MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories XX
[0] Hey, Prime members, you can binge eight new episodes of the Mr. Ballin podcast one month early and all episodes ad -free on Amazon Music.
[1] Download the Amazon Music app today.
[2] Today's podcast features two stories that will make you think twice before leaving the trail.
[3] The audio from both of these stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel and has been remastered for today's episode.
[4] The links to the original YouTube videos are in the description.
[5] The first story you'll hear is called Dinner and it's about a solo hiker who makes a big mistake.
[6] And the second and final story you'll hear is called Rattlesnake Canyon, and it's about two people who find themselves in a totally hopeless situation.
[7] As the story unfolds, ask yourself, if you were in their position, what would you do?
[8] But before we get into today's stories, if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious, delivered in story format, then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we do, and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday.
[9] So, if that's of interest to you, after the Amazon Music Follow button has gone to for the night, secretly sneak into their room, and slightly unplug their phone charger from their phone, so it looks like it's plugged in, but it's not charging.
[10] Okay, let's get into our first story, which is called dinner.
[11] I'm Dan Tversky.
[12] In 2011, something strange began to happen at a high school in upstate New York, a mystery illness, bizarre symptoms, and spreading fast.
[13] What's the answer?
[14] And what do you do if they tell you it's all in your head?
[15] Hysterical.
[16] A new podcast from Wondry and Pineapple Street Studios.
[17] Binge all episodes.
[18] of hysterical early and ad -free on Wondery Plus.
[19] In the summer of 2015, a young man named Paul was on his last day of a seven -day solo backpacking trip through a very remote area in Utah called the Dark Canyon Wilderness.
[20] Dark Canyon gets its name from its steep walls that block light in the morning and in the late afternoon.
[21] It's an area that's only accessible by foot and it's not uncommon to go in there and not see another person the whole time you're there.
[22] That morning, Paul got up and set off on a day, a day hike that would take him through a very forested area up onto a plateau where he planned to camp out for the night.
[23] About a mile into the hike, he found some amazing elk antlers and he decided he wanted to keep them.
[24] So he threw him on his backpack and rested them at the top and continued on his hike.
[25] But the added 15 pounds of weight proved to be far more exhausting than he was anticipating and very quickly he blew through all of his water.
[26] Even though he was within one mile of his final destination, this plateau, he decided to stop because he was so dehydrated, he needed to find water.
[27] So he puts his pack down, he puts the elk antlers down, and he starts walking around, and amazingly, he does find some water.
[28] Granted, it was kind of a gross puddle of standing water, but he figured I can boil this, and it should be okay.
[29] And as he's preparing a fire to boil this standing water, he figures, you know what, if I'm making a fire here, I might as well just make my camp here.
[30] So he sets up his tent, and then he makes a fire, and he's about to start boiling this water when he realizes how dumb he's being.
[31] If there's a puddle of standing water right here, then probably just a little ways upstream there's going to be some running water.
[32] Why don't I not boil this crappy water that will only yield, you know, a couple sips of water and go look for the running water where I can drink as much as I want?
[33] So he puts the pot down and he leaves all of his gear at the campsite and he begins walking up this mountain to hopefully find a stream.
[34] And after about a half mile of walking up this mountain, he finds this little spring.
[35] Immediately he's down on hands and knees drinking as much water as he possibly can because he's super dehydrated.
[36] And after he's drank for quite a while, he reaches down to his belt where he kept his water bottles.
[37] And he realized he left all of his gear, including his water bottles at camp.
[38] So he didn't have a way to collect this water.
[39] And so he's like, shoot, I got to go back to camp and get the bottle and come back.
[40] I'm going to burn a bunch of energy.
[41] But he's like, you know what?
[42] What can you do?
[43] I need the water.
[44] And so he gets up and he turns around and he starts walking back towards his camp.
[45] And immediately, he starts to feel really anxious as he's walking back.
[46] He can't help but feel like someone's behind him watching him.
[47] And he kept turning his head thinking he's going to see someone just over the mountain who's quietly stalking him and he just could not shake this feeling.
[48] And so as he's walking back to camp, every little sound he hears is totally throwing him off.
[49] Every little rustling leaf, every little bird overhead, he's totally on edge because he's convinced, someone is behind me or someone's over there, someone's watching me. He finally gets back to camp, he gets his water bottles, and he considered not going back to the spring because he didn't want to cover that distance again because of how stressful it just was.
[50] But ultimately, he knows he needs the water.
[51] So either he's going to sit here for a really long time and boil a bunch of stagnant water, or he can just suck it up, walk to the spring, get some water, come back, and be good.
[52] Before he walks up to the spring he grabs a really big stick to use as a club and then he walks up so now he's got some protection and immediately as he begins that half -mile trek to the spring the anxiety pours right back over him and he can't help but feel like someone is watching him but he gets up to the spring he fills his water bottles he turns around and he starts walking back and he walks down this little rock face and lands on the trail he had just been on a minute ago and he stops because he sees something on the ground that wasn't there before.
[53] A fresh mountain lion print is placed right in between two of his footprints that he had just made on his way back to the spring, meaning there's a mountain lion somewhere right around here that's not just watching me, it's hunting me. Paul doesn't really know what to do, so he runs to his campsite and gets in his tent and huddles in his tent for the rest of the night, hoping a mountain lion doesn't attack him.
[54] And fortunately, it does not.
[55] And what he thinks probably happened was when he picked up those elk antlers and put them on his backpack and was walking around with them, he probably attracted the mountain line that thought he was an elk and therefore food.
[56] Hey, all you fans of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious, it's me, Mr. Ballen, and today I have some big news.
[57] It's something I'm holding in my hands right now, and so obviously you can't see it, but this is something you're really going to want to see.
[58] It's the first ever official Mr. Ballin publication.
[59] It's a graphic novel, and it's called Mr. Ballin Presents, strange, dark, and mysterious, the graphic stories.
[60] It's an anthology of both classic and brand new, terrifying stories that we've never covered on any of my other platforms because we created them specifically for this first book.
[61] Each of these stories in the book are feature -length, Mr. Ball, and Stories that really needed to be told visually.
[62] And the artwork in this book is, I mean, I'm looking at it, and it's just absolutely stunning.
[63] So the book is not actually coming out until my birthday this year, October 1st, but you can pre -order it right now at book .bollen studios .com.
[64] Again, that's book .bohlen studios .com.
[65] I'm Dan Taberski.
[66] In 2011, something strange began to happen at the high school in Leroy, New York.
[67] I was like at my locker and she came up to me and she was like stuttering super bad.
[68] I'm like, stop fucking around.
[69] She's like, I can't.
[70] A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms and spreading fast.
[71] It's like doubling and tripling and it's all these girls.
[72] With a diagnosis, the state tried to keep on the down low.
[73] Everybody thought I was holding something back.
[74] Well, you were holding something back.
[75] Intentionally.
[76] Yeah, well, yeah.
[77] No, it's hysteria.
[78] It's all in your head.
[79] It's not physical.
[80] Oh, my gosh, you're exaggerating.
[81] Is this the largest mass hysteria since the Witches of Salem?
[82] Or is it something else entirely?
[83] Something's wrong here.
[84] Something's not right.
[85] Leroy was the new date line and everyone was trying to solve the murder.
[86] A new limited series from Wondery and Pineapple Street Studios.
[87] Hysterical.
[88] Follow Hysterical on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
[89] You can binge all episodes of Hysterical early and ad -free right now by joining Wondry Plus.
[90] The next and final story of today's episode is called Rattlesnake Canyon.
[91] At about 1 .30 in the afternoon on August 8, 1999, a park ranger named Lance Madsen stood frowning down at a dusty red Mazda car inside of an otherwise empty parking lot just outside of Carlsbad Caverns National Park.
[92] in New Mexico.
[93] Lance knew the two men who owned this red Mazda had taken out a one -night permit to be allowed to go into Rattlesnake Canyon, which is one of the most isolated parts of this national park.
[94] It's basically just a single, long, scrubby little trail that's kind of all desert, with high canyon walls on either side.
[95] In order to get access to Rattlesnake Canyon, people need to go to the visitor's center and literally fill out paperwork so the park rangers know they're out there and can go out and check on them if they don't come back in time.
[96] And so the two men who owned the Mazda had done that.
[97] They had filled out all the paperwork, but now Lance was noticing they had not returned at the end of their permit.
[98] They had stayed out, presumably, in Rattlesnake Canyon, for an additional three nights.
[99] Now, Lance was not concerned because people did do this.
[100] It was more like he was annoyed, because now he would have to go out into Rattlesnake Canyon and find these two guys and figure out what was going on.
[101] So, Lance and the park volunteer that he was with began walking on the trail in the direction of Rattlesnake Canyon.
[102] And after walking less than a mile on this trail, Lance and this volunteer looked up ahead, and just off the trail, there was a green and maroon tent that was pitched right out in the open.
[103] And so Lance immediately assumed that this had to be the two men who owned the Red Mazda.
[104] And so very quickly, Lance's annoyance was replaced with relief because it turned out it was really easy.
[105] to find these two campers and he'd be able to go figure out what was going on and either get them back to their car and get them to leave or if they wanted to they could in theory extend and stay longer with the right permitting but when lance and his partner walked down the trail and left the trail to go walk over to this tent they started to notice there was something off about it right away as they got closer and closer to this tent they began to smell this horrible kind of chemical burning smell, and then also all over the ground were all these little bits of burned pieces of trash.
[106] And then finally, when Lance and his partner actually arrived right in front of the tent, and they were looking down at the closed flap, it was zipped shut, they saw clearly there was something moving around inside of the tent.
[107] But whoever or whatever it was, wasn't making any noise.
[108] And so Lance and his partner, they kind of looked at each other, and they both at this point were pretty nervous.
[109] You know, their hearts are racing, they don't know what's going on here.
[110] And then Lance just kind of impulsively reached down, unzip the tent, and lifted it open.
[111] And when he saw what was inside, he immediately was hit with this wave of fear and anxiety.
[112] Three days earlier, on August 5, 1999, a 26 -year -old man named David Coughlin woke up in a sleeping bag inside of his green and maroon tent in Rattlesnake Canyon.
[113] And as soon as David sat up, he smiled, because he could hear right outside of his tent, the sound of his best friend, Rafi Kota Kean, making breakfast and gathering up supplies for that morning's hike.
[114] Dave and Rafi were on what they called a trip of a lifetime.
[115] Six days earlier, they had left their hometown of Boston, Massachusetts, and traveled more than 2 ,000 miles west, sleeping at campsites and cheap motels along the way.
[116] Their final destination was a university in Santa Barbara, California, where Dave was going to be getting his master's in environmental engineering, but they were going to basically turned the journey out to California into a big vacation.
[117] And Carlsbad Caverns National Park was easily both of the men's favorite spot so far, because unlike the other campgrounds they had stayed at so far, which were kind of cheap and small, Carlsbad Caverns was huge.
[118] It was 47 ,000 acres of just wild desert.
[119] And so for Dave and Rafi, whose normal everyday lives were kind of safe and boring doing desk jobs and the like, this felt sort of thrilling, like they were cowboys exploring the wild west.
[120] As Dave sat inside of his tent, listening to Rafi make breakfast and get ready, Dave noticed he was already sweating, despite it being pretty early in the morning.
[121] It was just already so hot outside.
[122] And so Dave grabbed his water and took a sip, and as he did, he thought about that park ranger who had helped them fill out their paperwork to be allowed to come out into Rattlesnake Canyon, who had made a really big deal about ensuring that Dave and Raffy each have at least one gallon of water per person per day, that they were going to be out here because of the heat.
[123] But after they had left the park ranger, Rafi, who had way more experience camping than Dave did, explained to Dave that that was totally overkill and they didn't need that much water.
[124] So, instead of bringing two huge gallons of water for the single night, they planned to be out in Rattlesnake Canyon, Rafi had brought along for both of them just three 16 -ounce bottles of water.
[125] For reference, that's approximately six times less than what the park ranger had suggested.
[126] The men had already used one of those 16 -ounce bottles of water to boil hot dogs the night before for their dinner.
[127] And now the bottle that Dave was drinking from was already half empty.
[128] And so he was pretty much down to the last of his water.
[129] But Dave wasn't really worried about his water because he and Rafi were going to be hiking out of Rattlesnake Canyon that day and heading back to their car and continuing their journey out to California.
[130] And they knew they had set up their tent very close to the parking lot.
[131] And so it was a short hike.
[132] They're back in their car and then they're good.
[133] And so Dave capped his water, he got out of a sleeping bag, he left the tent, and he joined Rafi in prepping their supplies to get ready for their hike out.
[134] And by 8 .30 a .m., their entire site was packed up, and the two men were on their way heading back.
[135] The two men walked at a leisurely pace in the direction towards their vehicle for about an hour, and as they walked, they did see signs that they were on the right trail.
[136] There were these stacks of white rocks that marked the trail, but after walking this full hour, they knew they probably should have been at the parking lot, but they didn't see it yet.
[137] However, the two men were not worried yet, because remember, they know they're close, and so they're thinking, okay, maybe a couple more minutes, and we'll see the parking lot.
[138] And so they stopped, they had some more water, and then they kept on walking.
[139] But after walking for another two, three hours still in the direction that they believe was towards the parking lot, they did not see the parking lot.
[140] In fact, they didn't see anything that looked familiar, and there were no more stacks of white rocks.
[141] to show they were even on a trail.
[142] They were totally lost.
[143] And so Dave and Rafi, who were doing their best not to panic, they both sat down, they pulled off their packs, and they pulled out their topographical map, and began looking for some sign of where they were.
[144] But neither man could read the topographical map, and so all the swirls on the map showing every contour of every geographical feature, it just didn't make any sense to them, and so the map was of no use, and it was getting hotter and hotter by the minute.
[145] And so Dave and Raffey put the map away, feeling totally frustrated.
[146] And for a second, they thought about getting up and just continuing to walk roughly in the direction they thought they should go.
[147] But as soon as they stood up, they both just felt so exhausted from walking and the heat, which was now, you know, it's noon.
[148] So it's really burning down on them.
[149] And so the two men just walked over to the edge of a canyon wall where some shrubs were kind of hanging off the wall, providing a little bit of shade.
[150] And the two men just plunked down right underneath the shade.
[151] and they just sat there in silence.
[152] Both men knew they did not have the supplies to stay out in this canyon for much longer.
[153] They certainly didn't have enough water, which now really was starting to feel like a huge oversight.
[154] But luckily, as they're just sitting there, these huge storm clouds rolled in, and for a very short amount of time, there was this incredible downpour of rain.
[155] And so Dave and Rafi began catching the raindrops in their mouths, and they begin drinking the water off of rocks and leaves.
[156] And, I mean, it wasn't a lot, but it was enough to kind of boost their spirits they got a little bit more hydration in and they were kind of ready to deal with the problem they were facing after the storm had gone dave and raffey decided that their best move was just to continue walking and try to find this parking lot but despite this motivation dave and raffy would walk for hours and hours into the night they would not find the parking lot and so finally they realized they would have to stop and set up camp for another night.
[157] And so, Dave and Rafi, who by now were really starting to feel scared, they found this washed out gully, and they set up their green and maroon tent, but neither man could sleep.
[158] And so they just sat outside of their tent, telling each other that, don't worry, the park rangers are bound to have noticed that we did not come back in time.
[159] We only had that one day permit, we've exceeded the limit, they're bound to come out here and find us.
[160] But in the back of both Dave and Rafi's mind, they weren't so sure that was definitely going to happen.
[161] They didn't really know how long it would take for park rangers to notice when people stayed too long.
[162] But as Dave and Raffey were speaking, they suddenly noticed far off in the distance something that looked like headlights, like on a car.
[163] And it was moving across the horizon.
[164] And both Dave and Raffey thought, wait a minute, that's got to be a road right there.
[165] All we have to do is go to that road and we're saved.
[166] We don't need the park rangers to come rescue us.
[167] And so suddenly, Dave and Raffy were filled with hope and they forgot about how third.
[168] thirsty and hungry they were, then they just crawled into their beds and they fell asleep almost immediately because all they wanted to do was get to the next morning where there'd be daylight so they could hike out and get to that road and get back home.
[169] Dave and Rafi woke up early the next morning and they were very eager to get up and start making their way towards this road, but instead of packing up their campsite and bringing it with them, they decided instead to leave their campsite and leave behind a journal that had some information about who they were and what they were doing in case park rangers came looking for them.
[170] And so Dave pulled out a journal from his pack and he drew a kind of crude map of where this campsite was and where they were going towards this road that appeared to be up on this ridge.
[171] And then also Dave included in this note, you know, Dave and Rafi's names, their ages where they live, some contact info, and also the fact that they were completely out of food and water and that if you find this journal, please follow up and make sure we're okay.
[172] And so, after leaving behind this journal at the campsite, Dave and Rafi set off to go to this road.
[173] But after walking for hours and hours up a kind of gradual incline, they reached what appeared to be this kind of third ridge where up and above the ridge was this road.
[174] But to get up onto this kind of wall right in front of them was really challenging.
[175] There was cactus everywhere, and the gullies that kind of led up to the top of this ridge were very slippery and almost vertical, so nearly impossible.
[176] to climb.
[177] And so this was really a chore getting up there.
[178] And you got to remember that Dave and Rafi are already totally exhausted.
[179] They have no food, no water.
[180] And so this is miserable.
[181] But eventually, Dave and Rafi were able to get up onto this ridge and they looked out and there was no road.
[182] There was nothing.
[183] It was just pure desert as far as they could see.
[184] And so they had no idea what those lights were that they saw.
[185] Clearly, it was not headlights.
[186] I mean, for all they knew, it could have been a figment of their imagination.
[187] You know, they're desperate to be saved, and so maybe it was possible that they imagined seeing this road.
[188] And so as the two men stared in stunned silence at nothingness in front of them, they noticed that a buzzard had actually begun flying in slow circles over their head, almost like it was just waiting for the two men to die so the buzzard could come down and eat them.
[189] Now, Dave was ready right then and there to head back to their campsite and just wait, but Rafi was insistent that they just keep on going because you never know, maybe there is a road just a little bit farther along, but after walking for maybe a couple more hours, they did not see a road, and by this point, both men were beyond exhausted, and so the two men did finally turn around and painstakingly walk their way all the way back to their campsite, and as they're walking, they're telling themselves, you know, maybe we'll get there, and park rangers will be waiting for us, you know, a search party will be here.
[190] But when they got to their campsite, there was absolutely no sign that anybody had come to their campsite since they left.
[191] Their journal with their note and their crude map and all that was still just sitting right in the middle of their campsite untouched.
[192] And it was at this point that Dave and Raffy's spirits were just totally broken.
[193] The next morning was Saturday, August 7th.
[194] So Dave and Raffey were now beginning their fourth day in the desert and their third day without any water.
[195] Raffy had gotten really sick from drinking his own urine, and Dave had begun to experience all these horrible stomach cramps very likely from eating unriped prickly pears.
[196] Also, Dave's legs were starting to seize up, which made it nearly impossible to walk.
[197] And so the two men knew they had no chance of hiking out of here to safety.
[198] They really just had to wait for their rescue to come.
[199] And so that day, Dave and Raffy attempted with the little energy they had to make a huge SOS symbol on the ground using rocks, but after putting the S down and the O down, they didn't have enough energy to collect more rocks to make the last S. And so they did not finish their SOS symbol.
[200] And then also Raffy at some point soaked his sleeping bag and fuel and lit it on fire to try to create a smoke signal that somebody might see.
[201] But the smoke didn't get high enough, and so it didn't work.
[202] And so all that really accomplished was it destroyed Raffy's sleeping bag and also created this terrible stench around their campsite of burning chemicals from having burned the polyester material that made up the sleeping bag.
[203] And so by that afternoon, when the sun was right over their head and beating down on them, Dave and Raffey just crawled inside of their tent and laid there in silence.
[204] And as they did, they noticed the stones underneath their tent felt kind of cool, and so they cut the bottom of the tent out and just laid directly on these loose rocks inside of their tent.
[205] By that evening, when still no rescuers had arrived, Dave and Rafi really began to realize that this could be the end.
[206] And so Dave, he grabbed that notebook where they had drawn that crude map of where the lights and the road had been, and he flipped the page, and then he wrote a note to his girlfriend, basically saying goodbye because he knew he was probably going to die.
[207] And then Rafi, he took the journal and he did something similar, but also included that he would not allow the buzzards to get them, that they would at least ensure their bodies were intact for their families, to find.
[208] And then after writing these notes and tucking the journal away, Dave and Rafi crawled out of the tent because by now it's dark outs, the sun's not out, it's a little bit cooler outside.
[209] And the two men, they sat down and they began having a fairly matter -of -fact conversation about the situation they were in.
[210] Both men were very emotional.
[211] At one point, Dave began screaming and crying just out of despair.
[212] But at the end of this conversation, the two men made a decision, an unthinkable one, that really would only ever be made in a situation like this.
[213] And so after both men were on the same page, they crawled inside the tent and zipped it up.
[214] It was the next morning, August 8, 1999, when that park ranger and his volunteer that was with him had walked along the trail towards Rattlesnake Canyon and discovered Dave and Raffey's ransacked campsite.
[215] And they had walked up and they'd seen all the burned materials nearby, which was Rafi's sleeping bag and other bits of trash they had tried to burn and then they had gone to the front of the tent and Lance had opened it up and when he looked inside he saw Rafi who was alive he was laying on his side and he was only wearing these filthy green shorts and he just looked totally emaciated and terrible and haggard I mean the guy really looked like he was on death's door then Rafi when he saw Lance looking in he just said please tell me you have some water and Lance did have some water he gave it to him and then Lance knowing that Rafi was with another person, Dave, he said, hey, where is the guy you were with?
[216] And Rafi, as he's drinking the water, just kind of casually pointed out of the tent somewhere off behind where Lance and his partner was.
[217] And so Lance and his partner, they turned around and they didn't see anybody.
[218] They were just kind of looking off towards the canyon wall and there was nothing there.
[219] And so Lance turned around again and he said, are you sure he's over there?
[220] And Rafi, without any expression on his face, just continued to point and said, yes, he's right over there.
[221] And so Lance, he got up, he turned around and he began walking towards this canyon wall, but before he got there, he nearly tripped over this arrangement of rocks on the ground.
[222] And when he looked down at them, he knew someone clearly had arranged these rocks in a particular way.
[223] And so, with a growing sense of dread, Lance reached down and he moved aside one of these rocks, and underneath it, he saw Dave's face.
[224] It would turn out the night before, when Rafi and Dave had crawled outside of their tent and began having that very intense conversation, what they were talking about is, what do we do?
[225] We know we're going to die.
[226] No one's going to reach us before we die of starvation, or we die of dehydration, or maybe some animal is going to come attack us and kill us.
[227] Like, we don't have any hope.
[228] And so as they were sitting there, Dave actually pulled out his pocket knife and attempted to cut his wrists, but he couldn't cut deep enough to actually kill himself.
[229] And so Dave said to Rafi, you're going to have to kill me. And then after that, you're going to have to kill yourself and raffy had agreed and so raffy and dave they went back inside their tent with no floor it's just open rocks on the bottom and dave he lied down on his back and he pulled his shirt up and he exposed his rib cage and then raffy he pulled out his four inch pocket knife and he placed it right up against dave's rib cage and then with dave basically egging him on to stab him raffy attempted to push the knife into his heart but he couldn't break the skin and so dave he's now screaming out in pain, but he's still urging Raffy to come on, just do it already.
[230] And finally, Raffy does manage to get the knife right through his ribs and into Dave's heart.
[231] Dave did not die right away, but Raffy covered his mouth and continued to push that knife in until he did die.
[232] And then once Dave was dead, Raffy used the little bit of energy he had to drag his body away from the tent, where he buried him under those rocks, and then Raffy, who now has no energy left, just crawled back to his tent and laid down on those loose rocks inside of his tent and waited to die.
[233] But just a few hours later, on the morning of August 8th, Lance the Park Ranger, along with his volunteer, had come down and discovered Rafi before he had died.
[234] Little did Dave and Rafi know, this campsite where they had been for the past few days, was just a 15 or 20 -minute walk from their car.
[235] Nine months later, on May 11, 2000, Rafi pled guilty to murder and was sentenced to 16 years in prison.
[236] However, Raffy insisted throughout the trial that the reason he killed Dave was because Dave asked him to.
[237] It effectively was a mercy killing and that Raffy intended afterwards to die himself.
[238] This was murder suicide.
[239] And Dave's family believed Raffy, and so did another judge.
[240] And so ultimately, Raffy would only serve 16 months in prison before he would be released.
[241] Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin podcast.
[242] If you enjoyed today's stories and your looking for more strange, dark and mysterious content, be sure to check out all of our studios' podcasts.
[243] They are this one, of course, Mr. Ballin podcast, and we also have Mr. Ballin's medical mysteries, we have bedtime stories, and also Run Full.
[244] To find those other podcasts, all you have to do is search for Ballin Studios wherever you listen to your podcasts.
[245] To watch hundreds more stories, just like the ones you heard today, head over to our YouTube channel, which is just called Mr. Ballin.
[246] So, that's going to do it.
[247] I really appreciate your support.
[248] Until next time, see ya.
[249] Hey, Prime members.
[250] You can binge eight new episodes of the Mr. Ballin podcast one month early and all episodes ad -free on Amazon Music.
[251] Download the Amazon Music app today.
[252] And before you go, please tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondry .com slash survey.
[253] She struck him with her motor vehicle.
[254] She had been under the influence and she left him there.
[255] In January 2022, local woman Karen Reed was implicated in the mysterious death of her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O 'Keefe.
[256] It was alleged that after an innocent night out for drinks with friends, Karen and John got into a lover's quarrel en route to the next location.
[257] What happens next?
[258] Depends on who you ask.
[259] Was it a crime of passion?
[260] If you believe the prosecution, it's because the evidence was so compelling.
[261] This was clearly an intentional act.
[262] And his cause of death was blunt force trauma with hypothermia.
[263] Or a corrupt police cover -up.
[264] If you believe the defense theory, however, this was all a cover -up to prevent one of their own from going down.
[265] Everyone had an opinion.
[266] And after the 10 -week trial, the jury could not come to a unanimous decision.
[267] To end in a mistrial, it's just a confirmation of just how complicated this case is.
[268] Law and crime presents the most in -depth analysis to date of the sensational case in Karen.
[269] You can listen to Karen exclusively with Wondry Plus.
[270] Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.