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Talking Dateline: Down the Rabbit Hole

October 16, 2024 /

This episode covers the 2012 murder of Marianne Murphy in Humble, Texas, featuring discussions on the investigation, lies, and jailhouse phone calls involving Carrie and Rebecca.

Josh Mankiewicz and Keith Morrison discuss the twists in the case, including the initial suspicion of Carrie, who was involved in her mother's murder. They highlight the complexity of the investigation and the various lies that misled detectives.

The conversation touches on the confession of Zane, who initially claimed involvement but was later proven innocent. They analyze the psychological aspects of false confessions and the impact of police interrogation techniques.

Keith shares an extra clip from jailhouse phone calls between Carrie and Rebecca, revealing their mindset during the investigation. The episode emphasizes the emotional fallout from the crime, particularly on Marianne's family.

In the final segment, they answer social media questions, reflecting on the emotional weight of the case and the dynamics within Marianne's family following her murder.

TLDR

The episode discusses the murder of Marianne Murphy, focusing on lies, confessions, and emotional family dynamics.

Episode

19:32
00:00:00
Hi everybody, it's Josh Mankiewicz, and we're talking Dateline today with Keith Morrison.
00:00:10
Very somber looking, Keith Morrison. I'm not somber. I'm perfectly happy. Content to be here. I could be a hundred other places, and here I am.
00:00:19
Perhaps you could supply us with a list of those places later. so this episode is called down the rabbit hole and it is the story of the 2012 murder of marianne
00:00:31
murphy in her home in humble texas and the twists and turns and from what i can discern roughly one
00:00:40
jillion lies that led detectives to her killers now if you have not listened to the broadcast yet
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It is the episode right below this one on the list of podcasts that you just chose from.
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So go there and listen to it. Or if you want to watch it on TV, you can stream it on Peacock and then come back here.
00:01:00
Now, today, Keith has an extra clip that he's going to play for us from the jailhouse phone calls part of this.
00:01:08
Oh, boy, that's a good part. And also, like many other things in this story, very hard to believe.
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and then Keith and I are also going to answer some of your questions about the broadcast from
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social media so stick around for that so let's talk Dateline okay so so let's start at the top
00:01:25
from the beginning watching this I was thinking man I hope like this feels so obviously like it's
00:01:33
going to turn out Carrie killed her mom and lied about everything else and I'm thinking like how
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you can do that for two hours because like I already suspect her in like the first 10 minutes
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You're just a suspicious guy. I am a suspicious guy. Look, another guy confessed to it.
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So why should we think she did it? Before that, I was just thinking like, it's so obviously her, right?
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But then it's just one twist after another and one crazy lie after another. I lost track.
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I didn't even try to count them all because it was one after another after another.
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And, I mean, maybe it's because we've been doing this for such a long time. But I mean, when I see things like the note left in the house and I ran outside because my mom is, you know, being killed and I slip on a piece of paper on the lawn and I pick it up.
00:02:21
Right. The minute I heard that, I'm like, OK, well, she's obviously involved because that is too much storytelling, which is a trap.
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A lot of people end up falling into. You're talking too much. What it seemed to me to be was evidence that more than one person was doing this planning.
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They came up with ideas. And, okay, if that idea doesn't work, then do this. You know, if Zane was not part of this, and he wasn't, right, then Carrie had no way of knowing that he was going to cop to this.
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She must have thought, wow, this is my lucky day. I believe she did think that, yes.
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This guy I lied about is actually going along with the lie. Yeah, go figure, right?
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I mean, he kind of talked himself into the jailhouse. I mean. He did, yeah, he did.
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But his family knew that very day that he couldn't possibly have done it and told the police so and provided proof that he was actually at home playing a video game.
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You try to sort of explain it to the audience, but I still don't get it. Like, why did he lie?
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Why did Zane confess to this? Well, actually, he didn't do it. He knew he didn't do it.
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What was his relationship with Carrie? I mean, was he trying to take the heat off her?
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What was going on? Strangest darn thing. Again, this is all spoilers, right? But Kerry was claiming that Zane was stalking her, that Zane was obsessed with her.
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Zane had no idea what she was talking about. Because it felt from the beginning like the stalking story was something that she set up in advance to be an alibi.
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Yeah, it's all BS. So but they put him in front of a questioner and he denied, denied, denied, denied he had anything to do with this.
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And then they took him into the polygraph machine. And all that is recorded is that he failed the test, failed it miserably.
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But also, interestingly enough, the person who actually committed the crime passed the test.
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So that might tell you something about polygraphy. Well, it does. We don't know how hard he was pushed.
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We do know, however, that when he was picked up and brought in for questioning, it was the task force that picked him up.
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And he was terrified when he was pulled out of the house and taken down to the station.
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But presumably, one of the questions that he was asked was, were you there when Marianne
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was killed? Do you have anything to do with this? Do you have any knowledge of the planning?
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And we've talked about this before. Frequently polygraphs are at their most useful when people refuse to take them because that generally is taken by law enforcement or can be taken as a sort of sign that they hiding something And some of these people willingness to take polygraphs exactly the same thing Like that a good sign
00:04:59
What he was up to, I literally do not understand. I mean, was this a case of police pressing too hard?
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Because sometimes, you know, particularly with kids or people who are not veterans of the criminal justice system,
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false confessions are easier to get. Zane is actually a perfect example of the kind of person who tends to confess falsely.
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He was vulnerable without a doubt. But all indications were that the initial interrogation was not the sort of harsh thing that would lead somebody, even a vulnerable person, to falsely confess.
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And because they had to wait to be sure that they could undo that confession. and this brings up another subject that you know once a person once usually a young person has
00:05:44
confessed to a crime even if the police are aware that that confession is false within hours of it
00:05:50
no no it's like it's like a boulder coming downhill oh absolutely and it takes a long long time and a
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lot of legal bouncing around before finally they can get the confession wiped so many people need
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to hear when they are facing interrogation by police is one, retain legal counsel, and two,
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try not to tell multiple and conflicting stories. Well, those are two very good pieces of advice.
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I will never understand why people feel the need just because they're put in a room surrounded by
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a couple of detectives to answer every question. You say, whoa, I'm pretty scared. I want my
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lawyer here to help me in. Right. So, why, who are you talking to? Who are you blowing a kiss to?
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It was my delightful and charming wife who just brought me a beautiful big cup of tea.
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She's the best. Tell her hello. She is that, yes. I'll do that, yeah. Yeah. Why she puts up with you,
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we literally don't, there aren't enough talking datelines to explain. No, probably not.
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No. I've never understood why, and I've stopped asking because, As long as she's there, that's the main thing.
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Hard to understand. All right. Back to the story. One of the things I thought really worked in this was showing the detective going back to the house at night looking around.
00:07:12
Now, obviously, that was not done at the time of the murder. How did we make that work?
00:07:16
Well, the new family living in the house was happy to help, which is not something you always run into, for sure.
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No, frequently they don't want you there. Yeah, of course. And who can blame them, right?
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They don't want the news spreading around even more than it might already be. And there is a location fee involved, of course.
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But the question remains, why do some people feel comfortable living in a house where such a heinous crime has occurred and other people don't?
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Just an interesting little quirk about human nature. I don't know what the answer is.
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When we come back, we have an extra clip from Rebecca and Carrie's jailhouse phone calls.
00:07:55
some stories are like you know stories that go back centuries this one really was a version
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of a shakespeare play this could be a shakespeare play because it's romeo and juliet with a different
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outcome uh but all the uh all the kind of the side characters and the and the little avenues
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you go down that are false trails the rabbit holes are there and but in a way that they would
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be in a Shakespearean play. It's a tragedy, clearly, but just fascinating to see what the
00:08:30
details were. Human beings don't change all that much over the centuries in some particular ways.
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Were you able to tell exactly when Carrie's relationship with her mother went sort of,
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not just bad, but homicidally bad? I mean, how long before Marianne was killed? I got the distinct impression that it was when Deputy Hooper came over to arrest the girlfriend, Rebecca, and take her downtown and charge her.
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At that point, it was going to be all out war. And the planning began. This is the most shocking part of it all, that a daughter can actually get together with somebody else and plan to commit a crime of that sort.
00:09:14
and then as she admitted at the at the tail end of things something rebecca apparently didn't even
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know is that she was right there watching the whole thing go down clearly there was some agreement
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that i'll do the crime and you don't have to be there but then she did although then she did
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and the other thing about it was that after professing their love to each other hundreds
00:09:38
and hundreds and hundreds of times on this on these phone calls from jail that particular young woman Carrie was quite naive about what law enforcement might in the end do and went on living her life
00:09:51
I mean, she just – the atrocity which would have been committed did not seem to matter a whole lot to her.
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I don't like to – I'm no psychologist, and I don't like to throw around words like sociopath, but she clearly understood the difference between right and wrong.
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but what she was facing she did not seem to understand and it did not seem to bother her at all that she had done that to her own mother.
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They still felt that they could get out of it somehow. Their conversations, their jailhouse conversations,
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which were, I mean, phenomenal. I can only imagine being one of the police officers listening to them,
00:10:27
but they seemed to know enough that they had to cover their tracks most of the time
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and they only leaked occasionally. But of course, the occasional leak is all they need to find out what they need to find out.
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It was that recorded phone call that sort of led prosecutors to think to themselves, okay, this is it.
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We can go ahead now. Yes. They'd been waiting for something just like that. They'd been waiting for that moment when there would be a conscious knowledge of what they had done expressed over the telephone in such a way that they could play that in court.
00:11:02
And the jury would say, oh, yes, I can see now what happened here. and find them guilty.
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They didn't have to go that far in the end. But that's why they were waiting. They were waiting for that for a long time.
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This feels like a good place to listen to the extra sound that we have. This did not make the episode.
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This occurred when Rebecca was locked up and Carrie was out on bond. And there's a couple of pieces of sound here.
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In the first, Carrie's talking about how she protected Rebecca when her mom, when Marianne caught them in the house.
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and in the second they're discussing how prosecutors offer them a deal that they don't want to take
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so let's listen to those like what my mom tried to hurt you when we were in the bathroom
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and she can't like I told you to back up in the corner like I moved you behind me
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and you like you kept trying to push yourself in front of me and I told my mom that she wasn't going to touch you
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remember oh no right before she called the cops I was like, you're not going to touch her
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She's like, oh yeah, you love her? I was like, yeah, I wasn't going to lay a hand on you
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She's going to have to go through me first She helped her take the right hand of you
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Jesus Christ Since we're so young They're trying to offer us so much time To try and make a confession
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Basically saying, okay, well if you make a confession We'll cut your time in half
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So they're trying to play us, but it's not working Oh it's not, because we're a lot smarter
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Than what they think they're that we are yeah a lot smarter than police yeah yeah um the police rely on that you know others thinking that
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they are smarter than the cops yeah you've seen it a ton of times i've seen it a ton of times where
00:12:43
where a good detective will allow him or herself to be seen as kind of a dope it's the colombo approach i guess and it puts people at ease and then they
00:12:52
get the impression that they're the smart one in the room i gotta say it is uh hearing a defendant
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and say, yeah, we're a lot smarter than the cops. On a phone call that the cops are listening to and recording, yeah.
00:13:06
Yeah, I think we know the answer to that. You know, one of the things is kind of a larger thing that came out of this for me
00:13:16
was the sort of the way that lying is perceived now. You know, lying used to be something that was inherently shameful.
00:13:26
You know, like George Washington couldn't tell a lie. right um today people can't tell the difference and it doesn't matter and the not mattering is
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disturbing yeah the people involved in this uh particularly Carrie and Rebecca seem to
00:13:42
like Carrie in particular it doesn't matter like I'll say whatever I want to say if it'll get me
00:13:47
out of it yeah that's right and her brother by the way was very slow to accept that and and it
00:13:54
breaks his heart even to talk about it now I thought he was a great character and I thought
00:13:58
You did a great job with him. And I loved how you could sort of see him evolve along with her stories evolving through the entire episode.
00:14:08
Because, you know, he starts out like, I know her. This could never have happened.
00:14:12
And at the end, he's like, I barely have any contact with her because of what she did.
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And we've covered plenty of family members who will not accept what was proven in court and admitted on wiretaps and testified to.
00:14:26
But he's not one of them. He knows what's out there. It's like a bomb went off in that family.
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And it often the case when a murder occurs It just the whole thing comes apart His father is in an institution His sister is in prison for a very long time
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His mother is dead. He's trying to build a life, but he's the only one left. And he has all that emotional baggage to carry around.
00:14:53
So I fell for that guy a lot. I love the way that you guys ended the episode, which was talking about her.
00:15:01
Like, hey, look, let's be clear on a couple of things. Like those last few minutes of her life, that was not her life.
00:15:08
And, you know, that she had this whole other life and she was a wife and a mom and a daughter and a friend.
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And, you know, one of the things that gets lost sometimes in coverage of murders is who the victim was on all the days that the crime wasn't committed.
00:15:28
and I think that's important because I think that's a bigger part of their life than just
00:15:34
the way they died. Absolutely true. Yeah, that's quite right. After the break, we are going to come back and answer some of your questions from social media.
00:15:48
Okay, on to social media. Very interesting that the first question on social media is from our
00:15:54
friend anxiety fries kim who we love and it's about do you have your big boy pants on she says
00:15:59
i can't think of a worse way to tell your son his mother is dead and i gotta tell you i can't either
00:16:04
um that is not in any parenting notebook uh or a handbook that i'm aware of it did not surprise
00:16:11
um the son though because uh it didn't surprise scott at all that's kind of the way his his dad
00:16:17
would communicate he was an interesting dude a loving man who had trouble expressing it a person
00:16:23
who was happy to be married to Marianne, but had a drinking problem. They'd had some issues in their
00:16:28
marriage, but really deep down, he was happy to be where he was. And as it turned out, not being able
00:16:35
to be where he was, not having his wife anymore was too much for him. He couldn't take it.
00:16:41
I thought when he said, when Scott quoted him as saying, I can fix a lot of things,
00:16:45
but I can't fix this. That was just heartbreaking. It was. Yeah. And on the other side of deploring
00:16:51
his comment about do you have your big boy pants on his bobby g62 says sounds like dad had good
00:16:55
advice that night which is true uh in that sense which was a a torrent of bad news was coming
00:17:02
so i i think i guess the audience had some mixed emotions on that um favorite auntie jen
00:17:08
uh tells us she says i heard one line from the daughter and i started putting my money on her
00:17:13
as the killer no affect emotion no tears in an interview right after your mother is brutally
00:17:17
murdered um she seemed unaware that investigators are going to be looking not just at her words but
00:17:23
everything else about her uh as she tells that story she and deputy hooper would be on the same
00:17:29
page there here's a uh here's an interesting question that came in from instagram it's from
00:17:34
meli meliopola mel meli m-e-l-y-o-p-l-e-a um but uh and said i need to know if Josh and Keith don't get along.
00:17:48
On the podcast, it sounds like playful animosity with an underneath layer of disdain.
00:17:56
I would object to that. Bingo! I would object to that very strongly. It's not an underlying layer of disdain.
00:18:04
It's disdain. It's disdain, yeah. Well, now I'm going to tell a secret. Character will out.
00:18:10
Now I'm going to tell a secret, which is... Oh, boy. Yeah, you're going to hate this.
00:18:14
everybody on Dateline, everybody, camera crews, producers, APs, everybody, everybody loves Keith.
00:18:21
And I'm no different. I do too. Oh, yeah. That's about the nicest thing anybody's ever said to me.
00:18:28
And that is Talking Dateline for this week. Wow. Keith, thank you. Thanks everybody for listening.
00:18:33
Remember, if you have any questions for us about anything on the broadcast, any of our stories or any cases that you think we should cover,
00:18:40
you can reach out to us on social at DatelineNBC. See you Fridays on Dateline on NBC.
00:18:46
And remember to listen to Keith's all-new podcast, which is called The Man in the Black Mask.
00:18:53
Yeah, or Josh, say it correctly. The Man in the Black Mask. Okay, I don't have your voice, okay?
00:19:00
But let me do my best. Try to listen to Keith's new podcast, The Man in the Black Mask.
00:19:09
Well, yeah. Yeah, the first two episodes are available to listen to. usual style.
00:19:14
No, I'm going to go back to that. First two episodes are available to listen to for free wherever you get your podcasts.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 80
    Most shocking
  • 75
    Most heartbreaking
  • 75
    Biggest twist
  • 70
    Most emotional

Episode Highlights

  • Down the Rabbit Hole
    Exploring the twists and turns of Marianne Murphy's murder case.
    “This episode is called down the rabbit hole.”
    @ 00m 23s
    October 16, 2024
  • The Complexity of Lies
    The discussion reveals how lying has changed in society, particularly in criminal cases.
    “Lying used to be something that was inherently shameful.”
    @ 13m 20s
    October 16, 2024
  • The Impact of Murder
    A poignant reflection on the victim's life beyond the crime.
    “Who the victim was on all the days that the crime wasn't committed.”
    @ 15m 28s
    October 16, 2024

Episode Quotes

  • It's so obviously her, right?
    Talking Dateline: Down the Rabbit Hole
  • I mean, he kind of talked himself into the jailhouse.
    Talking Dateline: Down the Rabbit Hole

Key Moments

  • Murder Mystery00:23
  • Unexpected Confessions03:26
  • Family Fallout14:32

Tension Over Time

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown