MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories XX
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[3] In late July of 1988, two hunters were walking up this steep mountain trail in Colorado looking for a place to set up for the day.
[4] As they were walking, they eventually left the trail and began meandering through the trees looking for a clearing.
[5] At some point, they spotted one, but in the clearing was this really bright white thing sitting.
[6] at the base of one of the trees.
[7] So the two hunters who were curious walked up to see what this white thing was and when they actually were close enough to get a good look at it, they both immediately knew this was something no one was supposed to see.
[8] But before we get into today's story, 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, the next time the Amazon Music Follow button is at work, secretly sneak into their home and train their brand new puppy to bark its shadows and pee behind the washing machine.
[10] Okay, let's get into today's story.
[11] I'm Dan Tversky.
[12] In 2011, something strange began to happen at a high school in upstate New York.
[13] A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms, and spreading fast.
[14] What's the answer?
[15] And what do you do if they tell you it's all in your head?
[16] Hysterical.
[17] A new podcast from Wondry and Pineapple Street Studios.
[18] Binge all episodes of hysterical early and ad -free on Wondery Plus.
[19] On the afternoon of June 15, 1988, a man named Keith Reinhard drove down the main street of a tiny town called Silver Plume, which is located in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado.
[20] In his car was everything Keith would need to live for the next three months.
[21] Silver Plum was the kind of place that most people would just pass by on the highway without even considering stopping.
[22] It was kind of a no -name town in the middle of nowhere.
[23] In the 1800s, it had been a booming mining town, however now all but 140 of its residents had either died or moved away.
[24] In fact, Silver Plum was considered a living ghost town because of how close it was to being totally abandoned.
[25] But this emptiness and kind of middle of nowhereness was exactly what appealed to Keith about this town.
[26] Keith was 49 years old and lived over 1 ,000 miles away to the east in a suburb of Chicago, Illinois.
[27] And Keith had a great life.
[28] He was married with two kids, a boy and a girl, he had a good job working for a newspaper covering high school sports, and he had a beautiful house.
[29] But for Keith, he felt like as good as his life looked on paper, it was missing something.
[30] There was one thing he had always wanted to do, but had always put off doing, and that was to write a book.
[31] And not just any book.
[32] A book that that lots of people were going to read, a great American classic.
[33] That's what he wanted to make.
[34] But there was just one problem.
[35] Keith had no idea what this big book was going to be about.
[36] And that was why he had come to Silver Plum.
[37] Keith had taken a three -month leave from his job and left his wife and his kids and the city all behind to come out to this town to hopefully in this new, peaceful, quiet environment find the inspiration he really needed to not only discover what this book would be about, but to sit down and actually write it.
[38] Keith's wife had not been happy about this plan, him kind of being gone for three months, not providing any income, not helping with the kids, but she could tell Keith really felt like he needed to do this, and so she gave him her blessing.
[39] After arriving on Main Street in Silver Plume, Keith looked up and he saw K .P. Cafe off to the right.
[40] It was a weathered old building that looked like it was straight out of a cowboy movie, and this cafe was exactly the landmark that Keith had been looking for.
[41] And so he pulled his car over on the side of the road, he got out, he stretched, and then he began walking towards this cafe.
[42] This cafe was the big hangout spot in Silverplum for all of its 140 residents, and the reason Keith knew this was because his best friend from high school, Ted Parker, owned K .P. Cafe.
[43] Ted had actually been the person who inspired Keith to come to Silver Plum in the first place.
[44] He had told him about how peaceful and serene this place was, the best environment for a writer.
[45] And when Keith had told Ted that sounds great, I'm going to do it.
[46] I'm going to come to Silver Plum.
[47] Ted had told him that he also owned the store right next to K .P. Cafe that used to be a bookstore, but the previous tenant who ran the bookstore had talked about some big European vacation he was going on and then had just kind of vanished.
[48] And so for months now, this storefront had been vacant, and so Ted had told Keith that while he was in town, he was more than welcome to work and write out of this vacant bookshop.
[49] And so Keith, after walking up to the front window of K .P. Cafe, he looked inside and didn't see Ted, and so he decided he would take a moment and walk over to this vacant bookshop that would be his office.
[50] So he went next door, he pulled out the key that Ted had already sent him in advance, he unlocked the door, and he went inside.
[51] And right away, Keith was struck at what he saw.
[52] I mean, the place was full of books.
[53] Some piles of books were higher than his head, and many of the books looked rare and expensive, and Keith's first thought was, why did this guy who used to run this store just abandon all of this?
[54] This had to cost a lot of money.
[55] But Keith was far too excited about the next few months and getting this book done, that he didn't really think too hard about whatever the previous owner had done, and instead he just began to daydream about what the next few months would be like.
[56] and how this book was going to turn out.
[57] And as Keith was thinking about his big book project, Ted actually came into the bookstore, and when the two friends saw each other, they ran up to each other and embraced, and then before long the two of them had gone outside and began walking around Silver Plume, just chatting and catching up.
[58] And eventually, after chatting and walking around for a really long time, the pair left Silver Plume and wound up walking onto this hiking trail that went up into the woods.
[59] Now, years earlier, Ted and Keith had both been avid hikers and outdoorsmen, but now, I mean, Keith had put on some weight and he really wasn't a big hiker anymore, but Ted didn't really know that, and so Ted, he's leading this hike up this trail as they're still kind of chatting and making light of things, but Keith, as he was struggling to keep up, was getting more and more anxious about this hike, and he also had a deep fear of heights, and this trail appeared to go really high up this mountain, but Keith kept telling himself, that, you know, he was here in Silver Plum as much to write this book as he was to kind of have a little more adventure in his life.
[60] And so he just kept on trudging along after Ted.
[61] But eventually, Keith just could not handle how high up they were getting.
[62] He was totally terrified of being able to see the valley way down below.
[63] And so he had a sort of panic attack where he lunged and grabbed a nearby tree and hugged it like it was the only thing keeping him from falling off the mountain.
[64] And when Ted turned around and saw Keith, he rushed over to him and said, don't worry, everything is okay.
[65] He convinced him to let go up the tree and then very carefully, Keith and Ted walked back down the trail back into town.
[66] And when they got down there, Ted would tell Keith he was so sorry for putting Keith in such a stressful position, and Keith kind of brushed it off and said, you know, it's totally fine, you know, no big deal.
[67] Even though this panic attack was very embarrassing for Keith, he wound up just kind of shifting his mental focus to getting settled into this new life he was going to be living for the next few months.
[68] And so along with this office space in this old abandoned bookstore that Keith would be using, he also rented a small apartment in the little church in town, and very quickly, Keith developed a sort of daily routine.
[69] He would get up early in his apartment, and he would make his way over to the bookstore, and he would sit down at his computer, and he would write all day.
[70] But even though Keith was doing a lot of writing, it was not productive writing.
[71] It was mostly Keith sitting down, trying to come up with the topic for his book, not being able to do it, and then he just sort of drifted off and began doing journal entries and writing snippets of poetry, and then before long the day was over, and he had accomplished nothing.
[72] And so at the end of June, roughly two weeks after Keith had arrived in town, he was sitting at his computer one morning inside of the bookshop, unable to write anything productive, and he told himself, you know what, I gotta do something to break out of this writer's block.
[73] Writers' block is when writers kind of hit a psychological wall and just can't seem to be creative.
[74] They can't write.
[75] And so Keith decided, in order to kind of get out of this funk, that he would go back up into the mountains again.
[76] He would face his fear of heights, and he would get to the summit, and that clean mountain air and all the nature around him would kind of bring him back to reality and give him the inspiration he would need to just write this book.
[77] And so Keith turned off his computer, he left the bookstore, he went back to his apartment in the church, he packed some sandwiches and some water into a backpack, and then he walked from the church apartment to the nearby trail that would lead out of silver plume and up into the forest and into the mountains.
[78] It was a hot day that day, but as soon as Keith was underneath the shade of all the trees, it was very cool, and the sounds of the birds and the insects and other animals all around him was very calming.
[79] But very quickly, Keith's hike went from very peaceful and relatively flat to very intimidating and very steep.
[80] But Keith, he was determined to do this hike.
[81] He felt like it was a critical step in the creation of this book.
[82] And so he just kept on going one foot after another, huffing and panting and making his way up this incredibly steep trail.
[83] And it was like with every step he took, he felt braver and braver.
[84] And suddenly he was able to look down at the valley below and not feel as frightened and then at some point as he was walking up he saw all these scratch marks on a tree that were obviously from a mountain lion but instead of keith feeling scared he felt more brave he felt excited he felt like this is what he came here for this book and adventure kind of coming together in this moment finally keith made it to the top of this trail and he found this incredible clearing that looked down over the town below and in this clearing was a monument to a man named Clifford Griffin who had died at this exact spot a hundred years earlier.
[85] Keith knew Clifford's story.
[86] Back in 1887, when Silver Plum was a booming mining town, Clifford, who was a mine owner, came up to this exact spot in the mountains to play his violin.
[87] And then after playing it for a bit, he stopped and dug a grave, stood on the edge of it, shot himself, and fell into the hole.
[88] No one knew why he did that.
[89] But within a couple of years, the mining industry came to a halt in silver plume and everybody just kind of vanished.
[90] And very quickly, rumors began to swirl around the people who remained in silver plume, how, you know, their town must be cursed.
[91] And maybe it was connected to what happened to poor old Clifford.
[92] After staring at this monument for a few minutes, Keith turned his attention to lunch.
[93] He pulled up his backpack, took out a sandwich, and he began eating.
[94] And as he ate, he looked back at this monument.
[95] and he thought of another strange Silver Plum story, except this one hit much closer to home.
[96] It was about the man who used to run the bookstore where Keith now did all of his writing out of.
[97] This man's name was Tom Young, and it would turn out what Keith had heard about Tom when Keith first arrived in Silver Plum was not entirely correct.
[98] You know, Keith had been told that Tom had been talking about this European vacation, and so the consensus was that, you know, he had left town and gone to Europe and just not come back.
[99] But the reality was, once Keith began asking around a little bit over those first couple of weeks he was there, was that Tom actually had been talking about this big European vacation, but then had walked into the woods up into the mountains, where Keith was right now, where this monument was, and Tom had just vanished, apparently, in these mountains.
[100] Tom apparently had been a very quirky guy who had come to Silver Plum in the 1970s to kind of start a new life for himself.
[101] He had been teaching high school students in Denver, but he apparently didn't really like doing that, and wanted to start over, and so that was what drew him to Silver Plum.
[102] And in Silver Plum, residents always saw Tom, along with his best friend, Gus, his black Labrador retriever, walking around town playing fetch.
[103] But instead of using a ball, Tom would throw a chewed -up doll's head.
[104] And then, on September 7, 1987, so roughly nine months before Keith arrived in Silver Plum, Tom and his dog Gus had gone for a hike in the woods where Keith was, and then vanished.
[105] Now, at first, people assumed that because Tom had been talking a lot about going on this European vacation right before he vanished, that that must be where he went.
[106] But when people checked his shop, they saw all of his books were still in there, it did not appear like he had packed things up, and when the sheriff looked into it, he couldn't find any evidence that Tom had ever bought any plane tickets to go to Europe.
[107] And so no one really knew what happened to Tom.
[108] It was like this big mystery.
[109] And so as Keith was standing in this clearing near this monument, thinking about Tom and his story, Keith began to realize there were a lot of similarities between him, Keith, and Tom.
[110] They both, as adults, had come to Silver Plum, this kind of random place in the middle of Colorado, to get a sort of second chance in life.
[111] And they both worked out of the exact same storefront, and Keith had done some additional digging on Tom when he heard about this mystery and learned that they were almost the exact same age, their birthdays were separated by one day.
[112] Also, Keith discovered that he and Tom had served in the military at almost the exact same time in the 1960s.
[113] And so as Keith was going over all these strange coincidences and weird similarities between his life and Tom's, suddenly Keith stopped chewing his sandwich and just quickly packed everything back up, he turned and began running down the trail going back towards town.
[114] And as he ran, Keith smiled because he realized he had just discovered what his great American classic novel was going to be about.
[115] It was going to be about Tom.
[116] She struck him with her motor vehicle.
[117] She had been under the influence that she left him there.
[118] In January 2022, local woman Karen Reed was implicated in the mysterious death of her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O 'Keefe.
[119] It was alleged that after an innocent night out for drinks with friends, Karen and John got into a lover's quarrel and route to the next location.
[120] What happens next depends on who you ask.
[121] Was it a crime of passion?
[122] If you believe the prosecution, it's because the evidence was so compelling.
[123] This was clearly an intentional act.
[124] And his cause of death was blunt force trauma with hypothermia.
[125] Or a corrupt police cover -up.
[126] If you believe the defense theory, however, this was all a cover.
[127] up to prevent one of their own from going down.
[128] Everyone had an opinion.
[129] And after the 10 -week trial, the jury could not come to a unanimous decision.
[130] To end in a mistrial, it's just a confirmation of just how complicated this case is.
[131] Law and crime presents the most in -depth analysis to date of the sensational case in Karen.
[132] You can listen to Karen exclusively with Wondery Plus.
[133] Join Wondery Plus in the Wondry app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
[134] If you're listening to this podcast, then chances are good, you are a fan of the Strange Dark and Mysterious.
[135] And if that's the case, then I've got some good news.
[136] We just launched a brand new Strange Dark and Mysterious podcast called Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries.
[137] And as the name suggests, it's a show about medical mysteries, a genre that many fans have been asking us to dive into for years, and we finally decided to take the plunge and the show is awesome.
[138] In this free weekly show, we explore bizarre, unheard of diseases, strange medical mishaps, unexplainable deaths, and everything in between.
[139] Each story is totally true and totally terrifying.
[140] Go follow Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries wherever you get your podcasts, and if you're a prime member, you can listen early and ad -free on Amazon Music.
[141] For the entire month of July, all Keith did was right.
[142] He was in his office seven days a week, type and away, and then at night, when he went back to his apartment, his neighbors would see the lights on all night long.
[143] At the end of July, so by this point, Keith has been living in Silver Plum for about a month and a half, two hunters from Silver Plum began hiking up that same mountain trail that led up into the mountains and into the forest that Keith had gone on recently and found his inspiration for his novel.
[144] And so these two hunters, they're making their way up the trail, and at some point they leave the marked trail and begin kind of meandering through the trees.
[145] And as they're walking, they're kind of looking for a clearing to set up for the day.
[146] and at one point one of the hunters happens to look up, and he sees there's this really bright white thing sitting at the base of a tree in a clearing.
[147] And so these two hunters make their way up to this bright white thing, and as soon as they're looking down at it, they realize they have very likely stumbled on a crime scene.
[148] At their feet was this green tarp that was partially exposing this white skeleton underneath.
[149] And when they pulled back the green tarp a little bit, they saw it was a human skeleton and a dog skeleton kind of lying next to each other as if the two of them had lied down and died there.
[150] But what was immediately apparent to these two hunters is that both the human skull and the dog skull had gaping holes in them, like they had been shot, and several feet away from the skeletons was a rusted pistol.
[151] And so these two hunters, after staring at the scene in front of them for a couple of seconds, they took a mental note of where they were on the mountain, and then they turned around and headed back down to town to tell the sheriff.
[152] And when the sheriff went up with his deputies to go search the scene themselves, they very quickly identified that these remains belonged to Tom Young and his dog Gus.
[153] And the sheriff also found out that that pistol that was found several feet away from the two skeletons had been purchased by Tom just a few days before he had vanished.
[154] And so the sheriff decided that what must have happened is Tom brought his dog up into the mountains, and after shooting his dog, Tom turned and shot himself.
[155] This was a suicide.
[156] Case closed.
[157] But this explanation didn't make any sense to the people of Silver Plum.
[158] First of all, Tom loved his dog Gus.
[159] Gus was basically like his child because Tom didn't have any other family, and so why would he hurt his dog?
[160] Also, Tom was not acting remotely like someone who was going to commit suicide in the days leading up to his death.
[161] People saw him at the grocery store, buying a whole bunch of groceries, he talked endlessly about how excited he was, about this big European vacation.
[162] And then there was this one other thing that also made suicide seem very unlikely.
[163] When those two hunters had discovered Tom and Gus, they were partially covered by that green plastic tarp.
[164] But it looked very much like the wind and kind of nature in general had blown the tarp off of them, revealing the white bones that the hunters had seen.
[165] But what that meant is that very likely that tarp at one point had been totally covering their bodies.
[166] And so between that and the fact that the gun was located several feet away from where Tom was, it seemed to the people of Silver Plume that probably somebody else had shot and killed, both Tom and Gus, covered them up with this tarp, and then dumped the gun several feet away.
[167] Adding to the theory that this was a murder, not a suicide, were the rumors around town that there was this nuclear weapon production facility somewhere near their town, and apparently they were illegally dumping radioactive materials into these old abandoned mine shafts near and in silver plume.
[168] And people thought, you know, maybe Tom, who had military training, he was actually in the special forces in the military, maybe he had gone out and done some snooping around and discovered this illegal dumping operation, and that got him killed.
[169] When Keith heard that Tom and Gus's bodies had been discovered up in the mountains, it was absolutely devastating for Keith.
[170] Even though Keith had never actually met Tom, he still felt like he had a bond with Tom.
[171] I mean, he was obsessively writing about Tom and learning everything about him, and he also had all these similarities with Tom, and so it was a really big deal to find out that Tom and Gus were dead.
[172] But the silver lining to this tragedy was that Keith was now armed with more information about Tom and his dog, and suddenly the ending to his big novel became clear.
[173] And so Keith got right back to work.
[174] On August 3rd, 1988, so a couple of days after Tom and Gus's skeletons were found up in the mountains, the town of Silverplum held a memorial service for Tom.
[175] And Keith, he would attend this service, and as he listened to the people of Silverplume talking about Tom and how he had come to Silverplume to get this second chance at life, Keith couldn't help but feel like it was almost like he was watching his own memorial service because Tom's life so closely mirrored his own.
[176] And then, as he was listening to more and more people talk, Keith started to feel like there was no way Tom killed himself.
[177] That can't be what happened.
[178] Something else happened to Tom.
[179] And Keith was confident that through his research and through doing this book about Tom, he would figure out what happened to him and his dog.
[180] As soon as the memorial service ended, Keith quickly slipped out and headed back to his apartment.
[181] And when he went inside, he looked around at all the stacks of papers and maps and books that he was using to put together this novel, and he knew that out of all this chaos around him, this novel really was becoming a thing.
[182] He was doing it.
[183] He was going to get this book done.
[184] But he knew there was one more thing he had to do before he could finish this book.
[185] And that was he had to go back up into the mountains.
[186] So a few days later, on August 7th at around 4 .30 in the afternoon, Keith walked inside of K .P. Cafe and strolled up to the counter, where his buddy, Ted Parker, was sitting there reading a book.
[187] Keith paid for a drink and then announced to Ted that he, Keith, was going to leave this cafe and go right up into the mountains again.
[188] And so as Keith told Ted his big plan for this hike he was going to go on, Ted just felt totally confused.
[189] Ted's looking at Keith knowing this guy is not a confident climber.
[190] I mean, they had gone on that one hike part way up the mountain and Keith had had a panic attack and had to go back down again.
[191] Also, at the top of the mountain, it was like 12 ,000 feet of elevation where the temperatures would be near or below freezing, and here Keith was just wearing a flannel shirt and jeans.
[192] He had no other equipment with him, no other warm clothes.
[193] Also, the route that Keith was describing to Ted would take at least six hours round trip, and it's 4 .30 p .m. now.
[194] And so Ted's thinking, you know, Keith is going to get trapped up in the mountains in the middle of the night.
[195] And so Ted finally says to Keith, I hope you're joking.
[196] But Keith would say, I am not joking.
[197] And in fact, I'm leaving right now.
[198] And then before Ted could even protest, Keith turned around and while sipping his drink, just casually walked out of the store and began heading towards the mountains.
[199] And Ted, you know, he thought about stopping Keith and really talking some sense into him and getting him not to do this hike.
[200] But ultimately, Ted decided to do nothing, and he told himself that he would just check on Keith the next day.
[201] And so, the next morning, Ted, instead of going to his cafe, went first to the bookstore next door to see if Keith was in there.
[202] But when he got to the door, it was clear Keith was not inside, and the door was locked, and everything was dark.
[203] And so, trying not to panic, Ted hopped right back into his car, and he drove over to the church apartment where Keith had been staying.
[204] But again, Keith was not there.
[205] And right away, Ted is like, oh my goodness, Keith is stuck up on the mountain right now.
[206] exactly what I thought was going to happen has happened.
[207] And so right away, Ted rushed to the sheriff to tell him that Keith was missing.
[208] And after hearing what Ted had to say, the sheriff would end up launching one of the biggest search and rescue efforts in the history of Colorado.
[209] Within 24 hours of being informed of Keith's absence, there were hundreds of people, professional searchers, and just locals who wanted to help combing this mountain trail looking for Keith.
[210] There were planes overhead, there were tracking dogs.
[211] I mean, this was a really big deal.
[212] And by this point, Keith was very well known in Silver Plum.
[213] It's a tiny place.
[214] Everybody knows each other, and everyone knew that, you know, he was working on this big book.
[215] And so people were really worried about Keith.
[216] He was one of theirs.
[217] But also, the townspeople were very creeped out by the fact that, you know, Keith, who they knew was very similar to Tom.
[218] They knew he was writing about Tom.
[219] They knew that Keith was working out of the same storefront that Tom had been in, that now Keith had apparently vanished under the exact same circumstances as Tom.
[220] He had wandered into the woods, and that was it.
[221] And so it just felt like how could they have these two people go missing in the exact same way?
[222] It just wasn't adding up.
[223] On August 9th, so two days after Keith had gone missing, and so by this point he's still missing, Ted and some friends decided they would go to Keith's apart.
[224] and look around and see if maybe there was some clue as to where Keith went or what he was going to do on this hike.
[225] And so they went into his apartment and Ted's friends began fanning out and looking in the bedroom and looking through all the papers and documents all over the floor.
[226] And Ted sat down at Keith's computer.
[227] And so Ted fired it up.
[228] And as soon as it loaded, there was just this one document on the desktop.
[229] And it was the book that Keith was writing.
[230] And so Ted clicked on it.
[231] And right away, after reading just a couple of lines, he was yelling for his friends to come over here and look at this.
[232] And one by one, each of these guys came over and they just could not believe what they were looking at.
[233] From the first page of Keith's book, it was clear the setting for his book was Silver Plume, except he renamed it White Plume.
[234] He had created all these fictional characters as well that were obviously based on real people, but had renamed them as well.
[235] But that was a not what shocked Ted and his friends.
[236] What shocked them was the main character of this book.
[237] His name was Guy Gypsum.
[238] Guy Gypsum was a military veteran who had come to White Plume looking for a better life and an opportunity to be closer to nature in rural Colorado.
[239] Guy was almost 50 years old, he'd love to go hiking, and he worked out of a storefront that was right next to the only cafe in town.
[240] Guy Gypsum was both Keith and Tom at the same time.
[241] Keith basically had taken Tom's life and Keith's own life and merged them to create this composite character.
[242] And when Ted and his friends scrolled to the bottom of this document, they realized that Keith had written an ending for Guy Gypsum's character.
[243] These are the final words in this document.
[244] Guy Gypsum changed into some hiking boots and donned a heavy flannel shirt.
[245] He understood it all now and his motivations.
[246] Guy closed the door and then walked off towards the lush, shadowless Colorado forests above.
[247] Five days later, the search for Keith was called off.
[248] He was never found.
[249] Some people say Keith wandered up into the mountains and accidentally died of exposure and someday we'll find his remains somewhere in the forest.
[250] But others say, after reading that final line, in Keith's book, that Keith did all this on purpose.
[251] I mean, he literally lived out the final part of his book.
[252] He put on his boots and his heavy flannel shirt and his jeans, and he wandered off into the lush, shadowless Colorado forest above, and killed himself in order to perhaps get closer to Tom Young, the man he had kind of become obsessed with after learning they were so similar, and the man he kind of like meshed his own life with and created this weird composite character of these two lives.
[253] I mean, it seemed like a guy that had kind of spiraled into madness in writing this book and decided that death was the only way to finish the novel.
[254] And still others say, you know, maybe there really is some kind of secret illicit operation happening in or around silver plume.
[255] Maybe it's that radioactive waste getting dumped into the mines that, you know, Tom discovered and that got him killed.
[256] And Keith, in researching Tom, also discovered this illegal thing and that got Keith killed as well.
[257] But all of those things are just theories because today, officially, there is no answer as to what happened to Keith.
[258] His case is still open.
[259] Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin podcast.
[260] If you enjoyed today's story and you're looking for more bone -chilling content, be sure to check out all of our studios podcasts.
[261] Those are Mr. Ballin's medical mysteries, bedtime stories, and run -full.
[262] Just search for Ballin Studios wherever you get your podcasts and you will find all of them.
[263] Also, there are hundreds more stories like the one you listen to today, but in video format on our YouTube channel.
[264] And our YouTube channel is just called Mr. Ballen.
[265] Go check it out.
[266] So that's going to do it.
[267] I really appreciate your support.
[268] Until next time, see you.
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[270] You can binge eight new episodes of the Mr. Ballin podcast one month early and all episodes ad free on Amazon music.
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[272] And before you go, please tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondry .com slash survey.
[273] I'm Dan Taberski.
[274] In 2011, something strange began to happen at the high school in Leroy, New York.
[275] I was like at my locker and she came up to me and she was like stuttering super bad.
[276] I'm like, stop fucking around.
[277] She's like, I can't.
[278] A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms and spreading fast.
[279] It's like doubling and tripling and it's all these girls.
[280] With a diagnosis, the state tried to keep on the download.
[281] Everybody thought I was holding something back.
[282] Well, you were holding something back.
[283] Intentionally.
[284] Yeah, yeah.
[285] Well, yeah.
[286] No, it's hysteria.
[287] It's all in your head.
[288] It's not physical.
[289] Oh my gosh, you're exaggerating.
[290] Is this the largest mass hysteria since the Witches of Salem?
[291] Or is it something else entirely?
[292] Something's wrong here.
[293] Something's not right.
[294] Leroy was the new date line and everyone was trying to solve the murder.
[295] A new limited series from Wondery and Pineapple Street Studios, Hysterical.
[296] Follow Hysterical on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
[297] You can binge all episodes of hysterical early and ad -free right now by joining Wondery Plus.