
·S3 E16
The Real Killer Season 3: Ep. 16, The Perfect Case
Episode Transcript
A warning.
Speaker 2This episode contains depictions of violence and conversations about suicide that may be disturbing and triggering for some listeners.
If you are struggling with suicidal thoughts, please fast forward to the end of this episode to find out where help is available.
Speaker 3So.
Speaker 2I've been working on this for more than a year, and you know, like I have questions.
Some people wrote in they had a lot of questions and theories and thoughts.
Speaker 4Yeah, You've never been afraid of hard questions because they do force us to take a look at our case.
Speaker 2As this season is about to come to an end, there are still so many unanswered questions, and especially since the podcast has come out, I've gone back into the transcripts.
I've gone back to like, is there anything that I've missed.
I'm Leah Rothman.
This is The Real Killer, Episode sixteen, The Perfect Case.
Before we can move forward with our finale, I need to address something that's happened since our last episode.
Two days ago, I received an email from Byron's lead attorney, Brian Russell on behalf of himself and the rest of the legal team about last week's Littering Case episode.
It began in part like this, quote.
We've finally digested last week's podcast and are disappointed in how you decided to approach the discrepancy with Kelly's misdemeanor.
We've been nothing but open, honest, and straightforward with you, and we are baffled by this one point eighty in your tone and attitude toward us.
We've never concealed or obfuscated the fact that Kelly's ticket on case net had another case number belonging to Brendan.
Brian continues.
Throughout our work on this case, we believed that Kelly's sentence of forty eight hours shock time, thirty days in jail in two years probation with the suspended execution of that sentence was accurate because the charge was a Class A misdemeanor, she had skipped her court date and only appeared when picked up on a warrant.
We believed that any discrepancy was the portion of the docket that says that Kelly's sentence was quote consecutive with case number.
Brian continues, that's why we're confused when you said this was a new development, that it kept you up all night.
Brian goes on to say, how in at least a few documents and filings which they had shared with me dating back to late twenty twenty three.
This other case number was mentioned in the footnotes.
He says I never asked about it.
Then, Brian says there was a timeline they shared where in the notes section this other case number was mentioned.
He says I never asked about it.
He also points out that there were emails exchanged where I had questions about Kelly's docket and I never asked about it then either.
Brian wrote that I had plenty of time and opportunity to bring this discrepancy up to them.
He's right, except the reason I never ever asked them about it was because in the thousands of pages I alone have had to go through, I never saw it.
Had I seen it, I would have asked about it long ago.
Had I seen it, the way we presented Kelly's littering case when it first came up in episode seven would have been very different.
Again, I'm sorry, but I never saw it.
The last line in Brian's email reads quote when I said I hoped you didn't feel misled.
I should have been clearer.
We did not mislead you.
We did not hide anything from you.
We did not misrepresent anything to you.
We were open, honest, upfront and answered all of your questions to the best of our ability in a complicated and fact intensive case.
I remain proud of our team and the work that we've done to help free an innocent man who was deprived of a fair trial.
Let me be very clear, Byron's legal team has been open, honest, and very available to answer all of my questions all along the way, and I'm grateful for that.
And I never said they misled me.
I was just surprised that they knew about this other case number, and in all of the times we'd spoken about the docket it never came up.
But whether or not they knew about it is not the issue.
The reason I needed to interview them about the discrepancy was first because I simply needed to ask them about this other docket number, since again I had never seen it before.
And second, I needed to share with the lit Listen and Byron's team that considering this other case number, I now cannot confidently say that that was in fact Kelly's sentence, and it needed to be addressed because I gave a platform for the theory that that was Kelly's sentence, which meant she might have been in some bigger trouble and in turn might have cooperated with prosecutors in the case against Byron.
I know that Byron's legal team one hundred percent believes that's Kelly's sentence, and hell, who knows it might just be Kelly says it isn't without proof, I just don't know either way.
Okay, as we are about to begin our last episode, I want to acknowledge that even with all of the left turns that have happened so far, we have never lost sight that this whole podcast and investigation is in an attempt to get to the truth about what happened to Anastasia.
Now stay with me, because we are not going to go chronologically.
We are going to start with my most recent interview with Byron, which took place after both of Kelly's episodes came out.
Byron's lead attorney, Brian Russell, wanted to be on the call, so that day, Brian and I speak for a few minutes before Byron calls in.
Speaker 1Hey, Ala, Hi, how are you good?
Good good good?
Speaker 2Just so you know, Brian says, there was so much in Kelly's interview that confirms for him.
She lied back when she came forward, and she's still lying today.
Brian says, Kelly conveniently doesn't remember key things, then other times comes up with wild new details, like a three way call that happened between her, Byron, and Justin that night after Anastasia was murdered.
Brian says, that didn't happen.
What do you make of the level of conviction that she has when she says Byron killed Anastasia and she knows it, he knows it.
Speaker 1What do you What do you make of that?
Speaker 5I mean, I make of it that she wants people to believe her.
And then I also think, I mean, she's admitted to having major problems with crack, cocaine and meth anthetamy.
Both of those drugs affect your brain in a way that can lead to psychosis, which can lead to the creation of false memories.
So even where she was when she came forward with the story, maybe she does believe it.
Maybe maybe in her mind these are actual memories that she has created, right, but none of them line up with any physical fact or any other person that can support her story, any element of it.
Speaker 6We don't need to I don't.
Speaker 5Care why Kelly was I us know that she wied right, I just know that her story isn't true because of the physical evidence.
Speaker 3Here we go, Okay, hold on just saying.
Speaker 1Then Byron calls in.
Speaker 7Okay, Willa are you there?
Speaker 1I'm here?
Speaker 3Okay, Byron, are you there yet?
Speaker 1I am Hileiah Hi, Byron?
How are you.
Speaker 3Better than some people would like me to be?
But yeah, no, it's always an under the circumstances kind of question.
Speaker 7But yeah, I'm good.
Thanks.
Speaker 2So you've listened to the podcast.
I mean, you emailed me, you've listened to the podcast.
I mean, this is a very big question right off the bat.
But any anything or anything that you want to say right off the bat, I don't know.
Speaker 3I think we kind of touched on this a little bit earlier.
When I first emailed you, I said that, yeah, I was kind of withholding John and was sort of waiting, you know, for something, for some sort of strong reaction.
I guess one way or the other or some way that I might contribute, and it never really materialized for me.
So I think as the podcasts went on and I heard more, there was a certain point where, you know, I was no longer able, so I actually haven't listened past, I think because A seventh and so everything that I've gotten since then has been kind of second hit.
And it's interesting because late ever since that happened, it seems like that was really when things It seemed like that was when for me, at least, more interesting content started to come up.
There was stuff that I had never heard before.
You did interviews with people that you know that I had never necessarily even heard say certain things that they were saying, and so, you know, way I was glad that I wasn't able to listen because some of that stuff was kind of upsetting and a reminder I think of how really I guess I've lived in a bubble, and you know, it's not like it's been an echo chamber, but I'm in a sense I'm kind of protected from a lot of people's opinions as far as the case goes, and so it was kind of a return to a not very good place as far as that goes, you know, just being reminded of those people and their and their opinions and you know, some of the stuff that they said in that way.
Speaker 2In your email, you said that you were waiting to listen to everything or waiting for the other shoe to drop.
What was the other shoe?
Like, what were you what did you mean by the other shoe?
Speaker 3So that's I think the sort of latent streak of pessimism.
Speaker 7That I've got.
Speaker 3It was just sort of waiting for things to take an ugly turn.
And just from the sound of it, Kelly's episodes were were that a turn at least as far as I'm concerned, you know, I was, I mean, honest, I was initially a little bothered by the idea that she would come forward after all of the information had come in, after she'd had a chance, had a chance to listen to all of the previous episodes.
That really hit a bigger pature and a greater understanding of what was going on with the case and with things that I just I know that she wasn't previously aware of as far as you know, factual, and so it was I just my my sort of kneejered reaction to that was to be a little angry, I guess about just the I guess giving her the platform to just sort of spout whatever she's going to spout with this new inform nation to her, or at least after she'd had time to formulate whatever she was going to formulate, and I don't know, And so that was sort of my reaction to that.
I felt was a little I don't know, I don't want to say unfair, because that's not really I don't know, that's not quite the right right word for it.
Speaker 2Just so you know that her not speaking, I asked her to listen to all of the episodes before making a decision on whether or not to talk.
So it wasn't like she did that on her own, I said, because she was considering talking, and I just said, just just wait and listen to all of the episodes and then make a decision one way or another.
Speaker 1So just you know, that's on me.
That's on me.
Speaker 3Yeah, And I understand that, you know, you're trying to ensure that the person is going to have an understanding that this is not going to be us, you know, getting helly on and hit her with a bunch of accusations or whatever.
I mean, it makes sense because you know, you wanted her to see that you're coming in this with an even hand.
But you know, I think that the net effect was the same.
I think that her having had an opportunity to hear all of that did give her I think of a little bit better preparedness, I think for some of the stuff and some of the directions that things were going to go.
Although based on what I've heard, I mean, she really didn't use that to your advantage much.
Speaker 1Yeah, I mean, I don't know.
Speaker 2You said you haven't listened to the episodes yet, but I mean, right, it to me, just at face value, didn't seem like somebody who had studied the podcast and came in with you know, you know, perfect answers to questions.
I mean, sure, it's meandering, it's all over the map.
It didn't feel calculated to me.
But but that is side.
Speaker 1We move on.
Now.
Speaker 2I am a little meandering going between questions I have for Byron and asking him to respond to some of Kelly's allegations.
Let's talk about what did Why did Anastasia have a stun gun?
Speaker 1You know, to the best of your knowledge.
Speaker 3Yeah, I was gonna say, I don't.
Speaker 7I don't really know.
Speaker 3I don't remember as I were talking about it as far as like reasons or anything.
I don't even remember when she bought it, or or really or anything about it.
Speaker 7I knew that he had one.
Speaker 3But you know, I also, again I knew that Byron Mercia that Justin had one.
Speaker 1Did you have a stun gun?
Speaker 7I did?
Speaker 1Why did you have one?
Speaker 3I bought it, well, hardly because they had them.
And first just for me personally, it seemed like.
Speaker 7Not a bad idea to own one.
Speaker 3The neighborhood that I lived in was not especially I want to say it was a bad neighborhood.
Speaker 7It wasn't great.
I lived around a lot of bars and.
Speaker 3Clubs, and you know, there was a there was a bit of violence that would kind of sort of erupt here and there, fight assaults, muggings.
I was mugged just down the street.
Speaker 7From my apartment one time at my point, you know, for like ten dollars in my wallet, you know.
And I've been at.
Speaker 3One point beaten up just I guess because I look different outside of a Country and Western bar that was in that area.
Like three guys just attacked me, and you know, so it seemed like not an unreasonable thing to.
Speaker 1Have, Tara.
Speaker 2I'm sure you know this, but Tara told Sergeant Kilgore the story that all of you three, I think, tased a homeless guy who were all there for the tasing of this homeless guy sitting on some steps he was drunk in Westport?
Speaker 1What why?
What can you tell me about that?
Speaker 3I have absolutely no recall of anything like that happening, So I don't know where Kara got that from or what she was talking about.
Speaker 2What do you make of Anastasia's stun gun being found on her bed?
Speaker 7That's a good.
Speaker 3Question, and I don't really I don't really.
Speaker 7Have an answer.
I can only wonder about.
Speaker 3It, and I'd rather not use this platform to speculate.
Speaker 2Okay, all right, let's talk about some of the stuff that Kelly said in her interview.
So let's start with well, keeping with the homeless people in Westport, Kelly said that you paid an overweight homeless guy named Slog to do jumping jacks as a way to humiliate him.
Speaker 1Did that happen?
Why did you do that?
Speaker 7Okay?
Speaker 3So this is I think a really good example of Kelly taking a seed of something and turning it issue something else.
What happened?
Uh, there was a guy who also panhandled kind of a mass area, and we justin Anastasia and I I don't remember if Kelly was there, but I know that the three of us at least were, and Dustin had just bought some donuts and we were walking down the street.
He had a box of a dozen donuts and we saw this guy and he asked us for some spare change, and Justin said, you know, well out of a patenty that we were willing to come.
And so Justin said that I'll gi you a donut if you do some jumping jacks, and.
Speaker 7And the guy.
Speaker 3Readily agreed and gnu and did some jumping jacks and Justin but haven't don't that it was one of those things where I really I was not aultigether comfortable with the situation, but I was still in a kind of like sort of moment way a hubist bias.
And of course, you know, not my proudest moment.
Speaker 7By any means, but yeah, I mean that kind of happened.
Speaker 1Okay, Okay.
So Kelly tells the story.
Speaker 2That you all went to that Mormon temple, you were dressed up as a priest, and you did this big tour of the church because there was a plan to kidnap you know, the bishop or something and hold him for ransom money.
But she says, you know, you spent this whole Saturday on this tour and what can you tell me about that?
Speaker 3Yeah, we we did.
Speaker 7Take a short see r LDS Temple.
Speaker 3On South Chrystler and Independence Surius, the States Fire Building.
Speaker 7And.
Speaker 3I did go wearing a clerical shirt that I owned.
You know, it was one of those one of those things where it felt really transgressive.
You know, we were feeling pretty like goofy and like we were really just by being there.
I felt like we were doing something we probably shouldn't be.
So it wasn't really a bad thing, but you know, that was something that we definitely enjoyed doing.
Speaker 7It was you know, or you.
Speaker 3Know, if it was like kind of pushing.
Speaker 7Some boundaries, then we.
Speaker 3As a as a general rule, we were all for that sort of thing.
As far as a plan, this.
Speaker 7Actually came up at my trial briefly.
Speaker 3They wanted to introduce something that Kelly had talked about this then too, trying to say that we had justin Stasia and I had a plan to blow up a church or take the like the president or whatever they head of the church hostage or something.
So I would say to that that we did have a plan.
Speaker 7In name only.
Speaker 3We were sitting around one night and it became this ridiculous sort of thing.
The plan in question calls for us getting some T four and having night vision goggles and stuff like that.
Clearly, this was not an actual plan that anybody was going to carry out or anticipated plan carrying out.
Speaker 2Okay, I mean, I think that she uses that as an example of some of like that and going to rob Justin's.
Speaker 1Parents, that there were these.
Speaker 2Plans that never came to fruition, so that when the plan came up to kill Anastasia, she didn't necessarily believe it because there had been so many crazy plans before that she didn't think it was anything that you guys would follow through with.
Speaker 8Okay, Okay.
Speaker 2She says that there was the night of October twenty second, and this was a new detail that she shared with me.
On the night of October twenty second, there was a three way phone call that night after every one was back home, between you, Kelly and Justin.
Was there a three way call that evening?
Speaker 1No, that's no, you never.
You never spoke with Justin that night.
Speaker 7No.
Speaker 3He dropped me off at my place and I didn't speak with him until.
Speaker 7The next morning.
Okay.
Speaker 2Kelly said that this was a new another new detail she had told the story before, where she said, like, how could you have killed her?
Speaking about Anastasia?
You know you're a murderer.
How do you feel about that?
And you know, and the story i'd heard this before, we hadn't heard this before that she said that, you said, I don't consider myself a murderer.
Murderer, doesn't feel bad, and I feel bad about what happened, or something to that effect.
But this time that she told the story, she said that you grabbed her by the neck and threw her or slammed her.
Again is the wall did that happen?
Speaker 6No?
Speaker 3No, I never laid my hand on Kelly in any violent ways.
That's not been my character.
Speaker 7I don't That's just not me.
Speaker 3And I just like to add briefly one thing.
Speaker 7I think that.
Speaker 3When you say, you know, oh, here's a new detail, I think, really what you're saying is that that here's.
Speaker 7Some more bullshit.
Speaker 3I just think I don't know it is It is so ridiculous to me, this idea that you know, she just keeps piling on and piling on, and that anybody believes her if these were things that actually happened, These were things that were troubling her or whatever, she would have come out with them years ago.
There was the time for unburdening was two thousand one, two thousand and two.
At this point, I feel like anybody giving any credibility whatsoever to anything she is saying that his quote unquote knew is the officer.
Speaker 2Kelly also said that you had told other people like Abraham and Tara that you killed Anastasia.
Speaker 1What do you have to say about that?
Speaker 3And that's another great example of that.
Again, you know Brom and Tara.
While you know Kara's not with us anymore, she was not a person in Vince words and Brom.
Speaker 7Never was either.
Speaker 3If they had something to say, if they knew something, they are so transparent.
Tarah was so transparent about everything.
She didn't keep anything in.
This would have come out so long ago, becad it actually happened.
So that's that's all I have to say about that.
Speaker 2Okay, Kelly says that there was a time that you welded a pitchfork to your car and put a chicken chicken carcass on it and drove around town with that.
Speaker 3Yeah, that's that's actually kind of true.
So, like I said, we were always into kind of transgressive stuff.
I had a group of friends who we we all had these big, old cars and we One of my friends was a welder and an artist, and he said, hey, you've had this car for a little while, let's let's put something on it.
And I said, okay, what have you got?
I went ounce to the garage and he kind of a pitchfork, and I said, absolutely not.
And my other friend was like, no, no, I think that's I think you have to do that.
I think that's going to be the thing.
So I consented, and he welded the head of this pitchfork to the hood of my car.
About a week or two later, I was over at my friend Robert house and Abraham was there and they had apparently they had thought out an eight pound fire chicken and had no intention of actually cooking.
And while I was using the restroom at one point from took the chicken out to the car and put it on the hitch work.
And then when we when I went to go leave that new thing, I saw it there and was just like okay, because it was another We pranked each other all the time like this.
All my friends that had these cars, we oftentimes would put food on them, and there was kind of a rule that you couldn't remove the food to you know, let the weather and animals carry it away.
So I was stuck with a chicken stuck to front of my car.
And I know that a lot got made out of that, calling it a chicken carcass.
I think it's one good example.
It would have been dinner, just like a week before Adams, but it was not finished.
Speaker 2It was just a goof The next two are a little uncomfortable, but I'm just going to ask you.
So she also, Kelly also said that you participated in necrophilia.
Speaker 7I heard about this.
Speaker 3I was in a way shot and also disgusted, but also it's so outlandish that I had to laugh.
It is so unbelievable.
Speaker 7I just I can't.
Speaker 3Even fathom the idea of this.
Unequivocally, No, no, absolutely not.
Speaker 1Did you ever say it to her as as like, you.
Speaker 7Know just what I think I even know.
Speaker 3I don't think I've.
Speaker 7Even joked about something like.
Speaker 3That, Like I don't know, but I just I really believe that that's something that she's just come.
Speaker 2Up with on her own, And you understand, I just have to I mean, I have to give you a chance to respond to this this stuff because she says it.
She also said that you told her, and again this is uncomfortable, But she also said that you told her the best way for you, or the quickest way when you were masturbating, was to do it over dead animals.
Speaker 3Yeah, that's absurd too, same or Eason, maybe even more so.
Speaker 7I don't know.
Speaker 3It's hard to weigh those sorts of things.
I love animals, not in that way.
Speaker 2Okay, this one is definitely more serious.
Kelly said that there was a plan to kill your father to basically keep him from having to die a very painful death or a prolonged death, and because you know he had HIV.
What do you have to say about that?
She tells a very specific story that you were going to lure your father out to like some cornfields in the middle of nowhere and say that you had, you know, car trouble, and while he was under the hood of the car, you were going to shoot him.
Speaker 1What do you have to say about that?
Speaker 3There's a lot that I could probably say about that, but I'll say this, I do think it's interesting that the same or that he's two stories that she's concocted one about a death that actually took place, and another about a death as she says was planned to take place.
That they both involved driving out somewhere to a secluded thought and shooting someone.
I don't I don't really know what to make about that, other than you know, it seems like it's it's just kind of a motif.
I guess that shows up in her imaginings.
No, that plan never used it.
Speaker 7The idea of that is reprehensible.
Speaker 6To me.
Speaker 3I love my father, but the idea of putting him out of some of that and misery, uh, that that was not something I had a hard enough time really making the decision of when the time came to take them off fights for the words, that was incredibly difficult, and I would say the hardest decision I ever had to make.
And to claim that that was something that I wouldn't impasily, it's disgusting that plan never existed.
Speaker 7That thought never entered my head.
Speaker 3It's just poor bullshit.
Speaker 2Well, another question I have is about the June fifth recorded phone call.
Speaker 1There is a part.
Speaker 2I mean, so much is made about the should or shouldn't, and we've already talked about why you didn't just say what are you talking about?
You know you didn't deny it, but not about that part.
My question is about there's a part in the phone call where you say to her, just say you don't remember.
Kelly says, don't you remember?
You don't remember what we said at all?
And you say, I do.
But what is what were you referring to there?
And I know it's been a long time, but you know, what is the idea?
What is the story?
I mean, what are you about to say?
There?
Speaker 7Oh?
I have no idea.
Speaker 3I you know that that conversation was twenty.
Speaker 7Four years ago.
Whatever I might have had on my mind at that time, and was about.
Speaker 3To say, I don't know.
Speaker 1Did you think that you were being recorded?
Speaker 3Again?
I don't really remember the conversation, so but no, I mean I wouldn't.
I don't believe that that ever would have crossed my mind.
Speaker 1What do you think happened that night?
Speaker 3I know that some things that I've you know, learned over the years have inclined me into one theory or another.
But here's the thing.
I would argue that I'm sitting in prison today, and I set in prison since I was twenty two years old, more than half a lifetime ago is from where I say now because people speculated, and because people acted on theories or or talked openly about theories without any supporting evidence, without anything backing up what they had to say, just based on feelings, selposition, suspicion, whatever you want to call them, and I refuse, both morally and constitutionally.
Speaker 7I will not do.
Speaker 3The same because I don't know looking forward, you know what those things that I speculated about might be construed as, or what they might hew to somebody else.
Speaker 7I just I can't do that, and.
Speaker 3So I've basically resigned myself to ignorance until more comes in, until I have something like really substantive, until I have something that says, oh, we now know ex Lly and Z.
Speaker 1I understand.
Speaker 2Is there anything else you think I should know or you want the listeners to know, or anything you want to say that I haven't asked.
Speaker 7I'm thinking.
Speaker 3I think the big takeaway here for anybody listening really is just that there is a lot of information.
In this case, there's a lot of stuff to have to sit through in order to come to anything like a reasoned conclusion about what happened, or at least a reason and conclusion about whether I had anything to do with it.
But I think that if you pay attention, if you're if you're really like looking at facts, really paying attention, it's going to come away with a pretty clear picture that Kelly is absolutely full of shit.
Speaker 7She is a very very.
Speaker 3Troubled person, I think, more so now than even what I knew.
Speaker 6But that.
Speaker 3You know, really it just comes down to not so much what she says today or or even really if some.
Speaker 7Of them more exaggerated or.
Speaker 3Over the top stuff that she spent years ago.
It just comes down to whether or not it atches what we know to be fact.
And that's I guess what I would encourage everybody to look at what we know to be fat you see that it has absolutely nothing to do with me.
That all those facts point away from me.
I think the decision is free sream to make as far as whether or not you think I had.
Speaker 7An aging stations then.
Speaker 2So now, going back in time, the morning after I interviewed Kelly in Kansas City, I met with Byron's legal team at Brian Russell's law offices for what was supposed to be our final interview.
And obviously this was before both of Kelly's episodes came out and the whole littering case thing happened.
The entire team was there, including Brian, Nicole Gordon, Sean O'Brien, and Quinn O'Brien.
Their paralegal, Jenna was there too.
Because I had four microphones for the five of us, Quinn and Nicole share one.
Okay, so we'll just go around the table.
Have you been listening to the podcast, and if so, Sean, what is standing out to you, any new revelations?
Speaker 1What has stood out to you?
Speaker 6I have been listening to the podcast.
I read the transcript of Kelly Moffitt's right along with Kilgore where she goes to Lincoln Cemetery, and it's one thing to see it in the transcript, but that's one tape I had never listened to.
She has never been to Lincoln Cemetery, and that's very clear.
She can't pick out the you know where this where Anastasia was found, But if you've been to Lincoln Cemetery and you knew where she had been, you would never miss that.
It's impossible to miss.
She also said that she could see headlights going by, and if you've been to Lincoln Cemetery.
You also know that it's impossible.
So that's the one thing that stands out to me.
And then look listening to what other people say.
You know, there are a couple people who say they believe Kelly, but they believe Kelly because Kelly is such a good liar.
Speaker 2You know.
Speaker 1The only way.
Speaker 6To know whether Kelly's lying or not is to look at what she says and find something in the outside world that would say that's truthful.
There's only one statement where you can do that, the one where Anastasia got out of the car.
Don Rand says that happened, Bob Whitbullshugen says that happened.
At least three other unnamed witnesses that were hidden from us say that happened.
The physical evidence says that happened.
And so the one truthful statement is her first one, and that's really clear, and I think the podcast kind of makes that point.
So to me, it's how well does the lawyer at the trial take on those issues and expose credibility, you know, where it needs to be.
The other thing we know about Kelly is that she is a drug addict.
An addict line, It's just a fact of life.
Speaker 1We don't need to go for here's Brian.
Speaker 9What I've found interesting about the podcast is just to hear a story told through someone else that we've been working on and trying to figure out for, you know, several years at this point, and so it's really a lot of people on the team or and past members of the team would tell you that, you know, when you're working on this case, you keep waiting for well, wait what he was convicted.
There must be more evidence than just Kelly and the tape, and you keep waiting for something to come out somebody else to say say, well, actually I knew this about Byron, or I saw this thing happen, and it never happens.
It's always Byron was a decent guy.
Speaker 8Yeah he was.
Speaker 9He could come across as weird or whatever.
But even this past within the past week, we've gotten other people that come forward with statements for us, saying I was in need and Byron helped me.
Speaker 8He was the only person to help me.
Speaker 2You know, I think that person Brian is referring to as a woman named Kim Yeoman.
She's written to me too, wanting me to know that Byron is a good person.
Incapable of committing a crime like murder.
She said, during some of her darkest days when she was a homeless teen living in abandoned houses in Kansas City, Byron would bring her food and was just a kind, generous, safe, trustworthy person to be around.
Kim wanted me to know that she has reviewed many court documents and she has found no credible evidence linking Byron to Anastasia's murder.
She believes Byron is innocent.
Here's Nicole.
Speaker 10I would say that there are a lot of nuances to the story that didn't get told just because there's not enough time.
The one that I would point out would be the timeline.
I always go back to the timeline.
Anastasia called Justin's apartment from the Dairy Queen, and we know that because she came back inside and told Don Wright that her boyfriend didn't want to pick her up because he'd already made plans with his best friend.
Anastasia could have made that call to Justin had Justin, Kelly, and Byron been on their way to pick her up at Dairy Queen from Lenexa.
So it's the little things like that that are weaved throughout the entire case that let me know in the beginning and even today and even as I hear you tell the story, yeah that you know, it just confirms what the facts.
Speaker 9Say, right, because as we're working on the habeas and weighing that timeline back out again for the tenth time.
According to Kelly's story and her timeline, the fabricated timeline, they pick her up Byron and Justin pick her up at her place at four o'clock.
They go straight to the gas station where she calls Anastasia.
And this is at four fifteen, four thirty, and she says, I've I've spoke to Anastasia then, and Anastasia says, where are we meeting?
And Kelly says at the Dairy Queen.
Well, according to Diane and Fran, Anastasia was already on her way to Mount Washington or at Mount Washington when Kelly says she's making.
Speaker 10That phone call and stayed at Mount Washington for an hour, right, waited and then for an hour and told a couple test driving a car in the cemetery.
Speaker 8Story, No, that's okay.
Speaker 1It told a couple who is.
Speaker 10Test driving a car in the cemetery.
They stopped her and they said the cemetery is about to close.
Speaker 1It's chili.
Speaker 10So they were checking on her and they said, you know, just to let you know, and she said, that's okay.
I'm waiting for my boyfriend.
And that was an hour after she was dropped off.
Speaker 8And she's in Mount Washington.
Speaker 2To Mount Washington, it's the lapage.
And she asked what time it was because she was supposed to be meeting her boyfriend.
Speaker 9Yes, and they say five thirty right, which and then back to Kelly's fabrication, So we make this phone call.
Then, according to Kelly, well, we make this phone I make this phone call to quote unquote lure Anastasia out.
Again, there's so many things that it's hard to keep track of them all because not only was this not a phone called a lure Anastasia out, Anastasia already had plans.
Speaker 8With justin that day.
Speaker 9Her stepmom talked about it, friends talked about it.
And so then then Kelly says, after I quote unquote lure her out, we go straight from Lenexa.
We go straight from Lenexa to Dairy Queen and Independence, which she estimates would take forty five minutes, maybe closer to thirty minutes rush hour.
Speaker 1Yeah, it was Russi hour on a Wednesday.
Speaker 9So they get there at what five point fifteen five point thirty according to Kelly's story, Again, Anastasia is still in Mount Washington talking to the Lapages at that time.
So again Kelly's story is false.
That also conflicts with what Dawn Wright and Suliman Solid said, which was they picked her up after dark.
They picked up Anastagia up after dark.
And like what Nicole was just saying, we know that Anastasia called Justin's apartment and talked to Justin.
So Kelly's story doesn't account for that because she says we went straight from the gas station to the dairy Queen.
Well, then how was Anastasia talking to Justin as a part man if you went straight from dairy from straight from the gas station to dairy queen with no stops?
Speaker 2And I understand because I have questions about the call that she made from the from the Phillip sixty six station near her house, right, Like, it has never made sense to me based on Anastasia's plan to meet Justin at Mount Washington Cemetery, that she would have that they would have needed Kelly to lure Anastasia to the Dairy Queen.
It's never made sense to me.
I asked her about that, and she was like, I don't know.
All I know is that I made a call and I spoke with Anastasia.
So then my mind goes to, Okay, well could Anastasia, But then it messes with the timeframe.
But could Anastasia have called from the Dairy Queen and left that phone number on Justin's answering machine which had been erased some of those early messages were gone.
Could they have called the answering machine found out where Anastasia was because and I have some of the trial or I don't know if it's her deposition or the trial transcript, but you know, she says that Anastasia believed that they were meeting at the Dairy Queen.
That might have been the secondary plan.
Right, The first plan I absolutely believe was Mount Washington.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 2Everyone knew it was Mount Washington, Betsy, Diane fran everyone knew they.
Speaker 1Were meeting at Mount Washington.
Speaker 2I wonder, and it's because I have to ask questions, but I wondered, did something change in that afternoon?
Because then I was asking myself, did Kelly assuming Kelly's telling the truth.
Did Kelly call and speak with Anastasia before Fran got home that day?
Speaker 4Okay, so they're luring her out to be alone somewhere to kill her, but they changed the place where she's supposed to be alone to kill her by going through all these extra steps.
Speaker 2All I'm saying is I have to ask all these questions, right, yeah, sure so?
And then I looked at what everyone said in terms of time, it seemed like friend got home at four, So I don't think that Kelly could have called before she got home.
So then I'm like crossing that off, you know, so, but I have to ask the questions.
Speaker 11That's exactly how we work the case.
Speaker 10And just a thought on what you're saying is that if the state didn't believe her story either, if they had, they.
Speaker 11Would wouldn't needed her to record the conversation with Byron.
Speaker 2I mean, she definitely had credibility issues because she was known to have lied, right, So this phone call has never made sense to me.
But maybe what happened was what prosecutors alleged at trial, that Anastasia had paged Byron from the dairy queen and that's the number that was dialed for Kelly at the gas station.
Again, law enforcement never pulled those payphone records from the gas station and the dairy queen.
Speaker 9When she gives that September twenty first statement to Kilgore, he says, well, when you told me in your initial statement back in October of nineteen ninety seven, you seemed pretty confident about that story.
And then even a few days later, I took you out to ride around and you took me on a You took me exactly, it took me where you said you guys went, and you seemed pretty confident about that.
You even drew me a map, which, as an aside, wasn't and still has never been produced.
We've never seen that map that Kelly drew in her initial statement.
And she says, well, I was so confident because before we talked with you for the first time, Byron took me back out there and drove me around.
Except that there was literally no time for that to happen because she was with her grandma all day the day that Anastasia's body was found on the twenty third that evening, and she even admitted in one of her statements that Byron's car was broken down, her mom and Evelyn, Byron's mom had to give them rides everywhere.
Evelyn had given Byron a ride to the Moffat residence where they hung out that evening of the twenty third, and then on the morning of the twenty fourth, Debbie Moffatt gives them a ride to the Jackson County Sheriff's Department to give their statement to Kilgore.
Speaker 8So her story is just it never it.
Speaker 9Didn't make sense, and it shouldn't have made sense to the Prosecutor's office and the Sheriff's department if they were doing their job at the very beginning.
Speaker 2I reach out to Kelly with this question from Byron's legal team.
When did Byron actually have the time to take her around to show her the area of Truman Road and the I four thirty five.
Kelly sends me a voice message answering this question.
She says, after Anastasia's murder was reported on the news the night of October twenty third, Byron drove her around so she could learn the area in case they had to speak with police.
Speaker 12Noon we found out like on like the four or five o'clock news, and then I came to your house and stayed the night, and that's when we made it a point to drive around and show me.
Speaker 13This is just so irritating.
Speaker 12I hate dealing with anything with him because he just he's trying to rely on the fact that the investigation was stupid and botched and they didn't do a good job.
He's trying to pick that apart and hoping to God that something sticks.
He throws anything against the wall and sees it.
He gets people fighting over these like little tiny indiscretions and stuff so that you don't look at the fact that he's fucking guilty as hell.
Speaker 2For the record, I was curious what was said about where exactly Kelly and Byron spent the night of October twenty third.
At trial, Kelly said they spent the night at Byron's mom's apartment.
She said the next morning, her mom picked them up from Byron's and took them to the Sheriff's department to be interviewed.
In Byron's first interview, he said his mom dropped him and Kelly off at her house that night because he had to go in for a job interview that evening, and Kelly came with him.
No mention if they spent the night there though, So did they go to Byron's house after the job interview or did they stay at Kelly's.
Who knows where they spent the night, and if there had been time, like Kelly said, for Byron to show her around Truman Roade and the I four thirty five that night.
Back to Nicole in our.
Speaker 10Interview, Kelly's not told the same story, not one time now, not even for the state.
Speaker 1And there have been big differences.
Speaker 10I mean, we're not talking about minor changes or forgetfulness.
There are just big differences in each of her stories that's unaccounted for.
Speaker 1The state didn't account for them.
Speaker 10And so for the state for the state to say, we have looked into this again and we decided not to take the case because Kelly Moffett stands by her story.
Speaker 1Well, tell us which story that is.
Speaker 2Nicole is referring to hearing former Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker in episode eleven, here's Quinn.
Speaker 7Yeah.
Speaker 4When I heard Jean Peters Baker on the podcast say we have done the work, I wanted to throw my headphones off.
They did not do the work.
They didn't even read the work that we gave them.
Speaker 6In our presentation.
I promise you all they did was read the trial transcript and call Kelly and ask her, if we called you as a witness again, would you say the same thing.
And she said yes over the telephone, is what she told them.
Speaker 13Because what they want is a perfect case.
Speaker 4They want the DNA to exclude the client, they want the DNA to match somebody else, they want a recantation from the eyewitness.
Speaker 11They want all this, you.
Speaker 13Know, perfect stuff.
And if all of those things are true, someone never would have gotten convicted in the first place.
I mean, they're looking for the perfect case and it's never going to happen.
Speaker 6But the only two things they told us to justify their decision not to reopen this case was number one, that Kelly had not recanted, and number two, Kelly had not recanded, you know, And so you know, and I was angry at this meeting, and they could probably tell it.
But at the end of it, I said, so you have effectively made Kelly Moffatt the gatekeeper for your conviction integrity unit.
Kelly Moffatt has told you not to proceed on this, and you're not proceeding on this.
That is essentially what they said, and so when you asked me my reaction to your podcast podcast is great, but that episode really me.
Speaker 2I continue my conversation with Byron's legal team.
A quick reminder, this interview took place the day after my interview with Kelly.
Speaker 1I asked her.
Speaker 2Fourteen pages of questions.
A lot of it she couldn't remember because it's been But to be fair, it's been twenty.
Speaker 6Something years, right, says, if you always tell the truth, you don't have to remember anything.
Speaker 2Yeah, well, she remembers that Byron did it.
One of the things that struck me that I had forgotten was that at trials she did not remember going to Abraham's.
And even the prosecutor said, are you sure you didn't stop anywhere else, you know, after the killing before going home, and she was like.
Speaker 1No, not that I remember.
So whatever that means.
Speaker 2Back in two thousand and two, at the trial, she didn't even remember stopping at Abrahams.
And the prosecution very much believes that they stopped at Abraham's, right, correct, So, and I'm not making her case for her.
I'm just saying there could be some things that she doesn't remember.
When she didn't even remember stopping at Abrahams back in two thousand and two.
Speaker 9Well, she didn't, and she didn't remember it in two thousand when she gave her statement, she's in her fabrication.
Speaker 2I asked her, did you guys go back to the house.
She said, I don't know, I don't remember.
So she left that open to the possibility that they may have gone back to the house.
Speaker 6She knew she would do that.
Yeah, of course she has to.
Now, she has to change her story to fit the fact.
Speaker 1Couldn't it be drug brain?
Couldn't it be?
I mean, couldn't that have messed up some of her memory?
Speaker 4It doesn't matter because the external facts still show that Kelly Moffett isn't being truthful.
Speaker 11I mean, we can sit.
Speaker 4Here and talk about drug brain and memory and all sorts of scientific studies about, you know, how memory changes and what happens.
But the fact is it can't be true because of these other people who don't have a stake in this saw Kelly at different times.
They saw antesthesia, the dairy queen, they saw anaesthesia, the cemetery.
Speaker 11Fact like, all of these.
Speaker 4External witnesses disprove Kelly's story.
Speaker 11So I'm saying that we.
Speaker 2Can you know, some people wrote in talking about memory loss and how that can happen as a result of trauma, not just with drug use.
Speaker 1Back to Quinn, and.
Speaker 4I have empathy for Kelly too.
And in this story, Kelly gets to be.
Speaker 11The hero to Fran and Emma and.
Speaker 4Anastasia and the Whipwell's Hugan family.
She gets to bring them closure.
You know, listening to the podcast, I cried listening to and Emma talk they lost someone really special and really important to them, and.
Speaker 11Kelly gets to be their hero.
Speaker 4I get that, you know, Kelly getting to play the hero, and this story is really compelling, and she's made that part.
Speaker 11Of who she is.
Speaker 4And she has the gratitude of the Whipple's Hugan family and the girls for providing them closure.
Speaker 11It's I get why she did that, you know.
Speaker 4She yes, she had to implicate herself to tell this story, but she was never at any risk, not ever.
She came forward with an attorney who made an immunity deal for her before she even said one word on the record that would implicate herself.
Speaker 11She was never at any risk ever, not at any time.
Speaker 2Yeah, she says that she was basically made to come forward.
She was, and that when she came forward there was no deal, no immunity promised.
Speaker 1She had no idea what was going to happen.
Speaker 11To Yes, that's not true, that's a lie.
Speaker 2When she came over to the counselor and then the counselor reached out to an attorney and I mean the prosecutor's office, she said at that point there was no deal.
Speaker 6The document showed the deal was on the table before she made any statements to the police.
The counselor is what locked in her story.
The councilor called the prosecutor and essentially turned her in, forced her to tell a story, and then this is the story that she developed off the cuff.
Speaker 2I think what Kelly said is that when she told the counselor or was forced to tell the counselor, and the counselor said she was going to go contact the prosecutor's office about it, Kelly had no idea what was going to happen to her.
She had no idea at that point she would eventually be given immunity.
Right, let's please talk about Anastasia's clothes and whether or not she might have gone home.
I know you very much, believe she went home.
This is my question about it if we believe Fran's description of what Anastasia was wearing when she left the house.
And I'm not supposed to give my opinions on anything, but I do believe that they had such a detailed conversation about the clothes.
I do believe Fran knows what Anastasia was wearing that day.
Fran seems very believable, and not just in the podcast where she gave a lot of details about it, but she seemed pretty clear in her early interviews that this is what Anastasia was wearing.
So for Anastasia to leave the house, let's just call it black clothes.
She leaves the house in black clothes.
In order for Dawn Wright to see her in blue jeans and the socks and sandals, Anastasia would have had to go home before going to the Dairy Queen.
So that's one change to then be at the Dairy Queen in the blue jeans, to then go home again, to change out of the blue jeans into the black clothes, to then later be killed in the black clothes.
Please try to explain to me the whole thing is like did in a Stagia go home once, it would have meant she went home twice.
Speaker 9So I don't think and this is all respect to Fran, and you know, she was a fifteen year old who just lost her sister.
She didn't give a statement though, for five days.
I believe her first statement was October twenty eighth.
By that point in time, everybody knew what Anastasia was wearing when she was found.
Speaker 8So I don't know that necessarily.
Speaker 9Fran's insistence of what she remembered Anastasia wearing wasn't somehow muddled by Bob telling her what she was wearing or what she was found in.
Speaker 1But we don't know that.
We don't know that someone told her.
Speaker 9We don't know, but you can imagine that within a small family there and having just on, you know that.
Speaker 8The trauma of what's going on.
Speaker 9So I mean they were I think that it's pretty clear that they were communicating with each other about how she was found.
But I think another part of that is you have two competing statements here.
You have what Fran believes she was wearing and what Dawn says she was wearing.
Fran saw Anastasia before she left for maybe fifteen minutes, whereas Dawn was with Anastasia for an hour to an hour and a half before she left, so she had simply more time to observe what she was wearing while she was at that Dairy Queen.
And if Anastasia was wearing what Fran said she was wearing, there would have been blood on those clothes and in that underwear and on that pad at some point by the time she was found.
That when Anna Stage is found, she's wearing clean everything.
But because Dawn says that she started her period in the Dairy Queen, we know that that means that whatever she was wearing it the Dairy Queen would have had blood on it somewhere, and none of that was found.
Speaker 4And I'd just like to point out that if Detective Kilgore had asked Solomon Suelatt for security footage, Solomon Seuelatt had that and was ready to provide it to the police, was never asked for it, So we would know all of this for sure, we would know the timeline for sure, we would know what Anastasia was wearing for sure.
If Kilgore had just bothered to ask if Solomon Suett had security.
Speaker 1Footage, does that video still exist.
Speaker 4No, I've spoken to mister Seuett and he got rid of it a long time ago.
Speaker 11The Dairy Queen wasn't a fire.
Speaker 13He eventually sold it to some other business.
Speaker 2It's now an because so much has been said about Sergeant Gary Kilgore and what he did and didn't do during his investigation.
I reached back out to him again to see if he's been listening and if he has anything he wants to say.
Speaker 1He has not returned my calls.
Here's Sean.
Speaker 6So, at the time that Fran made these observations, she did not know that her sister was going to be murdered that night.
And memory is very malleable, and so I think Fran is remembering what she usually saw Anastasia where the other piece of it is the purse or the wallet.
And how does don Wright know to describe a wallet that Bob Whitbolsfugen finds that evening, you know, on the stairway at their home, and then he texts a picture of it, and the picture as an email right different wall.
Speaker 11I'm not sure it is though as a t okay, okay, gotcha.
Speaker 6Okay, but yeah, but there is the purse, yeah, and That's.
Speaker 10Also something that I think wasn't pointed out in the podcast or may none of the purse that Don describes is like a wallet on a long strap, and it's not an usual size purse.
And then Bob sends a picture of that type of purse exactly.
Speaker 2For the record, in episode two, we do share Don Wright's exact description of the purse.
She said she saw Anastasia carrying that night.
Let me ask you a couple of follow up questions.
Yeah, so Anastasia was found with three dollars and sixty five cents in her pants pocket.
If she had that money on her, she did have that money on her, Why would that not be in her purse or wallet?
If she was carrying something that.
Speaker 4Night, changed pants and that was money that was in her pants before she put them on, and she the anxiety.
Speaker 8Yeah, she went home and left the purse left.
Speaker 10She typically didn't carry it purse, right, she typically didn't carry a purse.
Speaker 4Oh see, I think I think I call that magic money when you put your coat on that you haven't worn since last fall and you find three bucks in the pocket.
Speaker 1Right, But we don't know, I mean, that's a I don't know it's.
Speaker 11Just Ya's al anymore.
That's all.
There are multiple explanations for it.
Speaker 1It just yea and in terms of memory.
Speaker 2So one could make the argument that down right, I mean, as we know, I witness testimony is.
Speaker 1Often wrong, and she could have been wrong about Anastasia's clothes.
Speaker 11Slomon Sala doesn't think so.
Speaker 1He doesn't describe what she's wearing.
Speaker 4No, but he said that he was there when down was describing what she was wearing, and he didn't have any qualms or quibbles with it.
Speaker 8This is coming from a conversation.
Yeah.
Speaker 4Sorry, I interviewed Solomons a lot separately, So this is stuff that you would not have been privy to yet because it just recently happened.
He backs Solomon's all that backs up down right and says that whatever Dawn said Anastasia was wearing is what.
Speaker 1She was wearing.
Speaker 9But you're you're correct that, I mean, of course, anybody could be wrong about anything.
Speaker 8When we're talking about I witness say, you know, yeah, things.
Speaker 9That's why we go back to what she was with her for longer than anybody else that night.
She had more of a chance to see her and what she was wearing.
And take that in and remember it.
And no reason to lie, no reason to lie.
Speaker 6And yeah, yeah, and socks with sandals is really specific as opposed to she was wearing what she usually wore.
Speaker 2You know, which begs the question, isn't it odd that on this particular Dayastasia was supposedly seen wearing something people close to her said she never wore.
Also, she was seen caring a purse, which her friends and family said she would never do.
Why would Anastasia be seen in clothes so out of character for her?
Also, they say, don Wright has no reason to lie.
It might not have been a lie, just an honest mistake.
Also, Fran has no reason to lie.
Speaker 7Right.
Speaker 1Fran was in that interview.
Speaker 2On ten twenty eight, very specific also about the black bra.
Speaker 1You know, she they had a conversation about clothes.
Speaker 2It wasn't just like she saw Anastasia leave in these clothes and there was no they actually had a conversation about borrowing and like, so what do you make of that?
Speaker 1I mean, I think it's a little bit more than just she.
Speaker 2May or friend may have been incorrect, because it's what Anastasia often wore.
They talked, they talked, it seems like they talked about it.
Speaker 4They probably did have an argument, which is why Anastasa settled on socks with sandals instead of France Doc Martins at that time.
Speaker 6And I could see later in the evening when she went out a second time that her feet were probably cold.
Speaker 11Her sister wasn't there to argue anymore.
Speaker 4So you could take her sister's Doc Martens, and her sister wasn't there to fight her about it.
Speaker 2So let's talk about the pad versus tampon thing for a second, because as we know, don Wright first said it was a pad, then at trial she changed it to a tampon.
Kilgore found a box of tampons in Anastasia's room.
One could deduce I'm not saying I'm right, but one could deduce that that's what Anastasia used.
So how if don Wright actually gave her a tampon?
How did she end up in a pad?
Speaker 7She went home?
Speaker 2So how if don Wright actually gave her a tampon?
How to chand up in a pad?
Speaker 8She went home?
Speaker 1But if that's not what she normally used.
Speaker 11Why and why would you change?
Speaker 2I mean, I don't know if you like once you sorry very rapid, but once you put one in, you don't need to change it.
Speaker 1You don't have to.
Speaker 4Solomon saw That said that when he went in to change the trash in the employee bathroom, because that's when the Anastasia used uh, there was a you know, tampon trash in the garbage can, and there was still blood in the toilet, which means that Anastasia is actively bleeding.
Speaker 11At this point.
Speaker 4No matter what she was wearing, there should be some blood on it.
So at some point she puts something clean on.
And women know, periods unpredictable.
Your flow can be heavy and light, depending on the second of the day and which direction the wind's blowing.
Speaker 1Okay, let me ask you this question.
Speaker 2As I mean, as you said in a period can start and stop, especially when in the first few years they're very sporadic in the beginning.
My question is if Anastasia went from the dairy Queen in a pad just for the sake of argument in a pad, to Mount Washington and then to Lincoln where she was killed, there would be less time potentially for there to be anything on that pad.
If she went home, changed into a pad and then was killed hours potentially hours later, wouldn't there be a greater likelihood that something would have ended up on that pad after that many hours of having.
Speaker 8On there was no blood.
There was no blood in her underwear either.
Speaker 9And so if she went straight from Mount Washington, I mean straight from Dairy Queen, Mount Washington Lincoln Cemetery, even if the pad was clean and there wasn't an opportunity for her to bleed onto that, there still would have been blood on her underwear from when she started her period and needed a product.
Speaker 1We're getting very intimate with each other.
Speaker 2A woman can feel her period coming on before anything hits underwear.
She could have gone.
She could have said, I'm getting my period, do you have anything?
Gone to the bathroom.
She could have sat down and stuff could have come into the toilet and nothing ever ended up ending up on her underwear.
Speaker 1It is a possibility.
I think it's.
Speaker 11A that's a stretch.
That's a real stretch.
Speaker 4I mean, I think he's actively bleeding into the toilet, such as the male manager of the restaurant notices that there's blood in the toilet and tampon trash in the trash can.
Speaker 11There's probably blood on her underwear.
Speaker 9Plus it would have I think that they did.
In her autopsy, Doctor Young did find menstrual blood in her vagina.
Speaker 8Still right and so right.
Speaker 4It's more plausible that she cleaned herself up and that after the initial period started that it slowed down, or that she just wasn't upright as long as we thought between the times she returned home and the time that she was found over the time that she died in the cemetery.
Speaker 11Yeah, or if if she died in the cemetery at all, I don't know.
Speaker 2But again, if she went home, put on different clothes, and changed from a tampon to a pad, then was killed hours later, why wasn't there anything on the pad?
More hours equals more time to bleed?
Right, let me ask you, following up on a couple of things you just said.
So because I know that the Kansas City Police crime lab came back and said that there is a possibility that she may have been lying down when she was killed.
How do you explain a piece of her skull being up to a couple feet away.
Speaker 9I think that I mean a gunshot wound.
There's a lot of energy that goes into it, and especially if you've got if someone's head is laying on the ground to reflect that energy back.
I don't think it's inconceivable that it could have deflected part of her skull off of the ground and out from underneath her head.
Speaker 11Energy has neither created nor destroyed.
Speaker 4We know this because of science, and so when it is perfectly reasonable to assume that her head came off the ground so that the energy from the gunshot could disperse, it just physics.
Speaker 9Yeah, I don't think it was inconceivable that her when the bullet passed through her head, that it deflected part of that material out and out from underneath her head, because I believe it was about four feet from the top of her head.
Speaker 2This seemed a bit far fetched, so I reached out to doctor Bill Smock, who is an internationally recognized forensic expert in multiple fields, including, but not limited to, reconstruction of officer involved shootings and the forensic evaluation of gunshot wounds.
Doctor Smock is also the police surgeon and directs the clinical forensic Medicine program for the Louisville Metro Police Department in Louisville, Kentucky.
He's also a clinical Professor of Emergency Medicine at the University of Louisville School of Medicine.
When I read doctor Smock verbatim what Byron's legal team just said about the possibility that Anastasia was lying down when she was shot in a piece of her skull was sent feet away, doctor Smock says, if her head was on the ground, there's no way that her head would have come up from the force of the shot causing a piece of her skull to fly and land up two feet away.
If anything, he said, it just would have gone down further into the ground.
So doctor Smock doesn't believe their theory is possible.
Okay, this is a question.
I don't think you guys are going to like feature faces.
Speaker 1Okay.
Speaker 2As I went back through the transcripts, I saw something that was a teeny tiny bit of like a pink flag or a burnt orange flag.
In Byron's first interview with Kilgore and Kellogg, they asked him, has just never been suicidal?
And he says, yes, you know, I think he's attempted a few times.
Speaker 1And he says, I'll just read it to you.
He says.
Speaker 2That night, he says, I know he had attempts in the past, he quite a few actually.
Speaker 1And last night he did.
After Anastasia got out of the car.
Speaker 2I don't know.
We were driving down Truman Road.
We were going over I guess it was like railroad tracks or something.
I don't know, but he was like mentioning, you know, he was like, gee, I don't know, you know, I'm thinking, like, you know, tonight, I could just kill myself.
I just thought he was, you know, being silly about it, being silly about And then they jump in and ask him a couple of questions.
Okay, so here's my question.
I feel like I got a paper cut.
The first time Kelly comes forward in September of two thousand, she says that they dumped the gun near some railroad tracks.
The only time that railroad tracks come up are when Byron says justin thought or mentioned that he might kill himself, and when Kelly says they dumped the gun.
Is that a tell?
Did Byron say something that inadvertently he used a detail like the railroad tracks that also then matched.
Speaker 1Or kind of the area where Kelly or.
Speaker 9Map or is this a tell by Kelly of her integrating the actual truth into her fabrication.
Speaker 4I'm counting the number of railroad tracks they would pass over between Washington Mount Washington Cemetery before getting back downtown.
Speaker 2But I'm not even talking like, not even in relation to the area or Lincoln Cemetery or Truman Road.
Just the fact that Byron says Justin threatened or mentioned suicide at some railroad tracks.
Kelly says they dumped the gun near some railroad tracks.
One could say it would make sense that Justin threatened to kill himself.
It was if it was at a place after they killed her, it was at a place where the gun was dumped, or.
Speaker 4They pass over railroad tracks on their way back into Kansas City.
Speaker 8You're saying, yeah, I just think.
Speaker 11That three times.
Speaker 8I think that that would be a I don't think that that.
Speaker 9I don't find that fact particularly alarming or anything.
I mean, take your point, but it's just to me, it just seems like Byron is we're calling the story as it happened.
He's like, so she gets out and then we're driving and we start going over some railroad tracks and then oh and Justin's like talking about killing himself because of this argument they just had, Like.
Speaker 4It's another industrial area, so there are two opportunities before they get back even inside the what we would call the Downtown Loop or South Kansas City area, two opportunities where there are lots of railroad tracks.
Speaker 1It just stood out to me.
Speaker 2But if he just witnessed a murder, or he just killed her while the three of them were together, one could say, like that would be a response that could be believable.
So I wanted to ask, because you know, it's like, was that go ahead?
Speaker 10Were those of the railroad tracks by Lake Quavera or why?
Speaker 1I don't think it even matters where the tracks are.
I think just.
Speaker 2Hearing Byron say when we were near some railroad tracks, Justin said I should just kill myself tonight.
And then it turns out that the only other time we hear railroad tracks is when Kelly says they dumped the gun near them.
One could just say, hmm, I wonder if there is a connection time just having killed her.
Speaker 9Every good fabrication incorporates elements of truth in it.
But she would have been in the car when Justin says that as they're going over railroad tracks, and so.
Speaker 6I would say, even a blind squirrel finds an acorn every now and then, they're probably a couple of.
Speaker 1Truth blind squirrel.
Speaker 6No, no, no, Kelly's the blind squirrel.
It's a corollary to the broken clock.
Even a broken clock is right twice a day.
Speaker 8To me, it's the same it's the same thing as her incorporation.
Speaker 9She's incorporating real memories into her fabrication.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 6We've talked about theories of the case.
Speaker 1I mean it's all speculation.
Speaker 6Have no idea, Yeah, we really don't.
But the police theory of the case from the beginning was a murder supicide.
That's what they thought.
We don't know when or if or how Justin would have reconnected with Anastasia that night, but for a long time that's what the police belief happened.
Speaker 2So did Justin say he wanted to take his own life because Anastaesia got out of the car or was it because he just committed or witnessed her murder?
Speaker 10I was just going to point out, just for transparency, that we all have a different version.
I mean, we all have different ideas about what could have happened.
Speaker 6The question is this, what is the physical evidence?
It shows that the police find her body in the cemetery, she has been shot with a gun that was touching her nose, when it was fired, and she did not turn away.
She was probably lying on her back when that happened.
It could be a pistol, it could have been a rifle, but they can't say.
All we know is that there's not a gun on the scene.
If there had been a gun on the scene, this would have been ruled a suicide, open and shutcase.
But the crime lab has said the absence of a gun at the scene does not foreclose suicide, especially when we know there's an unexplained automobile that was there at the scene.
We cannot exclude.
Now, we don't know when that car went by, but we do know it went by before the police got there.
It might have been a few days before, it had rained on that like two days before, but still a car had been by, and so we don't know that the scene was pristine when the police arrived.
And so, beyond a reasonable doubt, did someone kill Anastatia?
I don't think they can show that it would go on from there.
You know, if she didn't take her own life, what could have happened?
How could that gun have been missing?
Well, there is evidence that Bob Whitbolsfugen thinks he heard the gun that killed her.
He thinks he heard that shot and he was standing in a place and said the shot came from the west of where he was, in the general direction of Lincoln Cemetery.
It is inconceivable that he didn't go there to look for the gun.
He, by the way, has the financial incentive to cover up a suicide because he just increased two days earlier the life insurance policy.
So there's evidence to support that theory.
And I'd probably argue to a jury that to find Byron guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, you have to answer these questions.
That all of these unanswered questions doesn't mean that Byron is guilty because we can't answer these questions.
They opposite is true.
These questions raise other possibilities inconsistent with Byron's guild.
Speaker 2What do you make of people's varying timelines, Like Suleiman and don Wright tell very different times that Anastasia was at the dairy, Queen don Rand said that he saw her at thirty.
None of those timelines really totally work with her getting out of the car, then they went to Abraham's.
Then she was home and Kelly was home by nine fifteen.
So what do you make of everyone's very different timelines.
Speaker 9Well, the time change, well that happened after but a week, like a week after she was found.
But I think that it's that time of year when it's getting darker earlier.
I think you asked anybody in October what time something happened last night?
Your brain is still adjusting to dark being eight o'clock versus dark being seven o'clock.
Speaker 7You know.
Speaker 1But Don Wright does start intructor.
Speaker 2Don Wright does say that she was here until a half hour before closing, and we close at ten, so that's much later, and we.
Speaker 9Know that can't be accurate because Kelly was home by that point in time, verified by Debbie.
Speaker 8I mean, that was her curfew.
She would have.
Speaker 9Gone nuclear if her daughter wasn't home by nine o'clock she was supposed to.
Speaker 6This is why the failure to collect that video surveillance is so prejudicial to the defense, because we would have a definitive point of time at which they left the dairy Queen, and then we have DeBie Moffatt establishing when Kelly got home, and we would have those two points in time fixed, and that would let us test everything in between, but and reenact on a clock whether or not Kelly's story is even plausible given the timeline and.
Speaker 10At the end of the day, Kelly told don Right Justin didn't want to come to Independence to pick her up because an Annastasia told don Wright that Justin didn't want to come to Independence to pick her up because he was hanging out with his best friend.
Does that sound like someone who's plotted to kill her all day he doesn't want to come get her.
Speaker 3I don't know.
Speaker 1I just wanted to add.
Speaker 2That a lot of people wrote in They had a lot of questions and theories and thoughts.
Speaker 1One of them was is Byron a sociopath?
Speaker 2And I know that you had him evaluate it, so I wanted to ask you about that.
Speaker 9Absolutely no evidence of sociopathy or any personality disorders or anything like that.
And in fact, you know, part of us we were wondering if maybe he was on the spectrum, and I think that kind of came back as inconclusive, but which you.
Speaker 8Know, we were.
We were interested in that for explaining some of his.
Speaker 6Demeanor.
Speaker 9Demeanor, Yeah, and that's not that's nothing that when you get to know Byron, he's not, you know, you see him for who he is.
But I could understand why some people would think he was I hate to say weird, but why he was different.
Speaker 6Well, he's brilliant.
Yeah, he is smart, and so he intellectually ruminates on a lot of things, and you know, people can draw conclusions from that, but that's just how Byron he is.
You know.
Speaker 9The other thing is we got his prison conduct records and he only in twenty some odd years of being in prison, has two conduct violations, one for staying up past curfew to read a book and the other for working on his Innocent's website when they had told him to stop working on his innocence website.
If he was a sociopath, that would be documented.
Speaker 2At this point, Brian just answered, Actually, another listener's question about whether or not Byron is autistic.
The listener asked if Byron is on the spectrum, suggesting that could explain some of his behaviors and judgments.
Brian just said that testing came back inconclusive.
One listener wrote asking if the phone records can still be retrieved.
It seems that answer is no.
Another person wrote in asking about the weight of the bullet fragment, wondering if that could tell us something about the kind of gun that was used, so the weight is fifty six point one grains, which unfortunately doesn't rule out a lot of calibers.
Another person wrote in asking if there was a metal detector ever used to look for other bullet fragments at the site where Anastasia died.
A metal detector was used the day her body was found.
According to a police report, there were several small to medium size metal objects located as deep as eight to ten inches below the surface of the ground.
None were bullets.
Many listeners asked if this wasn't in fact a murder suicide, that maybe after Justin took Byron home, he went back out, met up with Anastasia, killed her, then took his own life.
Sadly, there's really no way to prove that.
Another question that came in was about what items were picked up from Abraham and taken to Tara that night, and there are conflicting stories about that.
There are also conflicting stories about whose house they went to first.
It's hard to know if there's a there there or if it's just that too much time had gone by and those memories had faded.
Let's talk about Bob for two seconds.
Is there for all of the stuff that seems ridiculous that Bob came up with, like the caravan of cars.
Is it possible that some of the other things he was just mistaken about, like the clothes, like the underwear and jeans at the house.
Speaker 1Could they have been friends?
Could they?
I mean, he doesn't report those for a while, right, So.
Speaker 2Even though he's says that he found them not long after the murder, you.
Speaker 1Know, he said a lot of things.
Speaker 2Yeah, so it's hard to say, like we're gonna believe everything that Bob says, or we're gonna pick and choose some of the things that we believe Bob said was true.
Well we've you know what I mean, Like the audience is listening and they're like, well, Bob helps us in this way, but it is ridiculous in this way.
Speaker 4Or because we have external verification again, like when he talks about the underwear being in the saying and the genes being there, we do know that at least somewhere on this timeline, Anastasia cleaned herself up because her underwear is clean, her body is clean, the pad is clean, so she had to clean herself up.
Speaker 6So but with Bob, we look at him the same way we do Kelly.
And so with Bob.
I mean, the purse that he took a photograph of and email to Detective Kilgore matched perfectly the description of the one that Dawn writes.
AW, So that's pretty good evidence that he's you know that the panties and the and the genes and the laundry those support his theory that Anastasia went home.
And so that's how we look.
Speaker 2At everything in the case a chance that don Rand was incorrect and identifying Anastasia on Truman Road that night that.
Speaker 9Incorrect, it would be such a coincidence that they that they just happened to fabricate a story about Anastasia getting out of the car at around dusk, and then a mechanic at that exact location looks at a picture over and says, yeah, that's the girl I saw get out about dusk.
Speaker 2I mean, I asked Kelly about that.
I was like, what do you make of Don Rand having seen Anastasia?
And she was like, and don't quote me, because you know, but she said, we were stunned because it bolstered the story that we made up.
We couldn't believe how how lucky, we got that there was somebody.
Speaker 8Wait a minute, hold on, hold.
Speaker 14On when when when she exactly when was she stunned about that?
When she says Byron right, he didn't know that there was When did they find out that somebody at a gas station says they saw her?
Speaker 8I don't know, but that's the that's my question for Kelly.
Speaker 9When did you and Byron supposedly find out that an independent witness saw Anastasia get out of the car, because if that was a week in the investigation.
Speaker 1Exactly.
Speaker 2I mean, I didn't ask Kelly, but I was just going to say, because Terra spoke with Don Round, what do you think is going to be the greatest likelihood of you getting Byron and a new trial?
Will it be the Brady violations or what?
Speaker 9We do believe that the Brady violations are the strongest and clearest, especially the fact that they did not disclose Kelly's criminal record before trial.
There's a Missouri black letter law right on point when you have a single witness that you're resting your case on and you failed to disclose.
Speaker 8Evidence related to their credibility new trial.
Speaker 6Yeah, the other claimed that I think is equally important if not more so is a now Coup versus Illinois violation, which is the prosecutor presenting evidence that they know or should know is false, and the transcript they used to bolster Kelly's credibility is false.
I wanted to point out that all this discussion we're having is discussion that should have happened in the jury deliberations.
You know, you could picture making the movie twelve Angry Men about this case, or twelve angry people about this case.
We should be you know, the jury should have been the one arguing these facts, and they didn't get any of it.
They barely got any of it.
And we can lay the blame at the police for not telling the prosecutor everything, not forwarding Bob's emails.
We can blame the prosecutor for not telling the defense about Kelly's conviction, the fact that she's under warrant when she's giving statements and depositions about the case.
And you know, we can blame the prosecution for producing a false transcript that all you need to do is ask a court reporter like we did, to transcribe it and you get a truthful version of it.
This is what court reporters are trained to do and certify.
So it's now certified beyond question that the state used a false transcript, and so under natpoo versus Illinois, if there is any likelihood that it would have affected the verdict, then Byron is entitled to a new trial.
The big issue is always procedural technicalities.
We're not just allowed to walk into court and say, here's the new evidence, let him go.
We have to show that somebody blocked this evidence from getting into early Europeans and that's really the challenge for us.
Speaker 2Do you feel that Byron is legally innocent or factually innocent.
Speaker 6I think he's factually innocent, And by factual innocence, I mean he didn't kill anyone, And you know, legal innocence and factual innocence is kind of a bizarre little distinction, but he didn't do it.
And I believe that.
Speaker 9Yeah, I believe Byron is actually innocent.
I didn't believe that.
I didn't have a opinion about that when I first got involved in the case.
Speaker 8When I first got involved in.
Speaker 9The case, I knew he was legally innocent because I knew he didn't get a fair trial.
And I believe I don't everybody deserves a fair trial.
What else is the system if we don't have fairness?
But you know, very quickly within getting into this case is when I figured out and fully believe that he's actually innocent.
Speaker 8It is not in Byron's character to do something like this.
Speaker 9He just simply is not the kind of person that would be a you know, quote unquote thrill killer or something, or kill someone because they were annoying.
He's too thoughtful, he's too empathetic, he's too good of a human to do.
Speaker 8Something like that.
Speaker 9And the fact that there is not one shred of evidence other than his lying ex girlfriend to convict him is Yeah, I have very strong feelings about that, and it makes me mad.
Speaker 8It makes me.
Speaker 9Sad, It makes me scared for other people that have to go through this system that seems to have no interest in reforming itself or actually being fair when that matters.
Speaker 4I believe Byron is innocent because I've done the investigation.
I went out and I talked to people, We had the forensic evidence examined by people who were finally provided with the materials that they needed to do a true examination, And at every turn, Byron is innocent.
Every single time, I have in the past started an investigation and found definitive proof that someone was guilty, usually by DNA evidence, and it's heartbreaking, but you have to step away from those cases.
I can't say someone is innocent without having done the investigation myself.
I'm not going to put my integrity or my reputation on the line to do that.
I believe Byron Case is innocent.
Factually, legally, he did not do this.
Speaker 1I believe Byron is actually innocent.
Speaker 10I like Quinn, think that he's legally innocent and actually innocent.
I don't know what it would take to get me to change my mind.
Speaker 1I was gonna have to take those facts as they come, So.
Speaker 11I don't know, say the evidence in this case is what really matters.
Speaker 4And you know, we can pontificate and theorize all day about what really happened.
Speaker 11That's an interesting thing to do.
Speaker 4But every time we do that, every time we talk about theories about what happened, and none of those theories involved Byron.
Speaker 11And that's the point.
Byron Case didn't do.
Speaker 2This anything else before we say goodbye.
Speaker 8I don't think so.
Speaker 9I think we just we really appreciate the time and attention that you've given to this, and we do.
Speaker 8We appreciate the fairness and the the.
Speaker 9That you are also fact checking us and trying to keep us honest.
Then the new things even that you've discovered has been very helpful and illuminating for us, and so we appreciate that.
Speaker 1Thank you.
Speaker 2I don't even know where to begin with how to end this season.
I have said it since the beginning.
I have only been in search of the truth.
Although other people have been mentioned as potential persons of interest, doesn't it really come down to who do you believe Byron or Kelly?
By your Instagram comments, messages and emails, I can see there are listeners very much on both sides of the fence.
It's pretty much divided.
Byron has told the same story since nineteen ninety seven.
There's no physical evidence that links him to the murder.
His legal team says, there are people who saw Anastasia that night, which proves she got out of the car, and her genes and the washing machine and underwear soaking in a sink proved she went on home.
They say, if she got out of the car, Byron didn't do it.
They say, if she went home, Byron didn't do it.
They also say the TACIT admission is now a moot point because Byron now can be heard saying.
Speaker 1We should talk about this.
Speaker 2Kelly says she witnessed Anastasia's murder and the guilt she felt caused her to spiral into a drug addiction that almost killed her.
She says she didn't come forward for years because she was scared being told by Byron she was as guilty as he was.
She also says, before being made to come forward, she told her dad, her ex boyfriend Jim, and her friend Antigianino that Byron had murdered Anastasia.
Kelly says she is iffy on some details, but remembers the important things, like Byron is the one who pulled the trigger.
About the TACIT admission call, Kelly asks, if Byron is innocent.
Speaker 1Why didn't he just deny.
Speaker 2With all of the research and interviews we've done, there's still so much you the listeners, and I haven't been able to reconcile, Like the phone call Kelly says she made from the gas station to Anastasia, whether or not Anastasia went home that night.
The possibility that some of the eyewitnesses might have been wrong about what Anastasia was wearing or even if they saw her at all.
Why didn't Anastasia fight back or run?
Why did Justin take his own life.
Why didn't Byron deny anything in that June fifth call?
Speaker 1Patrick Rock?
Speaker 2Where were you that night, Bob?
Why did you go to the exact spot where Anastasia's body was found in Lincoln's cemetery before anyone informed you where it was prosecutors?
Why allegedly were certain things withheld from Byron's defense team and Sergeant Kilgore.
Why did this investigation.
Speaker 1Seem to go so wrong?
Speaker 2Why were obvious things like phone records never pulled that could have potentially solved this case right away?
Because it seems the way this investigation was handled is really why we have so many unanswered questions.
Also, why did Kelly agree to talk with me She didn't have to, and why didn't some people want to talk people who had already written affidavits for Byron, Horton, Lance, doctor Thomas Young, and Judge Charles Atwell.
Like I said at the beginning of this episode, although we have spent so much time talking about Byron and Kelly and what can and can't be proven in this case.
We must remember that all of this is about getting justice for Anastasia.
Was justice served.
A lot of people, including Anastasia's family, say yes, the real killer is in prison, case closed.
Others say no, the real killer is still out there or dead.
Regardless, the courts will decide if Byron deserves a new trial or not.
Thank you to everyone who participated, especially Anastasia's sisters Fran and Emma.
Our hearts go out to you and your family.
The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are solely those of the individuals participating in the podcast.
If you or someone you know is experiencing suicidal thoughts or a crisis, please no help is available.
Call or text nine to eight eight, or chat online at the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline's website at nine eight eight lifeline dot org.
To see photos, maps and documents related to this season's story, follow The Real Killer podcast on Instagram and at TRK podcast on TikTok.
The Real Killer is a production of AYR Media and iHeartMedia, hosted by me Leah Rothman.
Executive producers Leah Rothman and Elisa Rosen for AYR Media.
Written by Leah Rothman.
Editing and sound design by Cameron Taggi.
Mixed and mastered by Cameron Taggi.
Audio engineer Justin Longerbeam studio engineer Graham Gibson.
Legal council for AYR Media, Johnny Douglas, Executive producer for iHeartMedia, Maya Howard