it was being led into, so he contacted the head of a non-profit search and rescue organization, Tim Miller.

Miller traveled to California to investigate the McStay family disappearance. Miller recruited investigative journalist, Steph Watts for assistance. 


They search the McStay home and are baffled that the authorities never sealed off the home as a crime scene. They find no signs of foul play, however they find no indications that the family was planning a trip.

The next day Miller and Steph travel to the Mexican border in the search for answers, but called off their search once the police had shown them the surveillance video of a family crossing the border.

The case went cold until the FBI took it over in 2013.

On November 11th, 2013 at 9:58 a.m., a motorcyclist called 911 to say he had found human remains while he was riding in the Mohave desert. When the sheriff's department arrived on scene, they found two shallow graves and four skeletons. 
Two days later, the remains were identified being the missing McStay family. Their deaths were ruled a homicide and the authorities said they believed the family died of blunt force trauma. Investigators believed that the murder weapon was a 3-pound sledgehammer, which was found in the grave containing the remains of Summer and her son. They also believe that the family was tortured before death.

On November 15th, the San Bernardino sheriff's department took over the case. They re-interviewed and looked at everyone from the McStay's lives.
Michael had withdrew money from Joe's bank account in the first few weeks after the family disappeared. He also had sold off some of Joe's property. Michael claims he did that so the McStay's house wouldn't go into foreclosure.

Joe's business was worth more than a million dollars. 
Kavanaugh had began withdrawing money from the business account starting on February 6th, 2010. Kavanaugh claims he had permission from the family to do this to use it to keep Joe's business going. In 2011, without the family's permission and even though he didn't own any part of the company, Kavanaugh sold Joe's business.
Merritt was the last known person to have had contact with Joseph McStay. Merritt had felony convictions for burglary and receiving stolen property. His most recent felony conviction, in 2001, was for the theft of $32,000 worth of welding and drilling equipment from San Gabriel Valley Ornamental Iron Works. An acquaintance of Merritt's told a San Diego reporter, "I think police should look at him and anyone associated with him."

Merritt alleged that Summer had anger issues and that Joseph had been ill for some time with a mysterious ailment. Joseph's family confirmed that he had an unexplained illness and that Summer was possessive of her husband, but they called Merritt's suggestion that she was responsible for his illness unfounded.
The McStays' relatives believe that Summer's email records show that her ex-boyfriend, Vick W. Johansen, was obsessed with Summer for years after their relationship ended. Johansen had a criminal history that included violent threats, felony vandalism, disturbing the peace, interfering with a business and resisting a peace officer. The family also said that his pattern of movement around the time of the disappearance was suspicious.
On November 5th, 2014, detectives from the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department arrested Merritt in connection with the deaths of the McStay family on the fact that they had recovered Merrit's DNA from their car. He was charged with four counts of murder, and the district attorney was seeking the death penalty.
Patrick was shocked and saddened that Merrit would do such a thing to Joe and his family. Patrick said that he thinks Merrit killed the family over money and that Joe possibly was going to fire Merrit before the family went missing.

Prosecutors alleged that Merritt's motive was a gambling problem, and that killed the family over money. They said that he wrote checks totaling more than $21,000 on Joseph's business account in the days after the family was killed, and then went on a gambling spree at nearby casinos, where he lost thousands of dollars. 

Merritt's trial was had repeated delays and as of February 2016, he had gone through five attorneys. 

In January 2018, a trial-setting conference was scheduled for February 23. Merritt's attorney filed a motion in San Bernardino Superior Court on April 7, 2018, arguing that Joseph's business and accounting records were hearsay evidence and therefore inadmissible. On May 4, the case was scheduled to go to trial in July 2018. 
The trial finally began on January 7, 2019, in a San Bernardino court, with both sides making opening statements.
On June 10, 2019, a San Bernardino County jury found 62 year old Merritt guilty of murdering the McStay family. He could face the death sentence as a result.

On June 24th, 2019, a jury of 12 people recommended a sentence of death for Merritt, in counts two, three and four, but life in prison without the possibility of parole on count one.

The jury recommended Merritt be put to death for the murders of Summer McStay and her two young sons, but recommended life in prison without parole for the murder of Joseph McStay.

Merritt will be formally sentenced September 27th of this year.

It is expected that Merritt and his defense team will appeal the quadruple murder conviction.

Do you agree that Merrit is guilty and that he acted alone?

Saturday, June 29, 2019

House Of Horrors.

Scholars were baffled when in Ashkelon, on the Southern coast of Israel, archaeologists discovered a sinister sight in the sewers under a Roman bathhouse. Someone had disposed of human beings down there, specifically human babies. 

All of the infants were the same age and with no signs of disease or skeletal malformation, suggested infanticide rather than a catastrophe such as epidemic.

All the infants are thought to probably be girls because female infanticide was widespread in Roman society. 

In a letter written in 1 B.C a husband instructs his pregnant wife, "if it is a boy keep it, if a girl discard it." 

The Medieval Bionic Man

In Italy a bizarre discovery was made when archaeologists found a skeleton in an ancient necropolis. Dating back to the 6th to 8th centuries, the skeleton was of a man in his 40's or 50's.  It is thought that he was a member of the mysterious German barbarians known as the Longobords. 

Instead of a hand, the man had a knife attached to his arm. His teeth on one side were worn down. The Archaeologists said that "The survival of this Longobard male testifies to community care, family compassion and a high value given to human life."

There was also a headless horse and several greyhounds found in the necropolis.

Were These South American Tunnels Used For Human Experimentation?

Chavín de Huantar
It is an archaeological site in Peru and was the religious center of the Chavin people and the capital of the Chavin culture. The Chavin culture dates back more than 3,000 years.

In 2018, researchers used small robots to travel underneath the largest existing temple of the site. These robots made their way through cracks in the stone work and, to the amazement of the researchers, found a large network of tunnels. Inside these 30 interlocking tunnels human remains and other artifacts were found.  

Researches aren't exactly sure what the tunnels were used for or if there is more of them yet to be discovered. Some theorize that they were used to trap people and use them for secret rituals involving hallucinogenic plants and sacrifice.

The site was described as “the birthplace of South American culture."

No,The Hunger Stones Is Not A Prequel To The Hunger Games.

The Hunger Stones Of Czechia
In 2018, a terrible drought parched the Elbe river as this area suffered record heatwaves. As the water level of the river dropped, frightening messages carved into rock were revealed. These 700 year old inscriptions reminds us of the brutal wars raged over the precious resource known as water.

One of the inscriptions reads: 
"If you again see this stone, so will you weep, so shallow was the water in the year 1417."

Another inscription expressed that drought had brought a bad harvest, lack of food, high prices and hunger for poor people.

No one knows what happened to the authors of the stones.

The Hunger stones are among the oldest hydro-logical landmarks in Central Europe.

It's Not Part Of The Great Wall Of China, But a Pyramid Built On Human Sacrifices.

Recently in China, at a site called Shimao. a new excavation revealed an enormous walled settlement topped with a stepped pyramid. The 4,000 year old pyramid is massive. It stands 229 feet tall and totals eleven separate platforms. 

Originally mistaken for part of China's Great Wall, this Bronze Age site was built on at least six pits full of decapitated human heads(all of young women) which served as a building sacrifice. 

Experts are in awe at this complex society they didn't even know existed. Researchers say that this walled settlement is not only the largest of its time in ancient China, but was also among the largest centers in the world. 

This finding calls into question the traditional text-based narrative in which Chinese civilization supposedly arose on the Central Plains and then spread to other regions.

Some experts theorize that this finding is evidence of a pyramid culture with connections to the same rituals and buildings seen in South America and Africa at the time.

It is not clear what happened that caused the pyramid to be abandoned and fall into ruin. But archaeological excavations are ongoing, so more answers might be coming.

Ancient Secret Cults Twisted Ritual?

Hadrian's Wall is in the UK and was a defensive fortification used by the Romans to keep tribes, in what is now modern day Scotland, from attacking their settlements. 
In 2018, in a fort next to the wall, a hand made of solid bronze was unearthed. Some believe the hand was connected to the worship of an ancient god known as Jupiter Dolichenus whose mysterious cult was widespread in the Roman Empire from the early-2nd to mid-3rd centuries AD. It was possible that the hand was placed there on purpose in celebration of victory against Scottish tribes during the Roman invasion. 

In one account of the Roman invasion, written by famous Roman writer of the time, Cassius Dio, the Roman army was going to  annihilate the Scottish tribes.


“We are not going to leave a single one of them alive, down to the babies in their mothers’ wombs, not even they must live. The whole people must be wiped out of existence, with none to shed a tear for them, leaving no trace.”