Chris Distefano Shares Real Life Stories About Ted Bundy and Son of Sam

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That's sick. That's my favorite follow. That's Stoick Instagram. Oh, Stoick is great. Yeah. Ryan Holiday is great too. Oh yeah, Ryan Holiday, yeah. He looks like the guy that killed four college students in Idaho. He does. That's who I thought it was. I was like, oh, this Stoick is a mass murderer. He's out. He's out. He's writing books about just being cool about everything. But- Did you hear that, by the way? With Idaho, they're thinking about bringing back the firing squad if he gets convicted. Oh my God. Well, they think he might have killed people in Washington State too. Interesting. Is that where it was? It was somewhere else. There was another place where he lived where similar crime took place, and they think he was studying crime in college in order to get better at it. It's really evil. It's an evil, scary story. If all this, they're accusing him is accurate, it's horrific. The fact that guy was out there. Right. Dude, you want to hear a wild story? So my mom had a friend. Let's see if we can find out if that's true though. The part where they think that he might have committed a similar crime. Excuse me. Somewhere else. Here we go. See, this is what's happening now on an intermittent fasting stomach. I'm going to start getting crazy. It's going to, it might get bad in here. Want to take another sniff? Why the hell not? All right, here we go. Ready? Oh, that was deep. Joey went in. I went in. Okay. Get in there, Chrissy. Woo! Jamie? No. No. Jamie's not going to be here. Jamie said no. I didn't even get his full name out before Noah was coming out of his mouth. Jamie, that one burned. That one fogged up my glasses. That one burned, baby. I get it, dude. I want to live right now. I want to be deadlifts. Seriously. I seriously, like, yeah, like I want to fucking, I want to, yeah. Put the lid on it. I want to, I want to like start doing jujitsu with you. I don't even know how to do it. There's nothing like a freshy when you open them up fresh. That is a freshy. Yeah. When you, when you let them sit for a while, they lose a lot of their potency. Like we had one that was here for a few months and it had lost a lot of kick. But damn, when you open them fresh. I don't see anything about other crimes. I'm trying. I'm looking still. Um, I believe it was where he was originally going to school. He had said he was Washington State. Yeah. But just, did you, Google may have possibly committed similar crime in Washington State? Washington crimes. Okay. Just Google may have possibly committed, wanted for possibly committing similar crime. A lot of serial killers come from this part of the country. He could be major link to other murders. This is it. And this is a Newsweek. Okay. Oh, it says, um, new evidence recovered. It may be a major link to the Idaho murders. He's been accused of fatally stabbing University of Idaho students. The search warrant, which was reported by the New York Times, discussed several items which are taken from his residence. Here is the thing about the other cases. Oh, here it is. In December 30th, he was arrested as parents residence in Pennsylvania. Extradite to Idaho, where he's currently charged. Co-burger was attending Washington State University at the time of the murders. Yeah. He looks like the guy from the stoic. But there was something, he does. It looks a lot like him. But Ryan Holliday's quite a bit more handsome. Ryan Holliday's older like me brother. Ryan Holliday. But, uh, It says Pennsylvania was sifting through cold cases for links to him. Oh, it was Pennsylvania. Mm-hmm. That's where he was found. Interesting. Yeah, that's where they pulled him over and it was in his parents house. Because remember the media was saying, we don't know, we don't have any leads. But the FBI was following him across the country. Yeah, they can't just leak. Yeah, you can't do that. All that information. They're in the middle of an investigation of a fucking psycho. But it is wild like with these, you know, he's famous now for these murders. But as you said, could be stuff before. My mom had a friend, right? Grew up in Utah. Seven, maybe she's 18, 19 years old, whatever, year of 70s, 80s, whatever. Goes on a date with a guy, right? Normal date, just met him, I think at the supermarket. Goes on a date with this guy and she's at the table with him and she feels very like a ominous feeling looking at this man. She's like, I'm looking at him and I can see like there's nothing behind his eyes. Like there's just something that I don't like about this guy. So to the point where she has never done this, you know, she was only 18, but since this has never done this, she went to a pay phone at the restaurant, called her brother and was like, can you please come pick me up like immediately and stayed in the bathroom until her brother was outside and went in the car and left. And she was like, I'm just creeped out by this guy. I can't explain it. I'm creeped out. All this energy I'm creeped out, creeped out. Now he had, this man had picked her up from her house. So the brother had a paper route. He's leaving the next morning at 5am, sees some ruffling in the bushes. Okay. Crazy, right? Like whatever, sees a guy running out of the bushes, says, holy shit, whatever, runs back in the house, tells his mom and dad, sister wakes up, says he was wearing like a beige jacket. She's like, that's the guy I was on a date with. Like that, he was like waiting. He must have been like waiting for me, right? Whatever. Life goes on, life goes on. What a psycho, lunatic boyfriend. Three years later, Ted Bundy on the news face. She was on a date with Ted Bundy before he had committed any murders or he had committed murders but had not been famous for it yet, had not been convicted of it yet. She said when he saw him, she literally almost fell out of her chair because she was like, that look. She said that Ted Bundy about how everyone says he's so handsome, whatever, she said he would get a look over him when he was preying on a victim, which she felt she was being preyed on, that he does not look like that. His face configures and contorts to something that looks so sinister that she literally was like, get me away from him now. So I was like, whoa, fucking Teddy B. Imagine you're on a date with a young Teddy B. That'd be fucking nuts, dude. So he had already committed murders. So he was looking to murder her and he was giving that energy out. She said, based off when all his crimes were exposed, from what the FBI said, when she went on a date with him, let's say it was 1978, he had already been connected to murders and other parts of that. Because his first murders were in the Utah region and that's where they were. Holy shit. Wild, right? Holy shit. Dude, fucking, it's pretty nuts. And then I think I might've said this on the last one, but T.T. Jerry, when she was in prison, served prison time with the son of Sam. She shared a wall with the son of Sam, two murderers. She shared a wall with the son of Sam and Ronald DeFeo from the Amityville Horror House, the man who killed all those people in the movie, the Amityville Horror, who was really based off Ronald DeFeo. She was in prison with both of them at the same time and the prisoners from Escape from Dan Amora, who liked that Showtime show that they made. She was in real deal prisoners, but she said the son of Sam. Now this was months before the Netflix documentary came out. T.T. Jerry said, the son of Sam, David, did not kill all those people. He was involved in a cult. There were other murderers, but the city pinned it all on him. And then a few months later, this Netflix documentary comes out, came out a couple of years ago, basically saying that most likely, son of Sam did not kill all those people. He killed maybe one or two, but there was other murderers that just got away with it. Do you know the Henry Lee Lucas story? Henry Lee Lucas. Henry Lee Lucas, they made a film about him called Henry Portrait of a Serial Killer. It's a guy who got arrested for 62 murders, and he was basically a drifter, and he was traveling across the country murdering people. But they think that what really happened was they came up to him and they said, you know, hey Henry, you know, there was a few people that were killed behind the bushes in Indianapolis in 76, which sure loved to solve that crime. Was that you? Yep, that's me. I killed them too. Well, did you do it with a knife? Because we found a knife. Yep, knife. Killed him with a knife. Yeah. And this guy was basically a dullard and may have killed people. Like a lot of drifters have killed people. But it seems like, Google that, make sure I'm correct on this. I think now they think that they attributed a bunch of crimes to him that he couldn't possibly have committed. It's a wild thing. Look at this. The depraved serial killer who confessed to hundreds of murders. See, this is it. So it was more than 62, which is what he was, I think he was originally charged with, 600 people. Okay. Drawn together by shared childhood trauma, Henry Lee Lucas and Otis Toole became lovers than serial killers who terrorized America in the 1970s. But he confessed to hundreds of murders, but they think that some of them he couldn't possibly have done. But did he stay in prison for the rest of his life because of it? Yeah, they might have killed him. In prison. I don't know what happened. I don't know if he's still alive. But see if he got, if that's a story, that they got him to confess to a bunch of murders that he couldn't have actually done. That's a common thing though, right? People confess to stuff all the time. You know, I, there's a show on Apple TV, it was called Blackbird. It just came out last year. It's about a real story about a guy who, what his tactic would be, is he murdered a lot of people, but he would, he would say to the police, oh, I murdered that girl in that county. I'm confessing to it. But then they would go through the research and be like, no, you couldn't have possibly. But he would cop to it. And then the cops would be like, he did that like five times. They'd be like, every county he was investigating, they'd be like, that's what he does. He confesses to murders. He's a bullshitter, but he really was killing people. He was using, he was confessing to false ones so he could get away with the real ones. Holy shit. Wild, right? Holy shit. Yeah. So it's like some of these guys are so smart. Dude, the show Blackbird, this guy, this actor, I think it's William Hauser or something. This is one of the best actors in my generation. No, Joe, I don't know if you know this guy. This guy's acting is like Daniel Day Lewis level. He is a phenomenal actor. You watch a chill Blackbird, you cannot believe it where I'm like, and this is on Apple plus Apple TV. This is one of the best shows I've seen. Came out last summer. This shit, this kid is literally like phenomenal. And then I'm watching 101 Dalmatians a day later with my kids and he's in that. I'm like, look at his fucking lunatic. He plays Richard Jewell. Yes. The Joe George or Joel movie about the Olympic Park bombing. Yeah. Unbelievable actor. He was also in that in that sketch show. I think you should leave on Netflix, which is one of the funniest sketches. I've ever seen in my life. He's got great sketches in that guy. But that show Blackbird was unbelievable. So basically what happens is this guy who's from a bunch of movies. This kid is ripped, by the way. This kid has to be intermittent fasting. He's in the watch, not the watchman. With Samuel L. Jackson's in it, it's a famous movie and he's excellent. But basically the premise of it's based on a true story. This guy, the Hollywood with the Body, he gets convicted 10 years in prison for gun charges. I think he's a guy out of Massachusetts. And he was a good con man. This is all real. Good con man, gift a gab, whatever. So the FBI wants to pin the guy with the mutton chops, Hauser, they want to pin Larry Hall his name in real life. They want to pin murders on him. They know that they've kind of caught up to his game now. They know that he lies about murders here to commit murders here. They know it. They got to get him to confess to one of these murders because they found the girl's body because he was killing kids, like 14 year old girls, like brutal shit, raping them. Horrific. So they say to this kid, to the jacked guy, they say, look, you got the gift a gab. You got 10 years in federal prison. You're three months into your sentence. We're going to transfer you to this maximum security prison where Larry Hall is. If you can get him to confess to the murder of this girl that we have evidence on, and you can get that, your sentence is commuted immediately and you're out of prison. That's all you got to do. But he was in a minimum security prison, so he would be able to either coast through 10 years or take a chance and go to the prison with murderers, rapists, and potentially be murdered in the shower stall. But if he can get this guy gift a gab and get him to confess, then he'll get out. Holy shit. And that's what the show's about. And it was, dude, amazing show. Like Edge of My Seat. It was one of the best shows I've seen in a long time. That's awesome. I want to watch it again on Smelling Salt. Thank you for bringing that up. I'm fucking pumped about that. I've been looking for a new show. Yeah. Oh, and by the way, before ... Let me just finish the thought about Jerry. What I want to say is, the son of Sam thing, he said he was a serial killer, yes, and don't get me wrong, murderer deserves to be in prison. He said the biggest fucking lunatic, he was like the only person who I met, I was like, this guy needs to be either put to death or kept in a cage under the jail. He said was Ronald DeFeo, who the Amityville Horror House guy, because he said he would cook for him all the time, Ronald DeFeo. He would let Ronald DeFeo jerk off to him. They would put a prison mirror, because he was trans, Jerry. He would shake his ass a little bit and let Ronald get his rocks off, whatever. He didn't care. He said, but every morning, he would make Ronald DeFeo Jr. a little breakfast and his little ... They had little hot stoves in there. They would let prisoners like Jerry, after he did enough time, give you some stuff. He'd make a little bacon and stuff for him. And he said, every morning, like clockwork, seven days a week. Every morning, bring Ronald to his food and say, how was your night, Ronald? How are you feeling? He was like, good. I feel good. I didn't kill my grandma. It's the only thing. I killed everyone in that house, but I did not get my grandma. But everything other than that, it's good. And Jerry would be like, okay. So he's like, still, he's in prison for ... And that is true. The only one he did in killing that house, the grandma either got out or wasn't there, but he was like, there's no rehabilitation for that man. He genuinely believes if he does not kill his ... He would say to him, if I don't kill my grandma, I'm not getting into heaven. So he had it warped. He killed his entire family. He's like, that's how I get to heaven, but I got to get the grandma. And then he died in prison recently. But I was like, whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Shit. I know. It's wild.