True Crime Time For April 15, 2026 | Secret Service Trainee Hidden Camera, Son Dumps Father’s Body, Police Chief Assault
In this episode of True Crime Time For, Woody and Cyndi Overton cover a wide range of disturbing and bizarre cases, all tied together by one theme — human behavior at its worst, from betrayal to abuse of power.
The episode opens on Tax Day with a look back at historical tax evasion cases and how even the most powerful individuals — from celebrities to crime bosses — were ultimately held accountable. Woody highlights famous examples like Al Capone, Wesley Snipes, and others to show that you might outrun a lot of things, but not the IRS.
The episode then shifts into current crime stories, starting with a disturbing case out of Georgia where a Secret Service trainee is arrested after secretly recording his roommate using a hidden camera disguised as a phone charger. The situation escalates when the suspect begins sending anonymous messages to the victim, ultimately leading to his own arrest.
In Texas, a deeply troubling family case unfolds as a man is accused of attempting to conceal his father’s body, with evidence showing purchases of tools used in the aftermath and a trail of blood leading through the home. The investigation continues as authorities build their case.
Additional cases include:
- A stabbing death in London where police are urgently searching for a key witness who recorded the incident
- A shocking abuse of power case in Arkansas where a police chief is caught on video assaulting a paraplegic man, leading to his immediate resignation
- A disturbing international case involving a woman accused of murdering her sister and stealing her Rolex watch before attempting to cover her tracks
- A heartbreaking animal cruelty case in Pennsylvania where a man placed razor blades and fish hooks inside dog treats, injuring at least one animal
Throughout the episode, Woody and Cyndi reinforce the importance of accountability, awareness, and speaking up — because no crime exists in a vacuum, and somebody always knows something.
f you’re struggling with OCD or unrelenting intrusive thoughts, NOCD can help. Book a free 15 minute call to get started: https://learn.nocd.com/RLRC
🎧 Chapters
00:00 Introduction and Tax Day Discussion
02:00 This Day in History – Unsolved Stabbing Case
05:30 Dum Dum in the Court: Secret Service Trainee Hidden Camera Case
11:30 Tax Evasion Cases and Famous Convictions
20:00 Beast Mode: Airman’s Dog and Car Stolen
24:30 Family Matters: Son Accused of Concealing Father’s Body
31:00 Witness Appeal in London Stabbing Case
35:30 F’ed Up Professional: Police Chief Assault Case
43:00 Worldwide Crime: Sister Murder and Rolex Theft
52:00 Beast Mode: Razor Blades in Dog Treats Case
58:00 Closing Thoughts and Call to Action
true crime, Secret Service trainee arrest, hidden camera roommate case, voyeurism crime, Georgia spying case, Texas son hides father body, family murder investigation, San Antonio homicide case, Arkansas police chief assault, police misconduct case, paraplegic assault video, London stabbing case, Primrose Hill murder, witness video evidence, sister murder Rolex theft, international crime UK, Pennsylvania animal cruelty case, dog abuse razor blades, tax evasion cases history, IRS criminal cases, true crime podcast
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[SPEAKER_07]: Hello, if I didn't work on the subset of true crime, time for Wednesday, April 15th, 2026, and I'm Woody Overton.
[SPEAKER_07]: I'm Cindy Overton.
[SPEAKER_07]: The whole world, at least Americans, and now that today is tax day.
[SPEAKER_07]: Not for us, because there's shit I've done all the time, but the, you know, I've been a whole lot of extensions filed and then I remember when I used to watch and he's local news, they have like lines around the fucking post office today.
[SPEAKER_07]: And they bring in extra employees and shit because people trying to get it in and get a stamp before that last minute dead line.
[SPEAKER_07]: So I'm going to take you back to this day in 2017.
[SPEAKER_07]: Josiah Lawson, who was a student at Humboldt State University, was stabbed to death at a party.
[SPEAKER_07]: Now, you got into an argument with Kyle Zollner and Lala Ortega, and they accused Lawson and his group of friends of stealing, ortega's iPhone.
[SPEAKER_07]: Well,
[SPEAKER_07]: I don't know if he did or he didn't, but the argument escalated until Zona stabbed Larson multiple times, and Larson passed away at the hospital in a judge Ryan Holston dismissed the charges against Zona and an attempt at another indictment was declined by the grand jury.
[SPEAKER_07]: And to this day, no one has ever faced charges for this murder.
[SPEAKER_07]: Even if I can did it, everybody saw it.
[SPEAKER_07]: They were saying themselves to fence, I don't know.
[SPEAKER_07]: I don't know how that works, but tell you that we love and appreciate each other.
[SPEAKER_07]: One of y'all love our patrons, context, our national advertisers, big jays, side ports, and everybody else that supports us with love y'all.
[SPEAKER_07]: Hashtag what happened in Madison?
[SPEAKER_07]: Please call in your tips.
[SPEAKER_07]: These women are missing, I believe they're dead, at least most of them.
[SPEAKER_07]: I can tell you this case is actually being worked and the people that are working are not against me.
[SPEAKER_07]: How about that?
[SPEAKER_05]: I can tell you everything.
[SPEAKER_05]: Way on your side.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: And it is actually being worked and hope, I'm what I'd say I'd speak, but I hope my
[SPEAKER_07]: See, I'll continue calling you tips.
[SPEAKER_07]: Hashtag, what happened in Madison?
[SPEAKER_07]: Very important.
[SPEAKER_07]: Hashtag justice for everybody, right?
[SPEAKER_07]: And hate to see cases going solve.
[SPEAKER_07]: But what do you got?
[SPEAKER_07]: True crime time for this time for dumb dumb in the court.
[SPEAKER_07]: It's time for F of professionals.
[SPEAKER_05]: Well, I'm starting us off in Glenn County, Georgia, Georgia.
[SPEAKER_05]: Well, we have a secret service trainee at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center being arrested on April 8th.
[SPEAKER_05]: I always think of that as like where Clarice was.
[SPEAKER_05]: Is that where she?
[SPEAKER_05]: That's Monica.
[SPEAKER_05]: Monica.
[UNKNOWN]: Okay.
[SPEAKER_05]: Um, this person's charged with felony eavesdropping after spying on his roommate with a hidden camera.
[SPEAKER_05]: The trainees.
[SPEAKER_05]: Who's dumb ass?
[SPEAKER_05]: The trainees name is Joel.
[SPEAKER_05]: Canvass canvasser.
[SPEAKER_07]: This should be a dumb dumb in the court.
[SPEAKER_05]: And he previously worked as an analyst for the presidential protection team before starting with the agency in fall of 2025.
[SPEAKER_07]: I mean, you're not, you're not going to.
[SPEAKER_07]: a federal law enforcement job without some type of military service or something to back it out right.
[SPEAKER_07]: You're not an idiot.
[SPEAKER_05]: Well, some are idiots, sorry.
[SPEAKER_05]: Police say canvas are secretly recorded.
[SPEAKER_05]: His suitmates activities bulked by concealing a camera
[SPEAKER_05]: and he offered the phone charger to the victim after the roommate's own charger went missing.
[SPEAKER_05]: So the device plugged in below the television, gave a clear view of the entire room including the bathroom area.
[SPEAKER_05]: According to a police report, the roommate started receiving anonymous text messages from several initially believing his phone was hacked, the victim actually asked Canvassar who had cyber background for help.
[SPEAKER_05]: and canvas-er blamed malware and reset the roommate's phone, but the text soon resumed.
[SPEAKER_05]: And the victim became suspicious after receiving a message referencing his use of the bathroom while his phone was in his pocket, leading him to discover the hidden camera in the charge.
[SPEAKER_07]: What the fuck?
[SPEAKER_05]: The police report also states that Canvas her inner derhumates room multiple times at night while he was sleeping, prompting the victim to lock up his belongings.
[SPEAKER_05]: And Canvas her was arrested and released on a $8,458 bond in his access to all secret service systems has been suspended, and of course his security clearance is under review.
[SPEAKER_05]: and Secret Service Deputy Director Matthew Quinn described allegations as deeply troubling and says that the incident raises significant concerns about the individual's character and fitness.
[SPEAKER_05]: Come on, Parker.
[SPEAKER_07]: I asked all the polygraphs and the psychological tests where I'm someone I'm saying is they don't let you into that academy.
[SPEAKER_07]: without some serious shit going on, and the background, the mother of all backgrounds, and he's still been, you know, as a show, dumb dumb in the court.
[SPEAKER_07]: I mean, what the fuck you thought you weren't going to get caught?
[SPEAKER_07]: I mean, if you were just doing it and taking images, I don't know why you want to say another image of another dean, the bathroom, but you're taking that, but then,
[SPEAKER_07]: you have to send a text message.
[SPEAKER_04]: Exactly.
[SPEAKER_07]: I mean, get the fuck out.
[SPEAKER_07]: If you were saving it for your spank bank or something, it'd be different, but this deed's like antagonists.
[SPEAKER_04]: Literally.
[SPEAKER_07]: I want to get called.
[SPEAKER_07]: Please, I'm in the federal law enforcement training academy.
[SPEAKER_07]: Please, yeah.
[SPEAKER_04]: Thank you.
[SPEAKER_04]: It was just that smart.
[SPEAKER_07]: I think he's a dumb dumb in the court.
[SPEAKER_07]: I think he's a fucking idiot.
[SPEAKER_07]: All right, so I was thinking about all the years of paying taxes.
[SPEAKER_07]: I don't think anybody likes taxes, right?
[SPEAKER_07]: And I think it was theodore Roosevelt.
[SPEAKER_07]: One of the presidents said it's every American's duty to pay the least amount of taxes that they can.
[SPEAKER_07]: And I think that happens.
[SPEAKER_07]: That's why you have accounts and different things.
[SPEAKER_07]: you know, take loopholes and do this and do that and try to pay the least enough that you can.
[SPEAKER_07]: In a lot of people, this is a great time of the year, flight car sellsmanship, because a lot of people get there and come tax return back.
[SPEAKER_07]: The, uh, uh, telling the regular joys, but this is what it is.
[SPEAKER_07]: People, you know, you get your, get your money back, or maybe you got some needed to pin this, whatever you get a big, big fat check back, right?
[SPEAKER_05]: To get refunds.
[SPEAKER_07]: Yep.
[SPEAKER_07]: Get a big fat check back and even spend it on something.
[SPEAKER_07]: You know, my dad just would be like, oh, my buddy.
[SPEAKER_07]: You know, God, it's a sentimental prison for tax the Bayesian dotted out.
[SPEAKER_07]: And I remember one time they sent an hour of sage to all of my dad and he spent like a year and his office going through all the books that's when there were no computers and they ended up writing them like a $17 check.
[SPEAKER_07]: He was still the good, right?
[SPEAKER_07]: But some people take it a little too far, and I'm going to tell you about April 15th, whichever body knows.
[SPEAKER_07]: It's tax day in the US, and it's also the deadline for legitimate filing, and but you know, else has historically been a deadline for.
[SPEAKER_07]: the prosecution of major tax crimes.
[SPEAKER_07]: And I'm going to tell you about a couple of famous cases.
[SPEAKER_07]: Do you, you're going to remember this?
[SPEAKER_07]: Leonaheumsley.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yes.
[SPEAKER_07]: But what do you remember?
[SPEAKER_05]: Wasn't she like a, uh, um, Maddomer something?
[SPEAKER_07]: Now, as she was known as the Queen of Mean, and from back in the early 90s, like 1992, and she notoriously reported to federal president on April 15, 1992 for tax evasion, after stating that only the little people pay taxes.
[SPEAKER_07]: She was above it, she was just super rich.
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, okay.
[SPEAKER_07]: super rich bitch.
[SPEAKER_07]: So our word shift, then back in 2015, this dude, you know what, I don't really agree with all the tax stuff either.
[SPEAKER_07]: But you know what, the all is the law.
[SPEAKER_07]: You can't just say, fuck you, I'm not doing it.
[SPEAKER_07]: Or you can, and you could be a prominent tax protester like our
[SPEAKER_07]: Right?
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.
[SPEAKER_07]: Well, guess what happened to him?
[SPEAKER_07]: He died in federal prison for a while.
[SPEAKER_07]: Servent time for tax evasion.
[SPEAKER_07]: Right?
[SPEAKER_07]: Right.
[SPEAKER_07]: Lauren Hill.
[SPEAKER_07]: You don't know Lauren Hill?
[SPEAKER_04]: Sure.
[SPEAKER_07]: They like the, wouldn't the sugar street gang or whatever, the famous singer.
[SPEAKER_05]: Oh, yeah.
[SPEAKER_05]: Oh, yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: She had the bad ass boys.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_05]: Okay.
[SPEAKER_07]: You know what I'm talking about?
[SPEAKER_07]: I know you're talking about, but I didn't know what song Lauren Hill famous for.
[SPEAKER_03]: Here's an answer from Wikipedia and Essence.com.
[SPEAKER_07]: Steven's first her single that thing was stated at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and won two Grammy Awards in 1999.
[SPEAKER_07]: But that was, so that let me solve free.
[SPEAKER_07]: That's it.
[SPEAKER_07]: That's it.
[SPEAKER_07]: But that's not this song.
[SPEAKER_07]: But she's, well, she's famous for a lot of shit.
[SPEAKER_07]: But she's also,
[SPEAKER_07]: famous because in 2013, she served three months in prison for felon to buy our returns of roughly or felony report, 1.8 million in income.
[SPEAKER_05]: Wow.
[SPEAKER_07]: Well, if I should pay the taxes, they're going to get you.
[SPEAKER_07]: Now, let's go to the sports world, and everybody knows this thing.
[SPEAKER_07]: I'm gonna care what generation you're from.
[SPEAKER_07]: Pete Rose.
[SPEAKER_07]: In the 1990, he got bus, but not in 1990, but he got bus for bed and on baseball.
[SPEAKER_07]: At least I never bed on my own games, right?
[SPEAKER_07]: So he's supposed to be in the greatest baseball player of all time.
[SPEAKER_07]: They've banned him from the baseball hall of fame and all this.
[SPEAKER_07]: Everybody's like, look, just like the motherfucker in.
[SPEAKER_07]: But in 1990, guess what?
[SPEAKER_07]: He had a huge gambling problem.
[SPEAKER_07]: That's a little birdie on my shoulder telling me about Pete Rose.
[SPEAKER_07]: He said in 1990, he went to prison for felons report income from autographs and number billion.
[SPEAKER_07]: That's how he made his living out for his life.
[SPEAKER_07]: It showed up all these shows and I signed you a baseball, pay a hundred bucks, whatever.
[SPEAKER_07]: But he didn't report it.
[SPEAKER_07]: Anyway, to prison for it.
[SPEAKER_07]: Not done.
[SPEAKER_07]: KMPG tax shelter fraud this during 2000s.
[SPEAKER_07]: And while this is specifically following April 15th, this case like these six infamous tax scandals reported by Yahoo Finance, it involved multi-billion dollar schemes generating fake tax losses,
[SPEAKER_07]: often uncovered during tax season investigations.
[SPEAKER_07]: So, in a way, the RS reports all this shit and hopefully to deter rich people from trying to take advantage of the system.
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_04]: As they should.
[SPEAKER_07]: Emma, Leon, how does it say that only the poor people pay taxes?
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, they showed her.
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: who was Leanna Helmsie.
[SPEAKER_03]: Here's some info about the owner Helmsie.
[SPEAKER_07]: She's American businesswoman, and after allegations of non-payment were made by contractors, hired to improve her, Connecticut home, that's why she was, they came in and redid her mansions.
[SPEAKER_07]: She's like, fuck up my pain, and that's what started the investigation and she can
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know why I thought of it.
[SPEAKER_07]: You know what the most famous taximacy case was, ever?
[SPEAKER_05]: Donald Trump.
[SPEAKER_07]: No.
[SPEAKER_07]: No.
[SPEAKER_05]: I mean, don't they say you did that?
[SPEAKER_05]: I'm not saying that he did.
[SPEAKER_07]: I'm just saying it.
[SPEAKER_07]: No.
[SPEAKER_07]: No.
[SPEAKER_07]: They, if you can't catch a criminal one way, you catch another.
[SPEAKER_07]: And you should know this, who, who, this could be, got away with murder.
[SPEAKER_05]: Oh, um.
[SPEAKER_07]: The stores.
[SPEAKER_05]: Okay.
[SPEAKER_07]: Oh.
[SPEAKER_07]: Al Capone.
[SPEAKER_07]: Oh, why could you been on the tour that they couldn't catch him in the other way?
[SPEAKER_07]: And you know, how to get him?
[SPEAKER_07]: They followed the money and they did his ass on federal income tax evasion, then they slipped across the to the end to his jail cell that had the clap and she gave him, I think was going to rea, which slowly the way it is brain, and he once he got out of prison,
[SPEAKER_04]: I was on that tour, I sat in the chair, he sat in.
[SPEAKER_07]: Well, you didn't well, I was going to, to a person who, for, you know, we're still served jail time for tax abasin, Wesley Snipes.
[SPEAKER_04]: Wow.
[SPEAKER_07]: All right.
[SPEAKER_07]: He got three years for failing the fire.
[SPEAKER_07]: Jersey Shore, Star, Mike.
[SPEAKER_05]: Big Mike.
[SPEAKER_07]: The situation.
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: Well, this isn't, Mike, the situation of Sorentino served eight months.
[SPEAKER_07]: Wow.
[SPEAKER_07]: Right.
[SPEAKER_07]: And survivor winner Richard Hatch, the very first one ever to win the very first survivor ever.
[SPEAKER_07]: He got 50 fucking months.
[SPEAKER_04]: I remember it.
[SPEAKER_07]: Get your million dollars
[SPEAKER_07]: Fuck around and found out, right?
[SPEAKER_05]: That's crazy.
[SPEAKER_05]: I figured they'd take the taxes out before they gave it to him.
[SPEAKER_07]: Todd, did you really, Chris Lee, you know about that?
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: Even though they were just pardoned, they were convicted of conspiracies for all of our ass.
[SPEAKER_07]: Chuck Mary, my mom still loves Chuck Mary, served 120 days in prison for tax evasion.
[SPEAKER_07]: You know, you know, Chuck Mary is a singer.
[SPEAKER_07]: All right, I think it's our play or more famously.
[SPEAKER_07]: Sophia Lorenz.
[SPEAKER_04]: I know her.
[SPEAKER_07]: Besides, you're one of the prettiest women of all time.
[SPEAKER_07]: She serves 17 days, I have a 30-day sense for tax evasion, and I quit there.
[SPEAKER_05]: I didn't know that.
[SPEAKER_07]: I feel like the daddy I don't want to talk about just gives me the... Hey, you didn't have much money beyond CAA's, the R.S.
[SPEAKER_05]: One billion dollars.
[SPEAKER_07]: She owes $729 million in $26, and tax penalties instead of the near $2.7 million that our SS set center ended the fish to see those.
[SPEAKER_07]: That's funny, right?
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, that is funny.
[SPEAKER_07]: Anyway.
[SPEAKER_07]: I mean, it's not funny.
[SPEAKER_07]: All right, you go.
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.
[SPEAKER_06]: What's got?
[SPEAKER_06]: Beast mode.
[SPEAKER_05]: A U.S. airman who stationed abroad claims that his house sitter, who reportedly had a mental break, stole both his car and his chair-stalk maverick.
[SPEAKER_07]: So when overseas service deployment and we'll pay my house anyway, they pay them for me to live over a year and we'll get a house so they come in and take care of my dog and my shit.
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: Okay.
[SPEAKER_07]: Then you got back and obviously they were there.
[SPEAKER_05]: So he says, I am looking for this person.
[SPEAKER_05]: He was house sitting for me while I am deployed with the Air Force.
[SPEAKER_05]: And this was said by Andrew Beckham.
[SPEAKER_05]: And he wrote it in a nest alert shared on Facebook on April 3rd.
[SPEAKER_05]: He has stopped all contact and taken Maverick and Maverick and Maverick.
[SPEAKER_05]: The 90 vanished Maverick, which is an 11-year-old Siberian husky, was carried outside and placed in the airman's 2014 Subaru Forester while staying at Beckham's Aurora Colorado Residence with the hired assistance assistant.
[SPEAKER_05]: In addition to sharing a photo of the dog, Napper, Beckham disclosed that he had recorded the employee driving off with his dog in his car, so he has video evidence of it from a guest's next camera.
[SPEAKER_05]: The house sitter is having a mental break of paranoia and is run away with my car and my dog and he did so four days ago with no contact and no phone.
[SPEAKER_05]: Of course, now the dog owner is irate and is hired a man from the trusted house sitters, a company that matches pet owners with qualified sitters, and has contacted the company to request assistance in finding him and his dog.
[SPEAKER_05]: and he has not been found and he has my dog as though just Beckham just goes on and on and on and on, right?
[SPEAKER_07]: Like he's just bringing that dog home.
[SPEAKER_07]: I mean, taking a band of service from this, it's just fucking stupid, man.
[SPEAKER_07]: But the not only did they have free rent, he got fired out or whatever the dog was saying was, in a car.
[SPEAKER_07]: So I don't know how he knew he had a severe mental breakdown.
[SPEAKER_07]: I think he just told his shit.
[SPEAKER_07]: I don't get one for you.
[SPEAKER_07]: It's time to family matters.
[SPEAKER_07]: Going out to San Antonio, and we just told y'all, I think it was last episode, maybe in this one, about the all-airman, just like you just did the story of an airman.
[SPEAKER_07]: He went to basic training in San Antonio, right?
[SPEAKER_07]: They are forced.
[SPEAKER_07]: Well, we're going to San Antonio again.
[SPEAKER_07]: But not quite for that reason.
[SPEAKER_07]: And I'm going to play the audio of the story now.
[SPEAKER_01]: New at 10 a man is in jail accused of trying to hide his dead father's body, detectives found the body in a trash bag behind the family's home.
[SPEAKER_01]: News was sent to Tonyale's Phil Sterling joins us now with more.
[SPEAKER_00]: Daniel Sebastian or Donas is accused of attempting to cover up his father's murder.
[SPEAKER_00]: They went on to say they can't believe something so gruesome happened right next door.
[SPEAKER_00]: Police say 31-year-old Daniel Sebastian or Donas attempted to cover up his father's murder 54-year-old Daniel Antonio or Donas was found in a trash bag behind his home on Veracruz.
[SPEAKER_03]: He was the best neighbor ever.
[SPEAKER_03]: Like, he's both with everybody around here.
[SPEAKER_03]: We kept an eye out for each other.
[SPEAKER_03]: Diane?
[SPEAKER_00]: as Cabito lives next door and says she sat to hear Daniel Sebastian or Donas may have been involved, especially because she says Daniel Antonio or Donas has always spoken so fondly of his own kids.
[SPEAKER_03]: He always talked about him.
[SPEAKER_00]: Police were first tipped off to the case by a family member who reported the father missing.
[SPEAKER_00]: His phone and keys were found in a flower pot at another property the father owned on Theo Avenue.
[SPEAKER_00]: A neighbor said he overheard officer say this was the flower pot.
[SPEAKER_03]: time to sound like they were meditated.
[SPEAKER_00]: Police say they also found the father's car in the back of the home with the bullet hole in the driver's side rear window.
[SPEAKER_00]: The bear county medical examiner determined the father was shot in the head.
[SPEAKER_03]: Right now, it's too kind of a legend that he's not going to be here anymore.
[SPEAKER_00]: Back at the bear cruise home where the father was found dead in a trash bag, investigators say it appeared.
[SPEAKER_00]: The body had been dragged through the home.
[SPEAKER_00]: leaving a bloody trail.
[SPEAKER_00]: According to the arrest affidavid surveillance video footage from Walmart and Home Depot shows Daniel Sebastian or Donas allegedly using his father's card to purchase items like gloves, a shovel, duct tape and bags of concrete.
[SPEAKER_00]: Now, Escapito is left wondering who killed Daniel Antonio or Donas and why?
[SPEAKER_03]: I just wish that whoever did do it comes out and, you know, have, you know, that remorse in their, you know, in their hearts.
[SPEAKER_00]: As a now-to-motive is for the alleged murder is not known and a suspect has not been identified.
[SPEAKER_00]: Phil Sterling reporting live from the studio, used for saying Antonio.
[SPEAKER_07]: I don't agree with that.
[SPEAKER_07]: the Daniel Sebastian or Dennis has started one is charge with tampering or fabricating physical evidence and failure to report human remains in a connection to the death of this father 54 year old Daniel and Tonya or Dennis.
[SPEAKER_07]: Look, they got the sun on video at Walmart by the motherfucking shovel duct tape garbage bags and then you got a bloody trail through the home.
[SPEAKER_07]: And I mean, you got this one for the, I'm pretty sure they're just waiting on all tops and they're gonna do it last, so there you have it, family matters.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_05]: Well, this is a plea for help from law enforcement.
[SPEAKER_07]: All right.
[SPEAKER_05]: So, apparently there is a,
[SPEAKER_05]: fight, there was a fight and what is called Primrose Hill and police are urging a woman who recorded a fight where a filmmaking student was stabbed to death to come forward saying that the video will be the evidence that they need.
[SPEAKER_05]: Metropolitan Police have called the young woman or teenager a key witness and obviously could help officers to piece together the sequence of events in the Primrose Hill fight that occurred last Tuesday.
[SPEAKER_05]: Finn Bar Sullivan, who's 21, who was killed shortly after the fight.
[SPEAKER_05]: The woman was captured on film recording the fight.
[SPEAKER_05]: And police said she has not committed any crimes.
[SPEAKER_05]: But in the footage, she was wearing blue denim shorts, black tennis shoes, and a pink vest.
[SPEAKER_05]: Detective Inspector Andy Griffin, who was leading the investigation, said police need to speak to her as soon as possible.
[SPEAKER_05]: And he wants to reiterate, my team continues to pursue several urgent lines of inquiry to establish why Finn tragically lost his life.
[SPEAKER_05]: And he says, I believe this woman's account of events, as well as the video she captured will provide vital evidence and to reiterate she has not committed any offense, but we are urging her or anyone who may know her to come forward and assist our investigation.
[SPEAKER_07]: they'll get it and they need it and that's the one good thing about shows like ours and social media and stuff like that or that one obviously taking the video is they'll get it to come for it.
[SPEAKER_07]: She probably got a warrant or something and she's worried about that and they'll cut a deal with her and get her to provide the video.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah, but there's a second man believed to be in his 20s.
[SPEAKER_05]: He was found nearby in Regents Park with knife wounds and was taken to the hospital and police say his injuries are non-life threatening and non-life changing.
[SPEAKER_05]: But...
[SPEAKER_07]: They need the video to bus the case while I don't.
[SPEAKER_07]: Yes.
[SPEAKER_07]: So, turn it in, do the right thing.
[SPEAKER_07]: It's time for, after, up, professionals.
[SPEAKER_07]: Now.
[SPEAKER_07]: there are some f-tock professionals and then there's some f-tock professionals but different levels like most horror will be like murder or rape in a baby or something like that, right?
[SPEAKER_07]: And then on the other end you get a special breed of asshole like this guy
[SPEAKER_07]: This dude was chief of police for two weeks.
[SPEAKER_07]: Two weeks.
[SPEAKER_07]: Now he has resigned.
[SPEAKER_07]: You know why?
[SPEAKER_07]: Because they have a more video slapping a paraplegic man and putting him in a headlock.
[SPEAKER_07]: Peripolis.
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: So stick now the video is viral naturally and it shows Bobby Eflon hidden and grabbing the man who's the victim, who's the nearest Williams and he did this while he was on duty in this course and he's nation, local Philly at WR-EG.
[SPEAKER_07]: Flin, the chief, was responded to a call about an on-person, allegedly threatened and Williams, son and wife, at an apartment building in OCO law, Arkansas, which is about 50 miles north of Memphis, Tennessee, said the victim said, he smacked me, he smacked the hell out of me, and then he choked me.
[SPEAKER_07]: He said, you came behind me in a chair.
[SPEAKER_07]: This is what Williams told WRG.
[SPEAKER_07]: He said, I'm paraplegic.
[SPEAKER_07]: I can't feel anything.
[SPEAKER_07]: Can't do anything from the belly button down.
[SPEAKER_07]: So Williams, but now it's the chief right, but he doesn't know there's a video yet.
[SPEAKER_07]: He knows.
[SPEAKER_07]: He said, yeah, I used a few curse words while speaking to F1, but I didn't escalate it physically.
[SPEAKER_07]: I didn't touch him.
[SPEAKER_07]: I didn't hit him.
[SPEAKER_07]: But there's more.
[SPEAKER_07]: Well, that's not the better net.
[SPEAKER_04]: The video.
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: Suniston, the video comes out and the police chief's like fucking a quit, and he announced his resignation and said, this is best for me, my family, to step away from service.
[SPEAKER_07]: And I hear by a resign, my position is chief from the OSO Police Department, in effect immediately.
[SPEAKER_07]: It was an honor to be chosen by you to serve in your administration.
[SPEAKER_07]: I'm available to assist you in any way that I can to share a smooth transition.
[SPEAKER_07]: I wish you and your administration continue to success, but all the great things going on here in OCL.
[SPEAKER_07]: Well, if I could run that down with you yet, or have I told you, I've just sworn in in this place chief of March 26.
[SPEAKER_07]: So, the mayor sees a video, right, and a lot of small towns, the mayor appoints the police chief, the mayor sees a video after the quick resignation in the mayor's Joe Harris and he called for an independent review of the video that he says shocked him.
[SPEAKER_07]: He said, man, my saw the video, I said, oh, hell, because it really surprised me, because Bobby F. was not that kind of person.
[SPEAKER_07]: That's what he said before the chief resign.
[SPEAKER_07]: He said, the guy said something or did something to him, and everybody knows it was wrong, but being an efflent, we know that's not him.
[SPEAKER_07]: He's at the school every week, working with the kids, doing things, and it just wasn't him.
[SPEAKER_07]: Mother of God was him.
[SPEAKER_07]: So following F1's resignation, another dude, well-scracks, it's taken up the newly appointed vacated position.
[SPEAKER_07]: But the, what in him?
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_05]: It was a guy.
[SPEAKER_07]: You have maybe said, right?
[SPEAKER_05]: It was a guy.
[SPEAKER_07]: It was a guy.
[SPEAKER_07]: It's a fake about trying to break into a police car or whatever.
[SPEAKER_07]: And we're going to fake AI because it's funny when you bit slap and put a day, a paraproledger, a handicap man.
[SPEAKER_07]: Mm-hmm.
[SPEAKER_07]: Now it doesn't mean a handicap man can't pull a pistol and shoot you.
[SPEAKER_07]: But if he had a gun or something to that effect, the chief was a man at night.
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: I mean, you could shoot.
[SPEAKER_07]: shot a guy in a wheelchair on a search warrant, but he should also had a AK-47 machine that law enforcement, right?
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: And he's since the ceased, but so that means they can't hurt you, but obviously the video I showed, he may have been mountain off or he popped, he pissed off the
[SPEAKER_05]: Sticks and stones.
[SPEAKER_07]: Done.
[SPEAKER_05]: No reason to abuse.
[SPEAKER_07]: Fucked up professional.
[SPEAKER_05]: Literally.
[SPEAKER_07]: Great.
[SPEAKER_07]: He can only do so much.
[SPEAKER_07]: It's time for family matters.
[SPEAKER_05]: So we have a crate.
[SPEAKER_05]: This is mind blowing to me.
[SPEAKER_05]: We have a woman who fatally stabbed her sister in the neck.
[SPEAKER_05]: Nice.
[SPEAKER_05]: And then she snatched something from her.
[SPEAKER_05]: She...
[SPEAKER_07]: Her nipples.
[SPEAKER_05]: Hmm.
[SPEAKER_05]: No.
[SPEAKER_05]: Because it was something she was wearing.
[SPEAKER_07]: Her two pay.
[SPEAKER_07]: I don't know man, I do idea.
[SPEAKER_05]: Her diamond-incrusted gold Rolex.
[SPEAKER_07]: Huh?
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: Nice.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_05]: Nancy Pexton, who's 69 years old, is a accused of killing her older sibling, Jennifer Abbott.
[SPEAKER_05]: And Jennifer Abbott is a film director known professionally as Sarah Steinberg.
[SPEAKER_05]: And she was stabbed at her flat in Camden, North London.
[SPEAKER_07]: And London, then that makes it a two-foot.
[SPEAKER_07]: It's time for worldwide crime.
[SPEAKER_05]: So this occurred on June 10th of last year.
[SPEAKER_05]: A post-mortem examination found that Miss Abbott has sustained a number of stab and slash wounds in a single defensive wound to her right hand.
[SPEAKER_05]: Her body was not found until July 13th, and she was missing a Rolex watch.
[SPEAKER_05]: And apparently she was greatly attached to that watch.
[SPEAKER_05]: The old Bailey heard that Ms. Paxton was later found in possession of the Diamond and Crested Watch and claimed that her sister had asked her to look after it, opening the case on Thursday, Bill Boyce Casey, which is the prosecutor, said Ms. Paxton had visited her sister at her mornington place flat on June 10th.
[SPEAKER_05]: And Ms. Boyce said that Ms. Paxton was effectively homeless and staying near Baker Street.
[SPEAKER_05]: And on the morning of June 10, Ms. Paxton dressed in a cowboy hat and blue dungeries.
[SPEAKER_05]: Nice.
[SPEAKER_05]: Went to Sainsbury.
[SPEAKER_05]: Get it up.
[SPEAKER_05]: And she bought three bottles of wine and then went to Kentucky Fried Chicken.
[UNKNOWN]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: Okay, to get to whine, it's the KFC and England.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yes, right.
[SPEAKER_07]: That's right.
[SPEAKER_07]: And you're dressed up in like a cowboy.
[SPEAKER_05]: Uh-huh.
[SPEAKER_07]: Get it up, motherfucker.
[SPEAKER_07]: It's right.
[SPEAKER_05]: And she was at that point repeatedly trying to contact her sister.
[SPEAKER_05]: in Miss Pexton, then bought food at KFC and went back to St. Barry to buy another bottle of wine before getting the bus to her sister's flat.
[SPEAKER_05]: So she ate her KFC, got her wine, said, I'm going to get some more wine at KFC, bring it to my sister.
[SPEAKER_05]: Right.
[SPEAKER_05]: You know, my sister.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_05]: The court heard that she left Miss Abbott's flat around 145 p.m. before calling her GP and threatening to her general practitioner and threatening to kill herself.
[SPEAKER_07]: All at one, KSC.
[SPEAKER_05]: and stealing and killing her sister and grabbing the Rolex.
[SPEAKER_07]: I was just thinking, why don't you can't think of it?
[SPEAKER_05]: It's not funny.
[SPEAKER_05]: I mean, I'm laughing, but it's just not, it's horrible.
[SPEAKER_05]: With the doctor, her general practitioner called her back.
[SPEAKER_05]: And Ms. Pexton said she had taken a hundred and twenty emails of tramadol tablets.
[SPEAKER_05]: Millie.
[SPEAKER_05]: And when he, I didn't
[SPEAKER_05]: I thought leaders would be a liquid whatever.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah, I was just guess.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah, I'm not a doctor and 20 Zoplacone Which she got me what she claimed had been given to her by her sister.
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, there you go
[SPEAKER_05]: She told them she was at Mornington Crescent Station and the general practitioner called 999.
[SPEAKER_05]: And the 999 operator spoke with Ms. Pexton, and she said, the last hour and a half, I blacked out.
[SPEAKER_05]: I don't know.
[SPEAKER_05]: I don't know how I got to the station.
[SPEAKER_05]: I don't know what I've done.
[SPEAKER_05]: I had blacked out.
[SPEAKER_05]: The ambulance came to the station.
[SPEAKER_05]: Pexton was taken to the hospital.
[SPEAKER_05]: and they were treating her as a witness.
[SPEAKER_05]: Well, at the hospital, she asked one of her daughters to take her clothes and wash them or throw them away.
[SPEAKER_07]: Right, because you black out, right?
[SPEAKER_07]: Right.
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, I guess you black out.
[SPEAKER_07]: You think you might have shit yourself?
[SPEAKER_07]: No, you did it because, you know, what you did.
[SPEAKER_05]: And she said, she said that blood on her clothes was because she hugged her sister who was suffering from a nosebleep.
[SPEAKER_07]: have heard that one before.
[SPEAKER_05]: And she said that she had an up and down relationship with her sister, but they'd always been close.
[SPEAKER_05]: And we would tell each other secrets and the depths of our feeling.
[SPEAKER_07]: It sounded like it ended on a down that.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_05]: So that was, she's, you know, stolen necklace from her, et cetera.
[SPEAKER_05]: So yeah.
[SPEAKER_05]: No, watch.
[SPEAKER_05]: No.
[SPEAKER_05]: Also, the watch and another energy was star necklace.
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: Hmm, ah, yeah, the roll-a-slash might have got a few pounds for, all right, listen to this beast mode.
[SPEAKER_07]: It's going to Pennsylvania.
[SPEAKER_07]: And, you know, just, I don't know, dumb fucking people, evil people, yeah, we have dogs running out here in the country sometimes run wild, I catch them on my game cameras and stuff like that.
[SPEAKER_07]: These are fucking wild dogs and nobody owns them.
[SPEAKER_07]: What they're like wolves, you know what I mean?
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, but I'm not, I don't, as a general rule, I've had to shoot dogs before on dating and stuff like that that were attacking me, but it's general rules, I don't shoot dogs.
[SPEAKER_07]: Right.
[SPEAKER_07]: And unless it's an extreme situation, but you don't have to just shoot dogs to be an asshole.
[SPEAKER_04]: You can kick them.
[SPEAKER_07]: You can kick them.
[SPEAKER_07]: Or you can...
[SPEAKER_07]: place fish hooks and razor blades inside the dog treats.
[SPEAKER_05]: That's, that's not just I am a play this for y'all.
[SPEAKER_07]: We're going to Pennsylvania for a special kind of asshole in Bees mode.
[SPEAKER_02]: On the high-value man, we'll split up to two years in state prison for trying to injure dogs.
[SPEAKER_02]: Joseph Janko Hudson pleaded guilty to cruelty to animals and aggravated cruelty to animals.
[SPEAKER_02]: He placed fish hooks and a razor blade in dog treats that were found on the streets of downtown eastern, this winter, at least one dog was injured, the judge ordered Janko Hudson to pay restitution to the owner.
[SPEAKER_07]: I mean, that's a short one, and I'm not gonna say sweet because it ain't sweet, but the... What if that says you should motherfucker you live in the city?
[SPEAKER_07]: then possesses you to put fish hooks and razor blades and dog treats and throw them on the street.
[SPEAKER_04]: It doesn't make sense to me.
[SPEAKER_07]: Just, I mean, we love our far-back ways.
[SPEAKER_07]: Yeah, I can't imagine.
[SPEAKER_07]: I mean, they're trusting, but they're going to eat shit if it smells good to them or whatever they're going to eat.
[SPEAKER_07]: It's a dog eat treat they're going to eat it, but then they got razor blades and fish hooks.
[SPEAKER_05]: Well, even if you don't like the darn dogs, you don't have to put fish hooks and razor blades in them.
[SPEAKER_05]: I mean, like if you didn't, there's no reason.
[SPEAKER_07]: Absolutely in that reason and that's the reason he got two years in prison.
[SPEAKER_07]: And again, I think that people who abuse animals are just under baby ripers and women ripers.
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
[SPEAKER_07]: There you have it.
[SPEAKER_07]: You got anything else?
[SPEAKER_07]: No.
[SPEAKER_07]: Love and appreciate each everyone.
[SPEAKER_07]: Y'all.
[SPEAKER_07]: Hope y'all got your taxes and shit done or hope you got a big bet.
[SPEAKER_07]: Tax return checks.
[SPEAKER_04]: How would be nice?
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, we did.
[SPEAKER_04]: Really nice.
[SPEAKER_07]: Then that's okay.
[SPEAKER_07]: That's okay to you then it happens, but I hope we don't go downtown for a baby tights.
[SPEAKER_07]: But I'm what do you ever say?
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm Cindy Everton.
[SPEAKER_07]: You host a true crime time for this Wednesday, April 15th, 2026, a hotchiller, peace.