Today we're gonna be talking about the Hillside Stranglers.
I'm here with Angie.
Got a lot to talk about, guys.
Let's get into it.
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And we are live.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Fed Reacts.
Um quick before we get into it, guys.
Give me ones in the chat if the audio is good.
Can you guys hear me?
I actually can't hear you.
You can't hear me?
Hmm.
Give me ones if y'all can hear me, but let me go ahead and see here.
If the chat can hear me, then we're good.
But yeah, they can hear us, Angie.
I guess it's just uh oh, I think I know why it might be.
But Angie, you want to say what's up to the people?
You weren't here last week, so you want to say hello?
Oh, right, yeah, I wasn't I don't know what happened.
I can't remember.
Um Hi people, what's up?
Oh yeah, I can't hear now.
Yeah, it turns out you're fine.
Uh yeah, we're covering this one.
Nobody like people been asking for this, yes, but it's it's this was your idea to do this.
This was, yeah, this was me because I was watching a documentary on Netflix um of Richard Romers, and uh I really liked it, and I really got very interested with the detective.
The Night Stalker with the detective that caught him, caught these guys too in LA.
So I was like, okay, we need to do the the Hills are stranger.
So uh strangle.
So I I looked up in the Fed A Televen Fed React's um channel, and I saw that Myrna hadn't done it, so I was like, Yeah, let's do this.
And I hope you guys liked it.
Yeah, she texted me like randomly at late at night, like, hey, uh, I'm watching the Night Stalker.
And I said, Oh yeah, like that that's a really good documentary.
She was watching it on on Netflix, and I hadn't seen it years ago.
I th it was really well done.
Um how they caught him with the sneaker footprint and everything else like that, which by the way, I did Richard Ramirez, the Night Stalker on here, if you guys want to go check it out.
Um Avis shoe.
The yes, an Avis sneaker, yes.
And it was uh very particular one because the size that he got was it a ten and a half or an eleven and a half and it nine and a na nine and a half, I think it was.
No, eleven and a half, you're right.
Yeah, it was it was a uh it was a unique size, and it was uh make that they didn't really have that many of.
And they were able to track down the store he bought it at a time he bought it at, and that's how they're able to identify him, which is crazy.
It was one of the ways they were able to identify him.
So um, but yeah, guys, I did a whole pod on Richard Ramirez aka the Night Stalker.
Um, the not to be mistaken with the original Night Stalker, who is the golden state killer.
Um the Italian guy, forget his last name.
We also covered that one.
We covered that one too.
So um, so today we're gonna be covering the Hillside Stranglers.
And and the reason why this one came up is like Angie was saying, in the Netflix documentary, the main detective that did the Night Stalker case, his co-case detective, who was the more experienced guy.
Yeah, yeah, was a guy named Salerno, who we're gonna see here in this um detective Salerno, Frank Salerno.
We're gonna see him in this documentary, and he had just come off of catching these guys, the Hillside Stranglers, which was a huge thing in LA at the time.
In the 70s.
Yes.
And again, the 1970s, once again, rears this ugly head, guys.
It's been a bit since we've covered uh what I would call modern-day serial killers in the 70s and 80s.
I know we me and you were talking about the because we had covered some guys in the 20s and stuff like that.
When I say modern day, I mean as in like these guys that happened in like the last 50 years or so.
Um and they again, 1970s.
You got Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy, Jeffrey Dahmer had his first murderer.
The Hillside Killer killers, the Chicago uh crew.
Oh, yeah.
They were operating the Ripper crew, they're operating in the nineteen seventies.
Ed Kemper.
Um who else now?
The Night Stalker didn't didn't operate until the eighties.
Uh the This crazy guy that didn't act it alone in New York.
I think it was in New York City.
The Zodiac Killer operated in the 70s.
Oh, he was from San Francisco, yeah.
Uh, who else?
That was one of the first ones, too.
Who in New York are you talking about?
Um, the son of Sam.
Oh, the son of Sam, yep, yep, yep.
Uh David Berkowitz.
Uh that Green River Killer, Gary Richard.
The Green River Killer, Gary Ridgeway.
Yeah.
It's like almost 10 now that we named.
John Wayne Gacy, I think.
I mentioned him.
And this gay old the also gay guy that killed black people.
That's Jeffrey Dahmer.
Jeffrey Dahmer.
Mentioned him.
Yeah.
A bunch of people.
Almost 10.
Almost 10 a month.
It was a pandemic.
Like said Satan was just grabbing these guys and like.
Well, it was tough times.
Um in the 1970s, the economy was bad.
Yeah.
Inflation was through the roof.
Was it?
Yeah, it was very bad.
Um, it's a big reason why, which we're going to talk about that probably tomorrow, guys.
I don't know if y'all know this, guys, but big news, and I'm surprised this hasn't hit the mainstream media.
Well, obviously, they're not going to mention as mainstream media because it's not sexy.
Um, guys, Saudi Arabia is moving away from using the US dollar for their oil transactions.
And this is a big problem because that is how we basically have reserve currency status in the United States in the world.
Um, so in other words, back in the 19 early 1970s, uh, Richard Nixon went ahead and he made a deal.
Him and Henry and Kissinger.
Kissinger.
Well, what's the sound effect?
I don't got on this board.
But you guys know what I'm talking about, right?
Kissinger.
Oh, hold on one sec.
All right, my bad.
Now you guys should be out of here.
So um Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger struck a deal with Saudi Arabia where hey, we're gonna go ahead and give you guys military protection and give you guys military aid in exchange that you do all your oil transactions in US dollars.
Well, why is that important?
The reason why that's important, guys, is because we just print money thanks to Federal Reserve, because we went away from gold backed, right, to oil backed.
And whenever other countries want to buy oil from Saudi Arabia, and then a bunch of other OPEC countries followed on with this, they would need to use the US dollars.
So what that basically did was it ensured that the US dollar would always be in demand because it would be used to do oil transaction, which is one of the most important things, one of the most important energy resources for a multitude of different countries all across the world.
So back in the night, so now on June 9th, if I'm not mistaken, Saudi Arabia said that they are no longer going to be using the US dollar exclusively for oil transactions.
So they basically broke a 50-year deal that Nixon hit struck back then.
Now, for you guys wondering why does that matter matter, Myron?
The reason why it matters, guys, is because we print money pretty much infinitely.
About 40% of the U.S. currency and uh rotate and um circulation right now, guys, was printed in the last four years or so.
And we started printing money like crazy when the pandemic happened.
So, you know, I predict, I mean, obviously it's gonna come slowly, but it's definitely gonna affect the strength of the US dollar in the coming years, guys.
So this is a big problem, and I'm amazed that more people are not talking about this um all over the news.
I think this is some of the biggest news for the year of 2024, the fact that Saudi Arabia is deciding to not use the US dollar anymore for their currency.
Now, obviously it's gonna go slowly, maybe the 5% of their transaction won't be US dollar, and then it'll slowly change and increase, but it's not a good sign, regardless.
And I say all that to say this.
At the time when Nixon struck this deal in the 1970s, it was a very turbulent time in the uh for the economy.
Inflation rates were higher, um, and gas prices were through the roof, which is why Nixon was able to strike this deal, and it was a big win for us.
Uh, but the 70s were tough, guys.
Crime was through the roof, the economy was bad, just wasn't a good decade in American history.
And uh that's why you see a lot of these serial killers operating the way that they did with impunity.
Also, on top of that, we talked about um the interstate high highway system had just been put to put in place.
Um police had not had uh interstate databases yet.
Um detectives from different local uh local jurisdictions did not necessarily know how to work together.
There wasn't really uh How do I say this?
Unity and law enforcement yet from an interstate uh interstate database perspective.
And also um the federal law enforcement wasn't as refined as it is now as well.
So there was so many different things going on in the United States in the 1970s that kind of made it um a perfect time to be a circular, you know, for lack of better term.
You know, that now that you're saying that um in the documentary that I was watching, there was a little beef between the San Francisco PD and the LAPD when Richard Ramirez was going back and forth back then because they wanted to catch them too because he also killed two victims in San Francisco.
And they weren't even sure, like, yeah, and then there was issues.
Yeah, they didn't want to share information, they weren't sure if they had the same guy.
Yeah, um, I I remember famously, it was either the the it was the mayor of San Francisco or the governor of California leaked information that they shouldn't have.
Yeah, no, it was a lady.
It was a yeah, it was a lady from um lady.
I think it was the mayor from San Francisco back then.
Yeah, she leaked information that shouldn't have been leaked.
And it compromised and it compromised the investigation significantly when she leaked that information.
She licked that mean thing that was the shoe about the guy that he they were they they had.
Was it the shoe?
It was a shoe that they she leaked, right?
Yeah, I think there was that they had the shoe.
Oh, yeah, then he stopped wearing the shoes.
Yeah, yes, that's what it was.
The shoe print.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
She leaked the the sneaker, yes.
For no reason, because she didn't have to do to do like that press conference and like just say random shit about that killer.
I think that might have been a part uh a way that they were able to link him, I think, to the San Francisco murder.
It was very bad.
It was like demonic, like he he like, you know, he left that's in the pentagrams in the on the walls because he was drawing pentagrams on the walls back then.
Yeah, he drew pentagrams on the walls.
He left DNA, right?
We're on YouTube, so I won't go too far into that, but you guys know what I'm talking about.
He left DNA all over the scene like a weirdo.
Um, you know, and he and he butchered the bodies.
So um, so yeah, I think the snooze shoe print is how they were able to tie him from the crime in LA to also um to the one in San Francisco.
Yeah, and he was also eating the crime scenes too.
He believed apples, bananas, like bin, all this stuff.
Yeah, another thing too is people remembered about him is that he stunk really bad.
And he had really bad teeth.
He stunk really bad and had really, really bad teeth.
Yeah.
Um is saying L audio.
Why L audio?
Let's uh Chad, give me ones if the audio is good.
Give me ones and if the audio is good.
You guys should be able to hear me nice and clear, me and Angie.
Uh this dude, this dude Louis Locke is saying L audio on Rumble, but I don't know if he's trolling or not.
Video keeps stopping.
You guys shouldn't get any stops here.
Soundbar too loud.
You're saying audio is good.
Okay.
Audio is good.
All right, I'll tell the sound effects down a bit.
Uh lets me, what the hell?
Okay.
Um okay, audio is fine.
All right.
So this dude is over here just trolling on on uh on Rumble.
Um Louis Lock, I'm gonna give you one last chance, bro.
If you do that dumb shit again, I'm gonna ban you because if you when you people put that stuff like, oh, audio is bad, it like hurts acquired the show because now I'm stopping it to make sure the audio is good because your dumbass wants to troll, bro.
So if the video's lagging on Rumble guys, um, I'm also live on Twitch and I'm live on YouTube as well right now.
Um, but we might have to go to Rome.
I'm not gonna lie to y'all, we got some uh pictures that aren't safe for YouTube at all.
Some original crime scene photos.
Um and then also we uh got a documentary that we're gonna be react to reacting to, which I hope doesn't um hit us with a copyright, which it might do.
We might have to show the photos on Rumble though, yeah.
Yeah, we'll have to show yeah, we can't show them on YouTube.
No way we can show them on YouTube.
Yeah, uh, but yeah, we're live on Twitch right now, too, guys.
Um if if you're having issues with Rumble.
Um let me see if I can turn the volume down for you guys a little bit.
Uh let's see.
Nope, not there.
Uh I don't know why.
Well, let me turn it down.
All right.
Okay, someone said the video is lagging.
Oh, you know what?
Let me let me let me go.
I think I know why it might be lagging for you guys.
Yep, I got it.
Okay, I'm gonna put it down to 10,000 KBPBS.
Because I was streaming Overwatch before.
So you guys shouldn't get the lag now.
Let's do a quick little check here.
Refresh your page, guys.
I fixed the bit rate.
I lowered it.
So you guys should be good now.
I had it at like 16,000 bit rate.
Now it's gonna probably bring it down a bit for y'all.
So it shouldn't be lagging anymore.
We should be good on Rumble.
Let me look here in Rumble as well.
Make sure that we're good money.
Let me look, let me look.
Bear with me here, guys.
It's fixed.
If it looks good now.
It's looking in the Rumble chat looking good.
So all right.
Give me ones on Rumble if the video is good now.
Give me ones if the video's good now on Rumble.
Because we're probably gonna have to take this stream to Rumble.
I ain't gonna lie to y'all.
For the YouTube viewers, I know it's not lagging for you guys, but it was lagging for the Rumble guys.
Alright, cool.
Rumble's good.
Alright, audio's good too.
Alright, awesome, awesome, awesome.
Andy, do you have anything before we get into the documentary and stuff?
No, no.
No?
Okay.
Alright.
So uh guys, let's go ahead and get um get into it here.
Like I said before, I predict that we might get hit with a copyright.
So um if that's the case, guys, just be prepared that we're gonna go to Rumble.
Um or Twitch, whichever one you prefer.
So let me go ahead and um screen share this now for you ninjas.
Uh all right.
So we got the Hillside Strangler here, okay, guys.
So, or stranglers in this case, it was two individuals.
Hillside Strangler later, the Hillside Stranglers is the media uh epithet for one later discovered to be two American serial killers who terrorized Los Angeles, California between October 1977 and February 1978 with the nicknames originating from the fact that many of the victims' bodies were discovered in the hills surrounding the city.
Okay.
Um so I'll just leave it there.
We'll um we'll kind of get right into the documentary.
I got this one right here from Real Stories.
Again, I predict, guys, that we are probably gonna get hit with um, they're gonna try to turn the stream off and everything else like that.
Which, if that's the case, guys, uh what we'll do is we will just go ahead.
Um go to Rumble.
You go to Rumble, yeah.
Uh okay, we got uh Michaka boss A56.
When is Ryan Dust coming to the show for Jeff K?
Alright, I might as well just address this now.
Guys, it's not gonna happen.
Um, it's just not gonna happen.
Uh he's not he he um he canceled, said that he was sick.
Um I won't be working with Ryan Dawson anymore, guys.
Uh that's just a decision that I'm making.
Uh you know, it is what it is.
I have nothing bad to say about the guy.
I don't have an issue with him personally.
Um, but I'm just no longer gonna do business with him.
Um, you know, it is what it is.
He said some things about me publicly, negative things about me publicly.
I'm not gonna do the same to him.
So I don't necessarily want to do business with an individual like that.
So it is what it is.
Um like I said, I tried, you know, I tried to have him on.
Um said he was sick, which you know, I'm not saying that he was lying about that, but um just a couple things that just uh you know just not really acceptable.
So um again, I wish them the best.
I have nothing bad to say about him, but he made a bunch of comments about me publicly, negative comments about me publicly, and I just can't rock with someone that does that type of stuff, so you know I can't trust him.
So if I can't trust him, then it is what it is.
You know, I wish it wasn't like that, but um, don't worry.
I I have uh someone else that I'm working with uh to bring you guys the JFK um stuff in the RFK situation, so don't worry.
There is plenty of JFK and RFK researchers out there that will be able to give you guys the content.
Um I promise I'll get it to you guys.
Um literally dealing with someone right now that we can uh we might do a collab for y'all.
So um so yeah.
Again, I I uh I wish it wasn't like that, guys, but that's that's what it is.
I might as be honest and transparent with you guys.
Uh I'm not gonna say anything negative about the guy, but he he did that to me, so it is what it is, unfortunately.
Uh alright, so we got a video here, guys.
Um the chilling hillside strangler case, serial killers revealed to be a murderer's duo, crime documentary.
Um and we will go ahead and get into it.
Can you guys hear this?
No, you guys probably can't.
I can't either yeah, hold on.
I'm gonna fix it right now for you guys.
Give me one second.
I already know what it is.
I gotta fix the settings.
Yeah, I know what yeah.
Sorry about that, guys.
This should fix it.
The late 70s, a series of murders would leave the women of Long.
Chat, give me ones in the chat if y'all can if y'all can see this.
Give me ones in the chat if you guys can.
Sorry, if you can hear it.
My bad.
You should be able to see it, of course, but ones in a chat you guys can hear it.
Awesome, awesome, awesome.
All right.
Now, Machaka, it's not your fault, bro.
It's not your fault.
I wish Ryan all the best, man.
I wish him all the success.
Um I I you know, I'm not gonna shit here, sit here and badmouth the guy.
Uh, I wish him the best.
Um, but I I feel it's uh you guys are owed an explanation as to why if you don't see them on in the future, why why that is.
So, you know, I tried to handle things off uh off uh behind the scenes, and it doesn't seem like he wants to do that, so it is what it is.
Los Angeles, afraid to walk the streets.
All heck broke loose.
All women were high risk.
It was such a scary time.
Whomever had done this was certainly no amateur.
Crimes that plumbed the depths of depravity.
They put a bare wire in each of her palms and then plugged it in and out of the wall and we tried to electrocute her.
The killing spree that broke all the rules.
Most serial sexual murder cases, these are done so long.
Same individuals are out there and they're getting away with murder.
And baffled the experts.
There was the sweet guy.
How are you doing?
And then there was a sadistic murderer.
You know, I call you like a bra doesn't make any difference.
Not all Hollywood stories have a fairy tale ending.
I found him very charming.
Drive up the wall of wall right now.
I'd shoot that son of a bitch.
Welcome to Los Angeles.
Welcome to Los Angeles.
All right.
So we'll fast forward this a bit.
Thank you.
So, like I said before, guys, be ready.
There's a good chance that we might have to switch on over to um to rumble, because uh they do this all the time on on YouTube where they're gonna say stream suspended.
So we'll see what the hell happens, man.
Uh, so it is what it is, man.
Um, so it is what it is.
Alright, let's get back to it.
When you say Hollywood, there's a perception out there.
It's this glamorous place where all the movies are made and the stars live.
All right, here he is.
Frank Salerno, guys, this guy's a legendary detective out in LA.
Um the guy is um he's very good, man.
Uh he was involved in a nice darker case and involved with the um the Hillside Stranglers.
So um uh I I wanna I put that's another reason I picked this documentary is that because it gives commentary from him.
Well that that's really not true.
Uh there's CD Aerios of Hollywood.
Nothing's changed.
Just the just the faces.
But the same same type of actions going on right now.
It's been that way forever.
In 1977, Hollywood's dark underbelly would be exposed to the world.
It was a time of disco and nightclubbing, and uh while women were sexually liberated, they still were not viewed as um full-fledged citizens in many ways.
And prostitutes were still viewed as whores and not as victims.
Well, both can be true, right?
So uh, you know, and here's the other thing too.
I I want to mention this as well.
You got um With a lot of these serial killers, guys, okay.
With a lot of these serial killers, they attack victims that they know a lot of the times aren't necessarily gonna have people looking for them.
And one of the targeted classes of victims with a lot of these serial killers are prostitutes.
Well, what is why is the reason?
Well, because the thing is with prostitutes travel often, they go from state to state, town to town, et cetera.
So if someone puts in, and and a lot of the times they're vagrants, they don't have family, they don't have anyone that really cares about them, etc.
So if they don't, though when they go missing, the likelihood of the police putting serious resources into locating them are slim to none.
Because police know that when prostitutes go missing, a lot of the times they're just going somewhere else where they can make more money or they're traveling.
So they're a victim class that is, I hate to say this, but they're they're they're a vulnerable victim class for a lot of these serial killers.
And a lot of the serial killers have like like they're real real massages, like they hate women, like they they have like a deep disregard and hatred and contempt towards women, and a lot of the times they take out their frustrations on these women, and they know the class that they can go after that they can go ahead and victimize without real repercussions a lot of times, are prostitutes.
Um you look at serial killers like Samuel Little, also operated in 1970s.
He's the most prolific serial killer of all time.
He killed something like 90 something women.
I think somewhere between 93 and 96 women, like almost 80 of them were prostitutes.
Um Ted Bunny is one of the few actually that didn't exclusively go after prostitutes.
I think that's what made him so famous.
He killed college-age women, but that came with consequences.
What did he have to do?
He had to go from state to state to continue his killing escapade because when you get college-age women that have families, well, what do they do?
They go looking for you, right?
The police start taking those crimes seriously.
So but a lot of these other serial killers, um, Ed Kemper did prostitutes, right?
If I'm not mistaken, Angie.
AK the torso killer.
Ed Kemper was well he did college students too, actually.
Yeah.
He did college co-ed killer.
Yeah.
Um, but a lot of these guys go after prostitute.
Aver Jeffrey Dahmer went after male prostitutes.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, toy box killer, prostitutes.
Oh, yeah.
He did he operate it?
Yeah, he operated in in the that was uh thinking Illinois.
No, no, no, he was no, he was out in Nevada.
Oh, and he's out in the middle of nowhere in Nevada.
But I'm trying to remember like what decades he operated in.
It was the 70s.
Yeah.
It was in a town that was called Elephant's bot.
Yeah, it's like close to the Mexican border.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And back time back back then, um that that place where he was leaving in was one of the most dangerous series in the United States.
The second one, I think it was.
Yeah.
Um, so yeah.
But um, what else?
Well, actually, he had a prostitute that escaped him, and that was the one who go out to the police.
And the police didn't believe her because she was a prostitute.
Yes.
So that happens a lot.
Yeah, he targeted prostitutes.
But I I I think Alien weirdness too.
She was a prostitute, so she really like people didn't really like mind what she said because she was a prostitute.
She tried to claim that a lot of her customers try to kill her.
Try to kill her.
I think one actually tried to kill her.
Yeah.
But then she said, fuck it, I'm killing the rest of them too.
Yeah.
Um, but uh, but yeah, guys, you see the trend here.
Um basically a lot of these serial killers prey on the most vulnerable victims that they can that won't necessarily catch them, and it ends up being female prostitutes, unfortunately.
So um, let's see here.
We got um, let me see.
Oh, we got some shots here.
We got uh Myron, I got your back.
You and Fresh, the whole team, I'm not in Castle Club, but I will be in July.
You guys and Andrew Tate have changed me to be a better person.
Thank you.
I appreciate it, Andy the Great.
You know, join when you can.
Uh we might actually roll out something for you guys.
I'm thinking about rolling something out for you guys where I give you guys a year at a discount.
Um, we ran the promo where we gave you guys a year for 200 bucks.
What I might do is do it a year for like uh 250 or 300, somewhere in that range, because it's 35 right now per month.
Um, because we give you guys Zoom calls and everything else like that.
So 35 times 12, that equals 420.
So what I'll do is maybe we can make it 320 or 300 for you guys, give you knock off 100 bucks and you guys get it for a year, save some money.
Um so, and then you guys that got in at 17, stay in, man, because your grandpa didn't have a price.
We're not gonna get that low again.
So um, well, we might have something like that for you guys.
Um, Valexia goes, hey Martin starting uh uh starting a power washing business.
I'm I keep thinking, what if it doesn't work out due to saturation?
Seems they all do okay.
How to get the idea on my head, it's almost up and running now.
Uh Valexia, it'll be fine, bro.
You just gotta do it, man.
Obviously, um you're always gonna be scared.
That's a part of being human, you know, trying something new.
But what's the worst that could happen?
You fail?
So what?
The only difference between a winner and a loser is the winner decided to try one more time.
Okay, don't forget that.
Uh let's see here.
Anything else?
Okay, we'll make it back to the uh we'll make it back to the to the documentary, guys.
In the late 70s, Lois Lee founded Children of the Night, a charity dedicated to rescuing children from prostitution.
Who knows what they're gonna be when they grow up?
Raise your hand.
I want to be a social worker.
Do you want to work with kids?
Kids like yourself.
The most common age was 19, and that was true on the streets of Hollywood.
Also want to say this as well for you guys.
Keep in mind, man, that um back then in the 1970s, like it wasn't like now how like you can just get on the internet and look at some prawn, you know, or use the one of these sex phone lines, whatever.
That was like a 90s thing.
That wasn't even a 70s thing.
Like, if you were one of these guys and you wanted to pay for some box, like you had to get out, get your ass out the house, get in your car, drive the red light district in your neighborhood or in your city, and go pick up a girl.
Like that's what how you used to do it back in the day.
There was none of this, like, you know, internet and escort services, any of that other stuff.
Like, if you wanted to, you know, pay for some box, you got to actually actually get your ass up and get outside.
All right.
Any of my older viewers here, you guys probably know.
Like, this whole, you know, convenience Uber Pussy type thing was not a thing back then.
So um, there were a lot more process on the street, is what I'm trying to say here, guys.
It was a very common thing.
Just seems to draw a lot of transient type people to it.
Young people that either run away from home, uh no matter where, from the Midwest, the East Coast, wherever, and they end up on the streets, selling her body.
Yeah, the internet really changed the world.
And if you're old like me, right, I'm 34.
I remember what the world was like before the internet.
It was a much different place, my friends.
For a place to sleep.
One such teenager working the Hollywood streets was Yolanda Washington, prostituting to support herself and her baby son.
Her friends had called me and asked me to help her when she was in a Beverly Hills courtroom.
She seemed to be like a nice girl who was trapped in prostitution.
By the time I got to the courtroom, she'd already pled guilty and was going to jail for 10 days, and was supposed to call me when she got out of jail.
Uh, solicitation, guys, is typically a solicitation is typically a my misdemeanor.
Um, unless they catch you like in a ring and you know, they're able to get more serious serious charges against you, but most of the time solicitation is like a slap on the wrist, you know, a couple days in jail, if if a night in jail, and then you're back out in the streets.
That's another reason, too, why so many women uh would do this is because the consequences weren't that heavy.
They would give more time and more punishment to the Johns than the actual prostitutes most of the time.
She never did.
On the 17th of October 1977, Yolanda Washington's whereabouts were discovered.
Her friends called and said she was dead, found nude on a hillside.
At the side of the road near Hollywood's famous cemetery to the stars, Yolanda lay naked and dead.
And her murder would be just the first of many.
Now you guys are probably wondering, well, why why naked, Myron?
What the hell's going on here?
Guys, a reason why a lot of these serial killers do weird stuff like that is because they love the sense of control, they love the sense of power.
You'll see this with people like John Wayne Gacy, Ted Bundy, especially, where they strangle their victims to the point where they're about to pass out and then they let them, you know, gas for air a bit, and then they come back to and then they do it again.
And they really derive a great sense of pleasure from the terror that they inflict on their victims, and most importantly, the power that they exert over their victims while they have them in that, you know, um in that situation.
Uh these are really sick individuals uh that get off on this type of shit.
Just before six in the morning, the call basically was got our dead body.
It looks like a young female, nude.
Uh any time it involves a young person.
Uh those those are tough.
Those are always tough.
See where this car is?
She was right right there.
Uh She was found up here in uh this ice plant bedding type material.
She was uh nude, face up, feet were pointed down uh towards that direction of the cul-de-sac.
Soon as arriving at the same time, so this tells you a lot about the killer.
Um the fact that they left her like that, right?
Um, nude, out in the public.
They know someone's gonna discover her.
So it's almost like they want to taunt the police, they want to taunt law enforcement.
It's a game to them.
Um other serial killers that um that like to play games with oh, BTK, another serial killer that operated in the 1970s that we forgot.
That's over 10 now that we've named.
Um other serial killers that like serial killers that like to do that type of stuff, man.
Like mess with the police, try to get on the news.
A lot of them just want clout, too.
That's another thing.
Guys like BTK, the Zodiac killer, these dudes literally wrote letters to the police.
Like, you know, the Zodiac killer famously said would send um like cryptograms and uh, you know, want the police to solve it, and he would send uh uh he killed one guy, uh a taxi cab driver, right?
Shot him in the back of the head, took a piece of clothing from his from his shirts, right?
At the cost of getting caught, by the way.
He did this right in the middle of San Francisco, right, in a uh residential area.
In front of a house, and two kids saw him, right?
He rips the clothing off, almost getting caught, and he mails it to the newspaper company, I think it was a San Francisco Chronicle or something like that.
Yes, to prove that it was him because to prove it was him that killed that killed that individual, and he sends a piece of the bloody clothing in there, right?
At the risk of getting caught, by the way.
The only reason he didn't get caught, funny story, is because the police were looking for a black guy, because they called it in originally that uh they were looking for a black guy, but it was but then when they talked to the witnesses, they said no, he was a heavy set white male with glasses and a short haircut.
Actually, real quick, I'll show you guys the um the famous photograph.
Uh drawing.
Or drawing in this case.
Uh and to this day, they never caught him, guys.
They never caught him.
Um this is actually one of my favorite cases that I covered.
Uh here he's right here.
Zodiac killer.
Um what the hell?
No, this is not this is not true.
This is not the FBI.
They're saying, okay.
They're saying that it was uh it wasn't the FBI, it was the crime, it was the um cold case busters or whatever.
But yeah, uh da da da, who they say.
Okay, the theory is put forward by journalist Thomas Cobra that said the bureau whistleblower confirmed uh Gary Francis Post.
He died in 2018.
Yeah, case breakers, yeah.
These guys are the ones, but they're not officially law enforcement.
Law enforcement's primary suspect is still Arthur Lee Allen, who is this guy, which I suggest you guys all watch the movie uh Zodiac.
The Zodiac.
It was really good.
Jake Gyllenhaal, 2007.
Who else was it?
R Robert Downey Jr.
Uh yeah, Robert Downey Jr. is there, yeah.
You're right.
Yep.
Arthur Lee Allen is the primary suspect, according to law enforcement.
But they're saying it was Gary Francis Post.
So um, yeah.
Anyway, we'll uh go back to the original thing.
But yeah, uh I covered the zodiac killer in detail, guys, and I went over all the suspects.
So if you guys want to go in and watch that one, it's it's uh it's there.
And taking a look at the body.
No doubt it was a murder because you could see someone said, Yo, Mario, what happened to the Chess Broad podcast?
Y'all had it was one of my favorites.
Could y'all put it back up?
Love the fitness podcast.
It's on Rumble, bro.
Should be on Rumble.
Um, I think it's on Rumble.
Ligature marks on her wrists.
You can see him on her ankles, and you can see him on her neck.
So it appeared she had been uh tied up uh and she had been strangled.
We thought we had one random killing.
Um, not having any idea where it was gonna lead to or to what it was gonna lead.
We had no idea that this was the beginning of a series.
The bounty was eventually identified as 15-year-old Judy Miller.
She too had disappeared from Kellen juveniles, man, crazy fucks.
The streets of Hollywood.
She was still at the coroner's office, her body, and we got a call uh that there had been another murder, that a body had been found, uh, another young lady, nude in Glendale.
Uh my partner and I went to the coroner's office.
They they they pulled our victim out.
Uh they placed that body next to who turned out to be Lisa Caston's body.
And uh, and I can remember uh the coroner who looked at the bodies, were both next to each other, and He said, uh, looks like they came out of a Xerox machine.
Same kind of thin uh ligature marks on the wrists and ankles and on the neck.
Uh and the they were left the same on a hillside beside a road.
Uh they did not have any clothing or jewelry or any identifying things of any kind at or near them.
We knew he had a killer killers out there that was responsible for at least two murders.
And the tennis was about to increase.
I believe it was November 20th, 1977.
Oh, yeah, Bob was also on the case as well, Bob O'Grogan.
Uh called out to uh a nude body founder of the bush in the Highland Park area.
A young girl in her early 20s, obviously deceased.
Uh had ligature marks on her wrist.
And legature box on her ankles, and obviously uh legatry marks around the neck.
It appeared to me that she'd been strangled.
All right, so I found the uh chess breath, so I'll put it right now in the uh the thing for you.
It's the after hours.
I can't find the the daytime show that we did with him.
It's gotta be somewhere.
Which, you know, I might as well tell you guys this.
Mo, shout out to Mo.
He's going through the process right now of organizing our castle club videos into playlists for you guys.
So, and we're gonna re-upload all of our podcasts that we had to take down off of YouTube.
We're putting them back up on Castle Club guys, so they're gonna all be there.
It's gonna be our entire library on there.
So if you're trying to look for an old episode or whatever may be, you guys will be able to find it there.
Um, and we're putting a playlist for Frank Castles, one for Money Mondays, one for Womanizer Wednesdays, one for Friday shows, one for Callin' shows, one for guests, everything else like that.
So we're gonna go ahead and um we're gonna go ahead and make sure that we put all that content back there for you guys.
Um re-upload all the stuff that we took down.
As you guys know, we're trying to get re-monetized on YouTube so I'll take down a bunch of content.
We'll see what happens.
Um at this point, if we get monetized awesome, if we don't, it is what it is.
We've kind of already had to deal with the demodernization for almost a year now.
Um so you know, we've been able to uh figure out ways to get around it.
Um, but we'll see what happens.
Um so yeah, but Mo's on that right now, he's working on that.
So shout out to you, ninjas.
Um, so yeah, yeah.
Um someone said only on Castle Club.
Uh yeah, we're gonna put everything up on Castle Club.
It's all gonna be there for you guys.
So not everything is gonna be on Rumble because like some videos we did only on YouTube, and we didn't necessarily do on Rumble because we weren't with Rumble at the time, but we're gonna make sure we re-upload everything over to Castle Club, guys.
And I again I really didn't want to have to delete all the videos that we did, guys, but we had to do it because you can be canceled anytime on on uh on YouTube, man.
Unfortunately, it kind of kind of sucks.
So it is what it is.
So uh oh, they said the stream is down on YouTube?
That's hilarious.
We haven't even played that much of the video.
And they're already over here like hitting us with the with the thing.
Like see, it's like they knew.
They knew that I was talking about YouTube, and they go ahead and say, Oh, yeah, we're gonna go ahead and take this stream down now.
Fuck it crazy, man.
Crazy, crazy, crazy.
Uh well, don't worry, guys, because the stream's gonna come back up here in a second on YouTube.
This actually, interesting enough, because this has happened to me so many times.
When they suspend the stream, it's because they think that there's some copyright stuff is going on.
So what they do is they they suspend the stream for a bit, and then they turn it back on when they realize that you're not still um streaming that content.
So don't worry about it.
It'll it'll be it'll be back here in a second.
We're gonna probably go ahead and move on over to Rumble because I particular I predicted that this might happen.
Um so yeah, but shout out to Big Mo for handling that.
So don't worry, guys, all those episodes are gonna be back.
But what I just posted in here right now is the episode that we did with Chesperh uh back on when was this dated?
Uh we did this on what day.
This is before we even had a million subscribers, I think.
Oh, June 9th.
Oh no, January 9th.
So January 9th, was it this year?
Maybe January 9th.
No, definitely not January 9th this year.
I think it was January 9th of the year prior.
So yeah.
Um let's see here.
Are we back on oh yeah, we're back up on YouTube.
So yeah.
So yeah, guys, join Castle Club, man.
Like I said before, if you want to rock with us, you really want to support us.
Cast Club.tv is where we're gonna have everything.
We're doing Zoom calls.
Um, we got Viva Freight coming on tomorrow, actually.
You know, shout out to Rumble.
Okay.
Dumb the monk goes hurt your ears.
I'll turn your thing down.
Um I turn it down for you, Ngie.
Thank you.
Um, so yeah, we got Viva Frey coming on.
That's gonna be a good time.
We're gonna talk about uh a couple of things.
We're gonna talk about the Alex Jones situation, we're gonna talk about the Petrodollar, we're gonna talk politics, we're gonna talk um, as you guys know, Turning Point USA uh and AFPAC was this past weekend in Detroit.
Um, so you know it is what it is, uh, which I'll talk about that as well.
Um, and then call on show.
You guys have been asking for the call show.
We will do a call on show again.
Don't worry, guys.
Um, it's just that we've had guests the past like several weeks that we've um that we on our Fridays.
So um, but we will have a call-in show.
Uh we're we're gonna probably make the call-in show, guys, where it's like we're gonna prioritize Castle Club members, uh, talk to them, and then obviously we'll you know let the you know uh people that aren't members of Castle Club come in and make some comments or whatever, or some haters, whatever.
I know a bunch of you guys are probably fucking waiting forever to go ahead and make comments or whatever it may be.
But uh, but yeah.
Okay, so what we'll do is we're already got, let's see here.
We already got how many of you ninjas watching on YouTube?
338.
All right, so this is I'm gonna do, guys.
I got the stream here, right?
Obviously, I got the um the screen share here.
We're gonna continue the documentary over on Rumble because I got graphic photos anyway over there that we're gonna have to show you guys, and we can just say what we want to say and not have to worry about stuff.
So come on over.
I'll be able to be uncensored over there as well.
So we'll talk about you know, AFPAC, TPA, USA, all that other stuff over on Rumble anyway.
So come on over, guys to Rumble, Rumble.com slash Frustray.
I'm also live on Castle Club as well, right now.
Shout out to all you ninjas over in Castle Club.
Let me look in here, see how many you guys are in here.
Uh got a couple of y'all in here.
Yeah, shout out to you guys over at Castle Club.
I love you guys.
You guys are hilarious.
Um I see you guys are giving funny chat comments and stuff like that.
So that's always hilarious.
I'll look at right now.
All right.
So, guys, we're gonna come, we're gonna switch on over to um to um to Rumble right now, guys.
So come on over.
We're gonna stay up on X. Uh I'm gonna end it.
Uh we can stay up on okay, guys.
Twitch, we're gonna we're gonna go, we're gonna go to X and we're gonna go to uh Rumble and locals.
That's it.
Those are the three we're gonna be on.
So guys, come on over.
Um if you're on X watching on X, come on over to Unplug Fit X. I'm gonna turn off the Fresh of Fit X, okay?
So if you're watching on YouTube, X for the Fresh of Fit Pod or Twitch, come on over to either locals, Rumble, or X Unplugged Fit X is my Twitch uh Twitter username, guys.
So come on over right now.
Come on over.
I'm gonna start closing these bad boys down now.
All right.
Uh I'm gonna turn off the YouTube right now.
If you guys are watching on YouTube, this is where we're gonna have to end it, guys.
Come on over to Rumble.
Rumble.com slash FedReacts.
Fed Reacts.
I have a Rumble channel uh called Fed Reacts.
Come on over right now, guys.
Um, if you don't want to move on over, that's fine.
I love you, ninjas.
Don't forget we're gonna be live tomorrow at 7 30 p.m.
Uh with Viva Freight.
We're gonna talk about a bunch of different things.