The Alabama Murders - Part 2: Coon Dog Cemetery Road
Florence, Alabama. 1988. After a horrifying murder takes place, an anonymous caller names three young men as suspects. But speculation swirls about the victim’s husband.
Get early, ad-free access to the full season of The Alabama Murders by subscribing to Pushkin+ on Apple Podcasts or Pushkin.fm. Pushkin+ subscribers can access ad-free episodes, full audiobooks, exclusive binges, and bonus content for all Pushkin shows.
Subscribe on Apple: apple.co/pushkin
Subscribe on Pushkin: pushkin.com/plus
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Listen and follow along
Transcript
This is an iHeart podcast.
In today's super competitive business environment, the edge goes to those who push harder, move faster, and level up every tool in their arsenal.
T-Mobile knows all about that.
They're now the best network, according to the experts at OoCla Speed Test, and they're using that network to launch Supermobile, the first and only business plan to combine intelligent performance, built-in security, and seamless satellite coverage.
That's your business, Supercharged.
Learn more at supermobile.com.
Seamless coverage with compatible devices in most outdoor areas in the US where you can see the sky.
Best business plan based on a combination of advanced network performance, coverage layers, and security features.
Best network based on analysis by OOCLA of Speed Test Intelligence Data 1H 2025.
October is a travel month for me.
I'll be in California, Florida, all over the place.
I love exploring, walking up and down random side streets, sitting in cafes, and taking it all in.
It's how I found some of my favorite spots.
And if you're planning a trip soon, consider hosting your home on Airbnb while you're away.
It's an easy and simple way to make some extra money that can go towards your next vacation.
Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at airbnb.com/slash host.
This message is brought to you by Apple Card.
It's a great time to apply for an Apple Card.
You'll love earning up to 3% unlimited daily cash back on every purchase and no fees, period.
Through this special referral offer, when you get a new Apple Card, you can earn bonus daily cash.
To qualify, you must apply at apple.co slash get daily cash.
Apple Card issued by Goldman Sachs Bank, USA, Salt Lake City Branch.
Variable APRs for Apple Card range from 17.99% to 28.24% based on credit worthiness.
Rates as of October 1st, 2025.
Offer may not be available elsewhere.
Terms and limitations apply.
Pushkin.
Hello, hello, Malcolm here.
Before we get to the episode, I want to let you know you can get this entire season now, ad-free, by subscribing to Revisionist History on Pushkin Plus.
Sign up on the show page on Apple Podcasts or at pushkin.fm slash plus.
Pushkin Plus subscribers can access ad-free episodes, full audiobooks, exclusive binges, and bonus content for all Pushkin shows.
Previously on revisionist history.
Was he a good preacher?
Evidently, he must have been
charismatic.
Yes, I would say.
Very charismatic.
Florence, you don't get here by accident.
And so the idea that someone within this framework could do something like Charles Sennett did was very disruptive.
He worked very hard to make sure nobody knew outside that tight circle of biological family.
When someone says, I'm a member of the Church of Christ,
that means that they are members of the true church.
That's not a denomination, that's not Protestant, it's not Catholic, it's just the true church.
We're now into the hills.
We're now into the Alabama hills of
we're on a long winding two-lane road following an F-150
pickup truck.
Like much of
this corner of Alabama,
it's really gorgeous countryside.
We are way out and
I mean, we haven't passed
a house in quite some time.
On one of our trips to the Shoals, my colleague Ben Nadaf Haffrey and I drove out to find the house where Charles and Elizabeth Sennett lived.
We didn't have a precise address, just the name of the road, which turned out to be a long, winding, gravel track that runs high along a mountain ridge.
Coondog Cemetery Road.
Then arrive at your destination.
Where all the best coondogs arrived find their final
resting place.
Oh my god, it's an actual.
It's a real place.
Because we couldn't find the Senate House, we ended up at the cemetery.
There were headstones.
Lots of American flags.
There's a little sign with a coondog on it.
Only cemetery of its kind in the world.
Troop.
First dog laid to rest here, September 4th, 1937.
Then we met an older couple who gave us directions.
We drove back the way we came and finally found it.
Here, this is the driveway.
And there's the gate.
Oh, yeah, there's the
drain pipe.
The drain pipe.
I think I see the remains.
So it's just an overgrown gate with some posted signs.
The house is gone now.
It's a double-wide trailer.
Burned down a
couple years ago.
There's a pond back there.
It's
if we hadn't have met that
guy, we would have had no idea.
Yeah, you would not have identified this as a...
I guess there's the only thing is the gate that says private property.
It's all overgrown now.
If you wanted to hide,
let's just say this is a very good place to hide.
Nobody's going to trouble you.
My name is Malcolm Globwell.
This is the Alabama Murders.
I talked in the last episode about the notion of the failure cascade, a crisis that does not resolve itself, but rather accelerates in a way that we neither anticipate nor desire.
In this episode, we're going to go deep into the crime that took place on the morning of March 18th, 1988, that kicked off the cascade and tore the Senate family apart before it accelerated and spread to countless others.
35 years.
That's how long Elizabeth Sennett's family waited for justice to occur.
35 long
years.
This is the Attorney General of Alabama, Steve Marshall, at a press conference in 2022.
When, by the way, the Senate case still wasn't over, when it still had one final grotesque act to come.
To give some perspective, almost half of Alabama's population wasn't even born when this malicious crime was committed.
The well-known axiom is true.
The justice delayed is justice denied.
No, What the Senate case teaches us is that justice delayed is what justice is in the world we have chosen for ourselves.
The question is why?
How does a crime turn into a cascade?
Episode 2, Coondog Cemetery Road.
So then have you seen pictures of this family, of Charles Sennett and Liz?
So, actually, Charles Sennett kind of looked like
a 1980s TV evangelist.
This is Lacey Kennemer, whose husband was one of the many lawyers drawn into the Senate case.
He was handsome, dark-headed, kind of had that
southern,
a little bit,
a little bit redneck, but look, she was homely as a mud fence.
I mean, and
everything that I've read about him, and what I've
homely as a mud fence.
I've never heard of that.
Homely as a mud fence.
Yeah, I've never heard of that.
I don't even ever heard of a mud fence.
Mud fence.
Well, you can imagine.
Yes,
it paints a picture.
So, what I remember, what I recall
about this
was
the fact that he was having an affair with a parishioner.
There weren't 70 people that went to that church.
How did they not know that this was going on?
And then
they lived out on what's called Kung Dog Cemetery Road, which
is in a rural part of Cobra County.
And when I say rural, it's frighteningly rural,
which makes me wonder about this guy.
I mean, it had to be Kundal Cemetery Road, if you were on out on it.
He had to live 32 miles from his church building
and
a long way from his parishioners.
I think the guy was crazy.
On March 18th, 1988, just before noon, Charles Sennett returned home from a morning in town.
His house was ransacked.
The living room was a mess.
A coffee table had been turned upside down, its legs broken.
Wood fragments were everywhere.
A stereo and VCR were missing.
And lying on the floor of the den, in a pool of blood, was his wife, Elizabeth Dorlene Sennett.
She'd been stabbed repeatedly.
A white and blue Afghan covered her face and torso.
Sennett called the Colbert County Sheriff's Office.
An investigator named Ronnie Mae answered the phone.
Sennett was hysterical and May couldn't understand him at first, didn't even know whether he was speaking to a man or a woman.
May said, calm down.
Then again, calm down.
Sennett said, I've just come home.
My house has been broken into and my wife has been killed.
May said, stay where you are.
We'll be right there.
May and his officers drove out to Senate's house.
It was raining heavily.
As he walked in through the carport, Sennett came running towards him, wrapped his arms around him, and said, Ronnie, Ronnie, they've killed her.
They've killed her.
Ronnie Mae walked into the den where Elizabeth Sennett's body was lying.
He reached for a pulse, couldn't find one, thought she was dead.
But when the ambulance arrived a few minutes later, one of the paramedics found a faint pulse.
chuck and mike sennett their two sons were 25 and 23 years old at the time mom was just a homemaker kind nurturing was there every day after school you know growing up you know we never missed a time with her and daddy they later gave an interview to the local news about that day chuck got the news before I did.
Daddy called me at work.
Yeah, Chuck called me at work, said something happened to mom at the farm.
Get out here quick.
Elizabeth Sennett was taken by ambulance to Helen Keller Hospital in Sheffield.
In the ER, the medical staff tried frantically to keep her alive.
The doctors started cardiac resuscitation, put in an IV, gave her fluid, put in a breathing tube.
They took Elizabeth Sennett to the operating room, opened her chest.
Found no blood in her heart or vascular system.
In one last attempt to save her life, they put a clamp across her aorta on the chance that the fluid would fill her heart chamber.
We sit there for a while and then they invite you up to the second floor, which is where they deliver the bad news.
Elizabeth Sennett was pronounced dead at 2.05 in the afternoon.
Lacey Kennemer knew one of the nurses who was there at the hospital when Elizabeth was brought in that day.
So she's in the ER
with the doctor
and
Ms.
Sennett.
And the doctor said, please go out and tell her husband she is still hanging on.
She's still with us.
She said, I walked out of that.
I will never forget as long as I live.
I walked out of that.
um emergency department i walked out of the emergency room room and went to him and told him and he was astounded.
He said, that cannot be.
Wow.
It wasn't long before the speculation began.
I'm just really curious about when
the news broke about what had happened to Elizabeth or Elizabeth Dorlene.
Can you tell me about what that was like?
I can tell you every minute of that one.
This is Charlie Bill, who went to Charles Sennett's church.
When we stopped by to visit at the church the last time where he was preaching on the way home to visit our parents, he backhanded his child.
I don't know what the child had done.
My husband was furious
because he said, you just don't do that to a child across its face.
You might hit its ear and causes a hearing to be gone.
So he was really mad about it.
So when we heard the news on the radio one morning at breakfast, Charles Sennett's wife has been murdered, my husband looked right straight at me and he said, he did it.
That's how convinced he was over that slapping.
That the viciousness was there, that he could do something like that.
I don't know.
But that's where we heard it first: sitting at the breakfast table.
Carl Rodin, a member of Sennett's congregation, spoke to Sennett on the morning of the murder.
and drove him to the hospital.
Picked him up at Highway 72 at
247.
He was in ambulance and he got out and got in the car with me and I brought him on to the hospital.
Yeah.
The only thing he ever said after, you know, you look back, he said, they shouldn't have done her that way.
It didn't really mean nothing at the time.
Her funeral was the following Sunday at the Westside Church of Christ, her husband's church.
Roden watched Senna walk out of the service.
After the closing prayers and singing and all that, family comes out first.
And he has her picture up against his chest with both hands, hugging it.
And it was just the most fake thing I believe I ever saw.
And I told my wife, I said, that's the most funniest thing I've ever saw.
And
he just, it looked put on.
Rodin lives in a small white house right down the street from the old Westside Church of Christ, now empty, but still with the very Church of Christ message on the sign outside.
Time is precious.
Are you spending time with the God who made you?
As we were talking with Roden, he told us about a friend, someone who'd worked the case when it first broke.
You say his name is Mickey?
Ricky.
Ricky.
Ricky Miller.
Ricky Miller.
And he was one of the deputies investigating
the case.
And he's...
He's the one you really need to talk with.
And so Roden called Ricky up.
When do you say come, today or tomorrow?
I don't know, shit.
Around now, if we want to stay.
Okay, get it over with.
We'll be there in...
Now they're feminine and everything.
Get your hair combed.
It's going to be a movie to get your hair combed.
You got a haircut to me.
What's that movie mean?
Well, you done got your hair cut.
I don't know, but I don't know.
I don't know how no movie.
No, they just writing a story or something.
I don't really know.
They're pretty good old Joes anyway.
They are Yankees.
Hey, how many of them is it?
It's just two of them with a microphone.
Well, they'll bring your your bath to your song.
Okay.
I'll be there in ten minutes.
They'll be there in ten minutes.
Okay, bye.
Bye.
Thank you so much.
Thank y'all.
Appreciate it, Professor.
Good luck.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.
October 10th is World Mental Health Day.
And this year, let's flip the script and focus the attention on thanking the therapists who have made an impact on people's lives.
Thank you, therapists.
As it turns out, as a therapist who's made an enormous impact on my life, my mom, who I'm happy to say put all of her considerable training and expertise in the service of giving me and my brothers a happy home when we were kids, and who I have watched, over her ninety-four years, enrich and support the lives of countless other people.
So, mom, in honor of World Mental Health Day, thank you for being so kind and understanding and a reminder of how much value and love therapists can bring to the world.
With over 30,000 therapists, BetterHelp is the world's largest online therapy platform, having served over 5 million people globally.
And it works with an average rating of 4.9 out of 5 for a live session based on over 1.7 million client reviews.
This World Mental Health Day, we're celebrating the therapists who helped millions of of people take a step forward.
If you're ready to find the right therapist for you, BetterHelp can help you start that journey.
Our listeners get 10% off their first month at betterhelp.com slash Gladwell.
That's better, H-E-L-P dot com slash Gladwell.
The Olympic Games have come a long way since the first one in 776 BC.
In fact, those Olympic Games weren't even games.
It was the Olympic game, as there was only one race, a straight 630-foot sprint.
By 67 AD, chariot racing had become a big event, so big that the Emperor Nero competed.
And even though he was thrown from his chariot and couldn't finish, he was nonetheless declared the winner.
It's good to be king.
One thing that hasn't changed is the importance of quality sleep to an athlete's performance, which is why Satva is so proud to have been named the official mattress and restorative sleep provider for the U.S.
Olympic and Para-Olympic teams.
No one knows more about restorative sleep than Satfa.
Each one of their mattresses is designed to provide the kind of sleep elite athletes need to perform at their peak.
Of course, you don't have to be an elite athlete to benefit from sleeping well.
Being human is the only requirement.
Visit Satfa.com slash Gladwell to save up to $200 on a $1,000 or more purchase.
That's S-A-A-T-V-A.com/slash/Gladwell.
In today's super competitive business environment, the edge goes to those who push harder, move faster, and level up every tool in their arsenal.
T-Mobile knows all about that.
They're now the best network, according to the experts at OOCLA Speed Test, and they're using that network to launch Supermobile, the first and only business plan to combine intelligent performance, built-in security, and seamless satellite coverage.
With Supermobile, your performance, security, and coverage are supercharged.
With a network that adapts in real time, your business stays operating at peak capacity even in times of high demand.
With built-in security on the first nationwide 5G advanced network, you keep private data private for you, your team, your clients.
And with seamless coverage from the world's largest satellite-to-mobile constellation, your whole team can text and stay updated even when they're off the grid.
That's your business, supercharged.
Learn more at supermobile.com.
Seamless coverage with compatible devices in most outdoor areas in the U.S.
where you can see the sky.
Best business plan based on a combination of advanced network performance, coverage layers, and security features.
Best network based on analysis by OOCLA of Speed Test Intelligence Data 1H 2025.
Carl Roden's friend Ricky Miller lives in a small, immaculate house in a a quiet part of Muscle Shoals.
He's retired after a long career as an investigator in the district attorney's office.
Handsome, quiet, recently widowed.
Still had a law enforcement haircut.
I assisted the sheriff's department in investigating the case.
And
it got interesting.
You know, the more you got into it, the more interesting it got.
He was part of the team that went out to the Senate's property after the murder to search the pond.
They drained it, found a survival knife, a fireplace poker, and a fireplace brush.
There were so many leads and stuff we followed and followed.
But
at the time,
the Crime Stoppers phone for our county was in my office.
And I answered the call, and I got all the information on who done it.
who was all involved, and all the particulars.
The anonymous caller named three young men, all in their teens and early 20s, Billy Gray Williams, John Forrest Parker, and Kenny Eugene Smith.
The caller had details, right down to the location of key pieces of evidence.
The caller said they had taken the VCR.
And the call I received even told me where the VCR was being used, and it was on Kenneth Smith's
TV.
Said it's sitting there right now.
He's using it.
And come to find out, that was accurate.
All three of the young men were arrested.
All three confessed.
Kenny Smith explained that he'd been approached by Billy Williams a month earlier.
He knew Williams from high school.
The two of them had talked out on his front porch.
Smith said, quote, Billy said he knew someone that wanted somebody hurt.
Billy said the person wanted to pay to have it done.
Billy said the person would pay $1,500 to do the job.
I think I told Billy I would think about it and get back with him.
Smith then says he agrees to do it and recruits John Parker to help.
Two weeks later, Smith met with the man Williams had been in contact with.
He didn't identify himself and they had no idea who he was.
The man said he wanted someone taken care of, a woman.
The man said the woman would be at home, that she never had any visitors.
The man said that the house was out in the country.
They all met again at a coffee shop.
The man drew a diagram of the house.
It was supposed to look like a burglary that went bad.
The man said they could take whatever they wanted.
On the morning of the 18th, Parker and Smith met up at 8.30.
Parker brought a black-handled survival knife.
The two of them drove out to Koondag Cemetery Road in Parker's Pontiac Grand Prix.
Smith told investigators, John and I got to the Senate House around 9.30, I think.
I knocked on the door.
I told Mrs.
Sennett that that her husband had told us that we could come down and look around the property to see about hunting on it.
John and I looked around the property for a while, then came back into the house.
John and I went back to the door.
We told Mrs.
Sennett we needed to use the bathroom and she led us inside.
I went to the bathroom nearest the kitchen and then John went to the bathroom.
I stood at the edge of the kitchen talking with Mrs.
Sennett.
Mrs.
Sennett was sitting at a chair in the den.
Then I heard John coming through the house.
John walked up behind Mrs.
Sennett and started hitting her.
John was hitting her with his fist.
I started getting the VCR while John was beating Mrs.
Sennett.
John hit Mrs.
Sennett with a large cane and anything else he could get his hands on.
John went into a frenzy.
Mrs.
Sennett was yelling, just stop.
We could have anything we wanted.
As John was beating up Mrs.
Sennett, I messed up some things in the house to make it look like a burglary.
The last place I saw Mrs.
Sennett, she was lying near the fireplace, covered with some kind of blanket.
I had gone outside to look in the storage buildings when I saw John run out to the pond and throw some things in it.
End quote.
The next morning, the two of them read the newspapers and learned that the woman they had attacked was dead and that her name was Elizabeth Sennett.
Did you,
at what point during the investigation, did you come to suspect that Charles Sennett might be involved?
The first thing that caught our attention, the best I can remember, was he made too many alibis.
You know, if you go about your casual day, you might run into one, maybe two people,
but he had a pattern.
Everywhere he went was to make make an alibi.
And when he went by Carl's house, Carl said, told me he'd never been to his house, except that one time.
8 to 8.30, Joel Kendrick.
8.30 to 9, Sam Garrett Jr.
9 o'clock, Billy Alexander.
9.15, Mrs.
Louise Allen sees him leave Westside Church.
9.30 to 10, Carl Roden.
10.
Teresa Hall.
10.15, a phone phone call with Tammy Sue Wright.
11 a.m.
with Brenda Sprague on Woodmont Drive in Tuscumbria.
And on and on.
He made too many of it.
It was overkill.
You know, he stopped to see people that had never seen.
And that just threw up a red flag to us.
Why is he seeing all these people for the first time?
It happened to be at the time his wife's being murdered.
You know?
And even on his way home.
I don't know if you're familiar where it happened at, out in the county.
Have you ever been there?
Coomed on Cemetery Road.
Yeah.
And it's a good ways out there.
People along the way, even on the highway, 247 going up there, said he had stopped and said he'd never stopped here before.
He could tell you every time, everything, every day.
Well, had my wife just been murdered in my home?
I couldn't tell you nothing.
My mind's gone.
But he knew everything in detail.
That's a red flag.
So it's.
And then Carl told us that in the car, Carl takes him to the hospital
that night.
He
said that Senate said to him,
They beat her up pretty bad, or something like that.
They shouldn't have done her that way.
They shouldn't have done her that way.
How does he know there's two?
Yeah.
Yeah, when you use the word they,
yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
I understand that when
Sennett is,
he tells the story about how he comes back to the house, he sees his wife's body,
and then they say, well, what did you do?
And he said, I didn't touch her, even though he was trained in,
surely that was another red flag.
His wife was lying mortally wounded a few feet away.
He didn't touch her.
And this was a man who was trained in CPR.
That was a question we all wondered.
First thing you're going to do is go to your wife.
If it had been my wife laying there,
blunging, bloody, and all, first thing I would have done was checked her, grabbed her.
I would have had some kind of evidence on me that I had made contact with.
He lives 16 miles out.
It's going to take him a while to get there.
So what are you doing the whole time?
Are you just standing there looking at her?
And you're not going to check her?
That's a red flag.
You know, there would have been some kind of evidence that you would have checked your why.
He did not.
The Olympic Games have come a long way since the first one in 776 B.C.
In fact, those Olympic Games weren't even games.
It was the Olympic game, as there was only one race, a straight 630-foot sprint.
By 67 AD, chariot racing had become a big event, so big that the Emperor Nero competed.
And even though he was thrown from his chariot and couldn't finish, he was nonetheless declared the winner.
It's good to be king.
One thing that hasn't changed is the importance of quality sleep to an athlete's performance.
Which is why Satva is so proud to have been named the official mattress and restorative sleep provider for the U.S.
Olympic and Para-Olympic teams.
No one knows more about restorative sleep than Satfa.
Each one of their mattresses is designed to provide the kind of sleep elite athletes need to perform at their peak.
Of course, you don't have to be an elite athlete to benefit from sleeping well.
Being human is the only requirement.
Visit Satfa.com/slash Gladwell to save up to $200 on a $1,000 or more purchase.
That's saatva.com/slash Gladwell.
In today's super competitive business environment, the edge goes to those who push harder, move faster, and level up every tool in their arsenal.
T-Mobile knows all about that.
They're now the best network, according to the experts at an OOCLA speed test, and they're using that network to launch Supermobile, the first and only business plan to combine intelligent performance, built-in security, and seamless satellite coverage.
With Supermobile, your performance, security, and coverage are supercharged.
With a network that adapts in real time, your business stays operating at peak capacity even in times of high demand.
With built-in security on the first nationwide 5G advanced network, you keep private data private for you, your team, your clients.
And with seamless coverage from the world's largest satellite-to-mobile constellation, your whole team can text and stay updated even when they're off the grid.
That's your business, supercharged.
Learn more at supermobile.com.
Seamless coverage with compatible devices in most outdoor areas in the US where you can see the sky.
Best business plan based on a combination of advanced network performance, coverage layers, and security features.
Best network based on analysis by OOCLA of Speed Test Intelligence Data 1H 2025.
Whether you're planning a big event, launching a new campaign, or just stocking up on Team Gear, finding the right promotional products makes all the difference.
That's why so many brands turn to 4-imprint.
They offer thousands of options from on-trend apparel and premium drinkwear to tech, totes, and giveaways.
So you'll find the right fit for any audience, purpose, or budget.
You can customize it all, your logo, your message, your look, and many items come with no setup charge to help you save.
And if you're really watching the bottom line, you'll find standout choices at every price point so you can make a real impact while staying on budget.
Plus, you'll get expert help, fast turnaround times, and their 360-degree guarantee so you can be 4imprint certain your order will arrive on time and look exactly right.
Whatever your goal, 4imprint makes it easy to find your perfect promo match.
Explore the possibilities today at 4imprint.com.
That's the number 4 imprint for certain.
In the Brothers' Grim Telling of Little Red Riding Hood, a fairy tale beloved by small children for centuries, Little Red Riding Hood is tricked by a wolf, dressed as her grandmother, and eaten.
She's then saved by a hunter who cuts open the wolf's belly, glimpses her red cap, and pulls her out.
Ah, how frightened I have been!
How dark it was inside the wolf's.
Little Red Riding Hood, however, quickly fetched great stones with which to fill the wolf's belly, and when he awoke, he wanted to run away, but the stones were so heavy that he collapsed at once and fell dead.
Then another wolf stalks her, jumps on the roof of her grandmother's house, and Little Red Riding Hood and her grandmother foil him by putting a pot of sausage-flavoured water in front of their house.
Then the smell of the sausages reached the wolf.
and he sniffed and peeped down, and at last stretched out his neck so far that he could no longer keep his footing and began to slip and slipped down from the roof straight into the great trough and was drowned.
But Little Red Riding Hood went joyously home, and no one ever did anything to harm her again.
Why do children so cheerfully indulge in a story that is about, let's be clear, a pedophile?
Because the wolf gets his comeuppance in the end.
It's the same principle that explains everything from Sherlock Holmes to the television show Law and Order to countless tabloid-y true crime podcasts.
We are more than happy to wallow in stories of madness and depravity so long as order is restored in the end.
Crime stories are exercises in moral assurance.
With the Senate case, it's enormously tempting to tell a story this way.
The case is pure southern Gothic.
I mean, a preacher who has lost his way, a house on a lonely mountain road, called, for goodness sake, Coondog Cemetery Road, and then two local killers for hire speeding back to Florence with a VCR in the back seat.
You want that version?
You can find it online.
This is the story of a God-fearing family who preach, sing, and pray together through good times and bad.
But behind church doors and wholesome music
looms betrayal and deceit, and a murder that will rock a small-town Alabama community to its core.
But let's be clear, the Little Red Riding Hood model is an illusion.
You don't return home happily and safely after fighting off a violent predator.
You spend the rest of your childhood recovering.
The actual NYPD is nowhere near as effortlessly effective as the fictional NYPD of Law and Order.
And as much as everyone involved in the Senate case wanted it to end neatly and tidally, as all the classic crime stories do, it didn't end.
It kept going.
So tell me about
when the Senate case breaks,
when we first hear about it, what impact does it have on the town?
Well, of course, abject horror throughout the whole community.
And it, of course, made the gory headlines for days and days, especially because they didn't know who had murdered the
minister's wife.
And as long as they're on the run, then everybody's frightened.
They don't know the motive.
Billy Warren, the Florenc Town historian.
They don't know at that point that the minister has hired these young men.
They don't know anything.
So it was gripping really for the whole community because there was so much unknown.
In the middle of this is Sennett himself, under suspicion, but still at large, trying and failing to play the role of the grieving husband and becoming increasingly aware that his treachery was transparent.
Why did Charles Sennett do such a bad job of covering his own tracks?
Billy Gray Williams, the man he first approached with his scheme, was his tenant, for goodness sake.
The sheriff's deputy, Ronnie Mae, recognized Sennett because there had been a murder not long before at a gas station, and Sennett had come to the crime scene uninvited and hung around as if he was studying police procedure.
And you know where he found the money to pay his hitmen?
His lover.
It's as if he wasn't even trying, like he turned himself in before he'd even committed his crime.
When I try to imagine what was going through his mind in the days after his wife's death, I can't help but think of what the theologian Lee Camp said in the last episode, about how Sennett's original transgression, his affair with a woman in his church, would have filled him with shame.
And remember the joke he told?
That for us in the Church of Christ, it's easier to get forgiveness for murdering someone than it was for a divorce?
The point of the joke is that we are the most rigorous of Christian communities, and we will cast you out for a second-degree transgression like cheating on your wife, as surely as for a first-degree transgression, like arranging for her murder.
The acts are very different, but the consequences are the same.
So why would Charles Sennett act as if he was indifferent to whether he got caught?
Because maybe in his own tangled mind, the leap from an affair to a killing wasn't a leap at all.
From the moment he cheated on his wife, he was already beyond redemption.
Charles Sennett was called in for questioning.
He admitted to the affair, but he denied any involvement with his wife's death.
He said he suspected a black man from Cherokee, Alabama, a town not far from his house, who he said had an ongoing feud with his son.
The police called Sennett back for another round of questioning.
One of the officers mentioned the name Kenny Smith, and Sennett turned beat red.
Sennett left the police station.
He drove to his son, Michael's house.
You know, he said, you know, I failed a lie detector test.
He said,
you know, I've been involved with somebody else.
And
we're taking all this thing.
Can't believe it.
Charles Sennett left the house, got in his Chevy truck, picked up a 22.
Pow, you hear it.
He's in his truck
where he shot himself.
That was
seven days after
mom got killed.
Friday to Friday.
Yeah, lost them both in seven days.
Yeah.
One don't know how much you can take
until you go through something like that.
In the neat and tidy version of the Senate story, this is the ending.
The killers have confessed and are in custody.
The master criminal has shot himself.
The victim is buried.
A crime, a culprit, a mystery, a resolution, a beginning, an end.
But we're not telling that version of the story.
We're just getting started.
Coming up on the Alabama murders, the trial of John Forrest Parker.
I just don't think some of these people that were on the jury, they didn't want that to be on their conscience the rest of their life, putting somebody into the death penalty.
I've had, you know, other cases that technically were probably factually more complex, but
this is, you know, this is the one that I will
is still on my mind, even without child counting.
He was the chief of police in Florence.
He theorized really early on that, you know, that it wasn't like it was like it was supposed to be looking like it was.
Revisionist History is produced by Lucy Sullivan, Ben Nadaf Haffrey, and Nina Bird Lawrence.
Additional reporting by Ben Nadaf Haffrey and Lee Hedgesbeth.
Our editor is Karen Shikurji.
Fact-checking by Kate Furbee.
Our executive producer is Jacob Smith.
Engineering by Nina Bird Lawrence.
Production support from Luke Lamond.
Original scoring by Luis Guerra with Paul Brainard and Jimmy Bod.
Sound design and additional music by Jake Gorski.
I'm Malcolm Gladwell.
This is an ad by BetterHelp.
We've all had that epic rideshare experience.
Halfway through your best friends, and they know your aspirations to go find yourself in Portugal.
It's human.
We're all looking for someone to listen.
But not everyone is equipped to help.
With over a decade of experience, BetterHelp matches you with the right therapist.
See why they have a 4.9 rating out of 1.7 million client session reviews.
Visit betterhelp.com for 10% off your first month.
You've probably heard me say this.
Connection is one of the biggest keys to happiness.
And one of my favorite ways to build that?
Scruffy hospitality.
Inviting people over even when things aren't perfect.
Because just being together, laughing, chatting, cooking, makes you feel good.
That's why I love Bosch.
Bosch fridges with VitaFresh technology keep ingredients fresher longer, so you're always ready to whip up a meal and share a special moment.
Fresh foods show you care, and it shows the people you love that they matter.
Learn more, visit BoschHomeUS.com.
Siusas la frace persona precaida vale pordos.
The Colgate Total Active Prevention System is for you.
Cono pas rental reformulada, unse pedo de dientes innovador, y un enjuage bucal antibacterial diceñados para trabajar juntos y cerquínze eses más 5ases al reducir el crecimio de bacterias in just six weeks, starting from week one.
Compared to a non-antibacterial fluoride toothpaste and flat-trim toothbrush, helping you prevent oral health problems like cavities and gingivitis before they start.
Compalo en shop punto colgate punto com, yagunal toto and be dentist ready.
This is an iHeart podcast.