This is Holly Frey from Stuff You Missed in History Class. The national sales event is on at your Toyota dealer. Making now the perfect time to get a great deal on a dependable new SUV, like an adventure-ready RAV4. Available with all-wheel drive, your new RAV4 is built for performance on any terrain. Or to get a great deal on a dependable new SUV,
check out a stylish and comfortable Highlander with seating for up to eight passengers and available panoramic moonroof. You can sit back and enjoy the wide open views with the whole family. Check out more national sales event deals when you visit buyatoyota.com. Toyota, let's go places.
MITRE is investing in a massive AI supercomputer to power a new federal AI sandbox. With AI's potential to drive transformational advances across industries, MITRE's expertise in healthcare, cybersecurity, transportation, finance, climate, and national security will be critical. Transform your career while helping solve problems for a safer world. Visit MITRE.org slash careers. That's M-I-T-R-E dot org slash careers.
Life is happening around us. So many things to do, places to go. If you switch off, you're out of it. But if you switch on, you're part of it. Subscribe to The Washington Post today at WashingtonPost.com slash iHeart. Switch on The Washington Post. Ever tried to tackle a home improvement project without making 10 trips to Home Depot? What if I told you there's a way to earn cash back while you shop?
Introducing Drop, the ultimate rewards app. With Drop, you can earn free gift cards by shopping in-store or online at Home Depot and tons of other stores. Download the Drop app today and use code DROP33 to get an instant $5 in points. That's Drop, your go-to for shopping rewards.
You know, everybody wants to paint this idyllic picture of small-town America. Well, there's a seedy underside to that. And if you don't have anybody watching the watchman, keeping an eye on things, keeping people accountable, things can get out of control. There's over 20 unsolved homicides in Pike County. I want the community to realize this could happen to their family. This is the Piketon Massacre, Return to Pike County. Season 3, Episode 9, Cold-Blooded.
I'm Courtney Armstrong, a television producer at KT Studios with Stephanie Lydegger and Jeff Shane. Over the last two seasons, we've covered a few local stories that we believed were unrelated to the massacre. Turns out, we may have been mistaken. This episode is dedicated to tying up the loose ends of these stories that have new endings or new developments. We're also exploring the intersection between many of the main players who also have ties to the Roden murders.
The connections are undeniable. The rodent murders of April 2016, earth-shattering as they were, have pushed law enforcement in southern Ohio to the limit. It's left their relatively small ranks hyperextended. As a result, as local cold case advocates like Angie Montgomery point out, many other local homicides have gone ignored.
In fact, there are at least nine other murder cases in Pike County dating back to 2000 that have iced over without resolution or even charges issued. In light of the county's population of only 58,000, this number is staggering.
Speaking is Angie Montgomery, a Pikedon mother of four and spiritual advisor. Once her kids were grown, Angie decided to dedicate her life to being a cold case advocate.
Here she is talking about Sheriff Tracy D. Evans, who took over the Pike County Sheriff's Office in 2020. This was after Sheriff Charles Reeder, who spearheaded the Roden investigation, pled guilty to corruption charges. Reeder is currently facing a three-year sentence at the Toledo Correctional Facility. Here's Stephanie and Jeff.
Just as a reminder, Sheriff Charlie Reeder was the sheriff at the time of the Roden murders, and he's never been directly associated with the murders, but he, alongside former DA Mike DeWine, were very public talking about it at the time.
And after a very thorough investigation, Reeder agreed to be suspended in July 2019 and shortly after was indicted on 18 counts. That included also racketeering. Beloved Sheriff Charlie Reeder was accused of stealing more than $14,000 from the sheriff's office and seized drug money.
What he would do was go into these evidence envelopes that were in his possession, take out money, go gamble with it, and then put the money back before anyone noticed. And allegedly, he repeated this process numerous times before anyone even caught on. In September 2020, Reeder pled guilty to two counts of theft, one count of tampering with evidence, and then also one count of conflict of interest. Another matter that doesn't necessarily relate to this but is just another strike against Sheriff Reeder's morality is
is the story from 2021 that he was sued by county officials over collecting salary and benefits that they say he improperly collected while he was suspended as they were investigating all this other stuff that he had done. According to the lawsuit, Charlie Reeder collected over $120,000 from the city. It's not clear the exact status of this litigation, but it is just another strike against the sheriff. Here again, Angie Montgomery.
It's important to note that this is Angie Montgomery's recollection of events. We've reached out to Sheriff Tracy Evans for comment, but did not receive a response.
The Curtis and Jenny Angie is referring to are her cousin, Curtis Francis, and his fiancee, Jennifer Burgett. The pair were found dead in their bed on December 9th, 2006, in their home at 124 Hopper Road in Piketon. 34-year-old Curtis and 30-year-old Jennifer were each shot once while asleep. The killings became known as the Hopper Road murders. According to Angie, Curtis and his fiancee, Jennifer, were excited to get married.
They both loved hunting and fishing, and Chris was a jovial guy known for playing practical jokes. Curtis had just had shoulder replacement surgery and had a supply of pain medications. So one early theory was that the killers were after his pills. In the 16 years since the murders, the case has been opened and closed several times without a single arrest. It's currently a cold case.
Sheriff Evans, who during his campaign promised voters to improve resources for victims, has deflected Angie's passionate pleas to reopen the case.
He was done with it, basically. There was nothing more they could do that we would have to turn to the media if we wanted to get help with the case, which was kind of heartbreaking because, you know, he gets elected and tells us that he's going to do everything he can, but then he's flipping it around and saying, if the BCI doesn't help, then I'm just going to wash my hands with it. So you're kind of contradicting what you told me. Kind of gave us, like, false hopes, like this guy's really going to dig into it and do something.
The Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation, or BCI, has offered no new support. Here's investigative reporter and journalism professor James Pilcher.
For Angie, this case has been a long and frustrating series of missed opportunities and snafus.
In 2016, investigators discovered a hidden well at 324 Wynn Road, five minutes from Hopper Road. This well contained a saddle gun, a lever action, 18-shot. That is what Curtis and Jenny were killed with. There was also a pistol sunk in the swampy well. But according to reports, in the process of trying to flood the evidence out of the well, the fire department blew an 80-foot hole in the well and washed the guns away.
And then there was the issue of the lost 911 call. Here again, Angie Montgomery. And then they tell me that they lost the 911 call. They're not very efficient with things. You would think that that would be one of the main things you would keep a hold of in a double homicide.
So it kind of worries me that they did turn everything over that they have to the BCI. The BCI might look at it and say, well, there isn't anything here we can work with. That's where it falls back on all these cases, all these cases that are unsolved. It's the same thing. It's repetitive. All the families I talk to, they go through the same thing we go through, which is they lost this or they don't have this. And why doesn't a sheriff want Kip Conan to the sheriff's office?
Angie is still holding out hope that the BCI will reopen the cold case and look at it with fresh eyes. It's actually their cold case unit, which is through the Ohio Attorney General's office, and they are amazing. They just solved a 47-year-old homicide case.
What ultimately stands in the way of the Francis case-finding resolution? Is it incompetence? Apathy? Like the killer behind this awful crime, it remains a mystery.
I've got someone in Curt and Junie's case that gave a statement back in 2006 when it happened. And he was the last person to see Curtis and Jennifer alive. And he went to the sheriff's office and gave them a statement that he was there. And those people, they never called him back. They never followed up with him. And I had him go again and make another statement with Mr. Evans.
It's eerie the way things are done around here.
We don't know where the Francis case will go, but there's yet another Pike County case, this one involving a young man named Jacob Lansing, that has had its own investigative issues. In January of 2018, Pikedon prosecutors thought they had their man. Paul Deddy, 31, was all set to face trial in Pike County Common Pleas Court, charged with aggravated murder for the 2012 death of Jacob Lansing. But then prosecutors suddenly reversed course.
Newly uncovered evidence exonerated Deadee and the death penalty case was dismissed. Pike County Prosecutor Rob Junk, who's overseeing the Roden trials, described this case as one of the weirdest he'd ever seen. On October 27th, 2012, Jacob Lansing's body was found underneath a vehicle at his River Road home.
Authorities thought it was an unfortunate accident in which the SUV the 25-year-old had been working on fell on him. But his mother Maureen was incredulous and took action. The fact that Jacob wasn't dressed in his usual coveralls while working on his car did not wash. Here again, Stephanie and Jeff. Rob Junk is one of the main prosecutors against the Wagners. And as we've come to learn over the years, he was involved with both Reeder brothers.
All of these names kind of keep coming back to each other. He had a very public social media spat with Sheriff Charlie Reeder where Sheriff Reeder was threatening to take Rob Junk down, or as he put it, take the quote-unquote junk out. It turns out it was Rob Junk who would end up being an integral part in getting both Charlie and Brian Reeder removed from their posts.
A lot of people have theorized that the main reason that Brian Reeder was removed from office was because of his handling of the Lansing case. However, it's been reported on that Brian Reeder was terminated over attendance records and sick time. This is according to Pike County Commissioner Blaine Beekman. As for Rob Junk, in January of 2019, he noted that his office is an outwill employer and he can, quote, "...let somebody go if I don't like the color of their socks."
Here again, Angie Montgomery. This was a rare instance where an insistent family member was able to move the dial with the prosecutor's office.
Jacob's mom, Maureen, never believed that his death was an accident. Now, finally, in late 2016, early 2017, she got Brian Reeder to listen up.
This means that Jacob Lansing's killer took his dead body, placed it under his SUV,
and then precipitously dropped the vehicle to make it look like Jacob was crushed. A freak accident. But based on the new evidence, the death was ruled a homicide. Brian spent months and months following the leads and doing interviews to find these suspects, zeroing in on a man named Paul Michael Allen Deddy, who he arrested in May of 2017.
But in January of 2018, a week before Deddy's trial was to begin, Rob Junk, who I mentioned before he was a prosecutor, dismissed the case without prejudice and Deddy was released. He cited new evidence that popped up that affected the case, but he never told us what that evidence was. A year later, in 2019, Rob Junk fired Brian Reeder. Investigator Brian Reeder, who had been spearheading the probe, was let go from the prosecutor's office in 2019.
He is the brother of Charlie Reeder, the disgraced former Pike County Sheriff. Apparently, Reeder's payroll records and personnel files were under investigation by the state auditor for some time. Due to Reeder's firing and the general lack of viable leads, the Jacob Lansing case stalled. No further arrests were made. In November 2020, Jacob's mother, Maureen Lansing, issued an $8,000 reward for information about her son's murder. It has yet to be collected.
We're going to take a break. We'll be back in a moment. MITRE is investing in a massive AI supercomputer to power a new federal AI sandbox. With AI's potential to drive transformational advances across industries, MITRE's expertise in healthcare, cybersecurity, transportation, finance, climate, and national security will be critical. Transform your career while helping solve problems for a safer world.
visit mitre.org slash careers. That's M-I-T-R-E dot org slash careers.
Have you made the switch to NYX? Millions of women have made the switch to the revolutionary period underwear from NYX. That's K-N-I-X. Period panties from NYX are like no other, making them the number one leak-proof underwear brand in North America. They're comfy, stylish, and absorbent, perfect for period protection from your lightest to your heaviest days.
They look, feel, and machine wash just like regular underwear, but feature incognito protection that has you covered. You can shop sizes from extra small to 4XL. Choose from all kinds of colors, prints, and different styles, from bikinis to boy shorts, thongs to high-rise. You've got to try NYX. See why millions are ditching disposable, wasteful period products and have switched to NYX.
Go to knix.com and get 15% off with promo code TRY15. That's knix.com, promo code TRY15 for 15% off life-changing period underwear. That's knix.com. Life is happening around us. So many things to do, places to go. If you switch off, you're out of it. But if you switch on, you're part of it. Subscribe to The Washington Post today at washingtonpost.com slash iHeart.
switch on the Washington Post. Hey guys, it is Ryan. I'm not sure if you know this about me, but I'm a bit of a fun fanatic when I can. I like to work, but I like fun too. And now I can tell you about my favorite place to have fun, Chumba Casino. They have hundreds of social casino style games to choose from with new games released each week. You can play for free and each day brings a new chance to collect daily bonuses. So join me in the
Sign up now at ChumbaCasino.com. Sponsored by Chumba Casino. No purchase necessary. VGW Group. Voidware prohibited by law. 18 plus. Terms and conditions apply. What happened to Megan and Katie Lancaster? This is the harrowing story of two young sisters-in-law. One missing and one dead. This happened in a small town called Portsmouth, Ohio, 100 miles east of Cincinnati. It's a town of 20,000 people on the north bank of the Ohio River. Here again, James Pilcher.
I believe Megan Lancaster got involved with some bad people, like the people that have been thought to have killed some women up near Occelecothi and she got involved in that ring. Or whether or not she just, something went sideways with one of her clients or whatever. I think Megan is buried somewhere in those hills of Ceuta County.
Megan Lancaster, a mother and former high school softball player, was 25 when she disappeared on the evening of April 3rd, 2013.
Dressed in jeans and an Ohio State sweatshirt, she'd spent the evening with friends. Megan called her mother at about 7:30 to say she'd be home soon. There was no communication from her after that. Megan's white Mustang was located a few days later at a Rally's hamburger in Portsmouth. Her wallet was found on the front seat. She left behind her seven-year-old son, whose name was tattooed on her shoulder.
Portsmouth police detective Steve Brewer spearheaded the missing persons investigation, but no one looked for Megan more intensely than her sister-in-law and best friend, Katie Lancaster. Megan had been scraping by as a sex worker and had fallen into a life of addiction. So the search led Katie into the vast and shadowy underworld of sex trafficking in Portsmouth.
Undeterred, Katie threw herself into finding her sister-in-law. Victim's advocate Angie Montgomery, who helped Katie in her search efforts, described Katie's fearlessness and determination. Their pursuit began with scouring Backpage, which sex workers often use to advertise their services.
Just hours and hours and hours of doing that.
So in the beginning, I kind of did because she had a couple leads. She sent me a video one time of a girl in Columbus on Sullivan Avenue. It was a traffic cam that looks a lot like Megan. She would get in the car. She would get in the car and go to strip joints. And she would talk to pimps. She would talk to drug dealers. She was not scared to do that. And in the beginning, I did think she might be out there somewhere, but I don't think so now. I don't think she's here anymore.
Angie says that Katie's fierceness inspired her own efforts to keep fighting to solve Curtis and Jennifer's double homicide on Hopper Road.
She's the reason why I fight so hard.
Katie was well aware that there could be consequences for ruffling too many feathers with her insistent pleas for justice. Make sure you look into it. Make sure you find out that that's really what happened to me.
Because when you do go up against the people and, you know, the law enforcement or attorneys or judges, there's always that fear of they might retaliate against you. And she knew that.
Katie believed fervently that her sister-in-law got caught up with Michael Moran.
Moran was a prominent local attorney who was later indicted on 18 sex trafficking-related charges. We covered his story in season one of this podcast. The indictment accused Moran of engaging in sex trafficking from 2003 to 2018, with at least six victims being involved. Here's reporter Bob Strickley, who covered the story for the Cincinnati Inquirer.
Michael Moran is an attorney that's been practicing for several decades. He's originally from Ironton, Ohio, which is just up the river from Portsmouth. He operates of an office that is right across the street from the Scioto County Courthouse. And he was appointed to fulfill a term on Portsmouth City Council.
and continued until recently to practice criminal defense law until his law license was suspended after he was charged with different sex trafficking related crimes. Here again, Stephanie and Jeff. Morant's focus as a lawyer was Portsmouth's underworld, which gave him easy access to things like sex workers and drug dealers. He also has a connection to the Wagners. And
And just as a reminder, Pug Carter is actually Angela Wagner's father and George and Jake's grandfather. And he was allegedly using his pawn business to rip people off back in the day. He was also a frequenter of this nefarious place called Big Bear Lake. It's a location we've heard about for years, but haven't been able to speak about it until now.
And it appears to be a place that intersects Michael Moran, Sheriff Charles Reeder, the Wagners, as well as the Rodens. It may be a key factor in the trials ahead. Big Bear Lake could hold deep secrets that pertain to the case. We'll get into that a little more next week. Here's James Pilcher speaking about Michael Moran and his connection to Pug Carter.
— But now he was facing possibly career-ending allegations from a half-dozen women.
Here again, Bob Strickley. I would say that the women that stepped forward are the ones at the forefront. It just took somebody hitting me over the head with a fish to actually start paying attention to it in the regard that it demands. What set this one apart for me was just the amount of women that stepped forward and said something about this to us and talked to us about it.
And then also the apparatus that has to exist around a person like Michael Moran for an operation, as we reported on, to exist in the first place. A lot of people have to turn their heads. I think if anything over the years working on this particular story, it's kind of the damnability of people who just turn the other way and don't care about what's going on right in front of them in their community is more prevalent than maybe we all realized initially.
The charges against Moran included three counts of trafficking in person, five counts of compelling prostitution, nine counts of promoting prostitution, and one count of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity. His arrest was orchestrated by a human trafficking task force under Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, combining the forces of the BCI and several other agencies. Moran was the first domino to fall. Multiple other people are still under investigation.
Megan Lancaster had a color-coded notebook in which she kept track of clients. The entries included scribbles such as, quote, dance for and, quote, men who give money, and included Moran's name and number, along with a notation of $80.
Again, Bob Strickley. There were rumors about Lancaster's disappearance being related to Moran for several years. Her sister-in-law provided us with her little address, like, slash phone number book with different numbers in it. Dozens and dozens and dozens of different numbers of men. Moran was listed in there. We called all of those people to see what their...
associations were with Lancaster and came back with what we came back with. But she's still missing and I give her credit for continuing to keep the issue forefront. According to investigators, there were at least six women entangled in his exploitative ring. Moran denied all allegations. Was Megan Lancaster just another piece of his disposable merchandise? After years of probing, the Megan Lancaster case went cold.
In May of 2021, eight years after her disappearance, the Ohio BCI issued an age-advanced rendering of Megan as a forensic tool to reignite interest in finding her. Soon after, the case was turned over to the BCI cold case unit. Katie was hopeful, but nothing came of it.
Meanwhile, Moran remained business as usual. Michael Moran was out on bond, and part of his bond agreement was not to practice law. And he was under investigation of possible suspension by the Bar Association, and he still showed up trying to defend a client in municipal court. So they rescinded his bond agreement, and they put him on house arrest with a bracelet. But that shows you that he was arrogant till the end.
Then, in October of 2021, the tragedy deepened when Katie Lancaster, then 33, was found dead in a residence on the fourth block of Portsmouth. Angie Montgomery was devastated. I can't remember who told me. Somebody sent me a message about it. Of course, the first thing I did was cry my head off because she was one of my really good friends. She's the reason that I fight so hard.
As reporter James Pilcher tells us, Katie's death was a possible overdose, possibly induced by the stresses of relentlessly searching for her missing sister-in-law. But no one knows for sure.
Being the advocate can really wear on you. There's only so much fuel in the tank. There's only so much emotional fuel in the tank for something like that. And the funny thing is, is that she wasn't really, other than being her sister-in-law, she wasn't really technically related to her. She was really good friends with her. And then to lose her to possibly a drug overdose, given all of what's going on in Ceuta County and Pike County, it was just such a tragic, tragic thing to hear.
Angie has her doubts about the apparent overdose. Infiltrating the sex trafficking world like she was, could Katie have been silenced?
I'm going to be honest with you. She was using I didn't know it. Around this area, they find ways to make people quiet. Like at first when I found out that it was a supposed overdose, I was like, no, something's wrong. There's been people here in Pike County that have died of apparent drug overdoses and everybody knows better.
As brutal as the fate of these two women is, it did raise awareness of the struggle of women living in the margins. Bob Strickley. It certainly is taking, you know, an Epstein-Weinstein sort of story and saying, yeah, it can happen here too.
James Pilcher points out that small-town cases of sex abuse are systemically no different from anywhere else.
The one thing that this did was made me so much more aware and so much more interested in telling the stories of all these women all over the country. It doesn't matter if it was small town Portsmouth, Ohio or suburban Chicago. I've spoken to girls who got trapped into it by their uncles and they've lived in pretty affluent suburbs of Seattle. This sex trafficking is an onerous evil thing that is going on everywhere. It's never going to stop.
Let's stop here for another break.
MITRE is investing in a massive AI supercomputer to power a new federal AI sandbox. With AI's potential to drive transformational advances across industries, MITRE's expertise in healthcare, cybersecurity, transportation, finance, climate, and national security will be critical. Transform your career while helping solve problems for a safer world. Visit MITRE.org slash careers. That's M-I-T-R-E dot org slash careers.
Have you made the switch to NYX? Millions of women have made the switch to the revolutionary period underwear from NYX. That's K-N-I-X. Period panties from NYX are like no other, making them the number one leak-proof underwear brand in North America.
They're comfy, stylish, and absorbent, perfect for period protection from your lightest to your heaviest days. They look, feel, and machine wash just like regular underwear, but feature incognito protection that has you covered. You can shop sizes from extra small to 4XL. Choose from all kinds of colors, prints, and different styles, from bikinis to boy shorts, thongs to high-rise. You've got to try NYX.
Life is happening around us. So many things to do, places to go. If you switch off, you're out of it.
But if you switch on, you're part of it. Subscribe to The Washington Post today at WashingtonPost.com slash iHeart. Switch on The Washington Post.
It is Ryan here, and I have a question for you. What do you do when you win? Like, are you a fist pumper, a woohooer, a hand clapper, a high fiver? If you want to hone in on those winning moves, check out Chumba Casino. Choose from hundreds of social casino-style games for your chance to redeem serious cash prizes. There are new game releases weekly, plus free daily bonuses. So don't wait. Start having the most fun ever.
In November of 2021, Michael Moran, who had a number of health issues, died while out on bond after a brief hospital stay. His case was then dismissed. But Moran might have left behind a more wide-ranging network of abuse and exploitation.
James Pilcher. The women whose lives he ruined are not getting a shot to face him in court and face a person that did this to them. But there's so much more to that story than just Michael Moran. There's so much more what was going on in Portsmouth and how his operation had created all of these webs into branches of government. I really think that there are people that do not want it to go any further now that Moran is dead.
You're opening a whole can of worms. I mean, they had opened an investigation into all of the previous convictions and trials overseen by William Marshall, the judge, who was known to pal around with Michael Moran, who was possibly named in the federal affidavit that first turned us on to the Moran story, and that other women said that they slept with him and that Moran set it up.
According to an article published in April of 2020 by the Daily Independent, in 2019, more than 2,700 cases Judge William Marshall oversaw were reviewed by the state. This happened after it was revealed that he was potentially involved with Michael Moran's sex trafficking ring, among other allegations. He has never commented on these controversies.
Angie describes her reaction when she learned Moran was dead. I turned my phone on and it was blowing up. I was like, oh God, something happened. And I seen it and I was like, that son of a bitch. That's horrible to say about someone passing away, but I thought, man, you got away.
And he took all of his secrets with him because there's way more than him involved in all that. I'm hoping that he spilled the beans and told the whole story before he passed away, but I don't know. He was an awful, evil man. There were other people involved, and they need to be prosecuted for that. There's women that are dead because of that and women that are missing because of what he did. For years, he denied it, but everybody knew what he was doing.
But as Angie says, in the end, Moran will still meet his maker. And maybe there's reason to hope for a brighter future.
Again, James Pilcher. Portsmouth is actually better off than Pike County. There are new people in positions of authority now. They've got a new police chief. They've got a new mayor. I mean, you still have the poverty. It's still one of the places in Ohio with the highest rate of overdose deaths and opioid addiction. But as for the town moving on from the corruption and all of the things that happened when Moran was there...
I think they're trying to turn a corner. More on that next time. If you're enjoying The Pyton Massacre, listen to our other hit series, Crazy in Love. New episodes air every Tuesday wherever you get your podcasts. For more information and case photos, follow us on Instagram at kt underscore studios. The Pyton Massacre is produced by Stephanie Lidecker, Jeff Shane, Chris Graves, Alan Weider, and me, Courtney Armstrong.
Editing and sound design by Jeff Twa. Music by Jared Aston. Audio mixing by Ken Novak. The Piketon Massacre is a production of KT Studios and iHeartRadio. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
MITRE's mission is to solve problems for a safer world. If you have a passion for applied cybersecurity with skills in infrastructure threat intelligence, deterrence technologies, advisal threat emulation, or intelligence analysis, explore the many challenging and fulfilling career opportunities at MITRE.org slash careers. That's M-I-T-R-E dot org slash careers.
Tired of wandering the aisles at Walgreens trying to find the best deals? Well, we've got something that'll make your shopping experience a whole lot sweeter. Introducing Drop, the app that rewards you with free gift cards just for doing your everyday shopping. Whether it's groceries, toiletries, or your favorite snacks, with Drop, every purchase earns you points towards fantastic rewards. Download the Drop app now. Use code DROP55 when you sign up to get $5 in points.
Dot U-S. Visit M-O-D-O dot U-S for the best free play social casino experience wherever you are. Modo offers a huge selection of Vegas style games and now introducing live blackjack, roulette, and casino hold'em. These are so much fun. Modo always has generous jackpots, free spins, and exciting promotions. Register today at M-O-D-O dot U-S for your free welcome bonus. Modo is a social casino, no purchase necessary. Void where prohibited. Play responsibly. Conditions apply. See website for details. M-O-D-O dot U-S.
For 25 years, Brightview Senior Living Associates have been committed to creating a vibrant culture and delivering exceptional services, making Brightview a great place to work and live. If you're looking for a rewarding opportunity to serve your local community and grow, we want you to join our team. Brightview Senior Living is growing and actively seeking vibrant associates to join our community teams, including directors, healthcare, activities, hospitality, and dining. Apply today at careers.brightviewseniorliving.com. Equal employment opportunities.
Text BVJOBS to 97211 to apply.