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Shane and Sally | 3. An Open Investigation

2024/3/26
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Texas Monthly: 本集详细介绍了Shane和Sally谋杀案的最初调查步骤,以及Shane和Sally在被杀前几个月与当局接触的故事。还包括Tom Green县警局官员对最初调查的挫败感,以及犯罪现场幸存证据的细节。 Larry Counts: 我相信圣安吉洛警察局内部有人泄露了信息,导致Shane和Sally被杀。他们将一支被盗的枪交给警方,并提供了关于一起谋杀案的信息,这可能导致了他们的死亡。 Terry Lowe: 最初的调查对证据的处理存在重大问题,例如没有对Shane的汽车和周围环境进行充分的拍照和记录,也没有妥善收集指纹、头发和纤维等证据。此外,一些关键证据丢失了,例如Whataburger的杯子和吸管,以及Shane和Sally的一些个人物品。 David Jones: 最初的调查没有进行适当的犯罪现场调查,例如没有及时发现Shane的遗体。证词也存在矛盾,例如目击证人Randall Littlefield的证词与他的朋友Robert McCullough的证词存在矛盾。 Nick Hanna: 最初的调查存在时间空隙,导致很多事情没有及时处理。此外,证据的处理不当,例如对Stetson别针的处理。Sally可能作为线人,这可能会导致她的死亡。 Texas Monthly: 本集详细介绍了Shane和Sally谋杀案的最初调查步骤,以及Shane和Sally在被杀前几个月与当局接触的故事。还包括Tom Green县警局官员对最初调查的挫败感,以及犯罪现场幸存证据的细节。 Larry Counts: 我相信圣安吉洛警察局内部有人泄露了信息,导致Shane和Sally被杀。他们将一支被盗的枪交给警方,并提供了关于一起谋杀案的信息,这可能导致了他们的死亡。 Terry Lowe: 最初的调查对证据的处理存在重大问题,例如没有对Shane的汽车和周围环境进行充分的拍照和记录,也没有妥善收集指纹、头发和纤维等证据。此外,一些关键证据丢失了,例如Whataburger的杯子和吸管,以及Shane和Sally的一些个人物品。 David Jones: 最初的调查没有进行适当的犯罪现场调查,例如没有及时发现Shane的遗体。证词也存在矛盾,例如目击证人Randall Littlefield的证词与他的朋友Robert McCullough的证词存在矛盾。 Nick Hanna: 最初的调查存在时间空隙,导致很多事情没有及时处理。此外,证据的处理不当,例如对Stetson别针的处理。Sally可能作为线人,这可能会导致她的死亡。

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Texas Monthly. Three years after Shane and Sally were murdered, the case was featured on the TV show Unsolved Mysteries. In the show, there's a reenactment of the scene we described in our last episode. The one where former Sheriff's Deputy Larry Counts visited Shane and Sally's apartment to get a gun from Sally. She'd heard this gun was used in a murder, and Sally just wanted to get rid of it.

The scene is set in March of 1988, just a few months before the murders. Shane, he's here. Okay. He's trying to find the gun. Okay. That's Larry's voice saying okay there. He played himself in the episode. For all the attention the murders had gotten, all the pleas for help on local TV, this was the first time the gun story became public. This is the gun that guy gave us that I told you about. Does he have any other weapons?

Yeah, he's got a whole toolbox full of guns. I mean, it's scary because you know these guys are... In the episode, we never hear who gave Sally the gun, but whoever he is, she's worried about this guy. And Shane is worried the guy might hear they gave the gun to the sheriff's office. He's not going to find out about this, is he?

I can't promise you anything, but I will do my best. I appreciate it. At least for the cameras, Larry said he'd do his best to keep it secret. But today, he thinks it's possible that someone did find out. And that's what got Shane and Sally killed. Back at the sheriff's office, Larry traced the gun's serial number. Turned out, it had been stolen in 1984 from an Army surplus store in San Angelo.

And because Sally told him it had been used in a murder that took place within the city limits, Larry passed the gun to the St. Angelo Police Department and he gave them Shane and Sally's names. Larry told me he's come to believe there was a leak in the city police department. Someone with connections to whoever gave Sally that gun.

He mentioned this just as we were packing up to leave, so it's a little hard to hear. And then if we brought somebody in and had an interview with them, then maybe like the next day this policeman would come in and say, "Hey, how'd your interview with so-and-so go?" or stuff like that. And that's what got us wondering how he knew everything that was going on. I wanted to know more about Larry's theory.

It's a startling accusation for one lawman to make against another. And to me, the key piece of evidence seems to be the gun. So I filed an open records request with the city police. But they told me they couldn't find any records about this gun. I figured, surely someone who worked there back then would remember it.

I found one former officer who gave me a list of names. I mined old crime stories in the St. Angelo paper for more officers' names. Then I started calling, and after an endless string of wrong numbers, I finally reached one of them. Then another. Eventually, I'd talked with more than 20 people who'd worked at the St. Angelo Police Department around this time.

Yeah, do I have the right Phil Fox? The one and only. Okay. Well, I'm a reporter. I'm doing a... A retired officer named Phil Fox told me, yeah, he did remember the Shane and Sally case, but only that it was the sheriff's office who investigated it, not the city police. As far as the gun, I don't recall anything about a gun. I remember the case that you're talking about now.

'Cause it's been a long, long time ago in my life. - You're trying to find out what now?

I heard pretty much the same thing from Dennis McGuire. And from David Howard. And from Frank Carter Sr. You don't recall there any gun being turned over?

The stolen gun. A .25 caliber pistol supposedly used in a murder.

An 18 year old girl gives it to the sheriff's office and starts talking with the authorities just before getting murdered in a case that made national headlines. You'd think that someone would remember this gun. I even talked to Taylor Cole, who runs the store where the gun was stolen. Cole's Army Surplus. Are you aware of the Shane and Sally case?

I'm not aware of that case, but we've been broken into quite a few times. He told me he wanted to help, but since the gun was stolen in 1984, he knew there wouldn't be any records left at the store. In 1986, my dad had just bought out his father, and it all came crashing down that night. I sat and watched it burn. Their store, and all the records inside it, were lost in a fire.

They've rebuilt since then. Neither he nor his dad remember this missing gun. But now he was curious about what had happened to it. I had to break it to him. There's no records on it. Nothing. So... The gun's disappeared? Yeah, it's gone. Oh, so that means I can't get my gun back.

Were Shane and Sally killed for turning in this gun and telling the police about a murder in town? And were members of the San Angelo police involved in their deaths? That's one theory, one that Larry Counts believes. But without records of the gun or a single police officer who remembered it, I was getting worried this might be a dead end. But even back in 1988, investigators had other theories as well.

We're going to talk about how those first investigators tried to solve the murders of Shane Stewart and Sally McNelly. What leads they chased, what leads they apparently didn't, and how this became the kind of cold case the generations of sheriffs and Texas Rangers and reporters with podcasts keep coming back to over the years, searching for crumbs that everyone else missed, hoping for a break. From Texas Monthly, this is Shane and Sally McNelly.

I'm Rob D'Amico. And I'm Karen Jacobs. This is Episode 3, An Open Investigation. Back in 2018, I was talking with Terry Lowe, who was an investigator with the Tom Greene County Sheriff's Office. And he told me something about what it would have been like as an investigator in the summer and fall of 1988. The thing is, I think this, if Shane and Sally happened today, it'd be solved probably by tomorrow.

But unfortunately, things were different. He said St. Angelo is bigger now. The sheriff's office has more investigators, and those investigators have better tools, like forensic technology, access to social media, cell phone records. You know, it's just a different world in law enforcement than it was back then. Terry told me a story from years ago when he was working in Midland, a bigger city a couple of hours northwest of St. Angelo.

He was watching a true crime series on TV, and a detective in California was describing a novel way to find blood at a crime scene with ultraviolet light. So the next day I called him from Midland, and I said, hey, I saw where y'all used an alternative light source to look under blood, and I'm working a case where I think that'll help me. And he said, when did you see this? I said, I saw it last night. And he said, that was 11 years ago.

So it took 11 years and a television show for me in Midland, Texas to learn that that even existed. In July 1988, the sheriff of Tom Green County, Texas was Ernest Haynes. In his office, the lieutenant in charge of criminal investigations was named Lou Hargraves. There were just a few deputies. One of them was Larry Counts.

So tell me, what was it like in 1988? What was going on in San Angelo? Was it busy or sleepy? Well, for the sheriff's office, it was kind of slow, actually. We had an occasional homicide. For the most part, it was back then, it was relatively sleepy little country kind of a county. Larry has wire-rimmed glasses and neatly combed hair, just like he wore it back in the 80s.

Back then, he was just a patrolman at the start of his career. And I happened to be working the morning that the Lake Ranger called. He had that vehicle out there. And so I was one of the officers that went out there. And what were your first thoughts? Because there was, everything was kind of neat in the car and neat around it. You know, there was no signs of struggle and stuff. We originally thought they just broke down somehow. And...

They were just left out there. Then we contacted his dad and his dad said, "No, it's not broke down."

Marshall Stewart told us about this too, how he kept pressing investigators to search around Shane's Camaro to treat it more like a crime scene. And they told him Shane and Sally had just run away. But Larry says he never really believed Shane and Sally just skipped town. We got a report that they were seen at a truck stop somewhere, like they were hitchhiking or something, but that never made any sense either.

I mean, he had a perfectly good, nice car that a teenage boy would love to have. And why leave it? Two other detectives worked the case with Larry. He says they were the primary investigators. One was his lieutenant, Lou Hargraves. Another was named Bill McCloud. Both of them have since passed away. Together, they assembled a timeline where Shane and Sally were in the weeks before the murders, right up to the night they went missing.

The timeline is one of the key documents we have from the initial investigation, and it mentions at least 25 interviews they conducted until late December 1988. And we just started checking out with their friends and

the people they ran with. Did you think about the stories about the satanic stuff at all? Yes, yeah. Because two or three of their friends were kind of in, you know, were more involved in the satanic angle. Yeah, we did think that that might have something to do with it.

Actually, some of this Larry had heard directly from Shane and Sally. After they gave him that stolen gun, Larry says they offered to tell him more about this occult group. They told me or showed me a couple of places where satanic rituals were supposed to have taken place. Some of it was out in the county. One place was here in town, here in San Angelo.

The other place where they told me was very near where their car was found later when they were turned up missing out by the lake.

That's OC Fisher Lake, around those picnic tables that Marshall filmed, with the spray-painted pentagrams and heavy metal band names. Larry says he investigated the group of kids who hung out there and heard some outlandish rumors, but never found evidence to support them. You know, there was never any crime that was actually, we could say the crime was done because of somebody being a satanic worshiper. And I think a lot of it was just

Those old interview notes mentioned some people with records of pot possession and petty crime, as well as the fact that there was tension in the group. In particular, the deputies heard that there were some people Shane and Sally weren't getting along with. One of those leads came from Marshall. He told us about this too. And then the night of the 4th when he disappeared, he went into, there was a phone call and I answered it in the kitchen.

and it was a phone call for him. And I didn't recognize the voice on the phone, and so I just said, "Shane, you've got a phone call." So I walked kind of down the hall and just stood there to listen because I'm thinking, "Well, they just come back to town a day or two ago. Who would know that he's in town?" And as I was listening, he said, "Hey, I've got your money. Don't worry about the money. That's not a problem."

So when he hung the phone up, I told him, I said, "If you owe somebody and you've got money in there, you need to go ahead and pay them." He said, "Hey, Dad, it's not a problem. Not a problem at all." I said, "Okay." So I asked Larry what they did with that information. So is that something you followed up with when you can find him? Yes, yes. Now back in that time, it was hard to trace any telephone calls, not like you can now.

As far as I remember, we never knew who made that call. And as far as money, I mean, it's possible it could owe somebody money for something. No one ever found a large amount of cash on Shane or anything like that? No, no. It might have been hard to find out who made that phone call, but it was possible. And we haven't seen any record that anyone at the sheriff's office did.

The Sheriff's eight-page summary of early investigative work is kind of frustrating. It raises tantalizing questions that are never answered. It mentions so many interviews, so many leads, and so few conclusions.

The Sheriff's Office also had physical evidence to work with. But, and you've heard a little of this from Marshall already, there were major problems with how they handled that evidence. Mistakes that moderate investigators can never go back and fix. First, there was Shane's Camaro and the area around it at OC Fisher Lake. In the reports we have, detectives did make a list of what was in the car. The keys on the dash, the fast food wrappers, and Sally's work uniform.

But the report doesn't have any photos from the scene. And Marshall doesn't remember seeing the detectives take any. And those big tire tracks next to the Camaro? Marshall says he insisted the officers examine them, but there's no record that the officers took notes or photographs or made casts of the tracks. And then, they just let Marshall drive the car home. It was days before they called and asked him to bring it back to the station for a more thorough search.

DNA analysis was still years away in San Angelo, but by 1988, investigators were trained to collect fingerprints and hair and fibers from clothing. The kind of evidence that you can lose forever if you let someone drive off with a car. But even evidence that did make it to the sheriff's office had a way of going missing. Sally's stepfather, Bill Wade, told us that, like Marshall, he and Pat got lots of calls from people claiming to have information.

Bill figured the best thing they could do is just take notes on everything and pass it all to the sheriff's office. Basically, leave it to the professionals. Like you mentioned giving them notes and you were having calls and then what happened with all that stuff? As far as we know, it vanished. We had our written notes about people who called us and we had, you know, we'd acquired an answering machine to record calls and we'd turned over tapes of calls.

to Larry Counts and you know it's just honestly you know we gave them everything we had and so none of that stuff that we gathered is in our possession anymore and so we we have to dredge our memory and and bounce ideas off of each other to try and remember details you know when Terry asked hey did you know X or did you know Y and it's like god I don't know

In November of '88, the deputies were faced with the most critical evidence of all when the search for Shane and Sally ended with that call from a hunter at Twin Buttes Reservoir. So he walked over to a little grove of trees and as he stepped around, he walked up on Sally's body laying there. It was still clothed, but you know, of course, then all the flesh had all decomposed and so it was just actually a skeleton dressed in clothes.

Larry says it looked like whoever had killed them tried to hide the bodies under piles of branches. And maybe at the time in July when the branches were put on them, they may have had leaves on them and stuff, but by that time in November, all the leaves had fallen off and stuff, so it was just bare branches on top of them, and neither one were even attempted to be buried. Their bodies were 75 feet apart. Investigators recovered shotgun shells and buckshot on and around the remains.

Well, we photographed everything at the scene, and then we took a piece of thin board and we slid it under the body and scraped up all the dirt along with it and then put that in the body bag. So when we went to San Antonio to the M.E.'s office, we had the dirt underneath the body and stuff too.

Their photos from the scene are still with the reports we have. And thanks to these photos, we can also see that officers were handling evidence with their bare hands, which they would have known was a big mistake, even then. In one photo, an officer holds, in his bare hand, a shiny silver hat pin.

The pin is shaped like a branding iron. On one end are the letters JBS, which stand for John Batterson Stetson, as in the Stetson Hat Company. A report says this pin was found lying on top of the brush that covered Shane's body.

Near the bodies, officers also found a spot that looked charred, like someone had lit a campfire. And near it, they found the remains of a black cat, which they shipped off to the medical examiner too, though it didn't yield any more evidence. Investigators mentioned both the cat and the fire pit as potential evidence of cult activity. I've had numerous conversations with officials who say the Sheriff's Department had made mistakes in the initial investigation.

I went back to Larry last summer to ask him about all these times it looked like the sheriff's office had dropped the ball. Okay, I don't want to say anything bad either, but Bill and the other two detectives were very scatterbrained. And I was just a patrolman because Shane and Sally came to me first.

then they kind of brought me into it. But I was just a patrolman, I wasn't a detective. And you'd bring stuff to them and they wouldn't, they just flat wouldn't write reports and stuff. But we were interviewing people, yeah. By early 1989, though, the Sheriff's Office wasn't the only one looking into the case. After the bodies were found, the Texas Rangers and an investigator with the state police began looking into it as well.

The investigator's name was David Jones. David passed away in 2021, but I was able to interview him in San Angelo six years ago. He told me he heard about Shane and Sally's disappearance pretty quickly, and once he saw the facts of the case, he didn't believe they just ran off together. I know the sheriff's office at the time, that was their opinion. It wasn't my opinion once I became involved and knew the facts of the case.

David began interviewing people and writing detailed reports about what he'd learned. David took a close look at the eyewitness account of Randall Littlefield, the fisherman you heard about in episode one. At first, Littlefield's story was pretty clear-cut. He said he was out fishing when he saw Shane and Sally sitting on Shane's Camaro, then saw two young men in a small pickup truck drive up and start arguing with them.

His account became key to the investigation, but there were problems with it. For one thing, Littlefield didn't come forward until the spring of 1989, long after the 4th of July. It's not clear when investigators first interviewed Littlefield, but investigators brought him back in on May 5th, 1989. This time, they questioned him under hypnosis.

Littlefield mostly gave the same story. He described the small, orange or red 4x4 truck with bright lights on top. But he also said investigators might have better luck talking to a friend of his, who'd also been in the boat. That friend was a guy named Robert McCullough. It took a couple of months to track him down. But a Texas Ranger got his statement.

McCullough said Littlefield had been drinking that night. And, McCullough said, actually, it was around dusk, not midnight, when they saw Shane and Sally on the car. He did remember the KC lights on the truck that approached them, but, he said, there was nothing small about it. He said it was a big truck, painted a dark color.

Now, investigators had conflicting accounts from two key witnesses. And Littlefield's memory might have been less reliable because he'd been drinking, but the timing he gave still made the most sense. A Lake Ranger also came forward who saw Shane's car at O.C. Fisher Lake around midnight. And there was the Whataburger receipt in the car, stamped at 11:40 p.m. There was also another witness who had seen Shane's car earlier, at the fireworks show, miles away.

But now there was a doubt about the color and the size of that other truck. And David told me in a case this complex, every clue had to be documented carefully. Just having a hunch wouldn't be good enough to solve the case. They were involved in a fairly large group of kids here, and we were very much inundated with different rumors and different stories.

But to take a case to court, you have to have evidence that is substantiated and provable in court. David said the problems with the early sheriff's investigation went well beyond record keeping. Like how they recovered Sally's remains, but then left for the day without finding Shane's. How did they not see the other body? Were they far apart? They were not together.

Actually, I don't think they did a proper crime scene search at the time. By the time David spoke with us in 2018, he was the sheriff of Tom Green County.

We interviewed him in his spacious, wood-paneled office with a view overlooking downtown San Angelo. For all his problems with the early investigation, the case had become his responsibility. It was David who first hired Terry Lowe in 2013 to investigate cold cases like Shane and Sally's murders. And I heard we might be able to shoot some of the evidence. Is that true? You have it here? Lieutenant Lowe will let you see some of the evidence. Okay.

From the Sheriff's Office, Terry Lowe led us downstairs and down a hallway to a room where evidence from the case was spread over a few tables. Let me get some gloves on. There were a couple of cardboard bankers boxes and piles of manila envelopes and brown paper bags sealed with red tape. I've heard things stay more preserved in paper, is that? Right. Anything with blood goes in paper because plastic sweats.

Well, these are Shane's pants. The pants were tucked into a small rectangle. Terry unfolded them carefully. The fabric was torn and caked with dirt. A lot of the damage to the pants is post-mortem, so scavengers and decomposition.

Terry squinted to read the label on another bag and opened it. Inside was another piece of clothing covered in dirt, small, faded purple, with a polo collar. In his black-gloved hands, Terry held it up by the shoulders. Sally's T-shirt. Everything is in fairly bad shape, but I guess after 30 years, it's actually in good shape. I'll have to come back and seal all this again. Yeah.

This knife actually belonged to Shane and was found at a pawn shop afterwards. The handle was homemade. He made the handle himself. It also went to the lab and no evidence was developed from it. Do they know where it was before he found it? Well, he kept it in his car. And unfortunately what I don't have

is who ponded it. And of course that pond shop doesn't exist anymore. They don't keep records like we do nowadays. New holes develop in this case the longer it goes on. Some things Terry knows investigators collected are just gone, like the soda cups and straws from Whataburger. That's another thing with the evidence is that Document A may refer to Document B. Document B doesn't exist. And I mean after 30 years

actually we're lucky to have what we have. And I found a... Then there's the evidence that was never found at all. Things that weren't found with their bodies, in the Camaro, or in their bedrooms at home.

Early on, the officers made a list. First, a brown stuffed animal, about four inches tall, that usually hung from Shane's rearview mirror. Shane's black leather wallet was also gone. So was Sally's purse, which was blue and, the report says, banana shaped. And although Shane's boots were found with his remains, there were no shoes with Sally's. The idea was, if something had been stolen from Shane and Sally, maybe that could help point to the killers.

But so far, those missing items haven't yielded any answers. Terry opened another bag and took out Shane's black leather boots. He pointed to the heel of one boot. When I was first going over this evidence, I found a hair with a follicle right here on the boot. So I got all excited and we sent it to the lab.

It came back as a human hair. We got even more excited. So they'd send it for DNA. Nothing. What year was that? 2016. And we joke with our DNA scientists that, you know, you can get DNA from caveman poop, but you can't get it from Shane's knife.

So that's been our luck with DNA. It hasn't been a positive experience. Shane and Sally's clothes have been left outside for so long, Terry said it was nearly impossible to get any DNA from them that might point to a killer, at least with the technology we have today. He hopes that future investigators might be able to learn more from it. And actually, there is new technology that may be able to help. We'll talk more about that in a later episode.

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Sheriff David Jones retired in 2020. To replace him, voters in Tom Green County elected a former Texas Ranger, someone you've actually heard from already. Hello, I'm Nick Hanna, Republican candidate for the office of Tom Green County Sheriff. Nick Hanna. He'd already spent years investigating Shane and Sally's murders with the Rangers. Now, he runs the office that's responsible for solving the case.

You know, I first came here in 1984, right after I graduated from Plains High School in Plains, Texas. You know, Plains is located in South Plains. Over the years, he worked his way up through the state police, moved away for a time, and came back to San Angelo in 2007 as a Texas Ranger. He told me he'd been assigned to work on cold cases like this one, but right away, he was assigned to an even more high-profile case, the one he's best known for today.

For two days, ex-members of the fundamentalist LDS Church have testified about abuses they suffered at the hands of Warren Jeffs. In April 2008, Nick served as a lead investigator in the raid of the fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in El Dorado, about 45 miles south of San Angelo. The FLDS is a wing of the Mormon Church that still, illegally, embraces polygamy.

and its leader, Warren Jeffs, had been on the run from federal authorities. Here's Nick talking about the case on a local broadcast in San Angelo. I remember there's some grain elevators on the ranch and there's some of the members that had climbed up and they were watching us watch them and so it was a little bit of a standoff, kind of a Mormon standoff, if you will. After receiving a tip that children at the ranch were being sexually abused, Texas Rangers and other officials took more than 400 children into state custody.

Courts eventually ruled against the state and reunited the children with their mothers, but several FLDS men were convicted of crimes. Warren Jeffs was sentenced to life in prison for sexual assault. It was the sort of high-profile case that can define a career for a lawman like Nick Hanna.

But once Nick was done, he returned to his stack of cold cases, including the murders of Shane and Sally. When he first began looking into this case, around 15 years ago, Nick says he saw a few big challenges, and the initial police work didn't help. We don't have a crime scene. We really don't have DNA. Marshall Stewart, the victim's father, he...

He was the one that went and actually they had him drive the vehicle from the scene to the sheriff's office for processing, a practice that today would be abhorrent. And in 1988, I guess I would say maybe it was just against best practices. You would never have someone drive your vehicle down to be processed.

And as far as Nick could tell, there was a gap right after Shane and Sally disappeared when the deputies weren't questioning witnesses. And so I think for a period of 30 or 60 days, I think a lot of things were left undone. That's become now a very big obstacle in this investigation, where a lot of people should have been ran down and talked to. That's what we have to deal with because...

Later we do have some good statements and we have some good leads, but when you lose that initial time and it's not being proactively investigated, then it's hard to overcome. Even the physical evidence is hard to make sense of. Like the Stetson hat pin found on Shane's body. Terry said, based on what he knows about the original investigation, it's hard to know what to think.

You know, we've all conjectured that till we're blue in the face. And whether it was an accident or was actually placed there. Without speaking bad of the investigation back in the day, very few protocols were followed. So we weren't able to determine if that hat pin had been touched by 15 police officers. And then there's the stolen gun.

Sally had provided Mr. Counts with a stolen firearm in the weeks prior to her death and information. In other words, she was a confidential informant along with some information about some burglaries that had occurred. Why is that important? She's engaged in snitching, which will get you killed in the criminal world. But the early investigation reports don't seem to make much of this possibility.

I put this question to Larry when he and I spoke. I've heard that she was an informant for the police. Is that true? If she was, it wasn't with us. So I don't know. In other words, Larry didn't consider Shane or Sally to be informants just because they showed him around their hangouts. But since Larry turned over the gun to the city police, he said it's possible they got in touch with her. The police knew who she was.

And they may have talked to her about the gun and stuff. So she may have been informed for them, but I have no knowledge of it. Because what comes to my mind is if, well, if she turned in a gun or was working with the police and then she goes missing, wouldn't that be an immediate red flag? Sure, yeah. For Nick, though, it's a big problem that Larry had been getting information from Shane and Sally with so little detail included in the investigator's notes.

And I'm not exactly sure what the relationship was between the deputies and the victim. It's problematic. This case is problematic. So after all of that, about what we don't know about the case, let's review what we do know and what the authorities know. Because despite all the holes in the case, they still believe it's one they can solve. First, we know Shane and Sally were mixed up with a group of kids that they were trying to leave behind.

According to Marshall, one of these guys, Steve Schaefer, was covered in bruises when Marshall came to ask him about Shane. Someone also gave Sally a gun to get rid of, which left her worried enough to call the cops. And Shane owed money to someone. They'd argued about it on the phone the day he disappeared.

On the night of the 4th, Shane and Sally were out by the lake around midnight, and two guys in a truck drove up, argued with them, and drove away. And based on the way Shane and Sally died, investigators are confident there were at least two killers.

There are four men whose names turn up again and again in the case notes, who investigators have interviewed repeatedly, who multiple witnesses said were involved with the crime. All of them were part of the same social circles that included Shane and Sally. So there was kind of a pool of suspects involved.

And these individuals had been involved in some kind of post-incident behavior, which really put them on the radar. And the suspects were probably Steve Schaefer, John Gilbert, Jimmy Burnett. There's a little Heath and a big Heath. Their names just escaped me. I should have had my notes. Steve Schaefer. You've already heard about him. Marshall says he saw him with a bruised face shortly after July 4th.

Some sources told investigators that Schaefer was a leader in the occult group. And in the summer of 1988, Schaefer drove a truck with KC lights. Then, Jimmy Burnett. Burnett was 17 years old that summer, and he'd been a member of the Lost Boys. Actually, Lee Parker told me he thinks Burnett is the one who named the group. One witness said Burnett had a small stash of guns he liked to show off. And Burnett also drove a truck with KC lights.

And then there's this. According to the investigator's timeline, Sally had spent a couple of nights at Burnett's place late in June 1988, a week before Shane got back to town. Nick also mentioned Little Heath and Big Heath. Little Heath is not mentioned much in these reports, but Big Heath is Heath Davis, who was 18 that summer. Davis hung out with Jimmy Burnett, and investigators said he was the head honcho in a local drug distribution ring.

Later, Davis would go on to be arrested for drug possession, as well as burglary, robbery, and rape. And then there was one more suspect, a guy with a habit of inserting himself into the case. Larry Counts told us about him. Well, there was one of the people that was a friend of theirs that they ran with. And that guy, like every week, he would come in with a different story.

and he would come to the place yeah yeah yeah he he would come or he would call us and and he came up with a different story all the time and so and he and he became one of our suspects and we had him polygraphed i think either two or three times by different polygraph people and they all said that

What little he knew about the actual incident was he was probably told or read about it, so. Will you tell us who that is? John Gilbreth. Oh, yeah. And you don't think that was his? No, I don't think it was him. Investigators looked into other suspects, but they seemed most focused on these four. And if they were right that Shane and Sally were killed by more than one person, it might seem surprising that everyone who was involved has kept this secret for so long.

But maybe they haven't kept the secret at all. Maybe one of the many rumors investigators heard really is the truth. Nick says it's been impossible to know for sure. So everything you have is circumstantial. And what is it that you need to solve it? Like, what would be presentable in court? Well, here's what we need. We need some evidence.

We have some witnesses, as you've seen. The problem is, is you have a number of conflicting witness statements. And as investigators, we can't select one of the four, the one we like best. And so when we have witness statements, conflicting witness statements from different witnesses, placing different individuals at the scene, different individuals pulling the trigger, and we've got to figure out a way to corroborate somebody's statement.

So, you know, what we need is someone in the community with information about the crime that maybe hasn't came forward or maybe hasn't talked to police before to provide us that information. In fact, those four names are the same ones investigators came up with early on.

For all the years of work by Larry Counts, Lou Hargraves, Bill McLeod, David Jones, Terry Lowe, Nick Hanna, and all the other investigators who've touched this case, over 35 years, in some ways, not much has changed. They're still waiting for someone to come forward with a story that can prove as the truth.

By 2018, when I first interviewed these investigators, my crew and I all hoped we might be there filming when that big break came, or that someone would see our story on TV and finally come forward. But that's not what happened. At the start of the pandemic, our talks with TV distributors fell through, and the Texas Department of Public Safety, who'd let me in to film their work, cut the project loose.

But I still had all my footage, and I was still fixated on the hope that someone might hear from Shane and Sally's parents and decide it was finally time to say what happened that night. Over the last year, Rob and I have gone back to the investigators to hear the latest about their work and to ask new questions of our own. But the relationship is different now. I met them as a client hired to help them tell a story.

Now we're independent reporters. We're the ones who decide how to tell the story and what to tell. Nick and Terry still answer our questions, but there's a new dynamic. I assume you encourage the families to write me letters asking us to turn that over to the AG's office or get the AG's office involved. Did that happen? Yes or no? Because I don't think it's a coincidence. Well, it's a yes and no. What's your end goal for this deal? Well...

A good story? We want to make it a good story because if it's not a good story, then it's not going to get much attention. I mean, the hope is, like we originally thought, was get it out in the public. And, you know, that's the beauty of a podcast. You drop them every week and then people start responding and maybe have someone step up and that would be very helpful.

This case has seen years of mistakes by law enforcement and rumors about everything from stolen murder weapons to satanic rituals. So we've spent the last year chasing down these leads on our own. Every person I've seen mentioned in the investigation, I've called them or I've called their brother or their ex-wife or ex-roommate to try and find them.

I filed records requests with the sheriff's office for more of the case files. But the Texas Public Records Law says agencies can withhold records from an open investigation, even one that's 35 years old. And that's what Sheriff Nick Hanna has done. Whose DNA did they test against the evidence? What about the stolen gun? Can we see more information on the suspect alibis? In each case, I was told, "Nope, it's an open investigation."

We do have some records, mostly summaries of who the investigators interviewed and the basics of what they said. And the sheriff has answered some of our questions, but it's up to him if he wants to share more.

There are also a few things we've heard that investigators have asked us not to mention. Items found by Shane's Camaro and details about the remains. Details that only the killers would know, that could help investigators tell whether a witness has real information. In our view, leaving these out won't mislead you or make the story incomplete.

One thing I'd really like to know more about is that stolen gun. Because if you boil down the facts of this case, I think you have Shane and Sally handing a gun to the police. A gun that was supposedly used in a murder. And three months later, they're dead. Larry didn't remember who he gave the gun to at the police department. The police department told me they couldn't find any record of this gun. For a while, I wondered if there was anyone but Larry who did remember this gun.

But then we talked to Sally's friend, Diane, who said this. I do remember when I went with Sally to Jimmy Barnett's one time, there was, it's real foggy and it's hard for me to remember, but I want to say I remember something about a handgun. And I think that maybe he gave her a handgun and she asked me, should I do it?

Should I turn it into the police? What should I do? And I was like, I don't know. I have no idea. So Diane remembered the gun, or thought she did, but she said it came from Jimmy Burnett, the guy Sally had stayed with in June. At first, Nick Hanna and Terry Lowe told us they didn't know who gave the stolen gun to Sally, but eventually they found a report from Deputy Larry Counts saying it was Steve Schaefer who gave her the gun.

Terry said he'd looked into the gun himself, but it seemed to be a dead end. Once I started tracking the gun, I found out that the gun was stolen from Cole's Army surplus store here in town, and that it was a city case, and that Larry Counts had turned the gun over to the city. So I didn't pursue it any further.

In March 1989, four months after the teens' bodies were found, an officer was walking down a hallway at the San Angelo Police Department. He noticed something lying on the floor. As he got closer, he realized what he was looking at. I was walking into communications and I saw a driver's license lying in the hallway. And I picked it up and it was Sally McAnally's. Sally's driver's license, which up till then was still missing.

And it wasn't found in the sheriff's office, which was investigating her murder, but in the city police department. So what did you do with the license? I put it in evidence if I remember right, wrote a report. Did you find my report? No, I didn't find the report. Actually, the police department told me the report doesn't exist. Yet another key document in this case, just missing. ♪

And remember that theory Larry Counts had about a leak inside the police department? An officer who was close with the murder suspects? Larry says he tried to find out who it could be. Then another person said that involved in this satanic stuff was a police officer named Randy. So we went back and we did as much...

And it turns out, the officer who found the license? Well, first tell me a little bit about yourself. You could also just kind of state your name and who you are and what you do. Okay. I'm Randy Swick. That's next time on Shane and Sally.

You can learn more about the case at TexasMonthly.com. You can see original videos, archival photos, and documents from our reporting. Or get in touch with us about the case at TexasMonthly.com slash Shane and Sally.

Shane and Sally is a Texas Monthly production. The show is reported and written by me, Rob D'Amico, and Karen Jacobs. It was produced and co-written by Patrick Michaels and produced and engineered by Brian Standifer, who also wrote the music. Assistant producer is Aisling Ayers. Story editing by Rafe Bartholomew. Doyen Oyeniyi is our fact checker. Our executive producer is Megan Kreit.

Studio musician was John Sanchez. Artwork is by Emily Kimbrough and Victoria Milner. See y'all next week.