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With Randall Smith
November 12, 2023
Never Forget Little Timmy. In the latest episode of the Murder Police Podcast, we are taken on an emotional journey through the eyes of Randall Smith, a lifelong friend of the missing Little Timmy Sterner.
This gripping episode explores the deep bonds of friendship and the chilling mystery surrounding Timmy’s disappearance.
Randall takes us back to their childhood days, painting a vivid picture of their camaraderie and shared experiences. From playing basketball at his aunt’s house to the competitive spirit that defined their early years, Randall’s anecdotes bring Timmy to life.
But as they grew older, life took unexpected turns. Timmy’s incarceration for seven years was a period of separation, yet their friendship endured. Randall’s heartfelt efforts to stay connected, sending money and exchanging letters, highlight the strength of their bond.
The narrative takes a darker turn as Randall recounts the unsettling events leading to Timmy’s disappearance.
A mysterious car wreck, rumors, and the eerie circumstances surrounding that fateful night leave listeners on the edge of their seats. Randall’s reflections on missed opportunities and the haunting regret of not spending more time with Timmy add a poignant layer to the story.
This episode is not just a tale of mystery but a testament to the enduring power of friendship. Randall’s vivid storytelling and emotional honesty make this a must-listen for true crime enthusiasts and anyone who appreciates a heartfelt narrative. Tune in to unravel the mystery and honor the memory of Little Timmy Sterner. Don’t miss this captivating episode that blends suspense, emotion, and the quest for truth.
True Crime, Murder Police Podcast, Missing Persons, Little Timmy, Randall Smith, Friendship, Incarceration, Mystery, Investigation, Crime Stories, Prison Life, Brotherhood, Disappearance, Unsolved Mystery, Timmy Sterner, Emotional Testimony, Teen Friendship, Life Changes, Family Bonds, Suspenseful Storytelling
Watch this episode on YouTube, available at 3:30 p.m. EST on Tuesday November 12, 2024!
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Show Transcript
Please excuse AI generated errors
This podcast contains graphic descriptions of violent assaults, murder, and adult language
Randall Smith: I don’t know. I’ve been through these types of fears before with my brothers and my sisters and my sister, where like, accidents, freak accidents happen or something like that. And you just, at the moment, you don’t know how to take it all in, because it’s so, like, what the heck?
Wendy Lyons: Morning. The podcast you’re about to listen to may contain graphic descriptions of violent assaults, murder, and adult language. Listener discretion is advised. Welcome back to the Murder Police Podcast. In today’s episode, we will continue. Never forget little Timmy. This is part one of two of an interview with one of Timmy’s very best friends, Randall Smith.
Murder Police Podcast welcomes Randall to talk about missing Timmy Sterner
Welcome to the Murder Police Podcast. We have with us today Mr. Randall here to talk about the missing case of little Timmy Sterner.
Randall Smith: Yeah, thanks for having me.
Wendy Lyons: Thank you, Randall, for coming. We appreciate that. So I didn’t get to meet you, and I. I came in here expecting somebody different, and you’re this handsome young man, and I didn’t think that you were going to be an ugly old man, but I just had in my mind a different face. So what a pleasant surprise. But again, thank you for coming, Randall.
Randall Smith: No problem. I’m glad to be here.
How did you know little Timmy? Oh, it goes way back
Wendy Lyons: Well, Randall, because I didn’t get in on the inside scoop earlier, I truly don’t know any information, so I’m genuinely intrigued. Tell me, how did you know little Timmy?
Randall Smith: Oh, it goes way, way back. Like, we were like 12, 13 or whatever. I went to my aunt’s house and he was there. And, you know, I’ve seen kids outside playing basketball. So I went outside playing basketball and a conversation, you know, started. And, you know, we went from there and, you know, he asked me how old I was, and I was like, well, I’ll be 13 in, like a couple days or whatever. And he was like, oh, I’m already 13.
And, you know, he wanted to be that older person, you know, he wanted to be the oldest, I guess, you know. And, you know, that sparked like, competitive brother like type thing right there from the start, you know. And, you know, so it come to find out later that night I was talking to my cousin, because that’s where we was at my aunt.
My cup, you know, my aunt’s at my cousin’s house, you know, how old is he? And she was like, he’s like 12. He lied to me, you know. And, you know, she was like, you know, and then I went to him and he was like, yeah, this is my birthday. You know, it’s like November 4th, 1996. Wherever I was like, well, you lied to me, you know, and, you know, that’s how it started. You know, that’s we as friends ever since that day.
Wendy Lyons: So you all met when you were. Well, the ripe age of almost 13 and 12. so I guess you all just became close. Did you go to school together?
Randall Smith: Yeah, we ended. We did go to school together. We went to high school together, because I moved around a lot, so I went to like a lot of different elementary schools and middle schools. You know, I went to like middle school in Harrisburg and then one in Nicholasville. So, you know, I didn’t really know where he was at school. So,
Wendy Lyons: And then you reconnected.
Randall Smith: We reconnected in high school.
Wendy Lyons: And you’re like, I remember you, you lied about your age.
Randall Smith: Yeah, yeah. No, no, I mean, I knew him before high school. Like, so, like, when you talk about the schools, like that’s where we, you know, we spent a lot of time together at school in high school, but also knew him outside of the school through my family.
Wendy Lyons: You all still kind of hung out from m then on.
Randall Smith: Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: Even though you.
Randall Smith: Oh, yeah, yeah.
Wendy Lyons: So you had a long time friendship with him?
Randall Smith: Oh, yeah. Oh yeah. It went on. It’s still going today.
Wendy Lyons: What kind of fun, stuff did you all do when you were at the Ants? Just play ball and hang out?
Randall Smith: Yeah, played, basketball. Hung out, you know, argued, a lot as young boys did, you know, argued a lot about the game stuff. So, yeah, that’s pretty much all we did at my aunt’s house. And I remember, you know, one time I was probably like 14 or whatever, and, you know, I lived in the back of Southbrook, his neighborhood, and he came rolling up on a little mini bike. And I remember wrecking that and stuff like that. You know, riding his bike around, his little black mini bike he had. So.
Wendy Lyons: So you all just had a lot of boy fun?
Randall Smith: Yeah, yeah, yeah. As we got older, you know, we started hanging, out with girls and stuff like that, you know, just regular, regular, teen boy stuff, you know. I don’t know, we were just. We, you know, when we were with our clique of friends, we just always shooting the crap, you know, just talking, you know, played basketball together, played, video games together a lot, you know, Cause when I lived with my aunt for a while and I had, I had an Xbox, you know, and me and him would fight over that game, you know, we played, there was an NBA street, ball that we played a lot and Call of Duty. so.
Wendy Lyons: Yeah, well, that’s always fun. We’ve got a teen, and he and his friends, same thing. They. And it’s funny how it evolved from back when you, you know, play street ball, literally out in the yard. And now these guys, they all get on at the same time, and they’ve got their head set on and they’re talking to each other, and it’s like they’re having the best time, and you can hear them and they’re laughing and they’re all playing the game together remotely.
Randall Smith: Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: And so it’s kind of. Kind of neat that I guess that’s just a boy thing.
Randall Smith: Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: Well, how fun.
Timmy went away to prison for seven years; you all stayed in touch
So we know that, there, after a while, Timmy. Timmy went away for a little bit. And, did you all stay in contact during that time he was gone?
Randall Smith: yeah. so he had a girlfriend before he went in. and I got in contact with her. I was like, how do I contact Timmy? You know, and she gave me the information through, like, a little app or whatever. And I did that a couple times because, you know, I worked outside and my phone gets broke a lot, and I had to get a new phone and redownload all of it. so, you know, I’d send him some money here and there to get him some, like, food or whatever. I don’t know what prison’s like. So, like, I would just send him a couple hundred bucks here or there so he can get.
Wendy Lyons: To help him out.
Randall Smith: To help him out. you know, I don’t know what anybody else is doing for him in there, so I would just, you know, throw him a couple hundred bucks to get him through a couple weeks or whatever, you know.
Wendy Lyons: Wow.
Randall Smith: Talk.
Wendy Lyons: That is.
Randall Smith: He sent me. He sent me some letters. I sent him some letters back. and yeah, I mean, that was the rough seven years of him being gone, because I was with him every day before he went.
Wendy Lyons: Sure.
Randall Smith: You know, so not every day, but like, a lot, a lot, a lot of the time.
Wendy Lyons: Yeah. Just a real good friend. You all stayed in touch. That’s really sweet that you did that. You know, I can’t say that there’s too many people I know that would reach out and do that.
Randall Smith: Timmy. It’s hard to forget about Timmy, you know, whether he’s there or not. You know, when you’re good friend with Timmy, he’s just always. You’re always, you know, here and there, you’re thinking about him, you know, so just the imprint that he would put on you. This is my favorite part about Timmy. He was probably like five foot five, right?
But whenever he spoke, his demeanor, just who he was in general, he want. He was that younger, bigger brother that everybody needed. You know what I mean? But when you looked at him, he was a short guy, but when he talked and he carried himself in a, protective type of way, you swear he was 6 foot 7 foot tall, you know?
David Lyons: Wow.
Randall Smith: Yeah, sounds like me.
Wendy Lyons: That’s right. Because you’re a big guy.
David Lyons: Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: Very intimidating, you know?
Randall Smith: so, I mean, that’s. That’s the big thing, you know, when you’re talking about, you know, how can you describe him? Whatever.
Wendy Lyons: He’s just bigger than life, wasn’t he? Kind of.
Randall Smith: Yeah. M. He just always wanted to be that. The big guy in the room, you know, he wanted to be that protector. He wanted to be that, you know, center of attention. I don’t know about the center of attention, but, like, if. You know, he always wanted to make sure everybody around him was good, you know, Everybody taking care.
Wendy Lyons: Taking care of everybody.
Randall Smith: Yeah. And I think that’s what tied me and him so close together, because I’m that type of person, you know? and I looked out for him and he looked out for me, and that’s just. That’s just who he was, you know? And that’s the biggest thing that I could ever. That’s the best thing I could remember about him, you know?
David Lyons: He gave enough of himself.
Randall Smith: Yeah. Yes. He would give his all. If he called you brother, friend, family, you know, I’m gonna let you know, he would not go to war with you. He would let you sit at home and he would go to war for you. That’s. That’s how Timmy was, you know, we’re gathering. He liked tattoos. He liked having a good time. he liked clothes. He liked looking. He had to look good everywhere.
He tried to look good everywhere. Everywhere he went. You know, me and him, we didn’t have a lot, I would say, you know, and he made. I don’t know, just. He tried to make sure his appearance was always clean cut. Yeah, you know, that’s. He took pride in that. That’s. That’s really what it. You know, his clothes. He liked his clothes a lot. Like, he would wear two shirts and like. I remember. I remember, like, I don’t know if you would classify it as a hobby or not, but, And I don’t know where I’m trying to go with it, but his. He would go home all Right.
Timmy took pride in who he was, in a good way
Say that we go to the basketball court and we’re just sitting there. We’re not even sweating. We’re not doing nothing. Right. he had just put these clothes on two hours ago. He would go back down to his grandma’s house and grab a new shirt out of the dresser and put a new shirt just to make sure he looked good everywhere he was going.
Wendy Lyons: So, he was prideful.
Randall Smith: Yeah.
David Lyons: In a good way.
Wendy Lyons: That’s right. He took a lot of pride in who he was.
Randall Smith: Yeah, that. That’s. That’s one of the funniest things I would ever. I’ve always remembered is whenever he went into his house and grabbed a brand new shirt and threw it in the dryer. And I was like, bro, we just got. You just got dressed like two hours ago. He was like, yeah, but this shirt’s not fresh anymore. And I’m like, what are we talking about?
Wendy Lyons: We’ve just been setting.
Randall Smith: Yeah.
David Lyons: Yeah.
Randall Smith: All right. I don’t want to sound disrespectful or anything like that, but he. Timmy had a set type, you know, they had to carry themselves well, you know what I mean? They had to make sure that the girls that he was into made sure that they could handle their own. Because Timmy’s a strong, strong minded guy.
David Lyons: Yeah.
Randall Smith: You know, so he’s. He’s not what he never wanted, like, a weak minded female. you know, he was always into more mature girls, you know, that carried herself okay or was able to handle their own if they needed to. so. And all the girls that he ever dated, that I’ve ever seen date were like, hot, you know, like, if. I hope my fiance don’t hear me, but, like, you know, they were hot.
Wendy Lyons: You know, so they weren’t as beautiful as my fiance.
Randall Smith: Yeah, they’re not as beautiful as my fiance. But yeah, yeah, he.
Wendy Lyons: He liked pretty girls.
Randall Smith: He liked pretty girls, you know, he wasn’t the one to settle for whatever, you know.
Wendy Lyons: Well, so. So you, you helped Timmy when he was incarcerated. Do you remember when you were hearing I’m about to get out?
Randall Smith: I didn’t know he was about to get out. So, like, the last couple years, I would message, like, his cousin or somebody and say, hey, what’s. Well, you know, what’s the word on Timmy or whatever, But I never had a set date ever, you know, when he was getting out, so.
David Sterner reconnected with missing friend after seven years on Facebook
David Lyons: Hey, everybody, it’s David. If you follow us, on social media, you know that I travel a lot, teaching leadership across the country to Police executives. I love to travel, but sometimes when you travel, you can get food fatigue and get wore out. But every now and then you find a gym. And I want to share a gem in Harrisonville, Missouri Called 1886 with you right now, just outside Kansas City, Missouri. I stumbled across this beautiful restaurant in downtown Harrisonville and a fantastic menu of food that we kept going back far throughout the week.
So if you’re an area of Kansas City, slide south a little bit, go to Harrisonville and go to 1886 and grab a bite to eat. And when you do, tell him David with the Murder Police podcast says hello.
Randall Smith: Whenever he got out. My birthday was on the 5th, right? And I, went out of town for that weekend and came back and that Monday, that night, on Sunday night, I got a friend request from Timmy, Sterner on Facebook. And I’m laying in bed and I look over at my woman and I’m like, look at this. I was like, that’s. That’s Timmy. And so I accept it. You know, off top, I accept it. And I immediately messaged him and I’m like, hello. And he messaged me back.
And we get into a little conversation, which I’m getting ready for bed at that time. So the conversation, you know, carried for about five or 10 minutes. And then he had responded and I was already asleep and. But yeah, I mean, I had no idea he was getting out. It was a shocker. It was probably the best birthday gift eyes I could have ever, you know, ask for. And I will, always cherish those last few conversations I had. because it. I don’t know, you know, after seven. After seven years not seeing him, and then, boom, he’s there. Days after your birthday is crazy. It’s crazy. It was. It was amazing.
Wendy Lyons: Now, did you all set up hopes of let’s get together tomorrow or Tuesday or, you know, we were.
Randall Smith: He was trying to link up and stuff like that. But in April, my schedule so full, you know, because I own a business and I run a business in Lexington, so I do a business on side. So if I work, you know, 7:30 to 4:30, I get straight off work and I go do my jobs for my own company. and then I had a, my kid, he’s in T ball, so we doing like two practices, three practices a week.
And then the games on the weekend, early in the morning, 6 or they can go all day or whatever. so, you know, I wasn’t against it. And now thinking about it, looking back on it, I was like, man, I Wish I would have set something up or tried to set something up.
But I just, you know, I was like, man, I just don’t do much linking up anymore. My life is just so cram packed full of everything, you know, Seven years is a lot to. You know, my life has changed a lot in seven years. you know, it’s got a kid now, got a job, starting a business, running the business, you know, doing this and doing that. he wanted to come over the night I guess that he went missing.
And it was 8:30. So if I was to hang out with anybody, it would have to be from the time that I get off work or you know, and probably right before dark, right before I’m eating dinner or something like that so I can get wound down and ready for bed and get my kid into bed and stuff like that. you know, like a normal routine for the kid, a family, family life. and that eats me up every day that I didn’t say, yeah, come over, you know, instead I was like, yeah, it’s 8:30, it’s kind of late, let’s link up like maybe tomorrow or something like that.
and that’s probably been, that’s probably been the worst thing that’s been stuck in my head for the last few months. So growing up with Timmy, he’d been in and out of juvie a few times, you know, and come back home, mostly for missing school or whatever, hanging out with girls or whatever he’s doing, you know. And he’d come back home, you know, and we’d all get back together and you just never expect something like this to ever happen.
So you know, I just figured that we would just hang out, you know, on a weekend or you know, something, you know. And right before he went, to I guess prison, he I think he had, did ah, like a jail sent in Nicholasville or something, I’m not real sure. But he got out after a couple months and you know, I took him to the mall, showed him my new car because I got a new car.
And he was like this thing’s ignorant. Like I’ll never forget. Like we was doing donuts and getting sideways in it and took him to the mall and got him some new clothes and stuff like that. And that’s the last last time that I seen him in person was right before, right before he went, did that. Seven years. And yeah, I don’t know, I wish I would have said something up with him.
David Lyons: Yeah.
David and Timmy had a FaceTime call seven years ago
Wendy Lyons: So David had mentioned something Since I wasn’t here, I was late like usual. So you mentioned something to the effect of a FaceTime? I’m intrigued. Tell me about the FaceTime. I just heard FaceTime.
Randall Smith: Okay, so that Sunday night when he had sent me a friend request and we talked, right? He had messaged, but I’d left the. I’d left the conversation and fell asleep. I picked it back up after I had already gotten to work at my work truck. and seeing that he was online.
So I was like, you know what? I’m. I don’t even. I’m not going to respond. I’m just going to call him, you know, let’s video call him. And he answered it and we talked for, like five or ten minutes and, you know, talked about, you know, what was prison like, you know. Yeah, I’ve never been, you know, he was like, don’t go, don’t go. And, you know, what time in.
David Lyons: The morning was that?
Randall Smith: It was probably like 7:37, 7:45. It was white. Whenever I first got there, you know, it was early. And, he was telling me he ain’t been to bed yet. He’d been so excited to be home. And, you know, just. You couldn’t fit a whole seven years in a conversation, you know? You know, because he was. I don’t know that he was trying to go to his POS that morning, too. So we had ended the conversation after about 10 minutes. And, you know, I’m at work. but, you know, just seeing his face. Grown man Timmy was crazy. Like, he had facial hair.
David Lyons: Yeah.
Randall Smith: I’m still struggling at 28. I cannot grow it. And I’m seeing Timmy. I’m like, man, you got a beard. I, like, you know, that’s cool. I wish I had one of those. Yeah. And, he was like, you’ll get one. He said something. So, like, he had got this, like, accent, I guess, from being incarcerated for. So he said something, and it just cracked me up. I.
I don’t remember what it. He was like, you’ll get there. But he used, some like, I guess jail slaying terminology or whatever it was, and I was like, what the hell was that? You know? But, you know, that’s. That’s, you know, I don’t know. I will always cherish that car.
Wendy Lyons: So you got to see him.
Randall Smith: Well, not. Not in person.
Wendy Lyons: I mean, on the video.
Randall Smith: Yeah, on the video, I got this. I got to see him. Yeah, I got to see him and see grown up man Timmy. You know, I Was like, that’s crazy because when seven years ago when you went in there, he looked.
Wendy Lyons: Probably looked like you today.
Randall Smith: Yeah, your face was baby butt smooth, man. I was like, you got a full beard. So.
Wendy Lyons: So you all had your little video chat and then you go on to work.
Randall Smith: Yep. And I didn’t hear from him that whole day until about 8:30. and he was like, hey man. he asked me if I, was in town or something. Or he said, I’m in town. And I was like, he asked me what I was doing or something. And he was like, I’m in town, can I come over? Or whatever. And I was like, it’s 8:30, it’s kind of late. You know, April, it’s starting to get dark around 8:30 and the kids trying to go to bed. And I was like, but not tonight, you know, it’s 8:30. Yeah, I regret that. I wish I would have told him.
David Lyons: To come over, you know, because hindsight’s always 2020 as they say.
Wendy Lyons: So you all ended it with, you know, maybe another time.
Randall Smith: yeah. And you know, I told him that my life had changed. You know, I got a kid now, you know, hanging out at like 8:30 is kind of crazy. Whenever I’m trying to get a kid to bed, you know, I didn’t go that dipped into it. I just said, my life has changed a lot. And, he said, it’s all good, big head or something like that. I was like, what does that mean? And, you know, we ended the conversation on I love you, bro. And I said, I love you too, dawg.
Wendy Lyons: You know, so you were maybe going to talk in a couple more days or something. So then I guess you find out. When do you find out?
Randall Smith: I found out. I would think it was Thursday, you know, and when my aunt called me because I had no idea, you know, I had no idea it was Thursday. And she called me and she was like, have you seen Timmy? Is he at your house?
The story that I’ve heard about Timmy just didn’t make sense
You know, I was like, no, he’s not me. He was like, well, she ran me down on the story of what was going on. And I was like, that’s not like Timmy, you know, I mean, with the story that I’ve heard, it’s not that he wouldn’t do that. He just wouldn’t do it. not seven, not grown up Timmy, not, you know, teenage 18 year old Timmy. He just wouldn’t do nothing like that. You know, it didn’t make sense. The story just didn’t make sense. And I was like, no. so I started mess.
I messaged his Facebook, I was like, hey, yo. You know, and nothing. So that’s when I was like panicking because I heard, you know, the way the story happened was is he. I don’t know if I can go into it, but he wrecked a car out in the country. Timmy’s not a country guy. If he left the scene miles out into the country of a car wreck. Out. Miles out into the country. Even me. But that’s just in April, it’s cold at nighttime and it rained for weeks, days.
David Lyons: You know, it was a wet spring.
Randall Smith: You know, he’s. That’s not Timmy’s. He’s not leaving that road, period. He. He’s not going out into the woods.
Wendy Lyons: He’s not gonna get them clothes wet, is he?
Randall Smith: I don’t know if he’s gonna get the clothes, Webb. I know that he’s not gonna leave the road. So when I heard that, I was like, nah, Timmy’s, not going out in them dang woods. Not no, not no. Dark no. So yeah, that’s, you know, because that’s.
David Lyons: Down by River Road. It’s.
Randall Smith: Yeah, it’s far down in there, you know, and that’s. Jimmy’s not going in the woods on a good day.
Randall Smith: He don’t like being in the woods.
Wendy Lyons: During the day, let alone rain and dark.
Randall Smith: Rain and dark, it’s not happening.
Wendy Lyons: So you were. Had an uneasy feeling. You’re like, something don’t sound right.
Randall Smith: The whole story just didn’t make sense. You know, there. He drove a car down there. He ended up stealing somebody else’s car, wrecked it, ran off into the woods apparently, or whatever, whatever the story is that I was told. And I was like, that’s not right. Why would you steal somebody else’s car? When you left you that car, you drove a car there. Not right.
Wendy Lyons: so then you just, it didn’t sit well with you and you’re thinking, well, maybe some I hear from him tomorrow or something. Well, or did you know, then something, something just isn’t going to be right out of this.
Randall Smith: There’s a fear, you know, a panic when something like this happens with every, you know, so I don’t know, I’ve been through these types of fears before with my brothers and my sisters and my sister, where like accidents, freak accidents happen or something like that. And you just, at the moment, you don’t know how to take it all in. because it’s so like what the heck, you know? And your mind can only process things so fast and understand things.
so I just had this feeling, you know, inside that was like, it’s just off, you know, whenever you know somebody so well, like me and his family do, you know, because I classify his grandma. My grandma, you know, like, you know, his uncle. this is my uncle, you know, so when you know somebody as well as we know Timmy, something was just off and nobody had heard, you know, and his phone was broke. I know for a fact that Timmy is not going to be out in boon land.
David Lyons: That’s an important.
Randall Smith: With a broken phone. He’s not going to break his phone. Then people said that he broke his phone or whatever. I’m not trying to get in on, I’m not. I’m not sure what I’m allowed to say or whatever. But it just. Whenever I heard all the key facts, the key points of what everybody else would tell because they had already had, I, guess the night of the 9th, and then I guess that following day before I even heard about it, to unravel things, you know, with people down there.
David Lyons: there’s a lot of rumors and a lot that in which is natural in some like this.
Randall Smith: Yeah.
David Lyons: But you’re like a lot of people. The people we’ve talked to so far are like, you, A and B. Are not coming to see. And there’s no. And we have now is you talking about, him just not being in the boonies, as you say. Or 1.
Randall Smith: He’s not a country guy. He was not, you know, if we went out. I’ve never been out, like, to somebody’s house in the country at nighttime with him, but I know that we would go hiking or something like that. He hated it. He hated that he did not like being outside in the country.
He did not. You know, so, like, we’d go out and hike or whatever, you know, like to Indian Falls with my brother and our friend Justin. You know, we’d go out there. and he did not, like, he was like. I recall one time we got back to my house in Longview when I lived in Longview, and he was like, thank God we’re back home. I was like, yo, it wasn’t that bad. He was like, I’m sweating. I need new clothes.
The Murder Police Podcast is hosted by Wendy and David Lyons
I need a shower. That man would take a shower three or four times a day if he could. And even though Timmy had been gone a long time, that didn’t change on how Timmy was. Timmy was not being in them woods.
David Lyons: Yeah.
Randall Smith: Yeah. Yeah. No. It’s just no.
Wendy Lyons: So then I guess that was that. Thursday you found out and you tried to message him and nothing.
Randall Smith: Nothing.
Wendy Lyons: Friday, you’re probably still trying. Hey, you know there’s more to this story so go download the next episode like the true crime fan that you are.
David Lyons: The Murder Police Podcast is hosted by Wendy and David Lyons and was created created to honor the lives of crime victims so their names are never forgotten. It is produced, recorded and edited by David Lyons. The Murder Police Podcast can be found on your favorite Apple or Android podcast platform as well as@murderpolicepodcast.com where you will find show notes, transcripts, information about our presenters and a link to the official Murder Police Podcast Merch Store where you can purchase a huge variety of Murder Police Podcast swag.
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