The Deck
The Deck

Ronda Taylor and Bonnie Ryther (the King of Clubs and 9 of Diamonds, Florida)

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Our cards this week are Ronda Taylor and Bonnie Ryther, the King of Clubs and 9 of Diamonds from Florida. There is a man serving a life sentence in a Florida prison for his part in the 1989 murder of...

Transcript

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Whispers in the dark, phenomena that slip past a logic, legends that refuse t...

When the unknown stirs, its trail leads to our podcast, so supernatural, I'm Eva Gentile. And I'm her sister, Rochifekarero.

Together, we explore all of the world's most bizarre mysteries.

Listen to so supernatural, every Friday, wherever you get your podcasts. Our cards this week are Ron Detailer, the King of Clubs from Florida, and Bonnie Rhyther, the Nine of Diamonds from Florida. There is a man serving life in a Florida prison for his part in the 1989 murder of a 29-year-old pregnant woman named Donna Callahan.

Two brothers were ultimately convicted for her abduction, and each of them pointed to "the

other" as the ultimate perpetrator in her death. But only one of them would go on to confess to over a dozen other murders. And that man, Mark Ribi, is now considered by some to be one of the deadliest serial killers on Florida's Gulf Coast. And if his original confession is to be believed, then not one, but two Fort Walton Beach

cases could be closed.

So one detective is making it his mission to find out once and for all.

And he proved Mark Ribi is the serial killer everyone thinks he is. I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is the deck. In 1998, an agent from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement went to visit an inmate at the Union Correctional Institution in Rayford, Florida. That man's name was Mark Ribi.

And at that point, he'd been in prison for more than five months for murdering a pregnant woman named Anna Callahan. But the FDLE wasn't up there to talk to him about that. Mark had sent a letter to the FDLE agent requesting a meeting to talk about the "12 other murders" he said he'd committed.

What followed was a chilling recitation as Mark rattled off descriptions of 13 victims, along with how they were killed. Some vague other specific, like a woman in her condo and destined, beaten with a crowbar, an exotic dancer in Orlando, strangled, a young white woman in Fort Walton Beach, strangled. While many on his list were described simply as women or girls, some confessions included

names, like Donna Callahan, the pregnant woman who he was incarcerated for killing, at a convenient store in Gulf Breeze. She was strangled. He also listed Pamela Ray in Panama City, strangled, and number 11 on his list, 23-year-old Ronda Taylor, who he confessed to stabbing multiple times with a knife in Fort Walton

Beach, back in 1990. That last name. That's partially what gave this confession legitimacy, because a Ronda Taylor was found stabbed to death in that exact location mentioned in the confession, during that exact year.

But their best lead, fizzled out quickly, because a few months after that first meeting

with FDLE Mark, backtracked. He recounted the whole thing, and any investigation into a man that could have been one of the deadliest killers on Florida's Gulf Coast, went up in smoke. But recently, one detective who's been working on Ronda's case has revisited that old confession. Wondering if the answer has been there this whole time, just waiting for the right person

to come along and unearth the clue. So my name is Detective Michael Wilson, I'm a detective with a criminal investigated unit. You're at the Fort Walton Beach Police Department, Fort Walton Beach Florida.

I've always wanted to become an investigator, right?

Going back to probably my mother, who was really into true crime, and introduced me, didn't really introduce me. She would check out a lot of books from the library. There were mysteries and true crime related, and I'd scroll them away and she'd get

out of me, but I'd bring them to my room and read them, and I was always fascinated,

and what always particularly fascinated me was the role of the detectives and those stories. Detective Wilson took on Ronda's case two years ago, and while other detectives had come before him, they left behind years of unanswered questions and mountains of paperwork.

If you can imagine, like, I became an investigator, you're kind of at these c...

like, okay, you know, you sort of look and work, did somebody leave off, okay, could I see the case file? Well, we have to go back into storage, and you get a box covered in dust, you know, and you open it, and it's like a time capsule. Let me share with you what detective Wilson found in this time capsule about Ronda Taylor.

On Saturday, July 7th, 1990, the weekend after Independence Day, Florida's beaches were crowded with vacationers soaking up the summer sun. It was about noon when a call came into the Fort Walton Beach Police Department. Less than a mile away on Tupelo Avenue, a man walking past a parked silver-buick open, noticed something unusual in the backseat.

What he had first thought was a blow-up doll was actually a woman, Ronda, crumpled up,

naked in the backseat of her own car, deceased from ten stat wounds to her chest and neck. The car was towed in, basically, so it could be more thoroughly examined, so numerous pieces of evidence were taken from the car. But I mean, there was no smoking gun, there was no like, okay, here's the idea of a person. I was with her, here's a finger-print or anything like that.

There was a lot of blood, basically, and you know, you could tell that, you know, something had happened to her outside the car, basically, and then she was placed back in the car. The car was driven to where it was found, and then she was left there. But it was where her car was left, that would leave investigators scratching their heads. Because basically, it was right smack dab in the middle of town.

Why would someone create a crime scene where it could so easily be found?

Who would be that brazen?

Back in the day, police started with the usual suspects, including Ronda's on again off again boyfriend's Steve. Around the time of her murder, Ronda and Steve's communication was mainly through letters, which were sitting on Detective Wilson's desk when our reporter Annie Roddrick Jones visited. Ronda's writing itself was a reminder of just how young she was.

What gets me is saying her handwriting. Yeah. Yeah. What he said. It's just got that like high school girl writing.

Yeah. I know. And you could see she was struggling. Yeah, you could. And that she wanted to, you know, to get better.

Ronda was battling a substance use disorder. From rehab, she wrote to her boyfriend in loopy bubbly cursive. And in those letters, her hope came through clearly. She wanted to get well. Steve also struggled with substance use disorder and probably understood what Ronda was going through.

But when it came to Steve, Detective Wilson said that he didn't remain a person of interest for very long. He was interviewed and he was exonerated pretty early on.

I think it was one of those things where he was struggling with his own addictions.

And so they were kind of trying to get clean. You know, both of them were trying to get clean. And so he had an alibi and he was exonerated early on. Fort Walton Beach detectives also interviewed a man that Ronda was supposed to have a date with on the night of her murder. Although detective Wilson told our reporter that Ronda actually stood that guy up.

And she was seen by other witnesses during and after the time of that date. In fact, Detective Wilson said that about a half a dozen witnesses said that they saw her on the evening of the sixth with two different men that night. Like all three of them together. And apparently they were looking for drugs. He also said that her known drug use caused a lot of speculation on the streets.

So after she's found murdered, a lot of these people started to come up with all their theories. She was taken here. It was because she owed this guy money. It's because she ripped this guy off. It's because she, you know, this book is full of those series.

For more than eight long years, law enforcement really had nothing other than those rumors and theories that is.

They never found a murder weapon.

They never got prints or anything from her car. And although Ronda was found new, she hadn't been sexually assaulted. So there weren't any foreign biologics that were found during her autopsy. They were stuck. And then we have the confession.

Which just changed everything.

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I mean, they were details it seemed that only Ronda's killer would know.

First of all, Ronda Taylor was one of the few people on Mark's list of victims who he noted by name.

And that's because unlike some of the others on his list, investigators believe that Mark actually knew Ronda. I think it was his relative of his wasn't rehab at the same time. She wasn't rehab. So he had known her from before. And so they knew each other. They see each other. You want to go find some rock. Okay, because he was into that at the time too.

That's what Mark said they were doing together that day when he originally confessed to the FDLE agent.

And one of those facts that seemed like he wouldn't know unless he was there, he told the agent that he and Ronda had picked up another guy. Which would explain why so many witnesses saw her with two men. The three of them go to a place called Ranger Trail Road smoke the crack. He basically says that she went to perform a sex act with the guy.

I think he doesn't say this, but from what he says is that she said something to him to piss him off.

And supposedly that says M.O. is that like a woman will say something to him and he'll set him off and he goes into a murderous rage. And according to him, like I just black out, you know, I just don't know what happens. He actually admitted to stabbing her with a buck knife, which would be consistent with her wounds. He stated he said where he threw the buck knife away off of a bridge, which is nearby here. Ronda and her car were found near a nursing home, not too far from that bridge. That's actually where the 911 called to police came from.

Well, detective Wilson told our reporter Annie that the nursing home, or as he calls it, a calm, the lesson center, turned out to be more significant. Standing where that car was, you can see the convalescent center. He had worked at that convalescent center. And the night she was murdered, his wife was working there. So it would make sense.

It's like I have to get someplace I can walk to.

I got to dump this car and get a change of clothes or something and get out of here, right?

Did he admit all of those things that he walked to the convalescent home? Yes. He doesn't implicate his wife though. He just said he went back there and got clothes and that he dumped his clothes in a dumpster nearby, which was checked. But it was already dumped, I think. To detective Wilson, the details of this confession are all specific and believable.

And if Mark is to be believed in regards to Ronda, then it would make a lot of sense to look at him for another Fort Walton Beach case. I was assigned Bonnie Ryder's case because they thought it might be linked to Ronda Taylor's homicide. Detective Wilson doesn't have nearly the amount of information on Bonnie's case that he has on Ronda's. Mostly because it's older. While Ronda was killed in 1990, Bonnie's murder dates all the way back to 1978.

But he does know that Bonnie was last seen at a place that is now long gone called the Continental Club.

She had had some beers there and then left by herself. And then nothing. Till her boyfriend reported her missing and her employer at the holiday in in Ogilusa Island said that the 27-year-old didn't show up for work.

Six days later, an abandoned vehicle was reported and it all finally clicked.

And so the detect is working at the time or getting this missing person's reports, they realize, hey, her car has seen it very far. So they go to very far and turn up her car set in there. Not long after, in best eaters found Bonnie's car and her remains nearby. Do you have a report who found them? Her found her?

Uh, it was actually actually a deal of a month. It's on 4/11. The two detectives were doing a follow-up on a missing person. And they discovered the partially decomposed body on an unidentified white female. It's partially covered with dirt and sand and underbrush.

The body was located behind the very park recreation center in Fort Walton Beach.

For what I saw from the crime scene photos, it was like a shallow grave, part...

So it had the rain and uncovered some of the body.

I think on our left side, you could see like an arm and stuff like that.

Final stages of the exclamation continue under the direct supervision of the medical examiner. Eximation disclosed the body of a white female partially decomposed black hair cloth and torn denim pants pulled down to the knees. White or light color underpants rolled down to the upper thighs. No shoes and were prepared to be a green upper body garment, which is a description of the clothing she was wearing. Last clothing she was wearing.

A canvas of the area was conducted. No additional physical evidence was found. So the car became the main piece of physical evidence, right? And the contents of the car is what we still have, including the seats. Not the seats, but the seat covers.

So what is that telling them about her, like the way she was found? Do they know whether she was sexually assaulted? I don't think so. I don't think she was. So the medical examiner determined that the victim had been severely beaten to death.

And her death was due to either the beating or the strangulation. But I don't think I ever found anything where they said that they believe she was sexually assaulted. But I mean, the way she was found, like just as she might have been, you know. Additional reports tell us that Bonnie's boyfriend was cleared early on. And no one in her life seemed even close to being a suspect.

So like Rhonda's case, law enforcement was at a massive standstill that stretched on for decades. Until Mark Ruby statement.

Now unlike Rhonda, he never identified Bonnie by name.

What he did say was that one of the murders he committed was that of a young white woman in Fort Walton Beach. He specifically said that he had strangled her in 1978. This would have been one of, if not his first victim when he was only 17. With vague description, check, location, check, timeline, check. And there was one very specific piece of evidence that stood out to detective Wilson.

In addition to unsmoked cigarettes found inside Bonnie's car, investigators also collected some beer cans right by where her body was found. Specifically. Matty light, tall boys. Okay, so that's specific. That was his beer of choice.

Did he drink the tall boys? Yes, specifically. 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. Even though investigators back in 1998 made the connections between Mark and Bonnie, Mark and Ronda,

they never had anything concrete putting Mark Ruby at either scene, just as confessions.

Which is why when he took it back, they were kind of screwed. Over the years as technology advanced for Walton detectives tried testing what little physical evidence they had, like those Natty light beer cans from Bonnie Ryder's crime scene. But those hadn't been tested since 2008. And back then, they yielded nothing.

Do you think that finding the evidence from this, say it ties to Mark, does that help you in the Ronda case or vice versa? Absolutely. How? So I think if it were tied to him, it would reinforce the idea that his confession was accurate. That confession was sitting on Detective Wilson's desk when our reporter interviewed him.

It listed out the women, one by one. So if Mark Ruby was able to pinpoint these names and dates and locations, why recant? Mark told Detective Wilson that the reason he confessed was in order to protect somebody. In an interview with Pierce Morgan, it seems that somebody was his son.

And Mark basically told Detective Wilson that the agent didn't hold up his end of the bargain for said protection, and that's why he recanted.

Our reporter tried reaching out to the FDLE agent by email, phone, and Facebook, but we haven't heard any response. Detective Michael Wilson told our reporter that there could be another reason, as to why Mark took it all back. This is Florida, you know, the murderers one thing is terrible, but if you can depict it of murdering multiple people, the chances of death penalty are pretty high. Yes, so I guess I'm just like wrapping my head around, let's say if it's even a day later, he recants, why wasn't he arrested in that time if these things are kind of matching up?

I still have to work the case, like the confession is great, right?

That's like good, that sounds plausible, still have to prove it.

Right, we've stopped to prove it with either hard evidence, witness testimony, or something. I can't just go on the confessional on, right, because that's not going to be enough because, you know, you say, well, here's the confession, jury, you confessed. What is this defense going to say, he recant to the confession, he was under stress or something, I think they're going to say whatever. You know, but if you have that in addition to something else, then you might have something there, right? This is formally known in court as corpus delective, which is Latin for body of the crime, meaning that the state needs evidence beyond just a confession to build a case.

Especially when the person who confessed has no ties to the crime.

So, that's what detective Wilson has been working on.

He resimitted those natty light cans, and he is going through evidence logs to see what else he has to work with.

He's already identified Bonnie's carapole street as something that he plans to test, too.

You see some things, like I don't know if this is submitted at all. This was submitted in 2006, you know, it's like this is the evidence is all in a box. So my thing was just, I talked to Aphelia, I talked to her lab, and they said, just go ahead and start sending us stuff. Doesn't matter if it was tested already or not, we'll retest it, yeah. So that's where I started, that's what I'm doing.

Our reporter Annie reached out to Mark Ruby, who is currently serving a life sentence in Florida. He denied our request for an interview in person or by phone, and he told her via email that he lost trust in the media after that contentious interview with Peer's Morgan. But after a lot of back and forth, he did send this. Hi Annie, I've received your email with your questions, and I actually started to write and tell you I have already answered all those questions on the interview with Peer's Morgan.

But instead, I'm going to answer with this statement. No, I had absolutely nothing to do with Ronda's or Bonnie's cases. In fact, I am not responsible for any of the cases I've been accused of. And I know Detective Wilson, who is handling Ronda's and Bonnie's cases, has sent in more evidence to be tested for DNA. It is my hope that he will get the evidence that will lead him to the ones responsible for those cases. If so, that will clearly prove that I had nothing to do with those cases.

Now, I understand this isn't the way you may have wanted me to answer those questions, but I'm hoping this way my words may not be twisted or misconstrued. Again, I'm just trying to protect my side, respectfully, Mark.

So if Mark Ruby didn't kill Ronda Taylor or Bonnie, who did it?

And what do we make of the second person who was supposedly with Mark when Ronda died?

Detective Wilson said in Mark's recanted confession that this second man they picked up witnessed the murder. Even tried to intervene, but he was apparently injured in the process. That second person is Detective Wilson's Hail Mary. Now, he didn't want to go into detail about what steps he's taking next involving this other person, because this is an active investigation that is unfolding as I speak. But he did assure us that things are moving forward and that he should have an update for us soon.

If that's the case, I'll be sure to bring whatever we learn back to you. Detective Wilson has a plan, and he is going to follow the evidence. Even if the evidence plays out the way Mark Ruby told us it would in his statement. You know, I try to stay away from focusing on him, and being like, "I'm going to make sure I'm put this guy away." He did it, because at this point it's like, "I've tried to follow the evidence."

Right? Do you have any evidence that doesn't lead you to him at this point? No. If that's the assumption, you know, it's something a big serial killer. But you could be a big liar, too. You don't know.

You know, I think if we're investigator, you have to keep it unbiased approach.

You know, there's what you think and what you can prove, that's police 101. You may know something, but it's like, "Can you prove it?" And with him, it's like it's going to have to be DNA or I wouldn't access to money. And hopefully, if it is him, it's going to be one of those two things that's going to crack this whole thing. And so, if I can just get one or two of those things, we say, "Look, okay, we've got you on this one."

Let's go ahead and talk about these other ones you can fast out. It's quite the bulls. It tells tells what really happened. If you know anything about the murders of Ronda Taylor or Bonny Rhyther in Florida's Gulf Coast, you can contact Detective Wilson directly at 850-797-2458. You can also call the Emerald Coast Crime Stoppers at 850-863 tips.

[Music]

The deck is an audio-truck 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, Ashley Flowers here.

If you're like me, diving into True Crime is about more than just the details of a case.

It is also about giving a voice to the victims and understanding the lives behind the headlines.

And this is what host Kylie Lowe does each week on her podcast, Dark Down East.

Every Thursday, Kylie dives into New England's most gripping mysteries, uncovering stories

in a way you won't hear anywhere else. And she digs through archives, connects with families and shines a light on the voices that deserve to be heard. From cold cases, to moments of long-awaited justice, Dark Down East is the perfect blend of investigations and honoring the stories behind them. You can find Dark Down East now, wherever you're listening.

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