1 00:00:05,360 --> 00:00:09,039 Speaker 1: Who wrote the book head Man. I'm not at liberty 2 00:00:09,080 --> 00:00:14,920 Speaker 1: to disclose the author's name. That's Peter Lund, founder of 3 00:00:14,920 --> 00:00:18,520 Speaker 1: Paladin Press and publisher of Hitman, speaking with Mike Wallace 4 00:00:18,560 --> 00:00:25,480 Speaker 1: on sixty minutes back. Why not because the author asked 5 00:00:25,480 --> 00:00:32,400 Speaker 1: that we protect her privacy. It is a woman. It 6 00:00:32,600 --> 00:00:38,960 Speaker 1: is a woman. One afternoon this past February, I stepped 7 00:00:39,000 --> 00:00:41,959 Speaker 1: away from my desk for just a few minutes. By then, 8 00:00:42,000 --> 00:00:44,760 Speaker 1: I'd written who I believed to be Rex Ferrell. I'd 9 00:00:44,760 --> 00:00:48,480 Speaker 1: emailed multiple times to several different email addresses, called a bunch, 10 00:00:48,720 --> 00:00:52,239 Speaker 1: tried a few family members, mailed certified letters. I even 11 00:00:52,240 --> 00:00:55,560 Speaker 1: wrote her on Pinterest, on Instagram and Facebook. But no 12 00:00:55,600 --> 00:00:59,720 Speaker 1: matter what I did, I didn't hear back. I mean, 13 00:00:59,760 --> 00:01:02,160 Speaker 1: I was only gone for a moment. It was nothing, 14 00:01:02,720 --> 00:01:06,320 Speaker 1: no time at all. But when I returned there was 15 00:01:06,360 --> 00:01:08,919 Speaker 1: a missed call from one of the numbers I tried, 16 00:01:09,800 --> 00:01:13,960 Speaker 1: and there was a voicemail, a long one. I was excited, 17 00:01:14,319 --> 00:01:16,399 Speaker 1: kind of felt like I was gonna puke. I wasn't 18 00:01:16,520 --> 00:01:18,680 Speaker 1: entirely sure what I was gonna say, but I hope 19 00:01:18,720 --> 00:01:20,080 Speaker 1: to have a chance to tell her what kind of 20 00:01:20,160 --> 00:01:22,360 Speaker 1: journalists I am that I'm not looking for some kind 21 00:01:22,400 --> 00:01:24,959 Speaker 1: of gotcha moment that I had no interest in doxing 22 00:01:24,959 --> 00:01:28,039 Speaker 1: her or pursuing some kind of moral reckoning. I just 23 00:01:28,080 --> 00:01:31,760 Speaker 1: want to know what happened, what was her story? And 24 00:01:31,800 --> 00:01:33,640 Speaker 1: then I held the phone up to my ear and 25 00:01:33,760 --> 00:01:53,760 Speaker 1: pressed play. Ye, nothing, just some background noises. I listened 26 00:01:53,800 --> 00:01:56,080 Speaker 1: to it three times, hoping I had missed her message, 27 00:01:56,280 --> 00:01:58,120 Speaker 1: like maybe it was just at the very end or 28 00:01:58,200 --> 00:02:05,800 Speaker 1: really quiet. No, this was clearly a missdial. Now when 29 00:02:05,840 --> 00:02:10,280 Speaker 1: I try that number, it goes straight to voicemail. I 30 00:02:10,320 --> 00:02:12,760 Speaker 1: hope she's listening to this right now. It eventually calls 31 00:02:12,800 --> 00:02:33,880 Speaker 1: me again. She's got my number from my Heart radio 32 00:02:33,960 --> 00:02:37,520 Speaker 1: and hit Home Media. I'm Jasmine Morris. This is Hitman. 33 00:02:57,440 --> 00:03:03,079 Speaker 1: On the very last page of Hitman, Reck Ferrell boasts someday, 34 00:03:03,560 --> 00:03:06,200 Speaker 1: when you've done and seen it all, when there doesn't 35 00:03:06,200 --> 00:03:09,200 Speaker 1: seem to be any challenge left or any new frontier 36 00:03:09,320 --> 00:03:12,720 Speaker 1: left to conquer, you might just feel cocky enough to 37 00:03:12,720 --> 00:03:16,840 Speaker 1: write a book about it. You might just feel cocky 38 00:03:16,919 --> 00:03:20,120 Speaker 1: enough to write a book about it. It's so obvious, 39 00:03:20,280 --> 00:03:24,360 Speaker 1: especially now that Rex Ferrell, this macho rogue Maverick, the 40 00:03:24,440 --> 00:03:27,079 Speaker 1: King of the Wild Beasts, was always just to put 41 00:03:27,120 --> 00:03:32,560 Speaker 1: on a persona. When I got ahold of the print 42 00:03:32,560 --> 00:03:35,280 Speaker 1: copy and thumbed through its pages, I was struck by 43 00:03:35,320 --> 00:03:38,600 Speaker 1: some of the photographs about halfway through, where Rex Ferrell 44 00:03:38,640 --> 00:03:42,240 Speaker 1: shows how to make a homemade silencer. These photos are 45 00:03:42,240 --> 00:03:44,160 Speaker 1: in black and white. They're super grainy and kind of 46 00:03:44,160 --> 00:03:46,800 Speaker 1: hard to see any real detail. But the person in 47 00:03:46,840 --> 00:03:50,280 Speaker 1: these photographs demonstrating how to make these d i y weapons. 48 00:03:50,520 --> 00:03:52,960 Speaker 1: They're only shown from the neck down, but as I 49 00:03:53,000 --> 00:03:56,360 Speaker 1: looked closely, it looks like they're wearing a woman's engagement ring. 50 00:03:57,240 --> 00:04:00,120 Speaker 1: And in the Homework and Surveillance chapter, one of the 51 00:04:00,200 --> 00:04:05,520 Speaker 1: centerpieces of this book is a ten page questionnaire which 52 00:04:05,800 --> 00:04:11,600 Speaker 1: the hitman is supposed to submit to the employer and 53 00:04:11,640 --> 00:04:15,480 Speaker 1: seeks detailed information on the source, background, habits, whether he 54 00:04:15,520 --> 00:04:19,039 Speaker 1: has guns in the house, burglar alarms, whether he knows 55 00:04:19,120 --> 00:04:24,479 Speaker 1: martial arts, schematic of surrounding houses and neighbors Tom Kelly, 56 00:04:24,600 --> 00:04:30,000 Speaker 1: Paladin's press lawyer. It says directions, please print plainly, answer 57 00:04:30,120 --> 00:04:35,320 Speaker 1: all questions as completely as possible. Use additional sheets of necessary, 58 00:04:35,520 --> 00:04:40,159 Speaker 1: supply all information available, even if not requested. No detail 59 00:04:40,279 --> 00:04:43,760 Speaker 1: is too small. This sounds a little bit more like 60 00:04:43,800 --> 00:04:47,600 Speaker 1: a college application than Hitman making a deal with an 61 00:04:47,600 --> 00:04:52,679 Speaker 1: employer really bordering on the absurd. There are hands drawn 62 00:04:52,760 --> 00:04:57,120 Speaker 1: diagrams in maps and a sample information sheet. These are 63 00:04:57,160 --> 00:04:59,680 Speaker 1: all drawn and written in a sort of flowery cursive. 64 00:05:02,279 --> 00:05:04,120 Speaker 1: So I knew it was all fake, but that didn't 65 00:05:04,120 --> 00:05:07,040 Speaker 1: make my job any easier. How do you find someone 66 00:05:07,080 --> 00:05:09,599 Speaker 1: who wrote under a pen name, someone who might not 67 00:05:09,720 --> 00:05:13,480 Speaker 1: want to be found? I scoured message boards, Amazon reviews, 68 00:05:13,640 --> 00:05:16,720 Speaker 1: comments sections, hoping for some kind of bread crumb that 69 00:05:16,760 --> 00:05:20,960 Speaker 1: would lead me to this person. Nothing. I asked the 70 00:05:21,040 --> 00:05:24,200 Speaker 1: same question over and over. Yeah, I was gonna ask 71 00:05:24,200 --> 00:05:25,719 Speaker 1: you about this author? What do you know about the 72 00:05:25,720 --> 00:05:28,240 Speaker 1: anonymous office you just mentioned the What did you know 73 00:05:28,279 --> 00:05:30,479 Speaker 1: about the author of the book? So? Who was the 74 00:05:30,520 --> 00:05:32,599 Speaker 1: actual author? Do you ever know anything about the author 75 00:05:32,640 --> 00:05:37,600 Speaker 1: of the book. My good friend, investigative journalist Andrew Goldberg, 76 00:05:37,680 --> 00:05:40,440 Speaker 1: offered his help. He tracked down some court documents and 77 00:05:40,480 --> 00:05:42,919 Speaker 1: dockets and handed me a stack of paper with every 78 00:05:42,920 --> 00:05:46,760 Speaker 1: woman's name circled. I asked Howard Siegel why they never 79 00:05:46,800 --> 00:05:48,920 Speaker 1: looked into the author? Why didn't her name come out 80 00:05:48,960 --> 00:05:52,800 Speaker 1: in the lawsuit? He said, quote, we simply didn't need her. 81 00:05:53,320 --> 00:05:55,920 Speaker 1: There was no possible upside. What was she going to 82 00:05:56,000 --> 00:05:58,839 Speaker 1: say that she was trying to help would be murderers, 83 00:05:59,160 --> 00:06:01,560 Speaker 1: of course not she was going to tow the party 84 00:06:01,600 --> 00:06:04,279 Speaker 1: line and say she was just kidding or providing information. 85 00:06:05,000 --> 00:06:07,400 Speaker 1: Never bring a witness in who can't add to your case. 86 00:06:08,080 --> 00:06:10,200 Speaker 1: When you have them, buy the balls, you don't let 87 00:06:10,200 --> 00:06:11,680 Speaker 1: go to see if you can get a better grip. 88 00:06:12,080 --> 00:06:15,440 Speaker 1: The question is why didn't they depose or subpoena her, 89 00:06:16,000 --> 00:06:20,440 Speaker 1: meaning Paladin Press. So I asked Paladin's lawyer. He confirmed 90 00:06:20,480 --> 00:06:23,480 Speaker 1: what Lund had said on sixty minutes. The author chose 91 00:06:23,520 --> 00:06:26,800 Speaker 1: to be anonymous, a right protected by the First Amendment. 92 00:06:27,200 --> 00:06:31,279 Speaker 1: In Paladin agreed. Paladin deemed itself obliged to keep that 93 00:06:31,400 --> 00:06:35,320 Speaker 1: implied pledge of confidentiality, just as you would a news 94 00:06:35,320 --> 00:06:44,599 Speaker 1: source grasping for leeds. I remember these two amazing private 95 00:06:44,600 --> 00:06:48,400 Speaker 1: detectives I'd interviewed years prior for another radio piece, legit 96 00:06:48,480 --> 00:06:52,440 Speaker 1: sleuths who were also married to each other, Um Collin Collins, 97 00:06:52,680 --> 00:06:57,719 Speaker 1: I own North Dinder Investigations. My favorite operative's Sean Kaufman. 98 00:06:58,240 --> 00:07:02,360 Speaker 1: My name is Kaufman, and I'm a licensed private investigator 99 00:07:02,360 --> 00:07:04,920 Speaker 1: in the state of Colorado, and that opens the gate 100 00:07:05,000 --> 00:07:08,720 Speaker 1: to many mysteries. Colleen later named a character in one 101 00:07:08,760 --> 00:07:12,000 Speaker 1: of her romance novels After Me. That's another story. I 102 00:07:12,080 --> 00:07:15,480 Speaker 1: see Colleen Man tell you what, don't get on her 103 00:07:15,560 --> 00:07:19,160 Speaker 1: bad side, dude, don't make her look for you because 104 00:07:19,960 --> 00:07:25,960 Speaker 1: palso wham bam, she will find you, and then she'll 105 00:07:26,000 --> 00:07:28,320 Speaker 1: send me out to serve you. I did find someone 106 00:07:28,360 --> 00:07:31,200 Speaker 1: a c I A one what. So when I got 107 00:07:31,240 --> 00:07:34,520 Speaker 1: this person on the phone, the first thing I said 108 00:07:34,560 --> 00:07:36,800 Speaker 1: was how did you find me? Wow? What did you say? 109 00:07:36,880 --> 00:07:38,880 Speaker 1: I said, Well, I just want you to know it 110 00:07:38,920 --> 00:07:41,440 Speaker 1: wasn't easy. She said, that's because I'm in the CIA, 111 00:07:42,760 --> 00:07:46,640 Speaker 1: So finding people is what Colleen and Shawn do, which 112 00:07:46,640 --> 00:07:49,400 Speaker 1: is why. Back in two thousand fifteen, I emailed Colleen 113 00:07:49,440 --> 00:07:51,880 Speaker 1: with everything I knew about Rex Ferrell and told her 114 00:07:51,880 --> 00:07:55,200 Speaker 1: the entire story about this Hitman book, The Trible Murder 115 00:07:55,240 --> 00:08:00,240 Speaker 1: Paladin Press. To my surprise, she'd actually visited Paladin. You're ago. 116 00:08:01,080 --> 00:08:04,600 Speaker 1: I wrote a fiction novel which was really really bad, 117 00:08:04,680 --> 00:08:07,840 Speaker 1: because everybody's first books usually are really bad, and they 118 00:08:07,880 --> 00:08:09,960 Speaker 1: had a serial killer in it and guns and all 119 00:08:10,040 --> 00:08:13,440 Speaker 1: kinds of things. So I thought, gosh, there's that soldier 120 00:08:13,440 --> 00:08:17,680 Speaker 1: of Fortune magazine here in town. And yet palat impressed 121 00:08:17,760 --> 00:08:20,720 Speaker 1: or something I should call them, you know, because I 122 00:08:20,720 --> 00:08:24,280 Speaker 1: want to talk about guns and killings and stuff. She said, 123 00:08:24,320 --> 00:08:28,000 Speaker 1: it was a rather memorable experience. I mean, of course 124 00:08:28,040 --> 00:08:34,560 Speaker 1: it was. But was stunning to me was when I 125 00:08:34,600 --> 00:08:38,920 Speaker 1: got there there was all this security. I remember thinking, well, 126 00:08:38,960 --> 00:08:41,720 Speaker 1: this is really weird, you know, and there was a 127 00:08:41,760 --> 00:08:45,319 Speaker 1: camera and bars and this is fine. I was in 128 00:08:45,400 --> 00:08:48,400 Speaker 1: this portal and the door was locked, and this man's 129 00:08:48,480 --> 00:08:51,720 Speaker 1: voice said, is that you calling for the appointment? And 130 00:08:51,960 --> 00:08:55,280 Speaker 1: I said yes, I remember. He took me back to 131 00:08:55,280 --> 00:08:57,720 Speaker 1: a room and there was the desk in the place 132 00:08:58,120 --> 00:09:02,280 Speaker 1: was actually pretty bare. Its step for dozens and dozens 133 00:09:02,280 --> 00:09:04,679 Speaker 1: of boxes. She said she couldn't remember if it was 134 00:09:04,720 --> 00:09:07,760 Speaker 1: actually soldier of Fortune or paladin, but she told me 135 00:09:07,760 --> 00:09:10,360 Speaker 1: whoever she talked to pulled a gun out of his desk. 136 00:09:11,240 --> 00:09:15,400 Speaker 1: Sounds familiar, and so I interviewed him about guns. Well, 137 00:09:15,400 --> 00:09:16,920 Speaker 1: I didn't have a lot of friends. I was pretty 138 00:09:16,960 --> 00:09:19,400 Speaker 1: new and Boulder, so nobody told me that they were strange, 139 00:09:20,240 --> 00:09:22,120 Speaker 1: you know. And I really the first thing I do 140 00:09:22,160 --> 00:09:24,760 Speaker 1: when I go to a new town find find me 141 00:09:24,920 --> 00:09:28,840 Speaker 1: the right wing. Hey, everybody here know where I gets 142 00:09:28,840 --> 00:09:33,280 Speaker 1: a good hollow tips ammunition. I had no idea I 143 00:09:33,840 --> 00:09:36,560 Speaker 1: was like clueless. I probably would wearing a nice little 144 00:09:36,760 --> 00:09:41,200 Speaker 1: suit with heels. You know. Back in two thousand fifteen, 145 00:09:41,440 --> 00:09:44,920 Speaker 1: Colleen told me quote pseudonyms can be difficult to track 146 00:09:45,000 --> 00:09:48,480 Speaker 1: down depends on what other information you have. For example, 147 00:09:48,640 --> 00:09:50,480 Speaker 1: do you have a birth date or even a year 148 00:09:50,480 --> 00:09:52,959 Speaker 1: of birth, or even a range of age such as 149 00:09:53,000 --> 00:09:55,920 Speaker 1: thirty to thirty five years old, any family member or 150 00:09:55,920 --> 00:09:59,400 Speaker 1: spouse names. No, At the time, I had none of this. 151 00:10:00,400 --> 00:10:06,880 Speaker 1: Nothing is impossible, she said, until one learns it's really impossible. Gosh, 152 00:10:07,000 --> 00:10:09,160 Speaker 1: I think you just first said you were doing research 153 00:10:09,559 --> 00:10:12,200 Speaker 1: on someone called rex Ferrell. Give corrects me up that 154 00:10:12,280 --> 00:10:15,240 Speaker 1: name whenever it's spare time. I was like digging another 155 00:10:15,320 --> 00:10:18,079 Speaker 1: rabbit hole going. I would find more and more information, 156 00:10:18,160 --> 00:10:22,520 Speaker 1: and a lot you had already found two, you know. 157 00:10:22,640 --> 00:10:25,400 Speaker 1: I was exchanging notes with you about Okay, I found this, Yeah, 158 00:10:25,400 --> 00:10:27,040 Speaker 1: I read that too. What did you see this? We 159 00:10:27,040 --> 00:10:30,160 Speaker 1: were doing that back and forth, and then I found 160 00:10:30,200 --> 00:10:34,319 Speaker 1: the piece that you hadn't found yet, and it was 161 00:10:34,400 --> 00:10:37,720 Speaker 1: what opened the door. Well do you trying to speak 162 00:10:37,720 --> 00:10:42,160 Speaker 1: to the Rex Ferrell? There were so many dead ends 163 00:10:42,200 --> 00:10:44,360 Speaker 1: along the way. I'd learned something that would turn out 164 00:10:44,400 --> 00:10:46,560 Speaker 1: to be completely wrong, and I'd find myself going in 165 00:10:46,559 --> 00:10:50,520 Speaker 1: a totally different direction. At one point, I thought the 166 00:10:50,559 --> 00:10:53,160 Speaker 1: real Rex Ferrell was a real estate agent in Miami. 167 00:10:53,720 --> 00:10:56,040 Speaker 1: She was connected to a man who will We'll get 168 00:10:56,080 --> 00:10:58,760 Speaker 1: into that later. Anyway, I sent off a few emails 169 00:10:58,760 --> 00:11:01,200 Speaker 1: and I hoped for the best. I never heard back, 170 00:11:01,480 --> 00:11:04,160 Speaker 1: and after looking into this woman further, I started to 171 00:11:04,200 --> 00:11:06,760 Speaker 1: have my doubts. The age didn't quite line up. It 172 00:11:06,880 --> 00:11:10,960 Speaker 1: just didn't feel right. But this piece that Colleen found 173 00:11:11,120 --> 00:11:12,800 Speaker 1: led me to someone who claimed to be a friend 174 00:11:12,880 --> 00:11:18,280 Speaker 1: of Rex Ferrell's and author herself, Karen Abbott. She once 175 00:11:18,360 --> 00:11:21,960 Speaker 1: quoted an email from Rex publicly, I don't want to 176 00:11:21,960 --> 00:11:26,520 Speaker 1: be a hero, tragic or otherwise. Rex supposedly wrote, I 177 00:11:26,640 --> 00:11:28,800 Speaker 1: just want to sit in my rocker on my front 178 00:11:28,840 --> 00:11:36,760 Speaker 1: porch and tell my grandson's stories. They're certain are fantastic lies. Ultimately, 179 00:11:36,880 --> 00:11:39,360 Speaker 1: Abbott didn't want to talk to me without Rex's permission, 180 00:11:39,600 --> 00:11:41,800 Speaker 1: which she never got as far as I know, so 181 00:11:41,840 --> 00:11:45,680 Speaker 1: she declined to participate in this podcast. It was frustrating, 182 00:11:46,080 --> 00:11:48,719 Speaker 1: but I understand. I'm protective of anyone who shares their 183 00:11:48,720 --> 00:11:52,320 Speaker 1: story with me too. Either way, I felt like I 184 00:11:52,360 --> 00:11:56,960 Speaker 1: was getting closer, but then at the beginning of this year, 185 00:11:57,200 --> 00:11:59,320 Speaker 1: I made a few more phone calls, talked to a 186 00:11:59,320 --> 00:12:03,760 Speaker 1: bunch of people, and literally stumbled into this conversation. I'm 187 00:12:03,760 --> 00:12:06,280 Speaker 1: not going to give away my source, but I'll play 188 00:12:06,320 --> 00:12:10,040 Speaker 1: you my responses. They asked me if I wanted to 189 00:12:10,080 --> 00:12:14,360 Speaker 1: know who actually wrote hit Man, we do? That would 190 00:12:14,360 --> 00:12:22,080 Speaker 1: be so helpful. You're kidding me. I finally knew her name. Wow, yeah, 191 00:12:22,200 --> 00:12:24,160 Speaker 1: because she's I mean, she's been protected, her nance to 192 00:12:24,200 --> 00:12:30,920 Speaker 1: redacted and everything. Wow. I've been wrong, so wrong. My 193 00:12:31,160 --> 00:12:35,199 Speaker 1: jaws on the ground right now. I've been looking for 194 00:12:35,240 --> 00:12:39,920 Speaker 1: this for a year. I mean really, it's been years, 195 00:12:40,400 --> 00:12:43,920 Speaker 1: one concentrated year of looking. But suddenly there it was 196 00:12:44,559 --> 00:12:46,520 Speaker 1: a bunch of letters on a pad of paper that 197 00:12:46,559 --> 00:12:52,320 Speaker 1: I scribbled down into a name, the name. We'll be 198 00:12:52,440 --> 00:13:18,200 Speaker 1: right back. Women are highly emotional, rarely rational creatures. One 199 00:13:18,240 --> 00:13:19,840 Speaker 1: of the first things that jumped out to me when 200 00:13:19,840 --> 00:13:24,360 Speaker 1: reading Hitman was the way Rex talked about women, or 201 00:13:24,400 --> 00:13:28,760 Speaker 1: has he put it the h M i W, which 202 00:13:28,800 --> 00:13:34,640 Speaker 1: stands for Hitman's ideal woman. The book's misogyny is unsettling. 203 00:13:35,080 --> 00:13:40,000 Speaker 1: Take chapter eight, danger ego women in partners because of 204 00:13:40,040 --> 00:13:44,160 Speaker 1: their uncanny ability to get into places and situations a 205 00:13:44,200 --> 00:13:48,520 Speaker 1: man might find hard to duplicate because of their deceitful 206 00:13:48,960 --> 00:13:52,400 Speaker 1: game playing natures, and because a woman can be twice 207 00:13:52,440 --> 00:13:55,120 Speaker 1: as vicious as a man, a woman could be a 208 00:13:55,160 --> 00:13:58,520 Speaker 1: better hired executioner than a man. We had an actor 209 00:13:58,559 --> 00:14:01,160 Speaker 1: read some lines for Only for the World. A woman 210 00:14:01,240 --> 00:14:04,319 Speaker 1: usually makes only one man her target, and the nesting 211 00:14:04,440 --> 00:14:07,000 Speaker 1: instinct quickly takes her off the street and ties her 212 00:14:07,040 --> 00:14:10,560 Speaker 1: down to the little world of babies and laundry and 213 00:14:10,600 --> 00:14:14,040 Speaker 1: house work she creates and protects for her own. And 214 00:14:14,080 --> 00:14:16,800 Speaker 1: then there's the part where Rex Ferrell advises his reader 215 00:14:16,840 --> 00:14:21,240 Speaker 1: on avoiding quote woman problems. He writes, once a woman 216 00:14:21,320 --> 00:14:25,680 Speaker 1: becomes the proclaimed property of one man, she feels it 217 00:14:25,760 --> 00:14:30,920 Speaker 1: her duty to ward off other predators, whether real or imaginary, 218 00:14:31,040 --> 00:14:36,040 Speaker 1: through suspicion, jealousy, accusation, or even by becoming her own detective, 219 00:14:36,120 --> 00:14:40,680 Speaker 1: to protect and preserve her rightful place. This book has 220 00:14:40,680 --> 00:14:42,960 Speaker 1: been linked to the deaths of two women and the 221 00:14:42,960 --> 00:14:46,000 Speaker 1: attempted murder of another, and what happened to them is 222 00:14:46,040 --> 00:14:50,640 Speaker 1: a familiar, terrifying and infuriating story. Women killed at home, 223 00:14:50,800 --> 00:14:56,000 Speaker 1: at work in a car by their husband's ex husband's boyfriends, neighbors, 224 00:14:57,200 --> 00:15:00,800 Speaker 1: in this book, women are property. They serve at one purpose, 225 00:15:01,320 --> 00:15:05,160 Speaker 1: to serve their man, and if they don't, they should 226 00:15:05,160 --> 00:15:09,440 Speaker 1: be properly done away with. She will have to be 227 00:15:09,480 --> 00:15:13,120 Speaker 1: a very understanding woman, for if she knows too much, 228 00:15:13,720 --> 00:15:17,200 Speaker 1: she could become a hitman's worst enemy on the face 229 00:15:17,200 --> 00:15:19,640 Speaker 1: of the earth, and may someday have to be eliminated 230 00:15:19,800 --> 00:15:23,480 Speaker 1: in the name of self preservation. Eliminated in the name 231 00:15:23,600 --> 00:15:29,920 Speaker 1: of self preservation. It's like that Margaret Atwood quote. Men 232 00:15:29,960 --> 00:15:33,160 Speaker 1: are afraid that women will laugh at them. Women are 233 00:15:33,200 --> 00:15:38,160 Speaker 1: afraid that men will kill them. The woman who wrote 234 00:15:38,200 --> 00:15:41,160 Speaker 1: that book, if she needed the money, I mean, you 235 00:15:41,200 --> 00:15:44,240 Speaker 1: can always choose to do something else. I mean, if 236 00:15:44,280 --> 00:15:47,960 Speaker 1: you're that good of a writer, writes something else. That's 237 00:15:47,960 --> 00:15:53,000 Speaker 1: Tiffany Horn Millie's daughter, Trevor's sister. When the family sued Paladin. 238 00:15:53,360 --> 00:15:55,760 Speaker 1: Tiffany was a young mom. She was just trying to 239 00:15:55,800 --> 00:15:57,960 Speaker 1: live a normal life, which she told me was a 240 00:15:57,960 --> 00:16:00,400 Speaker 1: struggle at the time given what happened to her family. 241 00:16:00,960 --> 00:16:03,080 Speaker 1: So she didn't have a ton to say about Paladin 242 00:16:03,160 --> 00:16:05,840 Speaker 1: or the author when I asked her, But in caring 243 00:16:05,840 --> 00:16:09,400 Speaker 1: about her story just propelled me to keep looking for answers. 244 00:16:10,600 --> 00:16:13,240 Speaker 1: She remembers first hearing about the Hitman book leading up 245 00:16:13,280 --> 00:16:16,640 Speaker 1: to the criminal trials before her dad, Lawrence Horn, and 246 00:16:16,640 --> 00:16:20,280 Speaker 1: the hitman he hired, James Perry, were convicted. We found 247 00:16:20,320 --> 00:16:23,520 Speaker 1: out that the book was actually written by a single mom. Like, 248 00:16:23,720 --> 00:16:27,360 Speaker 1: how crazy is that? That was hard to wrap my 249 00:16:27,400 --> 00:16:29,400 Speaker 1: head around. I didn't even think about that, like a 250 00:16:29,480 --> 00:16:33,880 Speaker 1: mom actually like help kill him, because I mean those 251 00:16:33,920 --> 00:16:36,040 Speaker 1: were her words. She wrote that book, and it's not 252 00:16:36,120 --> 00:16:38,520 Speaker 1: just a fantasy. I know they said that, but I 253 00:16:38,560 --> 00:16:44,120 Speaker 1: don't believe that because it was really explicit. I mean, 254 00:16:44,120 --> 00:16:46,880 Speaker 1: did she strike you as a hit man? Oh no, no, 255 00:16:47,360 --> 00:16:50,760 Speaker 1: but again you know, very limited telephone type contact. No, 256 00:16:51,520 --> 00:16:54,600 Speaker 1: that's Don Corson. Remember he represented the plaintiff and the 257 00:16:54,640 --> 00:16:57,720 Speaker 1: second time Hitman was found to be used in this case, 258 00:16:57,840 --> 00:17:01,680 Speaker 1: in an attempted murder. He remembers speaking with the real 259 00:17:01,760 --> 00:17:05,160 Speaker 1: rex Ferrell once as he built his case. The impression 260 00:17:05,160 --> 00:17:07,120 Speaker 1: we got she was a grandmother and an author and 261 00:17:07,200 --> 00:17:09,960 Speaker 1: she was doing this for money. Rex Ferrell won't confirm 262 00:17:10,000 --> 00:17:13,560 Speaker 1: her identity. Paladin's closed now and their press lawyer won't 263 00:17:13,560 --> 00:17:17,360 Speaker 1: confirm it. But my best available information tells me I'm right, 264 00:17:18,160 --> 00:17:20,760 Speaker 1: And as far as I can tell, the real rex 265 00:17:20,840 --> 00:17:24,360 Speaker 1: Ferrell is now a grandmother in her seventies. She has 266 00:17:24,400 --> 00:17:27,280 Speaker 1: a social media presence and some of her posts are public. 267 00:17:28,119 --> 00:17:31,439 Speaker 1: I shouldn't be surprised by anything anymore. But she's not 268 00:17:31,520 --> 00:17:34,080 Speaker 1: at all what I pictured, not from what you'd imagine 269 00:17:34,080 --> 00:17:37,920 Speaker 1: from everything we've heard about the typical Paladin writer. She's 270 00:17:37,960 --> 00:17:43,520 Speaker 1: shared liberal memes about immigration, privilege in women's rights, and 271 00:17:43,560 --> 00:17:47,160 Speaker 1: she's really funny. I came across a few videos of her. 272 00:17:47,720 --> 00:17:49,840 Speaker 1: Her hair is white for the most part, she has 273 00:17:49,880 --> 00:17:53,360 Speaker 1: green eyes, and she's beautiful. In one of these videos, 274 00:17:53,359 --> 00:17:57,600 Speaker 1: she's singing, laughing, and wearing a sweater that says Grandma 275 00:17:57,640 --> 00:18:00,879 Speaker 1: on it. She has a slight Southern acts in and 276 00:18:00,960 --> 00:18:03,960 Speaker 1: yet it's hard to imagine this is the same person 277 00:18:04,160 --> 00:18:07,880 Speaker 1: who told their readers the kill is the easiest part 278 00:18:07,920 --> 00:18:11,639 Speaker 1: of the job. People kill one another every day. It 279 00:18:11,720 --> 00:18:14,439 Speaker 1: takes no great effort to pull a trigger or plunge 280 00:18:14,480 --> 00:18:17,679 Speaker 1: a knife. Is being able to do so in a 281 00:18:17,800 --> 00:18:21,679 Speaker 1: manner that will not link yourself or your employer to 282 00:18:21,800 --> 00:18:26,720 Speaker 1: the crime. That makes you a professional and the acceptance 283 00:18:26,880 --> 00:18:31,080 Speaker 1: of the valuelessness of life has given your own life value. 284 00:18:32,680 --> 00:18:35,639 Speaker 1: Regardless of whether Rex Ferrell ever decides to tell me 285 00:18:35,720 --> 00:18:39,080 Speaker 1: her story. Case files from the two lawsuits filed against 286 00:18:39,080 --> 00:18:42,159 Speaker 1: Paladin gives some insight into how this book was written 287 00:18:42,560 --> 00:18:46,359 Speaker 1: and given everything we know now well, she submitted her 288 00:18:46,400 --> 00:18:50,080 Speaker 1: first manuscript to Paladin Press with the attached letter dated 289 00:18:50,119 --> 00:18:59,200 Speaker 1: November that reads, Dear Sirs, enclosed is my manuscript entitled Hitman, 290 00:18:59,480 --> 00:19:03,919 Speaker 1: a tech call Handbook. And because we've now shared Rex 291 00:19:04,000 --> 00:19:06,040 Speaker 1: was a woman, we got a different actor to read 292 00:19:06,080 --> 00:19:10,080 Speaker 1: Rex's correspondence. This book is written in first person, but 293 00:19:10,280 --> 00:19:15,199 Speaker 1: a fictional professional hit man, Finnie Finnigan. The third chapters 294 00:19:15,359 --> 00:19:18,560 Speaker 1: contained many references to books I and my friends have 295 00:19:18,720 --> 00:19:24,679 Speaker 1: purchased from your fine library. This letter in manuscript landed 296 00:19:24,680 --> 00:19:28,120 Speaker 1: on Virginia Thomas's desk, who was an editor at Paladin 297 00:19:28,119 --> 00:19:30,159 Speaker 1: at the time. I reached out to her for this 298 00:19:30,240 --> 00:19:33,320 Speaker 1: podcast and didn't hear back. But that's okay. There are 299 00:19:33,359 --> 00:19:37,760 Speaker 1: court documents again, Attorney Don Corson, I remember we took 300 00:19:38,480 --> 00:19:41,800 Speaker 1: miss Thomas's deposition or testimony in Bomby's case. I was 301 00:19:41,840 --> 00:19:44,760 Speaker 1: able to get a transcript of that deposition. Most of 302 00:19:44,760 --> 00:19:47,840 Speaker 1: Thomas's answers are I don't know or I don't recall. 303 00:19:48,160 --> 00:19:50,800 Speaker 1: I mean she was deposed something like eighteen years later, 304 00:19:51,119 --> 00:19:53,399 Speaker 1: but don has her read some of her correspondence with 305 00:19:53,440 --> 00:19:57,800 Speaker 1: rex Ferrell. Thomas says, after reading rex Ferrell's manuscript, she 306 00:19:57,920 --> 00:20:01,600 Speaker 1: rejected it and sent the author a dated January four. 307 00:20:03,119 --> 00:20:06,159 Speaker 1: It reads, you will find your manuscript for Hitman a 308 00:20:06,280 --> 00:20:10,760 Speaker 1: technical handbook enclosed. Since we publish only nonfiction, we cannot 309 00:20:10,840 --> 00:20:15,320 Speaker 1: use this, and that's our producer, Michelle reading for Virginia. 310 00:20:15,600 --> 00:20:18,600 Speaker 1: Our readers are interested in the how to aspects of 311 00:20:18,640 --> 00:20:22,520 Speaker 1: survival weapons and military a thank you for allowing us 312 00:20:22,560 --> 00:20:25,840 Speaker 1: to consider your work. The idea is intriguing, as are 313 00:20:25,840 --> 00:20:29,720 Speaker 1: some of the tactics you suggest. Have you considered writing nonfiction? 314 00:20:30,960 --> 00:20:34,200 Speaker 1: The concluding sentence reads, good luck to you with this project. 315 00:20:34,640 --> 00:20:37,040 Speaker 1: Feel free to contact me with other ideas that might 316 00:20:37,080 --> 00:20:41,320 Speaker 1: fit our market. The original intention was quite a long 317 00:20:41,400 --> 00:20:45,720 Speaker 1: ways from what Plato turned it into. Rex Ferrell took 318 00:20:45,720 --> 00:20:49,080 Speaker 1: Thomas up on her suggestion and sent another proposal in 319 00:20:49,200 --> 00:20:56,119 Speaker 1: letter dated January enclosed. Please find the first two chapters 320 00:20:56,119 --> 00:21:00,080 Speaker 1: in an outline proposed which you suggested for my on 321 00:21:00,160 --> 00:21:05,520 Speaker 1: fiction rewrite hit Man a technical manual for the independent contractor. 322 00:21:06,520 --> 00:21:11,920 Speaker 1: According to court documents, about three weeks later, on February. 323 00:21:12,240 --> 00:21:17,080 Speaker 1: Thomas replies with this recommendation, make sure the material is 324 00:21:17,080 --> 00:21:20,040 Speaker 1: how to, since our readers buy books to learn, but 325 00:21:20,200 --> 00:21:23,240 Speaker 1: flush out the material with personal anecdotes as though you 326 00:21:23,280 --> 00:21:26,840 Speaker 1: were a working or retired hit man. People essentially like 327 00:21:26,960 --> 00:21:30,600 Speaker 1: to read about other people. Rex Ferrell writes back six 328 00:21:30,680 --> 00:21:35,720 Speaker 1: days later, the tone I am using is totally professional. However, 329 00:21:36,160 --> 00:21:39,159 Speaker 1: due to the serious nature of the book, I am 330 00:21:39,200 --> 00:21:45,280 Speaker 1: finding it hard to apply appropriate anecdotes. I do include 331 00:21:45,320 --> 00:21:48,880 Speaker 1: accounts of real hit men who have been apprehended by 332 00:21:48,920 --> 00:21:53,640 Speaker 1: the authorities, and I feel very satisfied that the finished 333 00:21:53,680 --> 00:21:58,160 Speaker 1: product will make us both Prior and Virginia. Thomas responds with, 334 00:21:58,720 --> 00:22:01,320 Speaker 1: as I told you in our tele phone conversation, we 335 00:22:01,440 --> 00:22:04,200 Speaker 1: received Hitman, and I am excited about it. I found 336 00:22:04,200 --> 00:22:08,480 Speaker 1: it most intriguing reading. Congratulations, you did what you set 337 00:22:08,480 --> 00:22:12,359 Speaker 1: out to do. I just want to underline what's happening here. 338 00:22:13,320 --> 00:22:17,560 Speaker 1: Rex Ferrell initially submitted a work of fiction, and at 339 00:22:17,600 --> 00:22:20,840 Speaker 1: Paladin Presses Encouragement or guidance, whatever you want to call it, 340 00:22:21,480 --> 00:22:28,040 Speaker 1: wrote an entirely new book other than you know, asking 341 00:22:28,040 --> 00:22:30,520 Speaker 1: rex Ferrell to change the format of the book. There 342 00:22:30,520 --> 00:22:34,560 Speaker 1: were some other changes. For example, apparently the original preface 343 00:22:34,600 --> 00:22:38,520 Speaker 1: to Hitman. Read this information and more will be made 344 00:22:38,560 --> 00:22:42,800 Speaker 1: available to enrich your fantasies and add spice to your 345 00:22:42,920 --> 00:22:46,760 Speaker 1: dreams of reasserting your status as the dominant sex of 346 00:22:46,800 --> 00:22:50,199 Speaker 1: the species who ruled with an iron will in the 347 00:22:50,320 --> 00:22:57,000 Speaker 1: days before overpopulation, mass production, and women's liberation. Ultimately, that 348 00:22:57,040 --> 00:22:59,760 Speaker 1: didn't make it into the book, and Rex Ferrell initially 349 00:22:59,800 --> 00:23:02,840 Speaker 1: had a different last name, one that wasn't working for Paladin. 350 00:23:03,359 --> 00:23:06,440 Speaker 1: Thomas writes, we must change the name Rex Savage to 351 00:23:06,520 --> 00:23:12,600 Speaker 1: something a little less stereotyped. However, Rex Savage, the publisher 352 00:23:12,680 --> 00:23:15,399 Speaker 1: suggests that you think of another name, possibly something that 353 00:23:15,480 --> 00:23:17,840 Speaker 1: sounds like a person who might belong to the mob, 354 00:23:18,280 --> 00:23:22,000 Speaker 1: although not too obviously. Then let's develop a persona for 355 00:23:22,040 --> 00:23:25,880 Speaker 1: the author for advertisements and future books. Write a personal 356 00:23:25,920 --> 00:23:29,840 Speaker 1: history for Mr X for that use. I am inclosing 357 00:23:29,840 --> 00:23:33,040 Speaker 1: your copy of the contract for hit Man signed by us. 358 00:23:34,520 --> 00:23:36,840 Speaker 1: There was a notation at the top right corner that 359 00:23:36,880 --> 00:23:40,600 Speaker 1: read five advanced paid. You will notice that we also 360 00:23:40,680 --> 00:23:43,800 Speaker 1: signed the paragraph on privacy that you added. She wrote. 361 00:23:44,680 --> 00:23:50,400 Speaker 1: That paragraph, apparently written by Rex Ferrell, said publisher agrees 362 00:23:50,600 --> 00:23:56,840 Speaker 1: to accept full financial and legal responsibility for any litigations 363 00:23:57,160 --> 00:24:00,240 Speaker 1: or censors that may arise out of this same ale 364 00:24:01,000 --> 00:24:06,520 Speaker 1: use or misuse of the contents of the contracted book. Furthermore, 365 00:24:07,080 --> 00:24:10,080 Speaker 1: publisher will, to the best of his ability, protect the 366 00:24:10,160 --> 00:24:16,480 Speaker 1: true identity of the author. I'm so fascinated by all 367 00:24:16,480 --> 00:24:19,760 Speaker 1: of this because these are her words, that's all I 368 00:24:19,800 --> 00:24:22,719 Speaker 1: have from her. And you have to wonder if her 369 00:24:22,720 --> 00:24:25,560 Speaker 1: book stayed the work of fiction she initially wrote, if 370 00:24:25,600 --> 00:24:28,800 Speaker 1: it never been turned into how To Manual, if any 371 00:24:28,840 --> 00:24:32,119 Speaker 1: of this would have ever happened. Paladin went on to 372 00:24:32,160 --> 00:24:36,200 Speaker 1: sell just over copies of hit Man, mostly via their 373 00:24:36,200 --> 00:24:40,440 Speaker 1: catalogs and eventually even through bookstores like Borders, Powell's Bookstore, 374 00:24:40,480 --> 00:24:46,159 Speaker 1: and Barnes and Noble, and then on March three, Millie 375 00:24:46,200 --> 00:24:52,840 Speaker 1: and Trevor Horn and Janie Saunders were murdered. The author, 376 00:24:52,880 --> 00:24:56,919 Speaker 1: who was just horrified that this has happened. I mean, 377 00:24:56,960 --> 00:25:01,080 Speaker 1: Stephen King was horrified when learned that one of his 378 00:25:01,160 --> 00:25:04,560 Speaker 1: books inspired a school shooting. I think that's a normal 379 00:25:04,640 --> 00:25:09,200 Speaker 1: human reaction. That's Tom Kelly, Paladin's lawyer. She's a decent 380 00:25:09,280 --> 00:25:12,840 Speaker 1: human being and wanted the book off the shelf. We 381 00:25:12,880 --> 00:25:15,400 Speaker 1: know the author was fearful of something like this, happening 382 00:25:15,440 --> 00:25:18,200 Speaker 1: based on her correspondence with Paladin as she was writing 383 00:25:18,200 --> 00:25:22,199 Speaker 1: this book, and once it did, she apparently tried to 384 00:25:22,240 --> 00:25:25,480 Speaker 1: do the right thing. Of course, her request was not honored. 385 00:25:25,920 --> 00:25:28,840 Speaker 1: Don Courson again, who represented the plaintiff and the second 386 00:25:28,880 --> 00:25:31,879 Speaker 1: hit Man lawsuit, and Paladin kept it on the market, 387 00:25:32,119 --> 00:25:34,360 Speaker 1: and their sales actually spiked because a lot of notoriety, 388 00:25:34,400 --> 00:25:37,960 Speaker 1: a lot of publicity about it. According to court documents, 389 00:25:38,119 --> 00:25:41,399 Speaker 1: sales of Hitman increased dramatically during the period after the 390 00:25:41,440 --> 00:25:44,720 Speaker 1: author asked that the manual be withdrawn due to the murders. 391 00:25:45,520 --> 00:25:48,720 Speaker 1: They made a conscious decision to continue selling the Hitman 392 00:25:48,840 --> 00:25:51,320 Speaker 1: book knowing and it had been used to murder people, 393 00:25:51,560 --> 00:25:53,560 Speaker 1: and it was a strategic choice in their part. In 394 00:25:53,600 --> 00:25:56,280 Speaker 1: other words, they knew what had been done, they knew 395 00:25:56,320 --> 00:25:59,120 Speaker 1: that the harm had been inflicted on humans, they knew 396 00:25:59,119 --> 00:26:01,480 Speaker 1: the author didn't want to They thought they're more likely 397 00:26:01,520 --> 00:26:03,040 Speaker 1: to win the case if they kept it on the market. 398 00:26:04,760 --> 00:26:07,560 Speaker 1: So that's how the book came to be, how it evolved, 399 00:26:07,920 --> 00:26:10,120 Speaker 1: and how she wanted to pull it after the murders. 400 00:26:11,119 --> 00:26:14,320 Speaker 1: But I still have so many questions. Should I even 401 00:26:14,359 --> 00:26:17,280 Speaker 1: be looking for this person? To someone who wrote under 402 00:26:17,320 --> 00:26:20,280 Speaker 1: a pen name, who obviously wanted to protect their identity 403 00:26:20,800 --> 00:26:23,960 Speaker 1: deserve to remain anonymous after something they created and put 404 00:26:23,960 --> 00:26:27,720 Speaker 1: out into the world actually hurt people. I don't know, 405 00:26:28,960 --> 00:26:31,080 Speaker 1: but if I could talk to Rex Ferrell, I think 406 00:26:31,119 --> 00:26:33,440 Speaker 1: the first thing I'd ask her is what do people 407 00:26:33,480 --> 00:26:36,920 Speaker 1: get wrong about you? Who was she then and who 408 00:26:36,960 --> 00:26:44,800 Speaker 1: is she today? I'd like to ask her the same 409 00:26:44,880 --> 00:26:48,359 Speaker 1: question I've asked so many others in this podcast. Is 410 00:26:48,359 --> 00:26:52,280 Speaker 1: there anything to be learned from all this? Until then, 411 00:26:52,680 --> 00:27:00,359 Speaker 1: all I have is this voicemail but us. When I 412 00:27:00,359 --> 00:27:03,159 Speaker 1: thought I'd reached the end of the Rex Feral journey, 413 00:27:03,520 --> 00:27:05,879 Speaker 1: and when I thought that I'd never really understand the 414 00:27:05,880 --> 00:27:09,400 Speaker 1: woman I saw on social media, the grandmother who apparently 415 00:27:09,400 --> 00:27:14,240 Speaker 1: feels strongly about women's rights, immigration, I found an arrest record. 416 00:27:14,920 --> 00:27:17,240 Speaker 1: The person who I believe to be the author had 417 00:27:17,240 --> 00:27:21,560 Speaker 1: been connected with an incident related to kidnapping, false imprisonment, 418 00:27:21,960 --> 00:27:28,479 Speaker 1: armed robbery, burglary, grand theft, and conspiracy. And what my 419 00:27:28,560 --> 00:27:30,840 Speaker 1: image of this person was about to do a whole 420 00:27:30,840 --> 00:27:34,800 Speaker 1: other one. Eight. Once again, I'd come across an entirely 421 00:27:34,840 --> 00:27:38,960 Speaker 1: different story, one that I never ever saw coming. I 422 00:27:39,000 --> 00:27:41,240 Speaker 1: looked into the man she was arrested in connection with 423 00:27:41,880 --> 00:27:45,240 Speaker 1: and every newspaper article or court record led to another 424 00:27:45,280 --> 00:27:53,320 Speaker 1: one and another one. I'm still finding them. This man, 425 00:27:54,040 --> 00:27:56,720 Speaker 1: he was a former police officer. He was a master 426 00:27:56,800 --> 00:28:01,679 Speaker 1: instructor in combat karate. This guy would become an FBI fugitive, 427 00:28:02,040 --> 00:28:05,119 Speaker 1: and one retired sergeant who encountered him told me he 428 00:28:05,200 --> 00:28:09,520 Speaker 1: is still suffering from PTSD from it. This guy used 429 00:28:09,560 --> 00:28:13,760 Speaker 1: a lot of pseudonyms, among them Rex Reid and Rex 430 00:28:13,880 --> 00:28:19,520 Speaker 1: James Rex so that macho rogue Maverick that Hitman is 431 00:28:19,560 --> 00:28:23,399 Speaker 1: based on. I was starting to realize maybe he did exist. 432 00:28:23,560 --> 00:28:38,320 Speaker 1: After all. People told us that Rex Reid was a 433 00:28:38,360 --> 00:28:40,680 Speaker 1: bad guy and that if anybody tried to mess with 434 00:28:40,760 --> 00:28:43,719 Speaker 1: them that you know, you guys will never take him alive, 435 00:28:43,880 --> 00:28:46,760 Speaker 1: and you know some officers might get hurt in the process. 436 00:28:47,680 --> 00:28:52,160 Speaker 1: That's next on hit Man. Hitman is a production of 437 00:28:52,200 --> 00:28:55,320 Speaker 1: I Heart Radio and hit Home Media. It's produced and 438 00:28:55,360 --> 00:28:59,920 Speaker 1: reported by Me Jasmine Morris. Our supervising producer is Michelle Lance. 439 00:29:00,240 --> 00:29:03,840 Speaker 1: Mark Flatto is our story consultant. Executive producers our main 440 00:29:03,920 --> 00:29:07,040 Speaker 1: guest Hat ticket Or and Me, mixing by Michelle Lance 441 00:29:07,080 --> 00:29:10,680 Speaker 1: and Josh Grogison. Our fact checker is not Sumi Ajisaka 442 00:29:11,120 --> 00:29:15,360 Speaker 1: voice acting by Levi Petrie and Kelly Jane Farnsworth. Special 443 00:29:15,400 --> 00:29:18,840 Speaker 1: thanks to Andrew Goldberg, our theme song by Alice McCoy, 444 00:29:18,880 --> 00:29:21,479 Speaker 1: and additional music written and produced by the students at 445 00:29:21,520 --> 00:29:24,880 Speaker 1: DIME powered by the Detroit Institute of Music Education,