Hi, it's Andrea Gunning, the host of Betrayal. I'm excited to announce that the Betrayal podcast is expanding. We are going to be releasing episodes weekly, every Thursday. Each week, you'll hear brand new stories, firsthand accounts of shocking deception, broken trust, and the trail of destruction left behind. Listen to Betrayal Weekly on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm John Walczak, host of the new podcast Missing in Arizona. And I'm Robert Fisher, one of the most wanted men in the world. We cloned his voice using AI.
In 2001, police say I killed my family and rigged my house to explode before escaping into the wilderness. Police believe he is alive and hiding somewhere. Join me. I'm going down in the cave. As I track down clues. I'm going to call the police and have you removed. Hunting. One of the most dangerous fugitives in the world. Robert Fisher. Do you recognize my voice? Listen to Missing in Arizona every Wednesday on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your favorite shows.
Hi, I'm Molly Conger, host of Weird Little Guys, a new podcast from Cool Zone Media on iHeartRadio. I've spent almost a decade researching right-wing extremism, digging into the lives of people you wouldn't be wrong to call monsters. But if Scooby-Doo taught us one thing, it's that there's a guy under that monster mask. The monsters in our political closets aren't some unfathomable evil. They're just some weird guy. So join me every Thursday for a look under the mask at the weird little guys trying to destroy America.
Listen to Weird Little Guys on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hello, and welcome to Haunting, Purgatory's premiere podcast. I'm your host, Teresa. We'll be bringing you different ghost stories each week, straight from the person who experienced it firsthand. Some will be unsettling, some unnerving, some even downright terrifying. But all of them will be totally true.
Listen to Haunting on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to the Pikedon Massacre, Return to Pike County, a production of iHeartRadio and KT Studios. You've got all these scenarios in your head. I think this may have happened, or maybe they did this. Every family, a murder victim does that. You lay in bed and you think, what happened? Why did they do this? Who did this? There's someone out there roaming around that killed two people.
that you could be standing beside in the grocery store. And that's scary. This is The Pikedon Massacre, Return to Pike County, Season 2, Episode 10, Hopper Road. I'm Courtney Armstrong, a television producer at KT Studios with Stephanie Lidecker and Jeff Shane. Over the course of producing this series, we've spoken to several members of the Roden family. Because of a gag order and impending trials for the Wagner family, they have been unable to go on record.
But earlier this year, one member of the family told us that her friend, a Piketon resident named Angie Montgomery, wanted to share a story about her own family and a loss they had suffered some years back. Coincidentally, that same week, a listener wrote in asking about that exact case. So for this bonus episode, as we gear up to the season finale next week, we decided to look into it.
Angie, perhaps more than most people, can empathize with what the Rodens are going through. When we spoke to Angie, she had just heard about Jake Wagner's plea deal in the Roden murder case. This news hit Angie especially hard. She told us that she immediately reached out to her Roden family friend. I remember texting her and just telling her I was sorry. I had to hurt so bad knowing that. You sat down to eat Christmas dinner with these people. You went to church with these people.
So I can't imagine finding that out. Angie reflected back on the day the bodies of eight members of the Rodin family were found. I think we lost our innocence that day. We lost our wholesomeness, our trust. We lost everything. It was like you were in a daze. This isn't happening. You're like, where am I living? What's going on here? It's crazy.
Angie's bewilderment is no doubt informed by her own tragic loss. Ten years before the Rodin family was gunned down, her cousin Curtis Francis and his fiancée, Jennifer Burgett, were also murdered in Pike County.
Angie spoke with producer Chris Graves about it. I know this is probably hard, but can you describe for me what happened to Curtis and Jennifer on December 9th, 2006? Curtis was at his friend's house visiting. He had been drinking that day and having a little bit of fun. And Jenny had came down and told him that he needed to get home. And he left about...
10:30 that night and went home and his mother talked to him before he went to bed. It was about midnight I think and Jenny had talked to a friend I think about 11:30 so they were going to bed and the next day a 911 call came in that Jenny's mother had found Curtis and Jenny. They had been shot in their bed. It was
It's unsolved, correct? Yeah.
Just before their murders, 34-year-old Curtis Francis and 30-year-old Jennifer Burgett were a recently engaged couple living in Piketon, Ohio. Your cousin Curtis, can you tell me a little bit about him and what he was like? Curtis was a good guy. He had a good heart. Would help anybody. He was a hard worker. Loved his family. He was very loyal. And he was a very good person.
He was a little bit older than me and we would see each other, you know, when we were younger, but we really hung out more when we got older, like teenagers and in our early 20s. During that time, we were pretty close. He was like more like a big brother to me. What about Jennifer, his fiancee? I like to call her a caretaker. She liked to take care of everybody. She loved animals. She liked to fish. She was a good soul. She had a good heart.
And what were they like together? They were a cute couple. They would always joke around. Curtis liked to joke a lot and laughing and things. They were just a normal couple, I guess, hardworking couple. Their murders just before Christmas in 2006 were a shock to everyone who knew the couple. Curtis and Jennifer were shot while they lie asleep in their home on Hopper Road in Piketon.
It was later determined that the bullets that killed them were fired from a lever action rifle. I assume you guys tried to work with the police on this, right? How did that work? At first, the family's being told, Jenny and Curtis's family, you know, we don't know who did this. We don't know what's going on. You know, that's law enforcement. You trust them. If they tell you, hey, we're working on this.
We're going to get them. You know, you got to be patient, which everybody understands that you can't solve a murder in a day. Sometimes it takes a long time. But after 14 years of being told, going from we're working on it to not contacting at all to, well, we've went as far as we can go with this case. There's not really anything else we can do unless someone confesses or says,
you know, something drastic happens. That hurts. I think there was one article on it when it happened a few days after it happened in the local paper and a few other media outlets picked it up and did a couple of articles. But after that, there was nothing. You feel like you're never going to get justice.
But authorities had no answers. Eventually, the case that became known as the Hopper Road Double Murder went cold.
Then, in 2012, there was suddenly some movement. As part of his Ohio Unsolved Homicides Initiative, then-Attorney General Mike DeWine revived the case, urging anyone with information to come forward. He caught wind and he went on Channel 10 News, a station out of Columbus, and featured the Hopper Road murders.
talked about it. They had a deputy from the sheriff's department talk about it, asking for tips, you know, anybody, if they have any information. We believe there is a person or people out there who have information who would enable us to solve the case.
How did that make you feel? Did it feel like someone was actually paying attention to you guys? In 2014, the investigation was handed back over to the Pike County Sheriff's Office.
Then it just went cold again. Nothing. Two years later, in 2016, Jody Barr, then an investigative reporter at Fox 19 in Cincinnati, received an email from a woman named Paula Horn. It's saying, you know, something to the effect of, my son was wrongfully convicted of murder. And then she says, I've got information in another cold case. So, of course, that got my attention.
I go and meet with this woman. And what ended up happening was Paula Horn's
son Eric was convicted of a separate murder in Pike County a few years before Curt and Jenny were murdered. He was convicted of murdering Paul Shope, shot him, killed him. He was convicted of that. But Paula Horne was on a mission to have her son Eric Horne set free from prison. Paula Horne was convinced her son did not do the murder. So she pulls this huge box out of a closet and
And it's stacked full of papers and files. Paula Horn had collected a massive amount of documentation tied to her son's murder conviction. But it was documents within this archive pertaining to a different case that caught Jodi's eye. The murders of Curtis Francis and Jennifer Burgett on Hopper Road.
As it turns out, Eric Horn knew Curtis Francis and was with him hours before he was murdered. In this box of documents that Paula Horn had were email communications between the prosecution and Eric Horn's own attorney. And they're plotting how Eric Horn would plead guilty in one case and the state would use him as a witness in the double murder on Harper Road.
I mean, this was essentially Eric Horn saying, I will trade information about this double murder for a plea deal in this Paul Shope murder. So Eric Horn had written out a statement. It's called a proffer where he's giving investigators information in one case to essentially help him in another.
Eric Horn gave this proffer to investigators somewhere around September of 2008. So over the next month or so, Eric from prison writes his mother a letter and he tells her about what happened the night that Kurt Francis and Jennifer Burgett were murdered.
According to his letter, Eric Horn told authorities that he was at a house on Wynn Road in Pyton on December 9th, 2006. That night, a group including Curtis Francis had gathered at the home for a party. Horn claimed that he left the Wynn Road home at around 10.30 p.m. and never saw Curtis Francis again. But Horn said that just weeks later, he ran into a man who was at the party. The man told Horn that he was forced to go to Curtis and Jennifer's house that night by his housemate, who shot the couple over a money dispute.
Eric Horn never admits to having direct involvement with the actual murders themselves. But Eric Horn wrote in that letter that there was a lever action rifle that hung on the wall of the Howells' home on Wynn Road. And that after these murders happened, that gun was no longer on the wall. We're going to take a quick break here. We'll be back in a moment.
Hi, it's Andrea Gunning, host of Betrayal. I'm excited to announce that the Betrayal podcast is expanding. We are going to be releasing episodes weekly, every Thursday. Each week, you'll hear brand new stories, firsthand accounts of shocking deception, broken trust, and the trail of destruction left behind. Stories about regaining a sense of safety, a handle on reality after your entire world is flipped upside down.
From unbelievable romantic betrayals... The love that was so real for me was always just a game for him. To betrayals in your own family... When I think about my dad, oh, well, he is a sociopath. Financial betrayal...
This is not even the part where he steals millions of dollars. And life or death deceptions. She's practicing how she's going to cry when the police calls her after they kill me. Listen to Betrayal Weekly on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm John Walzak, host of the new podcast Missing in Arizona. And I'm Robert Fisher, one of the most wanted men in the world. We cloned his voice using AI. Oh my God.
In 2001, police say I killed my family. First mom, then the kids. And rigged my house to explode. In a quiet suburb. This is the Beverly Hills of the Valley. Before escaping into the wilderness. There was sleet and hail and snow coming down. They found my wife's SUV. Right on the reservation boundary. And my dog flew. All I could think of is him and the sniper me out of some tree.
But not me. Police believe he is alive and hiding somewhere. For two years. They won't tell you anything. I've traveled the nation. I'm going down in the cave. Tracking down clues. They were thinking that I picked him up and took him somewhere. If you keep asking me this, I'm going to call the police and have you removed. Searching for Robert Fisher. One of the most dangerous fugitives in the world.
Do you recognize my voice? Join an exploding house, the hunt, family annihilation today and a disappearing act. Listen to Missing in Arizona every Wednesday on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your favorite shows. Hi, I'm Molly Conger, host of Weird Little Guys, a new podcast from Cool Zone Media on iHeartRadio. I spent almost a decade researching right wing extremism, digging into the lives of people you wouldn't be wrong to call monsters.
But if Scooby-Doo taught us one thing, it's that there's a guy under that monster mask. I've collected the stories of hundreds of aspiring little Hitlers of the suburbs. From the Nazi cop who tried to join ISIS, to the National Guardsman plotting to assassinate the Supreme Court, to the Satanist soldier who tried to get his own unit blown up in Turkey. The monsters in our political closets aren't some unfathomable evil. They're just some weird guy. And you can laugh. Honestly, I think you have to.
Seeing these guys for what they are doesn't mean they're not a threat. It's a survival strategy. So join me every Thursday for a look under the mask at the weird little guys trying to destroy America. Listen to Weird Little Guys on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm David Eagleman from the podcast Inner Cosmos, which recently hit the number one science podcast in America. I'm a neuroscientist at Stanford, and I've spent my career exploring the three-pound universe in our heads. We're looking at a whole new series of episodes this season to understand why and how our lives look the way they do. Why does your memory drift so much? Why is it so hard to keep a secret? When should you not trust your intuition?
Why do brains so easily fall for magic tricks? And why do they love conspiracy theories? I'm hitting these questions and hundreds more because the more we know about what's running under the hood, the better we can steer our lives. Join me weekly to explore the relationship between your brain and your life by digging into unexpected questions. Listen to Inner Cosmos with David Eagleman on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The files collected by Paula Horne contain not only Eric Horne's statements, but accounts from other witnesses about the night of Curtis Francis and Jennifer Burgett's murders. What I was reading on them was unbelievable. There were witness statements out of an investigative file from the Pike County Sheriff's Office contained in this box of records. So this box of records contained every document that
that somebody like me could only dream of having when you start investigating a murder that's 10 years old at that point in time. And what she had in her possession were documents that ultimately provided a whole lot of answers for, you know, Curt and Jenny's family. We went over every shred of paper in this case file. I made sure I understood who every person was, who these players are, how they were connected.
My next job was then to go talk to the victim's families. So I went to Judy Conley, who was Kurt Francis' mother. Jody Barr revealed some of the other statements taken by police in their investigation into Kurt and Jennifer's murder to the family. These accounts, however, seem to contradict what Eric Horn initially told authorities. Here again is Angie Montgomery. One statement is from a gentleman whose house Curtis was at the night that he got murdered.
He stated that his brother and his friend Eric Horn had left after Curtis had left about 10:30 or 11:00 and took a rifle off the wall and went and killed Curtis and Jenny and that they came back with bloody clothes and they got in the shower took a shower got the blood off of them took their clothes and
out in the yard and put them in a black trash bag and burnt them all at the command of his mother because apparently Curtis owed the mother's fiance $300 is what I was told and then there's another statement and they told the same story that they took a rifle off the wall came back bloody took a shower burnt the clothes
Eric Horn denies any and all involvement in Curtis and Jennifer's murders. Jody Barr knew that the information he had could help track down Curtis and Jennifer's killers. But there was one problem. Jody couldn't get any more information from investigators. We can't pull the records in this case. They're all under seal. This is still considered, although it's cold, a murder.
It's a pending open investigation, regardless of whether investigators are actively working it or not. These are not records you can get a hold of under the Open Records Act. So what do you have at that point? The only thing you have are the witnesses and family members who may have been in contact or who may have remembered something from back when this began. But I knew there was something here. I just had to get somebody from the family to work with us.
To help us and then all of a sudden this guy with this huge winter jacket walks in from the backyard and he's greasy He's been working on a car and it's Paul Francis. His brother is Kurt Francis and Judy introduces us and I tell him why why I am there and
And his whole demeanor changed. He looked angry. And I'm thinking, okay, you know, this is going to be one of those where I get, you know, hauled out of the house by my collar and my belt loops. And all Paul tells me is, let's get in your car. I've got something to show you.
So Paul and I get in the car and we drive from his home over to Wynn Road. And he walks me out to the edge of the property and he says, "This is a well." And then he starts telling me the story about the story that this well told that he just so happened to find. Paul told Jody that in July of 2016, he was doing a plumbing job at the same house on Wynn Road that Curtis was last seen at the night of his murder in 2006.
By this point, the previous owners had moved out. He's doing plumbing work. So he sees a water line running outside with an electrical wire running out alongside the pipe. So he's trying to pull this water line up and it gets to a point where he can't pull it up out of the ground any longer. So then he just starts pulling this electrical wire and it, you know, it snakes across the yard and it goes down a hill under a pile of junk in the yard as he described it.
So Paul Francis called the Pike County Sheriff's Office in to investigate.
By 2016, the department was headed up by Charlie Reeder, who, as we know, would later be jailed on charges related to corruption in office. At the moment, in 2016, what were you guys' feelings about Charlie Reeder? Were you hopeful? Yeah, you're hopeful with every new sheriff. He also had his hands full because the Roden massacre had just happened. We knew that resources were probably stretched out.
But we also thought the BCI, the FBI, they're already down here in our county. That gave us a little bit of hope of maybe, hey, they'll, the sheriff will say something and they'll pick up on this too. We were very hopeful that he would do something and something would happen. So the sheriff, Charlie Reeder, paid a local plumbing company to run a plumber's camera down the well. They were able to capture images of a handgun.
And then this lever action rifle. I mean, that is very similar to the gun that Eric Horn described in his 2008 letter that he sent his mom from prison. Let's stop here for another quick break. We'll be back in a moment.
Hi, it's Andrea Gunning, host of Betrayal. I'm excited to announce that the Betrayal podcast is expanding. We are going to be releasing episodes weekly, every Thursday. Each week, you'll hear brand new stories, firsthand accounts of shocking deception, broken trust, and the trail of destruction left behind. Stories about regaining a sense of safety, a handle on reality after your entire world is flipped upside down.
From unbelievable romantic betrayals... The love that was so real for me was always just a game for him. To betrayals in your own family... When I think about my dad, oh, well, he is a sociopath. Financial betrayal...
This is not even the part where he steals millions of dollars. And life or death deceptions. She's practicing how she's going to cry when the police calls her after they kill me. Listen to Betrayal Weekly on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm John Walzak, host of the new podcast Missing in Arizona. And I'm Robert Fisher, one of the most wanted men in the world. We cloned his voice using AI. Come on, Paul.
In 2001, police say I killed my family. First mom, then the kids. And rigged my house to explode. In a quiet suburb. This is the Beverly Hills of the Valley. Before escaping into the wilderness. There was sleet and hail and snow coming down. They found my wife's SUV. Right on the reservation boundary. And my dog flew. All I could think of is him and the sniper me out of some tree.
But not me. Police believe he is alive and hiding somewhere. For two years. They won't tell you anything. I've traveled the nation. I'm going down in the cave. Tracking down clues. They were thinking that I picked him up and took him somewhere. If you keep asking me this, I'm going to call the police and have you removed. Searching for Robert Fisher. One of the most dangerous fugitives in the world.
Do you recognize my voice? Join an exploding house, the hunt, family annihilation today and a disappearing act. Listen to Missing in Arizona every Wednesday on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your favorite shows. Hi, I'm Molly Conger, host of Weird Little Guys, a new podcast from Cool Zone Media on iHeartRadio. I spent almost a decade researching right wing extremism, digging into the lives of people you wouldn't be wrong to call monsters.
But if Scooby-Doo taught us one thing, it's that there's a guy under that monster mask. I've collected the stories of hundreds of aspiring little Hitlers of the suburbs, from the Nazi cop who tried to join ISIS, to the National Guardsman plotting to assassinate the Supreme Court, to the Satanist soldier who tried to get his own unit blown up in Turkey. The monsters in our political closets aren't some unfathomable evil. They're just some weird guy. And you can laugh. Honestly, I think you have to. Seeing these guys for what they are doesn't mean they're not a threat.
It's a survival strategy. So join me every Thursday for a look under the mask at the weird little guys trying to destroy America. Listen to Weird Little Guys on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm David Eagleman from the podcast Inner Cosmos, which recently hit the number one science podcast in America. I'm a neuroscientist at Stanford, and I've spent my career exploring the three-pound universe in our heads. We're looking at a whole new series of episodes this season to understand why and how our lives look the way they do. Why does your memory drift so much? Why is it so hard to keep a secret? When should you not trust your intuition?
Why do brains so easily fall for magic tricks? And why do they love conspiracy theories? I'm hitting these questions and hundreds more because the more we know about what's running under the hood, the better we can steer our lives. Join me weekly to explore the relationship between your brain and your life by digging into unexpected questions. Listen to Inner Cosmos with David Eagleman on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Authorities also found burnt clothing, a detail relayed in Eric Horn's statement. This could have been the break in the case. The only physical evidence that we know of was down a well shaft and the sheriff's office was just feet away from being able to get their hands on it, bag it, process it, and potentially prosecute somebody in the Hopper Road double murder.
So then they were faced with the task of how do we get these guns out of this well? It's an eight inch pipe that goes down into a well. So they tried with a magnet, I was told. And when that failed, they called in a fire truck
The idea was to use the fire hose to fill the well with water, which would in turn lift the guns back up to the surface for authorities to retrieve. But things did not go as expected. They placed the fire hose in the pipe and turned the water on. It blew the bottom of the well out and knocked like an 80-foot hole in the well, took the guns with it.
Sheriff's Office ultimately ends up getting a welder out there. The welder welds a plate over top of this well, and that's where it sat since July of 2016. And here we are years later, the likelihood that it's ever recovered, it's not looking very good right now. How did that feel for you guys? Horrible. I'm going to get emotional. I felt horrible anger.
You know, this is, that was probably the biggest break we'll ever get in this case, ever.
Despite potential evidence being lost, Jody Barr pressed on with his investigation. In 2017, he went forward with a series of reports on the Hopper Road double murder case. The Pike County Sheriff at the time, Charlie Reeder, when I was looking into this case, told me that he developed a cold case unit within his sheriff's office. And he had some seasoned law enforcement officials, investigators, criminal profilers on this team. And they were looking into the Hopper Road cold case. So,
I got an interview with those four men and I wanted to know more about the well. I wanted to know about this evidence in the bottom of this well. I wanted to know, I named all the names that were contained in these witness statements.
You know, I had all four members of this cold case unit sitting in front of me in an interview inside the sheriff's office. And all I got from this cold case unit was no comment. Every question was a no comment. Have you been able to develop any type of motive profile of the suspects? No comment. So, you know, we were at the end of the road.
Jody's reporting on Curtis and Jennifer's murder also received some pushback from the Pike County community, mainly due to his interactions with Sheriff Charlie Reeder at the time. The people in Pike County that seen Jody's airing of the Hopper Road murders reported
had a different perspective on Mr. Barr because of the investigation he did at the Roden Warehouse with Mr. Reeder. Mr. Reeder had got on Facebook and had a huge rant aimed at Mr. Barr, and I like to say they drank Mr. Reeder's Kool-Aid. People were saying,
you know, this guy's just down here to make the Pike County Sheriff's Office and Charlie Reeder look horrible. And so I had a lot of people messaging me saying, I can't believe that your family would let that guy do a report on this case. And, you know, he's just a troublemaker. He isn't even from around here. And I would always bite back and say, at least he cares. You know, he's the only one that cares. He, Jody,
And I mean this with all my heart and I hope I can get it out without crying. He really does care about my family. He is in constant contact with me. He has helped me. He has listened to me cry. He's just as aggravated as we are. He's a very caring person and he was, he's a godsend.
Jody Barr's reporting helped raise awareness about Curtis and Jennifer's murders, but police were seemingly unable to make any progress. Still today, no one's been arrested. Kurt and Jenny's family have no more answers today than they had when we rolled out of Pike County for the last time and aired the final broadcast into this case. From your extensive investigation, it seems as though investigators know what might have happened to Curtis and
and Jennifer and Whom may have done it.
Why do you think there hasn't been an arrest? That's my question. I don't know why there hasn't been an arrest. I don't know. The investigators just didn't have enough. I don't know what else was needed to finish this investigation. You've got people in these statements telling stories that spell out what happened when the people who were identified in these statements as having gone to this murder scene committed these crimes and came back home. So I don't know.
why or what or where investigators are at this point in time. This is, we're 15 years down the road and no arrests. So as far as the family's concerned, and I talk to them regularly still today, I mean, they just, they feel like this was a miscarriage of not even justice. They didn't get that far. It's just an incomplete investigation. You just hope one day you'll be able to finish the story.
Because at this point, two people are dead and it appears that whoever did this has gotten away with murder.
But that won't be the case if Angie Montgomery has anything to do with it. You're still on this mission to get answers, to get justice, and also to make sure that it doesn't happen to another family, right? I got my kids up where they were a little bit older. I had a little bit of time on my hands. So I started going full force with getting the Hopper Road case out into the public. Speaking, I went to the prosecutor, spoke with him a few times. I went to the sheriff's.
We had an interim sheriff when Mr. Reeder got suspended. We're told, just hang on. You know, help's coming. And it never does. And I noticed that it's always when I get really rowdy. Squeaky wheel gets the most grease. When I start squeaking, I'll get a phone call. Hey, you know, just hang on. I'm going to figure something out. And nothing happens. And we're tired of it.
That's what I get the most emotional about is just feeling like nobody cares. And I can't imagine what Kurt and Jenny's mom, their mothers feel like. That's another thing that puts the fire under my ass. It's never, it's not going to bring them back. You'll always have a hole in your heart from that. But I would love to see someone get arrested for Curtis and Jennifer's murder and get prosecuted and that we get justice.
For more information on the case and relevant photos, follow us on Instagram at KT underscore studios. Next week, we'll be bringing you the season finale where a full panel of contributors will answer listener questions. So please write us with anything you want to know. This week is your last chance to get the questions in.
The Pikedon Massacre Return to Pike County is executive produced by Stephanie Lidecker and me, Courtney Armstrong. Editing and sound design by executive producer Jared Astin. Additional producing by Jeff Shane, Andrew Becker, and Chris Graves. The Pikedon Massacre Return to Pike County is a production of iHeartRadio and KT Studios. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hi, it's Andrea Gunning, the host of Betrayal. I'm excited to announce that the Betrayal podcast is expanding. We are going to be releasing episodes weekly, every Thursday. Each week, you'll hear brand new stories, firsthand accounts of shocking deception, broken trust, and the trail of destruction left behind. Listen to Betrayal Weekly on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm John Walzak, host of the new podcast Missing in Arizona. And I'm Robert Fisher, one of the most wanted men in the world. We cloned his voice using AI. This is my mom.
In 2001, police say I killed my family and rigged my house to explode before escaping into the wilderness. Police believe he is alive and hiding somewhere. Join me. I'm going down in the cave. As I track down clues. I'm going to call the police and have you removed. Hunting. One of the most dangerous fugitives in the world. Robert Fisher. Do you recognize my voice? Listen to Missing in Arizona every Wednesday on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your favorite shows.
Hi, I'm Molly Conger, host of Weird Little Guys, a new podcast from Cool Zone Media on iHeartRadio. I've spent almost a decade researching right-wing extremism, digging into the lives of people you wouldn't be wrong to call monsters. But if Scooby-Doo taught us one thing, it's that there's a guy under that monster mask. The monsters in our political closets aren't some unfathomable evil. They're just some weird guy. So join me every Thursday for a look under the mask at the weird little guys trying to destroy America.
Listen to Weird Little Guys on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hello, and welcome to Haunting, Purgatory's premiere podcast. I'm your host, Teresa. We'll be bringing you different ghost stories each week, straight from the person who experienced it firsthand. Some will be unsettling, some unnerving, some even downright terrifying. But all of them will be totally true.
Listen to Haunting on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.