Dental One associates redefine what it means to visit the dentist. Get top-quality, personalized support from committed experts that prioritize the well-being and satisfaction of you and your family. Care is centered on a highly personalized treatment plan backed by the trust and support of long-lasting relationships. Find out how you can make an appointment for a custom smile design experience by visiting doa-seriousxm.com.
Freshman year of college is a lot. 100 people classes. I have so many questions, but one thing's a no-brainer. Getting a Brita pitcher with the Elite filter for your dorm room. You save over $240 a year by switching from plastic bottles to Brita. And it filters out 99% of lead and other contaminants from your tap water. Your emotional support water bottle will thank you. 99% of lead certified by WQA. Substances reduced may not be in all users' water. $240 savings a year versus standard 16.9 fluid ounce water bottles.
Savings assumes pre-purchase of Brita system. This episode is brought to you by Progressive, where drivers who save by switching save nearly $750 on average. Plus, auto customers qualify for an average of seven discounts. Quote now at Progressive.com to see if you could save. Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and Affiliates.
National average 12-month savings of $744 by new customers surveyed who saved with Progressive between June 2022 and May 2023. Potential savings will vary, discounts not available in all states and situations. This is episode three, Story. This is Detective Kim Lewis. It is 1.23 p.m. the 9th of July, 2003.
For 40 minutes on the day after John was found dead, DeSoto County Sheriff's Office Detective Kim Lewis recorded an official interview with Pat Strader, his grandma. And Kim wanted Pat to know that investigators were taking this conversation very seriously. Do you understand the meaning of the word perjury?
"Yes." "Perjury is lying under oath. In the state of Florida, if you are found to have committed perjury, you can be criminally charged for that. Do you understand that?" The audio quality of these tapes is fuzzy in some parts because they were done on actual cassettes. But for the most part, you can hear the exchange clearly. Through some digitizing and post-production magic, the team has tried to make them as audible as possible.
Now, normally, a sit-down interrogation like this between a detective and a potential suspect would be colder, pretty impersonal. But here's the thing: Pat and Kim knew one another. Pat had seen Kim grow up and they knew each other's family members. In fact, Pat knew most of the law enforcement officers working her grandson's case. And I definitely picked up on Pat's casual demeanor from the start of the conversation.
"Do you swear or affirm that the information provided in this statement will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?" "Kim, it's going to be as best as my recollection." The main reason the Sheriff's Office wanted to talk with Pat was because she was one of three people who'd found John in the woods. She'd made the 911 call. She was his legal guardian. And on top of that, she admitted to removing critical pieces of evidence from the crime scene prior to law enforcement arriving.
If there ever was a checklist on why to question someone in a homicide, I'd say she fit the bill.
Authorities needed to get the story straight about what went down before they'd arrived on scene. They were behind 24 hours with their investigation, and one of their only ways to get the ball rolling was to have Pat, her stepson Skip, and 16-year-old Patrick Skinner tell them what they each remembered about the last time John was accounted for at the Southeast Hansel property.
All three of those individuals were questioned on July 9th, but in this episode, we're going to focus on Pat's interview first. I have no actual knowledge that I could say what time that he went over to go to cross the road. Just going by what Skip said, it should have been somewhere around 12 or 12.30.
According to Pat, she and Skip had that conversation around 1.30 p.m. Pat told Kim that Skip then drove over into the pasture and woods to look for John. He went over there and you didn't find him.
He drove down the tree line and he said since he's in the diesel, he stopped and turned the motor engine off so that he could hear. You know, he called him again and no answer. And he just figured he was walking around out there in the pasture. When Skip returned, he reportedly told Pat that he never saw John while on that first trip. He came on back to the house and I fixed the sandwich and we ate. And then this time now we're thinking it's 2, 2.30 p.m.
So as soon as I finish with my sandwich, I get in Explorer and I go over there and possibly retrack his thing because I could see where the vehicle had gone through the pasture. And when I got down to the four-wheeler, I myself saw that there's nothing he's still sitting there, nothing had been done. As I told you with the cataract, now I'm looking off. I'm not looking down at my feet. I'm looking out in the pasture for him to see him walking. Why would he be
not at the four-wheeler to unload. And I panically screamed a couple of times, you know, "John, John Wells, John Robert Wells," and no answer. So I get back in my Explorer and do the same as Skip did, go to the tree line, stop, and call again.
Pat's recollection was that her trek to go look for John occurred between 2:30 p.m. and 3:00 p.m., and her journey had also been fruitless because John never answered and never showed up at the house. And just a reminder here, we're talking about a distance of half a mile to approximately three-quarters of a mile between where the trash pile was located and the front door of Pat's house. In between those locations is a lot of thick vegetation and fields.
Because she'd gotten nowhere on her trip, around 3 o'clock, Pat said she went back home and used her landline to call John's best friend, Patrick Skinner, who lived a few houses down the street. Patrick was 16, just one year younger than John. I said, Patrick, I can't find John. And I said, I'm concerned. I said, will you go over with me?
You know how he, when y'all go over there, kind of where you would go. He said, yes, how will I get there? And I said, well, I've got to go get some gas. And I said, I'll stop by on the way back and pick you up. According to her statement to police, Pat then drove to a nearby Murphy gas station at the Arcadia Walmart and back. Between approximately quarter after 3 and 3.30, she stopped at Patrick's house in his driveway.
With that gear in tow, Pat said she and Patrick set out in her Explorer to go check the pasture again for any sign of John.
They took a more direct path to the trash dump area where the four-wheeler was. Skip had decided to walk the woods on foot and take a longer route along Joshua Creek. He'd followed the tree line through some watery ditches that led in the direction of the trash pile. And I went back about the same route that I had been before and went back to the four-wheeler, called John, and I walked down through the creek because you could see
And called him again. Once they were at the trash dump, Pat said Patrick walked over to the front of John's backed-in four-wheeler and made a strange discovery. Now, I don't remember in here exactly, but Patrick found the gun laying right beside the four-wheeler.
She said, that's unusual. She said, John wouldn't put that in the dirt. She said it was kind of like, I believe the words he used was like buried, you know, like he didn't hit it pretty hard. And, well, we couldn't understand that. Pat says before she knew what was happening, Patrick had picked up the .22 revolver, unloaded its cylinder, and poured out the bullets that were inside of it. Did you see it when Patrick picked it up?
I don't think that I saw him in the act of picking it up. Okay. But then he had it in his hands, bringing it to your attention. I believe it might have been like, well, here's his gun. Okay.
Did anybody examine the gun? I asked him to check to see if there's any, if he could tell us if there was a, what would you say, if there's an empty, if there's any empty, yeah, casings in the gun as if it had been fired. Yes, yes, because that was my concern. Yes. Okay. And what happened? He had to work with it to get it where he could. Okay. And he told me none had been fired.
After that, Pat said Patrick started following a trail of other items that were scattered near the four-wheeler and started to pick them up too. He grabbed the stuff almost in a straight line as he got closer and closer to the watery ditch. She said the items he picked up were two leather belts, a nylon gun holster, and an olive green strap that John used to tie his holster to his thigh so it wouldn't slap against him.
As that was happening, she said Skip emerged from the woods and Patrick called him over near the edge of the ditch. For just a few seconds, she saw them standing sort of behind the largest section of the trash mound, pointing at something in the water. Patrick said, "Skip, come look." And of course, when Skip walked over to look, I went to look because I thought I was seeing the same thing, you know, maybe they were. And Skip grabbed me and turned around and said, "You don't want to see this."
Kim, what I saw when I was made aware of what it was was... I don't recall seeing his head because he was like in a fetal position and I could see his shoulders and his ribs near his backbone. The water wasn't that deep over him. Had he stood up, he would have probably been in way steeper, less water, my supposition.
As soon as the trio saw John's body floating, Pat said Skip rushed her away to the Explorer and they all three rode back to the house to call 911. By that time it was roughly 4:30 p.m. No one attempted CPR or even checked to see if John was alive or in distress. Well, we've been looking for him for so long, you know? It may not be a good reason.
You mean for why he didn't get in the water? Yeah, yeah. It is a very good reason. It makes perfect sense, but I needed you to say it. Pat's short and sweet answer as to why no one even attempted to check John for signs of life was because he'd been missing for so long. She said they all just assumed he was dead when they found him, something you hear her reiterate several times during the 911 call.
Now, I know what a lot of you are thinking. That feels weird. But trust me, we'll get more into that over the next few episodes.
After hearing Pat's explanation of why they didn't do CPR, Kim asked Pat about the gun. Most importantly, why the group had removed it from the crime scene. The gun yesterday, what happened with the gun? After you guys did find John, you loaded up in the truck or the Explorer and Patrick drove you all back to the house. What happened from there with the gun?
It stayed in the floorboard of the Explorer and the belts stayed in the back seat. This was in the back seat until late last night. And I went out after, you know, kind of the crowd eased out. I went out with that towel that it's wrapped in right now and wrapped it in a towel and picked up those belts and brought it in and put it down in the hall closet where he usually kept it.
"And is that where it's been until the sheriff showed up a while ago?" "Yes, because he went with me to pick it up, you know, to get it. He wants to handle it." "Get it? He didn't want me to do it." Pat said because Patrick had told her when he picked it up that he didn't think any bullets had been fired, she assumed it had nothing to do with John's death. So she felt it was in her best interest to remove it from the scene. "You heard and saw no evidence at the scene that indicated the gun was involved in John's death in any way.
So you continued to keep the gun from law enforcement thinking it was irrelevant. Is that correct? Yes. I mean, I was never, as I was pointing to the shirt, no one ever asked me, did he have a gun over there? Well, we wouldn't know that. Well, of course not. But again, this is what I'm saying. I didn't lie to them. Right. Because if it was not relevant, then I thought possibly, you know, I would step in a can of worms because of his age.
One of the many questions Kim really wanted Pat to answer was why she and Skip had become so concerned about John just an hour after he'd left to take the trash. If taking garbage over to the dump pile was his normal chore, and he was known to spend time in the woods afterwards, then why specifically on July 8th did his absence raise red flags for them? Her answer was not what police expected.
And you want to trust them too, you know? They need to take some responsibility.
Do you want to set your child up for success? IXL Learning is an online learning program for kids covering math, language arts, science, and social studies. IXL is designed to help them really understand and master topics in a fun way. Powered by advanced algorithms, IXL gives the right help to each kid no matter the age or personality. IXL is used in 95 of the top 100 school districts in the U.S.
There's one site for all the kids in your home, pre-K to 12th grade. Kids can even access IXL on the go through the app or on your phone or tablet. No more trying to figure out how to explain math equations or grammar rules yourself. IXL has built-in explanation videos.
And look, my son is only two and a half right now, but I can already tell by the time he is in school, he is going to appreciate having someone explain why something is the way it is. He doesn't like just to be told. So those explanation videos are going to be super helpful. Make an impact on your child's learning. Get IXL now. And CounterClock listeners can get an exclusive 20% off IXL membership when they sign up today at ixl.com slash clock.
Visit iXL.com slash clock to get the most effective learning program out there at the best price.
This message is sponsored by Greenlight. A new school year is starting soon, and if you're a parent, you want to make this school year an opportunity for your kids to learn important life skills and continue building independence. For that, there's Greenlight. Greenlight is a debit card and money app for families where kids learn how to save, invest, and spend wisely, and parents can keep an eye on kids' new money habits.
There's even Greenlight's Infinity Plan, which includes the same access to financial literacy education that makes Greenlight a valuable resource for millions of parents and kids. Plus, built-in safety to give you peace of mind. My son is only two and a half, but already he knows what a card is and what it does. He actually took it up to a vending machine the other day, swiped it, and, well, let's just say he's going to be a spender when he's older.
And so Greenlight is the perfect thing for him. There's even a chores feature that lets you reward your kids for honoring their responsibilities around the house. So what are you waiting for? Sign up for Greenlight today and get your first month free when you go to greenlight.com slash counterclock. That's greenlight.com slash counterclock to try Greenlight for free. greenlight.com slash counterclock.
In written statements and her recorded interviews with police, Pat alluded to the possibility that John might have been up to things he shouldn't have been back in the woods on July 8th. She said she wasn't sure what exactly he could have gotten into, but he'd recently displayed some behaviors that she felt were clear indicators he wanted privacy and didn't want her meddling in his recreational habits.
Detective Kim Lewis pressed Pat to be more specific, but she didn't give specifics. I guess as a way of being more blunt, Kim straight up asked Pat if John could have been doing drugs right before he died. And Pat didn't outright confirm that, but she also didn't squash the suggestion. The audio quality of that part of her tape-recorded interview isn't good, and at one point, the tape even cuts off, which is why I just recapped it for you.
But my point is, when you look at the transcript of their conversation, it was actually Detective Kim Lewis who first suggested it could be possible that John was consuming illegal substances.
I think she did this for two reasons. One, Kim knew at that point that John's autopsy showed he had drugs in his system. And two, Kim wanted to see if Pat would confirm that or maybe allude to another piece of evidence she'd hidden from the scene to protect John from people finding out he might have used drugs. But the tactic failed because Pat didn't confirm anything.
This isn't the last time, though, that this preconceived notion that law enforcement had about John maybe using drugs in the woods that day will pop up. According to police reports, at 1 o'clock on July 9th, while DCSO detectives were interrogating Pat and simultaneously doing interviews with Skip and Patrick, the DeSoto County Sheriff's Office called in the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, also known as FDLE.
Together, deputies and state agents had gone back out to the Southeast Hansel property to process the crime scene, or at least what was left of it. By that time, the four-wheeler and wooden trash trailer had been moved back to Pat's house. There were various sets of tire tread marks in the pasture leading to and from the crime scene, and a ton of shoe tracks and footprints were all around the area near the trash pile.
All of that disruption is what crime scene experts call "scene contamination." Now, it wasn't done intentionally in John's case. The commotion occurred when emergency responders initially came to the scene and thought they were just dealing with a drowning accident. To try and make some progress, though, FDLE had their crime scene tech do as good of a job as he could in terms of processing the scene and collecting items that he thought were potential pieces of evidence.
First, he inspected the ground where the ATV had been parked and noticed some small red stains and smears on some blades of grass and vegetation. Then he picked up a Coors Light beer can and noted that it, quote, was fashioned into a pipe, end quote. After that, he bagged a piece of plastic wrapping that appeared to have a red stain on it and scooped up a handful of sand that also appeared to have a dark red stain soaked into it.
Everything else FDLE seized as evidence included the Honda four-wheeler, the wooden trash trailer, the rake that was in the trailer, John's .22 revolver, the five unfired .17 caliber bullets that were in it, the holster, the leg strap, two of John's belts, the towel Pat said she'd wrapped those items in, John's jeans and boots and socks, as well as Skip's clothing and shoes.
Law enforcement only took patch shoes, though, not the clothing she'd been wearing the day before. When they asked her for them, she said she'd done laundry overnight after John died, so police just dropped it. The one saving grace FDLE did have in order to get an idea of what the scene looked like closer to the time John was killed were Emmy investigator Megan Simrack's pictures from the scene. Those are some of the photos you can see on our website, counterclockpodcast.com.
These pictures provide proof of where the four-wheeler was parked and give a good sense of the scene before everything was totally disrupted. They obviously don't show John's gun, holster, belts, or leg strap though, because those items were removed before anyone got there. But thankfully, Megan was thorough enough in her picture taking and did get a lot of shots of the ground around the ATV. And those images showed some of the dark stained areas that the FDLE tech had collected evidence from.
The pictures also showed some weird lines dug into the sand that state agents determined could be indicative of drag marks. So between what the FDLE guy found and what he gathered from the ME investigators' report and photos, law enforcement wrapped up their crime scene processing by mid-afternoon on July 9th. They towed the ATV and trailer along with Skip's Ford F-250 pickup truck to their lab in Fort Myers.
They immediately started figuring out what they could test and what they'd have to send off to other labs to determine if blood, DNA, or traces of drugs were present. Now, the traces of drugs thing is an important theme here. Based on their reports, both DeSoto County investigators and FDLE were convinced that John had smoked some kind of drug out of the Coors Light beer can while he was back there in the woods.
I literally can't find anywhere in the documentation about what their specific basis for this was, other than the fact that they just thought it could be possible. But reading between the lines, I think the reason they were so convinced of it was because, again, Dr. Anderson had told authorities that cocaine and cannabis had showed up in John's toxicology screen.
I wanted to explore further this idea that John used drugs. And to best do that, I tracked down his old high school sweetheart, a woman named Beth Flowers. She's married now and has since changed her last name to Waldron, but she went by Beth Flowers back in 2003. And I should note, she's no relation to our executive producer, Ashley Flowers, by the way.
Oh, I knew him around like age 12, I would say. So 11, 12 until he passed. We actually lived right down the road from each other, like maybe like three miles or so. We had a couple of us that lived a couple miles away down the road and stuff. And we would all gather up and, you know, we rode horses at the time or just rode around in the orange crows or hang out. There wasn't nobody he really disliked. And he's definitely missed by a lot of us.
Beth and John dated most of middle school and high school, but broke up a few months before he died. She said their breakup was a combination of just growing up and John starting to hang out with a different crowd, but not a crowd that was into hard drugs. He never used cocaine or anything around me, never cocaine.
He wasn't really into stuff like that. You know, he may have done something he wasn't supposed to, but he really, I mean, he didn't walk a straight line, but he just wasn't all out for the partying crowd. Like he may show up at a party, but he wasn't going to party all the time. You know, he still just, we all just hung out. It wasn't nothing crazy. I did know that he used marijuana time to time.
She says based on her knowledge of how hard John's life had been up until that point, she can see why he would have consumed cocaine maybe once or twice to blow off stress or feel something new. She thinks the main reason John would have even ventured into that territory was to cope with the loss of his step-grandfather, Melvin Eugene Strader Sr., who died of a massive heart attack on June 6, 2003, just weeks before John would eventually be killed.
Mel Sr. was Pat Strader's second husband, and he'd become a kind of father figure to John while he lived in Arcadia. For a long time, Mel operated an independent sawmill business on the Southeast Hansel property that made wood pallets for companies that needed to transport sod or other materials.
Ever since John was young, Mel had taught him how to use the mill and make something from his hands. It was apparently the type of relationship John desperately craved with his biological father, Mac, but never got. From everyone I've spoken with for this story, when Mel abruptly died at 70 years old, it took a big toll on John, despite the fact that John and Mel Sr. weren't even blood-related. Here's Beth again.
So in the weeks leading up to his death, it's conceivable to think that John might have begun to dabble in drugs outside of his normal cannabis use.
But John using drugs at all was something Helen, his mother, was unaware of. Everything was going south, but I was oblivious. Helen didn't have daily or even weekly contact with John due to ongoing legal issues with Pat and an active restraining order. But during the few times she did see her son in the summer of 2003, she began to suspect that something might be up with him.
She was especially concerned after an interaction they'd had days before he died, which turned out to be the last time she ever spoke with him. She'd driven to Arcadia in late June, around the time Mel Sr.'s funeral was supposed to happen. She was there to put papers in her mother's mailbox that were aimed at preventing Pat from burying Mel Sr. in the Huff family plot in Arcadia.
Pat's first husband, Helen's father, was buried there, and so is Helen's brother, and it's a private section of Joshua Creek Cemetery designated for members of the Huff family. So Helen felt like Pat burying Mel Strader Sr. there was unacceptable, and she let Pat know it.
And I said, "What are you thinking?" I said, "You know what? Your name is gonna be mud if you do something like that." I said, "People know us." I said, "Putting, you know, your ex-husband, a stepfather, or whatever you want to call him in there?" I don't remember what she hung up on me. So then I knew, well, it's done. So once again, the tension and infighting between Pat and Helen had grown to a fever pitch. And on the day Helen showed up at Pat's mailbox, John came out to confront her.
He was really upset that Helen was trying to keep Mel Sr., his beloved step-grandpa, out of the Huff family plot. He came out and I stopped and I got out of the truck. But he came up and the Explorer, roaring up and then just like slammed on brakes and shoved it into park and come out. And I was like, hey, and all of a sudden, like, who is this person?
And he started screaming and hollering at me about Mel and the set. And then I said, you know, he doesn't belong there. It's nothing against Mel. He does not belong there. And she doesn't have the right to do that. I'm trying to do things legal and all that. And then he started coming like at me. He had a hat and he threw it down. And, um, I'm sorry, this is the last face of his memory. He, uh,
Said something about, "You're not welcome at the funeral," whatever. And I said something like, "Do I look like I'm going to a funeral?" I said, "I'm not going to the funeral." I said, "He just doesn't belong there." And then you could tell he wanted to fight and it wasn't going to go anywhere. So I got in my truck and left. And as I did, he drew kind of a fit and there's a stop sign right there. He was hitting the stop sign and stuff. And I came to the house. So John was mad at you the last time you guys talked? About Mel.
Do you remember the last words he said to you? It was something, you know, like I think when he said, come on, you want a piece of me? And started like he wanted to fight. And I think I said, what's wrong with you? Because I described him. He didn't have any glasses or sunglasses or nothing. And I remember his eyes.
he just had like pin like the iris not the iris the pupil was like the size of a pen you know like a coat and when he had taken his shirt off you know if you don't bathe in a couple days you have that sheen and that oiliness and it wasn't like him because he was a clean kid
And I said, "Who the are you? What's wrong with you?" And, you know, that I think that just made him more angry because I'm not in my mind. His face is my son, but his actions and he would never talk to me that way because I didn't never allow that. It just did not ever happen. If they did, it was behind my back. He did not do that to me.
I did some digging to figure out if John had gotten into any trouble or had a rap sheet related to drug use during the summer of 2003. And turns out, he did. A very, very small rap sheet. According to police reports I found with the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office, a jurisdiction that neighbors DeSoto County, John was picked up for misdemeanor marijuana possession on May 4th, 2003 and released the same day.
The incident occurred during a traffic stop three days after his 17th birthday. The arresting agency doesn't have any paperwork still available about the arrest, but from what I gathered based on the booking sheet and court records, it appears John didn't serve any time for this and it was pretty much dropped. But I think that's because by the time it rolled around onto a court docket, John was already dead.
The record his arrest generated, though, was definitely something DeSoto County authorities investigating his murder paid attention to. They wanted to drill down on his possible drug history as one avenue of investigation. And the people they needed to talk to were not his tight-lipped grandmother and step-uncle. The people detectives needed to speak with were John's friends, specifically one friend, Patrick Skinner.
Patrick was not only an insider into John's life and habits, but he was also a witness who investigators knew had been at the original crime scene with Pat and Skip. And it was Patrick who authorities hoped would tell them everything they wanted to know about the dynamics between grandma, grandson, and step-uncle. I do know he wanted to get out. Of Arcadia? Not out of Arcadia specifically, out of the house he was living in.
That's coming up in Episode 4, Skinner. Listen right now. Boaters know that bad weather, like storms, lightning, and wind, can turn a fun day on the water into a challenge.
But what if you had satellite-delivered weather data giving you the full picture of what's around you, even when you're offshore and out of cell range? With SiriusXM Marine, get up-to-date weather directly on your boat's display. Features include radar, lightning, marine warnings, wind and wave info, and much more. And for offshore anglers, imagine having a guide that tells you where it might be best to cast your line. Fish mapping does just that. It's 8
fishing-focused features, including fishing recommendations, weed line info, plankton info, and sea surface temperature information can help you find fish faster. Plus, you can add SiriusXM Entertainment and listen to ad-free music, plus sports, talk, comedy, news, and more while you're on the water. Visit SiriusXM.com slash marine to learn more.
Grimace Mops. Hello Kitty Keychains. Teeny Beanies. For a limited time, your favorite McDonald's collectibles, filled with memories and magic, are now on collectible cups. Get one of six when you order a collector's meal at McDonald's with your choice of 10-piece McNuggets or a Big Mac. Come get your cup.
While you still can. Ba-da-ba-ba-ba. At participating McDonald's for a limited time while supplies last.