288: Online Dating Scam Ends With Two Bodies Floating in the River | The Case of Laura Kowal
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Transcript
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Speaker 3 Three years after Kelly Gow's father died from cancer, her mother, 57-year-old Laura Kowal, decided she was ready to start dating again.
Speaker 7 Kathy was just laying on the couch when I got here.
Speaker 4 Like three in ten adults have done, turned to online dating.
Speaker 10 My mom felt the emotions of feeling loved and having companionship just through email.
Speaker 4 She matched with someone who called himself Frank Boer.
Speaker 2
She had all these buckets full in her life, but there was this one bucket that was missing of having a relationship. A search for a missing woman.
Laura Cowell was last seen on Friday.
Speaker 12 Kelly Gow is a daughter searching for answers.
Speaker 2 Hey, True Crime Besties. Welcome back to an all-new episode of Serial Asleep.
Speaker 2 Hey, everybody, welcome back to an all-new episode of Serialessly with me, Annie Elise. Hope you guys are all having a good start to your week.
Speaker 2 I hope you're also ready for some twists and turns because this case kind of has a little bit of everything. It has scamming, catfishing, online dating, betrayal, um, what else?
Speaker 2 I mean, murder, a little bit of everything. And it kind of highlights this crime that's been on the rise, I feel like, in the last 10 years, and that's online scamming, right?
Speaker 2 People are either catfishing to scam people out of money, to lure them in so they can murder them.
Speaker 2 They are using online dating and online platforms almost as their personal playground to do do some really disgusting and evil crap.
Speaker 2 And some people, not to say that like scamming should be taken lightly, but like some people are only after money and like getting a quick buck.
Speaker 2 But as we know, in a lot of these cases that we talk about, other people truly do use this platform as a way to like identify their target, identify their prey, and then inflict all sorts of weird, twisted, perverse things.
Speaker 2 So we are going to be talking about one of those cases today, and I'm really curious to know what your thoughts are along the way.
Speaker 11 I am not someone who decides, after all I've accomplished in my life, now I'm going to become a criminal mastermind.
Speaker 5 We need you guys to prepare yourselves for what we're going to tell you.
Speaker 2 In August of 2020, a woman named Kelly Kowal saw that she had a missed call from an unknown number.
Speaker 2
The person had left her a voicemail, voicemail and when she listened to it, she heard that the caller was a federal agent. They were actually working as a U.S.
postal inspector.
Speaker 2 According to this caller, somebody close to her was involved in some sort of scheme, so this inspector was now trying to reach that person, and their hope was that Kelly would be able to help them do that.
Speaker 2
Almost like, hey, we can't get a hold of this person. We were able to identify that you are either a friend, a relative.
Can you put us in touch? Something like that. Now, Kelly was obviously shocked.
Speaker 2 I mean, it's not every day that the feds are blowing up your phone, right?
Speaker 2 But the other shocking thing was just who the caller was looking for, because it was somebody who Kelly was super close with, somebody who she never would have pegged as some sort of potential criminal, someone who would certainly never commit fraud.
Speaker 2 Because as it turns out, the agents were looking for 57-year-old Laura Cole, Kelly's own mother.
Speaker 2 So like any daughter would do, Kelly called her mom Laura immediately saying, these feds are looking for you. What's going on? But her mom was just like, don't panic, don't panic, it's nothing.
Speaker 2
I'll take care of it. I'll handle it.
Except something about that call, something in her mother's voice didn't quite sit right with Kelly. Something was clearly off with Laura.
Speaker 2 So Kelly hopped in her car and she drove to her mom's house. However, by the time Kelly arrived, there was no sign of her mom anywhere.
Speaker 2 It was like she had completely vanished and nobody had any idea where she could have gone. Was she on the run? Was she hiding from whatever or whoever? I mean, was she running from the feds?
Speaker 2 Was she hiding from other people that were involved? I mean, who knew what was going on at this point, right?
Speaker 2 Or worse, if she was mixed up in something dangerous, had the people that she was involved with gotten to her first?
Speaker 2 Now, before I move on to this next part, I think I do need to explain a little bit about who Laura is, because her daughter, Kelly, of course, thought there's no way she's a scammer.
Speaker 2 There's no way she would be involved in anything like this. Yet the police definitely felt otherwise.
Speaker 2 So we need to kind of dig into her background a little bit and then you can decide for yourselves which version of the story sounds more likely.
Speaker 2 Laura was a retired healthcare executive from Illinois and from the looks of things, she lived a pretty normal Midwestern life in Chicago.
Speaker 2 She and her husband had one daughter, Kelly, who remember she was very, very close with.
Speaker 2 And in fact, when her husband passed away from cancer in 2015, Kelly was the person who was there for her mom the most. Laura leaned on her and really needed her support.
Speaker 2 Now, Laura's husband had been sick for three years and his prognosis was never good, so it's not like his death was sudden or unexpected, but still Laura had spent the entire time being optimistic, hoping for the best.
Speaker 2 Turns out that maybe she was too optimistic, because when he did finally pass, it felt like a horrible blow to Laura. She just was knocked off her feet and not prepared for this.
Speaker 2
And aside from that, she was just kind of lost. She had been with him for decades.
They had built a life together, raised a family together. They had looked forward to retiring together.
Speaker 2 So, after taking some time to grieve, Laura decided that she needed a change.
Speaker 2 She needed something new, something exciting, something that she could look forward to so that she could get past her grief. And she had always been a pretty social person.
Speaker 2 Kelly even sometimes jokingly called her the mayor because it was the way that she was always getting involved in community events, in with the social crowds, bringing people together.
Speaker 2 So, in Laura's mind, it kind of made sense to now move to a new town, to meet brand new people, to just have a fresh start where she wasn't constantly reminded reminded of the things that she had lost.
Speaker 2 So she packed up her life in Chicago and she moved to Galena, Illinois, a city that was about three hours west, pretty close to the border of Iowa and the Mississippi River too.
Speaker 2 Now it had a completely different vibe from the big city of Chicago. Galena was this gorgeous small town that almost feels like it's frozen in time.
Speaker 2 I mean, it's full of old historic buildings, these green, beautiful parks.
Speaker 2 And if you go there, you could almost feel like you've gone back to a point in the past when life was just slower, simpler, easier.
Speaker 2 And I know there's never actually a time when everything was good and all that simple, but you know what? That was kind of the vibe that Laura was looking for. She just wanted to slow down.
Speaker 2
She wanted something peaceful. And she thought that Galena was what she needed.
But it turns out, it wasn't enough. Laura still wanted something more.
She was still lonely.
Speaker 2 And while she had all of these great things going for her in her life, what she felt like she was missing was a real connection.
Speaker 2 She was ready to get back into the world of dating, a world that she had really been out of for decades at this point, right?
Speaker 2 She and her first husband had gotten together so many years earlier, so getting back into the dating scene, it was brand new. But according to her daughter Kelly, Laura was ready.
Speaker 2 She wanted to get back out there, but she also wanted to go about things as safely as possible because she knew that there are always risks when you decide you're going to try and open your heart to somebody new.
Speaker 2 Now, with online dating being at like the peak pinnacle of this time, she decided in 2018 that she was going to sign up for match.com.
Speaker 2 And she was actually actually a little bit nervous about doing things the old-fashioned way, like going out, meeting a stranger for drinks in a bar, something like that.
Speaker 2 It felt safer to her to meet people online. Like she could get to know somebody from the comfort of her own home before deciding if she wanted to meet up with them in real life.
Speaker 2 And maybe she figured, you know, if she ever connected with a real weirdo out there, it would be easier to block them than it would be to get away from them in real life.
Speaker 2
But in any event, she started, you know, perusing on match.com. And it didn't take long for Laura to get a match.
She matched with a man named Frank Borg, and he was a very good looking.
Speaker 2 He was around the same age as her, and by all accounts, he seemed to be super successful. And here's how her daughter Kelly described it.
Speaker 9
She was almost giddy about him. His name was Frank, and he was from the Iowa City area, which was a connection to my mom.
My mom grew up on a farm in eastern Iowa and had strong roots.
Speaker 9 to the state of Iowa, so she really liked that. But he actually was originally from Sweden, So there was dual citizenship there.
Speaker 9
He was widowed, just like her. He had one daughter, similar to her, was around the same age.
And he had a really successful career in the investment industry, financial industry.
Speaker 9 And he was in the process of slowly trying to retire is what she had shared with me. So he was still working and traveling across the globe.
Speaker 9 but with the hopes to take a step back and kind of transition into a consulting type role in his career.
Speaker 9 So that's what she had shared with me about him and that he now too is located in the Chicago area as his U.S. based location whenever he wasn't traveling internationally.
Speaker 2
So this match seemed great. She met someone that she had a lot in common with.
They both grew up in Iowa, which was great. They both had lost a spouse, both had one child.
Speaker 2 I mean, it seemed as though the stars were aligning.
Speaker 2 Now, Frank also had the dual citizenship, right, between America and Sweden, and he also had this really successful financial career that made him travel all the time, just all over the world.
Speaker 2
Now, because of that, it made it difficult to find a time to meet up with Laura in person. He was always traveling.
It was difficult to nail a time and a place down.
Speaker 2 Which, if you think that maybe, okay, well, because they had just met, he's always on the road, it's long distance, they're never meeting in person, they're probably not hitting it off, it would be difficult to sustain any relationship like that, no less a brand new one.
Speaker 2 Well, it was actually the complete opposite.
Speaker 2 It actually only took them 12 days from meeting online for that very first time, exchanging hellos, to now full-on telling each other that they loved each other.
Speaker 2 12 days, which it's pretty fast, right? I mean, I wish I knew who said it first, if it was Frank or Laura, but they were now in love less than two weeks after meeting.
Speaker 2 And maybe it was just one of those things where when you know, you know, and they had both suffered loss before, they didn't want to waste any more time, and maybe they just, you know, whatever, fell in love.
Speaker 2 Now, according to his profile, Frank was a European businessman who was also living abroad at the time.
Speaker 2 He ran a company called Goose Investments, which specialized in helping regular people invest money and manage their portfolios.
Speaker 2 And I say regular people, but like, you know, you're lay people, people who don't have like oodles and oodles of money. So by all accounts, Frank seemed like quite the catch.
Speaker 2 And he wasn't just hiding behind a computer screen either.
Speaker 2 I mean, Frank and Laura's relationship may have started with emails and messages, but before long, they were calling each other every day and every night. They also messaged each other all the time.
Speaker 2
And Frank always knew just what to say to cheer Laura up. He knew when he should send her little love messages, little love notes.
He always knew how to play it, like what would make her happy.
Speaker 2 And the most important thing was, Laura seemed happy, happier than she had been in years, in fact. She had been alone ever since her husband's death, which was now at this point three years earlier.
Speaker 2
So now things were looking up, all thanks to Frank. So Laura and Frank dated from 2018 to 2020.
So two years, which is a pretty substantial relationship, right?
Speaker 2 And during those two years, she would tell her daughter Kelly how she was going on these little romantic weekend getaways with him, little trips here and there.
Speaker 2 But despite all of that, Kelly never met Frank, not once.
Speaker 2 And during all of their little weekend getaways too, or travel, whatever it was that it entailed, Frank never made his way to Galena, where they lived.
Speaker 2 He never got to know Kelly and never really made an effort to. And there seems to be a little bit of weirdness going on there.
Speaker 2 I'm not going to lie, I mean, no real red flags, but you would think that after two years, he'd probably meet your daughter at some point, or there would be some sort of, you know, time in which your paths would cross.
Speaker 2 But there wasn't anything. In fact, there were no real red flags until 2020 when Kelly got that really weird call from the feds about her mom being involved in some type of fraud.
Speaker 2 And then remember, she rushed over to her mom's house and she could not find her anywhere. So right away, as soon as she realized that Laura wasn't home, she started getting worried.
Speaker 2 It wasn't like her to just take off without a word, especially when they had just been on the phone a little while earlier.
Speaker 2
If Laura had plans that day, she definitely would have said something about it. She would have been like, you know, there's nothing to worry about.
Don't panic. I'm going out for a little bit.
Speaker 2
I'll be back. It'll all be sorted out.
But that never happened. Or at least, Kelly was never made aware of that information.
But see, Laura did have plans that day.
Speaker 2
She had plans to meet a neighbor for lunch. However, about 10 minutes before they were supposed to meet up, Laura texted this neighbor saying, you know, something's come up.
I'm not free anymore.
Speaker 2
I've got to cancel. Of course, though, Kelly, like I said, didn't know any of that.
She just knew that her mom was now gone without a word.
Speaker 2 And maybe any other day, Kelly would have just shrugged it off. She might have just figured, okay, my mom ran out for a quick errand, or maybe she's out for a walk around the block, who really knows.
Speaker 2
But with that weird voicemail, just something was pulling at her gut. Something wasn't right.
And as it turns out, Kelly was a little bit of a sleuth in her own right.
Speaker 2 She was really good at digging into things and investigating. She also knew how to log on to her mom's laptop, so she grabbed it and went to town.
Speaker 2 And then she got access to her email, which I gotta say, props to Kelly, because that was exactly the right place for her to be looking.
Speaker 2 Because as she was going through her mom's account, she found a lot of receipts, and I am talking a lot of receipts. These weren't receipts from grocery stores or online shopping.
Speaker 2 It was way worse than that. It was wire transfers, wire transfer after wire transfer, all sending money to a company called Goose Investments, aka Frank's company.
Speaker 2 So, after doing some quick math and adding up all of these wire transfers, Kelly realized just how much money her mom had been sending this boyfriend over the past two years.
Speaker 2 And buckle up, guys: $1.5 million.
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Speaker 2 So picture this, your mother's missing, apparently after getting involved in some kind of scam.
Speaker 2 Then you find out that she spent over $1.5 million to her online boyfriend, who, by the way, you've never met in person. I mean, there's one conclusion that almost anyone would jump to, right?
Speaker 2 Anna Delvey, the Tinder swindler, scammer, frauder,
Speaker 2
D, all of the above. So if you're thinking that Frank was a con artist and Laura was his victim, you are certainly not alone.
That's exactly what Kelly was thinking as well.
Speaker 2 Yet, there were some questions that she wasn't quite sure about yet. Namely, if Frank was a scammer, then who had her mom visited on all of those weekend getaways?
Speaker 2 Where was she going during the last two years of this relationship? Who was she talking to on the phone day and night, messaging and getting love letters from?
Speaker 2
Her mind was reeling, trying to figure everything out, trying to like reconcile what's going on. My mom's missing.
She's been wiring this money. The feds called me this morning looking for her.
Speaker 2
Like, what is happening? And there were so many possibilities. I mean, maybe Frank, this scammer had hurt her somehow.
But it it was also possible that Laura had been in on it somehow.
Speaker 2 Maybe she was helping Frank. Maybe she went along with this because she loved him.
Speaker 2 And now both of them were hiding out somewhere trying to fly under the radar, especially since she knew that the feds were on tour. I mean, there were a lot of possibilities, and I get it.
Speaker 2 It sounds kind of out there, I know.
Speaker 2 But as Kelly was going through all of her mom's emails and seeing all of these things, she was starting to realize that she didn't really know her mom the way that she thought that she did.
Speaker 2 Her mom had been keeping so much from her. I mean, who knew what other secrets she was hiding? So after she had gone through her mom's computer, Kelly decided to scour the entire house.
Speaker 2
I mean, looking for any type of clue. I'm talking papers, documents, anything.
And eventually, her efforts paid off because Kelly found a note, which, let me read it to you.
Speaker 2
Kelly, you have kept me going this long. I love you.
You were right in your judgment of me. I've been living a double life this past year.
It has left me broke and broken.
Speaker 2 Yes, it involves Frank, the man that I met through online online dating. I tried to stop this many times, but I knew I would end up dead.
Speaker 2 Which, can you imagine finding that note from your loved one, no less your mom? I mean, at first, I feel like my thought would be like, is she saying goodbye? Is this a goodbye letter?
Speaker 2 But now at the last sentence saying she would end up dead, does that mean people are after her? What is going on here?
Speaker 2
And when Kelly found that note, she also found something that her mom would never leave behind if she ever planned on returning. And that's her dog Effie.
Effie was Laura's best friend.
Speaker 2
And at first, Kelly just assumed that the fact that Effie was there was a good sign. Like, okay, her mom must have just stepped out.
She'll come back at some point. She just had to.
Speaker 9 To see if she is home. And if she's not home, do you mind opening the garage door to see if her car is there?
Speaker 9
So she stayed on the phone with me and walked over to our property. And she said, well, Effie's home.
Effie the dog is home because Effie started barking.
Speaker 9 So immediately for me, that was instant reassurance that wherever my mom was was at, if she was not home, she was coming back because my mom kept that dog on such a routine schedule of eating meals at a certain time and all of that.
Speaker 9
My mom would never leave that dog. So for me, that was a good sign.
But then I had a neighbor open the garage door and she had told me that her car was gone.
Speaker 9 And at that point, I kind of cut her off and I just said, I will be home very shortly. And I said, I will touch base with you right when I get home.
Speaker 20 And Kelly, at what point did you get law enforcement involved with the disappearance of your mom?
Speaker 9 I arrived to my mom's house early that afternoon and opened the door, came into the house, and everything seemed normal. There was nothing out of place.
Speaker 9 Effie looked like she just woken up, so there wasn't anything with Effie the dog that seemed different.
Speaker 9 My mom had been gardening that morning. My mom was a huge gardener, so it was not uncommon to find a bunch of cleaned vegetables drying on the counter.
Speaker 9 The house was completely clean and in order, but I knew that if there were any financial implications involved with all of this, that I just had to start going through whatever I could in the house.
Speaker 9
And so my gut told me to go and look at the office desk. And the first drawer that I opened, there was a sheet of paper on top with an international phone number.
with the name Frank under it.
Speaker 9 And at that point, my heart sank because I knew in my gut that this was all tied together.
Speaker 9 And underneath that international phone number was paper documentation of financial wire transfers that were transferred to numerous countries and just various financial information that I found.
Speaker 9 So I didn't take the time to go through that in detail, but I saw enough to know that something had happened to my mom.
Speaker 2 Then an entire night passed and Laura still didn't make it home. So that's when Kelly finally reported her missing.
Speaker 2 Now right away the police got involved and Kelly showed them everything that she had learned already.
Speaker 2 And of course they focused on all of her emails and the wire transfers with Frank right off the bat.
Speaker 2 And after digging through Laura's computer, they felt like without question, Laura had been the victim of a romance scam, trapped by Frank with these promises of love. But it didn't stop there.
Speaker 2 Laura didn't just get roped into giving Frank one and a half million dollars. She actually got wrapped up in the scheme herself.
Speaker 2 The police even believed that she had been working with Frank to assist him with his scams. And apparently, this is sadly pretty common in a lot of situations like this.
Speaker 2 Once scammers take you for all that you're worth, they then try to bring you in and rope you into the scam, into the con with them.
Speaker 2 And again, I know it might sound out there and more like a movie, but in 2023 alone, there were more than 64,000 reports to law enforcement of different romantic scams in the United States. 64,000.
Speaker 2 Altogether, scammers made more than $1 billion from their victims. And sadly, that might even be an underestimate, because those are just the scams that got reported to the police.
Speaker 2 A lot of the officials think there are a ton of other people out there who got ripped off and are just way too embarrassed to let anybody know.
Speaker 2
You know, they don't want to admit that they fell for it. They just want to forget about it.
So they take the loss and never say anything to the police.
Speaker 2 So in reality, that number could be a lot higher, which let me just say right now, there is absolutely nothing wrong with being the victim of a crime, regardless if it's a romance scam, a financial scam, whatever it is.
Speaker 2
There is no shame in that. It's the scammer's fault, not yours.
Not to mention, scamming has just gotten so.
Speaker 2 elevated over the last few years where now it's like you don't have just the Nigerian prince who's emailing you saying, oh, give me a wire transfer and I'll give you $2 million.
Speaker 2 But there's actually countries that have full scamming networks, like headquarters, where people are dialed in and know exactly what to do, what links to send, what phone calls to make.
Speaker 2 And it's almost run like.
Speaker 2 a well-oiled machine, like a business, which side note here, if you guys ever get any text messages that say like, oh, you have a UPS or a USPS delivery, click this link to confirm or do anything, never click the links, guys.
Speaker 2
Never click the links. If you get emails saying they're from PayPal and that you need to verify a receipt, click this link, open this attachment.
Never do it, never do it.
Speaker 2 It's now, that is how they're moving forward with these scams. They are getting so...
Speaker 2
detailed and they look so real. So just don't ever open any attachments or links from any unknown number or any unknown email address.
Now, another one of these businesses is called a scam farm.
Speaker 2
And there they actually trick people into falling in love with them and ripping them off. And they do this like rinse, recycle, repeat all day, every day.
They create a fake profile.
Speaker 2 They make sure that all of the photos on the profile are, you know, conventionally attractive because that's something that matters to a lot of people on dating sites, as we know.
Speaker 2 And in Frank's case, they stole pictures from a Chilean doctor who was somebody who had absolutely zero involvement in this case at all.
Speaker 2 Just, again, an attractive man and slapped it on Frank's profile, which, as a side note, I can only imagine how weird it must have been for that guy, the actual doctor, when Laura's case started hitting the news, to then then see his own face plastered all over the TV and internet.
Speaker 2 Like, that would be super unnerving. So anyway, once the profile is made, these scammers will then make up an entire personality and backstory, and then they just start matching away with people.
Speaker 2 And once someone is on the hook, they will do everything they can to make it seem like they are a real person.
Speaker 2
They might even have somebody get on the phone, like how Laura was talking to a man who she thought was Frank. I mean, there are no stops.
They will do whatever they have to do.
Speaker 2 Especially because, as we know, it's easy to get suspicious if you're not hearing a voice, right? Or not seeing photos of somebody holding up a sign or doing things like that.
Speaker 2
So they have people like, hey, she's getting suspicious. Call her up now.
Talk to her for a while. That is how, like,
Speaker 2 precisely these things are run. And the truth is, when you really break it down, all they're doing is love bombing, right?
Speaker 2 They're acting sweet, available, accessible, just to gain this other person's trust.
Speaker 2 They're also sharing all of these details about their lives, which are, of course, made up, usually a sob story about their tough childhood, or like in Frank's case, how he lost his spouse too, and really just try to love bomb you and build that connection to where it's shared interests, shared life history.
Speaker 2 They research their target a lot of the time too, so that they know that whatever they're saying isn't off base, that it will align with this other person. I mean, it's so scary.
Speaker 2 Then once you start falling for them, they start asking you for money.
Speaker 2 And it may start small with just a few dollars here and there, maybe a Venmo request here and there, but then the requests start getting bigger, bigger and bigger and bigger, asking for more until finally they get as much as they possibly can get out of you.
Speaker 2 And then once you're broke, they blackmail you. And then once you have nothing left to give and you are just completely bone broke, that's when these skeezy assholes blackmail you.
Speaker 2 They'll either threaten you, they will threaten to leak compromising photos of you to the public, to your employer, to your family, whatever they can do to threaten you to say, no, no, no, I need more money.
Speaker 2 And if you don't give me more money, here's what I'm going to do to retaliate. Now, we of course don't know for sure if Laura was ever blackmailed this way.
Speaker 2 It's not clear to me what she told Frank, what she sent Frank, or if any part of it was compromising, but it definitely does sound like a possibility, especially given what we know about Laura's personality.
Speaker 2 She just didn't really seem like someone who would take advantage of somebody else unless she maybe really felt like she had to, but she was now involved in this scheme.
Speaker 2 So much so that the police learned that Laura even helped set up fake dating profiles for Frank or for whoever was pretending to be Frank.
Speaker 2
She also created fake corporations, fake bank accounts for him. She moved money around through different wire transfers.
I mean, she was in on this scam.
Speaker 2 So Laura had been roped in as what they call being a money mule for Frank. And that's a term for somebody who helps launder or move illegal funds around.
Speaker 2 Sometimes the mule knows what they're doing, but other times they don't.
Speaker 2 And it sounds to me like Laura did know what she was doing and that she wasn't supposed to be doing it, which I'm just speculating, but I'm basing this in part on the fact that she was covering her tracks.
Speaker 2 At some point before her disappearance, she began talking to Frank through a burner phone instead of her regular cell phone.
Speaker 2 So it seems like she was doing things to protect herself and the secrets that she was keeping.
Speaker 2 And it's safe to assume that when she went missing, it was because Kelly had called her to say she got that voicemail from the feds, that the feds were onto her.
Speaker 2 She probably knew, of course, that she had been breaking the law, so now she knew the police wanted to talk to her about it. So she panicked and she skipped town.
Speaker 2 Except the police were able to pull security camera footage.
Speaker 2 And with that, they realized that after Laura left her house, after she canceled that lunch with her neighbor, she got on I-84 and headed south.
Speaker 2 She eventually passed a gas station in Illinois, which this was also caught on security cameras. And then the last time that her phone pinged, it was in Iowa.
Speaker 2 Then, the very next day, on August 9th, 2020, Laura's car was found.
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Speaker 2 Laura's car was on a boat ramp in a small Illinois town, which was more than three and a half hours south of where Laura lived.
Speaker 2
And I want to be clear: there was no real reason for Laura to be driving there. She didn't know anybody in this town.
She had never been there before. I mean, so far as Kelly knew.
Speaker 2 So it's not like she went there to visit friends or because she had business there. And like I mentioned before, the car wasn't just parked in a lot or on the street.
Speaker 2 It was literally on a boat ramp that led right into the Mississippi River. So when the police found Laura's car, it was a big, important discovery.
Speaker 2 But it was also kind of a bit of a dead end, because for so long they had been trying to track Laura's movements through security cameras, cell phone pings, all of those things, and now the investigation was drying up.
Speaker 2 So their next move was to start looking into this Frank guy himself, trying to figure out who he was, who was behind this profile, who was behind this entire scam operation.
Speaker 2 And the good news was that the police didn't really have to do any digging. Frank had actually been on their radar for quite some time.
Speaker 2 In fact, they had already caught him, or more accurately, them, because Frank was multiple people.
Speaker 2 And these people were practically in Laura's own backyard, in the town that she used to live in, Chicago.
Speaker 2 One of the scammers was a woman named Jennifer Gosha, and she was an Iraq War veteran who worked for the post office, which, remember earlier, I said sometimes these scammers find a way to bring their victim into the scam?
Speaker 2
Well, that's exactly what happened to Jennifer. She believed that she was dating this guy named Anthony.
But unlike with Laura, their relationship was not online.
Speaker 2
She actually knew this guy in real life, and he seemed very legit. I mean, that is, at first.
He told her he was a doctor. She believed it because he clearly had a lot of money.
He wore nice clothes.
Speaker 2
He drove this fancy car. He wore a Rolex.
I mean, he had all the things that you would assume be in line with somebody being a doctor.
Speaker 2 But as their relationship went on, Anthony started asking for little favors from Jennifer. And it all started out pretty innocent, you know, you know, new relationship kind of stuff.
Speaker 2 Can I borrow a few bucks for this? Can you pick something up for me at the store? Do you mind if you grab this dinner instead of me? That sort of thing.
Speaker 2 Which looking back in retrospect, I think it's easy to identify that maybe those are like the early markers and indicators of a scam.
Speaker 2 But when you're in the moment, you're probably like, yeah, sure, I'll door dash you some food or I'll pay for this door dash or yeah, I'll grab you a pack of cigarettes. I'm at CVS.
Speaker 2 I don't know if that's what it was, but you know, I'm just trying to think of little things that you might buy at a store.
Speaker 2 But anyways, as time went on, he began asking for more and more from Jennifer. It wasn't just little errands or little small loans here and there.
Speaker 2 He was now hitting up Jennifer for money all the time. And the amounts that he was asking for, they were just getting bigger and bigger.
Speaker 2
Then, somewhere along the way, Anthony's friend, a guy named Samuel, also came into the picture. Which, surprise, surprise, Samuel also needed cash.
He also needed money. He needed help.
Speaker 2
He needed all this help with a variety of things. And all of that had to come from Jennifer's wallet.
So Jennifer was sending these two guys thousands of dollars.
Speaker 2 And you might think, okay, well, at some point, she clearly would cut them off, right?
Speaker 2
She would realize that Samuel and Anthony were just taking, taking, taking, and never paying her back, and that this was a scam. Except, they were paying her back.
Well, sorta.
Speaker 2 Jennifer would send them money and they would then send her money back. But then sometimes other people would send her money.
Speaker 2
And then Samuel and Anthony would tell her, like, okay, so-and-so sent you money, but now I need you to move that money into another account for us. So please and thank you.
Please go do that.
Speaker 2
And Jennifer would just do it. Which this is how it all tied back to Laura.
Because one time this Frank guy asked Laura for $75,000. And Laura sent it.
Speaker 2 No questions asked, except that money did not go to Frank.
Speaker 2 I mean, it did, in theory, it went to the people who were posing as Frank, Jennifer, Samuel, and Anthony, but it didn't go to who, you know, this fictitious Frank person was.
Speaker 2
So Jennifer was scamming Laura. But according to her, she had no idea what was going on.
She didn't know who she was involved with, what she was involved with. She just got roped into this somehow.
Speaker 2 And she kept saying that, even once the police were able to literally follow the trail of money right to her front door. But Jennifer swore up and down she had never catfished anyone.
Speaker 2 According to her, she only transferred those funds and moved that money around because, you know, well, her boyfriend had asked her to.
Speaker 11
Deny Iraqi war. I raised my children.
I am not someone who decides, after all I've accomplished in my life, now I'm going to become a criminal mastermind. So I'm going to come up with the scheme.
Speaker 11 It's not going to be this dumbass scheme.
Speaker 4 Gosha told us the alleged co-conspirator she was dating used her to help launder money scammed from others.
Speaker 21 Do you ever think to yourself,
Speaker 12 I played a part in someone's life being ruined?
Speaker 15 I have thought that many, many times.
Speaker 11 And
Speaker 11 I didn't play a part in it knowingly.
Speaker 4 You're saying you're a victim of the scammers as well.
Speaker 11 I'm absolutely a victim.
Speaker 22 But I.
Speaker 12 And you're a victim who may end up doing time.
Speaker 7 And only because they feel like I should have known.
Speaker 2 And Jennifer said she could not possibly be behind these scams because she herself, she was basically broke.
Speaker 2 She had been sending all of this money around, doing all these transfers, all these transactions for Anthony and Samuel. And in all of that, she hadn't kept any money for herself.
Speaker 2 She also swore up and down that she had no idea that she was ever doing anything illegal.
Speaker 2 She had no idea that Samuel and Anthony were just out there scamming women, catfishing women, doing all these horrific things and roping her into this scam as well.
Speaker 2 However, that said, you've got to wonder: you know, were any red flags ever waving for Jennifer, just given the sheer amount of cash that she was moving around?
Speaker 2
Between her, Anthony, and Samuel, there was something like $750,000 flowing in and out of all of their accounts. That's three quarters of a million dollars.
That's a lot of money.
Speaker 2 And it's all stolen from lonely people on dating websites, which is so evil and heartbreaking.
Speaker 2 And they had accounts on all of the big sites, not just match.com, but OKCupid, I think Plenty of Phish too. I mean, all the major players in the dating space back in, you know, 2018, 2020.
Speaker 2 And in addition to like the dating site scam, which is more personal, more hands-on, I'm sure we all have received at some point something in our email, right?
Speaker 2 Where it says your email address has been compromised or your bank account has been compromised. You need to click this link, you need to call this phone number, those things too.
Speaker 2 Well, Samuel and Anthony did those scams as well. They had a bunch of fake businesses set up, all under different names.
Speaker 2 They also had numerous bank accounts, again, under different names, presumably to make it harder for anybody to notice what they were up to.
Speaker 2 So, this was all enough to charge Jennifer, Samuel, and Anthony with conspiracy to commit wire fraud. This was in July of 2020, and for context, this was one month before Laura went missing.
Speaker 2 So like I said, they already had their guys. They just hadn't made the connection yet.
Speaker 2 And apparently, the police didn't believe a word of what Jennifer said about being innocent and having no idea what she was involved with.
Speaker 2 Supposedly, investigators even had recordings that proved she knew what was going on.
Speaker 2 Sadly, those recordings don't appear to have been released anywhere, so it's hard to say much about them, what Jennifer actually said, what the context was, really any of it.
Speaker 2 But the police also knew that Laura was somehow tied to this scheme and they wanted to close in on her as well. So that's when they called her daughter Kelly, asking for help locating her.
Speaker 2 And then Kelly called Laura to ask what was going on, and Laura just took off and skipped town.
Speaker 2 Then, as we know, they tracked Laura's movements, and her car ended up on that boat ramp by the Mississippi River.
Speaker 2 And on that same day, on August 9th, Kelly got the kind of news that nobody ever wants to receive.
Speaker 5
This is Detective Casey Folks with the Sheriff's Office. My partner, Detective Phillips, is here.
We need you guys to prepare yourselves for what we're going to tell you.
Speaker 2 Someone had spotted a body floating in the Mississippi River. It had made it all the way to South Missouri, so it must have been floating downstream for quite some time.
Speaker 2 And when the recovery team got there, they realized that the deceased body was a woman in her mid-50s. And later, the body was positively ID'd as Laura.
Speaker 2 During her autopsy, the medical examiner ruled that Laura's cause of death was drowning. There were no injuries, and her talks report came back completely clean.
Speaker 2 So this meant that there was no evidence that anybody pushed her into the water or drugged her. There was no sign that anybody forced her into that river.
Speaker 2 And based on that, the police concluded that Laura had taken her own life.
Speaker 2 Maybe the fear and the stress of almost getting caught in this scam was way too much for her, so she just decided she had no other option but to end it all. But Kelly wasn't buying that explanation.
Speaker 2 I mean, first, she knew her mother. Or at least, least, I mean, she thought she knew her.
Speaker 2 We, of course, know Laura was keeping some incredibly major secrets, but even if Laura never opened up about what was going on with her and Frank and the scamming and the financials and all of that, Kelly still knew her mom well enough to say, she would never take her own life.
Speaker 2
This isn't my mom. That's just not who she is.
And in fairness, there wasn't a ton of evidence to prove that Laura's death was at her own hands.
Speaker 2
The police only came to that conclusion because they couldn't prove that it was murder. There was no drugs, no injuries, no weapon.
So that's what they kind of were left with.
Speaker 2 That That was really the only thing that they could come up with.
Speaker 2 Although, I guess theoretically, you could, you know, march somebody into a river at gunpoint and then sort of like shove them into it and let the current take them away and do the work for you without leaving any mark.
Speaker 2 I suppose that's a possibility.
Speaker 2 But the point is, Kelly just thought that it was really unfair for the police to announce that this was suicide when they really couldn't be sure, when maybe there was something else at play. here.
Speaker 2 And that wasn't all that had Kelly feeling this way.
Speaker 2 She also had her suspicions after she talked with that that couple who first had spotted Laura's body floating in the river, because they told her something that hadn't made it into any of the news reports.
Speaker 2 There apparently was a second body in the water.
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Speaker 2 So while Kelly was looking into her mother's death and doing her own investigating, she met up with the couple who said that they they were the ones who spotted her mom's remains floating in the river.
Speaker 2 Their names are Gary and Kathy. And before I get into this next part of the story, I need to tell you, I haven't been able to verify it.
Speaker 2 Gary and Kathy talked about it when they were interviewed on a podcast called The Protectors, and it's a very fascinating interview.
Speaker 2 The Protectors also interviewed Kelly as well to help get her mom's story out, which you should definitely check it out for yourselves if you want to hear more.
Speaker 2 But the point is, I don't have any way of verifying Gary and Kathy's story, so decide for yourself. However, I will say, Kelly did think that they were credible.
Speaker 9 So I was not contacted by Gary and Kathy immediately.
Speaker 9 It was actually the weeks following August 9th of when my mother's body was recovered that I received a Facebook message from an individual that claimed to be a family member of Gary and Kathy.
Speaker 9 And during this time,
Speaker 9 I had mentioned previously, web flues, people I didn't know, it became a lot of who was reaching out and contacting me and all the speculation that was going on.
Speaker 9 And so I received this message saying, I'm a family member of the couple that found your mom on the river and they're trying to get a hold of you.
Speaker 9 And I think you need to listen to what they have to say because it's not being reported of everything that they found.
Speaker 9 I didn't know if it was real or not. And this was actually the same day of my mother's funeral and memorial service that evening.
Speaker 9 So
Speaker 9 I had to do a little investigating myself to figure out who Gary and Kathy really were. And once I did, I connected with them
Speaker 9 and I knew immediately that they were a credible couple and everything that they said was genuine. and they absolutely cared.
Speaker 9 And not only was I traumatized, my entire family from this situation, but they were as well. They were the couple that found my mother dead on the river.
Speaker 9 And so their tradition was to go out fishing on, you know, weekends or Sunday evenings. And they are from the Canton, Missouri area, so very familiar with the river.
Speaker 9
And like I said, frequent it every weekend. That is their tradition as a couple.
And they were out on the river. And
Speaker 9 Jerry and Kathy noticed something floating in the water and it looked like a body and they approached approached it and it was a female body.
Speaker 9 But what they had shared with me is that this body that they found and actually called 911 on was not my mother's body. There was another female body that they found first before finding my mother's.
Speaker 9 And hearing that,
Speaker 9 I completely shocked me.
Speaker 9 I think changed just even the heaviness of this entire situation to say how, you know, what more is involved in this entire thing?
Speaker 9 The fact that they found another female body along with my mother's that day on the river on August 9th.
Speaker 2 So according to Gary and Kathy, they saw a body in the river on August 9th and reported it to the police. That much we already knew, right? But according to them, the body clearly wasn't Laura's.
Speaker 2 It was a woman who was wearing a bikini.
Speaker 13
And I noticed something odd in the water. It was around six o'clock in the evening.
So I
Speaker 13 motored over to it and it was a woman, a light brown-haired woman, floating face down.
Speaker 13 She had what I thought was a swim, two-piece swimsuit on and it had like a floral pattern on it. And her hair was short, but in a ponytail.
Speaker 13 And I could not see what her bottoms were. They were too far in the water.
Speaker 13 As soon as I found her, I mean, I was just like, I could have reached down and touched her at one time.
Speaker 13 And my wife was there. She's seen it too.
Speaker 13 But all this time, we are drifting down towards that dredging equipment. And so I immediately called 911 and talked to
Speaker 13 whoever it was.
Speaker 13 But while this is, while I'm explaining what's going on, we're getting closer to the dredging stuff. And finally, I
Speaker 13 had to make a decision, grab the body or let it go underneath the stuff, the piping and stuff.
Speaker 13 And I let it go. And I told my wife, we'll just go down river and get ahead of her.
Speaker 13 And when she comes out, which it wasn't nothing that would have tore her up or anything, it was just going under some floating pipes.
Speaker 13 She won't walk through any of the dredging equipment or none of that.
Speaker 2 So Gary and Kathy decided they would just wait for that body that they had discovered to drift under those pipes and then come out on the other side. Except it never did.
Speaker 2 It just vanished right there while they were watching.
Speaker 2 Then they found Laura's body just a few minutes later, and they knew that it was zero chance that it was the same body that they had just seen moments earlier.
Speaker 2 I mean, the haircut, the clothing, the build, the age, every detail about these two bodies, the two women were entirely different.
Speaker 24 On a scale of one to ten, how sure are you that what you saw was two different bodies?
Speaker 13 Twelve.
Speaker 24 All right. No, that answers it right there.
Speaker 13 I think it's just going to take one person to talk and
Speaker 13 they can clear it all up.
Speaker 2 So, when authorities got to the scene, they apparently looked everywhere for the first body that this couple had come across, but there was no sign of it.
Speaker 2 And to this day, it doesn't seem like anything really came of it, which that's a really weird story, right? And it's kind of hard to make sense of. I mean, it's really confusing.
Speaker 2
There were two bodies in the river, one disappeared, one was Laura. It's not clear how they were connected or if they were connected.
It's bizarre.
Speaker 2 And a lot of people think that there are two possible interpretations here. One is that this was all just a massive coincidence, that Laura did take her own life and then drifted down to Missouri.
Speaker 2 Then, in a completely unrelated development, this other bikini woman also died and ended up in the exact same part of the river at the same time.
Speaker 2 And those remains, for whatever reason, were tragically lost.
Speaker 2 However, the second theory, and I will say this one is a little out there, so do with it what you want, is that this wasn't a coincidence at all, that it just certainly was no coincidence that these two bodies turned up in the same place, that someone died at Laura's side at the same time, but rather that they were killed together.
Speaker 2 Maybe it was somebody else who was caught up in the scam, or maybe somebody else who was unfortunate enough to get mixed up with all of the wrong people, but either way, the theory suggests that someone might have murdered both Laura and this other woman, doing this by forcing them into the water and letting them drown together.
Speaker 2 And that sadly, the police just couldn't prove it because this second victim disappeared before they could even get to the scene.
Speaker 2 Which I don't know, which of those theories sounds more credible to you?
Speaker 2 There's a lot of conversation and speculation out there, and I will say, they're weighted pretty evenly in terms of who believes what.
Speaker 2 And Kelly definitely thought that there was something more there, something that was worth investigating. She wasn't just gonna like roll over and take this laying down.
Speaker 2 And she was very frustrated with the fact that the police were just not investigating, especially because, in her mind, there were other details that just weren't adding up in all of this.
Speaker 2 Like the circumstances around how Laura's car was found, for example. I mean, if Laura was going to take her own life, why drive to this random town, this town that she had never even been to before?
Speaker 2 Why spend three and a half hours or maybe even more on the road just to end it all at that location? Why? It wasn't even a significant location.
Speaker 2 Canadian Missouri and Morse High, Illinois are completely foreign locations to me and my family. We did not know where they were at until we looked on a map.
Speaker 2 So my mom, myself, our family have no connection down to that area. Now in interviews, Kelly said that she would accept whatever conclusions the police came to.
Speaker 2 After they did an actual thorough investigation, where they tied up all the loose ends and did all of the things that they needed to do to fully investigate.
Speaker 2 In Kelly's mind, the problem was that nobody even was looking closely enough at her mother's death yet. So she just wanted these investigators and these officials to take a deeper look.
Speaker 2 To Kelly, there were no other signs that Laura had ever expected to die that day.
Speaker 2 And one of those little signs was that she had texted her friend, the neighbor that she was supposed to get lunch with that day.
Speaker 2 She texted her just a few hours before her death saying, everything is good.
Speaker 2 Now maybe she just didn't want that neighbor to worry, but Kelly also thought that it was a really odd thing to say if Laura was planning on taking her own life.
Speaker 2
And on top of that, like I mentioned before, when Laura left, she also left her dog Effie behind. Laura loved Effie.
She had her for years. She treated her like another member of the family.
Speaker 2 So Kelly couldn't believe that Laura would do something that was so permanent and taking her own life without at least arranging for a pet sitter or somebody to come be with Effie.
Speaker 2 She would want to make sure that Effie was taken care of after she was gone, and Laura hadn't done a single thing to make sure that Effie would be okay. She didn't even cancel her weekend plans.
Speaker 2 She was supposed to have friends over that weekend for craft day. They were going to learn how to make, you know, these little cement bird baths together, I guess, which is pretty intense.
Speaker 2 And if you know me, you know, I'm freaked out by birds, but whatever, each their own. But why would she make these kinds of plans if she she wasn't going to even be around for the weekend?
Speaker 2 Or alternatively, let's just, you know, for the sake of argument, say if this was a spur-of-the-moment decision and Laura didn't intend to take her own life until that moment right before she did, why didn't she call anyone to say goodbye?
Speaker 2 Why'd she tell her daughter everything was going to be okay, she was going to handle it, rather than say goodbye? Unless maybe that was that note that she left behind.
Speaker 2 But remember, that last sentence of the note was that she would end up hurt, not that she would hurt herself.
Speaker 2 It included that exact line where she said, I tried to stop it, but I knew I would end up dead.
Speaker 2 So does that sound like a clear-cut admission on her part, that she knew she wasn't going to come out of this alive?
Speaker 2 But Kelly didn't think that this was a sign that Laura was thinking about self-harm.
Speaker 2 She thought that it was a sign that this Frank guy, or more accurately, one of the people pretending to be Frank, had been threatening Laura.
Speaker 2 And personally, that's what that letter sounds like to me, that note. It doesn't sound like, you know, I tried to stop it, I got in too deep, and now like, I love you, but I have to say goodbye.
Speaker 2
That's not what it was. It says, I tried to stop it, but I knew I would end up dead.
Who talks about self-harm in a way of saying, I knew I would end up dead?
Speaker 2 That to me just kind of insinuates somebody doing the act to you, doesn't it? Unless I'm crazy, but that's how I read into it. Now, I do think that one thing is clear.
Speaker 2 Whether it was murder or a self-harm situation, Samuel, Anthony, and Jennifer had put Laura in this position.
Speaker 2 Even if they didn't kill her themselves, they brought her into this entire criminal scheme, and they potentially had her feeling so hopeless that death seemed like the only way out.
Speaker 2 Sam eventually pleaded guilty to wire fraud and money laundering in July of 2023, and he took a plea deal and agreed to work with the prosecutors to tell them more about this scam, you know, who was involved, how it worked, and in return, he received a 10-year prison sentence.
Speaker 2 Now, at first, it seemed like Jennifer was willing to accept a plea deal.
Speaker 2 Guilty or not, it sounds like she just kind of wanted all of this to go away, to not have to go through this long legal process when she might lose anyway.
Speaker 2 But then a judge pointed something out to her, that pleading guilty would mean that she would be a convicted felon.
Speaker 2 That would also mean losing her pension from all of those years working at the post office, which tough situation to be in, right?
Speaker 2 So from the sounds of it, once Jennifer realized that she would have nothing to retire on, she decided that she was better off taking her chances in court, and she rejected the plea deal.
Speaker 2 Then in 2024, when her trial was supposed to start, she ended up pleading guilty. So it was kind of a lot of back and and forth for nothing.
Speaker 2 And she admitted to wire fraud, making false statements to a federal agent, all of the things that went along with it.
Speaker 2 And she ended up getting three years of probation, starting with six months of house arrest. Now, as for Anthony, he was the only person in this scheme who actually went to trial.
Speaker 2 He pleaded not guilty and he took his chances with a jury, which this was a bad call because he ended up being found guilty of 14 different counts, including wire fraud, mail fraud, money laundering, making false statements to a bank, passport fraud.
Speaker 2
I mean, you name it. He was also sentenced to 20 years in prison.
So adios. See you later.
Speaker 2
So two of the three scammers are currently behind bars, which is great. But Kelly, Kelly is of course still looking for answers, still to this day.
She's still asking for information and leads.
Speaker 2 I'm asking that if anyone has any information regarding the disappearance or death of my mother to come forward and share that information with the Joe Davies County Sheriff's Department.
Speaker 2 Now, Kelly did manage to track down some of her mom's money, but here's the thing.
Speaker 2 It wasn't even in the United States anymore, which, again, to me, it makes it sound like this scam was much bigger than what it was.
Speaker 2 I don't think it was something local in Chicago with only Anthony, Samuel, and Jennifer. It feels bigger.
Speaker 20 It's left in a place where somebody will easily find it so they understand why that person did what they did. But, you know, the other thing that bothers me and Mike is the dog.
Speaker 20 And she had such an affection and love for that dog and the manner if we were to speculate the manner of death was suicide by drowning then you know there was a very good chance that dog would not be found for days or weeks and you know do you think that is an indicator that your mother wasn't committing suicide
Speaker 2 Absolutely. Now, while we're on the subject of Kelly investigating and digging, I think it's important to mention that one day Kelly decided to do something.
Speaker 2 Now, some people might think that this was a little out there, but I can totally see why she thought that this was a good idea.
Speaker 2 But Kelly opened her mom's computer one last time and she wrote an email to Frank. She wrote this email from Laura's account and it said, Frank, I have not been well.
Speaker 2
I am feeling much better these days and would enjoy talking with you again. I have missed you.
Can we talk tomorrow? And guess what? Frank responded.
Speaker 2 This Frank guy actually responded, or whoever the hell was pretending to be Frank responded. And he actually called Laura's phone and left a message.
Speaker 2 So obviously this guy wasn't Anthony, Samuel, or Jennifer, right? They had all been arrested by this point. So who was this guy? Who was returning the call?
Speaker 2 Is it just one of the many co-workers of this organization?
Speaker 2 And I have to imagine that Kelly was probably thrilled to get this voicemail because now it was a new clue, a chance to find another person who was responsible for what happened to her mom.
Speaker 2
So she tried calling this fake Frank back, but he unfortunately didn't answer. And since then, she has never been able to get a hold of him.
Who knows though?
Speaker 2
Maybe one day she will hear from him again. But if I was Frank, I would be scared shitless.
I'd be shitting my pants right now because Kelly is not playing around. And honestly, I love Kelly.
Speaker 2 It is so amazing that she is still fighting and looking for answers regarding her mom's death so that she can get the answers as to what really happened here.
Speaker 2 She even quit her job to help spread awareness about catfishing and online scams.
Speaker 2 Every single day, she's out there fighting, trying to help people understand what kind of con artists are out there and how they can be safer.
Speaker 10 It's the scammers. It's the criminals behind those emails.
Speaker 7 It's Frank Borg
Speaker 10 from Sweden, this character.
Speaker 7 He killed my mom.
Speaker 10 And everyone that is involved in this scam in any capacity, that's moving the money, that's placing a phone call, that's hitting enter and send on an email.
Speaker 2 They're all responsible.
Speaker 2 Kelly has also been taking care of Laura's dog, Effie, and every week they travel to a a local nursing home where Effie works as a therapy dog.
Speaker 2 So it's sweet that even little Effie is helping people in all of this. It's not just Kelly, it's the whole family, including, you know, the little non-human furry member of the family.
Speaker 2 Now, this whole case, I think we can agree, it's just so heartbreaking, but it also should be a wake-up call for everybody who's listening right now.
Speaker 2 When it comes to online relationships, please, please, please just remember if something feels wrong, it probably is.
Speaker 2 And if someone, even someone you think that you know and trust, is asking you for things that make you feel uncomfortable, it's a huge red flag.
Speaker 2 And something I've said before, but I'll say it again, is your gut and your intuition, it's really there as your first line of defense.
Speaker 2 Your first line of defense against predators, against scams, against anything.
Speaker 2 Sometimes I know it's difficult because if you feel a certain way, you try to justify it, almost apologize for feeling that way or ignore it, but it's there to protect you.
Speaker 2 Your gut is there to just defend you from these people. So please, if something feels wrong, listen to your gut.
Speaker 2 I also want to give many thanks to Kelly for sharing her interview and to Doug Taylor, the producer of the Protectors podcast.
Speaker 2 Their aim is to educate consumers on all of the fraud, financial crimes, and cyber criminal activities that are becoming more and more common.
Speaker 2 And one of their taglines is, don't become the next victim, which I think is a sentiment we all can appreciate.
Speaker 2 Their podcast is presented by the International Association of Financial Crime Investigators, and it takes you inside the minds of criminals from all around the world, and with leading experts and the investigators who put them behind bars.
Speaker 2 And you can check out their full episode, The Life and Mysterious Death of Laura Coell, a Romance Investment Scheme Victim, at ProtectorsPodcast.com.
Speaker 2 I don't know, guys, what do you think about this case?
Speaker 2 Do you think it was all a coincidence that Laura was involved in this scheme and then she took her own life because she felt like there was no way out?
Speaker 2 Or do you think that this goes deeper, that more people are involved and they didn't want her to speak and so somebody did this to her to cover up the bigger scheme of things?
Speaker 2 I mean, we know that this fictitious fictitious Frank person ended up contacting her down the road again. So like down the road again, no.
Speaker 2 So like, what do you guys think is really going on here? I'm curious to know your thoughts. Thank you for tuning in to another episode with me.
Speaker 2 I think it is a great reminder to just always be careful in the online dating world. Heck, just even the world in general.
Speaker 2 And if somebody's ever asking you for something and it feels wrong or feels like they're taking advantage of you in some way, chances are not to be a pessimist, but chances are they probably are.
Speaker 2 So listen to your gut.
Speaker 2 I'll be back on the mic with you first thing on Thursday with an all new headline highlights where I will be breaking down everything happening this week in the true crime world.
Speaker 2 And then I will, of course, be back with you next Monday with an all-new deep dive into a case. Thanks again for tuning in, guys.
Speaker 2 And until the next one, be nice, don't kill people, don't scam anybody, don't join any cults, and be careful online dating. All right, bye.
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