[SPEAKER_00]: Celebrated author, Felicia Gold, resident of Bedford, and member of the Kai Theta Omega chapter of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority incorporated is thrilled to announce the release of her debut cozy mystery novel, Text, Tea, and Tragedy. [SPEAKER_00]: The first in the captivating Bella Hawkins Mystery series. [SPEAKER_00]: Set in the quaint and charming town of Bedford, Texas, this cozy mystery promises readers a blend of suspense, heart, and hope.
[SPEAKER_00]: The novel is now available on Amazon and Kindle, and will soon be in some bookstores and retailers. [SPEAKER_00]: In Texas, tea and tragedy, Bella Hawkins and Autistic English Professor with a unique ability to perceive details others miss, relocates to Bedford after a turbulent breakup. [SPEAKER_00]: As she settles into her new life, she quickly finds herself entangled in the town's deep rooted mysteries.
[SPEAKER_00]: With her intuitive nature and sharp intellect, Bella must navigate the complexities of new friendships, old wounds, and the dark secrets that threaten the peace of the seemingly idyllic community. [SPEAKER_00]: The novel's gripping plot unfolds as bodies start piling up, and Bella's determination to solve the mystery leads her to an unconventional friendship with Kamar, a misunderstood local artist.
[SPEAKER_00]: As Bella gets closer to uncovering the truth, she realizes that saving Kamar may come at a high price, unearthing the town's hidden secrets and facing the danger that lurks within. [SPEAKER_00]: Felicia masterfully, we have the story that explores the themes of resilience, courage, and the enduring human spirit.
[SPEAKER_00]: Through Bella Hawkins, readers will experience the journey of a woman driven by hope, fighting to protect those she cares about, while learning to heal her own heart. [SPEAKER_00]: Felicia Gold is an acclaimed author known for her insightful and engaging storytelling. [SPEAKER_00]: Her works often delve into the complexities of human relationships and the power of hope.
[SPEAKER_00]: With text T and tragedy, [SPEAKER_00]: She introduces a protagonist that readers will root for, admire, and relate to on many levels. [SPEAKER_00]: Hello, campus cronies. [SPEAKER_00]: Welcome back to Campus Crime Chronicles. [SPEAKER_00]: I'm your host, Dr. Nicole Turner, Higher Education Professional and True Crime Edit.
[SPEAKER_00]: In every episode of this podcast, I take a deep dive into some sort of true crime that occurred on a school campus or a crime that's associated with a college or university in some way. [SPEAKER_00]: For each episode, I rate the seriousness of the crime from one to five on my serious crime scale. [SPEAKER_00]: with one being completely not serious, possibly even a little humorous from time to time, to five being very serious.
[SPEAKER_00]: Okay y'all, before we dive in, I want to take a moment to acknowledge that this is my one hundredth episode. [SPEAKER_00]: Can you believe it? [SPEAKER_00]: Y'all have been hanging on with me for a hundred episodes of Campus Crime Chronicles, and I couldn't be more thrilled to have such dedicated listeners as all of you. [SPEAKER_00]: So first, thank you. [SPEAKER_00]: From the bottom of my heart, I sincerely thank you for your unwavering support of my little podcast that could.
[SPEAKER_00]: I also want to share with you that this episode, this story you're about to hear, was one of the core inspirations that led me to start this podcast in the first place. [SPEAKER_00]: From day one, I knew I wanted to cover this story and bring attention to this important topic. [SPEAKER_00]: But I also knew it would be a challenging one. [SPEAKER_00]: Complex, emotional, and controversial.
[SPEAKER_00]: It would require double, maybe triple the research, and an incredible amount of time to piece everything together carefully from start to finish. [SPEAKER_00]: And I wanted to be sure I handled it with the care and accuracy it needs and deserves. [SPEAKER_00]: I kept thinking, when the time is right, I'll tell Tim Piazza's heartbreaking story. [SPEAKER_00]: And I'll make sure to do a justice. [SPEAKER_00]: I realized that the hundredth episode was the right time.
[SPEAKER_00]: So with that, [SPEAKER_00]: This episode is rated a five. [SPEAKER_00]: In the spring of twenty seventeen, Timothy Piotso was like many college sophomores, eager to find his place, to build lasting friendships, and to be part of something bigger than himself. [SPEAKER_00]: At just nineteen years old, he had his sights set on Beta Theta Pi, one of the most respected fraternities at Pennsylvania State University.
[SPEAKER_00]: To Tim, pledging meant brotherhood, an unbreakable lifelong bond with men who would have his back. [SPEAKER_00]: But what he couldn't see was the danger of lurking beneath the surface. [SPEAKER_00]: Behind the promises of tradition and unity was a brutal culture of hazing. [SPEAKER_00]: One that didn't just test loyalty, it pushed young men to the edge of what their bodies and spirits couldn't doer. [SPEAKER_00]: For some, like Tim, [SPEAKER_00]: The price would prove far too high.
[SPEAKER_00]: This episode is titled Death by Hazing, so without further ado, let's get started. [SPEAKER_00]: In part two of this episode, we looked at the Greek system as a whole at Penn State. [SPEAKER_00]: We covered the experiences in heartbreaking stories of three different young men. [SPEAKER_00]: James Vavenzio pledged Capodelto Roe and came out on the other side with PTSD before ultimately dropping out of college.
[SPEAKER_00]: Joe Doddow visited several fraternity parties and became incredibly inebriated before falling to his death from a building on campus. [SPEAKER_00]: And Mark East Bram died by suicide after pledging Phi Sigma Kappa and enduring brutal sadistic hazing rituals, rituals that he did not wish on anyone else ever again. [SPEAKER_00]: So now that we have a clear picture of just how out of control Greek life was and how it led to Tim Piotz's death, let's get back to Tim's story.
[SPEAKER_00]: Timothy J. Piotta was born on September twenty fifth, nineteen ninety seven. [SPEAKER_00]: His whole life he was raised in Readington Township, New Jersey with his parents, Jim and Evelyn, and his older brother, Mike. [SPEAKER_00]: Evelyn Piotta described her son as an unbelievably funny guy who loved making people laugh.
[SPEAKER_00]: Growing up he was a natural athlete and in high school he played football and participated in track and field, specifically the jablin, the shot put and the discus. [SPEAKER_00]: Beyond sports though, Tim also enjoyed doing things where he could truly make a difference.
[SPEAKER_00]: Not only did he participate in his high school's teen prevention education program, but he also volunteered with multiple community outreach programs, including donating gifts to those in need during the holidays and working with special needs children to help them learn how to play football, basketball, and baseball. [SPEAKER_00]: While growing up, Tim was particularly close with his older brother of only eighteen months, Mike Piazza.
[SPEAKER_00]: Mike described their relationship dynamic as Batman and Robin, or Mario and Luigi. [SPEAKER_00]: In fact, Mike said Tim primarily decided to attend Penn State because he wanted to follow in his older brother's footsteps as that's where Mike was going to school. [SPEAKER_00]: When Tim arrived at Penn State, he made the unexpected decision to pledge beta-theta pie and join the university's Greek life, a world that was entirely new, not just to him, but to his whole family.
[SPEAKER_00]: His older brother had steered clearer fraternities altogether, and their parents had no experience with Greek life themselves. [SPEAKER_00]: Navigating this unfamiliar territory, [SPEAKER_00]: They were basically in the dark. [SPEAKER_00]: His father, Jim, said, quote, I didn't even know about it. [SPEAKER_00]: The whole Greek life scene, we didn't know all that he was getting into." [SPEAKER_00]: End quote. [SPEAKER_00]: But the little they did know seemed reassuring.
[SPEAKER_00]: Jim understood that beta theta pi had a reputation for strong networking opportunities. [SPEAKER_00]: And Tim's mother, Evelyn, recalled thinking he made a smart, safe decision. [SPEAKER_00]: She explained, quote, it said it was a non-hasing, non-drinking fraternity. [SPEAKER_00]: I thought he was making a good choice." [SPEAKER_00]: End quote. [SPEAKER_00]: To them, beta theta pi appeared to be one of the most respected and selective fraternities on campus.
[SPEAKER_00]: But everything they thought they knew about the fraternity changed in an instant in February of twenty seventeen. [SPEAKER_00]: I believe we left off in part one when Tim succumbed to his injuries after being airlifted to Hershey Medical Center. [SPEAKER_00]: It was February fourth, twenty seventeen. [SPEAKER_00]: But let's go back a little before that when his family was first notified that something was terribly wrong.
[SPEAKER_00]: On an episode of A&E's House's of horror, Secrets of College Greek Life, Evelyn recalled how she was at work when she received the call about her son. [SPEAKER_00]: She said, quote, Tim had fallen, they needed to airlift him to her she medical center for emergency surgery, and we needed to get there. [SPEAKER_00]: I really had no idea that it was as bad as it was."
[SPEAKER_00]: Mike recalled that the doctor explained to him that Tim had a number of issues and injuries, primarily involving head trauma and bleeding of the brain, so he needed to be airlifted to a hospital that was more equipped to treat his injuries. [SPEAKER_00]: Mike said, quote, they let me go see him before they prep Tim for transportation to her sheet. [SPEAKER_00]: I kissed him on the temple and I said, everything's going to be okay."
[SPEAKER_00]: But because his family had no idea of what actually happened inside the front house the night before, they also had no idea just how severe his injury really were. [SPEAKER_00]: When they arrived at the hospital, they remembered how all they could focus on were the bruises and bandages covering his body. [SPEAKER_00]: Evelyn explained, quote, I couldn't even fathom it. [SPEAKER_00]: I thought, okay, he's got a brain bleed.
[SPEAKER_00]: You know, maybe he'll have a little speech problem or a gate problem. [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe he has to take the semester off and quote. [SPEAKER_00]: But the family soon discovered that when doctors opened Tim's school to release pressure on his brain, it swelled outside of his school, which meant only one thing. [SPEAKER_00]: There was nothing they could do to save him, and he was going to die.
[SPEAKER_00]: Just to reiterate, it was determined that Tim suffered from non-survivable brain injuries [SPEAKER_00]: including a subdural hematoma and a school fracture, and on its own, a life-threatening, spleenic laceration, draining eighty percent of the blood into his abdomen. [SPEAKER_00]: Heart-breakingly, Evelyn explained, quote, a nurse pulled me forward and told me to kiss my baby goodbye, and everybody just stood there and we let him go."
[SPEAKER_00]: The hardest part of this whole situation, though, is that if his so-called brothers would have acted sooner, if they would have called nine-one-one the night before when they realized just how injured and messed up he was, you know, instead of at ten a.m. [SPEAKER_00]: the next morning, well, Tim would have most likely survived his injuries.
[SPEAKER_00]: Tim's father, Jim, explained that he was with Tim in the hospital just after Tim had passed when he realized this painful reality. [SPEAKER_00]: Jim said, quote, the thing I think about all the time, standing in the room by the bed with Tim, and I looked to the doctor and I said, if someone would have called for help much earlier, would we have a different outcome here? [SPEAKER_00]: And the guy just looked at me with sad eyes and just nodded his head and said, yeah, end quote.
[SPEAKER_00]: So Tim's family was forced to leave the hospital with more questions than answers about what exactly happened in that house. [SPEAKER_00]: And they'd have to wait three long months before they finally found out the truth, which includes all those terrifying details I took you through in part one, so I'm not going to rehash them here.
[SPEAKER_00]: It wasn't until May fifth, twenty- seventeen, when Senator County District Attorney Stacey Parks Miller held a press conference to reveal the results of an intense investigation of the death of Timothy Piazza. [SPEAKER_00]: And y'all the DA wasn't playing around either. [SPEAKER_00]: She announced that the state was bringing a combined total of more than eight hundred and fifty charges against eighteen different beta-theta pie fraternity brothers.
[SPEAKER_00]: The list of accusations was staggering. [SPEAKER_00]: From involuntary manslaughter and aggravated assault to tampering with evidence, hazing and furnishing alcohol to minors. [SPEAKER_00]: As you can imagine, the preliminary hearing in August, twenty- seventeen with all these young men was an absolute circus.
[SPEAKER_00]: Actually, the Piazza family attorney, Tom Klein, described it as raucous, contentious and difficult, particularly because of the large numbers of spectators, including friends and family, but also because it was twenty other attorneys against one. [SPEAKER_00]: Kind of mind-blowing when you think of it like that. [SPEAKER_00]: Anyway, the prosecution presented critical evidence during the hearing, including Tim's medical charts and text message exchanges between the brothers.
[SPEAKER_00]: But perhaps the most powerful piece of evidence presented by their prosecution was the security footage from the beta house on the night of February second and into the next morning of February third. [SPEAKER_00]: According to attorney Tom Klein, a hushed silence filled the courtroom when the six hours of footage was shown, which documented all the nitty gritty details of the horror Tim suffered throughout the night.
[SPEAKER_00]: Most importantly, though, the video revealed that the fraternity members cleaned up and tried to hide the party and any evidence that could potentially incriminate them before they ever called nine-one-one. [SPEAKER_00]: So, essentially, they put their reputation ahead of saving a life. [SPEAKER_00]: Regardless, after days of testimony and arguments, the judge ruled to dismiss the most serious felony charges of involuntary manslaughter and reckless endangerment.
[SPEAKER_00]: And although the DA had been aiming to make a grand statement about the dangers of hazing, the judge ruled that there simply wasn't enough evidence to show that the students acted with actual malice. [SPEAKER_00]: Plus, Hazing was a misdemeanor at the time in the state of Pennsylvania, so at the end of the day, not one of the eighteen young men charged in Tim's case saw any real jail time, especially because most of them pleaded out.
[SPEAKER_00]: The toughest sentences went to three of the brothers, who were convicted of hazing and conspiracy to commit hazing, and they each received sentences of six to nine months in jail. [SPEAKER_00]: However, their sentences were later reduced to house arrest and probation.
[SPEAKER_00]: And to give you a sense of just how long these cases can drag out and stretch on, the final two defendants, Brendan Young and Daniel Casey, I mentioned them in the very first episode, they weren't convicted and sentenced until twenty twenty four, just last year, more than seven years after Tim's death. [SPEAKER_00]: Both pleaded guilty in July, twenty twenty four to fourteen counts each of hazing and one count of reckless endangerment.
[SPEAKER_00]: Their sentences, though, two to four months in prison with eligibility for work release, meaning they could leave during the day to work and they just had to return at night to sleep there, followed by three years of probation and some community service. [SPEAKER_00]: So, when people say no one really saw significant jail time in this case, they're not exaggerating.
[SPEAKER_00]: However, the Piazza family has filed civil suits against more than twenty former beta-theta pi brothers. [SPEAKER_00]: Those cases are still ongoing. [SPEAKER_00]: As documented in the houses of horror episode, when the judge ruled that the prosecution couldn't move forward, district attorney Park's Miller shifted her focus to the court of public opinion.
[SPEAKER_00]: In December, a Skating Granger report was released, which cast a harsh light on Penn State itself, exposing deep-rooted issues and a long-standing culture of hazing that stretched far beyond Tim's death. [SPEAKER_00]: The massive report laid out much of the information and testimony we've been exploring in these episodes.
[SPEAKER_00]: In fact, Tom Klein, the Piazza family attorney, [SPEAKER_00]: describe the report as a bombshell, one that forced the university under an unforgiving spotlight. [SPEAKER_00]: You see in the report, it was revealed that Penn State had ample opportunity to try and make things right. [SPEAKER_00]: The university knew what was happening inside those frat houses, and they turned a blind eye and allowed it to continue.
[SPEAKER_00]: multiple people, students who experience the hazing, adults who witness the hazing, spoke to university administrators on multiple occasions, but to know a veil. [SPEAKER_00]: It's like everything seemed to be falling on deaf ears. [SPEAKER_00]: Remember Kin Raleigh from Part One? [SPEAKER_00]: He's a beta-theta pie alum who was hired to oversee renovations in the beta house.
[SPEAKER_00]: Well, he tried to meet with Penn State officials, particularly officials in student affairs who oversee Greek life, whom he testified were all well aware of the bad behavior. [SPEAKER_00]: Rolly told them about the excessive drinking about a guest who was beaten unconscious and another guest who was attacked with a beer bottle, all of which he witnessed firsthand.
[SPEAKER_00]: But Penn State consistently claimed that they could not regulate or govern for turnities because they lacked any official authority over them. [SPEAKER_00]: The only thing they could do was revoke recognition, something they weren't willing to do at the time, which you'll understand why a little later. [SPEAKER_00]: And yes, it has to do with funding and donors.
[SPEAKER_00]: According to the grand jury report, Raleigh testified that he met with the then vice president of student affairs, Damon Sims, and quote unquote, fairly aggressively communicated his concerns, which boiled down to his observation that these young men were far more focused on drinking and partying than what they were actually going to school for to learn and get a degree.
[SPEAKER_00]: In that meeting, according to Raleigh, Sims quote, indicated his concern that Penn State's marketing was primarily focused on having fun versus any academic endeavors or anything above that sort of thing.
[SPEAKER_00]: In response to this testimony from Raleigh, the report states quote, [SPEAKER_00]: The grand jury finds it appalling that the university's marketing would emphasize a fun party atmosphere ahead of academics, though the grand jury believes the testimony of Mr. Raleigh. [SPEAKER_00]: End quote. [SPEAKER_00]: Uh, yeah, told you it was pretty skating. [SPEAKER_00]: In Penn State's defense, however, not to say that they did things right or correct.
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, I would have definitely handled things differently as an administrator, especially as an administrator in student affairs, but I will say it wasn't that cut and dry. [SPEAKER_00]: No Greek life system ever is. [SPEAKER_00]: For starters, Greek alumni are some of the biggest donors to universities. [SPEAKER_00]: giving about seventy-five percent of all donations, which is especially true at Penn State.
[SPEAKER_00]: But also the governing of these organizations is wild and complicated, essentially leaving fraternities to govern themselves with little oversight from the university. [SPEAKER_00]: So let me try to explain how it works. [SPEAKER_00]: According to the Grand jury report, Penn State's Greek system is largely self-governed by the Inter-Verturnity Council or IFC for short, which is a student run body under the Office of Student Affairs.
[SPEAKER_00]: The IFC oversees forty-nine fraternity chapters in forcing both university and IFC policies. [SPEAKER_00]: Now, joining the IFC isn't required, but most fraternities do because of the perks that come with membership. [SPEAKER_00]: Each fraternity pays twenty-five dollars per member, which adds up to around a hundred and fifty thousand dollars total each semester, or three hundred thousand for the year.
[SPEAKER_00]: That money then goes toward things like hiring a private security firm. [SPEAKER_00]: not the university police to keep an eye on parties. [SPEAKER_00]: But here's the kicker. [SPEAKER_00]: Court documents say it's incredibly easy for fraternities to get around the rules enforced by the security firm. [SPEAKER_00]: On the scale of one to ten, the ease of scurting the system is apparently a solid ten.
[SPEAKER_00]: The relationship between Penn State and the IFC is described as a complicated marriage. [SPEAKER_00]: You see part of the membership dues that fraternities pay to the IFC go to Penn State to pay the salaries of employees within the office of fraternity and sorority life, which is housed in student affairs.
[SPEAKER_00]: While the IFC claims self-governance, Penn State still exerts some control, particularly by using its staff to investigate misconduct, like hazing or excessive drinking. [SPEAKER_00]: Yet instead of disciplining chapters directly through student conduct, the university passes the findings to the IFC, [SPEAKER_00]: which then acts as both judge and jury.
[SPEAKER_00]: The IFC alone decides sanctions and penalties ranging from probation to event bands to hefty fines, but the IFC is also responsible for enforcement of those sanctions and penalties. [SPEAKER_00]: So Penn State's only real disciplinary tool is revoking a chapter's official recognition, which strips the group of its campus house and often it's alumni funding.
[SPEAKER_00]: Ultimately, the system reflects a murky balance of power or the idea of conscious separation where neither the university nor the IFC fully takes responsibility or ensures accountability. [SPEAKER_00]: regarding the university's responsibility, however, Penn State settled with the Piazza family in twenty nineteen.
[SPEAKER_00]: With the university agreeing to several safety reforms, starting with revoking its charter and permanently banning beta theta pi from ever returning to campus.
[SPEAKER_00]: Additionally, according to the Daily Collegion, the university's student newspaper, quote, the university adopted a no-tolerance policy toward hazing, implemented a scorecard for Greek life organizations, and stipulated that students must earn at least fourteen Penn State credits, a semester, and maintain a two point five GPA to participate in Greek life. [SPEAKER_00]: and quote.
[SPEAKER_00]: This also means that most freshmen are barred from rushing or pledging because students can now only join a Greek organization if they have earned fourteen credit hours at Penn State or if they have twenty seven transfer credits from a different college or university. [SPEAKER_00]: The University also requires fraternities and sororities to register all events and socials beforehand, and they are limited to ten socials per semester.
[SPEAKER_00]: That might sound like a lot still, but before they could have as many as they wanted, whenever they wanted. [SPEAKER_00]: And, according to the Daily Collegion, since these new rules have been implemented, Penn State has banned or suspended numerous Greek organizations on campus. [SPEAKER_00]: According to the same article in the Daily Collegion, the IFC-II has taken several steps to encourage reform.
[SPEAKER_00]: These include, quote, the creation of the Vice President for Health and Safety Rule, the creation of a dry period during recruitment, the passing of a vote to make all new member processes four weeks long, the drafting of new social expectations and guidelines, and the restructuring of standards of excellence.
[SPEAKER_00]: The new standards of excellence set minimum requirements for fraternity community service hours, philanthropy money raised, and civic responsibility program attendance." [SPEAKER_00]: So I guess the idea there is to keep them busy doing meaningful, productive stuff so they won't have time for partying and excessive drinking.
[SPEAKER_00]: After Tim Piazza's death, Penn State additionally created the Timothy J. Piazza Center for fraternity and sorority research, which targets the underlying factors of hazing. [SPEAKER_00]: According to the Piazza Center webpage on the University's website, the Center additionally focuses on campus-based prevention to reduce hazing, risky drinking and violence, empowers students to learn, lead and take action, and promotes accountability that encourages positive choices.
[SPEAKER_00]: But perhaps the most significant and promising change in the wake of Tim's death occurred at the state level. [SPEAKER_00]: When Pennsylvania passed one of the country's strictest anti-hazing laws to date. [SPEAKER_00]: On October, nineteenth, twenty-eighteen, Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf signed Senate Bill ten ninety into law, better known as the Timothy J. P. Otsa anti-hazing law.
[SPEAKER_00]: Governor Wolf said, quote, I am proud to sign this new law that will make our colleges and universities safer. [SPEAKER_00]: There is no place for hazing on our campuses, and together we will protect students from hazing and hold accountable those who engage in it." [SPEAKER_00]: The law essentially established a tiered system of penalties significantly increasing the consequences for those involved.
[SPEAKER_00]: What's especially notable is that it expands legal accountability, not to just individuals, but to organizations as well. [SPEAKER_00]: Under Tim's law, hazing that results in serious injury or death, [SPEAKER_00]: known as aggravated hazing can now be charged as a third degree felony. [SPEAKER_00]: So now, in cases like Thames, it means those responsible could face up to seven years in prison and finds up to fifteen thousand dollars.
[SPEAKER_00]: It marks a clear shift in how seriously the state is treating hazing, moving it firmly into the realm of criminal behavior. [SPEAKER_00]: Regarding the law, Tim's father Jim said, quote, in many ways, I think for us, it keeps Tim alive. [SPEAKER_00]: You know, I hope he is looking down and saying, that's awesome and quote.
[SPEAKER_00]: Tim's parents are also keeping his memory alive through the LiveLike Tim Foundation, which provides help for children and adults who need prosthesis or an artificial body part. [SPEAKER_00]: Every year, the Foundation hosts a golf tournament to raise money for the organization. [SPEAKER_00]: You can find more information at LiveLikeTim.org.
[SPEAKER_00]: Before we wrap up this episode, I'd like to leave you with some inspiring words from Jim Piazza, Tim's Dad, who had some advice for young people involved with fraternities and sororities, or those thinking of joining a Greek organization. [SPEAKER_00]: He said, quote, [SPEAKER_00]: You don't prove yourself by being paddled, by being forced to drink. [SPEAKER_00]: You want to grow leaders? [SPEAKER_00]: Grow leaders the right way.
[SPEAKER_00]: Grow leaders by understanding who you are welcoming into your organization. [SPEAKER_00]: I would love the person when they walk through the door gets a hug and a welcome as opposed to a bottle of vodka in their face. [SPEAKER_00]: End quote. [SPEAKER_00]: Okay, y'all, that brings us to the end of our third and final part of Chronicle One Hundred. [SPEAKER_00]: As always, be sure to check out my social media where I post photos associated with each case in episode.
[SPEAKER_00]: You can find me at Campus Crime Chronicles on both Facebook and Instagram. [SPEAKER_00]: Also, to celebrate my one hundredth episode, I would love, love, love for y'all to go leave me a review on Apple Podcast or wherever you listen and can leave a review because those shine a spotlight on the podcast and they truly help other listeners like you know that campus crime chronicles exist. [SPEAKER_00]: Like it puts it in the algorithm and suggests it as a podcast to listen to.
[SPEAKER_00]: So, yeah, leave that review. [SPEAKER_00]: Okay, well, that's all for today, so bye for now. [SPEAKER_00]: Campus Crime Chronicles is researched written and recorded by me in a cold turner, and its edited and produced by GR Gas away. [SPEAKER_00]: Campus Crony Alexis McDonald is my research assistant. [SPEAKER_00]: Tune it again in two weeks for the next Chronicle.
