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Rachel Brown
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Narrator
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Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
The Bench. Wherever you go on water or land, you've still got to pay for. I tell about your brand. You talk to people I despise. Like Police Lieutenant Until He Spies
Narrator
Ruth Finley's tormentor wasn't letting up. A week after the first letter arrived, a second arrived in her mailbox. He had promised Ruth he'd send her his poetry, and here he was delivering. Before long, these poems would lead to him being nicknamed the Poet. The latest letter here, read for us by an actor, said Ruth, how would
Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
you like to put about $100 in a tablet under the seat in your husband's pee?
Narrator
Ruth read that to mean her husband Ed's Ford pickup truck. The letter was full of these strange abbreviations. The writing was scribbled and erratic. What was clear was that he stood still, wanted his payout.
Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
Don't tell no one. You can get that much without your husband to know it. I can find that lieutenant name on your car. Don't tell him neither.
Narrator
He somehow knew that Ruth had gone to the police.
Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
I can tell if anybody has watched me. Don't be a dumb bitch again and blow this.
Narrator
Despite the threat, Ruth called Lieutenant Bernie Drawski again. She read him the letter over the phone. Juratsky asked her to bring it down to the station, so Ed hand delivered it. At that same time, Drawotski and his team were trying to decipher letters and poems from btk. They were struck by the similarities, but they were also getting 30 tips a week. So they let Ruth's letter sit there, collecting dust. Ruth didn't obey the poet's orders. She didn't put $100 in the pickup truck like he requested, and she took her letter to the cops, which he specifically warned her not to do. Clearly, Ruth was no wallflower. She wasn't going to do what this man wanted. She was going to put up a fight. But Ruth's disobedience only angered the poet further. And just one week later, he got his revenge. Just two days before Thanksgiving, Ruth's sister Jean gets a call from Ruth's boss. He asks if she had eaten lunch with Ruth. Jean tells him she hadn't seen her sister at all that day. 45 minutes later, Ruth's boss calls Jean again. Have you heard from her? He asks. Jean again says no. Ruth's boss immediately hangs up and calls Ed to tell him Ruth hasn't come back from lunch.
Detective Bernie Drawski
Ed always knew where Ruth was every second of the day and night. They were that close.
Narrator
Ed had been keeping close tabs on Ruth, trying to do everything in his power to keep her stalker, whoever he was, from harming her. The poems upset him. They were vile and demeaning towards the woman he loved. Ruth put on a brave face, but he could feel the toll it was taking on her. It was all too much.
Detective Bernie Drawski
This was the first time in years that he did not know where his wife was. It had been two hours. He assumed the worst.
Narrator
Ed calls the police to report her missing. Under regular circumstances, the police wouldn't act on a missing persons report that early. But Ed insists something is very wrong.
Detective Bernie Drawski
He put everything together, thought this guy got her. He thought she was dead.
Narrator
From Sony Music Entertainment and New Metric Media, this is the Poet. I'm Rachel Brown. Episode 2 Where's Ruth? Ruth is at work at the phone company Southwestern Bell. On the morning of November 21, 1978, the day of her disappearance, one of her colleagues was having a birthday celebration in the office and Ruth had forgotten to get her a birthday card.
Detective Bernie Drawski
It was kind of a cold, windy, damp day. Rainy. It rained.
Narrator
Reporter Fred Mann was a young journalist working at the Wichita Eagle Beacon at the time.
Detective Bernie Drawski
She was kind of reluctant. She didn't know if she should leave, but she said, oh. She knew of a card store that was nearby. She didn't even take a coat, although she was advised by co workers. Hey, it's cold outside. You better put something on.
Narrator
These are Ruth's words, read for us by an actor.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
The wind was blowing. I had my sweater on. I thought it would be too cool to walk. I think I'll go back.
Narrator
As she crosses the street to return to the office, Ruth gets this eerie feeling like someone's following her. That's when an old green beat up Chevy Bel Air pulls up to the the curb. One of the rear windows is missing, patched up with tape. One side of the car has been caved in.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
This car pulled up beside me Guy hopped out. He kicked me in the shins with sharp shoes.
Narrator
He pushes Ruth into the back of the car.
Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
Get in.
Narrator
The back seat of the car is missing. Ruth is thrown to the floor.
Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
You got my money?
Narrator
Ruth looks up and realizes, to her horror, it's the same man who had grabbed her in the alley months earlier. Her stalker. There's another man in the car in the driver's seat. He's got fuzzy hair poking out from under a wool cap. There's no rearview mirror, so Ruth can't see his face as he struggles, starts to drive. He takes swigs of wine from a bottle wrapped in a brown paper bag. The entire car, inside and out, is a disaster. The dashboard seems to be kept together with tape, and there's trash everywhere.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
And it had lots of, like, big chains and just junk and had a board on top of it.
Narrator
On the floor, she notices rags, stones, empty gas cans and other things that make Ruth wonder if they've come from a farm. She's frantic, but she tries to keep her cool and memorize what's around her in case those details could be useful if she survives this thing. The man next to her, her stalker, talks incessantly.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
He was talking about being a spy for the government buildings and what all he had done. He babbled all the time.
Narrator
This talk about buildings struck Ruth. Could this be the construction worker who called her after finding that newspaper clip about her assault in Fort Scott?
Detective Bernie Drawski
He continued to talk about, we're gonna go party. We're gonna have a party, you and me.
Narrator
There was something alarming about their suggestion of a party. Ruth hears fragments of their conversation and picks up that the driver's name is Buddy. She doesn't hear what her kidnapper is called. She thinks about trying to escape, but the door handle on her side is broken and she worries she'll hurt herself if she leaps from the car. She notices a red bandana lying on the floor. When the men aren't looking, she picks it up and tucks it away. They cruise around town with Ruth for what feels like hours. She hopes someone will report the Chevy, which is noisy and falling apart, totally not fit for the road. At one moment, Ruth spots a police cruiser. She silently prays for the cop to pull them over, but he just keeps on driving.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
That is when he had me open my purse and he said, what you got in there? And I had a check and a bond.
Detective Bernie Drawski
He told Buddy, hey, we've hit the jackpot. He had heard go through the purse to show him what was in it. He Said, you see, I'm not touching anything in the purse, though. They can't get any fingerprints out of me. He was really proud of that, his whole attitude, I'm better than you are. I know what I'm doing. You know, I've got you.
Narrator
Ruth is careful to comply and shows him every item in her purse except for one. Her can of Mace. The stalker spots Lieutenant Drawacki's business card in her purse and freaks right out. He's angry that Ruth is still talking to the police.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
He got very mad.
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He pulls up a hunk of something
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
hard, looked like a piece of concrete. He walked me with it.
Narrator
He hits Ruth in the head. The driver, buddy, gets upset at this and tells him to leave Ruth alone.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
It was getting dark and he said we would go home, get some beer and go home. And then I panicked, you know, I thought there was no way I was going home with him. I told him I had to go to the bathroom.
Narrator
Ruth knows if she goes to another location with these guys, it's over for her.
Rachel Brown
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Ruth gets an idea. She tells her captors she's feeling sick. She warns the men that if she doesn't get to a bathroom quickly that she will throw up all over the car.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
I tried to gag and irritated the driver so they said, pull in here. And they pulled in by that kind of playground there on 21st street by the river.
Narrator
The stalker tells Ruth to go down by the river. He tells her he'll watch her as she goes to the bathroom. He forces her to take off her shoes and sweater so that she doesn't try running off. By now it's dark and cold and the ground is wet. The man walks Ruth, now barefoot, through the grass toward the bushes.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
He wasn't paying attention. Had a hold of my arm.
Narrator
Ruth reaches into her purse.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
I got the mace and shot him in the face. And he coughed and I ran.
Narrator
Ruth hides in the bushes and keeps quiet.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
I heard him calling one of them. I don't know which one. If I would come back, they would give me my sweater and my shoes.
Narrator
She could tell they were furious. Ruth stays hidden, not quite sure exactly where she is. After a while, the men give up and leave. She's free. Ruth spots a liquor store across the street and runs to it. She bursts through the door, still barefoot and shivering from the cold. Someone's after me, she tells the store owner. He asks if he should call the police. Ruth says yes and asks him to call Ed too. Meanwhile, at home, Ed had been panicking and in constant contact with Ruth's boss, her sister Jean, and the cops. He was at his breaking point. Ruth had now been gone for more than four hours when Eds phone rings. He immediately assumes the liquor store owner is her kidnapper and demands to speak with Ruth. She comes on the line and tells Ed she's okay, but to please hurry down there. Wichita police detectives bring Ruth down to the police station. This Kidnapping rocketed a somewhat lower priority stalking case right to the top of the pile. Now they had proof someone was directly targeting Ruth's life. Ed and Ruth's sister Jean arrive at the police station. They find Ruth still clutching her mace.
Detective Bernie Drawski
When Ed got there, he saw his wife was just a mess. You know, she was drenched, her hair was all over her forehead. Her clothes were wet. She was not crying, she was not hysterical. She had been telling the story as calmly as she could to the cops.
Narrator
She describes what she can remember about the men to the police. The man who grabbed her is in his 40s or 50s, with black hair that was graying around the temples. And he wore wire framed glasses. He's the same man who accosted her a few months ago. But this time she got a better look at him. She says he's around 5 foot 8 to 5 foot 10 and very skinny, around 145 pounds. He wore a flannel shirt and jeans. The driver was called Buddy. Ruth didn't get a good look at him, so she couldn't provide much of a physical description. The kidnappers got away with her payroll check, a savings bond and some stationery from her purse. She got away with the red bandana from the car. She shows it to the cops, who examine it. Detectives head down to the spot where Ruth fled from her kidnappers in search of clues. At the river, they find Ruth's sweater and shoes, but that's it. Police jump into action to try to find more leads, going so far as to run a check on every Chevy model that matched Ruth's description of the kidnapper's vehicle. The police thought the car was so beaten up and distinctive that surely somebody would have noticed it.
Detective Bernie Drawski
So they cruised that whole area for days looking for the car, talking to people who may have seen her during the abduction.
Narrator
But there are no witnesses. The trail goes cold. Ed and Ruth stay on high alert, fearful that Ruth could be taken again at any time. Detective Arlen Smith of the Wichita police recalls how things changed for the couple.
Detective Arlen Smith
She lived in fear that she would be kidnapped again. She tried to watch for people following her when she went to and from work. She and her husband changed their habits about where they ate and when they went out, when they came home and they'd come home and they checked the house carefully.
Narrator
The headaches she had been getting ever since she received the first poet phone call became an everyday occurrence. Now she begins to suffer from intense stomach cramps. And there was little Ed felt he could do to protect his wife. He Felt helpless and frustrated. But Ruth had been able to describe the man in detail. Ed was an artist. He liked to paint. So he put his skills to use and came up with a sketch of the guy with wire rimmed glasses and graying hair. The police took his sketch and sent it in a special bulletin to all officers on the force and even posted it around town. Lieutenant Drawotsky and his team remained vigilant. He sends two police detectives to surveil Ruth at work, following her at a distance on the street during her lunch breaks. Drawski and the Findlays were working together closely, keeping each other in the loop on developments and theories. Jarotzki and his wife even start socializing with the Findlays going to the same church. Juratsky, an old school kind of cop, usually kept his distance from the people involved in his investigations. But Ed and Ruth were so kind and generous that he and his wife fell into an easy friendship with them, even having dinner with them some evenings. But there was still one theory. Lt. Drawski wasn't telling the Finlays that her stalker could be btk. A new Poet letter detailed killing a fox. Was this a reference to BTK's murder of Nancy Jo Fox? Was BTK trying to tell them this was him? But BTK had never kidnapped anyone before. He always waited until his victims were safe at home and attacked them there. If this person going after Ruth really was btk, he was changing his pattern and carrying out his violence in public. Then, just a few weeks after Ruth's kidnapping, Lt. Drawski himself receives a letter from the poet. Though the Wichita PD and local newspapers and TV stations had received numerous letters from BTK over the last few years, this was the first time Drawski had received a letter like this addressed to him personally. Taunting him.
Detective Bernie Drawski
Bernie B. Bernie B. You can't catch me. That was the tone.
Narrator
The letter is long and rambling and accuses Drawacky of, quote, protecting a whore from death. Drawotski was known to have a bit of a temper and this gets under his skin. He's going to solve this thing. So he goes back to the beginning. In the first call Ruth had received, the man told her he found the newspaper clipping about her attack while demolishing buildings. If this was a construction worker who had become obsessed with Ruth, he might still be working in Fort Scott. Maybe the secret to cracking the case lay in Ruth's past. I wrote a little song to remind you. Choice hotels get you more of the experiences you value. The Cambria Hotel's got it all A rooftop bar.
Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
Have a ball.
Narrator
Cocktails up here feel just right, Ms. Cambria. Amazing. All right, bring a date, your team,
Detective Bernie Drawski
or even your mom.
Detective Arlen Smith
Book direct direct@ChoiceHotels.com See you on the roof.
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Narrator
Learn more@drinkag1.com Lt. Drawski sent the relatively new officer Mike McKenna to Fort Scott, only a few hours from Wichita. McKenna took the Finlays along to search for clues from Ruth's past that could lead them to her tormentor and perhaps btk himself. Their first stop is the house where Ruth was living in 1946. It's where she was attacked and branded on her inner thigh with a hot iron. Her attacker was never caught.
Detective Mike McKenna
We got there, we went to where the address was, where the house was supposed to be. The house had been torn down, demolished sometime in the 70s, so there was no house to look at.
Narrator
Detective McKenna and the other officers connect with the local police in Fort Scott.
Detective Mike McKenna
We asked the police department to look at the report on Ruth Findley, or Smock, as her name was at that time. And we asked for the file or the case jacket.
Narrator
They hope that a fresh look at the file might reveal something about the man who was targeting Ruth. But those hopes are quickly dashed.
Detective Mike McKenna
The police department in Fort Scott, Kansas, told us that they had destroyed the case files of any cases that had happened before 1953 or 54. So that was a dead end. Yeah.
Narrator
The only details that remained were those found in sensationalist media coverage in the Parson's Son and the Wichita Eagle. Under headlines like Sadist Mutilates High School Girl and Chloroform Fiend Brands. Fort Scott Girl with Flat Iron. The police cast a wide net looking for anyone who knew Ruth at the time, who might have known something about the attack.
Detective Mike McKenna
We looked for classmates that could tell us and we just kept coming up with zeros. Nobody remembered it.
Narrator
They ask around to different local construction companies to see if Ruth's description of the man who kidnapped her fits anyone working in demolition in Fort Scott.
Detective Bernie Drawski
People who may have employed this guy and couldn't really couldn't find anybody.
Narrator
Ed Ruth and the cops come back to Wichita empty handed. Another dead end. But Mike McKenna isn't ready to let up just yet. After a bit of digging in property records, he learns that Ruth's Fort Scott landlord at the time was actually living in a nursing home in Wichita. He goes to visit her on his own, without Ruth and Ed.
Detective Mike McKenna
I couldn't believe it. So I drove over there and I went in to see this woman. Her name was Flora Hale and she was 96 years old. And I spoke to Flora in her room and introduced myself. Very nice lady.
Narrator
McKenna tells her he wants to ask her about something that happened in one of her rooming houses in Fort Scott when a woman named Ruth Smock lived there.
Detective Mike McKenna
And I said, do you remember one afternoon and I repeated the story. That guy came into the apartment, rented her unconscious and branded her with an iron on her thighs. And this lady looked at me and she said, nothing like that ever happened at my apartments. And I said, you're sure? She said, yes, I'm quite sure. I would have known that if something like that would have happened.
Narrator
Mike McKenna records her saying this, then heads right to Drawski's office and plays it back to him.
Detective Mike McKenna
He listened to Flora. No, nothing like that ever happened in my apartment. When it was over, he said, she doesn't know what she's talking about. She's senile. I said, bernie, this woman has as much sense as you or me, maybe more. But she knew that nothing like that had ever happened. She was insistent on it. No, no, he said, you just wasted your time. I said, okay.
Narrator
So McKenna, a loyal officer, continues on with the investigation. But he starts to wonder what actually happened in Fort Scott. After Fort Scott, the letters keep coming.
Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
There once was a slut I met on the street who thought, to all men, she need not be sweet.
Narrator
And just like BTK's letters, these are misogynistic and perverse. Ed Hand delivers each one to the cops down at the station. Reporter Fred Mann again, they were hand printed.
Detective Bernie Drawski
Sometimes he would start off a letter with lined notebook paper and neatly printed hand printed letters. And then they would devolve into sort of childhood print. And he always misspelled the same word. The word know as in I know you. He would spell no.
Narrator
The writing style alternates between nearly incoherent ramblings and sophisticated vocabulary words like objurgate and damify.
Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
I'll disparage all whores invective words scatter, adducting ad hominem warning and my peace shatter.
Narrator
Ruth, Evertha's secretary, types out the letters and gives them to the cops. She would even add in definitions of the fancier words and her guesses at what some of the abbreviations could mean. She'd sometimes include a handwritten note to the officers.
Ruth Finlay (voice actor)
Hi, sleuths. I don't know if you want this or not. Since I put out the effort. You're getting it anyway.
Narrator
Young detective McKenna was a puzzler, a problem solver. He was determined to unearth any clues he could find in the letters.
Detective Mike McKenna
I would xerox him and take him home and read him at night, trying to find a clue in the letter that might fit together with some other letter that we have and figure out who this guy is.
Narrator
In June of 1979, as Ruth's letters kept coming, another woman in Wichita received a letter. The same letter arrived at Cake tv. Both were signed btk. The letter included a poem called. Oh, Anna, why didn't you appear? The letter goes alone again.
Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
I trod in past memory of mirrors and ponder why you Number eight was me not well, why didn't you appear?
Narrator
The recipient, Anna Williams, learns from this poem that she only just escaped being BTK's eighth victim. He broke into her home, then got impatient and left before she returned. The Witchita PD are now hard at work stretching their poetry analysis skills on two cases and coming up short. They start to wonder if they should look to the relatively new world of criminal profiling for some help if they really want to understand who this guy is and what he's capable of. Then one poem arrives in the Finley's mailbox that ups the ante.
Poet/BTK Killer (voice actor)
You know, in your fucked up mind, you are going to. To die. You don't know when, but you do know why.
Detective Mike McKenna
Correspondence from the assailant kept raising the bar, going from simply I want money to I'm going to kill you.
Narrator
The police dig in, spending more time and resources surveilling Ruth. And then in July, more than a year into this ordeal, the letters to Ruth seemed to slow down.
Detective Bernie Drawski
There would be periods of nothing happening. Everybody would think, maybe it's over. A month would go by, nothing would happen. And everybody was sort of okay again. Some of the cops said he's done playing his game. He's gone.
Narrator
Did it work? Has their presence scared him away?
Detective Bernie Drawski
If I knew the police were involved, I'd have got the hell out of there.
Narrator
Maybe Ruth's nightmare is finally over. But just as they thought they were out of the woods, the police get an alarming call. Ruth has been rushed to the hospital. She has been stabbed. Next time on the Poet.
Detective Mike McKenna
This guy comes up to her and stabs her. She's got three stab wounds in her back and her side.
Detective Bernie Drawski
She told him, I think I've been stabbed. And he said, just wait there, we'll get an ambulance to you.
Podcast Host (Crimelines)
And of course I said some nasty words and said he got her.
Narrator
He finally got her. Oh my God, he got her. Don't want to wait for the next episode. You don't have to unlock all episodes of the Poet early and ad free right now by subscribing to the binge. And it doesn't stop at the Poet. Subscribers get a binge drop of a brand new series on the first of every month. That's all episodes all at once, all ad free. Search for the binge on Apple Podcasts and hit subscribe not on apple. Head to getthebinge.com to subscribe directly. The Poet is a production of Sony Music Entertainment, New Metric Media and and Muse Entertainment. The show is hosted by me, Rachel Brown. The series is written and produced by Pippa Johnstone and Rachel Brown from New Metric Media. Our executive producer is Chris Kelly from Sony Music Entertainment. Our executive producers are Catherine St. Louis and Jonathan Hirsch. For Muse Entertainment. Our executive producer is Courtney Dobbins. Sound design and original music by Mark Angley. Nathan Howe is our story Editor and Associate producer consultant Gene Stone. Fact checking by Maya El Hawari and Alexis Green. Our lawyers are Daniel Henry, Garland Anthony and Austin Wong. Voice acting from Cassandra Sison, Morgan Murray and Antony McMahon. Special thanks to Andres, Lara, Patrick McConnell, Sammy Allison, Allison Haney, Emily Racik and the rest of the team at Sony Music Entertainment.
Podcast Host (Crimelines)
There are a lot of true crime podcasts out there and I have 30 seconds to convince you why you should check out Crimelines. Crimelines is one of those shows that just lays it all out there. The backstory, the legal context and details of cases you haven't heard before. If you hear about a true crime case and want to know what happened and why, you're my kind of listener. You can check out Crimelines wherever you get your podcasts. That's Crimelines. One word and get ready to dive deeper.
Sony Music Entertainment | Released July 8, 2026
This chilling, immersive episode follows the terror campaign against Ruth Finley in late-1970s Wichita, Kansas. A mysterious tormentor nicknamed “The Poet” escalates his obsession from menacing poems and threats to public abduction, leaving Ruth, her family, and the local police battling fear and frustration. Amid citywide panic over the infamous BTK killer, investigators scramble to discern if the threats against Ruth are connected—or if Wichita faces a new predator entirely. Through victim and police perspectives, the episode paints an intimate, suspenseful portrait of vulnerability, resilience, and the confusing overlaps of trauma, crime, and the nascent field of criminal profiling.
“You can get that much without your husband to know it. I can find that lieutenant name on your car. Don’t tell him neither.” – Poet/BTK Killer (01:48)
"I can tell if anybody has watched me. Don’t be a dumb bitch again and blow this.” – Poet/BTK Killer (02:28)
“It had lots of, like, big chains and just junk and had a board on top of it.” – Ruth Finlay (voice actor) (07:46)
“You see, I’m not touching anything in the purse, though. They can’t get any fingerprints out of me. He was really proud of that, his whole attitude.” – Detective Bernie Drawski recounting (09:46)
"I got the mace and shot him in the face. And he coughed and I ran." – Ruth Finlay (14:12)
“Bernie B. Bernie B. You can’t catch me. That was the tone.” – Detective Bernie Drawski (20:55)
“Nothing like that ever happened at my apartments.” – Flora Hale, landlord (26:18)
“There once was a slut I met on the street who thought, to all men, she need not be sweet.” – Poet/BTK Killer (27:40)
“I’ll disparage all whores, invective words scatter…” – Poet/BTK Killer (28:32)
"Hi, sleuths. I don’t know if you want this or not. Since I put out the effort. You’re getting it anyway." – Ruth Finlay (29:03)
“There would be periods of nothing happening. Everybody would think, maybe it’s over… Some of the cops said he’s done playing his game. He’s gone.” – Detective Bernie Drawski (31:39)
“This guy comes up to her and stabs her. She’s got three stab wounds in her back and her side.” – Detective Mike McKenna (32:30)
“He finally got her. Oh my god, he got her.” – Narrator (32:52)
| Timestamp | Event Description | |------------|---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 01:21 | Ruth receives second threatening poem from The Poet | | 03:10 | Ruth refuses kidnapper's ransom demand, intensifying his threats | | 06:25 | Ruth abducted after leaving her office | | 14:12 | Ruth escapes abductor using Mace | | 16:08 | Ruth found safe, police elevate investigation | | 18:28 | Ed’s police sketch distributed; routine and social lives disrupted | | 19:12 | New letter references fox killing, raising BTK connection | | 20:55 | Lt. Drawski receives taunting letter from The Poet | | 22:42-25:09| Police attempt but fail to find old Fort Scott case files | | 27:38–29:03| Ruth continues receiving misogynistic, threatening poetry; provides typed transcripts to cops| | 31:39 | Letter frequency drops; threat believed to be dormant | | 32:05 | Ruth is suddenly hospitalized for stabbing |
The episode leaves listeners desperate for resolution, with Ruth’s stabbing raising the stakes and casting new doubt on the investigation’s direction—was this BTK, The Poet, or someone else entirely?