MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories
MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories

Fan Favorite - "Death of a Ladies' Man"

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Today's story is a fan favorite that was previously published as Episode 384. One afternoon in January of 1998, a prosecutor for the state of Georgia sat in the very back row of seats in a courtroom w...

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Today's episode is a fan favorite.

One afternoon in January of 1998, a prosecutor for the state of Georgia sat in the very

back row of seats in a courtroom where a divorce trial was unfolding. Now this prosecutor was not

involved in this divorce case, he handled murder trials. But he'd still come here today because he had gotten a very surprising phone call about an unsolved murder case he had worked on a year and a half earlier. Caller had told him that the testimony in this divorce case could potentially solve that murder. Now in the courtroom, the prosecutor felt his heart rate pick up as the

witness he had been waiting for finally took the stand. And as soon as the witness began talking,

the prosecutor knew he had just solved that murder. But before we get into that story, if you're a fan of the strange dark and mysterious delivered in story format, then you'd come to the right podcast because that's all we do and we upload twice a week. Once on Monday and once on Thursday. So if that's of interest to you,

on the next very hot day, offer the fall of button a nice ice cold cup of water.

Except don't tell them it's actually white vinegar. Okay, let's get into today's story. ? On August 7th, 1996, a 41-year-old entrepreneur named Lance Herndon woke up at 340 AM to the sound of his alarm clock going off inside of his mansion in Roswell, Georgia. The alarm was actually

one of three alarms set to go off that morning. The first was at 340, the second at 350,

and the third at 4 AM. And this was actually how every workday began for Lance. He was the founder of an IT consulting company called Access Ink, and his borderline compulsive work ethic not only made him millions of dollars, but also it had made him a trailblazer for the Black Business Community in Greater Atlanta. His company Access Ink had actually been awarded

the National Service Film of the Year Award by President George H.W. Bush. President Clinton

had honored Lance with the Minority Entrepreneur of the Year Award, and had appointed him to the 1995 White House Conference on Small Business. Lance sat up and slammed his hand down on the clock to stop the alarm and then shut off the other two alarms so they wouldn't ring. Then he threw aside his bedsheets and got up and walked over to the dresser to pull out some clothes. On top of his dresser, he kept a sexy lingerie photograph of one of his girlfriends, a woman he'd been

seeing for years named Cathy Collins. Now, usually, when Lance saw this photograph, he would smile, but today, he flipped it face down so he wouldn't have to look at it. He was going to have to break up with Cathy, and he was not looking forward to it. Lance and Cathy had been on again off again since they first met three years ago, but they'd rekindled things for real about seven months ago, and she had moved most of her stuff into his house. But for Lance, this progression

sort of made the whole thing feel too serious. He sort of preferred to play the field. In fact, at that very moment, he didn't just have this one girlfriend. He had another steady girlfriend, a 27-year-old college student named Deon Baugh, and he was also interested in another woman that he had just met who worked as a school teacher. Plus, he was also still dealing with the fallout from his divorce from his third wife, Janine Herndon, who he had a four-year-old son with.

Lance actually had to keep meticulous notes in his calendar just to keep all of the straight, and it was really starting to wear on him. Plus, in addition to dumping Cathy, something he knew he needed to do soon, he was also considering dumping Deon as well, because she was the jealous type, and he just felt like he didn't need the drama. But, for now, Lance threw on a shirt and a pair of pants, and then headed downstairs into his

basement, where he had a full working office set up for his IT company. Every day, Lance's small staff of full-time employees, plus his assistant, came to this basement office to do all their work. But, they wouldn't actually arrive here for another four hours, which gave Lance plenty of time to get everything ready. Lance sat down at his desk, hit the record button on a small tape recorder, and started dictating detailed lists of instructions for each of his employees.

Every morning, he would make these cassette tapes so that when his employees came in, they knew exactly what he wanted them to do, even if he had already gone out for the day, which he was doing more and more lately. When Lance had first started accessing,

he had pretty much worked exclusively on his business all the time, and was never really out of the

office. But recently, business had not been going very well, and so Lance's attention was now split between a growing list of problems, and new ventures he was considering. He hadn't told anybody

The details, but access ink was in pretty big financial trouble.

at more than $3 million. But now, the business was heavily in debt and losing money.

Lance had tried to diversify by investing in a hip-hop club in downtown Atlanta,

but that had failed, and now he was embroiled in a lawsuit with his former business partner. At all that, to the alamone and child support that Lance was paying to his ex-wife, plus the lavish lifestyles he was funding for his various girlfriends, and for the first time in his life, Lance was starting to worry about whether he could even hold everything together. Lance finished the cassette tapes for his employees and left them on their desks,

then he went back upstairs to get ready for his day. By the time his workers actually started arriving at 8am through the designated office side door, Lance was already halfway through his list of daily tasks in his calendar, which meant by the time the late afternoon rolled around,

Lance was free to leave his house and therefore his office and go to his mother's house to have

dinner. His grandmother, who was visiting from out of town, was going to be at the dinner, along with Lance's ex-wife and their son. But despite wanting to see his family, Lance didn't

stay for very long. At around 8pm, he told his mother, his grandmother, his ex-wife, and his son,

that he had to get back to work, then he said goodbye, and drove the five minutes back to his house. When Lance pulled back into his driveway, he saw his secretaries light blue car parked in its usual spot, and he smiled. His secretary was a woman named Talana Carole, and she was one of his closest friends. They had been romantic in the past, in fact Lance's divorce was caused in part by the fact that his wife had found racy pictures he had of Talana. But now, their relationship was purely

platonic, and they both actually confided in each other about their respective love lives. Talana worked another full-time job, so she typically only worked evenings for Lance. Lance went in the office door, and found Talana working her way through the list of tasks that he had outlined for her on her cassette tape. Talana was very obviously happy to see him, and for a little while, the two of them just sat there chatting and catching up.

Talana was apparently having trouble with her partner, a guy named Jazz, and she complained about

him a bit. Lance actually knew Jazz because he had lent him some money, and he nodded sympathetically.

Lance told Talana that he was actually hoping for a fresh start in the romance department. Because he had another new woman, but this one he was really interested in, he said she was a teacher, and she was really nice, and he asked Talana if she would help him write her a card. And like he knew she would, Talana just laughed, like the idea that the ex-girlfriend is now writing a card for the new girlfriend was just kind of comical to her. But this was actually

one of the things that Lance really liked best about Talana, and it's why their relationship continued to flourish. She was just easygoing, unlike his various current girlfriends. And so Talana without any hesitation helped write the card, and then Lance signed it. As Lance stood up to head upstairs, Talana gestured for him to wait, then she handed him a couple slips of paper. She said they were messages from his girlfriend, Deon, who had called for him a

couple of times while he was out. At this, Lance groaned. Deon was a lot to deal with. A month earlier, she had shown up at his house unannounced, while Cathy was over, Deon and Seen Cathy through the window, and she had made such a scene that Lance actually had to call the police. She actually had a court hearing about that incident, tomorrow, that Lance was supposed to go to. Lance thanked Talana for the messages, and then he went upstairs to his bedroom to begin moving

Cathy's things out of his closet. About two and a half hours later, at around 1030 pm, Talana came upstairs and told Lance should seem tomorrow. It was raining, so Lance made her promise to call him when she got home so he knew she was safe. And she would do that around 1130 pm, and they actually chatted for another few minutes on the phone. But at some point, Lance told Talana a good night. He could have talked to her for hours, but he knew that he didn't have

long before his morning alarms would start going off. The next morning, August 8th, at exactly 8am. One of Lance's employees arrived at his house and unlocked the side office door. And the first thing she noticed when she stepped inside was that Lance was not there. This was weird because even on days where Lance left early, he was usually at his desk

first thing in the morning. But the employee figured that maybe Lance had an appointment. So she went over to his calendar to check to see where he was, but sort of a typical for him there was nothing listed for that day. That was when she noticed the second thing, which was that Lance had not left her a cassette tape for the day. And this was not just weird,

it was completely unprecedented. Lance had literally never not left her a tape.

And so the employee paged Lance, but he didn't answer. So unsure what else to do, the employee just sat down and started to work. About an hour later, at 9am, another employee arrived, but there was still no sign of Lance. The two employees paged him a few more times, but he still didn't answer.

Even though both of them considered going upstairs and just checking on him,

neither of them felt comfortable doing that. After all, the upstairs was Lance's house, it just felt like an invasion of privacy.

Finally, at 10am, so two hours after that first employee arrived, Lance's mother, who also

worked at accessing, arrived at her son's house. She had come in through the garage, and when she entered the office, and the employees told her that Lance was still not there, she said that didn't make any sense, because his car was in the garage. So, the two employees waited in the office, while Lance's mother went up to search the house. And for a few minutes, the two employees down in the basement heard nothing.

The house was quiet. They could just hear the sound of Lance's mother walking around upstairs. But then, out of nowhere, they heard a scream. About 30 minutes later, around 10.30am, Boswell Police Detective William Anastacio pulled up in front of a mansion that sat on a quiet cul-de-sac in a wealthy community in suburban Georgia.

The only thing dispatch had told him was that someone inside of this mansion had been killed.

Outside of the mansion, he could see there were police cruisers and ambulances on the street,

and his sergeant, and a few other investigators were standing in a cluster right near the front door. He walked over to them, and his sergeant briefed him on what they knew so far. The homeowner, Lance Herndon, had been found dead inside of his bed by his own mother, after he had failed to show up for work in his basement office. There were no signs of forced entry, and the crime scene itself appeared to be contained to the master bedroom.

Lance's employees had discovered that the office laptop was missing, but the rest of the house was filled with expensive electronics and jewelry that had not been touched. The sergeant told Anastacio that uniformed officers were already canvassing the neighborhood, and that Anastacio should take the lead in the investigation. So Anastacio turned, and walked inside the house, and began going up the stairs to the master bedroom.

Outside the door to the bedroom, there was a uniformed officer who's job was to make sure nobody

touched anything before the crime scene text arrived. And so Anastacio greeted him, and told him he understood the protocol, but then he just stood there outside the doorway, you know, not interfering, but looking inside,

you know, getting a first glimpse of the actual crime scene.

He could see Lance's body on the bed. Lance was on his back, with his arms crossed over his chest, and he was naked. Even from Anastacio could see that whoever had killed Lance, had beaten him so badly in the face that his facial bones had basically collapsed inwards. It was like someone truly bashed his head in. But strangely, despite this, it didn't seem like there had been any sort of struggle in this room.

I mean, typically with a beating death, there was often a big fight between the victim and the assailant, which can create a very messy scene with furniture knocked over and everything messed

around inside the room, but from the looks of it, it didn't seem like Lance had fought back at all.

Like nothing was knocked over, he was just laying there on his back on the bed, with his headcaped in. And reinforcing the idea that this was not about money, Anastacio could clearly see on the dresser next to the body, was a wallet, a stack of credit cards, and a folded-up wallet of cash. And so despite the one missing laptop, you know, this didn't really appear to be a robbery. And so as Anastacio went back down the stairs, towards the office, he had been told was

located in the basement. He was thinking to himself that Lance must have known his killer. This had to have been personal. In the basement office, Anastacio found a police officer, standing with a small cluster of very shocked-looking women. One was Lance's grandmother, another was Lance's mother, and the other two were employees of Lance's company. Anastacio spoke with each of them one by one, and Lance's family, their general impression was

they had no idea who'd won a hurt Lance. Lance's mother told Anastacio that, you know, Lance had just gone through a divorce, which could create some animosity, but he and his ex-wife had stayed on good terms. And in fact, just the night before, had had dinner together. Lance's grandmother echoed a similar sentiment that, you know, Lance was this harmless guy, but she also had Alzheimer's, and so couldn't really answer any of the questions, at least not credibly.

The other two women, the employees of Lance's company, they told a slightly different story to Anastacio. They said there had been some quote shady people in the office recently, but when he pressed them for specifics, they said all they knew was that Lance was involved in some business disputes. Just then, a uniformed officer opened the basement door and told Anastacio he'd better get outside.

The detective jogged outside, and there at the foot of the long driveway, he saw a woman sitting in a car. The uniformed officer told him that was Lance's ex-wife, Janine.

This was not what Anastacio had expected, and he would have preferred to talk...

under more controlled circumstances, not suddenly at the crime scene.

But it was also an opportunity, because it was very likely that Anastacio would be the first person

to tell her that Lance was dead. And in a murder case, the ex- spouse is always a suspect,

and so Anastacio wanted to see how Janine reacted to the news of her ex-husband's murder. So he walked down to her car. And as he did, Janine got out of the car, looking panicked, and she told him that someone in the house had paged her. She asked what was going on, but Anastacio, without saying anything, just gestured for her to come with him to his cruiser. Once they were seated inside, he broke the news. And as he did, he carefully watched her.

And Janine looked genuinely shocked. She opened and then closed her mouth like she couldn't even think of what to say, and then her eyes filled with tears. And then, in a trembling voice, she asked Anastacio what happened. But Anastacio was not ready to share anything at this point. So instead, he just asked Janine where she had been last night, and then waited to see if she

got defensive or started stuttering. But she didn't do either of those things. She took a deep breath,

and then told him she'd actually had dinner with Lance and his family the night before, and then after that she went home. Her new partner had come over and spent the night with her, and then that morning, she got up at 7am to head to her side job as a house cleaner, and then of course, set about 10/30 she'd received that page, and here she was. And that detail, that the ex-wife of an obviously very wealthy man was working as a cleaner,

caught Anastacio's attention. He wondered if she'd still be working as a cleaner after she received whatever life insurance payout he was certain was going to come her way. But before he could ask her anything about her finances or her job, Janine blurted something out. She said, "My husband was a powerful man with a lot of enemies." By the time Detective Anastacio finished his conversation with Janine, he had gone from having zero suspects to having six. There was Janine herself, of course,

but Anastacio had been surprised to learn that Lance had been seriously dating at least two other

women, Kathy Collins and Dion Baugh, and that his secretary, Talana Carroway, was also a former girlfriend. This meant that Janine, Kathy, Dion, and Talana all had potential motives to want Lance dead. But Janine had actually been much more focused on the men who hated Lance.

She said that Lance had always talked about business rivals being jealous of his success,

and recently he'd become embroiled in at least two lawsuits that Janine knew of, one with a former business partner over hip-hop club and the other with a contractor who said he hadn't been paid yet. Janine had heard that just yesterday that contractor had actually shown up to a local music show looking for Lance, and when he couldn't find him, apparently he was telling people that Lance didn't know what he was capable of, as if the contractor could inflict harm

on Lance if he didn't pay him. Anastacio was not quite sure what to think about any of this, except that he was definitely going to need a lot of DNA samples. That afternoon, Anastacio was back inside of the house, working alongside the crime scene

text would finally arrive at about noon, and while he was doing that, two other women showed up

at the crime scene. One of the women was Lance's secretary and former girlfriend, Talana Carroway. She said she had seen Lance the night before, and that one of his girlfriends, Dion, had kept calling for him over and over, and kept leaving increasingly upset messages when he didn't answer. And these messages, you know, Talana was fielding, and she gave them to Lance when he finally did come home. The other woman who was there with Talana was Lance's other girlfriend, Kathy Collins.

But unlike Janine and Talana, Kathy didn't even try to act like she wanted to help with this investigation. Instead, she demanded to be led inside the house to go get her close. The uniformed officers on the scene told her that she couldn't do that because this was a crime scene, but Kathy didn't seem to care at all. And so the officers took down her name and contact info, and they also made a note that Kathy had not shed a single tear.

Early the next morning, Detective Anastacio went to the medical examiner's office to observe the autopsy. He'd been at the crime scene until late, and once the crime scene text processed everything, he got in a closer look at the physical evidence, and a couple things it stood out to him. First, Lance had three alarm clocks, and all of them had been unplugged. And one of the alarm clocks was an analog clock, and when it was unplugged, it stopped at whatever time it was,

which in this case was 410 AM. And so, it was theoretically possible that perhaps the clocks began going off while the killer was still inside the house, and so they rushed over and unplugged the clocks to stop the alarm, which then put the likely time of death at or sometime before, 410 in the morning, on August 8th. Second, on the dresser, there was a framed photograph

Of a woman in lingerie that had been turned face down.

not knocked over, as if whoever had flipped it didn't want to look at this picture.

And third, inside of Lance's bedsheets were several pieces of long hair that clearly belonged

to more than one woman, and there were also some short hairs as well. Now, Anastacio and the medical examiner both looked down at Lance's body. He'd apparently been hit at least seven times in the face, with something long, heavy, and curved at the end. The medical examiner had seen wounds like this once before, and thought the murder weapon could be a wrench. However, there was not a single defensive wound on Lance. He clearly had not raised his hands to stop

any of the blows that his killer had rained down on him. That, combined with the fact that he'd

been found naked in bed, with no signs of struggle around him, suggested to Anastacio that the

attack had begun when Lance was asleep. The medical examiner said that judging from the locations of the blows and the blood spatter that he'd seen at the crime scene, the killer had likely

climbed on top of Lance before they beat him to death. And this was very significant to Anastacio.

On his list of suspects, he had female romantic partners and male business rivals. But, whoever in killed Lance had not had to break into the house, because Lance had clearly let them in, and also Lance felt comfortable enough with them to go to sleep naked near them. Then, to commit the murder, the killer had straddled Lance's chest, which was a very intimate position. And so to Anastacio, these details all combined suggested that his killer was a woman.

When Detective Anastacio got back to the station, he claimed the single interview room inside the Roswell Police headquarters and began doing interviews. He had a forensic person standing by to get hair samples and fingerprints from all his subjects to match against the crime scene. Anastacio spoke again to Lance's mother, also his ex-wife Janine, and those two employees who

had been at the house when the body was found. And he took all their DNA.

Anastacio didn't really suspect the mother or the employees, but he did have a feeling about Janine. Janine was cooperating, but she would stay on his list until he could definitively nail down her alibi and take a look at her financials. Next up was Kathy Collins, one of Lance's girlfriends who had shown up at the crime scene totally distraught about her clothing. In the moment she sat down in the chair in the interview room, Anastacio recognized her as the woman in that downturn

photograph on Lance's dresser. In when Anastacio began asking questions, he sort of half expected her to again ask about her clothes. But instead, Kathy laid out what Anastacio had to admit was a pretty good alibi. Kathy said she'd been out of town at a family funeral and had arrived back in Roswell on August 7th in the evening, along with her niece. She and her niece had gotten dinner at a restaurant close to Lance's house and it stayed there until about maybe 1030 or 11pm.

She then gave Anastacio a receipt from a gas station that was in another state, along with the tab from the restaurant to back these details up. Although Anastacio noted that she and her niece had only eaten $7 worth of food, which seemed very light for how long they had been there. However, Anastacio knew that Lance was not killed while Kathy and her niece were allegedly at this restaurant on August 7th. Instead, he was very likely killed in the early morning hours of August 8th,

likely around 4pm. But Kathy said she had spent the entire night on August 7th into August 8th

with her other romantic partner. She said that she and Lance had never really been all that

monogamous. In fact, when they met, both of them were married. So, when Anastacio asked Kathy, if it was possible that Lance might have been thinking about breaking up with her, she just shrugged and said they really weren't that close anymore. She told Anastacio she'd be happy to provide DNA samples and fingerprints because she didn't kill him. Before she got up to leave, Kathy told Anastacio there was one more thing. She said about a month earlier,

some woman had come to Lance's home in the middle of the night, freaking out so loudly that Lance had actually called the police. If the police were thinking one of Lance's girlfriend's kill, Kathy said they should start by finding that woman. When the door closed behind Kathy, Anastacio smiled. Because a record search had already turned up the police report for the incident Kathy was talking about. And that woman, the girlfriend, was Deonbaugh, who was already on her way

down to the station. When Deon arrived, she took a seat inside the interview room and right away Anastacio began drilling her with questions and immediately he was suspicious.

First of all, Deon's demeanor was very strange.

Now Anastacio knew that likely she was just nervous and so that by itself was not proof of guilt,

but it certainly didn't help her credibility. Second, Deon herself was carrying on multiple

romantic relationships just like Lance. And third, perhaps the most suspicious out of all of it,

Deon admitted right up front that she had Lance's missing laptop as well as one of his credit cards. And in fact, she had charged $2,700 worth of furniture on it the same night that Lance was murdered. Suddenly, Deonbaugh was Anastacio's number one suspect. And so the detective leaned forward in his chair and asked Deon where she'd been from the evening of August 7th to the morning of August 8th. And her alibi was very weak. She said she'd been at home without her husband or her daughter

who were visiting family. In fact, Deon said there was no one who could confirm this for her. But Deon insisted that she hadn't murdered Lance. She said that Lance did a lot of good stuff for her. He had bought her a beautiful Mercedes car and he gave her hundreds of dollars in cash every week

plus the use of his credit cards. And then she asked the detective, you know, why would she be so stupid

as to make a giant purchase with one of those credit cards on the same night that he was killed. It would be so suspicious. She also said he lent her his laptop all the time for school and any of his employees could confirm that. Deon said that on August 7th she had called Lance

repeatedly but he never answered. And then on August 8th, the day his body was found,

he was supposed to go with her to court to help her clear the charge she had picked up on the night a month earlier when he had called the cops on her for coming to his home act and crazy. But he hadn't shown up in court. She said she'd been so angry and called him repeatedly throughout the day to see why he blew her off but he never answered on the eighth. Of course, she said now she knew why it was because he was dead. Deon offered Anastacio her phone records,

she said she would give DNA samples and her fingerprints. And then she told him, she really hoped he solved the case soon because she was afraid. She said that Lance was always paying people to do his dirty work and until detectives caught his killer, she was going to be looking over her shoulder in case maybe they came for her too. Anastacio would spend the next couple of weeks trying to run down the alibis of every single person and their significant others,

who might have wanted Lance herndon dead. It was a long list. Some people, the detective did feel ready to rule out. Lance's ex-wife, Janine Herndon, for example, had a solid alibi confirmed by her new partner. And although she would have been the recipient, along with her son, of Lance's life insurance policy, she was already receiving a good amount of money from Lance monthly in the form of alimony and child support and so Lance was worth more to her alive than dead.

And then the relances various business rivals, and they turned out to be very weak suspects, primarily because they all had alibis. Plus, it just seemed very unlikely that Lance would have let these business rivals into his home late at night without some sort of confrontation. But as the investigation war on, other suspects, who Anastacio had also been ready to write off, started behaving in ways that made them look more suspicious, not less.

Kathy Collins, for example, who was really bent out of shape about not getting her close back, had supplied a more or less rock solid alibi, plus DNA and fingerprints. But six days after the murder, she had sent a demand letter to the police station, listing off every item she had left inside of Lance's home. Down to her sunglasses, perfume, and a bottle of wine, asking for all of it back immediately. It was an outrageously cold move from somebody who should have been

at least a little sad about Lance's death. And then there was Talana Carroway, the girlfriend turned secretary/plotonic friend. On the day Lance's body was found, she had come to Lance's home because she said she wanted to help. That action could be viewed either as proof that she had nothing to hide or as inserting herself into the investigation and offering distractions from her own

guilt. And after that first day, when she'd been so willing to talk and cooperate, now she had

clamped up. Another detective on Anastasia's team had gone to her house to ask some follow-up questions, and she had refused to come to the door at all. Then she'd shown up at the police station with

her own lawyer. And that wasn't all. The only thing police had learned during their canvas of the

neighborhood on the first day of the investigation was that apparently somebody had been spotted driving through the neighborhood in a light blue car at about 440 AM. This timeline matched up with the ballpark time of death of 410 AM and the vehicle description matched Talana's own car. However, apparently people thought they saw a man driving that car at 440 AM.

So after learning this, Anastasia did some digging and he discovered that Tal...

Jazz owed Lance money and that Jazz had a criminal record. And so while Anastasia doubted that

Jazz could have on his own just walked his way into Lance's house, he did think it was quite

possible that Talana could get inside and then maybe open the door for Jazz. Finally, there was

Dianbaugh, the woman who had shown up at Lance's house and acted crazy and had police called on her of all of Lance's girlfriends. Her alibi was absolutely the weakest and her level of anger and outrage at Lance was definitely the highest. Also, she literally had Lance's missing computer and one of his credit cards. But as the days ticked by, Anastasia was realizing that none of the details surrounding Dian were smoking guns. Dian's phone records confirmed her story

about making repeated calls to Lance and Lance's other employees confirmed that Dian did sometimes borrow his laptop, that was normal. And Lance's banking information showed that throughout his

entire relationship with Dian, he spent tons of money on her. And so the idea that she would buy,

you know, $2700 of furniture on the night of his murder looked suspicious but actually appeared

to be pretty typical. Dian had willingly given DNA and fingerprints and the police had matched three of the hairs found in Lance's bed to Dian, but they'd also found 13 other hairs that didn't belong to Dian Lance or any of the other women they knew Lance had slept with. And since Dian had already admitted to sleeping with Lance and his bed not long before the murder, the hairs really weren't proof of anything Anastasia didn't already know.

Detective Anastasia still didn't have the murder weapon either. Now, the medical examiner had guessed that Lance was killed with a wrench and after interviewing Lance's housekeeper, police had discovered that a wrench was missing from Lance's home. But a missing murder weapon couldn't give any fingerprints. And so far, none of the women that Anastasia who had collected

Prince from had matched Prince found in Lance's bedroom. And so within about a month of Lance's

murder, the case that had seemed so hot on that first day was now going cold.

More than a year would pass, and in that time, Detective Anastasia would continue to investigate Lance Hurnedon's murder, but he really didn't make any progress. He stayed in touch with the prosecutor with both of them hoping that some new lead would turn up, but all their evidence had gotten them nowhere. And so between business rivals from antique partners and romantic partners significant others, it felt like this murder could have possibly been committed by at least 10 different

people. That was until January of 1998, when the prosecutor who had been working with Anastasia got a phone call. And on this call, the caller told them that Lance's killer was currently involved in a heated divorce case, and during arguments for that case, the killer had destroyed their own alibi for the night of Lance's murder. Now, it had been 17 months at this point since Lance had been killed, but the prosecutor was still skeptical that the killer would really be so sloppy

as to present evidence to a different court that went against what they'd already told local police. But then, later that month, the prosecutor went to the divorce trial to watch for himself, and there, everything came together. Based on evidence and interviews conducted during an investigation that spanned a year and a half, this is what police believe happened to Lance Hurnedin in the early morning hours of August 8, 1996. The killer lay in bed next to Lance, listening to him breathe,

and as they did, a feeling of rage grew in the killer's chest. Lance was just lying there peacefully sleeping with no care in the world for how badly he was hurting the killer. Lance didn't know that the killer knew he had lied to them. Lance had fallen asleep thinking that he had the killer fooled, but Lance was wrong, and the killer couldn't stand it any longer. And so, they slipped out of bed and headed downstairs where they retrieved the wrench they had seen on

a countertop earlier. Then, with the weapon in hand, they went back into the master bedroom, got back in bed, and climbed right on top of Lance, straddling him. Then, while Lance slept peacefully right in front of them, the killer raised the wrench up, and then brought it down on his face so hard that Lance was instantly knocked on conscious. And so Lance did nothing, as the killer repeatedly smashed the wrench into Lance's face over and over again until his

skull literally caved in, and Lance was dead. After the frenzy, the killer climbed off of Lance and cleaned themselves up. Lance's alarm clocks began going off, and the killer panicked and just unplugged them off. Then, they put back on their clothes and hurried downstairs. But, the killer

Did not leave right away.

to take his laptop computer with them, something they had checked before they decided to kill him.

Because the killer was Deonbaugh, one of Lance's many girlfriends, and one thing inside of that

laptop helped explain her motive. It was Lance's daily calendar, which he had always updated so

meticulously to keep his appointments and his girlfriends straight. But official said Deon killed Lance and part because of the one thing he had not put into his calendar, which was, her court appearance, scheduled for the morning of August 8th. Lance had promised to go to court with her on that day

to help her clear the charge she'd picked up for coming to his home in the middle of the night

a month earlier, but Lance's calendar for August 8th was completely empty. Lance had no intention of going and Deon knew it. To Deon, this was an unforgivable betrayal, and so she bludgeoned Lance to death. Deon ultimately incriminated herself during her divorce trial by telling the court she had actually

gone to Lance's house on August 7th hours before he was killed. Remember, she had told police

the time that she had not done that and she was home alone, the whole time was never at his house.

And so when the prosecutor who sat in on the divorce trial actually heard her testimony, which directly contradicted her alibi that she had given, he had her arrested as soon as she left the court house. Ultimately Deon pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. She was released in 2011.

A quick note about our stories, they are all based on true events, but we sometimes use pseudonyms to

protect the people involved, and some details are fictionalized for dramatic purposes. Whit LaCasio, Jordan Stitham, and Cole LaCasio, mixed in mastered by Brendan Kane, production coordination by Samantha Collins, production support by Antonio Minata, and Delana Corley, artwork by Jessica Klugston-Kiner, theme song called Something Wicked by Ross Bugdon. Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin podcast. If you enjoyed today's story and you want to

hear more like it, go ahead and check out our YouTube channel, just called Mr. Ballin, where we have hundreds more stories, a lot like this one, but most of them are not available on this podcast, they are only available on that YouTube channel, which again is just called Mr. Ballin. So, that's going to do it, I really appreciate your support, until next time, see ya!

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