Episode Transcript
I'm Kate Winkler Dawson.
Speaker 2I'm a journalist who's spent the last twenty five years writing about true crime.
Speaker 3And I'm Paul Hols, a retired cold case investigator who's worked some of America's most complicated cases and solve them.
Speaker 2Each week, I present Paul with one of history's most compelling true crimes.
Speaker 3And I weigh in using modern forensic techniques to bring new insights to old mysteries.
Speaker 2Together, using our individual expertise, we're examining historical true crime cases through a twenty first century lens.
Speaker 4Some are solved and some are cold, very cold.
Speaker 1This is Buried Bones.
Speaker 4Hey Paul, Hey Kate, how are you.
Speaker 2I'm doing great.
How about you?
Speaker 3I'm doing good.
What's been going on with you?
Speaker 2Well, I've been watching a lot of true crime?
Speaker 4Oh good guy.
Speaker 2I probably need another project, you know.
I mean, the book has been out, Listener's all val has been out, and the book tour stuff is over, and I know you have endless book tours.
I do not, so now I'm you know, I've been writing my first mystery thriller.
I've been doing different things, but I have an extraordinary amount of time to watch true crime, and I know this is not something that you really do, right, No.
Speaker 4No, I don't.
Speaker 2It's a hard note.
Speaker 3Yeah, I'm obviously very well planted in the true crime space.
I don't consume the content, rarely consume the content.
Speaker 2Well, I had a question.
So I've mentioned this course before.
I teach a true crime podcast course at the University of Texas.
It's very popular.
I have I think probably about two hundred and thirty students each semester.
You know, we talk about cases that are meaningful to them, that are meaningful to me.
There is a generational divide for sure about the cases that my students, who are somewhere between eighteen and twenty two, what they think are sort of these groundbreaking everybody knows everything about them, binge worthy type of crimes.
And then my generation.
So I want to ask you about what you feel like from your generation, you know, growing up, what was that case that really sort of made you either think about, you know, criminal investigation or think about something that was you had never heard of before.
And I'd love to make a joke about maybe Charles Manson, but I'm not going to because I think it's probably going to be a little more modern than that.
Maybe not, though I don't know.
Speaker 3Now, i'd say, you know, if you're talking about you know, when I was growing up, I did not pay attention to any of the crime cases out there, you know.
I think, of course, you know, the story of me glomming on to getting into the field I got into was because of a TV show, Quincy, But I'm not remembering, you know, paying attention to the newspaper headlines or listening to the radio.
I would say the first true crime case that I really dug into was David Carpenter.
He was the trail side killer out there on Mount tamil Pious.
And I remember I had already started working for the Sheriff's office, but as a toxicologist, and I'm reading this book about the serial killer, and it's in the Bay Area, and he is going to restaurants in places where I knew where they were at.
I was just now reading a book, you know, many years after he had actually gone to these restaurants, and so I became fascinated, going, Wow, this is real, you know.
And that was sort of what I would say really catapulted me into doing a deeper dive into true crime, if you will, but I was really focused on serial predators.
I wasn't really paying attention to other types of cases.
Speaker 2Yeah, I understand that.
I think when I was younger, I did pay attention to a lot of true crime stuff.
One was the yogurt Chop murders because I was their age when these four girls were murdered and it's still an unsolved case.
I remember Columbine feeling shaken to my bones that something like that would have happened, because again that's my time period.
And then John Benay, I had never heard of anything like that happening before.
Speaker 3Yeah, you know, And of course I remember I had not heard of the yogurt chop murders until I got into the true crime space.
Speaker 4But I've now familiar.
Speaker 3I've talked to people who are working on that case within an official capacity.
But of course, John Binney Ramsey, I remember that hitting the headlines and Columbine, which I don't know if there were if there was a school shooting prior to that, but that was the one case that really, you know, brought to public awareness, you know, the school shooter.
And unfortunately, you know, there's been a rash of copycats, you know, ever since that's just it.
It's like a domino effect, you know, one copying the other.
Speaker 4You know.
Speaker 3For where I was at, I would say sort of the watershed case was poly Class, and that was a case I was with the Sheriff's office.
Speaker 4But the the idea.
Speaker 3That an offender, you know, this Richard Allen Davis, who you know basically had been in and out of prison his entire life, was able to go inside a house where this little girl was at an abduct her while her parents were still inside that house.
And then some of the communication problems between law enforcement agencies.
Possibly I wouldn't say they could have saved her, but they could have caught him sooner, if you know, other agencies were aware that there was a subducted girl.
But that was a big case out sort of like a man in Texas or you know, yogurt shot murders is something that was in that geosphere, and poly Class was one of the notable ones early on in my career out there in the Bay Area.
Speaker 4Yeah.
Speaker 2Absolutely, And I think when I talk to my students and I say, what are the cases that just haunt you guys?
I mean, it's no surprise they're in college.
They're saying Gabby Patito, and they're saying the Idaho for the college students who were murdered in Idaho.
And it makes sense because it's it's there, it's their peers, that group influencers, you know, young people who were on campus feeling vulnerable.
And so it was just interesting because they had never heard of one of the cases.
Maybe it was called Peterson that I brought up.
They were going, what, so everybody has a has a different you know, lens of which they look through true crime.
Speaker 3Well, and I think if the case is happening while you are paying attention to that type of content, you're going to be invested in it.
And when when you and I were growing up, we didn't have the pervasiveness of information on the cases like everybody does today.
You know, you might hear you'd read it in the newspaper, or you'd see it on the news.
Speaker 4That was it.
Speaker 3You couldn't go online to find out more information about the case or to track the case.
As you know, different aspects developed and became newsworthy, whereas today most certainly like with Idaho, you know, you can follow the trial you know online, you know, so it's it's a very different environment than when we grew up, for sure.
Speaker 2Yeah, absolutely, and I think so much more misinformation that you know, as our show goes along over the years, I'm definitely going to want to start dipping into the rights and wrongs that happened in true crime, in the true crime community as far as you know polyclass.
I just read an article it's a little bit older, that was written by her sister in the New York Times that just talked about the retraumatizing of her family every time something happens.
They've never approved of any you know, program that has gone on about polyclass and just saying this is it just over and over again for decades.
This has been going on.
Speaker 3Yeah, you know, and I've seen that firsthand.
We had another case out in the Bay Area of Zianna, fairchild girl abducted and ultimately killed out of a leo, and I became.
Speaker 4Friends with her mom.
Speaker 3Biologically it's her great aunt, Stephanie Cahliculu, but in essence, Stephanie's the one that raised Theanna, and I've seen Stephanie go through those same types of waves of being traumatized.
Because of the public attention, you know, something becomes newsworthy and now she's thrust in front of the cameras again.
And early on she was doing it because first she was trying to find her daughter, and then once it became obvious when Xianna Skull was found that she wasn't going to get her daughter back, then it was we need to get the killer.
And that's when I got involved.
Speaker 4In that case.
Speaker 3But since then, there's been multiple reasons for Stephanie to have been put out there, and she really, you know, struggles with that.
And I actually did present Zianna's case in Mitzi Sanchez, which is also a corresponding case out there at Crime Con And before I did that, I talked to Stephanie.
I got her permission to make sure that was something that she was okay with.
Speaker 2So when you and I talk about these cases that really catch people's attention and then sort of live in infamy, there are definitely cases that you and I talk about that I think have been forgotten in history.
But at that time period, we're just so infamous.
They can't all be Lizzie Borden's and Jack the Rippers, and so you know, that's our goal is to bring these stories back to see what we can learn.
Speaker 3Well, I think, you know, when you think about it, it's, you know, it's very much like celebrities.
You think about some of these individuals that you know, Hollywood, you know, and they were so famous, let's say back in the nineteen twenties.
M there's a few exceptions, but many of them have just kind of faded because now new generations the celebrities have occurred, and the new generations of consumers are paying attention to that.
And so I think the same thing happens, you know, within the crime stories.
You know, of course, a huge case O.
J.
Simpson, you know, for our generation, you know, that was momentous in terms of so many for so many reasons.
But I imagine a lot of the kids that you are teaching, they may have heard of the case, but it probably doesn't resonate the same way.
Speaker 2I think that my students when we've talked about OJ Simpson, they understand the facts of the case, they understand the controversy around it.
They had heard of Marcia Clark.
I don't think they understand the social context around why it was so momentous, you know, around I racial inequalities and everything was so polarizing.
I don't remember a case not even Manson that was as polarizing, particularly along you know, racial lines, as OJ Simpson.
So when I talk about that, they just kind of look at me like what I just thought?
It was this you know, ex football Heisman Trophy winner who killed his ex wife and her you know friend, And it's so much deeper than that, and I think sometimes you just have to live through it to understand the impact.
Speaker 4Absolutely.
Speaker 3You know, you have a celebrity that many people looked up to as a hero.
You know, he had a very engaging personality.
You know, I know I was stunned, you know when that case happened, when that crime happened, And so there's I think with that type of offender, you get to where, you know, you have a personal attachment to that celebrity.
And to be frank, you know, O J.
Simpson killed Nicole Brown and Ron Goldman, I don't want to dance around that.
Speaker 2Well, now, let's talk about a case that I found really interesting because while it was not polarizing along racial lines, it is polarizing around gender.
And we are going really far back eighteen fifties and it's I think been a while since we've dipped our tone into something this far back, but I think you'll find this case really interesting.
It seems simple sort of from the beginning, but then it gets more complicated as we move along.
So let's go ahead and set the scene.
So this story takes place in the mid eighteen fifties in Miami County, Ohio, which is between the towns of Piqua and Colesville.
I don't know how large these places are now, but then they were small.
Piqua is about thirty miles north of Dayton and as a population of about three thy three hundred at the time.
Colesville is a rural community.
It's about ten miles south of Piquas.
So we've got two different places that we're talking about.
Speaker 3Here.
Speaker 2We are in April, April third, eighteen fifty five.
It's a Tuesday, and the main person at the middle of this story is a guy named Arthur Reagan.
He is very, very, very sick.
He is suffering from severe stomach illness.
And his physician, who is a guy named doctor Brownell, says that Arthur has all the symptoms of gastritis or stomach inflammation with vomiting.
If we're talking about that now and it's something that you've ingested, leave off the poison because I know that'll be your go to.
Is there anything is it gastritis or what he's experiencing?
Is that Could that be food poisoning?
Could that be taking the wrong medicine and having a bad interaction.
What would that be in today's terms?
Speaker 4I think all of the above.
You know.
Speaker 3The first thing that came to my mind would would be like a food poisoning.
You know, we've all had that.
You know that oftentimes is some sort of nasty bacteria you know, you know, got out of control on the food.
But of course you could have all sorts of different substances that aren't necessarily intended to be poisons, but they have they have irritating properties.
Speaker 2So I was wondering about milk pasteurization.
Is there a risk?
I know there's a risk for pregnant women if you are having cheese or milk that's not pasteurized.
Now And why is that?
Speaker 3Well, the pasturization process is in essence to eliminate the bacteria that are present during the milking process kind of contaminates the milk, and so they bring the temperature of the milk up to a certain level to kill the the microorganisms.
Speaker 4You know to a point.
Speaker 3You know, of course, after a period of time, milk will still go bad, but the pasturization gives a logger shelf life.
So unpasteurized milk potentially has a greater likelihood of having a microorganism that your body isn't going to like.
Speaker 2So this story is in eighteen fifty five, and I was just thinking about this.
In eighteen sixty two is when Louis Pastor came up with the germ theory, which is just what you're saying.
You know, the boiling and milk, bringing it to a high temperature actually can kill the bacteria in the yeast because before there were these contaminations that were coming out, like tuberculosis.
So I was thinking that when he was complaining to his doctor about stomach pains.
Right now, he's sort of on a farm in between cities, and what he could be eating that is not nefarious at this.
Speaker 3Point, no, not at all.
And you know, you think it's not necessarily something that he purposely ingested.
You know, he could have, you know, working on the farm.
You know, imagine the hygiene.
How many times he's putting his his fingers, you know, into his mouth or something like that, and how dirty his hands could be.
You know, contaminate it.
Let's not to be too too graphic, but contaminate it like with animal fecal matter, you know, and of course the bacteria that are present there, or just the meats that they're eating.
Now you get into the food side and you know potential contamination with you know, microorganisms that the body doesn't like.
Speaker 2Now, I'd like you to come up with a new list of possible natural contaminations based on what Arthur does for a living.
And there might not be any there there.
Well, I'll tell you.
Have you heard of a craftsman called a cooper?
No, so it seems like a present tense term actually from when I looked at it, But a cooper in the eighteen hundreds, with someone who makes tubs and vats and wooden barrels that could be used for wine making.
And I first thought when I thought about his symptoms, I had done a story on a man who had asthma and was working, you know, with spraying all kinds of paint on, spraying paint on cars, and sometimes you wouldn't wear a mask, and it just sounded awful.
So I was wondering if any of those proses that you would do to make those even in the eighteen hundreds, they must have involved some kind of chemical, right, I would think.
Speaker 3You know, I imagine that there's some sort of sealant that they're using, and so that'd be my first guess.
Tubs in vats, you know, at least with what I am picturing from this time frame, they're probably having to shape you know, form wood, you know, steam it form it and somehow get it bound together.
And there's mechanical ways to bind it together so the planks you know, stay in place.
But if there it's going to be water tight, then I think that there's going to be some sort of seal it, whether it's a tar based sealant or you know they using you know, rubber, you know selant, you know, you know, more of a natural type of thing.
But it also could be something from crude oil, you know, that they've processed out, just like vacoline, you know, petrol, adam, jelly you know, is something that comes ultimately from crude you know, So is there something that they are they're a waxy substance that they get from crude oil, and then of course there could potentially be a variety of whether it be mineral based toxins to even organic benzene for example, could be present.
Speaker 2I'll just tell you sort of what was used commonly, and this does not mean this is what Arthur was doing.
But these wooden hubs were sort of temporary tubs.
They basically looked like barrels or sometimes they were like water troughs, so you would dunk yourself in there.
So they were heavy wood, and then they would use iron bands to reinforce the wooden vertical parts of it, and then sometimes they had a linen cloth to protect the bather from getting a little splinter in your bum.
So essentially you know the iron bands and you're right.
There must have also been a seilant in there somewhere, so we don't really know if that contributes to it.
I'm just saying this is something that he does that we have to look at too.
So Arthur first became sick on Friday.
So when he gets really really sick too, is the following Tuesday.
So I'll give you kind of the chronology, so he can becomes sick on Friday, he gets better when doctor Brunelle takes care of him on Sunday.
We have had several cases of a doctor coming to the aid of someone and they turn out to be the killer.
This is still a true crime show, so you can imagine this is not a simple illness.
And I'm not saying the doctor is a suspect, but you do have that access.
You have somebody there and he's administering medicine.
Doctor Burnelle leaves and then Monday back to being sick again, and it doesn't seem like he's recovering.
So he got better than he got worse.
Floating around and trying to take care of Arthur is his wife, who is twenty two years old.
She is a church going woman.
Her name is Jane, but everybody calls her Elizabeth Reagan.
She's pregnant at the time.
She talks to the doctor and she says that she thinks that Arthur has purposely poisoned himself, okay, to make himself sick and then potentially take his own life.
She doesn't give a great explanation for this, that he's been troubled, he's lived a hard life.
This is probably the tenth story that I've done where fifty percent turn out to be someone who has intentionally poisoned themselves.
In fifty percent.
It's the spouse saying, yeah, he's this and that, and then it turns out that they're poisoning them.
Speaker 3Is she expressing that he has any suicidal ideas, you know, is there a life insurance policy, et cetera.
You know, sometimes people will commit suicide, but they need to make it look like a homicide in order for these policies to actually be dispersed.
Yeah, and you know, so that's you know, part of what I would be looking at on this front.
Speaker 4You know, with Arthur.
Speaker 2So, Arthur does not have a life insurance policy that I can find.
He is not particularly wealthy.
I don't have his exact age, but it looks quite a bit older.
You know, there are not a lot of people who can sort of come around and talk about their marriage in general.
She is saying that he has a troubled mind and that this is what she thinks is happening with him, but she's being pretty vague about it.
You know, Like I said, I had thought, with these excruciating symptoms, this is not the way most people would have chosen to, you know, take in their own life.
That being said, you have and no go into this, Paul, but you have told me about some pretty horrific ways, including a table where people have decided to take their own lives.
So now I'm done being incredulous about something like that and expecting anything.
Speaker 3Sure, but for somebody to poison themselves, they're not necessarily wanting to do it over a long period of time.
They're trying to do an acute poisoning, so they die rapidly.
Speaker 2Okay, let's continue on and see what we come up with with Arthur.
Elizabeth.
When the doctor says, what are you talking about?
You think he's poisoning himself, Elizabeth said that he had eaten cream of tartar the night before, which she now suspects was laced with arsenic.
I know what arsenic is.
My mom kept a container in the spice rack of cream of tartar.
I know it's used in baking.
I can't remember or ever using it, but I know it's there, and I think it's still there.
Frankly, it's thirty years old.
I have a list of things that they would have used it in.
But just off the top of your head, do you have any idea what that's use would be in a kitchen?
Speaker 4It's the cream of tartar.
Speaker 3As far as I know as a baking ingredient, I think it's you know, I don't know anything more about it.
I'm not a baker.
It doesn't seem like it's something that you would take by itself.
It would be something that'd be added, you know, to you know, something that's cooked or something that's baked.
Speaker 4But that's all I know.
Speaker 2One of the things I found out is that cream of tartar in the eighteen hundreds was used medicinally for heartburn.
And I think it would be mixed with milk, I would suspect, or you know, like a fiber powder would be today, so you know, it was mixed up.
And I think she's saying that he had an upset stomach and he took it.
Now she says, I actually think that this is arsenic that he took, and he was pretending to take the cream of tartar to.
I don't know what it would be.
Spare her feelings, I will say cream of tartar was used also in the making of wine, and we know that, you know, he would make wine barrels.
So all of this is connected in an odd way.
So I don't know.
Speaker 3Is who makes up this cream a tartar, who gives it to him or does he go and get it himself?
Speaker 4You know what is the wife saying?
Speaker 2She says that he did it.
So he got it, okay, and took it.
He consumed it.
I don't think he was taking it by this spoonful.
I think because it was medicinal.
The insinuation is is that he was using it because he had an upset stomach or some heartburn.
Speaker 3So obviously, if there's still the source of this cream a tartar, that's evidence.
Speaker 2Yeah.
And then on top of that, Arthur has been vomiting, and so there the doctor had the foresight of making sure he knew where all of this vomit was because it was in multiple places, to make sure that if something was going awry here with Arthur, that there would be some kind of evidence.
And the reason is that Arthur denied it.
When he came back on Monday, Arthur had improved and then he started to go downhill and he had a conversation with the doctor and he said, I did not take it myself, despite what Elizabeth said, And he said, I think I'm being poisoned.
And when the doctor pressed him on it, he would not say who did it?
He just said, I'm pretty sure I'm being poisoned.
Speaker 3I think you know two thoughts.
You know, the doctor shows up and Arthur starts feeling better, and whether the doctor gave him something, you know, charcoal or whatever.
But the presence of the doctor may have prevented the offender from being able to add to whatever poison is being used.
Maybe it is this arsenic you know, on that particular day, and now Arthur's starting to recover, either from the medicinal intervention or just from the lack of ingesting more poison.
But then starting Monday, he's back to feeling symptoms and either the medicinal intervention or off or now he's starting to ingest more poison.
And then, of course, who has you know, the access to Arthur.
We know the wife Elizabeth does, but is there anybody else that is accessing either Arthur directly or anything that he might be ingesting inside the house.
Let's say a maid going into the pantry and spiking the cream of tartar with arsenic.
Speaker 2Well, let's keep going and find out.
Arthur gets worse and worse, and that day that the doctor's there, he dies because of what he said and of course what Elizabeth said.
The doctor calls in the authorities, which in the eighteen fifties could have been just like a local constable.
It could have been a deputy, it could have been you know, various people, no one, I don't think with in depth experience, however, I think you're going to be a little surprised by this.
They gather the stomach contents once there's an autopsy, and they get a dirt sample from outside the Reagan home.
And they get this dirt sample because when he threw up, somebody who was in the house, probably Elizabeth, collected it and threw it outside to get rid of it.
And so they collect this dirt sample and they send it off for analysis in Columbus, Ohio, big city.
They run five different tests, so they had the capability of looking for arsenic and it comes back arsenic positive, positive for arsenic.
And I was wondering if you were going to be surprised if they had that capability back then to look for arsenic.
Speaker 3I'm not shocked, I guess is the way to put it, you know, like I do have the you know, the Essentials of Forensic Medicine book from eighteen ninety two, and it's surprising in terms of the depth of chemistry knowledge that the toxicology experts.
Speaker 4Back in the day actually had.
Speaker 3And so the soil that they're looking at, they're obviously not using modern instrumental techniques, nor are they utilizing anything really advanced.
There in essence reacting that soil with various compounds that they know respond a certain way in the presence of a certain toxic and so they a compound.
I don't know what they would have used, but they probably reacted that soil oil with a compound and maybe microscopically saw a certain shape of crystal and they go up, that's positive for arsenic.
In this day and age, it's just a presumptive test, but back then that's they probably concluded, Yes, this is arsenic.
There's arsenic in this soil sample, and his vomit is mixed with that dirt.
Speaker 2And then you have to think, with arsenic in so many products that were so easily available, I mean, mostly rough on rats and products used to kill animals.
They're on a farm type situation, is this something that he would have ingested accidentally somehow, some way.
But there's a newspaper in nineteen ten that says that he had ingested enough arsenic according to the people who tested it, to kill quote half a dozen men.
Now that's vague, but well, it sounds like a shit ton of arsenic to me?
Is that the scientific term?
Speaker 4Yeah?
Speaker 3You know, I think, well, I kind of have a problem because I don't think that there would be any way back in eighteen fifty for them to do what we would call a quantitative analysis.
You know, in essence, there's probably a subjective opinion by the I'm going to call the person a toxicologist that is going this is a strong reaction, stronger than what they typically see.
But it's in many ways it's out of context.
You know, you're dealing with something that you know, is it hasn't been concentrated because of you know, the vomit aspect and in the soil, and is there something going on there?
So I don't know, I really am skeptical about an opinion like that, but I think what I would conclude is is that if this person actually has some experience testing a variety of arsenic containing samples, that they saw a very strong and quick reaction and concluded, oh, there's a lot of arsenic here.
Speaker 4That's probably about the extent that they can say.
Speaker 2Well, of course the suspicion is on Elizabeth.
I don't think anybody believes, including the doctor, that he took all this stuff himself.
It would have been so painful and as he said, over such a long period of time, right, It just seemed sure, especially after Arthur said I think I'm being poisoned.
I don't know why he didn't say anything.
Maybe he didn't have conclusive proof that it was his wife or a neighbor.
We've certainly heard about, you know, neighbor disputes, So there's a list of suspects that could pop up right now.
They're really homing in on Elizabeth, though.
Speaker 3Well, I think with Arthur making that statement about I think I'm being poisoned, you know, in many ways, that negates him doing this to himself, because if he was, he's now undoing the reason he would be poisoning himself, you know.
And now he's saying it's a homicide, right or somebody's trying to hurt me, and ultimately it's a homicide through poisoning.
So this does seem to indicate that somebody with Elizabeth the primary person having access, is trying to kill him utilizing the arsenic.
Now, Elizabeth is prime suspect for sure, but I also go to, well, if Arthur's going in himself to the cream of tartar, is there somebody else that could be adding arsenic to that cream of tartar?
Speaker 4Yeah?
Oh, versus just Elizabeth.
Speaker 2I don't believe they're finding arsenic anywhere in the house.
I don't believe they find the cream of tartar anywhere that you know we're talking about, But that's not reported, so I don't know it could have been there, and I think that if it had been tested, there probably would have been a note about that.
But the way we're going into this is because of what he said and because of Elizabeth planting it very early that she believed that he was trying to take his own life.
People of course, are looking at the wife.
Sure, so the police are thinking what kind of physical evidence do we have?
And so far they don't.
They don't have any physical evidence that they can say that would prove aside from his statement you know that I didn't do this.
Who would have done this to him?
If the doors are unlocked and there are other people in his life?
Speaker 3Well, and that's where you know it's his victimology.
You have the spouse and you know what is that relationship, Like, how would she benefit if Arthur is no longer around and has died.
But then what else has Arthur been involved with?
And is there a way for somebody on the outside to have accomplished this poisoning if Arthur is not leaving the house during this time that he's ill.
Speaker 2Okay, well, let's get into what becomes the more scandalous parts of this story, which are to me with some of the most interesting.
So a simple mistake leads to some pretty big accusations.
So here's what happens around this time when the investigators are working on the case and the doctor is trying to figure out what happened.
There is a man who shows up to the investigators.
His name is J.
L.
Temple.
He is the assistant postmaster of a town nearby Colesville called Troy, and he comes with this I think damning information months earlier, so January.
We're in April when Arthur dies.
So in January he had gotten a letter that he found really troubling.
It was returned to the post office after it had been given to the wrong person.
Eventually, when he gets this letter back, and there's a man named Murray who returns this letter and says, this is not me, It's meant for somebody else.
Then JAYL Temple looks at this letter and realizes that he gave it to the wrong person.
The letter was not meant for a man named Murray.
It was meant for a man whose last name was Maori.
So James Maury was supposed to get this letter.
And it was dated December sixth, about a month earlier, and it was sent from a different town, the Piqua town that I was telling you about before.
So it was so disturbing that the postmaster made a copy and then gave it to the rightful owner of this who was James Mawy.
This is kind of a long letter, but I feel like you're going to want to hear all of it.
So this guy's name is James.
It's written to James, and it says, dear Jimmy, once again, I am seeded to write a few lines to you.
I said I would not write anymore, but you know I can't refrain from it, and as I have been living in a perfect hell.
If you will allow me the expression it is a hard one, but nevertheless true.
And I have been tormented day and night since I came home.
He so we don't know who he is, saw me kiss you and that was enough.
Oh, I have had to suffer for it.
I did not think he saw me, but he was watching me.
I'm so near beside myself.
I hardly know what I am doing.
He says, I shall not go home anymore, and he says he will not get me any more clothes, and then I can't go as much as I have.
Now, I can't stand this any longer, and I appeal for your help.
There is another part of this letter, Paul, but it's unsigned.
I will say this eventually does get tied to Elizabeth Reagan.
Speaker 3Yeah, that's what I kind of figured.
I mean stating the obvious.
Obviously, Elizabeth seems to have a relationship with James, and that relationship was discovered by Arthur.
Now she is confiding in James on how her life at home is miserable because he's basically taking over control and what she's doing as well.
As it sounds like Elizabeth under the guise of going to see her parents is possibly when she's slipping out to go see James, and so Arthur is going You're not doing that anymore, You're staying home.
This letter, at least with what you've read so far, makes it sound like Elizabeth is feeling trapped.
Now, she's having to figure out how do I get out of this trap?
And it sounds like she's possibly appealing to James to help her at this point in the letter.
What a letter to be delivered to the wrong person.
Speaker 2I know this isn't me and this is somebody else?
Can you not read?
It is not Marie, it's mottle Boy, it's Maori.
Well do you want to hear the second half of this because then it gets really specific?
Speaker 3Of course, I do you know?
Of course you know I'm now questioning the pregnancy and who's the father?
Speaker 2This is what else?
Now it says is Elizabeth is the letter writer here, even though it's not signed.
I have thought of one more plan.
I'm going to make one more proposition to you, and if you will do it, I will grant you the request you have so long asked of me, as soon as you do what I want you to do or before, if you will only do what I want you now, it is this, You make a proposition to him to go with you to look at some new country to Oregon or Wisconsin or some other place, and name the period right off.
And if he says he has not the means, you tell him you will furnish him with the means if he will go for company.
So clearly James and Arthur know each other.
Ye, And then I will persuade him to go.
And then you can go on horseback or on the cars.
And you can take your two horses and go part of the way on the cars, and you can take the horses and go the rest of the way, that is till you get a good ways away from here.
And you can procure your poison and administer it in his oysters, and he will never know the difference.
You can eat your oysters on the road, or you can give them to some farmhouse.
They will never know the difference.
And you can pretend to take it hard, to think you have to turn back.
Speaker 4So to pretend to take it hard.
Speaker 3Like if Arthur dies as a result of eating oysters.
Speaker 2Oh that's it.
And then he's so upset he has to move.
He gets to go back home.
Speaker 3He gets to go back.
And now she's promising him.
I guess the way that I'm interpreting the early part of the second part of the letter is it sounds like James has been asking for a more involved relationship with Elizabeth, and so she's now saying, you do this, basically, kill Arthur, and I will do what you've been asking for, which sounds like whether that's a marriage or something more involved than what they've been able to do while she's been married with Arthur.
Speaker 2I will inform you now that James is married with children, So then it gets more complicated.
Well maybe not, I mean a little look on your face and maybe not.
Speaker 3Well what tangled?
Speaker 4Well they weave?
No, yea.
Speaker 3I was just thinking oysters in the middle of the country.
I've never had oysters.
I don't think I can ingest a whole creature like that.
Speaker 4I'm very picky when it comes to.
Speaker 2Eating food, jesting whole creatures.
Speaker 3Maybe one of these days, with a sufficient bourbon in me, I might try.
Speaker 2Yeah, not with me, buddy, I don't like oysters either.
Speaker 3Oh, but I was just thinking why specifically oysters, and I imagine oysters in the middle of the country were probably a common source of food poisoning.
Speaker 2They were a delicacy in the eighteen hundreds in certain parts, and certainly I would think Ohio, I would think it would be very difficult, no matter what the risk is, for somebody like Arthur Reagan to say no to something like that, because it would have been pricey for them to get them, and I wonder if they're packed correctly, they would be salty, like with salt water.
I don't know what arsenic tastes like, but for some reason, I have heard of oil being poisoned with arsenic before.
So this doesn't seem novel, but it's definitely a choice.
Cream of tartar seems like it's looking pretty good at this point.
Speaker 3Okay, so the use of the oysters is really just you know, it's like offering up you know.
Speaker 4Nice chocolate, right, It's yeah, Okay.
Speaker 3So she has devised a plan and she is manipulating James in order to in essence, take care of Arthur for her.
Speaker 4That's interesting.
Speaker 3It'll be interesting to see how Arthur ends up being poisoned in his own house, because it doesn't sound like this trip must have happened.
He didn't receive this well.
He received the letter well before.
Arthur actually ends up being poisoned.
Speaker 2Right, it's January, yes, so that's what three or four months before.
Speaker 3I wondered, did the postmaster actually tell James, hey, this was accidentally delivered to somebody else who opened it and read it.
Or did he just kind of repackage the the letter and give it to James without divulging that you know.
And so now James is kicking into motion what Elizabeth wants, but later in time than what Elizabeth initially thought would happen.
Speaker 2So the postmaster copies this letter.
So to me, that means he clearly didn't turn it over to the investigators.
So he turned this back over to James, but kept a copy of the letter, which is very smart.
There's a little bit left.
Tell me if this makes sense to you.
So the last thing she says to him is pretend like this is terrible and that you're so upset you have to go back home.
When you have accomplished what I have told you.
Mayah, she's manipulative.
When you accomplish what I have told you, then you can telegraph to me that he is dead.
I will tell the templars and have them make up thirty dollars and send to you to bear his expenses, So Arthur must have been a member, is what I'm assuming.
If you will come up as soon as you get this, I will tell you better.
Now, dear, do come.
You know I love you, you are well aware of it.
I will write no more till I see you come up right away.
My ink is pale.
You're right, it sounds like he wants more because she seems to be emphasizing to him and reassuring him how much that she loves him, and then she's asking this huge thing.
She obviously trusts him enough to not go to authorities.
Speaker 3Yeah, but also there's there's a two way street here, or maybe a three way street, because James is married himself, you know.
So now even if he carries out this plot that Elizabeth is launching and gets rid of Arthur, well that frees up Elizabeth.
But he has a family at home that isn't necessarily going to be very accepting of Elizabeth in his life, you know.
So James is sort of in a in a pinch from that perspective.
So something has you know, I guess what are the quest since I have?
Did James and Arthur actually go on a trip to find this plot of land or did that just dissolve over time for one reason like Arthur's Like, now I'm not interested, and so now Elizabeth and James have to concoct a different way of getting rid of Arthur.
Speaker 2Yeah.
I think once we get into the legal part of this, maybe that'll answer some questions.
I don't believe the trip ever happened, and I think that they had to kind of punt regarding James's family.
I don't think James is thinking very far ahead, is the impression I'm getting.
So James is thirty two, married with children.
As I mentioned, he has brought.
Now explain this to me.
He's brought to court for a preliminary trial.
Is that the same thing?
Do you think as a preliminary hearing?
This is not a murder trial.
It sounds like it's in for questioning.
But there are people testifying, including Elizabeth.
Speaker 4It was this related to Arthur's death.
Speaker 2Then yes, it's not a murder trial.
It sounds like a pulmonary hearing.
But they're calling it a trial just to see if it should go on to trial.
Speaker 3That sounds more I think akin to like a grand jury.
Okay, with preliminary hearings, that's after somebody has been arrested, charged, or reigned, right, and so there you have a defendant.
So if there isn't a if you don't have a defendant and they're just hearing the facts of the case, it sounds like either a coroner's inquest or maybe a grand jury.
Speaker 2I think this is probably you're right, akin to a grand jury.
He's not under arrest, and I think they're just trying to figure out if there's any there there.
And we do have Elizabeth explaining a lot.
So now tell me what you think if you are a defense attorney for James and a defense attorney for Elizabeth, what is the best way to go.
The only thing implicating James right now is this letter, the stinking letter.
We know a fingerprint.
They're not doing any of that kind of stuff.
They're not putting arsenic in his hand.
But then he knows that his girlfriend is going to sit on the stand and you know, testify maybe against him, maybe not.
I don't know if he knows.
So I'm not quite sure what the best tact is for either of these people who are now under suspicion for killing Arthur Reagan.
Speaker 3Well, the defense is going to be these two pointing fingers at each other.
But you think about James.
You know, this letter, it's addressed to him, but it's not signed by Elizabeth, you know, so of course Elizabeth's attorney is going to say Bett didn't come from Elizabeth.
How can you prove it came from Elizabeth?
You know in eighteen fifty, like you said, no, no fingerprints, no DNA, no signature, handwriting analysis.
You know, maybe somebody says, well, it looks like her handwriting.
So that's that's pretty weak, you know, from just the letter itself.
Nor does does it even Arthur's name?
Speaker 4It's he, you know.
Speaker 3So there's a lot of wiggle room that I could see a defense attorney exploiting under those types of circumstances with that letter to defend Elizabeth.
You know, right now, the biggest thing is is arsenic is found.
Elizabeth has access to Arthur has access to the cream of tartar.
The doctor has been inside the house, you know, he mostly you know, has to be considered, and you could see a defense pointing at the doctor and saying the doctor's one that did this.
It would be really tough.
I think James is in the best position, you know, at least with what you've told me is he lives a distance away.
Unless somebody have witnesses that could put James, you know, lurking around the house around the time Arthur starts getting sick, It's going to be tough to put the poisoning on James from the distance.
But it sounds like Elizabeth in this letter is asking James to come visit her.
So does that visit a her?
Speaker 2Well, let's get into what everybody says here.
Elizabeth has been romantically involved with James in the past before they both got married.
Okay, so when she is talking at this, let's just call this grand jury testimony.
When she is doing this, she is saying, you know, we were together before we met our spouses, then we stopped being together after that.
What she says how they reconnected is interesting.
She reconnected with him.
So Maren was confused, as am I about this last summer a year ago, so you know, she hasn't seen She says that they have not seen each other for a while, and she was visiting her father's home in Colesville.
She says she was nursing her baby at her dad's house when James, who lived in the area, showed up and declared his love for her.
You know, that is kind of a pretty bold statement.
She says that she said, I'm not interested James.
I've got a baby.
But at some point the baby passes away.
She sees James again a few months later.
She's in a state of grief.
She's very vulnerable, and she succumbs and they start this affair.
There doesn't seem to be anything nefarious about the baby dying.
I'm sure it was like bacterial effecture something like that.
They're not suspecting anything, but it sounds like from the beginning of this testimony she's definitely sort of setting herself up as the vulnerable young woman slash young girl.
So she would have been probably twenty twenty one when this started.
James is ten years older, so you know, who is sort of falling for this and this affair begins.
So she sounds like she's being honest.
She's saying, yes, we were having an affair, we were sleeping together, which in the eighteen fifties would have been something else to say, but she's being honest about it.
So what do you think so far?
Speaker 3Well, this is just you know, typical human relationships.
You know, whether you've got the marriages or you have you know, some partner that you're with, but then you've also got you know, feelings for somebody else.
I mean, this is a long term relationship between the two relatively speaking, something caused both of them to marry somebody else.
But then most early it sounds like James is still pining for Elizabeth.
I guess Elizabeth actually has also got emotions for him.
When they restart and rekindle this affair, you know, and this is possibly the pregnancy, maybe a result of the sexual interactions you know, during this affair.
But then Elizabeth, you know, Arthur finds out and now Elizabeth is capitalizing on James's emotions for her to manipulate him to get rid of Arthur.
And I imagine in eighteen fifties, the idea of a divorce is probably a tough thing to accept.
Speaker 2It would be difficult.
But do you see anything any credibility in what she's saying, which she is I just lost my baby, And probably she's framing Arthur as crotchety, maybe not the best husband in the world.
She's having this affair that she was manipulated into.
She doesn't know how to get out of it.
And so she's saying, do you see how that there's a world where that could also be happening when you have an older person like James sort of pressing against her constantly, because she says, Paul that James said, run away with me.
Every single time she was in town visiting her dad, he would find her.
And then he says, let's poison Arthur to make this much easier on both of us.
That's what she says.
Speaker 3He says her perspective is a possibility, but also sounds like she's minimizing, you know, in essence, she's saying, he's the manipulator.
I kind of succumbed to the manipulation, and he's the one that is like, let's get rid of Arthur.
Well, that's I think possible.
Speaker 4But if we.
Speaker 3Believe the letter came from Elizabeth, that's not what the letter says.
Speaker 4She's the one.
Speaker 3I mean, she's she's still saying he's really pining for her in that letter, But she's launching the plot, a very sophisticated plot, relatively speaking, you know, to get Arthur out away from the small town and to poison him with these tainted oysters.
You know and then James can finally get what he's been asking for.
So at that point, she really is the manipulator.
I think, Elizabeth, there's probably a lot of truth in terms of how the relationship occurred in James feelings for her that she's expressing while she's testifying.
Speaker 4But I'm not buying that.
Speaker 3You know, James is the one that is, you know, behind Arthur's death, is the one that is coming up with that idea.
I think she's the one.
She's the one that's expressing she's feeling trapped because Arthur found out about her and James, and Arthur probably knew that those two had previous relationships before the marriage has occurred.
Speaker 2Well, this is what Elizabeth said about exactly what you're talking about.
She said, I thought he was crazy.
I was not interested in doing that.
I was not interested in leaving Arthur or killing him, especially until Arthur put his hands on me.
And then that's when things changed for me.
She said.
James put it in my head a little bit that this was a possibility.
Let's poison him.
I'll leave my wife, He'll be dead.
Whatever money Arthur has could be ours.
She mentions in that letter she reiterates that Arthur saw her kissing James and Arthur freaked out.
This happened in December.
She said, he grew enraged, he put his hands on her, he shook her.
He said exactly what she said.
I'm not buying you any more clothes.
You are never going to your father's again, and you are not going to see this guy again.
And then that's when she sends this letter, just saying I can't deal with it.
I'm not gonna be able to live the next forty years with this guy.
And she's pregnant and I don't know yet, but of course we're suspecting that she's probably not having sex with Arthur.
She's having sex with James though, so she is feeling trapped.
So you know, she saw James in January and he had not gotten this letter because of this whole like mumbling mix up thing that happened.
But she said he's the one who said, let's spike Arthur's coffee with Arsenic.
So again he comes back with even though there's this letter that's got her plan in it, he's kind of insinuating this all sounds like it's going to take too long.
Why don't you just get arsenic and put it in his coffee.
Speaker 3Well, you know, fundamentally, a crime has occurred and the crime resulted in Arthur's death.
That's a homicide by poisoning.
So it really comes down to in the investigation, who is the one providing Arthur the arsenic?
Who is the one, whether it be in his coffee, whether it be in the kreama tartar, Who is the one that is doing that.
It doesn't matter that a discussion occurred months before, even if James is the originator of the idea, if he's not the one that is actually dosing Arthur with the actual murder weapon, the arsenic, you know, he is not culpable for the murder.
It's the person that is doing it.
And so that's where we get into Okay, No, obviously Elizabeth is inside the house, she most certainly could do this.
Does James have an alibi?
Is do we have anybody putting James into a position to either be inside the house or to spike something of food stuff that ultimately makes its way into the house.
You know, And then we're talking about, Okay, what is the culpability of the person who's providing let's say the kreama tartar that spiked versus the person who is actually giving the cream of tartar.
And then if it's Arthur who is self consuming, you know, he goes in, then there's intelligence from inside the house to the person outside the house of this is what the victim always eats or always drinks.
So now you could see from a distance how somebody like James could be culpable for the homicide because he is now exploiting that type of intel in order because he you know, just through that information, he is in essence dosing Arthur himself, even though it's from a distance.
Speaker 4If that makes any.
Speaker 2Sense, Yeah, absolutely, I think that you could believe, as a man in the eighteen hundred's, you know, sitting as a judger on a jury, that a woman could be manipulated by a man who is older than her, for sure.
But the detail and how well she thought out that plan of taking him on a horseback and the whole oysters, I mean, she really thought out every detail.
So you know, I am then leaning him a lot more towards she was manipulating James more than anything else.
But let's continue.
So she says, you know, I bought arsenic.
He told me to.
I mixed it into Arthur's coffee.
It made him sick, but it didn't kill him.
So that must have been the Friday into the Sunday when the doctor shows up, right.
She said she tried again after the doctor left that Sunday and she put it in his chicken soup and he said it tasted great, and then he died the next day.
Speaker 3So she is.
Speaker 2Fully admitting this, which is what makes this case to me even more interesting.
We don't know why she testified.
She was not compelled or made to do it.
There were some sources that said she did it because she was going to be promised sort of immunity later on.
Because really people did think she was being manipulated, that it wasn't him.
She had given birth, she was breast feeding on the stand, and this would have been really shocking.
I mean, it would be shocking now, I think, but it was really shocking, and she was saying, I have to be able to do this.
So then you think about that.
Is that a level of manipulation?
What is that doing to the people who are listening to this information.
Speaker 3Yeah, to me, that's blatant manipulation in terms of trying to become more sympathetic to the.
Speaker 4Jurors or to whoever.
Speaker 3If this was just maybe a you know, you just have a judge a magistrate that's hearing the testimony.
But in essence, here I am, you know now a single mother, you know, and I've got to take care of my baby.
I couldn't imagine a judge actually allowing that to occur during session.
But eighteen fifties and small little area out there in Ohio, who knows how their trials are run.
But fundamentally, she is confessing to murdering Arthur on the stand.
She's the one that is putting the arsenic in different things that Arthur is ingesting.
So it's not just a one time thing.
She does it in his coffee, she does it in his chicken noodle soup, you know.
So that from my perspective, is cut and dry.
You know, she murdered Arthur.
Now, all this talk about the relationship, you know, you've got from Elizabeth's perspective in one of the things I wanted to address, I don't disbelieve her in terms of Arthur got physical with her after finding out about James, right, you know, but does that that's not a get out of jail free card in terms of this type of homicide, because she's now plotting, She's sending the letter with a very detailed plot.
She's now putting arsenic and multiple food stuff that ultimately kills kills Arthur.
So standalone, you know she is responsible for murder.
The reason she murders Arthur could come into play in terms of assessing kind of the sentencing you will you know, and where the crime charge is.
I don't know what Ohio's murder statutes are.
You know's this a second degree murder?
Doesn't could You could even argue maybe there's a first degree aspect with all the malice, a forethought, you know, the pre planning.
So from my perspective, she's absolutely responsible and it's confessing to the murder of Arthur.
It just now comes into well, what is James' role in the crime.
You know, it's one thing to be in a relationship and to discuss this, but does James provide the arsenic?
You know, does he instruct her how to do it?
You know, there's there.
I think there's different levels of culpability that may or may not be there for James.
Speaker 2Well, she admits she bought it herself, and one of them doesn't know what they're doing because she didn't give him enough to begin with.
You know, so if James did kind of try to give her advice on how much to administer, heate and know what he was doing either because he didn't kill Arthur the first time.
Speaker 3Yeah, I have a hard time, at least within the murder of Arthur, seeing how James has any significant culpability.
Does he lie to the constable or to law enforcement?
Does he have knowledge and fails to come forward, even though that's not necessarily a crime, But if he lied while being interviewed to a peace officer or to the court, if he testified, then yeah, maybe he could be charged with a type of crime.
But the mere fact that he was aware that Elizabeth was possibly plotting against Arthur and had tried to involve him, he could have reported Elizabeth at that point.
You know, she's in essence trying to hire a hitman, right, Yeah, what ended up happening to James.
Speaker 2So here's what happens.
James is never tried for Arthur's death.
Okay, there's any evidence against him?
Yeah, and you know, he had denied all of this to begin with, so we don't know what his role was.
He has kept quiet.
We don't know what happened to him after that that he has let go.
After her testimony, she is arrested and they want to put her on trial for murder.
I don't know if it was first degree.
I can't imagine would be for maybe it would be first degree, I don't know.
Let me kind of preface this by telling you what a reporter says, who was in that preliminary trial, and it was sort of the sentiment of everyone there because it was very clear to them that she was confessing when she was giving this testimony.
He says.
We have no desire to injure Missus Reagan to magnify her guilt or to lessen the mitigating circumstances in her case.
On the other hand, we would gladly see her restored to innocence and happiness if it were possible eighteen fifty five, for the sake of her sex.
We would rejoice to see the responsibility of her crime thrown upon man, if it could be done justly.
It is more fitting, less shocking that man should commit such a monstrous crime.
But Missus Reagan has placed it out of our power or the power of any man to injure her case.
She is a self convicted murderer and nothing can save her from death.
But the clemency of the governor her life may be saved, and we hope it will, but she can never be restored to society again.
Now this is before she's charged with murder, but it will kind of give you an idea of the mindset of particularly the men in this case, who just don't want to do this.
They do not this would have been a capital crime.
Obviously she would have been executed.
They don't want to do this.
Nobody wants to do this.
And then she's been breastfeeding on the stand for part of her testimony.
Speaker 3She most certainly is a sympathetic defendant.
You know, young, young female, feeling trapped, possibly being abused.
You know how they viewed the affair eighteen fifth you know that probably was something that really was a mark against both her and James.
I can see twenty two year old, that's how old she was, right, twenty.
Speaker 2Two at the time.
Speaker 3You know, I've got a daughter that's ten years older than that, but I know, you know what she was like when she was twenty two.
And I've got a daughter that's, you know, senior in high school.
You know, I mean this this is such a young age.
Speaker 4You know.
Speaker 3In some ways you can say this is a bad decision and you feels sorry that she.
I mean, you feel sorry for Arthur.
He lost his life.
But she's just showing such poor judgment in terms of how to get out of what she feels trapped in.
Would there have been other avenues that she could have taken where she doesn't resort to murder, you know, And that's that's the big thing.
My surprise is the capital punishment side for this case.
And maybe it's just speaking to the eighteen fifties, you know, it seems like that is a kind of excessive punishment, a death penalty for this particular case, even though it is a murder case.
Speaker 2Yeah, I understand that.
I mean, this would be a time period though, where if you're an habitual thief, they would have put you to death.
Also, this was pretty extreme.
Let me tell you what happens all of this, Paul is to say that she is never put on trial for murder.
I don't know if this is the district attorney or the sentiment in general that they will not convict a woman and sentence her to death, but that would have been the only option, and nobody wanted to do it.
I think there was a feeling that she was manipulated by an older man, that potentially Arthur had been abusive.
She had a baby in her arms, she was young, so she is not convicted.
She has let go.
She eventually leaves Piquat and she goes to Indianapolis, and that newspapers say that at one point an old friend was leaving a church and Elizabeth was there working at the church in Indianapolis and went on presumably to live, you know, a hopefully quiet life, but that's what ended up happening.
They both get out of it, and we have no We just know somebody has poisoned Arthur Reagan.
And nobody's been held responsible ever for this case.
Speaker 3Right, but you have you have Elizabeth confessing to doing the poisoning.
Speaker 4Yeah, the DA does have discretion.
Speaker 3However, you know, when you when you were talking about even with these you know, Elizabeth talking about the potential abuse, the idea that she's being manipulated by an older man, thirty two year olds, These are what I would call her mitigating circumstances, and those can be taken into account by the district attorney in terms of how is she going to be charged, and the judge can also take those mitigating circumstances in terms of the penalty.
I think my primary problem is is that she had somebody commit murder, admits the committing murder, and they're not held responsible.
I think that the mitigating circumstances could have been used to potentially reduce what Elizabeth was convicted of and how long her sentence would have been, but I still think she needs to be held responsible.
That's kind of the position where I would come in.
This wasn't a self defense scenario that sometimes you do see with women that are being abused by men, and we don't.
It doesn't sound like it got to that level.
She is able to take her time and poison Arthur and kill them in a very slow, painful way, even though she's young and there's those mitigating circumstances.
I do feel that she should have at least been responsible, you know, to a point, for.
Speaker 2Sure, I agree, but I will point this little bit out so you know, we've done stories before about women who feel trapped because they're pregnant by their boyfriends who they're having an affair with.
So if she is pregnant in December or January is what they keep pointing to, saying January by month four, I'm assuming that Arthur would have started to see signs of this pregnancy by April and they're not having sex.
I'm presuming I could be wrong.
Of course there could be obviously for sex.
But I just wonder if there was like this ticking clock with the pregnancy she doesn't mention that.
That would not be a good thing for her to mention, obviously, But that's what I was thinking in my head this whole time, is she's pregnant, He's going to know it's not his.
She's going to get bigger and bigger, and how much longer can she hold out on this?
And then it would have just been fireworks in that small community in Ohio.
It would have been awful for her.
Speaker 4Yep.
Speaker 2So yes to mitigating circumstances, no to execute.
Yes to I guess James leaving and getting out of this.
But you know, of course, we think James is looped in here somehow, some way, and I wonder what happened with his wife and his kids.
If she just said, Okay, I'm out of this, that's it.
Speaker 4But in the eighteen fifties, it's that grounds for divorce.
Speaker 2It was like an act of God to get a divorce.
I mean you had to go to the state legislature to get a divorce in that time period.
I know it was really it was really difficult.
So you have worked so extraordinarily hard that I think you do need a couple of weeks off.
So we are on a hiatus week next week, are we?
I mean, listen, you can come back next week.
I'm not going to be here, but I can leave the fireplace on in the cottage.
Speaker 3And I can pine for you, hoping that you will see.
You could step into your cottage there you could just.
Speaker 2Make I know, you could fulfill some kind of a dream for us to switch roles and you can tell me a story and I can pipe in with different information.
Speaker 3There's no way, yeah, I could not hold a candle to your storytelling.
Speaker 2So Paul, Paul, thank you.
Speaker 1Well.
Speaker 2I will see you in two weeks.
We'll come back with the case in a completely different era, because I need a break already from the eighteen fifties.
Speaker 3For sure, Okay, sounds good.
Well, you take care of yourself and we'll see in a few weeks.
Speaker 2Okay.
Speaker 1This has been an exactly right production for.
Speaker 3Our sources and show notes go to Exactlyrightmedia dot com slash Buried Bones sources.
Speaker 1Our senior producer is Alexis Emosi.
Speaker 3Research by Maren mcclashan, Ali Elkin, and Kate Winkler Dawson.
Speaker 1Our mixing engineer is Ben Tolliday.
Speaker 4Our theme song is by Tom Bryfogel.
Speaker 1Our artwork is by Vanessa Lilac.
Speaker 3Executive produced by Karen Kilgaroff, Georgia hard Stark, and Daniel Kramer.
Speaker 2You can follow Buried Bones on Instagram and Facebook at Buried Bones pod.
Speaker 3Kate's most recent book, All That Is Wicked, a Gilded Age story of murder and the race to decode the criminal mind, is available.
Speaker 2Now, and Paul's best selling memoir Unmasked, My life Solving America's Cold Cases is also available now.
Speaker 3Listen to Varied Bones on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.