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Talking Dateline: The Watcher

January 08, 2025 /

This episode covers the case of Lauren Giddings, her disappearance in 2011, and the subsequent murder investigation that revealed her neighbor as the killer. The discussion includes the details of the crime, the legal implications, and the latest developments in the case.

Josh Mankiewicz and Keith Morrison discuss how Lauren Giddings, a Georgia law student, vanished, leading investigators to discover dismembered remains in her apartment. They highlight the odd circumstances surrounding the case, including the killer's reaction when the body was found.

The conversation touches on Lauren's aspirations to be a defense attorney and the irony of her situation. Keith and Josh reflect on the nature of crime and the importance of being aware of one's surroundings.

They also discuss the killer's attempts to appeal his conviction, revealing shocking details shared by his defense attorney during the appeal process. The episode emphasizes the complexities of the legal system and the psychological aspects of the crime.

Finally, they address social media questions about Lauren's dog and the community's reaction to the case, providing a broader context to the tragic events.

TLDR

Lauren Giddings' murder case reveals chilling details about her neighbor, who pleaded guilty but later attempted to appeal his conviction.

Episode

19:13
00:00:00
Hi, everybody. It's Josh Mankiewicz, and we're talking Dateline. Today, we're talking about
00:00:09
an episode called The Watcher, and we're here with the correspondent who is, let me see,
00:00:15
I have that here somewhere. Oh, it's Keith. Yeah, hi, Keith. You know, that's a good title, don't you think?
00:00:22
It is a good title, although one could argue that it gives it away, because there were points
00:00:29
in this where I thought like, oh yeah, it's called The Watcher. So yeah. Which means there's somebody else watching.
00:00:34
Yeah, that's true. It's true. This is a very good episode, I thought. Now, if you have not seen it, this is the episode right below this one on your Dateline
00:00:43
podcast feed. So go there, listen to it, or you could stream it on Peacock and then come back here.
00:00:49
So just to recap, in 2011, Georgia law student Lauren Giddings vanished. Investigators were pretty certain that this wasn't an ordinary missing persons case.
00:00:58
And then in what really amounted to some very lucky happenstance, investigators found some dismembered remains at Lauren's apartment.
00:01:07
And then they they knew what had happened. What they did not know was who had committed that crime.
00:01:12
And it turned out that someone who was the watcher, her next door neighbor, had actually done it.
00:01:19
Now, for this talking dateline, we have the very latest developments in this case, because the man who ended up pleading guilty to the murder of Lauren Giddings tried to appeal his conviction.
00:01:27
one of his defense attorneys revealed some significant details of the murder that his
00:01:33
client may not have wanted to make public. So let's talk Dateline. The sense that I get from Lauren Giddings is that she was a lot of fun.
00:01:43
She was really smart. She was really interesting. And she was, you know, maybe the glue that held all her friends together.
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They all seem to sort of coalesce around her. Yeah, you've got it right. She was that person.
00:01:55
She certainly struck me as being a very smart woman. Additionally, she felt she had a calling.
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And that was one of the ironies of this of this story. Her goal in life was to be a defense attorney who would represent the very kind of person who wound up killing her.
00:02:15
Right. And ironically, again, her professor who was teaching her the techniques of representing such people went ahead and represented him.
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And the feeling among her friends and compatriots at law school was, had she survived this attack somehow, she would probably have defended them anyway.
00:02:36
She was just that kind of person. I think that's probably unusual as people who come out of law school wanting to work for the PD's office.
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I mean, some people want to do defense work, but wanting to work for, you know, essentially people who can't afford lawyers is something else.
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Yeah, it's a rare thing, and it doesn't pay a lot compared to other kinds of legal work.
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No, and it's underfunded, and you don't have – every time you go to court, there's a – the deck is very heavily stacked in favor of the prosecution because they have the police department.
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And you have maybe an investigator who's working on a bunch of different cases. You're starting off behind the eight ball a lot of the time, and you're juggling a bazillion cases.
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So you have to really want to do it. Some of the loveliest people I know do that kind of work.
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They tilted windmills their whole lives and don't make very much money for it. Anyway, that's one of the aspects of this story that appealed to me.
00:03:33
And there's also a MacGuffin in it in the sense that they probably wouldn't have discovered so easily what happened or at least gotten on the right trail to find out what happened had it not been for the fact that it was in Macon, Georgia, and it was hot as hell that day.
00:03:47
the torso was is creating an odor yeah and and like literally like if the trash had been picked
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up a day sooner if the police had gotten there three hours later you know yeah the trash truck
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was on the way i mean it was uh and i think that the probably the killer had had expected and planned
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for that trash truck to be there before there was any hoo-ha about what happened and that moment in
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the story that really stuck out to me it's this guy is he's a terrible terrible person uh but but
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also not terribly bright and when he is confronted with the the recognition that somebody announces
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that they have found the body and his reaction to that it's it's in the middle of that tv interview
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now yes you've got to be prepared if you're the killer or you would think you'd be prepared
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for right you know when you're told that she is dead because you're the only person that knows
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that she is dead at that point. So when somebody says, hey we found her and she no longer with us you should be I can believe it That the worst news But instead he he like wait they found the body body He says yeah that was
00:04:55
Yeah, that's not the way you laugh. But I mean, that was. No, but I mean, it's astonishingly telling is what it is.
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Yeah. So the other thing besides the hot day, as they're looking around, they found those.
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He had insisted that he was a celibate guy. He was waiting for marriage, and then they found those condoms.
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And he was so determined to retain the idea that he wasn't, you know, messing around, and therefore he couldn't have attacked her and had sex with her.
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So why do you have the condoms? And he, rather than, you know, give up his story, he then confesses that he stole them from a neighbor.
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Which allows them to arrest him. To arrest him and hold him. Well, they continue their investigation.
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Because there certainly wasn't enough to arrest him for her murder at that point.
00:05:38
Right, exactly. So he talked himself right into the jailhouse. I think one of the lessons here is you never really know who's living next door.
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Right. I mean, I know my neighbors to say hello to. I certainly, you know. Sure.
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You know, beyond that, I couldn't tell you much. And you've lived there for quite a while.
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I have. I have. And I don't think anybody's spying on me. I think most people who get spied on don't think anyone's spying on them.
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What's interesting, you know, something we talk about all the time here is how you need to listen to your instincts.
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And she had this sense that somebody was stalking her, following her, something was up.
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She did. And, you know, her friends just kind of chalked that up to, well, you know, men are always interested in her.
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You know, this is probably not a big deal. So, yeah. And it's one of the things that women have to put up with a lot is having, you know, men look at them whenever they possibly can, including, you know, some creep peeping in the window once in a while.
00:06:41
Now, let me ask you this. I don't know the answer to this. That video that they come up with that closes the case, essentially, that is taken obviously by him looking in her window.
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She's not in that video, right? You don't ever actually see her. You don't ever actually see her, but you see him attempting to see her.
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You see his activities outside her window. It's clearly her apartment that he's looking into through the blinds, but he doesn't actually get any video of her, at least not that they recovered.
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That's right. But, you know, his whole setup was exposed by that. Would they have got a conviction without it?
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I suspect they might have, but that certainly sealed the deal. Steve McDaniel pleaded guilty, but years after confessing the crime, he made a bunch of attempts to appeal his conviction.
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When we get back, the details revealed during his appeals and the surprising person who reveals them.
00:07:41
A couple interesting things in this story, particularly from a storytelling point of view, that I thought you did very well, as you always do.
00:07:50
one was uh uh you just sort of barely mentioned the neighbor like he was we wanted to help and
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he had some thoughtful things he's mentioned that there's a neighbor who wants to help
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but then clearly you've got it down to joe the ex-boyfriend uh and uh and david yeah and then
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david the current boyfriend right uh and so you're thinking if you're the audience okay it's one of
00:08:16
then and then you throw in the maintenance man and i'm like okay well that's clearly who it is
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like it's nearly probably the maintenance guy it's neither joe nor it's the maintenance man
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obviously and then it turns out of course it's somebody else entirely and so from a dateline
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storytelling point of view i thought that was great well that's very kind of you to say josh
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thank you when we're telling these stories when we're writing them is we have to do the storytelling
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in a way that it's not obvious from the get-go what happened, but we also have to stay completely faithful to the truth.
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Like, we're not going to say, you know, the maintenance man was a suspect if he wasn't a suspect.
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Exactly. We're not going to say the cops were looking at Joe and they were looking at David if they weren't, but they were.
00:09:02
Yeah, which brings up another little piece of advice for people who may be listening to this,
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which is if you're – pay careful attention to whether you're watching a program that is journalistically sound
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and you tell all the facts as best you possibly can. But then there's a scripted series that comes along that takes a point of view
00:09:22
and therefore will fudge on certain details and will reduce the effect of some things
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and increase the effect of some other things. In other words they manufacturing the story out of raw material which may be true in the first place but stops being true as you telling it Anyway this character reminds me of a lot of other people who done stories about
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He is the boogeyman. And boogeyman exists. They're very, very rare, but they do exist and they get all the attention.
00:09:51
And I mean, usually, almost always, the person who ends up being the culprit is the Joe of
00:09:59
the story or the David of the story. Well, yeah, it's almost never the random guy who was not on police radar.
00:10:06
But sometimes it is. Those random psychopathic killers are very, very unusual. So sometimes I think I worry that we might put a little too much fear into an audience that there are those kind of people out there in numbers and they're targeting and watching and, you know.
00:10:26
Yeah. I mean, look, look, I mean, I'm going to say upwards of 90 percent of Dateline.
00:10:31
stories involve some sort of relationship between the killer. Of course. They're not they're not unknown to each other.
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And I think that probably mirrors to some degree the statistics and murder. I mean, the person who leaps out of the bushes and attacks someone and rapes them, that's
00:10:52
the that's the least common kind of rape. That's right. Always. It's somebody that the victim knows.
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That's overwhelmingly likely. But that's sort of not widely known. And so people fear one maybe more than they should and fear the other maybe less than they should.
00:11:10
Exactly the point. Yeah. So since this happened, Steve McDaniel has tried to appeal his case in Georgia State courts.
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Yes, and to interject only slightly, he tried to appeal the case even though he pleaded guilty to what he did.
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Which usually means you give up any right to appeal. That's what a guilty person does.
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Generally speaking, yeah. Yeah. But he, in 2018, he claimed his constitutional rights were violated, asked for a new trial.
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He represented himself. He called one of his own defense attorneys as a witness in his case.
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Not the right move. No. No. No. That backfired because to do that, to call your attorney to testify in your appeal, he had to waive attorney-client privilege.
00:11:57
Sure. Which means the attorney can now say anything that the defendant said to him during a time when that was privileged.
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And that attorney undoubtedly had stored all this stuff up for a long time, thinking he'd never be able to tell anybody until that opportunity came along.
00:12:13
What Stephen McDaniel's defense attorney, Floyd Buford, said when he could speak freely about what his client had shared with him, in other words, outside lawyer-client privilege, well, it's like something out of a horror movie.
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He testified that McDaniel had admitted to decapitating Lauren, cutting her fingers off and flushing them down the toilet.
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Really awful stuff. And he also said that McDaniel possessed some of the worst child porn that the attorney had ever seen.
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This normally would have been protected by privilege, but in this case it wasn't.
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And it's not what you want your defense attorney revealing in court. That appeal didn't go anywhere.
00:12:52
Well, yes. I guess he has a possibility after 30 years of getting out, but seems unlikely somehow.
00:13:00
So coming up next, your questions from social media. Let's take your questions from social media.
00:13:14
Good idea. So a lot of people wrote to us saying that they lived in Macon at the time.
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They remember the coverage of this case. I will say this. I had not been before doing this story.
00:13:24
I had not been to Macon, Georgia before. And what a lovely place it is. That's great.
00:13:30
It has a history. I realize it is complicated. But it is, my gosh, some of those wonderful homes and the atmosphere is really quite delightful.
00:13:41
Well, that's nice. Yeah. Just thought I'd add that. I like going places like that.
00:13:45
I used to live in Atlanta. This was like 40 years ago. So I was in Macon and other parts of Georgia back then.
00:13:52
A lot. You know, you loved Macon when you were there. Did people love you back? Were they nice to you?
00:14:02
They were very nice to me, yes, absolutely. But, you know, come on, a TV guy. Right.
00:14:09
People are not going to be mean, I don't think. No. A lot of questions about Lauren's dog.
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What became of Lauren's dog? Everybody wants to know. Well, it's an important thing.
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You know the dog was part of her persona It was part of her life And dogs I don know if you know this josh yeah but dogs are important to a lot of people dogs are very important to a lot of people and in
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nearly every dateline episode that i've done that involves a dog there are social media questions
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about what happened to the dog of course of course and in this case the dog was um you know went to
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live with lauren's family right and if it had been there that night it might have uh might have woken
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her up. Well, it might have because, right, she left the dog with him, given the fact that they were writing their bar exams
00:14:55
and a lot going on. Another piece of bad luck. On the other hand, it may also have been that he waited
00:15:01
until the dog wasn't there anymore. That's also possible. Gail Brown Salvo on Facebook. Keith and I are on Facebook
00:15:09
all the time. She says that this was such a sad story. So strange that the man who did this had a promising law
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career ahead of him and would end up destroying his life and the lives of this woman and her family, which is all true.
00:15:22
I will say that in most cases, I don't see people who end up being the killers sort of thinking about the ramifications of what happens.
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You know, I'm going to get caught. I'm going to, you know, end up in prison. My family will be ashamed of me.
00:15:36
I'll impoverish them because they had to hire an attorney. You know, I'll wreck somebody else's family's life.
00:15:46
by taking away this person. Right. I gather the desire to kill, to get sexual pleasure from killing a woman
00:15:56
or a man, but generally speaking, a woman, is so powerful. It's the only emotion that these folks can feel.
00:16:05
They don't feel any compassion for a human being. No. I mean, that guy presumably went into law for some reason.
00:16:11
Like he thought, you know, he could help people or he could help himself or he could help his family.
00:16:16
And, you know, he's going to be locked up or he would know, you know, or he would know how the system works so that he could dodge it.
00:16:22
It's right. So he can get away with it. Yeah. I'm reminded of Brian Koberger in Idaho facing those charges there.
00:16:29
And of course, he's still facing charges. He hasn't been convicted of anything yet.
00:16:33
But he, you know, attempted to join a police force because he was kind of interested to see how the police would work.
00:16:39
He he wanted to be a lawyer. Yeah, it's I must say, I have only followed that case by watching your stories.
00:16:46
But that is a weird story. And that's the kind of thing we were talking about earlier in which this is not a traditional dateline defendant in which they're involved with or close friends with, you know, or married to somebody in the case.
00:17:01
And they stand out because they're so unusual, so rare. You know, I remember them.
00:17:05
You remember them. We all remember them. I do. Because they are monsters. And the monster, I'm not saying Brian Koberger is a monster.
00:17:13
We don't know yet. He's not been convicted of anything. But the people who do these things are monsters, and so they kind of fit into the template of the scary story we tell ourselves at night before we go to bed.
00:17:26
Well, that's a happy thought to go out on. Yes, exactly. Thanks, Keith. However, I spend my time thinking about you, Josh, and then I drift off to sleep happily.
00:17:36
Oh, that's nice. That's a sweet thought. Yeah. Just for the audience's benefit, none of that was true.
00:17:44
Keith, Happy New Year. Happy New Year to you, too, Josh. And one more thing. Yeah.
00:17:51
I have a new podcast out called Deadly Mirage. You know, I heard that. It's called Deadly Mirage or something?
00:17:58
Deadly Mirage. We called it Deadly Mirage because the other, like, seven or eight titles that we thought of were all taken.
00:18:05
My choice was Keith Wasn't Interested, but that apparently was also taken. But anyway, it's called Deadly Mirage.
00:18:13
And it's going to run on Dateline as a TV episode Friday at 9 o'clock Eastern. That's sort of a clever idea.
00:18:21
If you've been listening to this podcast, you can now watch the TV program and you'll see what all these people look like.
00:18:27
Oh, just to see what the places look like. Anyway, so Deadly Mirage, that's this Friday on Dateline.
00:18:36
And the year's pretty good, Josh. So congratulations on that. Thank you very much.
00:18:39
One more thing for Dateline Premium subscribers, we have a new After the Verdict that will be available on January 9th.
00:18:47
If you have any questions for us about our stories or about Dateline, you can reach us on social media at DatelineNBC.
00:18:56
See you Fridays on Dateline on NBC. Thank you.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 80
    Most shocking
  • 75
    Most heartbreaking
  • 75
    Most surprising
  • 70
    Most dramatic

Episode Highlights

  • The Watcher Episode Overview
    A deep dive into the chilling case of Lauren Giddings and her neighbor's dark secret.
    “Investigators found some dismembered remains at Lauren's apartment.”
    @ 00m 58s
    January 08, 2025
  • Lauren Giddings' Aspirations
    Lauren aimed to be a defense attorney, ironically representing those like her killer.
    “Her goal in life was to be a defense attorney who would represent the very kind of person who wound up killing her.”
    @ 02m 06s
    January 08, 2025
  • The Killer's Mistake
    The killer's reaction to the discovery of the body reveals his guilt and ignorance.
    “It's astonishingly telling.”
    @ 04m 55s
    January 08, 2025
  • The Appeal Attempt
    Steve McDaniel's failed appeal reveals shocking details about the murder he confessed to.
    “He testified that McDaniel had admitted to decapitating Lauren.”
    @ 12m 25s
    January 08, 2025
  • New Podcast Announcement
    Josh and Keith discuss the launch of a new podcast titled 'Deadly Mirage'.
    “It's called Deadly Mirage.”
    @ 17m 58s
    January 08, 2025

Episode Quotes

  • It's astonishingly telling.
    Talking Dateline: The Watcher
  • You never really know who's living next door.
    Talking Dateline: The Watcher
  • Dogs are very important to a lot of people.
    Talking Dateline: The Watcher
  • I gather the desire to kill is so powerful.
    Talking Dateline: The Watcher
  • The monster... are monsters, and they fit into the template of the scary story.
    Talking Dateline: The Watcher

Key Moments

  • The Watcher00:09
  • Lauren's Disappearance00:49
  • Killer's Reaction04:55
  • Failed Appeal11:18
  • New Podcast17:58

Tension Over Time

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown