Episode Transcript
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0:00
With the $5 meal deal at McDonald's,
0:02
you pick a McDouble or a McChicken,
0:04
then get a small fry, a small
0:07
drink, and a four-piece McNuggets. That's
0:09
a lot of McDonald's for not a lot
0:11
of money. Price and participation may vary for
0:13
a limited time only. Hey
0:30
everyone, welcome back to Crime Weekly News. I'm
0:32
Derek Lavassar. And I'm Stephanie Harlow.
0:35
And real quickly, just want to
0:37
say thank you to everyone who
0:40
came out to CrimeCon. What an event.
0:43
Unbelievable. I know this is a little late. It'll
0:45
make more sense down the road why that is, why we're talking about it
0:47
now. Some of you detectives probably
0:50
already figured it out. But anyways, happy
0:53
to report that CrimeCon was a
0:55
huge success. We had a line
0:57
for three days straight. And we
0:59
were fortunate enough to basically get
1:01
to meet everyone up until
1:03
the last day where we were there on Sunday
1:05
packing up. People were still coming in and we
1:07
saw every single person. And I just want to
1:10
say thank you to everybody who waited. The
1:12
line was long, but as I was explaining to a
1:14
lot of people who were waiting for us, we're
1:17
trying to find that balance between spending enough
1:19
time with everyone to hear what you guys
1:21
want to talk about, sign everything you want
1:23
us to sign, while also being aware
1:26
that other people are waiting. And you
1:28
guys were awesome. Nobody bitch. Nobody complained.
1:30
Everyone was super understanding. And
1:32
also shout out to the team, Shannon,
1:35
Sam and Bella. They
1:38
were handling the merch and the coffee and
1:40
they were awesome. They were just on it the
1:43
whole time. Everything went great. Unfortunately,
1:46
we did not win
1:48
the Clue Awards. We were
1:51
double losers. We lost the Content
1:53
Creator of the Year Award for Crime Weekly and
1:56
we lost Detective
1:58
Perspective Outstanding Podcast. series,
2:00
but, and I know it sounds cliche to say it,
2:03
it really is an honor to be nominated
2:05
when you think about the other podcasts
2:07
that are in the same category with
2:10
us, some really heavy hitters, and it
2:12
truly is a blessing to be mentioned
2:15
with them because it's not guaranteed. And there's a
2:17
lot of podcasts that attend these events, and
2:19
so to be one of the very few who
2:21
get nominated, who get to attend this event and
2:24
have these experiences, we
2:26
are very, very lucky and we wouldn't be here
2:29
without you guys. So we're gonna keep
2:31
fighting, we're gonna keep growing and learning.
2:33
That's the benefit for these events is
2:35
I just put up a post about it where we
2:37
get to interact with you guys, hear about what
2:40
you like, what you don't like, what cases you
2:42
want to hear in the future, and we're getting
2:44
to have those one-on-one experiences instead of just seeing
2:46
them in the comments. So it's
2:48
really valuable to us and I promise
2:50
you we're getting as much out of it as you
2:52
guys are, and yeah it was
2:54
just an awesome experience and Stephanie,
2:57
anything to add to that? CrimeCon,
2:59
awesome. Shannon, Sam, Bella? It
3:02
was awesome. Every one we met
3:04
was so sweet, just
3:07
a pleasure to get to talk to the same
3:10
people that watch the videos every week and we talked
3:12
to you in the comments, but to see you in
3:14
person to be able to put my arms around you,
3:16
hug you, talk to you, you
3:18
know, have human connection, there's nothing that
3:20
beats that. We are so thankful for
3:23
all the support we get at CrimeCon and we're so
3:25
thankful to be able to spend any time that we
3:27
get and Derek always thinks I spend too much time
3:30
with everybody because I have no like concept of
3:33
there's a line and we need to go but
3:35
like you waited in the line I want to
3:37
give everybody like their due amount of time and
3:39
I kind of want to also spend time so.
3:41
Stephanie feels the need to physically
3:43
dry each and every signature by blowing
3:45
on it for two minutes. Because I don't
3:48
want it to smudge man. Yeah so I'm
3:50
like come on they can blow on their own card. There's nothing worse
3:52
than a smudge signature. I
3:55
get it, I get it and no it was great.
3:57
If you go on our website Crime Weekly Podcast
4:00
Com all the photos that were taken by Sam
4:02
and Shannon are up on the website They're the
4:04
ones that we took so if you're if you
4:06
took photos with us with one of our cameras
4:09
Go over to crime with the podcast comm right
4:11
now You can go check out the photos and
4:13
there's already a link for Denver, which will be
4:15
next year We can go over you
4:18
can sign up you can use our code and you'll get a discount
4:20
if you use it that doesn't apply To
4:22
VIP tickets though. It's just the normal
4:24
general passes So again really appreciate it
4:26
and we're gonna transition now and I
4:29
always hate doing this when we go
4:31
from this positive You know story that
4:33
we're talking about with you guys to
4:35
something. That's not so great but also
4:37
very important because Part of
4:39
the reason we started crime weekly news is
4:41
to cover topical stories and headlines Not
4:44
only because they're they're terrible But also because
4:46
there's usually something to take from it something
4:48
to learn and and tonight's story is no
4:51
different So maybe some of you have heard
4:53
about it. Maybe some of you haven't so
4:55
we'll go over the specifics And
4:57
then we'll dive into what we can take
5:00
away from it So for those of you
5:02
who haven't heard a North Carolina family of
5:04
five was tortured with hot metal during a
5:06
home evasion According to police now from what
5:08
we know at around 2 a.m Local
5:11
time on Saturday, June 15th a
5:13
family in Western Harnett County of
5:15
North Carolina Was sitting in their
5:17
garage with their door open when a group of five men
5:20
Approached the home and allegedly assaulted the
5:22
family before stealing some of their belongings
5:25
now Stephanie's gonna get into more details But there's
5:27
definitely information that we can take from this. But
5:29
before we get to that Stephanie, what do you
5:31
want to add to this? Yeah
5:33
So this is actually terrible because what
5:35
happened according to sheriff Wayne Coates is
5:37
the five men tied the family up
5:39
with duct tape But
5:42
then they began to torture them as well Which
5:44
I mean any normal person could say hey if
5:46
you're there to steal these people's belongings You don't
5:49
you don't have to torture them But what they did is
5:51
they put a knife and a fork on top of the
5:53
stove They heated up the metal of the knife and fork
5:56
and then they stuck it to the bodies of the family
5:58
members the sheriff portioned
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9:48
so we're back. And I was thinking about this as
9:50
I was reading about this story.
9:52
And again, I'm going to give a couple theories,
9:54
but there's also a lot of variables that we're
9:56
unaware of at this point. This is an open
9:58
investigation. There may be some sort of be more
10:01
information that if we were aware of it, it
10:03
may change our opinions. But on
10:05
the surface, let's talk about what transpired.
10:07
This family was outside. They were in
10:10
front of the garage. You
10:12
could have a situation where they
10:14
were just victims of opportunity. There's no
10:17
previous story connected to this and that
10:19
this group of individuals had
10:21
been casing the neighborhood, saw this
10:24
family outside with the garage door
10:26
open, saw easy access and decided
10:28
to capitalize on this
10:30
vulnerability. Absolutely
10:33
plausible where that was just wrong people, wrong
10:35
time, and it just happened to them because
10:37
they were outside. However,
10:40
in many instances, there's usually, not
10:42
all the time, more to the
10:44
story. And I've
10:46
investigated dozens, if not hundreds
10:48
of home invasions at different
10:51
levels. And usually
10:53
there's some premeditation, some planning that goes
10:55
into it. And there's a
10:57
motive behind the home invasion. Not
10:59
always, but in most cases there are. So
11:02
what could those motivations be? This
11:05
could be an inside job. It may be someone
11:07
who's connected to the family or a friend of
11:09
the family who's aware of valuables
11:11
that are inside the home. Could
11:13
it be guns? Could it be money? Could it
11:16
be jewelry? It could
11:18
be any of those things or it could be multiple things. I
11:21
also see situations like this and again, let me
11:23
qualify by saying I'm not suggesting it's the case
11:25
here. But you also see a
11:27
lot of home invasions where there's
11:29
narcotics involved, where the attacks
11:32
occur because a rival
11:34
gang or a rival competitor
11:36
knows that there's a large amount of money or drugs
11:39
inside the home. And because
11:41
these individuals are facilitating some type
11:43
of illegal activity, you have
11:45
different individuals who are entering the home at different
11:47
times of the day. They're exposed
11:49
to the inner workings of the house and where
11:51
things are located. They may inform
11:53
other drug dealers of what's going on. And
11:56
so this could be a planned attack from one
11:59
competitor to another. another where that that's a simply
12:01
they're going in there to steal their product and
12:03
their money. You also mentioned
12:05
guns. Now they were
12:07
looking for guns so another scenario is
12:10
misidentification wrong house. Right. It could
12:13
be the exact scenario that I
12:15
just described where this group of
12:17
individuals were looking for a
12:19
specific home that contained drugs guns and
12:21
money and they accidentally went to the
12:24
wrong home. Sounds stupid but
12:27
it's happened before and it's going to happen again. So
12:30
without having the full details we
12:33
really don't know what transpired here
12:35
but we can take some things from it
12:38
and I tell my kids about this all the time
12:40
to a lesser degree. I
12:42
live in a nice area but at the
12:44
end of the day it doesn't matter where you live it
12:46
can happen to anyone anywhere and if
12:49
there's a vulnerability that's exposed to the public
12:51
yes 99% of the time it might just
12:54
be your neighbors that notice it
12:57
but all it takes is that
12:59
one time where someone who has
13:01
an ulterior motive who has malicious
13:03
intentions to see that vulnerability
13:05
make note of it and then keep an
13:07
eye on it for future situations and
13:09
what am I talking about here leaving
13:11
your garage door open leaving the
13:13
gate to your backyard open which could lead
13:15
to a sliding glass door leaving
13:18
your front door open when
13:21
you have like a glass door on the front or a front
13:23
screen this is what my children are guilty
13:25
of all the time though you
13:27
know they'll keep the the main door that has
13:29
the deadbolt open because we have the glass door
13:31
in the front that they can look out they
13:34
can wave to their friends they can see everything
13:36
that's going on the dog likes to look out
13:38
the glass door as well it's all cute and
13:40
innocent but there's no protection
13:42
there an assailant can just or
13:45
they can just simply open the door because
13:48
my children never lock the glass door and
13:51
they always get upset with
13:53
me when I'm like what are you doing because
13:55
I'll walk in and I'm how did I just gain entry
13:57
so easy like what are you guys doing it
14:00
was only for a couple of minutes. That's all
14:02
it takes. Garage door is
14:04
open, front door is open. Somebody
14:06
walking by with no premeditation could
14:08
just say, hey, here's
14:10
an easy access point. It looks like
14:13
just one individual is home or they
14:15
may see just the kids in the front of the house
14:18
and decide, you know what, I'm
14:20
going inside. And once they're in,
14:22
what do you do then? Now you're at a
14:25
disadvantage because they're inside your home and
14:27
if you can't get outside,
14:29
you can't gain access to anyone to let them know
14:31
what's going on. So there's
14:34
a lot of issues there and I think that minimum what we
14:36
can take from this is you always,
14:38
and I know I'm always scaring you guys, but
14:41
you have to assume the worst in these
14:43
situations and I'd rather be safe
14:45
than sorry. I know it's a cliche statement, but
14:48
you have to assume that it's
14:50
not the people that you know you have to
14:53
worry about, it's the people you don't know about.
14:55
Just somebody driving by, somebody walking by. It could
14:57
be someone that you've seen every day who walks
14:59
their dog. You don't know who that person is.
15:01
You don't know who they are behind closed doors.
15:04
So when you can, you
15:06
want to prevent these types of situations
15:08
and you can do that by taking
15:11
simple precautions like shutting your
15:13
garage door, shutting your exterior
15:15
door, making sure that your
15:17
windows have some type of locking mechanism where
15:19
the window can go up, but
15:21
you can put those brackets at a certain height
15:24
where you can still open the window, but especially
15:26
the windows on the first floor, even
15:28
if they're open, they can't go far enough where
15:30
another human being could climb through them, especially
15:33
if you have air conditioning units
15:35
that you can just kick in. That's
15:37
a big thing that we see on first floors where
15:40
if you don't have central air, you
15:42
could have a unit that could be pushed in and that
15:44
would be easy access for an offender. So
15:46
there's a lot of things that
15:49
we can do to mitigate these types
15:51
of circumstances and that's really why we're
15:53
here. That's really why we're talking about
15:55
it. I was thinking like maybe it's
15:57
drugs and it was just kind of a crime
15:59
of opportunity. where they're driving around and like, oh, we
16:01
gotta get money, we gotta get drugs, we gotta get
16:03
something we can sell for drugs, and they happen to
16:05
see this family with the garage door open. Possible, yeah.
16:07
So it's like, oh, well, here's, you know, maybe
16:10
they have money, maybe they have drugs, and it
16:12
wasn't really like they knew for sure that they
16:14
did. Correct. But it was like there could be a potential
16:16
that they do, and we're gonna torture them
16:18
until we get an answer, because this is like an act
16:20
of desperation, it looks like. Yeah, and you
16:23
bring up a great point there where not only
16:25
did they go into the home, but
16:27
it does appear from what we're being told that
16:29
there was some type of torture
16:31
being conducted through a
16:34
very poor interrogation tactic where
16:37
they were assaulting the children and
16:39
the adults, and probably assaulting the
16:41
children to elicit a specific response
16:43
from the adults, right? Like if the adults weren't
16:45
willing to give up their information on
16:47
their own, one way you could do it
16:50
is by punishing the children in front of them. It's
16:52
terrible to think, but it does
16:54
sound like that happened, which is why I
16:57
tend to believe there's definitely
17:00
more to the story. It sounds like
17:02
these individuals felt like
17:04
they knew what was in
17:06
the home. Again, it could be the wrong house, but
17:09
it sounds like they were searching for
17:11
something specific, and as it said in the
17:13
article, they were requesting guns
17:15
which weren't there. So they went
17:17
into this house under some type of pretense that
17:19
they were going to get a particular item, and
17:21
it looks like it was firearms. So
17:24
they appeared to have escalated their
17:26
interrogation tactics when they didn't get
17:29
what they wanted, and I'm really
17:31
interested to hear what comes
17:33
out of this story because I think we're just
17:35
scratching the surface, and I wanted
17:37
to say it again and reiterate it by no means
17:39
am I suggesting that this family did
17:41
anything wrong. I don't know them, I don't know the
17:44
specifics of it, but there's definitely
17:46
something going on here, and it
17:48
may have nothing to do with the
17:50
actual family, but maybe the offenders
17:52
involved were, again, wrong
17:54
place, wrong time, or they, like you said,
17:57
they were in desperate need of something they could
17:59
sell, there's
22:00
this roar that goes throughout the
22:02
entire convention center. I mean, loud
22:05
applause, everything. I didn't know
22:07
what was going on. And I looked at you and I
22:10
said, what's going on? And you said, Chad
22:12
Daybell just got the death penalty. And I
22:15
wanted to get your opinion on it because I
22:17
believe Lori Valo did not
22:19
get the death penalty. She got two consecutive
22:21
life sentences. So what do you make of
22:23
all this? Yeah, she got consecutive. I think
22:25
it's ridiculous. I think they both should have
22:27
gotten the death penalty, obviously. They
22:30
were her children. She was definitely running the show in
22:33
a lot of this. I mean, we covered this case
22:35
extensively. Yeah, I thought we agreed to that when we
22:37
did the series on this case. But I mean,
22:40
they're both culpable. They're both responsible, equally
22:43
responsible, in my opinion. So like who
22:45
was running the show, who
22:47
was driving the ship, it doesn't really
22:49
matter. At the end of the day,
22:51
like the actions were done by consenting
22:54
adults who both understood the implications. There's
22:58
nothing in me that thinks Chad
23:00
Daybell is more culpable than Lori
23:02
Valo. But I
23:04
don't understand what the reasoning is
23:06
for it. Yeah, I
23:09
was obviously not tuning into the
23:11
trial too much. But my guess
23:13
would be Lori
23:15
may have done some
23:17
of the planning, but Chad Daybell
23:19
actually carried out the physical act.
23:22
So maybe that's why. I get it,
23:24
but still. I know I'm with you. I'm with you. Like
23:27
if I'm involved in a robbery
23:29
and someone goes and I'm the driver and
23:31
someone goes in and kills the cashier, in
23:34
some instances, the driver can be held just
23:36
as responsible as the shooter and can be
23:38
given the same sentence. So I don't
23:41
know. I'm with you. Based on everything
23:43
we covered, it seemed like she was really
23:46
heavily involved with everything that transpired. And
23:48
I don't even know if these things happen. If
23:51
she's not involved. She was very manipulative, handling
23:53
a lot of this and kind of, in
23:55
my opinion, the brain behind
23:58
all of it. to
24:00
think that she got two life sentences and he's getting
24:02
the death penalty, it seems like,
24:04
you know, maybe they got that wrong. But I
24:06
will say this, I
24:08
almost feel like Chad might be getting off a
24:11
little easier because I don't know what's worse, the
24:13
death penalty or being in prison for
24:15
the rest of your life when they're relatively young. I
24:17
say that because I'm 40. I
24:20
wanna pretend like I'm young. Yeah, it's relatively. But
24:23
I mean, I don't know. I don't know what
24:25
I would want more to be
24:28
in prison for the rest of my life without the
24:30
possibility of getting out or just, you know,
24:32
a five minute thing where the lights go out and that's
24:34
it, game over. So depending on where
24:36
you fall on that, you may be
24:39
on one side or the other, but we
24:41
always tell you, we're gonna keep you updated on these
24:43
cases, especially the big series that we do. And
24:46
that was the latest update and it
24:48
just so happened while we were at
24:50
CrimeCon. And then I put it on
24:52
Instagram. Yeah. And
24:55
it's still there. Yeah, you posted it, right? Yeah, I
24:57
posted it because I missed the initial roar but
25:00
then when I figured out what was happening, I kind
25:02
of pulled my camera out and it was just this
25:04
like amazing connecting experience. And it's like, you know, you
25:06
hate to cheer for somebody being put to death, but
25:09
at the same time, not in
25:12
this situation. I think a cheer was necessary.
25:14
It felt like, you know, I've
25:16
been on this case since it happened.
25:18
I was in a different house. I was
25:20
in a different place in my life. I've
25:23
been following this case religiously since then. And
25:25
it felt, I just
25:27
got goosebumps, but it felt like a
25:30
culmination of all the frustration and
25:32
like pain and, you know,
25:36
like ridiculousness of these two people. And
25:38
then they kind of like going about
25:40
their lives for years, just taking people
25:42
out and nothing's happening. And
25:45
then finally it's like, okay, through
25:47
the whole crime,
25:50
which took years, through the whole investigation
25:52
and then the arrest, and then finally
25:55
the trials. And it's been years and
25:57
years, but finally JJ and Tylee. justice
26:00
and it's not enough. It's not
26:03
enough because these were
26:05
two innocent children who became the victims
26:07
of, I'd like to say they were
26:09
crazy, but I think they're just evil,
26:12
evil people. And
26:14
they didn't ask for this and they didn't want this and
26:16
they had their whole lives ahead of them and so when
26:18
I say like it's some sort of justice it's the only
26:20
one that they are allowed to now but what they should
26:22
have had was their lives to live. Yeah I think I
26:24
think overall we met a lot of
26:26
people at CrimeCon and there's a lot of parents there
26:28
and I think that's what the cheer was. It wasn't
26:30
necessarily because someone was sentenced to death. It was that
26:32
it did feel weird like are we cheering for this
26:34
but it but that's no it was more justice for
26:36
the kids. Yeah that's how I took it more justice
26:38
for the kids that were taken from
26:40
us all too soon but I
26:43
want to switch gears one more thing before we go
26:45
tonight in the same vein of CrimeCon but also another
26:48
case that we had just covered
26:50
extensively the Menendez brothers. There was
26:52
another form of breaking news
26:54
that only was known to people who
26:56
attended CrimeCon. Now we were at our
26:59
booth we were you know meeting everyone
27:01
but then all of a sudden we started getting
27:04
rapid-fire information from everyone who
27:06
was coming up to our booth and
27:09
it was regarding the Menendez brothers. Mark
27:12
Garagos was at the event and
27:14
apparently we were not there but he was
27:16
doing some type of speaking engagement and he
27:18
actually got I believe it
27:20
was Eric Menendez don't hold me to that
27:22
Eric or Lyle I can't remember which one
27:25
it was maybe you know Stephanie but one
27:27
of the Menendez brothers. It was Lyle. Okay
27:29
it was Lyle got Lyle on speakerphone at
27:32
the event so everyone was hearing
27:34
him at this event and I
27:36
don't know exactly what was discussed but I
27:39
guess they're filing for some type of
27:41
appeal or something along that lines but
27:43
I just found it very interesting because
27:45
we were just wrapping up the Menendez
27:47
series and while we're in
27:49
the other room Lyle Menendez is on
27:51
speakerphone so a lot of you
27:54
came up to us and informed us that that was
27:56
taking place and talk about timing
27:58
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