SEQUESTERED Podcast
Nearly three decades after the murders of Julie Williams and Lollie Winans, a new team inside the FBI’s Richmond field office reopened the Shenandoah case. This time, the science had changed. With funding from the Sexual Assault Kit Initiative (SAKI), old evidence was retested using technology that hadn’t existed in 1996. What they found would break the silence of the case, and finally name the man responsible. As DNA revealed a serial offender with a violent past, investigators finally closed one of the darkest chapters in national park history. Episode Five traces the final steps...
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Six years after the murders of Julie Williams and Lollie Winans, the U.S. Department of Justice announced an indictment against Darrell David Rice - the man they believed was responsible for the killings in Shenandoah National Park. It was a landmark case, to be prosecuted under new federal hate-crime laws, and for a moment it seemed justice was finally within reach. But as the trial approached, the cracks beneath the case began to widen. Witnesses wavered, timelines shifted, and the forensic evidence didn’t align with what investigators expected. Then, a single test would change everything,...
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One year after the murders of Julie Williams and Lollie Winans, a cyclist named Yvonne Malbasha was attacked on Skyline Drive inside Shenandoah National Park. Her escape set off a chain of events that would expose a pattern of rage and violence that would lead investigators straight to Darrell David Rice, a 29 year old from Maryland whose hatred toward women and the LGBTQ+ community would soon become central to a federal murder case. Episode Three captures the moment the investigation shifted from unanswered questions to a name investigators couldn’t ignore. A survivor’s escape would spark...
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In May 1996, hikers Julie Williams and Lollie Winans set out for a backcountry camping trip in Virginia’s Shenandoah National Park, a place they considered safe. When they failed to return home, a missing-persons report sparked a massive search across hundreds of miles of trails. Days later, park rangers made a devastating discovery that would change Shenandoah forever. Episode 2 retraces the women’s final days: their hike through Whiteoak Canyon, their last photos atop Hawksbill Mountain, and the moment a peaceful national park became the scene of a double homicide. Through ranger...
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In May 1996, two women - Julie Williams and Lollie Winans - set out on a backcountry camping trip in Virginia’s Shenandoah National Park. What began as a five-day escape into the wild became one of the most haunting crimes in National Park history. But before the tragedy, there was their story: two women who found love, freedom, and belonging in the wilderness. From their first meeting, to the drive that carried them deep into the mountains, they were chasing peace. Unaware of what waited in the quiet. Episode One retraces their final days of safety and joy. Before the silence of...
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In May 1996, Julie Williams and Lollie Winans set out for a backcountry camping trip in Shenandoah National Park. Days later, their lives were brutally cut short, and nearly three decades of silence followed until a 2024 DNA match revealed someone who could be responsible. Season 3 of SEQUESTERED retraces the tragedy that shook their families, and the truth that refused to stay buried. Premieres October 13. Follow SEQUESTERED wherever you listen. https://www.sequesteredpod.com
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In this bonus episode, Sara and Andrea revisit the haunting cases of Zebb Quinn and Mitrice Richardson. From the mysterious page and staged car in Asheville to the unanswered questions about Mitrice’s release, call log, and remote discovery site in Los Angeles, we explore the details and honor the advocates who refuse to let their stories fade. Visit SequesteredPod.com and please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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In the final chapter of Mitrice Richardson’s story, we return to the canyon where her remains were found and examine the questions that still haunt this case fifteen years later. From new leads that surfaced in 2024, to troubling revelations about the detective who moved her body, this episode explores how a pattern of mishandling, silence, and unanswered questions left Mitrice’s family, and a community of advocates, still fighting for the truth. If you have any information about the disappearance and death of Mitrice Richardson, please contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s...
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On September 2, 2025, Barry Morphew appeared in Alamosa County court seeking a bond reduction. His request was denied, though the judge modified his $3 million bond to allow cash, surety, or property. In this bonus episode, Sara and Andrea break down what happened inside the courtroom, including arguments from the defense and prosecution, and Judge Hopkins’ ruling. They also share powerful words from Suzanne’s brother’s impact letter, reminding us all that at the center of this case is Suzanne, a mother, sister, and friend whose life was stolen. With reporting from The Alamosa Citizen.
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In September 2009, 24-year-old Mitrice Richardson vanished after being released alone from the Lost Hills Sheriff’s Station in Malibu, California. Eleven months later, her remains were discovered in a rugged canyon less than two miles away. In Part Two of this case, we trace the painful discovery of Mitrice’s body, disturbing murals found during search efforts, and the mishandling of evidence that left her family with more questions than answers. Through the voices of her mother Latice Sutton, Dr. Ronda Hampton, and independent journalist Cece Woods, this episode examines how critical...
info_outlineIn this pivotal episode, Juror #11 takes us inside Day 7 of the murder trial for Jasmine Pace—the day both the defense and prosecution delivered their final arguments before deliberations began.
After a much-needed day off filled with quiet moments at Ruby Falls and the Tennessee Aquarium, the jurors returned to the courtroom to face the weight of their duty. With no rebuttal from the state, the defense formally rested its case, and the court turned to a final legal debate—should the jury be allowed to consider voluntary manslaughter as a possible charge?
As the courtroom settled, Assistant DA Paul Moyle delivered a powerful closing statement, outlining Jason Chen’s calculated actions—from Jasmine’s final moments to his chilling digital trail. His yellow-light analogy on premeditation struck a nerve, changing how at least one juror understood the law.
Then came the defense’s final word. Amanda Morrison didn’t deny Jason killed Jasmine but argued it was a crime of passion, not premeditation. Her gaze locked on Juror #11 as she challenged the prosecution’s timeline and pointed to the absence of physical restraint evidence.
But the moment truly shifted when District Attorney General Coty Wamp stood to deliver her rebuttal. In a fiery and focused final plea, she read directly from the defense’s opening statement transcript—highlighting contradictions, disproven claims, and what she called attempts to "muddy the waters." With composure and intensity, Wamp reminded the jury: This trial is not about Jason Chen. It’s about Jasmine Pace.
As the court prepared for deliberations, four jurors were randomly selected as alternates—an emotional and abrupt departure for those removed from the process they’d fully committed to. The episode closes with a powerful journal entry from one of those alternates, Juror #5, whose insight and emotion reflect the deeper human experience of service and exclusion.
Next time, we enter the jury room—and hear the verdict.
Here's the blog for this episode on our website.
On our website, you can see more photos, videos, and blogs about each day of the trial, organized by episode. Go to SequesteredPod.com
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SEQUESTERED is a BP Production.