Don't look behind the mirror!! The unknown Candyman case and famous horror story | Mystery & Makeup
Summary
TLDRIn this chilling episode, Bailey Seran explores the real-life Candyman, delving into the tragic murder of Ruthie May McCoy. Living in the notorious Abbott projects in Chicago, Ruthie's life was fraught with hardship and fear. On April 22, 1987, she was brutally murdered in her own home, her death eerily echoing the urban legend. Despite multiple 911 calls and police presence, the case remains unsolved, with the prime suspects acquitted due to lack of evidence and inconsistent witness testimonies. The story highlights systemic failures, the plight of marginalized communities, and the haunting parallels with the fictional Candyman lore.
Takeaways
- ๐ฅ The video is a combination of makeup and storytelling, focusing on a murder mystery involving Ruthie May McCoy.
- ๐ The story details the tragic murder of Ruthie May McCoy, a resident of the Abbott Homes in Chicago, and the subsequent failed attempts to bring her killers to justice.
- ๐ The conditions of the Abbott Homes are highlighted, including rampant crime, poor living conditions, and the fear and violence that were a part of daily life for residents.
- ๐ The Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) and the police are criticized for their lack of response and action, which contributed to the tragedy and the unsolved nature of the case.
- ๐ฃ๏ธ The main witness, Tim Brown, is central to the case but his credibility is questioned due to inconsistencies in his testimony and allegations of police coercion.
- ๐ฎโโ๏ธ The trial of the two main suspects, Edward Turner and John Hondras, is discussed, with both being acquitted due to lack of evidence and unreliable witness accounts.
- ๐ The impact of the murder on Ruthie May's family, particularly her daughter Verita, is mentioned, including a lawsuit against the CHA for negligence.
- ๐๏ธ The script raises questions about the integrity of the justice system and the treatment of vulnerable individuals in high-crime areas.
- ๐ต Ruthie May McCoy's personal struggles, including her mental health issues and her attempts to improve her life, are shared, humanizing the victim.
- ๐ณ๏ธโ๐ The video concludes with a reflection on the lack of closure for Ruthie May's family and the ongoing issues of crime and injustice in similar communities.
- ๐ The script also provides an update on the suspects' lives after the trial, noting their continued involvement with the criminal justice system.
Q & A
What was the main theme of Bailey Seran's video?
-The main theme of Bailey Seran's video was a combination of makeup and a murder mystery story, specifically focusing on the real-life case that inspired the 'Candyman' horror movie.
What personal update did Bailey Seran share at the beginning of the video?
-Bailey Seran shared that she had recently undergone a nose surgery to fix a broken nose from high school, which had affected her breathing, and she was still in the healing process.
How did the story of Ruthie May McCoy relate to the 'Candyman' horror movie?
-The story of Ruthie May McCoy related to the 'Candyman' horror movie because her tragic murder in the Chicago projects had elements similar to the plot of the movie, such as the killer being summoned through a bathroom mirror.
What was the significance of the bathroom medicine cabinet in the murder of Ruthie May McCoy?
-The bathroom medicine cabinet was significant because it was used as an access point for the intruder to enter Ruthie May McCoy's apartment, similar to the plot device in the 'Candyman' movie.
What were the living conditions like in the Abbott Homes where Ruthie May McCoy lived?
-The living conditions in the Abbott Homes were extremely poor, with high crime rates, gang control, broken elevators, and inadequate maintenance, contributing to a hostile and unsafe environment for residents.
What was the role of the 'pay masters' gang in the Abbott Homes?
-The 'pay masters' gang controlled the Abbott Homes, engaging in activities like drug dealing and using intimidation tactics, such as setting fire to the doors of tenants who needed a reminder of their authority.
How did the Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) respond to the issues in the Abbott Homes?
-The Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) was slow to respond to maintenance requests and complaints, leading to worsening living conditions and a lack of trust from the residents.
What was the outcome of the murder case involving Ruthie May McCoy?
-The murder case involving Ruthie May McCoy was not solved, as the two main suspects were acquitted due to insufficient evidence and the unreliability of the key witness, Tim Brown.
What legal action was taken by Ruthie May McCoy's daughter, Verita, after her mother's death?
-Verita, Ruthie May McCoy's daughter, sued the Chicago Housing Authority and its security company for negligence in the wrongful death of her mother, seeking $1.5 million in damages.
What were the later life outcomes for the two main suspects, John Hondras and Edward Turner, after their acquittal?
-Both John Hondras and Edward Turner faced additional felony charges and legal issues after their acquittal. John Hondras settled in Kansas and faced charges related to robbery and drug possession, while Edward Turner served time in prison for drug manufacturing and faced other charges including burglary and disorderly conduct.
Outlines
๐ฅ Introduction to Murder Mystery Monday
Bailey Seran greets viewers on 'Murder Mystery and Makeup Monday', discussing her recent rhinoplasty due to a long-standing broken nose. She mentions her social media presence and teases the makeup look she plans to create using a new palette inspired by the movie 'Candyman'. Bailey hints at the film's plot and its connection to a real-life horror story from Chicago's housing projects.
๐๏ธ The Dark History of Chicago's Housing Projects
The script delves into the history of Chicago's public housing projects, focusing on the Abbott Homes, where Ruthie May McCoy lived. It details the neighborhood's notorious reputation, rampant crime, and living conditions that led to a landmark federal lawsuit against the Chicago Housing Authority for racial segregation and discrimination. Ruthie's personal struggles with her health and living situation in the projects are highlighted.
๐ต Ruthie May McCoy's Tragic Life
This paragraph paints a picture of Ruthie May McCoy's life, from her difficult living conditions in the Abbott projects to her health issues and mental health struggles. It discusses her daughter Vanita and the challenges they faced living in the projects, including the crime and violence that were a part of daily life.
๐ The Night of the Tragedy
The narrative recounts the events of the night Ruthie May McCoy was murdered. It describes her 911 call, the police's delayed response, and the subsequent discovery of her body. The paragraph also highlights the police's failure to act promptly and the missed opportunities to save Ruthie's life.
๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ Investigation and Aftermath
The script discusses the investigation into Ruthie May McCoy's murder, including the autopsy results and the police's search for leads. It details the missing items from Ruthie's apartment and the discovery of two men carrying a rocking chair and a TV, which were among the stolen items.
๐ The Trial and Testimonies
This section focuses on the trial of the two men accused of Ruthie May McCoy's murder. It outlines the testimonies of key witnesses, including Tim Brown's changing story and the inconsistencies in his account. The lack of physical evidence and the reliance on witness statements are highlighted.
๐ก The Unraveling of Truth and Justice
The script describes the complexities of the trial, the defense's strategy, and the testimonies that pointed fingers at different suspects. It reveals the acquittal of both defendants and the judge's criticism of the police investigation, emphasizing the incompetence that led to the failure to secure justice for Ruthie McCoy.
๐๏ธ The Ongoing Impact and Unresolved Case
The final paragraph discusses the unresolved nature of Ruthie May McCoy's murder and the impact it had on her daughter, the community, and the legal system. It mentions the settlement of the lawsuit filed by Vanita and provides updates on the lives of the acquitted defendants, reflecting on the challenges of escaping the cycle of crime and the ongoing issues with gang violence in Chicago.
Mindmap
Keywords
๐กMurder Mystery
๐กCandyman
๐กRuthie May McCoy
๐กAbbott Housing Projects
๐กHorror
๐กBathroom Mirror
๐กMedicine Cabinet
๐กMakeup Monday
๐กUrban Legends
๐กIncompetence
๐กNegligence
Highlights
Bailey Seran discusses her recent nose surgery and its impact on her ability to apply makeup.
The Candy Man movie from 1992 is explored, drawing parallels to a real-life case in Chicago.
Ruthie May McCoy's tragic murder in 1987 is detailed, including her background and the circumstances leading up to her death.
The living conditions in Chicago's Abbott projects, including rampant crime and poor housing, are described.
Ruthie May's personal struggles with mental illness and her efforts to improve her life are highlighted.
The mysterious and gruesome details of Ruthie May's murder are recounted, including the police's delayed response.
The trial of Edward Turner and John Hondras for Ruthie May's murder and the inconsistencies in witness testimonies are discussed.
Tim Brown's changing testimonies and allegations of police harassment are examined.
The lack of physical evidence and the reliance on witness accounts in the trial are noted.
The acquittal of both Edward Turner and John Hondras and the impact on Ruthie May's family are covered.
The aftermath of the trial, including the settlement of the lawsuit by Ruthie May's daughter and the ongoing issues in the Chicago Housing Authority, are summarized.
The current status of both Edward Turner and John Hondras, and their subsequent legal troubles, are mentioned.
The broader implications of the case on the Chicago Police Department's gang database and the city's ongoing gang issues are explored.
Bailey reflects on the tragic story of Ruthie May McCoy and the systemic failures that contributed to her death.
The story concludes with a call for viewers to share their thoughts and a reminder to stay safe.
Transcripts
hi friends how are you today I hope you
are having a wonderful day so far my
name is Bailey seran and today is Monday
so you know what that means it's murder
mystery and makeup
Monday welcome Hi how are you I hope
you're having a good day look if you
follow me on
Instagram and like I think Tik Tok too I
post it on there then you would know
about like two weeks ago or 3 weeks I
think it is now I got my nose fit fixed
you see going off track here really
quick my nose has been broken since high
school I haven't been able to breathe
through my nose since high school so
about 3 weeks ago I got it fixed I know
insane right they like rip me open fix
my nose it's still healing I'm swollen
and all that jazz and I'm telling you
this because I don't know if I'm going
to put face makeup on because it's so
sensitive right here so I think I'm
going to do like eyes is that cool let
me know if not doesn't matter cuz I'm
going do it anyways thank you so much um
but for the most part like I'm look I'm
not that bad looking for getting beat up
I can't wait to breathe it's going to be
incredible I hear breathing yeah you're
so lucky if you can breathe whatever
products I'm going to be using I'll list
them like down below but really just go
into this with like no judgment because
I'm just I want to play I just want to
like try this palette and I don't know
if I'm going to like actually like
create a full look we'll see go on me
with this journey cuz today we're
talking about the candy man yeah you
know the Candy Man sheesh let's get into
it horror horror movies you know horror
not horror horror okay great movies
that's where today's episode is is going
to take us and like you know if you pay
attention you know how the drill the
drill of horror movies go it's like
always a creepy building there's like a
killer lurking around there's always a
helpless woman she's like oh my God no
uh and then there's always some kind of
like terrifying plot twist when you
think about it it's the formula that
made the movie The Candy Man an instant
cult favorite when it came out in 1992
it was about like a a creepy serial
killer who was like haunting the Chicago
tenement area and um he was being
summoned via the bathroom mirror which
is funny when you think about it it's
not funny it's just like how come
growing up like well with the Candy Man
specifically it was like if you go on to
the bathroom and you said his name five
times like candyman candyman like he
would come through the bathroom mirror
like uh what's her name what's her name
Bloody Mary remember her anyways what
I'm getting at is that you know we all
did that but what was even more
horrifying is that the Candyman it turns
out like mimics a true case that
happened in the Chicago projects back in
April of 1987
so April um 22nd 1987 so on that day
that's when Ruthie May McCoy had dialed
911 to report that someone was coming
through literally through her bathroom
medicine
cabinet what yeah so police would often
get phone calls from Ruthie May's
neighborhood which was on the west side
back then like they were always getting
phone calls the crack epidemic had you
know crime rates were just going through
the roof and there were tons of
different gangs out there who were
controlling the drug trade from
Chicago's worst public housing projects
most of the households there were headed
by single black mothers but Ruthie she
was 52 years old and she lived alone and
she lived like on like the 11th floor
apartment in a complex called Abbott
Holmes Abbott was actually a cluster of
like seven
highrises in sprawling mass of housing
projects that locals called The Village
or they would just call it the vill
there was like nothing cozy about this
area and there were thousands of people
who lived there and sadly violence was
like an everyday occurrence here so
compared to the rest of Chicago in this
area like your chances of being mugged
assaulted robbed raped murdered or
anything it like more than doubled once
you set foot in this area called The
Village
and in fact the number of violent crimes
alone hit
4,228 in uh the CH projects that year
like holy right so it was said that
like Ruthie may she never ventured
outside without something for protection
like usually a
stick not that really being inside was
any safer really so Abbott's 15 story
Towers were among the first that the
Chicago Housing Authority
chha had built when it began developing
like huge public housing projects back
in the 1940s and the' 50s originally cha
proposed housing impoverished families
in like little pocket developments
scattered throughout safer middle class
white uh neighborhoods but you know the
big guys in charge they didn't like that
idea of course they didn't so they
squashed that real quick and they're
like hey let's like Clump cheap ginor
eyes sour in like the bleakest parts of
town and give minority
applicants uh no other option so this
Choice like would later lead to a
landmark Federal lawsuit that held the
cha accountable for racial segregation
and discrimination we should do a dark
history on
that but that's on the point so but
Ruthie may she had moved to Abbott after
getting flooded out of her basement
apartment in a different project area so
she moved into this abot area and it was
said she hated it from the GetGo you
know it was rough they were like gang
bangers there and they would like roam
the Halls at all hours uh there would be
loud music playing there'd be partying
in vacant apartments and a lot of the um
vet Apartments were turned into like
drug dens I guess break-ins were very
common and CJ was really slow to replace
locks so it's like even when you asked
for help you couldn't even you couldn't
get help I know I look abs absolutely
crazy right
now okay but I think this might be going
somewhere we're going to find out so
part of this like original Village
concept meant that there were no through
streets around Abbott I guess this was
supposed to create a nice space for kids
to like run around and parents to
socialize but at the end of the day um
like that pedestrian Plaza only made it
harder for police to reach the towers
and like get to you if you need help and
it also made it easier for people to
jump you Abbott was controlled by a gang
called the pay masters and any tenant
that the pay masters thought needed like
a reminder of who was in charge would
get their front door doused with
gasoline and then set on
fire yeah the charred doors made people
think twice before um reporting like any
crime they happened to witness or like
suspect and people were just like you
know scared of telling ation so they
wouldn't report anything so on Ruthie
May floor there were only four of the 10
apartments that were legally occupied
the rest were boarded up or they were
taken over by the pay
masters okay sorry I'm giving myself
literally a black eye so it wasn't just
like you know the drugs and gangs that
made life in the projects pretty hellish
the cha had stacks of complaints from
residents I mean literally Stacks like
the sewage would back up um in broken
toilets the boiler systems didn't work
for for weeks in the dead of winter so
like freezing your ass off people got
exposed to mold into lead from the paint
that peeled off the walls chunks of
plaster sometimes would just like fall
from the ceilings trash would pile up in
building basements because the shoots on
each floor were like too narrow to
handle the debris of so many people
crammed into a single building okay
I'm not liking this eye so I'm going to
take it off thank you so one of the most
like upsetting problems for residents
was I guess the elevators I mean they
were always out of service and Cha
logged over, 1500 elevator repairs one
year in just a single building let's
rebuild shall we great so at Abbot like
taking the stairs was well that was like
one your only option two it was very
dangerous because I guess the stairwells
were really dark
um and they were
enclosed and with Ruthie may she had
high blood pressure and she also had
heart problems and she lived on the 11th
floor so like going up and down 11
flights of stairs was not something she
could easily handle I guess she had like
repeatedly begged cha to move her to a
lower floor but the answer was always no
even though Abbott had a 30% vacancy
rate so it's like what the right
right Ruthie's subsidized rent was $46 a
month and I mean she couldn't find like
a decent place on the private market for
that price there's no way so she was
just feeling really stuck and it wasn't
just her physical health that Ruthie
struggled with she also had a mild form
of schizophrenia she wasn't psychotic or
hallucinating but people who knew her
said that she could sometimes she would
get paranoid and agitated especially if
she wasn't taking her
medications and you know the teenagers
in the area they weren't very nice
especially like the Rowdy ones they were
known to harass her and then they would
just call her crazy old lady according
to Steve bogira in the Chicago Reader he
was like the only reporter to cover the
story when it happened I guess the local
police they weren't unfamiliar with
Ruthie they had come over like on
occasion when she would get into fights
with like the young kids who were
to her so Ruthie like
wasn't afraid to stand out for herself
is really what I'm getting at so it's
Wednesday night it's like 8:45 p.m.
Ruthie you know she's home alone so she
gets startled because she hears some
noises coming from her bathroom she
thinks someone's like breaking in so she
dials 911 she states her address and
then she immediately asks for Chicago
Police so Ruthie ends up telling the
dispatcher that the people next door had
pulled their cabinets out so the
operator is on the phone like I don't
get I I'm not understanding like what
you're saying I don't get it Ruthie
explains that she lives in the projects
and they were trying or someone was
trying to break into her apartment
through the bathroom the dispatcher asks
for her address and like Ruthie ends up
repeating it and this time she makes a
point to say that the elevator is
working so take the elevator because you
know normally it's not so she provides
her name when asked and the dispatcher
promises to send a police officer like
right away I don't even want to do my
makeup so I'm just don't know what to do
I don't understand these
Shadows okay I'm taking this
off so then at 8:47 the dispatcher
assigns a patrol car to go out to
Ruthie's address it isn't given the high
priority it would have gotten if the
call had been correctly logged as like a
Breakin in
progress so they ended up like taking
their time so at 9:02 p.m. another woman
calls 911 and reports hearing gunshots
from Ruth's Apartment 2 minutes later
there's another neighbor who calls 911
and also reports like the same thing at
9:10 25 minutes after Ruthie May McCoy
called for help four officers arrive at
her apartment so they're at her door and
they're shouting like police and like
they're pounding on her door but no
one's answering so then they the police
they radio dispatch and they asked the
operator to call Ruthie May back because
they quote think somebody might be
inside holding somebody end quote so
dispatch dials ru's number and the four
cops they listen like they can hear the
phone inside just ring and ring and ring
but nobody picks up by this point two
more officers had rolled up and they
head over to the management office the
management office of like the the
building and this office is like a block
away and they try and get a key for the
apartment one
109 so they get the key they go back and
I guess the key doesn't fit the lock got
to be frustrating so officers they end
up knocking on nearby doors like the
neighbors and whatnot but that doesn't
lead anywhere the neighbors down the
hall they say they didn't see or like
hear anything they have no idea what's
going on so then someone else tells the
officers that there is an elderly woman
who lives
in19 and that you know she always
answers her door so it's kind of weird
that she wasn't one of the officers ERS
relays this back to dispatch and adds
quote I don't know if maybe she answered
to the wrong person or what so then the
police on the scene they contact the
building janitor to see if like maybe
they have a key but no so of course they
don't so then at 9:48 p.m. the
police they leave they're like all right
guess we're going like I don't know
shouldn't they bust down the door or
something you would think no
I don't know I don't know how that works
but like you would think so the next
evening a neighbor named Deborah who
Ruthie was friendly with she calls
police to say that she's worried about
Ruthie I think I'm giving up on my
makeup you guys this might be the first
non murder mystery
makeup I just want to crawl in a hole
but I'm going to keep telling you my
story okay so she's worried about Ruthie
cuz normally every day Ruthie would like
stop by every morning on her way out and
then again when she got home in the
afternoon every day but on April 23rd I
guess Ruthie hadn't stopped by at all
and like this was concerning enough that
she called police okay so the police
show up at ruthies and this time like
half a dozen officers come by and
they're at Ruth's house with four or
five cha security guards so they knock
on Ruth's door and they're calling her
number her phone number ring ring ring
no response soort reps show that most of
the police officers agreed at this point
that they should break down Ruthie's
store but the douchebags at chha
security well the security guards they
were like no they argued against it they
don't want like the liability if the
tenant Sues and technically since the
police they didn't have a warrant and
they weren't in an active pursuit of
like a criminal which gives like the
justification for break in police kind
of were like
okay all right and then they
left again they left again I just feel
like they should have broke down the
door at this point you would think I
don't know you would think anyways the
next day you know that same neighbor
Deborah she's still concerned so she
notifies the project office that you
know she's really worried about Ruthie
May's welfare and someone needs to check
on her so around 1:00 p.m. a project
official brings a carpenter around to
drill through Ruthie's lock so they're
getting in okay so they are able to get
in they open up the door and inside they
see Ruthie May sprawled dead on her
bedroom floor in a pool of blood so
there was an autopsy done and it showed
that she had been shot four times one
bullet had passed through her left
shoulder another through her left thigh
and there was a third bullet that had
pierced her liver on its way through her
AB her abdom abdomen side note I hate
that word abdomen I don't know why it's
so hard for me to say abdomen
abdomen there was an a fourth shot that
went through her right arm and into her
chest where it like severed a major vein
to the L her lung and like I guess that
was the Fatal shot so the official cause
of death was internal bleeding but like
she was shot to death you know the
medical examiner concluded that Ruthie
May probably
sadly unfortunately she didn't die like
immediately poor thing but like she
wouldn't have stayed alive for long
after she was shot and it was unlikely
that she she would have made it even if
she had gotten you know Swift medical
attention 41 hours after she called 911
after more than a dozen officers and
half as many cha employees stood outside
her door and then walked away Ruthie
May's body was already beginning to
decompose by the time they reached her
so who was Ruthie may let me tell you so
Ruthie May McCoy she had been born in
Arkansas but she ended up moving to
Chicago as a child she was one of nine
in her family and she dropped out of
high school in 10th Grade and started
showing signs of mental illness in her
20s I guess she was like talking to
herself she'd be cursing at strangers
she was having like Angry
outbursts and yeah it was just sad it
was going untreated as well when Ruthie
was 27 she ended up having a daughter
named verita but I guess like the father
didn't stick around because of Ruth's
illness you know so verita was mostly
raised by her family her relatives
sometimes Ruthie would work a month or
so as a housekeeper or she would work
like as a laundromat attendant but that
never lasted I guess they wouldn't last
long and most of her adult life she
would be on Public Assistance which she
would receive freaking measly $154 a
month like thanks what's that going to
do so she and her daughter Vanita they
managed to like maintain a good
relationship despite you know everything
and then eventually I guess verita you
know she grows up she gets older verita
uh her boyfriend and their two children
they end up sharing Ruth's two-bedroom
apartment at Abbot but I guess the
friction between Ruthie and Vera's
boyfriend it was just too much and they
ended up moving out friends and
neighbors they would say that like after
that Ruthie just kind of was going
downhill she was spiraling really she
seemed really depressed or upset all of
the time her neighbors noticed that she
was like losing a lot of weight she'd be
out on the street or in the hallways
like shaking her stick and just cussing
at people and it was clear that she
wasn't taking care of herself I guess
there was one neighbor who started to
notice her her
behavior was a little bizarre a little
odd like one neighbor had spotted her
outside making snow angels it was like
below freezing outside okay and she
spotted Ruthie outside making snow
angels you know and it was like uh uh oh
and then on hot summer days they would
see um Ruthie outside bundled up in like
layers of heavy winter clothes and it
was kind of clear that like her mental
health was going down Hill it was
getting worse and worse and Ruthie was
becoming just more and more vulnerable
this is a side note this is why I always
do makeup because I never I'm so like
antsy touchy I don't know how to sit
still so
like okay anyways so I guess like Ruthie
was just paranoid about locks she would
always like jiggle door she would go up
to all of her neighbors doors and just
jiggle them just jiggle random door
knobs she would like go up to cars and
um you know trying to open them up to
see if they're locked or not and it
would like set off the the car
alarms and um if like a door was
unlocked she would go find the person
and then lecture them that they need to
lock their doors which fair but like it
was a lot she was just really paranoid
is what I'm getting at and she was like
living in constant fear of being like
mugged or burglar burglarized
burglarized so verita remember Ruth
daughter she ended up telling journalist
Steve borera that her mother had
complained to Cha in like 1986 that
someone had kicked through her medicine
cabinet via the one next door and
burglarized her which might sound
confusing but I'll explain in August of
1986 Ruthie ended up in a state psych
ward and her medication she got on
medications they were
adjusted and they kept her for about a
month and then she was discharged and
she was referred to like an outpatient
daycare at the Mount Sinai Psychiatric
Center which offered a free shuttle van
like to and from the projects so it's
like this is like really good for her
because Ruthie started going to the
center like three times a week and it
was making a huge difference in her life
she's on the proper medications she's
starting to trust that there's no one
out there who wants to get her Ruthie
became just like now the community or
the the center's like mother h social
workers told the Chicago Reader that um
she liked working on arts and crafts and
would participate in group therapy she
would give advice to like the local
younger girls she was even studying to
earn her GED and Ruthie had talked about
like someday finding a job in the health
field like maybe even becoming a nurse
herself so when she first went to sign
up for to take GED classes I guess her
teacher was like a little confused as to
why Ruthie was there she was like why
would you sign up three times a week for
these classes like why would you start
your academic career after 50 like being
judgmental like is this woman serious
but the answer was yes like Ruthie
surprised everyone with how fast she
picked up everything she took workbooks
home and she religiously completed like
every assignment she was on track to
earn her degree before Thanksgiving but
sadly she was murdered that spring it
was so sad so there was a social work
who was working with Ruthie you know how
confusing the whole government system
can
be it's confusing as hell they make it
super difficult but there's a social
worker who's like helping Ruthie collect
um supplemental Social Security SSI is
for people with like physical or mental
handicaps and the additional assistance
would help out like it would more than
double ruthy's income to
$340 a month Ruth cashed her first check
just 2 months before she was killed so
with this extra money which I'm sure we
can all agree is is not a lot but with
this extra money like Ruthie was able to
buy some new clothes like a plain winter
coat nothing fancy she also got a few
like cheap little odds and ends for her
apartment and I guess like her neighbors
had noticed and she even seemed more
confident and upbeat you know nice she
just seemed she seemed better like she
was doing a lot lot better so verita her
daughter remember so verita told Steve
Oria at the time her mother was keeping
like any of the extra money an extra
cash at home and she was like stacking
it hoping to add a little bit more each
month because you know she was talking
ruie was talking about putting the
projects behind her and like hopefully
moving to a better place okay so back to
the crime scene the only things that
were missing at Ruthie's house was her
cane backed rocking chair
her 19in color TV and her phone well and
her medicine cabinet a detective went
out there and interviewed the people
next door in apartment 1108 now next
door these were actually squatters
living there so he goes in he checks the
medicine cabinet in their bathroom and
it was like super secure there was no
evidence that was taken from this place
I don't know he didn't know what he was
looking for well I mean the detective
said like he knew he wasn't going to
find anything because
they knew the people next door that they
knew like police were going to
investigate sooner or later and they had
a two-day Head Start to to get rid of
anything incriminating like plenty of
time to clean up a crime scene if there
was one here's how the bathroom
situation worked cuz it's kind of it was
confusing at first but so at the end of
each Corridor in the Abbot Towers the
two End Apartments had bathrooms that
like Bud it up to each other so if you
unscrewed a handful of screws and you
took down your medicine cabinet you
could see the back of your neighbor's
cabinet through the hole since I have
nothing to do I'm going to clean my
brushes so you could see your neighbor's
cabinet through the hole there was like
I guess this Narrow 2 and 1/2t long
crawl space in between it was supposedly
designed this way so like plumbers could
you know access the pipes more easily if
they needed to be repaired it definitely
made it easier for unfortunately home
invasions cuz they could like get into
this crawl space and like get out when
pressed by that reporter Steve Borgir a
cha official admitted that they had
reports of quote fewer than 10 and
probably around seven medicine cabinet
break-ins over a span of 18 months could
you imagine though like you're just like
in your room minding your own business
and someone is crawling through your
medicine cabinet M there is no cash that
was found in ruthy's apartment except
for like some spare change that I guess
was scattered on the floor beside her
body Ruthie was found with one shoe off
and the other on and her right hand was
like laying across her bloody chest poor
Ruthie she was like getting her life
together finally getting a chance was
taken from her you know Ruthie wasn't
like a frail woman she was 5' 11 and she
was around 250 lbs and everyone knew
like she wasn't afraid of Confrontation
but there wasn't like when they observed
her body and whatnot there wasn't any
mention of defensive wounds and the
autopsy found that there were no signs
of sexual assault so police are
canvasing the Abbot area right for
possible Witnesses and they learned that
there were several people who had
spotted two guys who were like carrying
around a rocking chair and a TV around
to different apartments and even like a
different building and they saw this
like right after the murder and even in
the early hours the next morning she
like okay tell us more there was a
scrawny guy
sorry to call him scrawny but he was uh
he was on probation for drug charges and
he stepped forward and said that he had
been in apartment
118 which was like the apartment right
next door to ruthies the night of the
murder his name was Tim Brown and he
said that he knew the woman who had like
moved out of the apartment and I guess
like she had given him the key so that's
why he was there he said that like him
and his friends would sometimes crash
there I don't know but that's why was
there so Tim Brown is telling this to
the police and they're like hey can you
come downtown and like like write down
your account and sign it so then several
hours go by and Tim Brown he ends up
telling a grand jury that the statement
that he was giving was true and accurate
and that no one had threatened him or
promised him anything for his
cooperation period I guess the statement
was like six pages long but here's like
the summary of what Tim Brown swore
happened that night so Tim Brown said
that him and his friend Corey had spent
the afternoon of the 22nd hanging out in
1108 and they were like lifting weights
there were three friends with him John
hondes Edward Turner and Ronald Coleman
but Ronald goes by Bo so I'm just going
to call him Bo okay John Edward and Bo
so I guess they came by at around 8:00
p.m. and everyone was there and they
were like hanging out and listening to
music around 11:30 p.m. John and Bo went
to the bathroom Bo I guess was like
telling John like Hey look it's possible
to break into like the neighbor's
apartment through the medicine cabinet
like let me show you how to do it so
then Bo and Corey they left I guess they
left shortly after this and then John
and Edward they ended up heading back to
the bathroom so John who just now
realized how to break through to the
neighbors through the medicine cabinet
he does so once everyone leaves he pulls
out the medicine cabinet and then the
two the two of them John and Edward they
were able to see straight into Ruthie
May's bathroom now they could see
through her bathroom because her
medicine cabinet was already missing so
it was just like an open hole so John
made the assumption that the apartment
was probably empty but Tim told him that
he heard that there was actually an an
old lady who lived there her name was
Miss May so he didn't think he was empty
but John believed like no one was home
and he he climbed through that hole
space and climbed onto the sink and like
crawled through the hole into the
bathroom of 1109 and at that point Tim
said that he heard a woman's voice call
out who's there so then he watched John
run out of the bathroom and like deeper
into her apartment he runs more in to
wherever she's at then he heard a knock
on his front door and it was John I
guess he wanted to borrow Tim's jacket
so I know I was like what I don't know
but he did okay so John tossed the
jacket over his head and then went back
inside Ruth's apartment so Tim then goes
to the bathroom and saw now Edward go
through the bathroom hole so then Edward
I guess had yelled get down which was
Then followed by the sound of four
gunshots some five or 10 minutes later
Tim saw John and Edward carrying a
rocking chair and TV through his front
door so 2 or 3 hours later which would
now be like 2 in the morning this is
again Tim his account right John and
Edward returned to retrieve the um shell
casings from Ruthie's apartment they
entered through the front door and then
when they came out a few minutes later
John said that he scooped up the three
shells so because of this account police
arrested Edward Turner the day after
interviewing Tim Brown when they
arrested him it was Edward's 19th
birthday Edward Turner he had been
raised in the projects and even lived in
Ruth's building for a while Edward he
didn't have any convictions as an adult
but he was free on bond for unlawful use
of a weapon two weeks later police had
found like John hiding they couldn't
find him they couldn't locate him but
they found him hiding under a bed in one
of like the Abbott Towers he was 21 and
he had three felonies on his record one
was robbery and then two Grand Theft
Auto so both of these guys were charged
with murder home invasion armed robbery
armed violence and residential burglary
there was a bond set it was like $10
million for John and there was no bond
set for Edward now the prosecutors
believed he was the gunman and I guess
they had heard that he was boasting
about it so they were actually seeking
the death penalty so unfortunately then
like there was absolutely no physical
evidence it was completely non-existent
there were no fingerprints that were
lifted I guess investigators they found
like a damp sheet and a blouse that was
in a plastic bag which was put
underneath Ruth's mattress and I guess
investigators had assumed that this was
used to like wipe down the apartment so
at this time I guess like DNA evidence
was literally just taking off as a
forensic tool but it wasn't like applied
here okay because in like 1986 was the
first year that DNA led to a conviction
in a homicide case but there was no
mention at the trial of this trial that
there was like any DNA samples being
taken from like the sheet the blouse the
bag nothing there was no gun that was
ever found and there was only one bullet
and one cartridge that was collected so
remember when police were like standing
outside Ruthie May's lock door and they
asked the dispatcher to try and like
call her and they heard her phone
ringing and ringing and ringing and they
could hear it inside but then when they
got in there they noticed that the phone
was gone well the detective admitted to
the Chicago Reader afterwards that it
was possible that the killer or killers
were like still hiding out somewhere on
the 11th floor while police were on
Ruth's doorstep or it was possible they
were probably even inside her place just
like being really quiet
so now what well it took 3 years before
like the case would be brought to trial
so by this point there was a second
Court case involving Ruthie May's murder
was also underway her daughter verita
was suing the Chicago Housing Authority
and its security company for negligence
in the wrongful death of her
mother good for her right and she was
demanding like 1.5 million damages as
she should so the murder trial actually
started on March 27th of
1990 and inside the courtroom they had
like the rocking chair and the
television set was on display and it was
like right next to the prosecution table
so Edward Turner had opted for a jury
Tri
but John hondras he didn't the judge
would decide his case period so the case
against the two defendants really
depended on the testimony of the the
prosecution's star witness that guy Tim
Brown now something was kind of off
though because his signed statement the
timeline it didn't align with the time
of the 911 calls or the police arriving
at Ruth's
door but you know that was was really
all they had and they were just like
counting on this Tim Brown guy but
people like brought up that even Tim
Brown
himself he like had some red flags you
know he had some or yellow flags like he
was a convicted drug dealer and he was
currently in prison for possession of a
controlled substance with intent to
deliver he had been on probation for a
similar offense when police first
interviewed him about the murder that
took place and he had spent some time in
County Jail uh housed in the same unit
as Edward Turner so people were like
well like what's in this for him what's
in this for him well it it didn't matter
so he he's brought in right now under
oath on the witness stand Tim Brown his
freaking story changed oh yeah his story
changed so he said yes I saw John and Bo
go into the bathroom together but this
time Tim said that those two never came
back out and that while they were gone
he had heard three or four shots coming
from next door Tim Tim Brown said he
checked his bathroom saw a hole in the
wall and figured John and Bo had gone
through to the next door apartment Tim
said that he and everyone else in his
apartment 1108 they ran downstairs to
the lobby when they heard the gunfire
then he was asked well where was Edward
when you know the you heard the gunshots
and Tim said that Edward was sitting on
a couch in the living
room what so the prosecutors were like
were stunned they're like did Tim Brown
not remember signing a six-page
statement like he gave it to the police
you know what is going like why is this
story changing so then they ask him they
asked Tim on the stand like don't you
remember signing that statement so like
are you lying now and like Tim was like
yeah I remember signing it but the only
reason he signed it
was because a detective had sexually
harassed him or like got aggressive with
him Tim was claiming that the detective
who was questioning him grabbed his
balls and squeezed them while he was
handcuffed to like U he was handcuffed
to like the wall so Tim Brown testified
that the only reason he said JN and
Edward were the killers was because
police like told him that they were the
killers and that's what they wanted to
hear and he was being harassed and
that's why he said it but the truth Tim
Brown like now swore was that John and
Bo they did it so Tim was now saying
that the truth was under oath that John
and Bo were the ones who did it and he
insisted he had told cops this like back
in 1987 when they first interviewed him
while on the stand Tim denied knowing
Ruthie McCoy and he denied like even
knowing that anyone lived next door and
he also said that he had no idea that
you could create from apartment to
apartment in the building using the
medicine cabinet and he didn't know this
until the murder now the judge during
this trial was taking notes and at some
point during Tim Brown's testimony the
judge had scribbled a few words like on
his paper was like turned in and he
wrote like this is a total liar so I
like what do you even believe like
what's the truth here there were various
women that John and Edward allegedly
asked to like stash the rocking chair
and TV and they were like brought in to
testify there was one who finally agreed
to take this stuff and it was like 3:30
in the morning and this was John's
girlfriend at the time the theola and
she testified that neither John nor
Edward would say like where they got the
things but um when they showed up they
had it and they plugged in the TV and it
didn't work then Sonia Moore she went by
the name sweetie she also invited Edward
into her home just hours after the
murder took place Edward was said to be
he had like a crush on sweetie and she
showed up in the courtroom and it was
said that they like were smiling at each
other and stuff but Sonia was like
entertaining her sister and her sister's
boyfriend in her apartment which was
like five floors below ruthy's when
Edward knocked on her door around like
10:30 that night so she invited him in
and everyone's like hanging out in the
living room and like during the
conversation this is according to
Sonia's um testimony she said that
Edward announced that he had shot
someone like he said it out loud to
everyone who was there so she was like
asking for details like what you shot
someone like who and Edward was like
kind of bragging that he had shot a lady
who had a daughter who was around
Sonia's age so I guess she just was not
impressed or whatever but I guess some
time goes by and then he like takes it
back he was like oh I was just kidding I
wasn't serious I didn't really shoot
anyone kind of weird thing to say why
would you say that but okay so then
after a few hours go by Edward ends up
leaving and he then returns later after
Sonia had gone to bed now she had
testified that she heard him pounding on
the door and like calling her name but
she didn't get up she's like I'm
sleeping I'm not getting up for him
Edward Turner's attorney played the
stupid card in his defense like yes he
carried Ruthie mccay's television to
another apartment the night of the
murder but John had asked him to and he
was just helping a friend and of course
like yeah yeah he had he said he shot
someone but he was just lying to impress
Sonia he just wanted to impress this
woman when the evidence was before them
the defense attorney suggested that
jurors might be convinced Beyond a
reasonable doubt that Edward was very
stupid but not a mder
he did not murder Ruthie McCoy Edward's
defense attorney instead was saying that
the killers were not Edward they were
John and Howard gin I know so you're
probably thinking who's this Howard guy
I know I was like
same so this Howard guy he didn't know
like the finger was going to be pointed
at him he actually appeared on the
witness stand as a defense witness for
Edward Turner he had come from jail
where he was serving time for drug
dealing and also jumping bail he
admitted that he had been at a party
within the apartment of
1108 and this party had taken place on
April 22nd but he said that there was
more than a dozen men and women who were
at this party Howard story was that John
took him into a bedroom showed him like
a bunch of guns that were hidden beneath
a a bed mattress and then let him over
to the bathroom and showed him the whole
medicine cabinet situation how where
said that like okay they took the
medicine cabinet off he looked through
the hole to the neighboring apartment
then left and went down to the
building's Lobby he said he was still in
the building um about a half hour later
when people who had been at that party
came running down the stairs like he
wasn't sure whether Edward Turner was in
that group but he was certain that John
was not because he saw him come down
later well then finally Edward ends up
taking the stand in his own defense
Edward had denied that he shot Ruthie
McCoy or that he was even in her
apartment when she was killed he
admitted that he knew like an older lady
named Miss May had lived next door in
the apartment but Edward insisted that
he had been sitting on the couch in the
apartment and like left with everyone
else in the living room after they heard
the gunfire he then said that JN came
down to the lobby like by himself about
30 minutes later Edward like he said he
did tell Sonia about the whole like I
shot someone's story he said he wanted
to be her boyfriend so he told her that
he shot a woman just to like brag and
that he ended up taking it back when he
saw that Sonia was not impressed and
that's why he was like oh just kidding I
didn't do that I was just kidding Edward
said that he ended up leaving son's
apartment around 2 a.m. and then turned
around and went back up to 1108 when he
noticed a light on in the window so he
testified that he spotted a TV set
sitting in the Hall and a guy he knew
carrying like a rocking chair out of
this apartment 118 this guy supposedly
asked Edward if he would give him a hand
and carry the TV and Edward was like
sure I'll help you know I guess at this
point Edward noticed that the neighbor's
door was open a little and he told the
court that he kicked it open even more
and like went a few feet inside
and saw a body on the bedroom floor so I
guess he sees the body he runs out of
there he goes back to the hallway he
picks up the TV and like carries on so
Edward notices John then a few minute
like seconds minutes later like comes
out of the apartment where he sees the
body and like starts helping move the
rocker and the TV
so I don't know that's what he said
happen so who's the Killer I don't don't
even remember names I don't even
remember at this point Edward was
essentially saying that he didn't do it
okay period he didn't do it I think
everyone thinks it was John they think
John did it so the prosecutor of course
like wanted to focus on the fact that
like he went to this L's apartment and
he saw her dead body and like didn't do
anything and Edward said that he saw the
body and saw the blood but didn't get
close enough to tell whether she was
alive or dead so then they're giving him
him a hard time like why didn't you call
police why don't you inform the cha
people like something and Edward didn't
really have a response he didn't do
anything instead he walked back to the
hallway and picked up the TV you know so
it was just not a great look in closing
arguments the defense suggested that
John and Howard likely went through the
medicine cabinet together or maybe it
was John and Bo or John was by himself
but there was no evidence proving that
Edward did any anything as for keeping
quiet after seeing like Ruthie McCoy's
bloody body I mean that was really the
way a young black man survived within
this area the jury had deliberated less
than 4 hours before finding Edward not
guilty on all counts so that all but
made John hundra's verdict a foregone
conclusion and his defense team didn't
even bother calling additional Witnesses
before arresting so the judge his name
is Michael Getty he quitted John hondras
as well the whole case the judge said
hung on the dubious stories of Tim Brown
but the judge would say like Ruthie
McCoy's brutal murder wasn't the only
tragedy in this case it was because the
incompetence of Chicago Police was what
really CA Ruthie McCoy her chance at
Justice I mean look after the fact it's
unclear when or even if any attempts
were made to like seal off this like
network of Medicine
passageways after Ruthie May McCoy died
so no one got like charged with her
murder so we did like a little
investigating of our own here at murder
mystery makeup thank you so much we
found out that cha quietly settled the
lawsuit that verita filed over her
mother's death there's one public
document and it doesn't reveal how much
she got I don't think it matters but at
least she got something right it's not
her mom but it's some accountability as
for like the both of the guys who were
acquitted deep dive into court records
reveals that both unfortunately like
racked up some felony charges since
walking out the courtroom in 1990 I say
unfortunately because it's just sad like
once you're in the system it's hard to
get out of it so that's just facts and
it's just sad John he would be like 58
now and seems to be settled in Kansas
after the whole court stuff he spent
some time Behind Bars um after pleading
guil guilty to Second deegree
robbery and also he got charged for like
occasional drug possession
charges and I guess he owes like
thousands of dollars from civil suits
over several evictions and unpaid child
support John had bounced around
treatment facilities and halfway houses
for a while and was like the subject of
a missing person search in Kansas a few
years ago police described him as a
schizophrenic who could be at risk if
he's off his medications they found him
safe like 5 days later and that's what
we know about him now so Edward Turner
now apparently is living in Florida he's
like 56 he actually admitted on the
record to the Chicago Reader after the
murder that he was in fact a member of
the pay masters gang but then he said he
would probably leave the west side of
Chicago and hopefully like in his high
school degree but unfortunately again he
got into some more trouble Edward ended
up doing 2 years in Illinois state
prison for felony drug manufacturing and
possession with intent to sell there was
like a bunch of drug charges as well as
ones for burglary and disorderly conduct
but the court docket just knows like
they were disposed of so no idea how
they got resolved in 2010 he had pled
guilty to possession of burglary tools
and property damage in Cook County but I
I guess he's got disposed of as well
there was a couple of marijuana charges
and then nothing for the past decade so
hopefully he's out of this and like
moving I have hope for these people okay
if you watch dark history you know like
never mind let let me not go on a long
tangent but it's just hard to get out of
this this system for when you're born
into this so I hope he's doing well okay
I hope I just hope everyone's doing well
so I guess like the Chicago Police
Department is currently revamping its
gang database
but as recently as 2020 the Police
Superintendent confirmed to reporters
that there were over
117,000 known gang members active in the
city so that's the murder of Ruthie May
McCoy sadly like technically not really
not really solved right and also very
creepy and unfortunate and the fact that
like all of her complaints were brushed
off could have been prevented if
actually people tried to help not people
but like the people in charge it's just
sad it's a sad story really and there's
no
closure
anyways let me know your thoughts I
don't know what you can say to that I
kind of believe that Tim guy I mean
there's got to be some truth in the
story right I don't know I'm sorry I
didn't do any makeup I think you
understand my face hurts a lot so it's
probably for the better and plus it the
look I was doing was going south real
quick that my friends is the story of
like the real life Candyman whoever the
hell that person is right let me know
who you want me to talk about next time
in the comment section I read your
comments I see you you see me but other
than that I hope you have a good day you
make a choices you be safe out there
okay lock your doors and stuff and I'll
be seeing you guys
later bye
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