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Edwin “Eddie” Heath Sr. (King of Hearts, Delaware)

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Our card this week is Edwin “Eddie” Heath Sr., the King of Hearts from Delaware. For the last eleven years, the mystery of who murdered 33-year-old Eddie has haunted the New Castle County Police. It l...

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Just after opening on a cold Saturday in February, someone entered the Lane B...

in Timley Park, Illinois.

And over the course of just about 40 minutes and acted a brutal crime, killing five of

the six women inside. Despite a detailed suspect sketch from the survivor, despite the fact that 911 was called while he was still in the store, and despite the fact that police were on the scene within minutes, the killer got away. When I got into this story, it got so much bigger than I ever thought it could have.

The case got so big that I needed help. So I brought in the best investigative journalist, I know, Dealia, Deambra. And on her newest season of Counter Clock, she is ready to fill you in on her years

long investigation into the Lane Bryant murders and the suspect that it led her to.

Listen, to season eight of Counter Clock, wherever you get your podcasts. Our card this week is Edwin Eddie Heath Senior, the King of Hearts from Delaware. For the last 11 years, the mystery of whom murder 33-year-old Eddie has haunted the New Castle County police. It looked to them like Eddie had been targeted.

Scott just steps from where he lived in front of his children, but a few big questions for me.

Who was the man possibly in disguise that shot Eddie that day?

And was this the same man caught on a surveillance camera near the scene? And why would anyone want this otherwise normal-seeming dad, dead? I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is the deck. On the afternoon of May 13, 2015, Eddie Heath's mother, Dr. Crystal Heath, who prefers to be called Dr. Crystal, was off work recovering from knee surgery.

She had a physical therapy appointment that day and then picked up some takeout Chinese on the way home for her and her partner. And while they were eating that meal, she got a call from her son's fiance that would change her life. She said, Eddie was shot and I said, I said, you got to be kidding me.

I said, not my Eddie, you got to be kidding me. And she said, no, she said, no, no.

So I didn't have any shoes on, I left the food on the table, got in the car.

Her partner started driving her from her home to Eddie's place in Bear Delaware, where he lived in an apartment/town home community known as Fox Run. That's where she was told the shooting had occurred. It was a long, 40 or so-minute drive for Eddie's mother as she replayed the last time she saw her son, just the night before when she'd stopped by his place.

And I said, I will see you tomorrow, which was the next day. I didn't know that that day was going to be the last day that I would see him.

While still in the car on the way to Eddie's, Dr. Crystal received a second call from Eddie's

fiance. And this one was even worse. And she said, um, Eddie's dead. Dr. Crystal dropped the phone in shock and just started screaming. She was in disbelief all the way until they pulled up to Eddie's town home.

And that's when reality stood in. The yellow line was out there, all of these people out there and I see the house where they live and I see a person laying on the ground and I knew it was him because of the pants that he had on and the boots that he had on. I knew it was him.

So I go around me while I had my surgery and walking with the cane, I couldn't get this fast enough. So I'm walking around to the back of the house and I get met by an officer and he's says, well, man, you can't go back there. So, you know, I, I, I said, well, this is my son and I need to get back there to make sure

that it's him. I need to get back there. They escort me back to the, to the with a crowd is and I was angry because my child is laying on the ground like an animal in the street and I felt like he was out there for hours. Dr. Crystal was accustomed to doing the hard things in life.

She had raised Eddie as a single mother and had dropped out of high school only to earn

Her PhD eventually.

But as she stood in that crowd, watching and waiting, this was another level of hard.

The whole thing felt like a nightmare that she'd never wish on anyone.

And on the other side of the police tape that day, was Sergeant Matt de Sabatino of the Newcastle County Police. He was the Chief Homicide Investigator at the time, so it was going to be his job to figure out what happened. Now what they'd pieced together so far was that Eddie had been hanging around the house most of the day, between shuddling his children to and from school.

And most of his days appeared to revolve around that routine, take care of his kids, then go to school at night to become a full bottomest. And while he had a passion for things like music and writing, his real passion was his kids. Three of Eddie's four children lived with him, some were from previous relationships,

and Fox run offered more space for his family, and at least according to Sergeant De Sabatino an area with little criminal activity. That day Eddie had gone to pick up two of his young kids from school and was arriving home with them at around 4 p.m.

It looked like he had parked in front of his town home, gotten out of the car, and headed

for the passenger side to let his kids out when someone took him by surprise.

He has then shot on the passenger side of the vehicle, and that's where he was ultimately

pronounced the cease. And where he was shot or at least where he fell was in the parking stall in front of the town home. So from where his final position was to the front door was maybe 10 feet, 15 feet, it was very close proximity.

Eddie had been shot multiple times right in front of his children who were still inside the car, and his fiance was inside the townhouse when the shots rang out. With so many people right there when this happened police were hopeful for a quick lead early on. But his children, spoken to with the help of the children's advocacy center, could

not for them much.

And according to Sergeant De Sabatino despite the proximity to the town home, Eddie's

fiance Helena told them that she didn't hear the gun fire.

So we spoke to her very briefly the night of, but again, between emotions, we were very limited in the information that we could get, totally normal, totally understandable. Though those closest to the actual crime scene couldn't provide much, there were plenty of other witnesses that the police were able to rely on. So because this happened a little bit after four in the afternoon, because there's multiple

people walking around, school buses just let out, because it is a tightly packed, dense town home community, we received multiple 911 calls from area neighbors who had all either heard gunshots or witnesses who had actually seen shooting, or had seen somebody on the ground that they assumed had been injured from the sounds that they had just heard. Those witnesses who saw the shooting described it as happening fast.

Without any big commotion or struggle, a 20-something blackmail, 510 in height, maybe 180 pounds, approached Eddie next to the car and just began firing. But the one thing that consistently stood out with all of these descriptions was the suspect with some type of larger beard, where there was a bushy beard, or some type of scraggly beard.

They were all consistent that it was either some type of beard or maybe a mask or a fake beard. Really developed along the suspect's chin and facial area. Based on the witnesses accounts and with the help of a canine unit, police were able to track the suspect's possible escape route, and that led them to nearby Route 40, which

bordered the Fox Run community. It's a busy road, lined with strip malls, other neighbourhoods, and a large public park. There was a car that one of the witnesses had seen parked along Route 40, that we believe the same person had entered into that vehicle and fled Westbound along Route 40. Gold Sedan was the initial description.

We were fortunate enough to have a red light camera at the next closest intersection for 40 and 896, so when we were able to look at that red light camera, we found a vehicle that generally matched that description. The video quality was pouring off that we couldn't identify any suspects or even the registration played on the vehicle.

That poor quality forced investigators to think outside the box. Maybe there was a way to enhance the footage somehow. The department at the time was a little lacking in the tech department, but a lot of these investigators were football fans, and someone in the department had an idea. NFL films did all their production nearby.

They had the latest and greatest enhancement technology. They could literally zoom in to see whether a player's foot had stepped on the out of bounds line. Surely, they could help clean up that red light camera footage.

Someone from the Investigations Division made a phone call.

Fortunately, they're about an hour drive from our headquarters.

They are very long-forced, but friendly.

They did all the work free of charge. We called them up and said, hey, we have a video that we'd like you to help us enhance. We took it up on a USB drive, they did it within the hour while we waited there. The Wizards at NFL Films did enhance the video, but it still wasn't enough. Now luckily, they'd been parallel pathing, trying to find more footage, something that might

be better quality, and they hit the jackpot. And this video actually showed a person. Hi everyone, Ashley here with some exciting news. The deck will not only land right here in your feed-free to listen to every week, but now,

we are also on camera for you to watch on YouTube.

Now you can see the cards, the case files, and the people behind the coldest cases as I share these stories with you. So no matter where you get your podcast, whether you prefer to listen to watch or maybe

both, I will be there with stories you need to hear.

Join me for the deck on YouTube. Subscribe to AudioCheck Investigates on YouTube today. Witnesses told police that on the day of Eddie's murder, they noticed a suspicious person hanging around the Fox Run community playground close to Eddie's place. There was a security camera pointed right at that area, so police pulled the footage,

and it too wasn't enhanced by the NFL. It's a little blurry and pixelated, but it shows what appears to be a man in dark baggy pants and a grayish top. Alone, quickly strolling past some swings and other playground equipment towards a bench.

You see, sits down on the bench, and then flees right away. We believe that is when the shots were actually fired.

Joe Sergeant D. Sabatino believes this man was involved in some way. He has a working theory

that this is not the man who pulled the trigger that day. You can see in this video the suspect with his right hand up to his right ear approaching the blue park bench. We believe this is at the point where he actually calls the shooter to enact the homicide. Now, the one thing to note is that the playground where the suspicious guy was seen doesn't

have a direct line of sight to Eddie's place. There's a row of town homes in between. So for instance, if he was acting at some kind of like "Look out, he couldn't do it from there." Others we've spoken to in the department, and what's been put out publicly in the past suggests that the playground guy and the shooter are one and the same.

And Sergeant D. Sabatino readily admits that is a possibility. He even admits it's a possibility that this guy had nothing to do with Eddie's murder at all. But if he did have something to do with it, whether or not he was the shooter.

This footage suggests that there could be a second suspect involved.

Because... What is this a told us that this individual was using a either walkie-talkie or an old-school cricket phone because they heard the chirp from the phone. Right after the shooting, what is the said they heard the shooting and then they saw this individual flee right away. Whatever this guy in the footage is, and accomplice a trigger man or somebody else,

it doesn't change another part of Sergeant D. Sabatino's working theory that this was all well planned out. They would have had to know when Eddie was going to approximately arrive on what day he was going to arrive and being a position to be able to witness that. They have to coordinate with a second person to actually be the shooter and then to formulate their escape route,

they have to know the general area where they're going, so they would have had to have either knowledge of that area or done some pre-planning before that. This also opens the possibility that whoever killed Eddie might have known his children were in the car, especially they were tracking Eddie's schedule or even following him that day, making this all the more horrific.

Now police did try to figure out who that guy could be. They released the footage publicly but no one came forward to ID him, which I guess is an all that surprising considering the quality. They also looked at cell tower data in the area, but that led nowhere either. Though as Sergeant D. Sabatino notes, if the people involved were using phones with walkie-talkie type capabilities, as some witnesses suggested the man in the playground was, that makes

things tricky for police. They're not analog per se, they're a lot more difficult to track and a lot more difficult to obtain information for versatile cell phone records. They even tried getting fingerprints and DNA from the bench that the man was sitting on in the video, but nothing they pulled pointed to someone in particular, which is not surprising

Given that it was a public bench in the middle of a playground exposed to the...

With so little to go on, a nagging question was still at the center of this case, unanswered.

Why would anyone want to kill Eddie Heat?

From everything we know about him, he really seemed like an average guy just trying to live his life, get an education, and raise his family. Eddie was not a rich man, this was not a target of a robbery, somebody trying to store him from money, anything along those lines. We don't believe he was involved in anything with drugs, or any other illegal activities,

or anything that we would suspect, hey, this is part and parcel for being involved in some of those criminal activities. There was nothing that gave us any kind of that level of communication. Nothing was found on Eddie in his vehicle or at his home that suggested any illegal activity either.

Police never found any evidence that Eddie had any conflicts with neighbors, and there

was also no evidence that Eddie had any issues with his fiance Helena, whom police interviewed at least three times. But she did suggest to the police someone else she thought they needed to look at. Someone who did have an ongoing dispute with Eddie. She was fixated on Eddie's children's mother Alexa, as being the suspect, or being somehow

involved or in some way complicit with his homicide. Hi everyone, Ashley here with some exciting news. The deck will not only land right here in your feed for you to listen to every week, but now we are also on camera for you to watch on YouTube.

Now you can see the cards, the case files, and the people behind the coldest cases, as

I share these stories with you. So no matter where you get your podcast, whether you prefer to listen to watch or maybe

both, I will be there with stories you need to hear.

Join me for the deck on YouTube, subscribe to audio-check Investigates on YouTube today. Eddie and his ex Alexa married in March of 2009, but less than a year later, the relationship was over. According to Sergeant D. Sabatino, at the time of his debt, Eddie and his ex had limited interaction, but they had been locked in a custody battle over their two children.

The same children who were in the car when Eddie was murdered. The custody fight went back to a violent incident involving someone close to Alexa. Alexa was involved with an individual, her boyfriend, Kamimal, has been at the time who had been shot, and our local division family services had determined that the children were better off in Eddie's custody.

She didn't believe that just because her boyfriend got shot, that she would quit her losing the kids.

Sergeant D. Sabatino didn't have details around Alexa's boyfriend's shooting, as it was

with another police agency, but he does know that the boyfriend survived. And to be very clear, he does not believe that Eddie had anything to do with that shooting. According to Sergeant D. Sabatino, Alexa was interviewed more than once about Eddie's case, but she told the police very little in those interviews. Alexa, a distance herself, as much as she possibly could, from being involved with the

homicide, and truth be told she didn't match the suspect description, although a motive did exist with respect to the custody, she did not match the suspect description, so we know at least from that since she was not involved in the homicide. We asked Sergeant D. Sabatino if Alexa or her boyfriend had alabies on the day of Eddie's murder, but like some other things in this case, it was something that he refrain from

getting into. We tried calling and texting Alexa, but so far we've had no luck reaching her ourselves. When the police tried to talk to Alexa's boyfriend, he wouldn't even speak to them. We weren't able to confidently say he was involved. There's nothing that let us definitively say he's a suspect that we need to follow as a

working theory, but nothing that we could really hang our hat on before I would know. We wondered if the police had tried to match the suspect's description to anybody in Alexa's or her boyfriend's circle, but Sergeant D. Sabatino said that the descriptions were too general to make a definitive call. We also asked whether Alexa's boyfriend had a beard, but he couldn't recall, though that

might not matter if the man who shot Eddie at the time was wearing a fake beard as some witnesses thought. And police tried to corroborate those witness accounts about the fake beard by visiting no fewer than two dozen stores, including one not far from where the shooting took place. We found one store they confirmed, yes, we do sell fake beard, this is a common product

We do sell.

Unfortunately, there's no way they track it. They don't have a point of sale register

detail or anything along those lines. There'd be no way for them to track it. They don't

keep videos surveillance inside the store that we could have reviewed and said this person would have lined up with our suspect or time frame. When investigative lines into Alexa didn't go anywhere, police even explored the possibility that maybe Eddie wasn't the intended target. There's nobody who is similar to description build, age that would look like Eddie,

who somebody might be confused, where they targeting another neighbor who was in proximity, and they accidentally shot Eddie rather than that neighbor. I don't believe that it was accidental in that sense. By the fall of 2015, now some six months after the shooting, the Newcastle County Police ran out of investigative leads, and that's when Eddie's case went cold.

There was no new information developing, no new forensic evidence had panned out, no technical evidence had panned out, where we were able to identify a suspect or anything along those lines. And while this was all disappointing for the police, it was far more disappointing to Eddie's

mother, who was trying to cope with the loss of her only child.

Eddie had been killed on a Wednesday, and from then on, Dr. Crystal's weeks would come and go marked by a terrible moment of dread. You know, I wanted it to be from Monday and Tuesday, please skip Wednesday and go right to Thursday Friday Saturday, so that that's where I was because I didn't know how to to deal with this.

Her grief led her to a place that many people often end up, where you start asking yourself, "What if?" She wondered if she had made different decisions along the way, could she have protected her son? The one that stuck out in her head was the decision she made when Eddie was a teenager

to move from New York City to Delaware.

What if they'd never moved?

It wasn't challenged because she really didn't want to leave, but I said, you know, it's better for us. I think we just need to go. So, you know, now that he's no longer here, I feel like, you know, I should have listened to him.

This day there, Eddie had his ups and downs, like any young man. And while his father wasn't always in his life, one thing that remained steady was his relationship with his mother, who continues to be a voice for her son. I mean, I'm at a point now where I just want to keep Eddie's name alive. You know, he was my child.

And again, he didn't deserve to die like this. Dr. Crystal believes more than one person was involved in her son's murder. I just say the people and I say they, I don't know. You know, I just, again, just my thought process and how I feel about this, I just feel that I just feel like the way they killed my son, I felt like it was one person.

The way he was killed, I felt like it was more than one person. I wasn't there, but that's just what I feel. Eddie's mom wouldn't go into detail about the custody battle Eddie was involved in with his ex Alexa. All she would say is that his two oldest did come to live with her for about two months

after his murder, then they went to live with Alexa, who has no criminal record that

we've come across and has never been named a suspect in this case.

Nor has her boyfriend. Today, Eddie's case is pretty much exactly where it was when it went cold in the fall of 2015. There is an any physical evidence or even much in the way of ballistics that we've been made aware of.

And the police haven't publicly named any suspects or made any arrests. They still haven't been able to track down the gold sedan that could have been the getaway car. They never even released footage of it because they don't feel the footage they have is specific enough.

And most importantly of all, they're still left trying to figure out who that man at the playground was. I think with this one, we need somebody from the general public who was either made aware of what occurred, who has knowledge of what occurred, who was a witness to the shooter

and the suspect and looking back and say, "Oh, I do remember that suspect.

I do remember that person that day." It's going to be, unfortunately, with the benefit of hindsight, and somebody having the courage and fortitude to say, "I'm going to help Eddie's family get some closure. I know what happened."

Brady's mother, she's done what she's always done, pushes on.

She keeps some of Eddie's ashes in a necklace that she wears. It's in the shape of a musical note, a nod to one of Eddie's interests. She's also kept a collection of Eddie's hats and sneakers and even had some of his clothes

Taken and made into a quilt.

Eddie, who once considered becoming a broad cast journalist, was also writing a book about

parts of his life, which he hopes to finish and plans to add a chapter about what happened

to her son in May of 2015. "In my heart, I don't think his case is going to ever be solved. That's where I'm at. That's where I'm at.

But I have to still have a little, little bit, I also faith that that may be.

Somebody awake up with a conscience to say, "You know what?

I need to go and report what I saw up. Just maybe I just need some peace when it comes to my son. That's it. That's all I need. That's all I want."

This episode is being released just two weeks after the 11th anniversary of Eddie Heath's murder.

If you have any information or if you live in or near the Fox run apartments and town homes community in May of 2015 and saw something, anything, please get in touch with the Newcastle County Police Department at 302-5-7-3-28-0-0. You can also submit an anonymous tip by calling the local crime stoppers at 1-800-10-3-3-3. Or visit their website at Delaware.cryingstoppersweb.com.

The deck is an audio check production with theme music by Ryan Lewis to learn more about the deck and our advocacy work visit thedeckpodcast.com. I think Chuck would approve. Hi everyone, I'm Delia Diambra, an investigative journalist, avid park enthusiast and host of park predators.

A weekly podcast that explores the dark underbelly of beautiful landscapes we all know and love. Each week I guide you through national parks and forests across the globe and share stories that highlight how the most beautiful landscapes can be equally as dark and sinister.

So whether you're a park enthusiast or are always diving into true crime stories,

park predators is your next listen. Listen to park predators every Tuesday anywhere you get your podcasts.

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