Episode 568 - Herb Baumeister I

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh Herbie. Oh Herbie, why'd you do it? Herbie. Oh I've been meaning to have a long talk with you, Herbie. I'm hearing the men scream and I just, no, I can't sleep. Okay? If you're gonna murder these men, Herbie-

MARCUS PARKS

Herbie.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) If you're gonna be murdering these men, honestly can you keep it to in town? Can't you take it downtown? You used to do it by the highway. Now it's just all day long with the gagging and the choking and the dying and the cumming and I need it to stop there, Herbie. Okay?

MARCUS PARKS

Welcome to the Last Podcast on the Left, ladies and gentlemen.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh Herbie.

MARCUS PARKS

My name is Marcus Parks. I'm here with Henry Zebrowski.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) No, it's me, it's Julie Baumeister. Hi!

MARCUS PARKS

That's your Indiana accent?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh Herbie's being bad. Oh no, he tried to get to The Jackson 5 but they don't go down to the gay bars.

MARCUS PARKS

And of course Ed Larson.

ED LARSON

Hello! How is everybody?

MARCUS PARKS

And today we're gonna be returning to heavy hitter territory with Herb Baumeister.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah. What a charmer!

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

You know it's weird-

ED LARSON

Unfortunately I think he might have been.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well no. I want to ask this question. We'll get to it but I want to ask this question to our audience. Now Herb Baumeister is a character.

MARCUS PARKS

He is. Herb Baumeister was a serial killer from Indianapolis who murdered up to 35 gay men over a period of about 15 years. We do not however know a lot of specifics when it comes to Herb's killings because Herb was never actually convicted for the murders. Rather, Herb put a gun to his head in the Canadian wilderness after the cops found human remains on his property. So while he's technically a suspected serial killer, it's a near impossibility that he didn't murder all those men whose bones were found scattered across his 18 acres of land.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They were 60 ft from his house, half of them. So he definitely did it. But we'll see what god says.

ED LARSON

Could have been an elaborate prank.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I keep saying this. I keep saying this. You never know, those bone twins, you never know what they're up to. But Herb Baumeister, what a relief to not be talking about David Icke anymore.

MARCUS PARKS

Ugh.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That now we're talking about Herb Baumeister and there's almost a smile, like I'm almost smiling.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Well this is familiar territory, this is true crime. This is bread and butter stuff.

ED LARSON

He's somehow more likable.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He really is. He is. Herb Baumeister-

ED LARSON

At least he knows what he likes.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes, yes. He's clear.

MARCUS PARKS

Responsible for less pain and destruction than David Icke.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But Herb Baumeister is a great example of when we cover serial killers, a lot of what we know from the serial killer is from the mouth of the serial killers themselves.

MARCUS PARKS

The last surviving witness as they often call it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes. And then we see a phenomenon a lot of times in true crime of serial killers that love to talk.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And want everybody to know everything that they've done and quite often exaggerate. Henry Lee Lucas, probably Ted Bundy but also was an extremely dangerous human being. But he definitely exaggerated. Those people who talk, right? There's the loquacious type. But then there's this guy who is just like reminds me of Samuel Little, reminds me of these other characters like where he probably killed more than what was found than not. Like he specifically was a hidden predator.

MARCUS PARKS

No, I mean there was no exaggeration, he never mentioned it to any living soul.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah because if he did it would be bad.

MARCUS PARKS

Well it's also almost positive that Herb Baumeister had two phases as a serial killer. While the majority of his murders occurred on the property that he shared with his wife and three children, Herb is highly, highly suspected of also being the I-70 Strangler.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Which is different than the I-70 Killer.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. In that series of murders, 11 men were found dumped in rivers, streams, and ditches in the rural countrysides along Interstate 70 throughout the 1980s. It's thought that Herb was the perpetrator because he spent a lot of time driving on I-70 and those killings abruptly stopped when Herbie bought his property in 1991.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh Herbie's not like that, his whole thing, that's just where his favorite Steak n Shake was on the highway. That's what he likes, he likes to drive. Because he told me, he said oh Julie, you know what I love to do? Cruising. And I was like oh me too! Why can't I go?

ED LARSON

Yeah. He's listing his rest areas from favorite to least favorite.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) And I was like why can't I go? What's so glorious about these holes?

MARCUS PARKS

Now when it comes to Herb Baumeister's personality and modus operandi, I describe him as kind of John Wayne Gacy by way of John Waters.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yikes.

MARCUS PARKS

See in my opinion, Gacy is a little too on the nose for a John Waters character.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. I mean Serial Mom is closest to John Wayne Gacy maybe but not really.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Hey, is this the cocksucker residence I love the Serial Mom so fucking much.

ED LARSON

Serial Mom is great but she didn't have an act.

MARCUS PARKS

No.

ED LARSON

Gacy had an act.

MARCUS PARKS

Gacy had an act. But to that point, Waters himself said that Gacy was quote "the worst dressed mass murderer we've ever had".

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Ooh shade.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Bad bad taste, not good bad taste. And Waters at one point actually used a John Wayne Gacy painting as a deterrent, hanging one in a guest bedroom to keep certain people from staying over at his house for too long.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's awesome.

MARCUS PARKS

That's classic Waters. Baumeister however was a closeted owner of a chain of shitty thrift stores, a hoarder who kept several mannequins surrounding his indoor pool-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

His audience.

MARCUS PARKS

And he filled his house with weird tchotchkes like gigantic mascara tubes and styrofoam horse heads as well as used toilet paper. And that doesn't even get into the raccoon infestation.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Those raccoons were gentrifying that home.

ED LARSON

Yeah. And I don't know if you can really call used toilet paper like a keepsake.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Eddie, this is one of those stories where you find out like one man's trash is another man's treasure.

MARCUS PARKS

State of mind, bro.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

You view shit as like a thing that's wasted, right?

ED LARSON

It's weird. No, I love shit.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But that's the trauma that was created by Big Toilet-

ED LARSON

I also love getting rid of it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah Rob, looking at you who is a former plumber. Because they made shit be dirty. But shit-

MARCUS PARKS

So you gotta use their toilets to get rid of it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's what they're saying, right.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's how they control where all the shit goes. Where if I keep shit in my house, it's like hey, I made it. Don't try to take things I made from my hands. What is this, communist Russia?

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

You know what people don't know is that you can actually take your own shit, make it into bricks, and build your house out of it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's what they did in Peru. I think?

ED LARSON

Yeah, these buckets don't fill themselves.

MARCUS PARKS

Baumeister even got fired from the BMV for pissing on his boss's desk.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And they do that at Christmas.

MARCUS PARKS

And this was all while he was murdering several people a year and burning their bodies in his backyard before crushing up the bones and scattering them across the yard. If all that doesn't say filthiest person alive, I don't fucking know what does.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, he's pretty gross.

MARCUS PARKS

Now one of the things that fascinates me about true crime is why some serial killers are remembered and others are forgotten. And I think John Wayne Gacy and Herb Baumeister are great examples of that contrast.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They really are. It's really like Elvis and Orion.

MARCUS PARKS

Both murdered gay men in large numbers, almost the exact same body count in fact. And both, with some exceptions, kept the remains of their strangled victims on their own property. Baumeister, according to one of his surviving victims, even set up his strangulations by asking the victim if he wanted to see a neat trick, just like Gacy.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Exactly like Gacy.

ED LARSON

And they're like 500 miles away or less from each other.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, Des Plaines, Illinois. Yeah. Illinois and Indiana, yeah.

ED LARSON

And killing people around the same time, right?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I literally have chills going up my spine because we're also going to talk about another serial killer that was also operating at the same exact time during this time period in the exact part of the United States that this was all fucking happening.

MARCUS PARKS

Well Baumeister picked up where Gacy left off.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

ED LARSON

Okay.

MARCUS PARKS

Around then, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Because he's later on, he's 90s.

ED LARSON

Okay.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

More like 80s/90s.

MARCUS PARKS

Actually he started in '81.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh wow.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Baumeister started in '81.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like what was the guy that did Buster Poindexter?

MARCUS PARKS

David Johansen?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, David Johansen started Buster Poindexter in 1981. And I'm pretty certain he might also be a serial killer as well. That might be slander and I might get sued by the Buster Poindexter family.

MARCUS PARKS

David Johansen is not a serial killer.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Do you know that for sure?

MARCUS PARKS

Well we'll fucking find out when we do our New York Dolls series on No Dogs in Space coming later this summer.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Hey.

MARCUS PARKS

We'll find out.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

If he becomes a serial killer then that becomes Last Podcast, buddy. Okay?

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Don't even fucking take material from us, buddy.

MARCUS PARKS

We'll bring you on.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I've always wanted to get inbetween him and his wife.

MARCUS PARKS

Ugh. Now as far as why Gacy is remembered, there's obviously the clown angle which is huge.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's packaging. Marketing in that way.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

But Gacy was also a blue-collar, working class Joe, a successful business owner and politician who'd once been photographed with the first lady. And you just saw, did you just see this picture for the first time recently with Gacy and the first lady?

ED LARSON

No, I haven't.

MARCUS PARKS

You haven't?

ED LARSON

Which lady?

MARCUS PARKS

Rosalynn Carter.

ED LARSON

Really?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. That fucking bitch.

ED LARSON

Oh man. She was hot.

MARCUS PARKS

She met Jim Jones and John Wayne Gacy in the same year.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Wait a second. You just said Rosalynn Carter was hot Elle Macpherson.

ED LARSON

Have you not seen younger pictures of her? She was hot. That just shut down the podcast.

MARCUS PARKS

Wow.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

She's fine.

MARCUS PARKS

She's pretty cute. She's very cute.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

My first thought wouldn't have been like goddamn.

ED LARSON

I mean 60 years ago I'm talking about.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah but there was what's his putz? We had other big breasts. We had other sexy people 60 years ago.

MARCUS PARKS

Barbara Bush?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Barbara Bush is not attractive.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. No, what are you talking about, man? It's in her last name.

MARCUS PARKS

All right, John Wayne Gacy.

ED LARSON

So hot.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Now that's hot.

MARCUS PARKS

You wanna talk about breasts! Well Gacy was a guy anyone might know, he's a local character who threw good parties. And finally Gacy's last victim, the one that got him caught, was not a transient gay youth or a kid born from poverty like his previous victims. Gacy killed a popular local boy, Robert Piest, which kicked off an immediate search that led police directly to Gacy and the bodies buried underneath his house.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

John Wayne Gacy is on obviously the very dark Mount Rushmore of serial killers because of this fact. I think that because he has these quote unquote "X factors" about him, he has the clown angle mixed with the politician angle mixed with the everybody loves this guy angle.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like he was on television.

ED LARSON

A showman.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He was a business owner. And then the idea of living this extreme second life was something that blew everybody's minds. Because it's like in America, we really do believe that appearances tell you everything because we worship appearances in this country. But not this type of ostentatiousness does not a good serial killer make all the time. Even though John Wayne Gacy is extremely unique in being a super predator and have this level of attention. Where somebody like Herb Baumeister is one of the actual boogeymen that ramble through the highways and byways of America that kill anonymously and only kill for their own self satisfaction. They don't really care. I think because someone like John Wayne Gacy in some way, in the back of his head, knows that when I get caught I'm gonna be like a celebrity.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Oh he's got the ego.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

He's got the ego. He wants to be that guy.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes. He wants to be it.

MARCUS PARKS

Grand Marshall of the Polish Day Parade.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But then Jeffrey Dahmer is an example of somebody like Herb Baumeister that he did have to get fucking drunk to do it.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Jeffrey Dahmer had to get drunk to do it.

MARCUS PARKS

I don't think Baumeister had to get drunk to do it. I think Baumeister really liked doing it. He was process, not product.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes he was. But then he... We'll get to it.

MARCUS PARKS

I think he enjoyed the product part. We'll get into it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

His favorite television show was watching bodies rot in a fucking pyramid while he drank Millers. So I don't know. Maybe he only drank when he was watching them rot.

MARCUS PARKS

Baumeister was more of a loner. He was a failed businessman with a long suffering wife and no friends to speak of. He was a weirdo and a dick, unpopular, kind of gross, and smart enough to stay in a marginalized victim pool, gay men. And this was during a time when investigating the murders of gay men was considered a little icky.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. They always thought they'd get like cum on their badge.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Especially in places like Indianapolis.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh Midwest.

MARCUS PARKS

My god. No, I mean Milwaukee, Indianapolis. The Indianapolis police were just absolutely fucking awful in this.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Let's be frank, it was the time period. Because we saw the same thing when we covered Randy Kraft, it was happening in SoCal too. It was happening in the liberal areas of the country too. There was plenty.

MARCUS PARKS

Miami.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Basically we're just talking about within police institutions, like going after these crimes made them feel icky so they didn't want to deal with it. And they just assumed that all gay dudes, when they have sex, punch and choke each other. And a lot of times it's just jerking each other off while watching the Golden Girls. From what I've seen. Or like young men that are having problems at practice.

MARCUS PARKS

At practice?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, for whatever sport they're doing. It's always like they're at like-

MARCUS PARKS

You been watching documentaries?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No, not those. But I've seen clips from them. Where it's like you see them and it's always some guy going like hey, Bran! My shoes are too tight. And him going like oh Greg, I see your pants fell down, man. And he says like oh no, what's gonna happen now, bro? And then he just starts getting at him.

MARCUS PARKS

Sounds pretty similar to the heterosexual documentaries.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I feel like they have more plot sometimes.

MARCUS PARKS

The gay ones?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No, the straight ones.

MARCUS PARKS

Oh yeah. I'm stuck in the laundry machine. There's a lot of fucking plot to that. That's so much plot.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well basically, you know what that's all about? The problem in America that we can't fix our fucking machines, right?

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's what this is about.

MARCUS PARKS

Oh you're talking about planned obsolescence?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's what that's all about! It's all about it.

ED LARSON

Big Mayfair.

MARCUS PARKS

Well Baumeister also offed himself before he was arrested. And even though there was the same sort of mass investigation of his property like Gacy's, you didn't have the dramatic footage of men carrying body bags filled with goopy remains like you did at Gacy's house in Des Plaines, Illinois. But because Baumeister didn't reach star status, so to speak, only one somewhat reliable true crime paperback was written covering his life and crimes. That's our main source today, 'Where the Bodies are Buried' by Fannie Weinstein and Melinda Wilson.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I did read the somewhat bitchily titled 'You Don't Know Who I Am' that was also about Herb Baumeister but it's one of those Amazon books where it's just all filled with fake shit.

ED LARSON

Oh yeah, you can't trust that shit.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, it's like the Jack Rosewood books that are just total fucking horseshit. But for our other source, which we'll get into next episode, we've got something that I've never seen in a serial killer story.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. Yeah, that's what makes this one fucking good.

MARCUS PARKS

But before we get into all that, let's tell the story of Herb Baumeister himself, starting with his childhood in Indianapolis. So Herbert Richard Baumeister was born to a comfortable middle class life in 1947 Indianapolis as the eldest of four children, the son of a successful anesthesiologist and a housewife.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Love it already! Wish I could be in there.

MARCUS PARKS

Now when Herb was a small boy he wasn't exactly abnormal, more accurately, Herbie was just a fucking nerd.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Super nerd, yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

For example, he and a friend formed what they called the weather club where they'd pick a random spot on the globe and quote "report on the weather there". Herby would then moderate the discussion that followed.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's a bit exacting. But I knew a lot of nerds that kind of had this sort of... I had a kid growing up that was super obsessed with the MTA.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Right. So he was super into all the buses and the trains, I think now they call that something different. But they also have had other things where we go like I had the chess club, that was kind of nerdy.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, I mean chess club is fine.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But it was so horny. Like that's the thing about the weather club is like I wonder whether or not like, yeah, they're all talking about clouds-

MARCUS PARKS

Did you said the chess club is horny?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Really?

ED LARSON

You were in the chess club?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah buddy.

MARCUS PARKS

And it was honry.

ED LARSON

You got laid?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I had girlfriends.

ED LARSON

You had girlfriends.

MARCUS PARKS

But did you meet them through the chess club?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No.

MARCUS PARKS

So what are you basing the chess club being horny on?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Nerds are horny.

ED LARSON

You'd go home and jerk off.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No, nerds are super horny.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, everyone's super horny.

ED LARSON

Yeah!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No, not all people. Some people aren't apparently.

ED LARSON

At 16 everyone's horny.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Sometimes they're more angry.

MARCUS PARKS

But once Herbie reached adolescence, his behavior morphed into something more antisocial. He had a hard time fitting in with others not because he was a nerd but because he started saying and doing odd shit.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He was jacked from the batter. Like he was one of those guys that was like never quite, he never fit into any social rhythm at all.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

What did he do?

MARCUS PARKS

His childhood friend Bill said that Herbie would ask people uncomfortable, unprompted questions like hey, what do you think it'd be like to drink human urine?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Honestly I think it'd be difficult to catch and I think a lot of it is probably I don't like yellow drinks.

ED LARSON

Yeah. I feel like that's not that crazy of a question.

MARCUS PARKS

But if you ask it again and again to a lot of people-

ED LARSON

Yeah, no. You ask it once or twice.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Hey, what do you think about human urine? You think it tastes like lemons?

MARCUS PARKS

It's the frequency.

ED LARSON

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. Yeah. Can I have some of that urine, please? Also I imagine then you become urine boy. You know how it is in high school.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

If you do one thing that's outlier, then you become that thing and then you're locked into that. Unless you show up at the talent show, do that lip sync that changes your entire fucking career around inside of the fucking school. Retrofit it.

MARCUS PARKS

That's nice. Did you do the lip sync?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No, I was already way more popular. I was running the talent show. And then I was the gatekeeper. Yeah. And I had a little office, people would come in there.

ED LARSON

You had an office in high school?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They'd come in the little back area. And then first of all I'd be like do you tap? And they'd go like yeah. And I was like do you tap naked?

MARCUS PARKS

Wow.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Learned how to be a producer.

MARCUS PARKS

On another occasion Herbie found a dead crow, hid it in his jacket, brought it to school, and left it on a teacher's desk. It's rumored but not proven that after the crow incident and after Herbie got obsessed with the idea of drinking piss that his father had him committed to a mental hospital.

ED LARSON

Kids do that kind of stuff.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He just needs an adjustment.

MARCUS PARKS

It's rumored. We don't know that for sure.

ED LARSON

I knew this one kid, he showed up to school covered in blood one day and they were like what happened? He's like oh I was whittling a stick and a raccoon jumped at me and then I stabbed it and it bled all over me. And we were like you killed that raccoon.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, you stabbed a raccoon to death. Yeah, yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

That's a long road to hoe to get to killing a raccoon.

ED LARSON

But he lived on a farm and he was like the only person in Boca Raton that lives on a farm.

MARCUS PARKS

Okay.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah but still, killing a raccoon is pretty rough. On the way to school? Yeah, it's not felling a cow to eat. It's not going through the chickens for food.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. You chased down a raccoon and stabbed it to death.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Also put on your gym shorts for the day or something.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Should have changed. But people said that Herbie thought that it was like funny.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He was a guy very similar to Jeffrey Dahmer that was the kook. So people thought he was funny in a way but most of the time people said that he was invisible.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. I mean Herbie was supposedly diagnosed with schizophrenia in the mental hospital. But again, this claim is from fairly dubious sources that only reference each other for proof that Baumeister was actually committed as a teenager.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, nothing's on the books saying that he has schizophrenia.

MARCUS PARKS

What we do know however was that Herbie's father was a strict disciplinarian who would verbally and physically abuse his son.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's the only time he's not wrong.

MARCUS PARKS

But we can't say that. Because that's the thing is that you can have-

ED LARSON

He created him!

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, that's the thing is that's the shit that leads to the killing.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I don't know, man. Made Jermaine Jackson, bring him back up, man, super talented kid.

ED LARSON

Yeah, he is doing great.

MARCUS PARKS

Why are you so obsessed with the Jackson family getting beat into talent?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Because we're in Indiana.

MARCUS PARKS

This is like the 10th time you've brought up like oh yeah, Michael Jackson, good thing he got hit!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well it's because I'm saying-

ED LARSON

Thank god.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I wish that somebody had cared about me so much.

MARCUS PARKS

To beat you? But your mother did beat you.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

A couple of times.

ED LARSON

Not hard enough. She couldn't finish the fucking job.

MARCUS PARKS

Well because he was abused, Herbie shut down emotionally at a young age and stopped reacting altogether when his father punished him. He also withdrew socially, choosing to go home straight after school to watch TV and eat peanut butter sandwiches and carrots instead of playing with friends or siblings. In fact besides the friend who remembered all the piss talk, nobody else remembered Herb Baumeister at all.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. You gotta make a moment for yourself.

MARCUS PARKS

Sure. But even though Herb's relationship with his father wasn't the best, what with the physical abuse and the mental institutions and such, Herb still wanted to emulate his father's career. So he attended Indiana University in 1965 where he majored in a very serial killer specialization, anatomy.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. This is his attempt, we see this I think a lot with serial killers where he was like I'm gonna give being normal a shot.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

My father does this. He obviously created, his DNA created me, right? And I kind of feel weird but maybe this is where I can go and not feel weird. I can go into this. Because in anatomy, like a surgeon, then you get to cut up bodies and play with fucking disposable tits and like cut off people's butts and stuff and play with their organs and stuff.

ED LARSON

Is that what surgeons do?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah!

ED LARSON

Guys, I have surgeons in my family and they never bring that up.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But they get paid to do it. They get paid to go through someone's intestines going oh spaghetti! Oh spaghetti!

MARCUS PARKS

Oh sorry, I gotta go do a butt-ectomy. I gotta go cut off a butt this afternoon.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But that is a completely responsible way to exorcise these feelings.

ED LARSON

I'll have to ask my brother-in-law.

MARCUS PARKS

Herb however still had no idea how to fit in. But instead of being antisocial he went too far in the other direction, accommodating people to the point where it was uncomfortable while putting on such a show of caring for others that it became suspicious.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He did it because he thought people were watching and he thought that people thought that this is what normal people do.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Yeah. And it's the Midwest.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

That's got a lot to do with it as well.

MARCUS PARKS

I don't know, man. How many times have you been to Indiana?

ED LARSON

A couple times.

MARCUS PARKS

It's not a friendly place.

ED LARSON

I've been to Indianapolis.

MARCUS PARKS

It's not a friendly place at all.

ED LARSON

Yeah. Well they got lots of sausage.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Just remember that one time when you had collapsed before the show and we couldn't do that live show in Indiana. And we went to that bar in Indianapolis and then we met the COVID nurse that was like super racist and saying a bunch of weird stuff and then saying about how COVID didn't exist. But she had a wedding ring on and she was talking about her husband and then she started making out with another man. And he was like groping her and stuff and people were taking pictures and stuff and she was like laughing. And then I think they went and had sex in the bathroom.

ED LARSON

Hell yeah, shout out to our first responders.

MARCUS PARKS

Well Herb was also a creature of contradictions. He insisted on being meticulously dressed at all times despite the fact that it was the mid to late 60s, when being a square wasn't in style. But he also drove around in a hearse outfitted with the siren, which combined with his style cut an unsettling figure.

ED LARSON

So he liked the Ghostbusters.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He's an Addams Family cousin.

MARCUS PARKS

Yes. Yeah, that's a great way of putting it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He's one of those guys who shows up because he's just like hi, everybody. Hey. Because he's immediately strange out the box.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And he wants to stand out but he doesn't quite know how to do it.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Well if he wanted to stand out he should have drank the piss.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Exactly!

MARCUS PARKS

I think he did.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

I think it's safe to say he did.

ED LARSON

You don't ask, you're like this is what piss tastes like.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I'll tell you what, it tastes like piss.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Well maybe we're putting the emphasis on the wrong word. Maybe it should have been like what do YOU think piss tastes like?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Because I think-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I know.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I know.

MARCUS PARKS

But the interest in cars was how her first bonded with his soon to be wife, the long suffering Julie Baumeister.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) I love a siren on a hearse. Because all the bodies get to the cemeteries quicker. They go to sleep so much faster.

MARCUS PARKS

Well as she put it, she liked Herb because they both like cars and they were both young republicans.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And that is like such an example of being a contrary fuck during the coolest time period to be in America.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like that was like an awesome time.

MARCUS PARKS

It was really stressful.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes. But to be in the counterculture? That sounded like a fucking blast! And you had total impunity to go be a part of the most amazing moment in American youth culture.

MARCUS PARKS

That's why all of the fucking nursing homes, all the baby boomers, all the nurses say you gotta wear gloves because they all have hepatitis.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. And they fucked everything up!

MARCUS PARKS

Well Julie also liked that Herb was strange. And during college, she thought that he was fun and creative because he stapled hubcaps to his walls instead of putting up posters like the other kids, which shows you how low the bar for fun and creative was for the future Mrs. Baumeister.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) He was simply a ball of laughs. Sometimes he said the funniest things like his favorite color was green. And I was like oh Herbie, they broke the mold when they made you. (choking) Don't choke me, don't choke me.

ED LARSON

He's a decorator like WALL-E was a decorator.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Actually yeah, very similar to WALL-E.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He was a decorator like Jeffrey Macdonald was a decorator.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. But when they got married in 1971, Julie discovered that strange isn't always a good thing. For example, on their wedding night, when young lovers are supposed to be deep in the throes of passion, Herbie chose to instead read a magazine.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh you know how it is. He likes to get his stretches in and then we did a couple of rounds of making makeups on each other and then he read his favorite magazine, which is called Wedding Night Magazine. And I don't need all the sweat.

MARCUS PARKS

No, no, no. They didn't. I mean it's the modern day equivalent of getting married and then scrolling through your phone all night.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. Julie is if obtuse was a person.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Because I don't know whether or not, we'll get to the idea of whether or not she knew or what she knew and all that kind of stuff.

MARCUS PARKS

What she wanted to know I think is the best way to put it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

She had that incredible ability that only moms seem to be able to achieve of recreating history in a Stalin-like fashion where they can just delete whole things that happened. All moms do this apparently.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Deleting eras.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Eras!

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And ways they behaved and creating entire scenarios where they're the hero and everyone around them is a incompetent villain.

ED LARSON

Oh my god.

MARCUS PARKS

Yup.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. And I don't know why, I don't know why moms have that ability. And fathers just go away inside. Fathers just retreat to the inside.

ED LARSON

Anytime you call a mom a liar, they're like I'm a storyteller.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well that's a Zebrowski trait.

MARCUS PARKS

Well Julie actually claimed that over the 25 years they were married, they had sex half a dozen times. She actually counted, six times. She never actually saw Herb naked because those half a dozen times were in a pitch black room and he'd always sleep in full body pajamas.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) What I kind of felt was fun about it was that I was like oh, this is how Stevie Wonder has sex.

ED LARSON

Now is she counting just the vagina?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Yeah, yeah, yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) He didn't even put it all the way in. He just kind of put what we call the semen half in. And just so I could get it up in my guts.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. And that's the thing is that he actually had, I mean he was like three for six. He had three kids with her.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah dude.

ED LARSON

Wow.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well he saved his cum.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. No, I don't think he did.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He saved his baby cum.

MARCUS PARKS

So you think that the cum that he was having with the gay men was different from the cum that he gave... You think that's different? Do you think you can consciously, a man can consciously choose to have different types of cum that he shoots?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I think the unconscious is something that we don't understand. And I think that if you're having sex, maybe it's because if the swimmers know there ain't no egg, maybe the swimmers-

MARCUS PARKS

They take the night off?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well maybe that's where the lazy ones go.

MARCUS PARKS

Maybe. Interesting theory. Sidestorieslpotl@gmail.com.

ED LARSON

When was the last time you shot baby cum?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh god knows. I actually think that mine are all retired. I think that they quit.

MARCUS PARKS

You got weed cum.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I slow it down, buddy.

MARCUS PARKS

Now while the Baumeisters outwardly appeared to be a stereotypical heterosexual white American couple complete with ostentatious National Lampoon-style Christmas displays every year, things were much darker behind closed doors.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Much darker.

MARCUS PARKS

As Julie put it, her world was controlled by Herb. She had no friends so she didn't know that almost never having sex with your husband was in any way abnormal.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh yeah, he told me he only has six cums, he has six cums in his life inside of his balls.

MARCUS PARKS

Julie also had no family and therefore nowhere to go, especially after they had kids. So Herb controlled his wife using childish mind games. In one case shortly after they got married, Herb and Julie got into a fight. So Herb moved into the room upstairs and didn't speak to his wife for a year.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) There was one time for Christmas that Herbie, he said oh let's roleplay. And I was like oh I'm not an actress, I didn't go to drama school, I'm shy. But then he did this thing for Christmas. I dressed up as Mrs. Claus, he dressed up as Santa Claus. And I was like oh we're gonna maybe kiss, maybe we'll kiss. And then that night I go to sleep and I wake up and downstairs he's choking this man dressed as a reindeer. And I was like Herbie, why at Christmas time?

ED LARSON

What happened to all the sugar plums?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh and then honestly, because whatever cum he was covered in, that man, that reindeer, I guess he couldn't get pregnant. He must have been on his period.

MARCUS PARKS

But continuing that behavior, Herb also held grudges which would develop easily and last forever, hinting at more of a borderline personality than schizophrenic. Family members would be cut off at the smallest slight. And he once didn't speak to his mother for four years simply because she said something he didn't like.

ED LARSON

Good for her.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Good for her. Way to go, good job. Four years without this shithead. This demeanor of course made Herb perfect for his first career track. Medical school was definitely not in the cards for Herb.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No.

MARCUS PARKS

So his father used his connections to get him a job at the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles as the Director of Financial Operations.

ED LARSON

And you wonder why they have a bad reputation.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Dude.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. It's guys like Herb Baumeister in charge. Like you wonder like the fucking road, I've said it before, the roads of Indiana almost killed me.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. There's a lot of these. When you think about Dennis Rader worked as a dog catcher.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And he worked for an HOA.

ED LARSON

Killed dogs for a living.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That is what he did for a living. You look at even John Wayne Gacy is a contractor. Talk about one of the most mysterious careers that exist. Because a contractor is the closest thing that humans have to knowing ghosts because of the way they disappear. They just go away.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And so ugh god, it is all of these people.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. I mean not to besmirch all our civil service workers out there.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh no.

MARCUS PARKS

I know we got a lot of good mail people out there.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I love the BMV.

ED LARSON

But if you're at the BMV, take the headphones out and help some people.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

We love the BMV. We definitely don't need any more problems at the BMV.

ED LARSON

I'm getting my driver's license soon.

MARCUS PARKS

Congratulations.

ED LARSON

Thank you.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He's never had it.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

I had it but I got rid of it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well they got rid of it for you.

ED LARSON

They took it from me.

MARCUS PARKS

Can you vote?

ED LARSON

Oh yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Oh nice. Okay.

ED LARSON

Yeah. I vote like three or four times an election.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah!

MARCUS PARKS

Now the reviews Herb's coworkers gave of his behavior were mixed because at this point he was still trying to fit into society. But he was slipping. One coworker said that he was an excellent people-oriented boss while another said Herb gave up one of his vacation days to drive her 140 miles to a bank when she was going through a rough divorce. At the same time though, Herbie's mental state was precarious to say the least. He would rant and rave about odd shit for no real reason, then would spend hours crying alone in his house. At one point he got into a car accident that triggered a full mental breakdown and got him a stay in a mental health ward, possibly his second.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I have a theory where he... So during this time period he was starting to... Apparently he went through this... He always would have problems spending money, right? He would just spend money extravagantly and we'll get more into it. But he was sort of dressing really nice. That was his first foray into I'm normal. Guys, I'm normal. I'm a people-oriented boss. I'm the fun boss. And so for a while they were doing stuff where he was one of those like tit for tat guys.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That was like look at all these nice things I did, I'm not a crazy person, I'm not a bad person. Even though he would rant and rave about nonsensical things. Unfortunately a lot of this does sound like my style as a boss. But I do show up every day.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And I've never done anything too untoward.

MARCUS PARKS

No!

ED LARSON

No.

MARCUS PARKS

No!

ED LARSON

Not yet. Imagine that long car ride and he's just like do you mind if I pee in this bottle?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, gotta pee. Like ooh man, I am thirsty. But no.

MARCUS PARKS

Do you need to pee?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Do you need to pee? What does your urine taste like? But my theory is that I think what happened was that he was doing a proto practice run before he started killing where something happened in this, where he picked up a hitchhiker and something happened.

MARCUS PARKS

This wasn't a hitchhiker. This was somebody that worked at the BMV with him.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No, I'm talking about the full mental breakdown after the car accident. I have a feeling that the father, his father helped cover something up with Herbie where something happened that was like oh no, I've done something really bad and either I'm gonna get caught for it or someone's gonna say something. I'm gonna pick up a young hitchhiker. I'm gonna do that thing where it's ass, grass, or gas. Whatever, right?

MARCUS PARKS

Gas.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

We're gonna talk about this. I'm gonna maybe try to... Because he's already starting to dabble in the gay bar scene a little bit. And so it's like maybe now we have some kind of sexual encounter. Maybe I choke a kid, maybe I'm choking somebody and I'm doing something. And then I think that he reached a breaking point and told or said something.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And then they put him into a mental asylum and then it didn't help.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Yeah. Certainly not a good advertisement for that mental asylum.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's why Reagan closed them.

MARCUS PARKS

He came out worse!

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Like he came out even more odd. I mean he exhibited a need for exactness that bordered on neurotic. Once when he was picking out a Christmas tree with his wife, he insisted that it had to be exactly 40 ft tall, which is town square size.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) And I said oh you know the mayor doesn't even have a tree that big. But you know Herbie.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Yeah, you can't get him out and not getting something large inside of him.

ED LARSON

Where are you gonna put that tree? Bend over, I'll show you.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I'll show you.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

This tree was either a part of Herb's ostentatious outdoor display that year or he was giving his wife an impossible task that he could use to berate her when the quest failed. And I have a bit of a theory as well that just kind of hit me about his stay in the mental asylum. I think maybe he was trying to push down his urges to kill.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh sure.

MARCUS PARKS

I think he was trying to push them down and it became too much.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

And then when he got out, he said fuck it. And then he just went for it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Because there's no way he wasn't already playing with autoerotic asphyxiation.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like he was definitely playing with it because that's how it all begins, with sexual curiosity. And I guess there's really nothing what's wrong with autoerotic asphyxiation.

MARCUS PARKS

Absolutely not. I mean it's highly dangerous and I wouldn't recommend it to anybody and if you do it regularly I'd say stop.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But you know what you need? A spotter.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. You always need a spotter.

ED LARSON

Call a buddy.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Phone a friend.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Have a sex spotter.

MARCUS PARKS

Although it did result in like one of the funniest, I mean World's Greatest Dad.

ED LARSON

Oh yeah, incredible.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Slowly but surely though Herb's behavior turned from helpful to abrasive at work. He would brag about how his father was a successful doctor and how much his outfits cost, making sure to tell anybody who accidentally stepped on his shoes hey buddy, those are $300 shoes, you watch it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

These shoes are worth more than your life! I just went down to another, I listen to Howard Stern all the time and there's a guy that was a Wack Packer named Elegant Elliott Offen. And he was like this where he would come in and be like look at me! Look at me! Look at my rings! $240,000 worth of jewelry on my body! And I could just see Herb Baumeister like coming in, just being like take a look at the shoes, take a look at the fucking pants. These pants are made out of pure eel leather.

ED LARSON

And people still didn't fucking remember him.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. He also had an extremely shallow intellect and was unable to hold an in depth conversation about anything. People actually started to wonder how he was able to keep his job because he would regularly disappear from work at random hours and just wouldn't come back. Herb pushed the envelope even further when he pissed on his boss's desk.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He loves the pee-pee.

ED LARSON

Loves pee-pee. He loves pee-pee.

MARCUS PARKS

But that's the weird thing is that after this the pee stops.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well as far as we know.

MARCUS PARKS

Okay, he pissed on his boss's desk. He got away with that.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He got away with that! Think about this. They let him continue to work after.

ED LARSON

It's the BMV, you can't find good people. You can't. He showed up everyday for 8 hours.

MARCUS PARKS

No, he didn't show up everyday. He left all the time.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

If you went to the Indiana Board of fucking Motor Vehicles during this time period and asked for his superior, that's the man you'd reach, the guy who's entirely fine being like people piss sometimes. Like what am I gonna do? Shut him down?

MARCUS PARKS

Well it was the second piss job that got him fired. He pissed on a letter to the Governor of Indiana.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And this was my legacy.

ED LARSON

That I understand by the way.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, yeah. No, piss on the letter to the Governor of Indiana. Yeah, for that he was finally fired and started jumping from job to job. When he was between jobs he'd pick up on the housework, sometimes quote unquote "cooking" a specialty dish he called pizza crackers.

ED LARSON

I thought you were gonna say people.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. No, no, no. He loved his urine smoothies.

MARCUS PARKS

Pizza crackers were saltines with a dollop of tomato sauce topped with a slice of hot dog or bologna, which for some reason just sounds like a dish someone from Indianapolis would come up with.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) It's actually the state dish. When the governor first served pizza crackers to the president of Iran, that was one of the most special days in Indiana history. And I was just a little girl seeing it on the news and it was like the moon landing.

MARCUS PARKS

Now even while Herb was working at the BMV, he was also becoming an accomplished collector of junk, or as my friends Chris and Joe put it on Show & Sell, their YouTube channel about thrifting and flipping, Herb was quite the trash dragon. They hoard.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like Smaug.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, like Smaug, trash dragon. Herb would troll yard sales, estate sales, thrift stores, and dumpsters for clothes, car parts, and light fixtures as well as novelty items like oversized footballs, giant maple leafs, used political bumper stickers, anything that might have a smidgen of value.

ED LARSON

A used bumper sticker?

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. His wife said that like he once fished like a used Vote for Nixon bumper sticker out of the trash.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Anything with Nixon on it. That's what my Herbie loves.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, they were both staunch republicans.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

But along with his so-called treasures, Herb exhibited other extreme hoarding behaviors like saving used toilet paper and other disgusting bits of human detritus. About the only whimsical thing Herb Baumeister ever did, which is still kind of sort of sinister-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Was demand that his home always have a fully decorated Christmas tree year round.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I love Christmas! It's amazing! Everything's in shiny papers! I love it! Boxes are not normal anymore. Boxes are now fun.

ED LARSON

Yeah. And in my Ohio family, they keep the Christmas tree up too long and then they just decorate it for Valentine's Day and then Easter.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's a sign of depression. Herb Baumeister, is there maybe like what does this sound like to you? Getting into thrifting, getting into flipping, is it his own way of being like... Because he has no skills, he's not super smart, the epitome of mediocrity, everything he touches turns to shit. What if when he goes and he goes thrifting, is there something along the lines of oh look, like I can make something out of nothing. Of like oh look, look what I can do, I'm adding value to the world like in that way, which is actually I think a lot of people's impulses of doing thrifting. Or is it just like... Because hoarding is about control?

MARCUS PARKS

Well it's about anxiety.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

I think Herb Baumeister, you know also he had a stay in a mental hospital.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

You think he was anxious?

MARCUS PARKS

I think he had massive amounts of anxiety and this was a way to control, again like control things and it just calmed him down. Some people just get that hit of dopamine from just buying something.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I do that.

MARCUS PARKS

They just fucking buy. But when it gets to this point though, it's like you're just buying little tiny tchotchke-like, just bullshit things to fill your house up with. Or he would fish them out of dumpsters. I don't know, maybe it gave him some sense of worth.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I mean it definitely stops me from buying more T-shirts. I have thousands of T-shirts and one thing that always, like once I want to buy another T-shirt, I just kill five or six dogs and I just feel better. So like I kind of get that, I get like where his anxiety had to go.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, yeah, yeah. The steam release, yeah. Now after bouncing around various low skilled jobs for years, Herb finally got a job at a thrift store which is like an alcoholic working as a bartender. It's a fucking bad idea.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

But after a short period of time just working at a thrift store, Herb got the bright idea to open his own. Herb got it into his head that he was gonna open a chain of upscale thrift stores, something that he thought was a ticket to the American dream. And eventually Herb got his wish in 1988 when he and his wife borrowed $35,000 from Herb's mother and opened their first Sav-A-Lot thrift store on 46th street in Indianapolis.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Sav-A-Lot.

MARCUS PARKS

Sav-A-Lot.

ED LARSON

Sav-A-Lot.

MARCUS PARKS

They left the E off.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But that's what makes it cool.

ED LARSON

Save money on the sign thing.

MARCUS PARKS

Which automatically, that's the thing, he wants the upscale store. I see Sav-A-Lot, I know that's a cheap place.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

See it could be funky. You know when they do that like funky is different because funky means it's well curated.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But it sounds like he didn't do that.

MARCUS PARKS

No.

ED LARSON

He was so in the closet that he opened two closets.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes. He's just being like (Midwest accent) you know there's amazing things inside of this closet. Oh wow, look at this coat. I could kill a man in this coat.

MARCUS PARKS

Now Herb and his wife did surprisingly well in their first year running the store together and made enough money to open a second store in 1990.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They made not enough money to open the second store.

MARCUS PARKS

They made it, I mean they did it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It was a problem obviously.

MARCUS PARKS

But Herb and Julie already didn't have the best marriage, owning and running two retail stores only made matters worse. Little did Julie know however that Herb's private life was far darker than she could have ever imagined. Because for the previous decade, Herb Baumeister had been one of Indiana's most prolific serial killers. I mean I'm fucking making the reveal here but this entire time he's been killing dudes.

ED LARSON

Yeah?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah, buddy.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

When he's opening the store?

MARCUS PARKS

All of it. The entire time.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He's been killing people this whole time.

ED LARSON

But he's not definitely the I-70 Killer.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He is. It's pretty close.

MARCUS PARKS

I mean it's very close.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I-70 Strangler. Because the the I-70 Killer is somebody else.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

It's nice.

MARCUS PARKS

See it had been common knowledge in the Indianapolis gay community throughout the 80s that an increasing number of young gay men had either disappeared or turned up dead.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Can I get a true crime sound bed after this when we put it in the editing? (ominous music) And that's when he went down to the seedy underworld of gay sex dungeons. And they're just bars.

ED LARSON

Yeah, they're just bars.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, they're just bars.

ED LARSON

They're watching sports.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But the way they just talk about it-

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, they're all bars. Every true crime... Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

There's literally no difference.

ED LARSON

They're just playing poker and watching sports.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Indianapolis.

ED LARSON

There's a pinball machine. Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Seedy gay underground. Yeah, yeah, they're just eating cheese curds.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And like hanging out.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. I remember I went to a bar in Indianapolis once and it was supposed to be like a goth night but the kids that ran the goth night couldn't figure out how to get the PA system going.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

So we just sat there in silence for an hour while they just fucked around with it.

ED LARSON

I mean what's more goth than that?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, yeah, yeah. The silence of the grave.

MARCUS PARKS

What, incompetence? The extreme incompetence?

ED LARSON

Yeah and silence. Both.

MARCUS PARKS

Well in all, the bodies of 11 teenagers and adults were discovered naked or partially clothed near Interstate 70, all of whom have been strangled to death. These men however were not hitchhikers nor was the killer a trucker like the moniker of the I-70 Strangler suggests. I guess that's the I-70 Killer. That's the trucker, right?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's the trucker.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Or they think is the trucker.

MARCUS PARKS

They think. Instead most of the victims had met their killer in popular gay bars with great fucking names. You had the Vogue Theater-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's awesome.

MARCUS PARKS

You had the Broad Ripple. I love that, I'd go to the Broad Ripple. They even had a Brothers.

ED LARSON

Hey!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I think Brothers-

ED LARSON

It's all over, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's very common.

ED LARSON

My dad used to always make fun every time we passed the Brothers. He was like I'm not going there.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Meanwhile like but you keep bringing it up, dad. You know what I mean?

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

You keep bringing it up and you have this weird sort of like tinge tense obsession with Brothers. And every time we go by it you say that you don't want to go in there.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

We're like why would I assume you would go in there, dad? That's a gay bar. You are though, you keep mentioning it though.

ED LARSON

Yeah. He would always say the same thing about Choices where Cunanan used to go.

MARCUS PARKS

Interesting.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

The gay steakhouse club.

ED LARSON

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Where just being like but you're obsessed with this, dad. It seems like you're curious. It seems like you want to go in there. You want to check it out. Because it might be nice because then he'd probably make up nice conversation with other men.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

You don't always gotta suck dick.

MARCUS PARKS

Not always. My favorite thing my dad would do when we were driving around is every time we passed a strip club he'd go uh oh! And then he'd say the name of the strip club.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Uh oh, Chit Chat Club!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's funny. My dad, my favorite thing that my dad used to do, quote unquote "favorite thing" was that if someone was crossing the streets, he'd always go like 90 points! About killing them.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Yeah, yeah, my dad had that joke as well.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Childbearing. That's 180 points.

ED LARSON

He was a cop, right?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. Love my father. He's doing great. And where did it come from? Where did that sense of humor come from?

MARCUS PARKS

Well starting with a sex worker named Michael Petree in 1980, Baumeister, if he was indeed the I-70 Strangler, killed at a clip of about one a year but usually between August and October but sometimes as early as may, it was always during the warm months.

ED LARSON

Is that like common?

MARCUS PARKS

Actually showing that amount of restraint isn't common.

ED LARSON

Okay.

MARCUS PARKS

For 10 years? Usually the guys, they go more often because you get less of a return on the dopamine each time, you get less of a return on the pleasure each time.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

So the cooling off period is shorter and shorter. But to kill one a year for 10 years is very uncommon.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well he's probably-

MARCUS PARKS

Or at least that's the thing, it's uncommon amongst those who get caught.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

ED LARSON

Yes.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And then I think that having that space inbetween allows enough time to go that people kind of forget. You could see that Herb Baumeister, just from already talking about all of this, is fighting every day tooth and nail to not kill and rape. He is literally like a moment away.

ED LARSON

You think he didn't want to do it?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I think that he created, what we talk about with serial killers a lot is they create circumstances in which then they can say it is now beyond my control. I had to kill. So they start slowly ramping up. Probably, that's why I think it started with just some activity with sex workers.

MARCUS PARKS

Usually does.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And I think a lot of it probably is that he got his steam released by doing extreme sex with sex workers that did not involve death, that like he probably was still just getting violently choked out and choking out somebody else without killing them every once in a blue moon to blow off the steam. And then he would then go into a fugue state, he would become this shadow other person when he was sexually engorged and he would choke and choke and choke and choke and then wake and be like... Once he came his pants, he was like oh no. And had to deal with.

ED LARSON

But we would have had more stories then, right? Or no.

MARCUS PARKS

No.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Not unless they were happy with it. There's a consensual, there's some of it that's probably some form of consensual.

ED LARSON

And I imagine sometimes you're blackout drunk and don't remember what happened.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Sometimes. And you also remember like this is the 80s, the 90s in Indiana.

ED LARSON

It's a secret.

MARCUS PARKS

And Indiana is a rapidly racist and homophobic place.

ED LARSON

I know.

MARCUS PARKS

So these guys aren't gonna be coming out and telling their stories. One guy did, we will get to later.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

But most of the time what happens with guys like him, this happened with Gacy, is they're getting into it, they're doing like weirder and weirder and more violent like sexual shit. And then they accidentally kill someone for the first time.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And then it's on.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. And then after they accidentally kill someone, they recognize the feeling that they get when they do and they're like I've never felt anything that good in my entire life. I want to do that all the time. But they also know that it's wrong. They know that if they do keep doing it, they're gonna get caught and they're gonna go to jail.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

So really tamping down the urge to not do it isn't because like oh I don't wanna do this, it's because I know if I do this too much I'm gonna get caught.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. It's all I wanna do. It's the opposite.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's like remember when you first made your very first cheesesteak? It's like that.

ED LARSON

Yeah. I mean I never looked back. And now I eat them in secret.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yep. Oh my god, you're the Herb Baumeister of cheesesteaks. It's the I-8-70 Cheesesteaks Killer.

MARCUS PARKS

Using ropes and other objects as strangulation aids, Baumeister would murder his victims and leave them in ditches or near streams or abandoned railroad tracks, not exactly where people would quickly find them but definitely in places where someone would eventually find them.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

So the two are similar because they are process killers and not product killers.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Making things even more complicated was the fact that Herb Baumeister was not the only person murdering gay men in the region in the early 80s.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah dude. They were all, it was bad there, man.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Between 1982-1984, a man named Larry Eyler tortured and murdered at least 21 young men from Illinois and Indianapolis. That's between '82-'84. It's two fucking years.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That was a dangerous place in the world in time to be a twink, man.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. From like the 70s to the 80s, I mean yeah, like John Wayne Gacy, he has 32 or 33 that we know about.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That we know. Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

It's likely that it's far, far more.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

50-60. He traveled around, there's more counts of him killing people in other areas.

ED LARSON

Yeah because he killed people in California too, right?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. And him going on work trips and killing people. They're pretty certain that he did. I think John Wayne Gacy could be like 70, like 70-80.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Very much so. Yeah because I mean Gary Ridgway is something like, what was it, 90?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

50!

MARCUS PARKS

No, Gary Ridgway is like something like 90-something.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Really?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Because he did it... It's fucked. Like you know how Stanley Tucci makes dinner? Where like if you see these videos-

ED LARSON

He took his time?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. It's just always like-

ED LARSON

He fucked his wife on top of it?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He's always got like a little scarf on and he sits there and he's just being like you know we had prosciutto di montagnana last night and I had a little bit left and some liguori pasta and I had a little bit of truffle oil and I just whipped up... And there's something about doing it low effort and simply in a way where you're just there to fucking cum in your pants by strangling somebody to death that can really allow you to kill a lot of people.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like if your process is not super elaborate, it's actually way easier to get along without getting caught.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. It's like the less imagination you have, the less of a chance you are at getting caught.

ED LARSON

That that makes a lot of sense. But with Gacy, he's big, like he's scary. This guy's tiny looking, he doesn't look tough at all.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

All you had to do is get somebody blackout drunk and put him in a vulnerable situation.

MARCUS PARKS

And it's not just blackout drunk because we'll get into later, he probably had other methods for putting these guys under. A lot like Dahmer did.

ED LARSON

Okay.

MARCUS PARKS

Well this guy who had killed 21 between '82-'84, Larry Eyler, his signature had been to drug, handcuff, and disembowel his victims, then pull their pants around their ankles as a final indignation. He'd then leave them off remote highways. But thankfully he was caught in 1984 and died of AIDS on death row 10 years later.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

So they got one of them.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

So he got AIDS in prison.

MARCUS PARKS

Nope.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No.

MARCUS PARKS

He got AIDS before.

ED LARSON

Wow!

MARCUS PARKS

Well at least as far as I know.

ED LARSON

10 years? If he died in '84...

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well once he got in prison then he technically got healthcare.

ED LARSON

I mean I don't think you're gonna have AIDS for 10 years back then. I mean maybe I'm an idiot.

MARCUS PARKS

You can. You very much can.

ED LARSON

Yeah?

MARCUS PARKS

AIDS, you didn't-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No one knew.

MARCUS PARKS

THere's some people who actually got AIDS back then who actually survived. That being very, very few. But yeah, it really affected a lot of people in different ways. Some people would go very quickly, some people would linger on for a long time.

ED LARSON

Okay.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And that's where I'm gonna end this now because I don't know any more.

MARCUS PARKS

You don't wanna know anymore about HIV and AIDS?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

We don't know that much either.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

So you're talking to two people who only just know that much more about it.

MARCUS PARKS

I know a fair amount. I've looked into it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, sure.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Now to be fair, there was an FBI task force formed to try and find the I-70 Strangler. But they were unable to come up with even a suspect before they were forced to shut down the investigation. The bodies also stopped in 1991 but gay men continued to disappear from the gay bars of Indianapolis and of course the fucking Indianapolis PD, like they all are, they said at the time that they didn't have the resources to investigate the disappearances of these gay men. I mean if there were fucking white cheerleaders going missing like every few months-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Then yeah, I think they might find the fucking resources but back then-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

If they were killing congressmen.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

But even now I don't think that the fucking police departments would give that much of a fuck about missing... Especially gay sex workers, they're not gonna fucking care.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

This is my question to the audience I wanted to pose. Sidestorieslpotl@gmail.com. So we know that Herb Baumeister was super uncomfortable sitting in these gay bars.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

So the common theme seemed to be that he'd hang out and he'd look like, he'd be at the gay bar and he would look like he did not want to be there. But he'd still go home with a guy.

MARCUS PARKS

He'd look like a republican at a gay bar.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

ED LARSON

Yeah. Dressed nice. And yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well no, kind of whatever. It's just more so like very much in the closet, hiding in a gay bar. But he'd still go home at night with somebody. And I'd love to know from our people who go out there, what would make somebody fuck a weirdo like Herb Baumeister? Same thing with Jeffrey Dahmer. Like in this period, yeah, sure, I wonder is it just slim pickins?

MARCUS PARKS

I mean I think we'd have to, I mean if we have any of our older gay listeners.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, I'd love to know.

MARCUS PARKS

We'd have to ask them. It's like what was it like in like 1989-1991?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

What is it about... Because Jeffrey Dahmer was a fucking weirdo. Same thing.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Well you could say the same thing, plenty of nice women go home with horrible dudes all the time.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, I guess.

ED LARSON

It's just like if you're persuasive enough and you're buying enough drinks, people are gonna go home with you sometimes.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He wasn't charming. He was not.

ED LARSON

Charming and aggressive and haunting you and going... That persistence is a different thing.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Or just waiting.

ED LARSON

Are we gonna go home and fuck? Are we gonna go home and fuck? Well maybe we should go home and fuck. We can go home and fuck.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

ED LARSON

And then eventually they're like fine! Shut the fuck up!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, we'll do it. Or you just wait til 4 o'clock in the morning when everything is closing and then you just kind of figure out who's the last loopy-eyed person and then you kind of convince him to go in your car and then no one sees him ever again.

ED LARSON

Exactly. It's the guy who's-

MARCUS PARKS

And it's all fucking awful.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Now not so coincidentally, 1991 was the same year that Herb Baumeister and his family moved to an 18 acre property called Fox Hollow Farm, which gave Herb ample room to dispose of corpses in a more private setting. Now Fox Hollow Farm was far above the Baumeister's budget. He always lived beyond his means. The house was a 10,000 square foot Tudor-style property with 15 rooms including five bathrooms. But the most important part of the house for Herb Baumeister was the bizarre indoor swimming pool in the basement.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

The Midwest, man. Have you ever gone on like Zillow Gone Wild or any of those things where they show like accounts of like houses in the middle of fucking nowhere?

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

The Midwest has the sex-filled indoor pool on lockdown.

ED LARSON

Well it's cold for most of the year.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes. But there's something about an indoor pool that just says dad strangles gay prostitutes in here. Like there's something about, I don't know what it is.

ED LARSON

It was one of those things, it's creepy and then you think about it it's like I want one.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No, I do too!

MARCUS PARKS

Actually that sounds kind of cool.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But what will happen to us if we have one? This is the problem. Do we just become a Herb Baumeister?

ED LARSON

Or you get thinner from exercising.

MARCUS PARKS

No, you just swim a lot.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Just having fun.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I actually feel like I never swim for exercise, I always kind of float and drink.

MARCUS PARKS

You do.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Good for you.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Well the pool is where it's thought that Herb committed most if not all of his murders between 1991-1996. In all, it's been proven that unless some other guy was dumping bodies in Herb's backyard, Baumeister murdered and disposed of 25 men in just five years at Fox Hollow Farm.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And there's just no way that it's just 25. I think it is way more and that's just what they could even find. It's just what they found and what they even put together.

MARCUS PARKS

They collected every bit of bone, they DNA tested all of it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They could.

MARCUS PARKS

And they came up with, yeah, 25.

ED LARSON

Okay.

MARCUS PARKS

Now because Herb and Julie refused to pay for a cleaning service and they were too busy running the thrift stores to clean themselves-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Yeah, no one's gonna sell these pool noodles that you found in the dump.

MARCUS PARKS

The manor at Fox Hollow Farm soon became filthy and jam packed with junk and trash. Eventually the attic became infested with raccoons, so many that some of the ceilings in the upstairs bedrooms were visibly soaked in raccoon urine and feces.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Man, can you imagine just being that raccoon in the attic? You're taking a dump like you do every night and you're watching through the hole in the ceiling that you've created with your own acidic urine. And you're watching the guy that like is your landlord ostensibly like murder man after man after man in the pool. And it's a raccoon. That's gotta be traumatizing. You're just sitting there, like you already gotta deal with so much. You're an unhoused animal. You're there, you're hanging out-

MARCUS PARKS

No, you're a housed animal.

ED LARSON

You're housed.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well you're squatting.

MARCUS PARKS

You're the definition of a housed animal.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Squatting. You're sitting there, you're smoking, watching him kill people, just being like (Midwest accent) I just wish that somebody got this guy another hobby because I hate watching this, this is bumming me out.

ED LARSON

Maybe they liked eating people. You don't know.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I actually feel like the raccoons are extremely innocent here.

MARCUS PARKS

Actually a lot of animals on the property did eat the remains. So I'd imagine those raccoons-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They're actually kind of happy.

MARCUS PARKS

Did actually eat quite a few bodies.

ED LARSON

Of course they did, they eat anything.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And they were hanging out because they're getting fed.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

How many bones were in the attic? Because they're thieves.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh whoa, did we check? But I think raccoons eat bones.

ED LARSON

Sure, why not? I know wolverines do but who knows.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Who knows what Hugh Jackman does.

MARCUS PARKS

Well like his home, Herb's thrift stores soon became filthy as well and were piled with mountains of garbage bags full of donated clothes that Herb refused to throw away or go through because they were too dirty. Again, a man of contradictions. The problem was that Herb had chosen terrible locations for his stores in bad neighborhoods. The donations were usually from locals who tended to be poor. So his dream of opening an upscale shop wasn't happening and it therefore seemed like he was losing interest.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, he thought he was gonna make a consignment shop.

MARCUS PARKS

No.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And it was not happening because he does not have... I've seen consignment shops and normally they're lovely, they're curated by like lovely Instagram ladies. And they're always like doing like a fun little video about all the fun 70s clothes they have. That's a consignment store. This is a dump.

MARCUS PARKS

He'd again often disappear in the middle of the day, telling employees he was going to the bank, then he wouldn't return for hours on end. Other times he'd show up with a quote unquote "male friend" and liquor on his breath and the two of them would continue to drink at the shop.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh you know Herbie, he's got all his buddies. It's like Jesus with his disciples, hanging out, enjoying each other's company, having sex with each other.

MARCUS PARKS

But out of all the quote unquote "male friends" that Herb Baumeister had, only one who visited the farm survived to tell the tale. And it's from this man, Tony Harris, that we get even a peek into Herb Baumeister's serial killer MO.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well it's very similar to this one survivor of John Wayne Gacy that we had.

MARCUS PARKS

Yup. Now Tony Harris didn't know Herb Baumeister as Herbie from the thrift store. Instead Tony knew him as Brian Smart, a closeted gay Indiana republican with leathery skin who hung around a gay bar called the 501 Tavern.

ED LARSON

This just shows gay people, they'll buy new clothes.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

They're not going to the thrift store.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Now after Tony and Herb had a brief chat one night at the 501, Herb asked if Tony wanted to go out to what he said was his employer's house for a drink and a swim. This was of course Herb's place at Fox Hollow Farm, which was empty that night because his wife and kids had gone out of town as they often did. They had to have gone out of town a lot. I mean 25 guys, that's 25 trips out of town. I think every single time his wife and kids left, like they'd go up to his mother's place.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

She had a condo on the lake like 100 miles north.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That was their vacation spot.

MARCUS PARKS

Every single time they left, he went and picked up a guy and killed him.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. I think that he may have done it while they were in the house too. I think that he brought them downstairs.

MARCUS PARKS

You think so? Maybe.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I think that this was the denial that was happening in this house was at a... It's just the most denial that there's ever been.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like besides Michael Jackson's nanny. It's like the most denial that's ever existed.

MARCUS PARKS

I'd put it on par with like Jerry Brudos.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

The amount of denial that his wife had about him. Jerry Brudos was a serial killer, he was killing women in his garage. And his wife lived with him.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

She was home.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Like he was making casts out of the breasts that he had cut off of women he killed and putting them on his mantle and she was just like blank.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Not accepting it at all.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I feel like predators are really, really good at reading people.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They're extremely able to know who is going to fucking come at me. You're also talking about this time period which was like there was still that full stripe of misogyny. Like I mean obviously it's still embedded in the country but wives were supposed to listen and not question their husbands.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And these women were born with that put inside of their brains. And so they were just kind of like under this idea of like well if he's paying for stuff and he's not beating me, that's the bar, right.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Which is not healthy and we need to change in this country.

ED LARSON

He was awful too.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

So she was probably happy to not be around him.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah!

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Absolutely. I mean I think the only guy who I think truly pulled it off where the wife had no idea and it's like okay, I get it, was Dennis Rader.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

I think his wife had zero idea that he was BTK.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well he was such a meticulous control freak.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, yeah. It was his whole life was his balancing his second life and his first life.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Now Tony was well aware of the danger of going to a stranger's secluded house, especially considering how so many gay men in Indianapolis had gone missing over the last decade or so. This was 1994 and Herb had committed as many as 20 murders by this point.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And that's not including the I-70 Strangler.

MARCUS PARKS

That is including the I-70 Strangler.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

You think so? Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

94? Yeah, he'd only been at the house for a few years.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh okay, good, good.

ED LARSON

Yeah, three years.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Now one of Tony's friends, Allen Goodlet, had actually been one of the men who'd gone missing. But Tony nevertheless rolled the dice that night with Herb. Well aware of the risks, Tony insisted that he ride out to Herb's farm in Herb's car. So if Tony were to say go missing, his abandoned car would serve as a marker that he'd disappeared.

ED LARSON

In a weird way, it's like good that he did this.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

This person knew that they were entering into a risky situation. Which they might have found erotic.

MARCUS PARKS

Some people do.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And you go and yeah. But that's also fi you're going to be risky erotically, then do some safety measures in there. Have a spotter. Yeah, phone a friend.

MARCUS PARKS

Now once they got to the house it was completely dark. Herb said that the power was off upstairs but the basement was fully juiced and that's where Herb had his indoor pool.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Set the scene here, Marcus. Like you're in the middle of the fucking Indiana woods. You've driven out in the middle because that was the thing, right.

MARCUS PARKS

Well it's the suburbs.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

You're in the suburbs. But still it's like a 30 minute drive.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

It's a huge property.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Huge property. You were just in downtown Indianapolis or wherever their city was, they're hanging out, right. Normal gay bar. You're gonna go to a second location which we always say never do. Never go to a second location. You're out in the middle of the fucking woods.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

You see this mansion, this mansion in the middle of nowhere, big land.

ED LARSON

Broken down mansion.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Already dilapidated.

ED LARSON

Disgusting looking.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

There was a pit, like there's things in there that are already super weird. He's got stuff just hanging out in the fucking yard, right. Like all of his treasures and his junk is all just kind of hanging out in this yard.

ED LARSON

It really is Addams Family-like.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's very scary. You're driving in and then you go into his... Like he takes you through his dark house.

MARCUS PARKS

But he's saying it's not my house.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's not my house!

MARCUS PARKS

It's my employer's house.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's not my house. You go through this house, reeks of piss. They say the whole place was horrifying, it's a hoarder's house.

ED LARSON

No way, this guy?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I know! But you go to his house and he's just like well actually this is not even mine, the power is out, you gotta see the pool. And then you go down to the pool and this is what you see. Inside it's all like cheesily done with tile and shit.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. The first alarming thing that Tony noticed upon descending into the pool room were all the mannequins. Two were upright next to the pool, one was facedown, and another was standing off to the side wearing only a woman's wig. Four mannequins just hanging out.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Staring.

MARCUS PARKS

And when Tony asked hey, what's with the mannequins? That's kind of strange.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, what do you have all these mannequins for?

MARCUS PARKS

Herb replied that he got lonely out there and didn't like to be alone.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Bad answer.

ED LARSON

Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

And this is a weird thing to say, not least because Herb had said at the bar that he was only in town for a couple of weeks and had also said that it was his employer's place. This meant that if you were following Herb's story that he would have had to have brought the mannequins with him from another location for a two week stay.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well how do you think I save 30 minutes going either way in the HOV lane?

ED LARSON

Yeah, yeah, exactly. You ever seen Today's Special on Nickelodeon when you were a kid? He believes they come alive, they have a great time in the pool, they come back, they're mannequins.

MARCUS PARKS

But when Herb sensed the confusion and felt the follow up questions coming, he changed the subject to cocaine.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's always good. That's a good diversion. If you don't want anybody to question your audience of mannequins, always offer cocaine.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Tony declined and played it safe with a joint but Herb also kept pushing Tony to have a drink. Tony kept refusing and every time Tony refused, Herb got more and more annoyed.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Because guess what was in the fucking alcohol?

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Well I mean who knows? Because to me it seems like alcohol was probably a part of Herb's MO.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's what Jeffrey Dahmer did.

MARCUS PARKS

Yes. Either Herb counted on getting his victims drunk enough where fighting back would be difficult or he spiked their drinks. Jeffrey Dahmer used Haldol. But smartly, Tony kept refusing. Eventually Herb left. And that's the thing, anytime anyone's pushing a drink on you, say no and go away.

ED LARSON

Yes.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Just go away!

MARCUS PARKS

Say no and leave.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

You are better off in the woods.

MARCUS PARKS

On foot.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

You know where the main road is. Just start walking towards the main road.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes. Go I gotta go to the bathroom and book it.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Eventually Herb left and returned energized, probably because he'd done a lot of cocaine in the other room.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah!

ED LARSON

You know it hits you harder when you stick it in your ass.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I'm staring at the mannequins, don't you come to life tonight, mannequins! Because I'm busy!

MARCUS PARKS

Well as such, Herb had a case of the gacked out jabber jaws.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Woo!

MARCUS PARKS

And went on and on about his mom, his dad, and being gay.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Woo!

MARCUS PARKS

All while Tony politely listened.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like my shirt? Like this shirt? Cost me $100! Like these shoes?!

MARCUS PARKS

Now eventually Herb convinced Tony to take a swim. But while they were in the pool, Herb asked Tony if he wanted to see a neat trick. This neat trick was autoerotic asphyxiation.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(nervous giggling) That's not a trick.

MARCUS PARKS

And after Herb claimed that it could give a man the most intense orgasm imaginable, Tony was reluctant but intrigued. So he agreed to try it. Taking a length of hose, Herb wrapped it around Tony's neck gently at first. But then he began tightening the hose more and more until Tony felt lightheaded. Realizing that he was in trouble, Tony pretended to pass out and fell limp into the water. After Herb relaxed, Tony jumped up and screamed that Herb was the one who'd killed his friend Allen, who killed all the men who'd gone missing. Tony then started choking Herb, who turned blue, passed out, and slipped under the water. But like a monster in a horror movie, Herb shot out of the water moments later, coughing, and after a bit he smiled at Tony and said, quote, this is what Tony said that herb said:

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

"Wow, you could have killed me. But that was so cool. It was such a rush. But you're supposed to hold me above water when I lose consciousness."

MARCUS PARKS

Like just fucking blanking on him, just like oh yeah, this is something that happens all the time. That was great! Let's keep going!

ED LARSON

Good job, yeah. Well it's great deflection to be honest with you.

MARCUS PARKS

It is.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. He understood what he just did. Because he couldn't get him fully in and then he didn't kill him. And now it's too late. I guess he could have killed him but what's weird is I think that when he came back and choked him, he was like oh this guy's cool.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like oh this guy fucking gets it.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Or he's actually like stronger than him.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Probably.

ED LARSON

Not hammered also.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah and not super hammered.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

He realizes like this isn't gonna work, so let's just-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I guess we'll just have normal sex tonight.

MARCUS PARKS

Well perhaps relaxing a bit at Herb's nonchalant attitude, Tony listened as Herb gave specific instructions on how you're supposed to do autoerotic asphyxiation, saying that he should see how beautiful it looks when someone's lips change color when you're doing it to them. To demonstrate in a better atmosphere, Tony and Herb got out of the pool and sat on a couch where Herb pulled out a necktie and told Tony to choke him while he jerked off. He said this is how you do it. Tony obliged, then they switched. Tony pretended to fall unconscious again, then started arguing once more about Herb possibly killing Tony's friend Allen. Now since Tony had gotten a ride with Herb, he agreed to spend the night but faked falling asleep.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Can you imagine sitting in that bed where you just know that all the mannequins are awake and the raccoons are in the ceiling and everything smells like piss?

ED LARSON

It fucking reeks.

MARCUS PARKS

I think he kept him downstairs in the basement the entire time.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, definitely, definitely.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. And once Herb was out, Tony called his sister to tell her that the guy he was with wasn't right. He then stayed up all night trying to work up the courage to find some trace of his friend Allen. The next morning though, Herb went out to run an errand which left Tony alone in the house to finally explore the upstairs in the light of day. What struck him, he said, was how messy and disorganized it was. But he specifically noticed how much video recording equipment and videotapes Herb had in his possession. He thought he was a film producer of some kind.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Not good.

ED LARSON

Why would he leave him there?

MARCUS PARKS

This was the weird thing about Herb Baumeister and we'll get into it a little bit later. He left everything everywhere. He just didn't care. He just didn't care.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I view him in the, what they talk about with psychopaths of like we talk about it's shallowness. So there is a thing there where with psychopaths, that's like one of the main issues is that they can't feel feelings. So they need excitement and they crave excitement and some form of like they wanna be pushed into feeling something. And so I think with him is that you see it with the I-70 Strangler murders and these murders and the way he disposed of the bodies, he did it in the most lazy way possible. And it's like number one, it's because humans are not human to him. Humans are objects. He views everything as a 2D paper cut out, right.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like nobody has any, you don't have a soul to him. And so you're just somebody he can cum on. And so he does that and then once it's out of him, I really, the idea that he goes away, that Herb Baumeister that you know goes away, this shadow Herb steps forward, does the thing in a fugue state, cums at the end of it. He's just like that's done. And then he just sort of moves on.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And so like all of that stuff that night, I think he was just like just having a normal day. Met this guy, don't know this guy, like literally just kind of I'm now gonna go put my Herb mask on and I'm gonna go to the store.

MARCUS PARKS

Finally though, Herb came home and offered to take Tony back to his car at the 501 club. Once they returned, they exchanged numbers. And just before leaving, Herb said quote:

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

"I had a really good time. You really know how to play, sport."

MARCUS PARKS

And then said see you later.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Bye! See you soon!

MARCUS PARKS

Now Tony definitely escaped his own death that night.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

And as I said earlier, Herb had killed as many as 20 men by the time Tony had his weird night in the country. And now that I think about it, it was '94, 20-25. I would put that, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Maybe 25. Because that's the other thing, we also have very little idea of the frequency with which he killed. We just know it's 25 in five years.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

And that's it. The question here though is if Herb was no longer dumping bodies along I-70, where was he putting them? The answer-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

The upside down! It's a Stranger Things tie-in.

MARCUS PARKS

The answer quite simply was the 18 acres of property he owned. But Herb wasn't burying the bodies. Instead Herb was killing men, burning off the flesh, crushing the bones, and scattering the remains above ground for anyone to find. And that was when Herb was feeling motivated. Sometimes he'd just leave the bodies out in the open to decompose. He did it once as far as we know and he did that in the fall of 1994 when his own son found one of Herb's murder victims.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Whoopsie!

ED LARSON

Yeah. I should probably burn these and bang them up.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I actually thought I had beat the curiosity out of you, son.

MARCUS PARKS

Well just about 60 ft from the back patio of their home, Herb's 13 year old son found a full human skeleton lying in the undergrowth under some trees.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Just hanging out.

MARCUS PARKS

Perhaps used to finding weird shit around the house, this kid took the skull and put it on a stick so he could use it to chase around his sisters.

ED LARSON

How old was he?

MARCUS PARKS

13!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh I'm certain this kid's fine, I think he's fine. There's no way he's gonna have any problems.

ED LARSON

If he was like 8 or 9 I'd be like I probably would have done it and not thought twice about it. But 13, you should know.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh no, I'd play with the human skull up to about 25.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Before now I understand like all the issues with it but if I found a human skull, unfortunately when I was younger, the first thing I would have done would be like hey, how you doing? And like playing with it.

ED LARSON

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Exactly.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

The jaws and stuff, yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Now his mother Julie was was horrified when she saw the skull on a stick and asked where he'd found it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Where did you find these toys? Oh did the cat do this? Full human skull.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Herb's son brought her to the spot where she found a full human skeleton looking like, as she put it, as if someone had just laid down and died. Now instead of calling the police, Julie went to her husband and asked him why there was a skeleton in their backyard.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) I gotta ask here. Have you been letting skeletons sleep in the backyard? And I don't have a problem with it, I don't, whatever you want to do. But it seems that they're just lazy.

ED LARSON

But if you're just throwing a body in your backyard and it's decomposing to the point where it's a skeleton, like it had to have reeked.

MARCUS PARKS

Well what he had probably done, and this was his MO again and again, it's not like he just left the body felt, just like killed a guy and then left the body. He would kill a guy, burn the body immediately.

ED LARSON

Okay.

MARCUS PARKS

And then he probably dragged the body somewhere else to decompose.

ED LARSON

That's why there was no clothes on the skeleton.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, why there were no clothes.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He was burning the skin as much as he could off and then the rest of it would kind of melt.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, all the flesh. So yeah. And then animals honestly, animals took care of the rest.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

So yeah, it could have been very much like a skeleton mostly picked clean.

ED LARSON

Now what is that? What have they got around there? I guess they got badgers and wolverines.

MARCUS PARKS

In Indiana?

ED LARSON

Wolves, coyotes.

MARCUS PARKS

Raccoons.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Raccoons. Wow, it's a whole world of cannibal raccoons. Human flesh-consuming squirrels.

MARCUS PARKS

Do raccoons-

ED LARSON

Don't tell Travis Irvine.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's his third movie!

MARCUS PARKS

Well when Julie asked her husband like what the fuck? Herb casually said that it was an old anatomical skeleton of his father's that he'd stored in the garage until just recently and he decided to get rid of it by just throwing it into the treed area behind the house. That's how you get rid of stuff.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Okay, yup.

MARCUS PARKS

Yup.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Okay, bye bye!

ED LARSON

Pretty good.

MARCUS PARKS

It's not the craziest story.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's one of those lies that it's like it's so weird it's real!

MARCUS PARKS

Because Herb, I mean he was a hoarder and his father was a doctor. And a week later the skeleton was gone and Julie put the human skeleton that was found basically in her backyard out of mind.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Yeah, that skeleton probably got a job and moved on.

ED LARSON

Yeah. It's like 20 years later, you're like oh my god, that skeleton.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) No.

MARCUS PARKS

Actually it was two years later.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Well partly Julie was able to forget about this because life was falling apart for the Baumeisters. They were behind on their bills, the thrift stores were failing, and the Baumeister marriage was reaching its natural conclusion although the process would be long and drawn out. They'd stayed together for 25 years.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. And they got almost divorced like three or four times. And then he'd somehow keep pulling it back. I don't know if it's just because she just didn't wanna go or like just scared, straight up just scared to be single, scared of him.

MARCUS PARKS

She had nobody.

ED LARSON

Did she have a job?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Well working at the thrift store.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. They ran the thrift store.

ED LARSON

Oh she worked at the thrift store, that's right.

MARCUS PARKS

She co-owned the thrift stores, like he ran one store and she ran the other one. Julie filed for divorce in 1994 and Herb moved into the in-law suite on their property. But the impending divorce freed up a lot more time for Herb to go see his favorite band, a white guy blues outfit based out of Madison, Wisconsin called Dr. Bop and the Headliners.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It is absolute garbage. Did you watch any of it?

MARCUS PARKS

I did.

ED LARSON

I watched some. I might go see it.

MARCUS PARKS

It's fine.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

It's not garbage.

ED LARSON

It's a cover band in Indiana.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It just feels like they play, I mean it's just the type of band where they like play at retirement homes.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, yeah. Now Herb was obsessed with Dr. Bop and would drop everything to go see a Dr. Bop show.

ED LARSON

Everyone needs a fan.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, they do. And I mean Dr. Bop was big. They were a big regional band. And they're reasonably entertaining for a regionally popular band. Now to give a little more insight into Dr. Bop and perhaps Herb Baumeister, Henry will now read the Dr. Bop entry from the Illinois Rock & Roll Museum on Route 66, which is weird considering how this band is from Wisconsin.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Hey there, cats and dogs! Get you all your ducks in a row because these pigs are about to come out of the hen house. Now it was the early 70s, the emergence of Dr. Bop and the Headliners was one of the surest signs that the protest era that had dominated the University of Wisconsin campus and the national news in recent years was coming to a close.

MARCUS PARKS

It's weird that they're celebrating that so much.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Long hairs! All these long hairs were packed in Marsh Shapiro's Nitty Gritty to see a band that violated every rule of the then current hip code. They wore stage suits, each member portrayed a likable character, they smiled, they talked to the audience, they were funny, they embraced every showbiz cliche in the book and they played 50s music. The classic early Dr. Bop lineup was singer The White Raven, Jerry Lee Larry, Troy Sharmell-

ED LARSON

Jerry Lee Larry?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Are you serious?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's me.

ED LARSON

I used to be Jerry Lee Lewis but he ruined the name.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yep, I wanted to be him but then he got that cousin fucker playing that piano irresponsibly. We've got the Ferret De Monte Cristo. Oh it's 'Ferray'.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Pronounced 'Ferray'.

MARCUS PARKS

And don't forget about Troy Sharmell and Speedo.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And on the drums and expertly handling the duties of master of ceremonies, Mike Riegel, AKA Dr. Bop.

MARCUS PARKS

And so on and so forth. The entry is very long.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Dr. Bop sounds like a super flu that would be in a Stephen King novel.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. It's Captain Trips, Dr. Bop. Yeah. Interestingly, Dr. Bop just celebrated their 50th year as a touring band in 2021.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

What?

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

They're still doing it?

MARCUS PARKS

They're still-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Through COVID?

ED LARSON

There was no COVID in Indiana.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

How did you make it through COVID?

MARCUS PARKS

Oh I forgot, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, yeah, yeah. We learned.

MARCUS PARKS

That doctor who tried to help me, yeah. She was skeptical.

ED LARSON

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Which was not-

ED LARSON

That's because she was listening to Dr. Bop.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) That's the problem. My doctor is Dr. Bop.

MARCUS PARKS

Well that's the funny thing is that Dr. Bop, they edged out Herb Baumeister's age at the time of his death by a year.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Wow!

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, Baumeister was 49. But as Baumeister was rocking out at Dr. Bop performances, authorities were slowly but surely, and I do mean slowly-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Closing in on their suspect.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I wish we could play some Dr. Bop so you could imagine Herb Baumeister just going like yeah! Woo! Yeah!

MARCUS PARKS

Now the person who found the first link to Herb was not a member of the Indianapolis police but a private detective with the perfect PI name of Virgil Vandagriff.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, it's cool.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

He'd been hired to investigate the disappearance of a man named Allen Broussard, who'd last been seen coming out of the gay bar Brothers in June of '94.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

This is always for all of you to remember which we talk about, we talk about the less dead, people saying like sex workers getting murdered. When the police and the killer's mentality is that no one's looking for these people but that is completely not true. There is always somebody in some level like depending on what's going on, like these people have families, they have friends, they have social workers that they connect with a lot of times. Like there are people looking for them. And they are a lot of times the people that crack the case.

MARCUS PARKS

Yup. Virgil's big break finally came when he talked to Tony Harris, the guy who'd survived his night with Herb Baumeister. Problem was Tony only knew him as Brian Smart and all searches Virgil made on the name Brian Smart of course turned up nothing. But in the summer of 1995, Tony Harris was hanging out with some of his friends at a gay bar called Varsity when who else but Brian Smart walks through the door.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Hey everybody. Ha, hoo, ha!

MARCUS PARKS

Thinking fast, Tony told one of his friends to go get this guy's license plate number while Tony distracted Herb by asking like hey, show my friends how to do that chokey jerk off thing you do.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

ED LARSON

That's actually great. It's very smart because now he's like showing evidence.

MARCUS PARKS

Oh yeah, he's showing everybody.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh no, it's very good. Yes. And he was getting super uncomfortable, like he did not know how to respond to this while he was doing this.

ED LARSON

Oh he didn't just put on a show for everybody?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's like this!

MARCUS PARKS

He'd taken no lessons from Dr. Bop.

ED LARSON

Yeah, yeah, yeah. All right.

MARCUS PARKS

Now the friend did manage to get the license plate number which was passed on to detective Mary Wilson with the Indianapolis PD, who seemed to be the only person who gave a damn about all the missing men. She found that the car was registered to Herb Baumeister but the registration was still attached to the address at Herb's old house.

ED LARSON

Now is this the hearse with the lights on it?

MARCUS PARKS

No, no, this is a gray Buick.

ED LARSON

Oh okay.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, yeah.

ED LARSON

Ooh I had one of those. They're nice.

MARCUS PARKS

Nice.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh wow.

ED LARSON

I had a '82 LeSabre. I am not the bad guy.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

What if we start calling those cars Baumeisters? Would that be bad?

MARCUS PARKS

No, I don't think gray Buicks really exist anymore.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah, Buick's around.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah but gray?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Well meanwhile Herb's life was falling apart in every way it could.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah. I don't know how to tell you this, Eddie, but yeah, he wasn't ready to be a business owner.

MARCUS PARKS

No. No. The Sav-A-Lot stores were close to bankruptcy, divorce proceedings with his wife were on and off, and lawsuits were being filed by creditors. But Sav-A-Lot is also where Detective Wilson got Herb's new address at Fox Hollow Farm. After discovering Herb, she became a regular customer at the store, hoping that Herb would show his face. After weeks of browsing he finally showed up. So Mary Wilson politely asked if she could ask him some questions about some missing persons cases.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah sure, yeah, that'd be great! Yeah!

MARCUS PARKS

I'd love to help!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I'd love to help!

ED LARSON

We're not selling them here!

MARCUS PARKS

He agreed to talk the next day but when Detective Wilson showed up asking about men going missing from gay bars-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I don't think men miss gay bars at all.

MARCUS PARKS

Herb said he'd never been to a gay bar and he wasn't gay anyway so I really don't know why you're talking to me about all this. But when Detective Wilson said that his license plate was taken from a gay bar parking lot, Herb admitted all right, you got me, I go to gay bars but don't tell anyone because my my wife doesn't know. That however was all Herb was willing to give up.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's very common within like murder.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Is like they'll always try to, it's what they do with police officers, what they do when they get you into an interrogation. The goal is to get you the small little things that will open you up to telling the entire story. Because our entire judicial system basically depends upon a confession.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They want a confession or a murder weapon. Otherwise circumstantial evidence, they say no body, no murder all the time, right. Where like it's hard to convict without the physical evidence. Where like this guy, like she set it all up for him and he knew that maybe if I cop to just being gay and say this is why I'm so shady-

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

People then will sort of like kind of leave me alone.

ED LARSON

Yeah but then he just admitted that he was there.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. But from then on Herb directed all his questions to his lawyer, a guy named James Voyles. Interestingly, Voyles had previously represented an accomplice to the gay serial killer that I mentioned earlier, Larry Eyler. So it's pretty positive that Herb knew what was coming.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. If you hire the guy that just defended the newest serial killer in town, it's a bit suspicious.

ED LARSON

Yeah. Also why would you hire him? He got convicted.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Hey. But he knows that he won't ask a bunch of questions.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Well changing tact, Detective Wilson then asked Herb's wife Julie if she could get permission from her to search their home, telling her that they were investigating her husband in relation to quote "homosexual homicide".

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh wait a second, homosexual homicide? That don't sound like my Herbie.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Can you imagine if it did? If she was like (Midwest accent) oh homosexual homicide? Yes, did my husband's favorite color is the lips of a dead man? It is one of his favorite things. He said something, it's just so fun for him to cum big when he's choking. Because sometimes these guys, they go to sleep and they don't get back up. But that's nice for them to be dreaming, right? Homosexual homicide! Is that his favorite cologne?

MARCUS PARKS

Shocked, Julie again went to Herb who said that an ex-employer was harassing him with false accusations. There's definitely no homosexual homicide going on here. This again-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's a hard position to be in.

MARCUS PARKS

It really is. He like plays it all off, it's all casual. It's like that, that's fucking bullshit. Fucking that dude that I fired two weeks ago, he's trying to get me in trouble.

ED LARSON

Yeah, I'm sure he was like (laughs) homosexual homicide! Cut a rug!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh my god. Leave the jokes to the comedians!

ED LARSON

I'm gonna go in the swimming pool.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Excuse me, I gotta go outta town.

MARCUS PARKS

This again was good enough for Julie or at least good enough for Julie to once again avoid a horrific truth. So she also refused a search on Fox Hollow Farm. Now while Detective Wilson hit nothing but dead ends for another two years because she didn't have enough evidence to get a search warrant for the place, she had to have permission, Herb and Julie's relationship ebbed and flowed. First they were getting a divorce, then they weren't, then they were again. At certain points they sued each other and the thrift stores would open and close again and again. It's just fucking chaos and turmoil constantly. But for some reason the last straw came on June 20th, 1996. That day, Herb told Julie that he was intending to take their children to a six week program at Culver Military Academy.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He just wanted to get rid of the family. He literally was just trying to get rid of everybody out of the house.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. And after this, Julie said fuck him and called Detective Wilson to finally give her permission to search Fox Hollow Farm.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

God, it took so fucking long. Because you remember what happened with John Wayne Gacy. I actually feel like in some ways he was aware because he hired that serial killer's lawyer and because obviously John Wayne Gacy was an extremely famous case, that I think that he saw a little bit of the patterns within John Wayne Gacy and wanted to emulate it and saw... Because you remember, when John Wayne Gacy, once they finally got divorced and he admitted that he was bisexual and he was doing all this stuff. He then he got to really play. Right?

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

So I wonder if in his mind he's like I'll get rid of the kids, my wife and I will finally divorce, and then finally I can be the gay devil in here that I want to be.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Do you think during those two years was he still killing people?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

He was. Oh yeah. No, he absolutely was. At that point he probably killed anywhere between 6- 12.

ED LARSON

Wow.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Busy boy.

MARCUS PARKS

Now at first investigators who weren't as familiar with the case as Detective Wilson assumed that this was just a wife trying to get back at her husband for some reason or another, which as we know from other serial killer cases, it happens.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Every time they put out a call, like it happened with the Son of Sam.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

It happened with Boston Strangler. Like a wife will call up and say my husband did it.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He's a bastard!

ED LARSON

It's like they're assholes or something.

MARCUS PARKS

No, they're always fucking terrible.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, they're pieces of shit.

MARCUS PARKS

They always look into him and like-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No one gets accused of being the Son of Sam because they're like a fun guy.

MARCUS PARKS

But once Detective Wilson convinced them that Baumeister was the best and only suspect concerning most of the disappearances and murders of gay men over the last 15 or so years, officers began searching the property.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

As soon as Detective Wilson got there, the first thing she said was wow.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Like Owen Wilson.

ED LARSON

Yes.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Wow.

MARCUS PARKS

Wow.

ED LARSON

Wow.

MARCUS PARKS

Well very quickly-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I don't kill.

ED LARSON

He's popular, he's popular. Why don't they just bring a police dog and like throw a tennis ball over and be like oh look, he came back with a bone.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Uh oh! There he goes!

MARCUS PARKS

That's really good. It's very, very good, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's a good way to do it.

MARCUS PARKS

Well very quickly investigators saw that there were hundreds of bone fragments around a burn pile in the backyard, most smaller than a thumb and all charred from fire. The bones had been shattered and the area was also scattered with teeth.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I have no idea how honestly that Julie wasn't also immediately arrested. When they arrived... And it's not, again, they're scattered in the backyard.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's not deep in the lands. It is right here.

MARCUS PARKS

It's 60 ft from the backyard.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's visible from the home. These are obviously, these are shattered human bones.

ED LARSON

Well I mean it's not like there's a landscaper. So I imagine the grass is probably like really tall.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Maybe.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

And it's hard to like-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Quite possible.

ED LARSON

You're not gonna see it out the back window.

MARCUS PARKS

Very true.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Very possible.

ED LARSON

And she's not gonna go mow the grass herself because she's a sloppy woman, no offense.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's still littered with human bones.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Now Marcus, as a bone man-

MARCUS PARKS

Sure.

ED LARSON

Would you be able to tell if a human bone was all smashed up, if it was a human bone or different?

MARCUS PARKS

Absolutely not.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No.

MARCUS PARKS

Absolutely not.

ED LARSON

Right?

MARCUS PARKS

I would not be able to tell in any way whatsoever. Nobody would.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

By sight?

ED LARSON

The teeth I feel like you could tell.

MARCUS PARKS

The teeth, I would say that looks like a man's molar.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I guess.

MARCUS PARKS

But on the other hand, it could also be like a small, like it's not like we're the only mammals with molars or incisors or anything like that.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

I mean possibly you could say let's check that out. That's what I would say. Let's go ahead and check that out.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

If he's not a taxidermist or if he's not a habitual hunter or works for a slaughterhouse, why in the living fuck would he have a pit of just animal bones?

MARCUS PARKS

Raccoons. Getting rid of the raccoons.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They're all alive in the house! They are actively roommates with the family.

MARCUS PARKS

But there's so many raccoons, you gotta keep killing the raccoons all the time. But then more raccoons show up.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Wouldn't you hear the raccoons scream?

ED LARSON

I bet you heard all kinds of shit out of that attic.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

She was just like (whistling) just Swiffering her one little clean spot where her butt sits.

MARCUS PARKS

Maybe that's what he told her every time she was out of town, like well time to kill the raccoons. I gotta go up there, I'll kill as many as I can.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Oh but Herbie, it seems like there's still about 20-25 up there so.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah but last week there was 40.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Midwest accent) Herbie, I love ya. Oh Herbie.

MARCUS PARKS

Now the captain who had thought all this was just a spat between a married couple, they kept insisting that these bones were from animals. But once forensics got a hold of the-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They just fucking didn't want to deal with it.

MARCUS PARKS

It's just so crazy how some of these cops-

ED LARSON

Well it's like okay, so you're killing a bunch of animals?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But it's like it's not even a hard case! It's right there!

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

All the bones are right there! You can just scoop it all up.

MARCUS PARKS

It's so weird how some of these cops just deny, deny, deny. They just don't... I think you're right, Ed. I think they just don't want to deal with it.

ED LARSON

Yeah, they're so skeeved out about gay stuff.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. At this point they don't know it's gay, they don't know what it is. They just know like oh there's a lot of bones around here. But Mary Wilson is telling them like yeah, it is probably gay dudes.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

But these are the bones of like gay men that have gone missing.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And they went wow.

ED LARSON

There you go, buddy.

MARCUS PARKS

There you go. You got it, you got the genuine laugh.

ED LARSON

Should I call Lorne Michaels and say you're ready to go again?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I refuse! I will not host!

MARCUS PARKS

Well after searching the property further, they found a larger bone area where they found a full human humerus.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Nothing funny about that.

MARCUS PARKS

It soon became clear that Herb Baumeister's property was a literal bone yard with thousands of fragments scattered across the property. Tens of thousands of fragments. To expand the investigation, the head of forensics called in two of his assistants known to everyone as the bone twins.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes, these are my twin boys. It is I, the bone slicer! This is my twins, this is Herman and Merman. They love the family business! Carving and searching. We love a boneyard! We also love a buffet.

MARCUS PARKS

Well their job was to lay orange flags at every location where a bone was found. And within 30 minutes, they dropped 100 flags.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Gonna need more flags!

ED LARSON

Just get a big one and put it in the backyard.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's kind of the whole thing. It's kind of the whole process here.

ED LARSON

And whenever the sun sets, you bring it down, you fold it, you bring it up, put it back up in the morning.

MARCUS PARKS

According to those present, the Baumeister property soon looked like a mass disaster scene. It was like a plane crash or a terrorist attack. The majority of the bone fragments however were concentrated around an area that the police were soon calling the mulch pile. This pile was so named because it appeared as if Herb was placing the dead bodies in this spot, burning them the best he could, then covering them with debris. Animals would then pull the dead bodies apart and drag pieces down to the creek where they'd float away. And then eventually he would smash up the bones and scatter them.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

See this is where it's kind of cute for the animals in one way because they get to eat and it's gotta be fun for them. And in a way those animals view this probably is like the most incredible spot, like this is their vacation.

MARCUS PARKS

I mean if you're a scavenger, then yeah, this is gonna be, I mean this is fucking horrible but yeah, you're feeding the animals.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's kind of nice.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah because animals-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

In that way.

MARCUS PARKS

The animals will come back to a place where they're fed.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

ED LARSON

I bet there's a bunch of vultures and stuff.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's Indiana. I don't think they have vultures in Indiana.

ED LARSON

You got vultures everywhere.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, everywhere. Every state in America has vultures.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Is that true?

MARCUS PARKS

Or buzzards.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

What?

ED LARSON

They're just different types of vultures.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I thought vultures are just in the desert.

ED LARSON

No! I had them all the time in Florida. We had turkey vultures.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I remember turkey vultures but those aren't vultures.

ED LARSON

They're not? Why do they have the name?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

They're turkeys.

MARCUS PARKS

What?

ED LARSON

Turkeys are turkeys.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, turkeys are turkeys.

ED LARSON

Vultures are vultures.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I think turkey vultures are a style of turkeys.

ED LARSON

No.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

With the hood down.

ED LARSON

No.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It's like a convertible turkey.

MARCUS PARKS

Turkey vultures are style of vulture.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Otherwise they'd be called vulture turkeys.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Not necessarily.

MARCUS PARKS

A vulture turkey would a be a turkey-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I will be vindicated!

ED LARSON

I don't think so.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Sidestorieslpotl@gmail.com.

MARCUS PARKS

I can fucking prove you wrong.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I will wait.

MARCUS PARKS

Oh my god, I'm looking. That is the fucking definition of a goddamn vulture.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I'm looking forward and not looking at your propaganda. Either way, they're letting the animals do the work.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, I mean he is.

ED LARSON

I mean it's helpful.

MARCUS PARKS

Well judging by the cans of Miller Genuine Draft found at the mulch pit, it seems as if Herb sat there drinking beer while watching the bodies burn to the point where the bones became brittle enough to smash to bits.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Essentially that was his favorite television show. That's like what he'd do. He'd go outside for hours just burning bodies, drinking beers, vibes, no phones.

MARCUS PARKS

And this had been going on for years.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Wow.

ED LARSON

Man, imagine if he had a Bluetooth speaker.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, dude.

ED LARSON

It'd be so much better.

MARCUS PARKS

Listening to Dr. Bop.

ED LARSON

Yeah. So much better.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Just nothing but Dr. Bop. Ugh, burying bodies to Dr. Bop. Do you think Dr. Bop ever thought about that?

ED LARSON

I bet every day he thinks about it.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

He might not know.

MARCUS PARKS

I don't know if Dr. Bop knows.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Unless Dr. Bop is also an intricate serial killer.

MARCUS PARKS

Let us not malign Dr. Bop.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I don't know, I don't want him to sue us.

MARCUS PARKS

I'm sure one of our listeners knows, like Dr. Bop's my fucking grandpa.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I hope he hasn't killed.

ED LARSON

No, unfortunately on stage and off he has not killed.

MARCUS PARKS

Well the prevailing theory is that the mulch pit was the original disposal spot but out of laziness or arrogance, Herb began placing the bodies closer and closer to the house. By the end of it he'd been burning and leaving bodies within eyeshot of the house's back porch. The inside of the house however was proving to be a nightmare for forensics. It was a classic hoarder house filled with clutter and garbage from floor to ceiling. The raccoon infestation had essentially destroyed the upstairs bedrooms to the point where the ceiling had collapsed in spots where the raccoon waste had soaked it so thoroughly.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Hey guys, listen, I know that it's like weird to have a bunch of raccoons living in here. But let me tell you fucking man, seriously not the weirdest shit that's going on in this house. Right?

ED LARSON

It's just nice to finally have a place where we can all piss and shit on top of each other.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Honestly for us this is a godsend. For a lot of people, it's not a nice place. But we're really enjoying ourselves.

MARCUS PARKS

There was also the matter of the mannequins which just sort of weirded everyone out.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. What, the bone pit? Oh these mannequins are creepy. Meanwhile there is a literal decomposition pit.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Well the mannequins plus the bone pit.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah, together. I honestly though would be creeped out by the mannequins.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But I would be thinking about the bone pit.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, definitely.

ED LARSON

Who cares about the mannequins? He's a hoarder.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah but the way they're set up-

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

With their wigs on there and they're all staring at the pool where all the murders happened obviously.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. There were also hundreds of videotapes but investigators noticed that one shelf was conspicuously missing its tapes. One group of guys were tasked to watch all of the tapes for evidence of Herb's crimes. But when it was all said and done, the cops said there was nothing incriminating, extrapolating further by saying that they'd never watched so many episodes of Dallas in all their life. He loved Dallas.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Loved Dallas.

MARCUS PARKS

Videotaped every episode. Herb however had obviously taken some extremely incriminating evidence from the scene. And by the time forensics were done with the house, they had no serial killer souvenirs or strangulation ligatures. All they had were the bones.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

The bones! But he knew and he had plenty of time to get his shit out.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Now it seems as if Herb may have known what was coming because he and his videotapes were, during the search, at his mother's lakeside condo 100 miles north of Indianapolis.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I have to go return some videotapes.

ED LARSON

Be kind, please rewind.

MARCUS PARKS

After three days of digging, 5500 bones, bone fragments, and teeth were found but no skulls. Those had either been taken somewhere else or smashed beyond recognition. It was also possible that the skulls had been taken down to the creek and floated downstream.

ED LARSON

But why take the teeth out?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Because that's how you identify people.

ED LARSON

Oh okay.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

Yeah, that's right.

MARCUS PARKS

Following that lead, investigators searched a drainage ditch down the way from Fox Hollow Farm and found intact ribs, vertebrae, lower jaws, and entire spines. Later the ditch would be dubbed Skull Creek by the local kids.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Appropriate. Yeah.

ED LARSON

Oh my god. I would be in that creek every day looking for bones.

MARCUS PARKS

All the time.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah, dude! Absolutely. I would be fascinated.

ED LARSON

The entire summer would be we're looking for bones.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

We're looking for human bones. Isn't this the funnest day of our lives?

MARCUS PARKS

Now by this time the news had broke that over 5000 human bone fragments had been found on a property in Indianapolis. And we can speculate that Herb heard about it on the news while he was in northern Indiana. So he got in his gray Buick and drove across the border to Ontario via Detroit. After crossing the border, Herb pulled off underneath an underpass to sleep but was awoken by a Mountie. While the Mountie didn't have any reason to detain Herb, just move along, he did notice a large amount of videotapes in Herb's backseat.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Canadian accent) Hey there, buddy. I can't help but tell you, I'm looking back here and if I was you, the first thing I'd do is I'd take this bunch of, you gotta take these back to the video store. You don't even know what the kind of... When you're holding onto inventory-

ED LARSON

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

(Canadian accent) There's people like me, I'm waiting, I've been waiting for Cool World for weeks now and you're holding onto it. I should arrest you on the spot!

MARCUS PARKS

Well it's thought that Herb filmed every murder he ever committed at Fox Hollow Farm on CCTV. And he brought the tapes with him just to get rid of the incriminating evidence and to destroy them.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I have two theories. One is either he had a camera and filmed it while it was happening. But I think that it might have been too conspicuous or he had a camera hidden maybe.

MARCUS PARKS

Yes.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

But the cameras were big at the time. So a little harder to hide. My thing is that I think that it happened after the deaths and that was when he was having his little bit of maybe last night with Mary Jane-style dressing straight. I actually think it might have been an entire production that we did not see.

MARCUS PARKS

Maybe.

ED LARSON

Also some people are into getting videotaped while they fuck.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Absolutely. Like Dennis Rader, when he did his own self photography and stuff like that, I can kind of see a world where this was another form of trophy for Herb Baumeister to put his secret self on.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

ED LARSON

I guarantee the lighting was awful.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh yeah, not good, not good, friend.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. But after being awoken by the Mountie, Herb found his way to Pinery Provincial Park along the shores of Lake Huron. There at a sandy picnic area he composed a suicide letter, apologizing for leaving his family in financial ruin and for making an ugly mess in such a beautiful park.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Aw.

MARCUS PARKS

He also made sure to put all the blame for all of his problems on his wife but never once mentioned a single murder.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, weird, huh?

MARCUS PARKS

Finally he ended the note by saying he was gonna eat a peanut butter sandwich and go to sleep. Then signed the note as THE Herb Baumeister.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes, one night only! Yes!

MARCUS PARKS

He then put a gun to his head and pulled the trigger. That was the end of Herb, who went to his grave having never mentioned the murders to a single living person.

ED LARSON

Hold on a second, did he have the sandwich or not?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I searched for the suicide letter for days, I could not find the suicide letter. Most of what we know about it from what I have gathered is that it was extremely boring and it was all just the description of this. It was just him driving, going sleeping under the overpass. He just described his day.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And that was it.

MARCUS PARKS

Now to date, 10,000 bone fragments have been found at Fox Hollow Farm and victims are still being identified as recently as last year.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

This is why we're even doing this story is because in February of this year they found new evidence.

MARCUS PARKS

Oh shit.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. The current owner says that he still finds fragments to this day. And notice I say current owner. See usually the sites of sea killings get torn down or are abandoned completely.

ED LARSON

Especially with a coveted raccoon piss and shit.

MARCUS PARKS

Yes, yes.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

And the people who buy the property almost never want to talk about the terrible things that happened there.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, it hurts the home value.

MARCUS PARKS

What I've always wondered is if those places are ever haunted. And in this case, the author of 'Horror at Fox Hollow Farm' says that the answer is a resounding yes. And it's with next week's episode that we'll fully explore the intense paranormal activity that supposedly plagues Herb Baumeister's former killing grounds.

ED LARSON

Whoa! I thought the second episode we were just gonna get more into the killings!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

No, dude.

MARCUS PARKS

No! We're gonna get into the haunting of Fox Hollow Farm.

ED LARSON

Wow.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

It really is-

MARCUS PARKS

And supposedly like Herb himself haunts the fucking place.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

This next half is like what makes this one of the more unique stories that we've covered under like the banner of serial killers because not only is the paranormal activity well documented, it really is unlike other ghost stories we've covered. There's always something dubious in the nature of it. This place I think is like unbearably haunted. It's like wildly haunted.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. Soaked with energy.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah. And we're gonna talk about it next week. I love it, man! We got fucking, we got it all in one go. It's all of Last Podcast almost in one go.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah. If only aliens showed up, then we'd be good.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

The only alien involved is Herb Baumeister.

MARCUS PARKS

That's right.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

All right. Well this is fucking awesome. We're gonna come back next week. We have a bunch of stuff we can't even announce yet. And we're not going to. So we will announce other things first. Patreon.com/lastpodcastontheleft if you want to see us.

MARCUS PARKS

Yes.

ED LARSON

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

If you want to see the actual video of this episode, go to patreon.com/lastpodcastontheleft.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

MARCUS PARKS

And there's plenty of other perks there including exclusive interviews. You guys just did an interview with the guy who made the octopus murders documentary on Netflix.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yes.

ED LARSON

Yeah!

MARCUS PARKS

That I know a lot of people are really getting into right now. So you can go to patreon. com/lastpodcastontheleft if you want to hear that. And it's not expensive, we actually give a lot of shit for not too much.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

We're doing our best. And then you go down to TikTok which is hopefully gone soon @LPontheleft. You go check that out, also on the Instagrams. I don't know why that's less evil but that's fine. And then go to twitch.tv/LPNTV to watch all of our wares on Twitch and then go to our Youtube channel to see it after it has been aired live. And finally come see us on tour!

ED LARSON

Oh my god. I can't wait for this fucking tour.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Australia in the summer, in August, can't wait to be there. It's all set, locked in. I think you are allowed to legally, I think you're allowed to enter the country.

ED LARSON

Yeah I know, just stop bringing it up on air.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

We'll figure it out when we get there. And then North America, come see us on our JK Ultra tour. Can't fucking wait.

ED LARSON

Hell yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

So good. Tickets are selling out. Go to lastpodcastontheleft.com to see all of the various cities that we're coming to.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

And you get those tickets.

ED LARSON

Yeah. Denver in May, Seattle in June, DC in July, and so forth.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

So forth!

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, yeah. Right here in LA, we're gonna be doing Brooklyn, we're gonna be doing King's Theater in Brooklyn.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

ED LARSON

King's Theater, I'm so excited for King's Theater, I can't even tell you.

MARCUS PARKS

It's such a cool show. Yeah.

ED LARSON

I love that place.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I cannot fucking wait. Guys, this is wonderful. Hail Satan. And honestly if you feel like you're gonna kill or wanna kill, join the army.

ED LARSON

Yeah! Do it legally.

MARCUS PARKS

Talk to somebody.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, the army.

MARCUS PARKS

No, we don't want these people in the army. We want people, those dudes that are in the army-

ED LARSON

We want them in the Navy.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

The men and women in our armed forces need to be able to fucking count on the person next to them. We don't need psychopaths in there, we need capable human beings.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

You're probably right. We love our boys in green.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, go talk to somebody about your feelings and all that. Go talk to somebody.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah, sure.

MARCUS PARKS

It's better than killing.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Or get into acting.

MARCUS PARKS

And I guarantee turkey vultures are vultures.

ED LARSON

They're vultures.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I'm not a fucking bird guy.

ED LARSON

Yeah well I watched them eat dead animals.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

That's cause you're boring.

MARCUS PARKS

I was once almost killed by a buzzard.

ED LARSON

Really?

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Wow.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, my mom was driving us down, I was like five, and a buzzard flew straight into our windshield and almost lost control.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Sounds like that buzzard was suicidal.

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah, yeah.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

I guess that's what happens when you eat nothing but human flesh.

MARCUS PARKS

They love it.

ED LARSON

Yeah. Was its last name Baumeister?

MARCUS PARKS

Buzzard Baumeister.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Oh cool.

MARCUS PARKS

Hail Gein, everyone.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Hail Satan!

ED LARSON

Hail raccoons!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah!

MARCUS PARKS

Yeah!

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Yeah.

MARCUS PARKS

Bye.

HENRY ZEBROWSKI

Little hands.