S1 E7: Head of the Snake

Published Aug 12, 2024, 4:00 AM

The suspicious death of the rumored hitman leaves the Petrone’s wondering...especially when it’s revealed that he left behind a note. And he wasn’t the only person from the investigation who died under mysterious circumstances.   

Reach out to the There and Gone Team by email at thereandgonepod@gmail.com.  

If you have any tips on the disappearance of Richard Petrone and Danielle Imbo, please contact the Citizens Crime Commission at 215-546-TIPS (8477).

In our investigation of Danielle Richard's disappearance, a lot of names came up. One of them was Robert carry You know, people are a little reluctant to bring his name up because he instilled fear in a lot of people.

His reputation was scary.

I've been doing the violent crime and gang thing pretty much for the twenty years I was on the street. Yeah, I'd come across all kinds of folks with all kinds of reputations, and I'd have him up in the top five as far as a scary reputation.

I'm Andre Gunning and this is there and Gone South Street, Episode seven, Head of the Snakes, I say in my dream reached out on the talk.

For you filast to me, I'll never give up, no matter how.

I open my eyes.

Defineca.

Just a note, the views and opinions expressed in this podcast are solely those of the individual's participating. This podcast also contains subject matter which may not be suitable for everyone. Discretion is advised. On the evening of April fourteenth, twenty ten, Robert Carey was found on the floor of his jail cell with a shoelace wrapped around his neck. He had been incarcerated on charges for an illegal prescription drug operation. But there's so much more to the story. According to a twenty ten article in the Philadelphia Daily News, Robert Carey was also linked to the the disappearance of Danielle Imbo and Richard Petrone. In fact, there are three sentences buried toward the bottom of that article that I want you to hear. When Danielle Imbo and Richard Petrone vanished from South Street in February two thousand and five, rumors circulated that Carrie was the hitman who made them disappear. A source familiar with the area in which Carrie ran part of the drug operation, so that the Street Talk had implicated Carrie in the couple's disappearance. A law enforcement source said authorities eyed Carrie but never declared him a suspect. I asked FBI agent Fido Rosselli if he was aware of that article.

Yeah, you know, I will comment any further, but the article is very interesting.

That article pretty much said Robert Carey did it, but law enforcement never charged him and never publicly named him a suspect. Of course, there's also the fact that he's dead, So I'm interested to hear how the FBI first identified him as a person of interest.

If you have a case that's a clean murder, one of the first things you start looking at is who has the motive, and then you try and find some connections to individuals that were built for that kind of activity, and then you would build the murder of a higher case that way. Through the investigation, a lot of names came up. One of them was Robert Carrey. He was subject of a pill distribution ring and was the head of the snake of that investigation.

According to a twenty ten Courier Post article, Robert Carey headed a scheme to obtain and sell opioids like oxycon and percocet. Between two thousand and eight and twenty ten alone, Carrie obtained over one hundred and forty thousand pills using counterfeit prescription pads. The FEDS learned these pads contained the names of real doctors, but had a phone number manned by Carrie's people. They posed as employees of those doctors, so whenever the pharmacy's called to verify those prescriptions, they wound up talking with Robert Carey's associates. So how did a guy who was arrested for selling oxycon and percocet, get tied up in the investigation of Danielle and.

Richard starting in two thousand and nine.

His name comes up as being associated somehow in this couple's disappearance.

Vito said, the Drug task Force within the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office passed along that tip.

They brought forward to me details that involved my investigation, and that's where Robert Carry's name really came up, and that's where I really started focusing on him. So I started digging into him, and he was a bad dude on paper.

I clearly never.

Met the guy, but I certainly talked to a whole bunch of folks that knew him.

His reputation was scary.

He was a tough kid, smart, street smart individual, had a lot of people scared.

We found that out pretty quickly. My team learned that Robert Carey attended North Catholic, a private all boys high school in Philadelphia. At its peak, it was the largest Catholic high school in the world. It's closed now, but you would never know it because to this day people wear it's moniker proudly. It's like a brotherhood, a fraternity. We reached out to a dozen of his classmates, but no one wanted to talk to us on the record, and then we found this court record. Said Robert Carey once bragged to his girlfriend that he had quote tight friends strictly from fear alone.

There are a lot of individuals I spoke to that were personally on the receiving end of some of his violence. At least one of his arrests dealt with being so physically violent, where you know, he took masage into his own hands and put somebody's eye out.

He put somebody's eye out. According to a twenty ten pill Aadelphia Daily News article, that man owed Robert Carrey money twenty four hundred for drugs, and when he didn't pay up, Carrie began stalking the victim. He eventually found the man and in January of twenty ten, beat him up so badly he broke the victim's nose, fractured three bones in his face, and knocked out his left eye, Like literally knocked the guy's eye out. In March of twenty ten, police arrested Robert Carey and charged him with attempted murder. We didn't just hear these rumors from the FBI. We've spoken to sources that also confirmed these rumors about Carrie's reputation, but they were all too afraid to come on the record except for one, and he asked us to keep his name anonymous.

He was a fighter. His main thing was, you know, to scare anyone else that may owe him money. And if he had to beat you up, he's going to do bad damage.

And that's exactly what Robert Carey did.

This guy oeda money, He waited for him, schnuck into his work behind him and literally should a guy's eye fall out of his head when he was beating them and figured he killed them. Like he literally said, when his eye fell out of his head, he thought.

He was dead.

But here's the thing. That victim survived the beating. And then, according to the Courier Post, Robert Carey tried to intimidate a witness to that beating but it all backfired.

He talked about beating this dude and he bragged how he went and did it because he wanted people to know, if you borrow money from me, I want my money, or you're going to have fear of this type just stopt happening.

In April twenty ten, an article ran in the Philadelphia Daily News that detailed everything from Robert Carey's past, his alleged prescription pill empire, the beatdown of that victim who lost his left eye, and how he was rumored to be the hit man who killed Danielle and Richard. My team talked with one of the authors of that article. He told us that after that article came out, several people from Robert Carey's neighborhood called or wrote him, questioning his sanity. They warned him that Carrie was a big man about the block who routinely took care of matters with his own hands, and they warned the author that Carrie might come after him once he got out of jail. FBI agent Vito ROSSELLI.

I'd come across all kinds of folks with all kinds of reputations, and I'd have him up in the top five as far as a scary reputation.

He was, of course of interest.

But unfortunately they found him dead in his jail Celle Love in Bucks County Correctional Facility.

Jail officials told the Philadelphia Daily News Robert Kerrey hung himself with the shoelace, but the investigation into Robert Kerrey's connection to Danielle and Richard lived on. I asked Philly TV reporter Dave Schratweiser what he heard.

There were rumors that before he died, he penned some type of note in which he talked about Ian Boh and Petrunk case. There were reports before the note part of its surface, that he told an inmate in prison that he was involved in that, or he knew people who were involved in that. We chased it, and to my knowledge, neither one of those two things ended up being true.

I asked FBI agent Vito Rosselli about the note Carrie was said to leave behind.

A suicide note was left. That's public knowledge.

Of course, I viewed that suicide note. There was a lot of interesting statements, as you could imagine, but there was no direct confession to Danielle Rich's disappearance that I found.

No direct confession. That answer almost made me wonder if there was more to the story. But all Vito would say about the note was that it was five pages long. Of course, that's left everyone connected to the story wondering just what exactly did Robert Carey write in those five pages. Here's Richard Petron's cousin Stacy.

I do wish I could see that suicide note, and I think the fact that we don't know what's in that suicide note says more than.

Anything outside the handful of people who have read the note, its contents remain a mystery, But Stacy said she knows enough to have formed her own theory about what happened to Danielle and Richard.

When they actually said the words murder for hire, we were shocked. Once you get into murder for hire, it's personal, it's someone with a reason. The fact that it was so professional, that it was so clean, I believe that Robert Carey was the hit man. This person expected to only encounter Danielle.

Danielle was tiny.

According to the missing Person's fire Danielle was five to five and weighed one hundred and seventeen pounds.

That's what he expected to encounter. I mean, he certainly didn't expect Richard plocking it around two hundred pounds.

To Stacy's point, Richard was five nine. He played hockey, and his family said he wasn't someone who could just easily be taken down.

This was so professionally done, that it was able to handle that hicc hop without skipping a beat, and lo and behold, Robert carry goes and hangs himself.

That's when it begs the question, what did you do based.

Upon your life of crime that bothered you so much that you had to take your own life.

I thought about what Richard Petron's cousin Stacy said about how tight lipped the FBI was about their investigation, how they didn't reveal much to the public except in two thousand and eight. That's when they held a press conference and said Danielle and Richard might have been victims of a murder for higher plot. Two years later, the Philadelphia Daily News reported that the rumored hitman was Robert Carey. All of this, of course, is speculation. The FBI has never said it was definitely murder for hire, but that didn't stop more speculation about who the intended target was. My colleague Ben and I talked about this at length.

I think Stacey said there's like a two percent chance that Richard was the target and a ninety eight percent chance that Danielle was the target.

But a zero percent chance that it was both of them at the same time is what I heard her say right where John, I'm not sure he necessarily feels that way.

Danielle's brother John said something in the last episode about who he believed the intended target was.

These two people are creatures of habit, and if either one of them were a target, they could have very easily gotten either one of them by themselves. They had to have been targeted together.

What John believes runs counter to the FBI's theory.

If the hit or the target was one person, they're going to wait until that person is alone because they don't want witnesses or involve someone else that has nothing to do with what this is about, right, and expose themselves to more hassle.

That to me makes more sense than a planned hit being carried out against two people when it was supposed to be one. If there's the outside shot that it was the two of them, the only way that's a possibility is that if someone on South Street saw them together and then put in a phone call right and called someone or worked a network saying hey, you're never going to believe this, but they're actually together tonight.

Alternatively, if it had to be on that specific weekend.

If February nineteenth was the planned night.

Then they had no other choice to handle both of them. Or there's also another scenario where this was kind of an escalation where the intended outcome was not necessarily to kill one or the other. It was to send a message or threaten one of them, and it went.

Out of control.

I think motive is going to be tied with identifying who was the target.

Ben is right. I know this is a question we've asked from the beginning, but as we've learned more, it has led to more questions than answers. Is it to kill one of them? Both of them? And now I keep thinking of this scenario about it being one of intimidation. Could an attempt to threaten escalate to something so much worse? These questions we are asking will ultimately lead us to why why they are gone. Here's FBI agent beat O Vercelli.

Motive for me was always a big challenge in this and still is a big challenge because there's a couple of competing motives, but both kind of fit this investigative theory with how they got rid of the truck. Who may have done the actual deed. But here we are twenty years later, Noah wrest Are made.

A twenty ten article in the Philadelphia Daily News reported that sources in law enforcement and on the streets named Robert Kerry as the alleged hit man.

A lot of names came up. One of them was Robert Carey. I'm not talking inside baseball. That's kind of almost common knowledge at this point that his name comes up as being associated somehow in this couple's disappearance.

If Robert Carey was the alleged hitman, did he have a motive or was he simply the hired gun? And why did he end up dead in his jail cell? And how jail officials said that he hung himself with a shoelace. But why It again made me wonder what was in that note he left. But Vito said that after Robert Carey's death, something strange started happening.

After he dies in April of twenty ten, more people started coming out of the woodwork. I started getting all kinds of folks, informants, tips coming in about Robert Carey and associates of Robert Carey repeating rumors or talking about specific interactions they had with Robert Carey, both on the good side and a whole hell of a lot on the bad violence side.

I asked my anonymous source, who claimed to know Robert Carey if if he had heard any other rumors anything about his violent side.

He definitely killed Shannon Fox.

She was a bartender, Shannon Fox. I had to look it up. So according to a two thousand and two Philadelphia Daily News article, Shannon was also known as Shana Simsak. Early one December morning in two thousand and two, the thirty one year old bartender was found unconscious at the bottom of a stairwell in her apartment building. She suffered significant head injuries. After four days on life support, Shannon died.

We were actually standing on a corner. I did personally hear Bobby Carrey say that he did the light bulb in Shannon's apartment and had a hood on. He talked about how they would never find DNA because he were a tight hood and gloves.

I asked my source why Robert Carrey, who was also known around the neighborhood as Bobby, would do something like this to Shannon Fox.

So her boyfriend got arrested for pills, and supposedly the pills were Bobby cares His goal was to not kill anybody, probably, but I know he was going to smack the guy with a stick or whatever he had in his hand. I don't remember directly, but he said that he waded up there in the dark. He was telling his story to a couple other people that was there, like bragging about it.

Drinking again, here's agent Theodore Rosselli.

There was other stories about getting retribution, stalking people and getting retribution for perceived wrong, whether somebody ripped him off in the drug business or did him dirty in some way or the other where he perceived he did him dirty. People that talked to me would tell me stories about how he would, you know, exact revenge on those specific individuals, and it was pretty personal. And then kind of understood that why maybe you know, people are a little reluctant to bring his name up because he instilled fear in a lot of people.

At the time of his death, Robert Carey was forty years old and pursuing a law degree in college. Although he wasn't married, he had a fiance. We reached out to her but never heard back. We also got in touch with Robert's mother, although she did not want to talk to us on the record, she told us he was my son. I loved him. Why is anyone going to believe what I have to say. I'm supposed to say nice things like most people in Philly. Robert Carey's mother said she was aware of this story about Danielle and Richard's disappearance, but she said her son had absolutely nothing to do with it. And we can't ignore the fact the police have never charged Robert Carey or even named him a suspect. When Robert Carey was found dead in jail, he was facing attempted murder and felony identity theft charges, and according to Vito, those were just the charges that actually stuck.

He had a pretty extensive rap sheet and yet no convictions.

They all basically got dismissed.

According to court records, between nineteen ninety and twenty ten, Robert Carey pled guilty to three separate simple assault charges. He's twice pled guilty to criminal conspiracy. He also pled guilty to theft, attempted theft, and criminal mischief each time he received probation. Along with aspiring to be a lawyer, Robert Kerrey also had other business ventures. Become through public records and learned he also owned a Philadelphia bar and grill called Krabbe's.

What I understood by a number of sources, he had an illegal gambling wholesome gambling tables up on the second story. Never really took off from what I gathered.

Crabbe's was open for about five years and closed sometime around two thousand and six. Now this may be a stretch, but we learned from one of Danielle's friends that Danielle had a side hustle. She used to work for a company as a dealer that hosted private gambling events such as birthday parties and charity functions, and sporadically picked up shifts in the months before she disappeared. And then we found this out back in two thousand and five, Robert Carey owned a townhouse in Mount Laurel, New Jersey. And if Mount Laurel sounds familiar to you, that's because it's the same township where Danielle Embo and her son lived. Danielle's condo sat roughly five miles away from Robert Carey's townhouse, so there definitely were opportunities for Danielle to cross path with Robert Carey.

But did they I never came across a specific insign or, time or place, or a witness that was able to put Danielle to Robert Carrey together.

There were plenty of possibilities, but no direct connections between Robert Carey and Danielle or Robert Kerrey and Richard. I asked TV reporter Dave Schratweiser what he knew about Robert Carey.

I never even heard of the guy before.

To be honest with you, he got on my radar screen because the Attorney General's office held the press conference at a time when the opioid epidemic was kind of just starting and the fake prescription scam was everywhere, and they announced that Robert Carrey was kind of at the top of the chain in that operation.

And it was a big operation.

According to a twenty ten article in the Philadelphia Daily News, that operation was a multimillion dollar scheme, So Robert Carey had plenty of money, he had power, he was feared. It begs a number of different questions, like why would someone who bragged about nearly killing someone with his fists and traded on his reputation of intimidation and fear decides to finally get a conscience and kill himself. And to that end, if he was the rumored hitman, why get involved in the murder of two strangers, especially if he had people to handle matters for him. From everything I've learned about the guy, this was either a personal vendetta or he did it as a favor for someone else.

There's all these possibilities here, but there's no connection. There's no link. There's no thread that leads you to say, yeah, that's what happened. There's nothing to connect these possibilities thread wise, evidence wise, link wise that would lead to a conclusion beyond the reasonable doubt.

In the last episode, we talked extensively about a guy named Rob Lefloor, the one who owned a couple strip clubs and a junkyard called Gianna's. Gianna's has since closed, but according to FBI agent Fiodo Rosselli, it was the only Philly junk yard back in two thousand and five had an industrial crusher.

Common sense, you want to look at how a truck could have disappeared, and Gianna's was a logical conclusion. Rob Laflor, being the owner, was obviously somebody that.

We took a very hard look at.

So I know it gets a little confusing.

Here.

There's Rob laflor who owned the Philly Junkyard with an industrial crusher, and then there's Robert Carey, who was rumored to be the hitman. And guess what we learned that the two of them actually knew one another.

I don't want to call them best buddies, but they were associates, close associates.

Just like Robert Carey, Rob Lafloor was embroiled in some serious investigations. A twenty eleven Philly Daily News article said Lafloor's two strip clubs and Junkyard were being investigated by the FBI in an alleged kickback scheme, and there was more. Lafloor was also facing third degree murder charges after a two thousand and nine alter ca in the parking lot of Laflora's strip club Oasis Gentlemen's Club. One patron was injured while the other was struck and hit the pavement. He later died, but just like his associate Robert Carrey, Rob laflor never made it into the courtroom.

Unfortunately, when I started refocusing on Rob Lafloor and Gianna's and people associated there, Robert Floor was dead.

He had died of an overdose.

Rob Laflor died in twenty twelve. He was forty six years old.

We spent a lot of time going up this path of Rob Lafloor, and we dug up a bunch of good, solid leads from that investigation. But I never closed the door and Robbed Lafloor. Unfortunately he's dead.

He talked about Robert Carrey and Rob Laflor and how they were rumored to be connected to Danielle and Richard's disappearance. Neither of them have been charged in this case or named a suspect, but they both died Carrie in twenty ten and Lafloor in twenty twelve. There's also Danielle's estranged husband, Joe Imbo. Just like the others, Joe has never been charged or named a suspect. There's also another name attached to this case who not only is alive, but he's currently sitting in prison, a man named Anthony Rideski. Here's Vido Rosselli.

Anthony Rideski. He was somebody that law enforcement was looking at shortly after the disappearance because he killed two people around the same time that the couple disappeared. In pretty gruesome fashion.

Radeski killed two people in the community right next to where Danielle Embo lived in a township called Maple Shade, New Jersey. In March of two thousand and five, about a month after Danielle and Richard vanished, Anthony Rodeski carried out the first of his two murders. According to a two thousand and five Courier Post article, Anthony Rodeski was out on parole at the time and was living in a halfway house. That's when someone caught his eye. In a nearby motel parking lot.

He observed the owner of one of the motels walking with what he thought was a money bag from his car to his office, so he decided to go back and rob that guy, but.

That robbery went sideways. In court, Rodeski told the judge that when the owner screamed, he shot him, and instead of taking off with the money, Radeski only got away with the motel owner's car. About a week later, Radeski struck again. This time it happened inside his home. According to a two thousand and five Courier Post article, Anthony Radeski had done work for flooring company and invited the owner of that company to his house under the guise of a business transaction, but Rodeski really wanted to collect a debt he felt the victim own him. Radeski wound up firing seven shots at that man, hitting his head and chest. And believe it or not, the story gets even worse. After Radeski's step son heard the gunfire, he ran into the room. That's when Radeski held a gun to his steps on and ordered him to stab the victim. And that's what his stepsn did multiple times. The victim died a short time later. For the next week, Rideski used the victim's credit card and checkbook to steal forty thousand dollars from the victim. Meanwhile, he stashed the victim's dead body in the basement of their home and left it there for a week before disposing of it.

He takes that body and dumps it in the woods because it started getting a little too ripe, and no body's found and then that's when things started unraveling for mister Radeski.

Police later arrested Rideski and his step son. His step son pled guilty to reckless man slaughter and was sentenced to six years, while Anthony Radeski pled guilty to two counts of felony murder. He was sentenced to sixty years in prison without the chance of parole.

The Anthony Rideski wasn't is a bad dude, did some bad things at that time.

Keep in mind, these two murders happened five to six weeks after Danielle and.

Richard vanished, so of course his name came up, and of course he was somebody who had to spend a lot of time investigating.

The thought was, if Radeski was capable of these two murders, could he also be responsible for killing Danielle and Richard Viudis and law enforcement took a good hard look at Rideski to find that answer.

You know, I sent dive teams in Central Jersey dug up farms based on information that was coming from people close to Anthony Rideski.

A forensics team spent a good chunk of time going through Radeski's house.

We spent a lot of time in the basement, had him siphon out a septic tank, had to go through all the sludge looking for o evidence.

That won me a lot of friends, but all that.

Dirty work didn't uncover any conclusive evidence that Redsky was involved in the murder of Tanielle and Richard.

The amount of promising directions and leads that this case has taken it had a lot of ups and downs where you thought you're on the right track and then you've run up against a wall, or you think you're on the right track and you just can't take it any further because all your leads are dead, are gone.

Today. Anthony Rideski is in a maximum security present in Illinois. In the winter of twenty twenty four, our team reached out to one of his attorneys in hopes of talking with him, but that conversation went nowhere. In the last episode, we talked about that meeting with law enforcement that Danielle's brother John sat in on, the one where they wrote names on a whiteboard and then talked about motive. We've spent much of this episode doing the same thing. And when I look at the names on our whiteboard, two of them are dead, one is in on an unrelated conviction, but none of them were ever charged or named suspects in this case. To me, the most intriguing name is Robert Carey. The alleged hitman. Here's a guy who had been running a lucrative prescription pill ring. He had money, he had a fiance, he was studying to become a lawyer. Why get involved in killing Danielle and Richard? And conversely, why did he take his own life in jail. In the nearly fifteen years since Robert Carrey died, no one in his circle has talked. And while we spent the last twenty minutes running through our whiteboard of who could have been responsible, the victims families and friends have been living through this for the last twenty years. Here's Philly TV reporter Dave Schratweiser.

They were frustrated both sides. They're looking for answers, and that was, in my mind, always the key for them. Just tell us something, Just tell us something about what happened to here.

As any journalist or member of law enforcement would tell you, you try to keep emotion out of it, but it isn't easy.

I have to tell you, I've never met a Warmer family who kind of embraced the people who covered the story. And it wasn't just me, it was reporters from other stations, and they were affable, kind and cooperative.

Dave said he spent the most time with the Patrons and formed a bond with Richard's father, Richard Senior.

He was always very welcoming to me. Lovable guy.

If you spent five minutes with him in a room, you like the guy. And Marge kind of the power behind the throne, you know, the quiet power behind the throne.

And you know, listen.

The thing that kind of hurts my heart the most is I have seen the pain in both of their faces, in Richard's daughter's face, reliving it, trying to figure it out. And it's the mystery of it. It's the no answers part of it that you kind of grabs you and kind of throttles you. You're like, who would want the car and this couple to disappear without a trace. Those are nightmares kind of thoughts to live with every day.

When we talked with Marge, she said her husband became a different person after their son disappeared.

With no words scene. He's not all there some days. You know, my welf killed him too.

Marge said her husband has been riddled with guilt that he should have done more to protect Richard.

He said, I didn't protect my son. I'm his father. I should have protected him. Hell, we didn't know that he was going on a date and never coming back. I had no idea, I said, how would we know that he was thirty five years old? We're going to follow him like no.

Up until now, you haven't heard from Richard Senior. He's been in and out of the hospital and not well enough for us to interview him. But recently he was back home and Ben was fortunate to meet with him.

Richard's disappearance that put a period in my life. There's everything that happened before and everything that happened since.

They spent a couple hours talking about everything from Danielle.

She was the closest.

Thing my son would ever get to, the perfect match.

To what he thinks happened to his son.

I think the evidence speaks for itself.

We also learned about how difficult it was when the investigators turned the tables.

He had to take a live detector test. You know what that did to him one day when they brought him in to take a hive detector test to say, you know what happened to your son?

That's next time on there and gone. If you have any information about the disappearance of Danielle Imbo and Richard Patrone. Please call the Citizens Crime Commission tip line at two one five five four six eight four seven seven, or contact the Thereon Gone team at thearngonepod at gmail dot com. That's Therein Gone Pod at gmail dot com. We're grateful for your support. One way to show support is by subscribing to our show on Apple Podcasts, and don't forget to rate and review Therein Gone. Five star reviews go a long way. A big thank you to all of our listeners. Thearon Gon is a production of Glass Podcasts, a division of Glass Entertainment Group, in partnership with iHeart Podcasts. The show is executive produced by Nancy Glass and Ben Fetnerman. It's hosted and written by me Andrea Gunning, with additional reporting and writing by Ben Fetterman. The series is also written and produced by Todd Gans. Our associate producer is Kristin Melcurie. Research by Mason Klinder, Anna Hamilton, and Bella Ricky. Our iHeart team is Ali Perry and Jessica Crincheck. Audio editing and mixing by Matt Alvecchio. Additional editing support from Nico Aruka and Tanner Robbins. There Gunn's theme and original compositions were composed by Oliver Bains and Darry mcaulay of Neiser Music Library, provided by Mybe Music and a special thanks to both the Patron and a Tobray families. Your strength and willingness to share your stories have been invaluable through the making of this podcast. Thank you for allowing us to honor the memories of your loved ones and to help keep their stories alive. For more podcasts from iHeart, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.

There and Gone: South Street

There and Gone: South Street digs into the case of Danielle Imbo and Richard Petrone. Danielle and R 
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