Presenting Spiral: Murder in Detroit | 1. One of 36 Angels

42m
On October 21, 2023, a young and beloved Detroit community leader, Samantha Woll was found viciously stabbed to death outside her home. Her murder, exactly two weeks after October 7, made international news. To many, it looked like an obvious hate crime – Samantha was the president of the only remaining synagogue in downtown Detroit. But soon the police apprehended a suspect: a young black man named Michael Jackson-Bolanos, who had served time for burglary. He insisted he was innocent, and his trial – filled with shocking twists – ignited a firestorm of questions about antisemitism, race, bias, doubt, and justice. Hosted by The Free Press’s Frannie Block, “Spiral: Murder in Detroit” features exclusive interviews, recalls Samantha’s extraordinary life, and follows a case that spirals into unexpected places in the search for the truth behind one of Detroit’s most haunting modern crimes.

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Runtime: 42m

Transcript

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Speaker 2 I want to tell you about a synagogue, a synagogue in the middle of downtown Detroit.

Speaker 2 The building was built in the 1930s and it has this kind of Art Deco style. It has these striking, brightly colored stained glass windows and it's shaped like a triangle.

Speaker 2 almost like the Flatiron Building in New York City.

Speaker 2 But during fraught times in the 1960s, as race riots upended downtown, the front windows were bricked up for safety, and the colorful stained glass above started to collect dust and grime.

Speaker 2 The Jewish community had slowly moved away, forcing nearby synagogues to shut down their doors, leaving just this one downtown remaining.

Speaker 2 Only a small star of David on the building's bright red double doors and a brass iron sign above it would tell you it even was a synagogue.

Speaker 2 But recently, I mean, just in the last decade or so, a group of people wanted to change that. They found money and a growing community of Jews moving back to the city.

Speaker 2 And slowly, brick by brick, they opened the community back up again.

Speaker 1 Gathering here today celebrates not only the renovation of this beautiful building, but the hope and pride and the ability to be able to gather here today, publicly and proudly, sharing our culture, our history, and our future with our neighbors in this great city.

Speaker 2 That synagogue president, Samantha Wall, in August 2023, at the grand reopening. She's standing in a lectern in front of a crowd of people and she's smiling, wearing a bright blue dress.

Speaker 1 We are a community and a continuity of learning, of praying, of understanding, and of belonging.

Speaker 2 Come, join us.

Speaker 2 The synagogue Sam helped remodel has windows from floor to ceiling, even in the rabbi's office. From the street, you can see right in.
Shabbat is held on the roof deck when the weather's nice.

Speaker 2 And artists from all over Michigan display their work in the community spaces. It's a place where local kids now celebrate their bar and bot mitzvahs.

Speaker 2 And a Jewish day school even held their prom there just last year.

Speaker 4 Where are we now, Frenny?

Speaker 2 We are outside the downtown synagogue, right in the heart of downtown Detroit, basically. I went to the synagogue on a cold December day in 2024 with my producer Poppy Damon.

Speaker 2 The building now bears Sam's name in bold blue lettering, the Samantha Wall Center for Jewish Detroit.

Speaker 5 And it really does make us think of Sam and her multicolored clothes and life.

Speaker 2 Sam Wall had both a big vision for the space and the community and an amazing attention to detail. She wanted to build an elevator to make it accessible for everybody.

Speaker 2 She wanted rows of books, both old and new, traditional and modern, and the Ark, the cabinet where the Torah is held.

Speaker 2 She helped design it so it looked like spokes on a wheel, just like the streets of the city she loved, the streets of Detroit.

Speaker 6 She rode her bike here. She would like wear basketball shorts and tuck her dress into it and then change.

Speaker 2 That's Rachel Rudman, the synagogue's executive director, who used to work with Sam almost every day. This was her city.
It was her city. One she dedicated her life to.

Speaker 6 And she knew so many people. Everybody knew Sam.
She touched so many people from so many different communities.

Speaker 2 This was her home.

Speaker 2 And yet, on October 21st, 2023, she was found murdered here, just minutes away from the synagogue. She was stabbed eight times.

Speaker 7 There is shock and sadness tonight over the violent killing of Samantha Woll, a prominent figure in the Metro Detroit Jewish community who was known for promoting understanding understanding between different faiths.

Speaker 2 And in the murder investigation that followed, it became apparent that in a city full of cameras, it's a case that lives and dies in a three-hour window of mystery that I've spent a year trying to unravel.

Speaker 8 We didn't know how it happened, who did it. We didn't know any of that.

Speaker 9 It doesn't add up.

Speaker 10 It keeps this lingering doubt. It doesn't put the period on the end of the sentence.
We're sitting here with an ellipsis.

Speaker 4 It's pretty surreal that she is effectively the subject of a murder mystery saga.

Speaker 4 It's just heart-wrenching, and all of the details of this are extremely bizarre.

Speaker 2 I'm Franny Block, and from the free press, this is Spiral: Murder in Detroit.

Speaker 2 Episode 1:

Speaker 2 One of 36 Angels.

Speaker 2 It's 6:20 a.m. on October 21st, 2023, and Kevin Moll, a local tech entrepreneur, goes to walk his dog.

Speaker 11 As I went out into the little park that's between my building and the building across, where normally we would walk the dog, I noticed something on the sidewalk at the building directly across from my unit.

Speaker 2 He lives in a townhouse that overlooks a park and a parking lot. The houses face each other and they're very distinctive.

Speaker 2 In fact, they're designed by the famous 20th century architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. They have flat roofs and big windows, so you can kind of see right inside of everyone's homes.

Speaker 2 But on this day, it's rainy, really quite misty, and it's still dark outside. So Kevin can barely see 10 feet in front of him.

Speaker 2 But across the street, he can sort of make out this dark shape that's on the sidewalk.

Speaker 11 I couldn't tell what it was, so as I made my way across the meadow, I eventually realized that it was a person that was lying on the sidewalk.

Speaker 2 A person lying on the sidewalk with their back towards him.

Speaker 11 In what I would describe as a fetal position, and I noticed that right away that the person did not have any shoes on.

Speaker 2 He called out. There was no response.
As he got closer, he leaned down.

Speaker 13 The skin was blue, the feet were blue.

Speaker 11 I touched that part of the body to try to get some kind of reaction and I immediately could tell how cold the body was.

Speaker 2 He noticed a bit of exposed skin on the person's back. And worse still, when he touched the body.

Speaker 11 No reaction.

Speaker 2 So he raced back home and told his wife, Jessica Robinson. And she calls 911.

Speaker 6 My husband was walking our dog. And he told me there is a person,

Speaker 15 potentially a body, laying on the sidewalk.

Speaker 2 He attempted to match the person and they didn't move and they're just blood present.

Speaker 6 And the person's just blowing that.

Speaker 2 A body, blood present. And the person is just laying there.

Speaker 6 Yeah, where's the blood?

Speaker 6 Yeah, Kevin, where is the blood?

Speaker 2 On the sidewalk around the body. On the sidewalk.

Speaker 2 On the sidewalk, around the body.

Speaker 2 We'll go look again as well. Jessica Jessica stepped outside and noticed the victim had on a familiar hair clip and a Maccabees basketball jacket.

Speaker 6 I thought that it was my neighbor Sam Wall.

Speaker 2 Soon, the police arrived.

Speaker 12 My name is Lieutenant Matthew Bray. I work for the Detroit Police Department and I am one of the lieutenants in charge of the homicide task force.

Speaker 2 Lieutenant Matthew Bray, who is now actually Captain Matthew Bray, wasn't called to the scene, but he was managing the detectives who took on the case.

Speaker 2 Tell me about what the blood evidence was telling police.

Speaker 12 The blood evidence clearly shows that the attack, violent attack, occurred inside of the residence based on blood evidence. The blood evidence is what shows where the violence occurred at.

Speaker 2 Though her body was found outside, the police found the door to Sam's house was already open. Inside, they found pools of blood in the hallway.

Speaker 2 There was no blood in the kitchen, from what they could see, but a bowl of fruit was knocked over on the kitchen table. There was no forced entry and and no obvious murder weapon.

Speaker 12 I always tell people that cases are like jigsaw puzzles. Some of them are 2,000 pieces

Speaker 12 and you don't even know what the picture looks like and you're missing 100 of the pieces. And some of them are 10 pieces and they go together very easily.

Speaker 2 Here are some other pieces of the puzzle that quickly came together. Sam had been at a wedding that night.
She came home around 12.30.

Speaker 2 Security footage showed her getting out of her car and walking to her house. Her phone records revealed that she sent a few texts and she opened Netflix.
Her phone then went inactive at 1.35.

Speaker 12 So really, the preservation of evidence is the most important part to the beginning of the investigation because ultimately that's the evidence that we follow to determine who the potential suspect is in that case.

Speaker 2 There are other details about Sam's house that are important to point out.

Speaker 2 On the front window next to the door hung a Black Lives Matter poster and the small image of an Israeli flag and a sign stating Detroit stands with Israel.

Speaker 2 Inside her home, there was an Israeli flag on the wall, which police found completely untouched. And at this point, the police find themselves faced with even more questions.

Speaker 12 So just like any other case, each case follows the evidence.

Speaker 2 Follow the evidence. It's harder than it sounds.

Speaker 2 In the decades after the racial riots of the 1960s, homicide rates in Detroit have been among the highest in the nation, although although these numbers have fallen in recent years.

Speaker 2 Police in Sam's case focused their efforts on the cameras. There's a ton of them in the area around Sam's house.
Many of them are new, put up by homeowners, businesses, and the city itself.

Speaker 2 Over the course of the investigation, Captain Bray told us they issued over 150 search warrants, more than he'd ever seen in a case like this. Officers also spoke to neighbors in the area.

Speaker 2 They hoped someone would have maybe seen or heard something.

Speaker 16 I felt like credible guilt. Just speak the last 24 hours.
Like, I originally would have gone down there,

Speaker 16 but

Speaker 17 I didn't.

Speaker 16 Like, I'm that

Speaker 4 callous.

Speaker 2 That's James Griffun, another of Sam's neighbors. In this video, he's sitting in a cop car near Sam's house.

Speaker 2 He had told police that at between 1.20 and 1.30 in the morning, when he woke up to walk his six-month-old puppy, he thought he heard something.

Speaker 2 The police officer he's speaking to refers to it as a scream. But later, James would say it was maybe just a woman's voice.
He didn't do anything about it at the time.

Speaker 2 And he's telling the cop that obviously he feels terrible.

Speaker 16 Just at this point, like, it didn't sound to me like I'd never heard the word help or anything like that. And I was, I have, having been down here for as long as we have, I felt calloused.

Speaker 16 It's not my problem.

Speaker 2 What exactly James heard becomes important later it's really unclear what it actually was but that timing is significant you see after sam came home from the wedding police believe she laid down on her couch and started using her phone her phone records show she sent a few texts and then she opened netflix her phone goes inactive at 135.

Speaker 2 And then police also pulled data from Sam's ADT home alarm system, which could detect motion in her living room. And the alarm system showed that she opened her back door at 1235 and 1238.

Speaker 2 Then the system went idle, meaning no motion was detected at 1.24 a.m. And that's not long before Sam stopped using her phone.

Speaker 2 It's also around the same time that Sam's neighbor told police he might have heard something.

Speaker 2 The system didn't detect any motion again until 4.20 a.m.

Speaker 2 The motion lasted for no more than two minutes. It's that two minutes where prosecutors will later build their case.

Speaker 2 And that's all the police had to work with. Meanwhile, they still had to find Sam's family and tell them what happened.

Speaker 2 The day Sam died, her mother Margo was in New York with a friend, and her dad Doug was at home. by himself.

Speaker 8 The doorbell rang. There were four policemen

Speaker 10 at the door.

Speaker 8 And the first thing is, they said, are you the father of Samantha Wall? And I knew, I didn't, I knew something awful had happened.

Speaker 8 And it's like you read in the military when an officer comes to your door.

Speaker 15 He had a bad reaction, understandably.

Speaker 2 As you may know, more observant Jews don't use their phones on Saturdays for Shabbat.

Speaker 2 And so Sam's sister, Monica Wall Rosen, her husband Ben, and their three kids were coming back from temple, unaware of what had happened. Here's Monica and Ben.

Speaker 6 We were walking home from synagogue and

Speaker 6 people were coming to our house for lunch.

Speaker 6 And a good friend of mine, who is also friends with my parents and uses his phone on Shabbat, I didn't have my phone with me.

Speaker 6 was driving around the neighborhood looking for me because my dad had texted him, emergency, please find Monica and have her call me right away.

Speaker 2 The friend didn't know what had happened, but he dutifully drove around the neighborhood and found them walking towards their house.

Speaker 6 He said, Monica, come here. He had gotten out of his car a couple blocks further, and I was walking slowly.
And he said, No, Monica, come here, run.

Speaker 6 So I did, and he said, Your dad needs you to call him. So I went upstairs and at this point, what were you thinking?

Speaker 4 We knew somebody had died.

Speaker 16 No, I did.

Speaker 4 It was like, it was a very emergency situation.

Speaker 6 I thought someone was sick and in the hospital. No one just dies.

Speaker 10 This is the worst day of my life. Yeah.

Speaker 15 And I really just couldn't believe it. I just, they say that denial is your first thing, and it's so true.

Speaker 2 The day Sam was murdered in Detroit, her close friend, Andy Einhorn, woke up in New York City to a text from her.

Speaker 18 It was my birthday, Saturday, the 21st, and she had sent a text at 12.01.

Speaker 19 She was the first person and said, wishing you happiest of days.

Speaker 2 I love you.

Speaker 2 Later that day, Andy was at the opera with his husband. They were seeing a performance of Dead Man Walking, which opens with a brutal stabbing scene.

Speaker 2 During the scene, somebody Andy knew from back in Michigan kept texting him, saying, call me.

Speaker 2 At intermission, Andy stepped out of the theater and called his friend.

Speaker 2 And that's when he learned that Sam had been stabbed.

Speaker 19 I just remember falling to the ground because I just couldn't fathom that something this monstrous could happen to somebody like this.

Speaker 2 And so that's what we left the opera and came home. By the time he arrived back at his apartment, there was a package already waiting for him.

Speaker 18 The doorman called and said, you have a delivery.

Speaker 18 And it happened to be flowers that Sam had sent.

Speaker 13 And it was a card signed by her entire family and her friends that I knew and

Speaker 18 there was something so utterly heartbreaking and fragile and vulnerable and almost enraging to know that

Speaker 12 just

Speaker 18 12 hours prior to that she had been living.

Speaker 2 See, that's the type of friend that Sam was.

Speaker 2 The one who'd make sure you had flowers on your birthday.

Speaker 2 I spoke to more than 20 people about Sam. Her family, friends, even just acquaintances.
And that's all they could talk about. About how she was the epitome of goodness.

Speaker 2 Here's Sam's friend Laura.

Speaker 21 My 40th birthday, I told Sam very casually, I said, I'm going to be going up north. I'm going to be in Suttons Bay.
I'm excited to check out a bookstore in Suttons Bay.

Speaker 21 I mentioned to her the name of the bookstore, Bay Books. I said, I'll see you when I get back.

Speaker 21 And on my 40th birthday, I walked into the bookstore

Speaker 21 and a woman behind the counter kept looking over at me and my mom and eventually asked, Are you Laura? I was very startled.

Speaker 21 I said, Yes.

Speaker 21 She said, Happy birthday, and then handed me a gift card and a note that Sam had left for me.

Speaker 21 Sam consistently showed up like this in our friendship, and I was just beyond grateful to have a friend like her.

Speaker 2 I remember the day Sam was killed. I heard about her murder through my mom.
We're Jewish and she's actually also the president of a synagogue, like Sam was.

Speaker 2 My mom told me that when she heard the news, she was too scared to leave the house. So many in the Jewish community who heard about Sam's murder thought the same thing.

Speaker 2 It must have been fueled by anti-Semitism.

Speaker 2 It was just two weeks after October 7th, 2023, and that day and its aftermath changed so much for Jews in America, myself included.

Speaker 2 It wasn't just the day itself when Hamas terrorists stormed southern Israel, slaughtering 1,200 people, mostly innocent civilians, including children and the elderly.

Speaker 2 and taking over 200 people hostage.

Speaker 2 It was the aftermath, too, when hundreds took to the streets of cities like New York.

Speaker 2 But rather than condemn Hamas, these protesters were celebrating the slaughter of Jews, which they justified as legitimate resistance.

Speaker 2 Not everyone in Sam's family thought anti-Semitism led to Sam's murder. But I asked Marco, Sam's mom, What did she think happened to her daughter?

Speaker 15 In my bone of bones, I really feel to hate crime.

Speaker 15 I remember a week after October 7th, I had a conversation with my sisters out of town and saying, I never used to be afraid before of being Jewish, and now I am afraid.

Speaker 15 And it was like a week before Samantha was killed.

Speaker 2 It was around this time that a former leader of Hamas called for a global day of rage, which many of us Jews interpreted was directed at us. I remember this day so clearly.

Speaker 2 I was so scared about what might happen that I actually left New York City.

Speaker 2 I didn't even want to stay at home in my apartment because there was a synagogue on my block and I thought it could become a target. I wasn't alone in that feeling either.
Here's Monica, Sam's sister.

Speaker 6 My kids go to a Jewish day school. They couldn't even have outdoor recess.
the week before because everyone in the whole country was concerned about violence and anti-Semitic attacks.

Speaker 6 And then my sister is killed, the president of a synagogue in Detroit. It made no sense.

Speaker 6 And the way that she was killed with the stabbing, and there's people out there who say you should stab Jews in the neck. And that's what happened to her.

Speaker 2 Sam's murder made international news, and Jewish leaders across the country began to wonder if they were next.

Speaker 2 The fear was even more palpable for Jewish leaders in Detroit, like Rabbi Israel Pinson, the executive director of Chabad of Greater Downtown Detroit, and a friend of Sam's.

Speaker 4 The way I described it to my friends is there is

Speaker 2 people in the world that want me dead.

Speaker 23 If you look at the top five Jewish figures in the city of Detroit at the time,

Speaker 23 Sam was one of them and I was one of them.

Speaker 4 So who knows if this was targeted?

Speaker 23 Maybe they were able to get to her, but I should be on that list too.

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Speaker 17 Hey,

Speaker 2 how are you?

Speaker 2 Thank you so much.

Speaker 5 Shoes off? It doesn't matter.

Speaker 2 Nice to meet you.

Speaker 2 We just wanted to give you a little thank you. Oh, come on.

Speaker 2 Hi, and meeting you. What was the story? Poppy and I flew to Detroit one snowy December day last year to meet the Wall family in person.

Speaker 2 Sam's entire family works in medicine. Her dad, Doug, was a doctor, and her mom, Margo, was a dentist.
They met at Jewish youth group when they were 14 and 15 years old.

Speaker 8 And we got married and now we're here.

Speaker 2 Monica, who's two years younger than Sam, is an OPGYN and her husband Ben works in medical research. Together, they have three kids, Sam's niece and nephews, whom she adored.

Speaker 2 They are a really close family. Sam often slept over at Monica and Ben's home on the weekends, sometimes two or three times a month.

Speaker 6 She would also not want to bother you by saying, hey, can I grab a pair of pajamas? She would rather just sleep over there.

Speaker 26 She would never want to bother anybody.

Speaker 2 At Monica and Ben's house in Ann Arbor, which is about an hour from Detroit, the family quickly started showing us Sam's things.

Speaker 2 There was a bookshelf designated for Sam, filled with books about feminist theory, medieval history, Israel, Palestine, and everything in between.

Speaker 2 And there was her art. Sam was an artistic child, and she continued making art throughout her life, sculptures and paintings.

Speaker 2 She didn't aspire to be a professional, but art was another way for her to bring all of her passions together, including her activism.

Speaker 2 The family showed us this piece she painted of a dove carrying an olive branch in its mouth. I asked Ben, Sam's brother-in-law, about it.
What does stick with love mean or signify?

Speaker 4 I think with the olive tree symbol there, it's like a combination of the Palestinian flag or the Palestinian colors

Speaker 4 with the Israeli flag. So sticking with love and not resorting to hate and violence.

Speaker 2 Her art reflected her personality. It was cheerful, colorful, eclectic.
Every piece features her unique symbol, a signature she repeated again and again.

Speaker 2 It's a spiral, a continuous loop growing from the center. It was painted onto a postcard she'd written her mom when studying abroad in college.

Speaker 2 It was on her high school graduation cap in pink and blue glitter. And it was on a pillow she painted, which now sits in her parents' office at home.

Speaker 2 You couldn't look at a piece of Sam's art and not know it was hers.

Speaker 2 In the early days after Sam's murder, after the police cleared out, the family were left with the awful task of going through her home, giving away her clothes and her books.

Speaker 2 And they discovered the basement was full of her art pieces, ones they'd never even known about when she was alive.

Speaker 2 They did all of this as they waited for news from the police. And that question of whether or not this was a hate crime hung thick in the air.

Speaker 2 But it didn't take long for the cops to rule this motive out.

Speaker 16 I want to offer my sincere condolences to the family, friends, and loved ones of Samantha Wohl.

Speaker 2 This is James White, then the chief of the Detroit Police Department.

Speaker 2 Me speaking at a press conference two days after Sam's murder. He's saying that investigators have all but ruled out the possibility of a hate crime.

Speaker 16 We believe that there are no other groups or anyone else at risk in regards to this particular incident.

Speaker 16 We believe that this incident was not motivated by anti-Semitism and that this suspect acted alone.

Speaker 2 We asked the current police captain, Matthew Bray, about this moment. One thing that a lot of people noted was that the police ruled out very quickly that this crime was a hate crime.

Speaker 2 Can you tell me how police ruled that out and why they ruled that out?

Speaker 12 Then Chief James White's statement to the news.

Speaker 12 I don't think his statement ruled it out. I think his statement provided strong evidence that we didn't believe that to be the case.

Speaker 2 Bray said it didn't have the hallmarks of a hate crime.

Speaker 12 Ms. Wool had a Jewish flag in her house.

Speaker 12 The flag was not damaged in any way.

Speaker 2 It wasn't ripped off the wall.

Speaker 12 It wasn't burned. It wasn't torn.
It wasn't cut. There's not one piece of information that demonstrates that this would be any sort of hate crime.

Speaker 12 The timing obviously does cause people concern, but there's not anything in the investigation that has led us to that conclusion.

Speaker 2 But it's not like police had any explanation for what actually happened to Sam that night.

Speaker 2 As far as anyone knew, they had no definite suspects, no murder weapon, no clear motive, no answers for Sam's grieving family and friends. Here's Sam's dad, Doug.

Speaker 8 The question was, what happened? We didn't know what happened. We knew she had been killed.
We didn't know how it happened, who did it. We didn't know any of that then.

Speaker 15 I would look at everybody and say, could you have done it? Could you have done it? Could you have done it? I mean, it's a terrible thing, but just

Speaker 15 didn't know.

Speaker 27 The Detroit community is gathering for Samantha Wool's funeral, which starts momentarily.

Speaker 27 Wool was the president of a Detroit synagogue who was found stabbed to death outside of her home yesterday morning. Police still working to determine the motive and suspects in the killing.

Speaker 27 Wool had a strong connection to Detroit's Jewish and political communities.

Speaker 2 In the Jewish tradition, burial should take place within 24 hours of death, and parts of the soul can continue its journey. For a murder victim in a bureaucratic world though, that isn't so easy.

Speaker 2 But Sam had the gift of knowing, well, almost everyone.

Speaker 2 This ability to connect meant that she could be buried on time.

Speaker 15 And it so happens she knew the medical examiner, somebody she went to school with, and he says, I can be the identifier. I know that, I know Samantha.

Speaker 2 I know.

Speaker 2 Sam's family would later be criticized for rushing the autopsy, but they told us that, of course, they let officials do what they needed to do.

Speaker 2 By Sunday, thousands of people attended Sam's funeral or live streamed it, a testament to the impact she had. Here's Ben and Monica again.

Speaker 4 The funeral was

Speaker 9 unbelievable.

Speaker 26 There were thousands and thousands of people.

Speaker 2 There was an overflow room.

Speaker 6 Watching on a TV, they said the funeral home has said they've never had that many people for a funeral ever before.

Speaker 27 The many who loved her are gathering at the Hebrew Memorial Chapel in Oak Park.

Speaker 6 We'll take you to the live stream.

Speaker 28 Exalted, compassionate God, grant infinite rest in your sheltering presence among the holy and pure.

Speaker 29 We have in this room Muslims and Hindus,

Speaker 29 Catholics, and Christians and Jews and all kinds of races and everyone

Speaker 29 loved Sam and was affirmed by Sam.

Speaker 2 When Sam was alive, she worked on election campaigns, helping progressive politicians make their way to the Michigan State House.

Speaker 2 She even worked as a staffer for then Congresswoman, now Senator Alyssa Slotkin. At Sam's funeral, a number of her colleagues and former bosses spoke.

Speaker 2 including Dana Nessel, the Michigan State Attorney General. And Sam was honored in the halls of Congress.
Here's Alyssa Slotkin when she was a Congresswoman.

Speaker 30 It is important to me, as I know it is to my colleagues who knew her directly, that we honor the way Sam lived.

Speaker 30 From working in my very first congressional office to serving as the president of her synagogue in Detroit, Sam had profound faith, not just as a Jewish woman, but an abiding faith in humanity and a passion for interfaith relations, something that right now is more than ever important to our country.

Speaker 2 Sam was a progressive through and through, and she was also a Zionist, someone who believed in Israel's right to exist. This is Monica and Margot.

Speaker 6 She was very pro-Israel, even though oftentimes the circles she would run in were not,

Speaker 6 which was very difficult for her at times, especially after October 7th.

Speaker 15 She was extremely disappointed at the reaction of the

Speaker 15 pogrom that happened October 7th in Israel and this inverse morality of blaming the victim. And some of these were her friends where she did marches and

Speaker 15 meetings and protests with, and she couldn't understand how they thought this way. And

Speaker 15 she did. She would call me and say, Mom, I just can't believe it.
She was very disappointed. And then, of course, her death two weeks later to the day,

Speaker 15 it's

Speaker 15 very sad.

Speaker 4 She would find a common ground, even with people that were completely against everything that she stands for. She would find a common ground.

Speaker 2 This is Monica's husband, Ben.

Speaker 4 There were people at her funeral who, you know, would probably say that October 7th was justified and a good thing. And she would be friends with that person and she would figure out, you know,

Speaker 4 let's talk and let's figure out what the, you know, what the bottom lines are here that we can agree on.

Speaker 2 That unusual space which Sam inhabited helped her do something very few people can. Reach across the aisle and bring truly opposing views together.
But did it also make her a target?

Speaker 2 Was it political and not religious reasons that had led Sam to be killed? Maybe, but Sam was a peace builder.

Speaker 2 From the floors of Congress, here's Rashida Tlib, the Palestinian American representative from Michigan, who's become known for her anti-Israel rhetoric. Even she considered Sam a really good friend.

Speaker 14 She was a friend of mine, and my friend, our mutual friend Dan, reminded me how she showed up with that beautiful, sweet smile and the warmest eyes that greet you to my swearing-in ceremony and how she embraced him in a hug,

Speaker 14 saying she was so happy that he showed up and how important it was. That's who she was.
She showed up for others always.

Speaker 2 We spoke to friends of Sam's from her time at the University of Michigan, where she was a history major, an activist, a member of women's groups, and sometimes a bit of a rebel.

Speaker 2 Her friend, Jenny Nathan Simino, told us about how Sam used to smoke cigarettes, but she did so in a distinctly Sam way.

Speaker 31 She was very environmentally conscious, so she always had an ashtray in her van. And if she was walking and smoking a cigarette, she would put the butt in the cuff of her jeans.

Speaker 31 And then when she got to wherever she was going, then she would throw them away.

Speaker 2 And Sam even promoted Israel on campus with a a cheeky stunt involving branded condoms.

Speaker 31 For her, having a pro-Israel presence in a progressive event was very important. And she decided that she would get condoms printed with the Israeli flag on them.
And the condoms said,

Speaker 31 Israel, it's still safe to come.

Speaker 2 She graduated and carried on her work in advocacy and campaigning for the Democratic Party.

Speaker 2 But despite how beloved she was by everyone who knew her, Sam, like all of us, struggled with her own insecurities.

Speaker 2 For one, she always wanted a family of her own, something her friends told us weighed on her.

Speaker 2 And she often questioned whether she was good enough, especially in her career.

Speaker 8 Samantha was always bothered by the fact she did not have anything beyond a bachelor's degree, that she did not have a master's degree or a PhD or hadn't gone to law school.

Speaker 2 And her parents are struck by just how many posthumous awards she's received since she was killed.

Speaker 8 She's gotten more accolades and respect than you can possibly imagine, even if she had 10 degrees. I used to tell her, well, you know, Bill Gates doesn't have an advanced degree.

Speaker 2 She felt very self-conscious about that.

Speaker 8 Unfortunately, it's come to the realization that I was proven right, but

Speaker 15 in a

Speaker 19 sad kind of way.

Speaker 2 But just before her death, it felt like everything was finally coming together for Sam.

Speaker 2 In June, 2023, she turned 40 years old, which she celebrated with a big party with all of her closest family and friends.

Speaker 2 And that August, the synagogue had reopened after nearly three years and $6 million in renovations that Sam had spearheaded.

Speaker 15 She started volunteering in college, and I remember she worked on Hillary's campaign and Obama's campaign.

Speaker 6 It was just something deep inside of her that was just who she was. This is what she wanted to do from a young age.
This is what she was passionate about.

Speaker 2 In fact,

Speaker 6 the day before she was killed, she had just gotten a job, a really good job.

Speaker 2 The day before her death, Sam had just landed her dream job, a full-time offer from a political strategy firm in Michigan to run campaigns across the state.

Speaker 6 And she was so excited and told us about it.

Speaker 2 And then this happened.

Speaker 2 All to say, Sam's life was cut short when she was on the cusp of realizing many of her dreams, of seeing all of her hard work finally come to fruition.

Speaker 2 In the end, though, it wasn't Sam's accomplishments that people told us made her special. Here's her friend Andy again.

Speaker 10 I think she was an angel that walked among us because I do think there are people who genuinely only know how to do good.

Speaker 2 But those who loved Sam don't see her just as an angel in a metaphorical sense. Here's her brother-in-law, Ben Rosen.

Speaker 4 There's like a concept that there are 36 angels at any given time, and I truly believe she was one of those people.

Speaker 2 That's what made all of this all the more confusing. Who would want to hurt Samantha Wall?

Speaker 9 Sam wasn't a cutthroat divorce attorney. Sam didn't have a long list of enemies.

Speaker 2 Sam's friend, Paul Spurgeon.

Speaker 9 I was willing to help the police in any way I could, but there wasn't anything that I could tell them that would help figure this situation out.

Speaker 2 You had no idea who would have the motivation to kill Sam Wall.

Speaker 4 Nope. Nothing.

Speaker 2 And her friend, Andrew Yaakand.

Speaker 13 My mind did not go to some sort of targeted attack.

Speaker 13 I also think that it's a little bit strange to say, but Sam would have been the one building bridges amongst the opposition when it came to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Speaker 13 And Sam was beloved even by those who could not stand her political views. And so I think having known that, having seen that, I just didn't think that's what it was.

Speaker 2 So with no obvious enemies, her family started to look at her trusting nature as a potential clue.

Speaker 2 One time, when Sam was in college, She traveled to Israel with a friend. This was during the Second Intifada, a time of major instability in Israel and tension in the region.

Speaker 2 There were real threats of terrorism, like suicide bombings.

Speaker 2 But that didn't deter Sam. Without telling her parents, she and her friend visited the West Bank.

Speaker 2 Her parents only found out after the fact, when Sam published a story of her travels in the University of Michigan School paper.

Speaker 15 I always knew she didn't have much of a fear factor. She had a lot of trust in humanity.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 15 I don't think careless is the word. I think she just,

Speaker 15 I don't know if she had such strong faith. I don't, I try to think of how she got this, but she did not have fear of things.

Speaker 15 And she thought Dan was a worrywart.

Speaker 2 But I think,

Speaker 15 yeah, and I think you're more realistic, but she just

Speaker 2 didn't.

Speaker 2 And living fearlessly wasn't just about her travel exploits. Though she lived in downtown Detroit, the night she was murdered, Sam actually left her front door open.

Speaker 2 Police confirmed that by looking at her ADT alarm system.

Speaker 2 And none of her friends and family seemed particularly surprised by that fact. Sam, come on, just like this.
Like, that was so sad. Like, I'm not surprised that happened, right?

Speaker 2 This is her friend, Shira Heisler. talking about the open door.

Speaker 21 It's not like she's irresponsible, but she's just like living in her own world and like

Speaker 2 really assuming the best of everybody. And so that's like the irony that this happened to the most like trusting person isn't lost on us.

Speaker 2 So knowing all that,

Speaker 2 the obvious next question might be, did someone wander into Sam's house that night? A burglar, perhaps. who saw their chance to steal something and was surprised to find Sam asleep on the couch.

Speaker 2 Was Sam one of the rare victims killed by a total stranger? It's a theory police had to grapple with, especially once they got back security camera footage.

Speaker 2 In it, they see a figure with a backpack wearing all black, running not far from Sam's house just after 4:20 a.m. when the last motion was detected in her home.

Speaker 2 This has got to be a suspect, or the suspect, right?

Speaker 2 Well, as I was about to learn, nothing in this investigation is quite that simple.

Speaker 2 I mean, it's a lot of bad luck.

Speaker 10 It is. I mean, it is like a movie.

Speaker 32 There is some reason that they want to sink their claws so deeply into someone who is so blatantly innocent.

Speaker 2 I guess I can't say for sure who did it, but I can for sure tell you who didn't do it. That's next time on Spiral: Murder in Detroit by the free press.

Speaker 2 Episode 2 is already available, but if you want to binge the whole series right now and with reduced ads, subscribe to the free press at thefp.com.

Speaker 2 Otherwise, join us every Tuesday for a new episode, wherever you get your podcasts. And if you enjoy this reporting, please leave us a nice review and help spread the word about this show.

Speaker 2 You'll also find more photos of Sam and bonus material on our website, so go to thefp.com for more.

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