Sunday, July 30, 2017

The Tragic Life and Unsolved Death of Karyn Kupcinet

The Victim:

          Karyn Kupcinet was born in 1941 in Chicago, Illinois to a famous columnist father and a socialite mother named Essie who would never qualify as mother of the year. Essie Kupcinet valued fame and being on the A-List more than anything else, and was determined that her only daughter would achieve the fame that had eluded her in her own career as a dancer. Although Karyn has kindly been described as lacking any real talent, Essie groomed Karyn for fame her entire life, a short 23 years wrought with addictions and bad choices.

         To make sure that her daughter kept a fame-worthy figure, Karyn’s mother began giving her diet pills at roughly 13 years old, which in 1954 was essentially speed. Between 1955 and 1960, while still a minor, Karyn moved to New York to try acting on Broadway, underwent several cosmetic surgeries to improve her looks, and became addicted to prescription painkillers. Karyn had her chin, nose, ears, and eyes done all before she was 20 years old, which reportedly dulled her face and limited her acting abilities even further.

          In 1960, Karyn abandoned the stage and moved to Hollywood, where she got bit parts in movies and television shows. She began dating an actor named Andrew Prine, When Karyn’s histrionics and addictions and inappropriate behavior became too much and Andrew ended the relationship. Karyn stalked him for months, busting into his home during dinner parties, watching outside his house for hours, and hiding in his attic. According to journals found after her death, this behavior went on for months. She then cut words out of magazines and assembled them into letter form like you’d see in a B movie about a kidnapping. Her last day on Earth she called Prine twice telling him a wild story that someone had left a baby in a basket on her doorstep and pleading for him to come over. People like to speculate that lie was borne out of regret over an abortion she had traveled to Mexico for a year prior, but I imagine it was just a badly adjusted woman with too many chemicals in her system.

The Death:

         
The last time Karyn was seen by someone not considered a suspect or connected to a suspect was the day before Thanksgiving. On Wednesday, November 27th, 1963, Karyn had dinner at the home of a married couple, family friends who said she seemed to behave in a healthy state of mind. Those same friends had not heard from her and drove to her home to check on her the following Saturday. There they discovered her laying naked, face down on the couch, dead. Several items in the home had been knocked over or spilled. Reportedly it was obvious that something had happened even outside of the home due to the odor. Mail had piled up on the welcome mat. More than a dozen nearly-empty bottles of medication were inside the home. The coroner would determine that the cause of death was manual strangulation, as her hyoid bone was fractured, and she had most likely been killed Wednesday night or Thursday morning. There was a desperate note found in the apartment, but nothing much further than what any depressed teenager would write.

The Suspects:

         Andrew Prine ran with a group of friends, many of whom associated with Karyn as well. Andrew, you will recall, was Karyn’s former beau that she had a hard time getting over. Andrew’s roommate was Robert Hathaway, Robert and a man named Edward Rubin claimed they visited Karyn that Wednesday evening, had some drinks and watched television. Andrew had a second roommate named William Mamches who reported that he hadn’t seen Karyn in weeks. They said that at some point Karyn claimed she was tired and went to bed. They finished the program they were watching, turned off the television, and left. Around midnight a phone call was made between Karyn and Andrew. The final member of Prine’s posse was Karyn’s downstairs neighbor, named David Lange. David Lange wasn’t a celebrity himself, but had a famous sister and was dating actress Natalie Wood, who would herself die under mysterious circumstances years later. David and Natalie returned from a date around midnight. David had a serious drinking problem and was likely passed out shortly after returning home. He claims he heard and saw nothing out of the ordinary that night. Prine, Rubin, and Hathaway are alibi for one another, claiming they all spent the evening having cocktails and watching a film after Prine spoke on the phone to Karyn.

        
          Karyn’s downstairs neighbor, David, was questioned at length by police because of his alcohol addiction, his history of walking into the wrong apartment when inebriated, and the fact that he made jokes about having been the one to kill Karyn. Irv and Essie, Karyn’s parents, went to their graves fully believing that Prine was somehow responsible, but there was never evidence there. Prine had a role on Six Feet Under, one of my favorite shows, and I always give him the side eye when he appears onscreen.


The Crackpot Theories:

          November of 1963 was an infamous and tragic month in American History. The Friday before Karyn lost her own life, the shocked nation mourned the assassination of President John F Kennedy in Dallas, Texas. Twenty minutes before the president was shot, a woman called a phone operator in southern California screaming that the president was about to be killed. The police investigated and attempted to locate the caller, but never did. Someone at some point linked the two murders together, claiming that Irv Kupcinet had mob ties who told him of their plans in advance, which would mean one of Chicago’s most beloved newspaper columnists just knew about a pending murder of the president and not only failed to alert authorities, but casually mentioned it to his amphetamine abusing daughter, who flipped out about it twenty minutes before it happened. Kup not only denied the story but expressed how offensive he found it to be.

         James Ellroy is arguably one of the world’s premiere not-true crime writers, known for books and movies like L.A. Confidential and The Black Dahlia. I like to think Mr. Ellroy would hate me because I’m verbose and somewhat liberal, two things he is definitely not. Perhaps Mr. Ellroy’s greatest work of fiction is his imagined explanation for the death of Karyn Kupcinet. In the scenario he envisions, post-phone call Karyn is drunk and high and dancing naked in her apartment. She stumbles and falls, hitting straight across her neck on the edge of a table with enough force to bruise the surrounding tissue and fracture her hyoid bone, then rises, rights herself just long enough to make it to the couch where she falls face down and perishes. He based his theory off of the fact that there was a book about the benefit of naked dance in Karyn’s apartment and explains the lack of evidence by saying that the coroner was an alcoholic.

My Conclusion:


          I first read about Karyn’s murder as a kid in a book about unsolved murders related to Chicago. When I revisited it as an adult I want to say that not only was her death tragic, Karyn’s life was tragic. Her mother pushed her to be perfect and famous. She had multiple surgeries to make her more attractive before her body was likely done growing. She paired off with a man-about-town who didn’t seem to treat her that well and didn’t do her the favor of giving her a clean break. She was dependent on substances that she likely abused as a form of self-medication. And then, barely in her twenties, her life was over, with no chance of finding her happily ever after. But who killed her? DNA technology was still more than 20 years away from making headlines, and all the likely suspects save one gave alibis for the others. Alibis that, in time, proved to be flimsy and remembered differently by all parties involved. We will never know who the murderer was, but I’d like to hear your theories anyway.

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Celina Mays: Twelve, Pregnant, and Missing

When Celina Mays disappeared in the New Jersey winter of 1996 she was twelve years old and nine months pregnant. Celina, who was biracial, had gone to live with her father after the death of her mother.

Her father and his family were deeply involved with an isolating, cult-like church called The Gospel of Christ Ministries. She lived in a modest, middle-class ranch home with fifteen other members of the church and was schooled at home with other young church members. Gospel of Christ Ministries was headed by her father’s sister, her aunt and Reverend, Cerita Smith.

According to the family, on the evening of December 16th, around 11 p.m., Celina remarked to a cousin “thanks for everything” and went off to bed. Celina’s father claims that he went to check on her in the morning and found that instead of his daughter under the covers, he found strategically placed pillows. None of Celina’s belongings were missing, and her purse and prenatal vitamins remained in her room.

The paternity of Celina’s child is unknown. Her father asserted that he was threatening blood tests after the child was born and Celina’s obstetrician was given a potentially coached answer about it being a 16-year-old boy she met at a skating rink. Former members of the GoCM insist that the children there were never allowed unattended in public, let alone at a place such as a skating rink.

Celina’s father thinks that she ran away because he was demanding to know who her baby’s father was.

Celina’s aunt, the head of the church, believes that Celina was hidden by members of the church who left.

Celina’s mother’s family believes that the girl met foul play.

Two years after Celina disappeared, her reverend/aunt’s son, Sean, was arrested for aggravated sexual assault against two minor children in the church. At the time of Celina’s disappearance, Sean Smith was 23 years old and married. According to an unnamed lawyer embroiled in a lawsuit against the church, Sean Smith was tapped to be a “stud” for the GoCM and given the responsibility to impregnate young women in the church to boost the number of members of the congregation.

No trace of Celina Mays was ever found, living or dead. Little details were given about unique identifiers that could help identify Celina, just that she had long wavy hair, tended to grow a unibrow, and might have been wearing a red coat when she left.

Usually I just present the facts and let our group discuss theories, but there are a few more facts I’d like to leave here at the bottom. 

Homicide is the leading cause of death for pregnant women in the United States. Unmarried women of color under the age of 25 are the most likely victim. Between one half and two thirds of these victims are killed by a current or former romantic partner.


Links:
https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/187356569/ (turns into an article about the recent JonBenet Ramsay murder halfway through)

Thursday, March 30, 2017

What Happened to Brandon Lawson?

There is something inherently creepy about the last known moments of someone’s life being recorded. The audio of the Jonestown murder/suicides, Elisa Lam in the elevator moments before her death, and the 911 calls that marked the last known moments of Brandon Lawson (and which can be heard here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9Nr0qdc624&feature=youtu.be).



Late at night on August 8, 2013, Brandon Lawson, a 26-year-old father of four and oil field employee, got into an argument with his girlfriend, Ladessa. He got in his pickup truck and left his home in San Angelo, Texas, and what happened to Brandon after that is a mystery.

The Timeline

@11:54 p.m. – Brandon leaves the home he shares with Ladessa and their children, reportedly in an agitated state of mind

@12:10 a.m. – Brandon’s brother Kyle and Kyle’s girlfriend Ashley visit Ladessa after the argument.

@12:34, 12:36, and 12:48 a.m. – Brandon attempts to call Ladessa but gets her voicemail.

@12:38 a.m. – Brandon calls his brother, Kyle, and says he ran out of gas. Kyle informs Ladessa and then Kyle and his girlfriend leave to find and assist Brandon on Hwy 277 near the town of Bronte.

@12:54 a.m. – Brandon calls 911 and asks that police be sent to his location. The person who answered the phone was not a trained 911 dispatcher and failed to ask questions about who was calling or what was happening. It is worth noting that Brandon knew he had a felony warrant out for his arrest and called for assistance anyway.

@12:58 – A passing trucker calls 911 to report a vehicle posing a hazard in the roadway

@1:10 a.m. – The police and Kyle and Ashley arrive at the truck simultaneously. Brandon’s car was parked still partially in the roadway. Brandon was not there and the vehicle was unlocked. Kyle and Ashley try to get in contact with Brandon by phone and text, warning him that there is a police officer at the vehicle.

@1:19 a.m. – Brandon calls Kyle again, saying that he is ten minutes up the road, in a field, and bleeding, but before they can get any further information, the line goes dead. After 15 minutes or so, the police officer leaves. Kyle and Ashley continue to call Brandon, but the phone rings several times and goes to voicemail. They drive around and look, but find no trace of Brandon and can’t reach him. Not knowing that Brandon had called the police, they thought he was out of sight hiding from the officer, and would come out from concealment once the cops were gone.

@3:30 a.m. – Brandon’s phone stops ringing and instead goes straight to voicemail, presumably because the battery had died.

@4:30 a.m. – Kyle calls Brandon’s girlfriend to inform her that they haven’t been able to locate him.

@8:30 a.m. – The sheriff’s department tows Brandon’s truck.

In the following days and weeks, family and law enforcement searched the area, but nothing was found of Brandon. No one has heard from him since, and his phone and bank accounts haven’t been used.



Interesting Information:

The area where Brandon disappeared is sparsely populated, and people pull double duty. Just as a nursing home employee answered 911 calls, the county sheriff and his wife owned the local newspaper. After Brandon’s disappearance, the sheriff’s wife published a great deal of speculation about what happened to Brandon without citing any sources. Her claims were inflammatory and didn’t paint Brandon in the best of light, saying he had drug issues and intentionally abandoned his family. The official case status according to Coke County is that Brandon is intentionally missing.

There is much speculation as to what Brandon is trying to describe in his 911 call. Who was pushing people on both sides? Who is the first guy he is referring to? Is the “Yeah” response said by a second person near Brandon? Is it possible, given his past drug conviction and argument with Ladessa, that he used a substance that made him paranoid? Did he meet foul play? Did he abandon his life to start a new one?

What happened to Brandon Lawson?




I got my information from

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

The Disappearance of Brian Shaffer

Brian Shaffer was a man facing big life changes. The 27-year-old Ohio State University medical student had just lost his mother to cancer weeks earlier, and was planning to propose to his girlfriend during a trip to Miami the first week of April, 2006. He never made that trip, and exists in history as Ohio State Police Case MP#1709.

The Day of Disappearance – March 31st/April 1st, 2006
  • Brian met his father, Randy, for a steak dinner. The elder Shaffer reports that his son seemed worn-out.
  • 9 p.m. – Brian meets his friend and former dorm-mate William “Clint” Florence, and a bar near the college campus called the Ugly Tuna Saloona
  • 10 p.m. – Brian calls his girlfriend, Alexis Waggoner, to tell her that he loves her.
  • 10 p.m. – 12 a.m. – Florence and Shaffer bar hop, taking shots at several bars in the area. Brian is believed to be intoxicated.
  • 12 a.m. – The men meet up with Meredith Reed and return to the Ugly Tuna to finish their night out with one last round.
  • 1:15 a.m. – Security camera footage show the trio arriving at the Ugly Tuna and riding the escalator up to the bar’s second floor location.
  • 1:55 a.m. – Brian is again seen on camera outside of the bar talking to two young women. He moves off-camera in the direction of the bar, as if he is going back in.
  •  2 a.m. – Closing time at the bar, and Reed and Florence make their way out of the bar along with the large crowd. They search the area and wait for a while out front, but assume that Brian left without them.


Friends and family attempted to call Brian in the days that followed, but his phone went to voice mail. When he didn’t make his flight with Alexis for their trip to Miami, his family filed a missing person’s report. Everything at his home, just six blocks away from where he disappeared, looked as it always did. Brian had his wallet, and since the day of his disappearance his bank accounts, credit cards, and cell phone were never again used. The resulting investigation was extensive, with police searching streets around the bar for miles with search dogs, and the city granting access for the police department to search the sewer system. The monitored entrance to the bar was the only public entrance to the bar, but it is possible that Brian somehow gained access to the freight elevator and left another way. 

The Ugly Tuna was located in an area with a high crime rate, and several surveillance cameras in the area failed to capture images of Shaffer. Many people who knew Brian took polygraph tests during the investigation, but Florence refused. Members of the Shaffer family felt that Clint may have known more than he let on. Clint’s attorneys claim that the police believe Brian left of his own free will. Brian’s girlfriend, in an interview, claimed that a few days before the disappearance Brian told her that she should move on and find someone else, and later asked if she would just run away with him.

No trace of Brian was ever found, and nine years later, another man disappeared from almost the same place under similar circumstances and was never heard from again.

What happened to Brian Shaffer?





I got my information from –