4.8 • 4.8K Ratings
🗓️ 3 April 2019
⏱️ 119 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Steven Beard woke up on October 2, 1999, in horrible pain. His stomach was split open. His intestines were exposed. When he called 911, he couldn’t tell the dispatcher what had happened — he could only say that he desperately needed help. It didn’t take investigators long to discover that Steven had been shot in his sleep. But who would want him dead?
Then Kristin tells us a story that, at first glance, makes no sense. A man walked into a QuikTrip, bought a couple of lottery tickets, and despite the overwhelming odds against him, won $16.5 million. Great, right? Not so much. He refused to claim the prize money. Iowa lottery officials were stunned. Who wouldn’t want $16.5 million? Months passed. The man still refused to come forward. Lottery officials smelled something fishy.
And now for a note about our process. For each episode, Kristin reads a bunch of articles, then spits them back out in her very limited vocabulary. Brandi copies and pastes from the best sources on the web. And sometimes Wikipedia. (No shade, Wikipedia. We love you.) We owe a huge debt of gratitude to the real experts who covered these cases.
In this episode, Kristin pulled from:
“Court says Iowa lottery rigging investigation took too long,” Associated Press
“Just a dollar and a scheme,” episode of American Greed
“The man who cracked the lottery” by Reid Forgave for the New York Times
In this episode, Brandi pulled from:
“Marriage, Money and Murder: Steven and Celeste Beard” by David Krajicek, crimelibrary.com
“Celeste Beard Johnson” episode Snapped
“Marriage, Money, and Murder” by Bill Hewitt, People Magazine
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | One semester of law school. |
0:02.0 | One semester of criminal justice. |
0:04.0 | Two experts. |
0:06.0 | I'm Kristen Pitts. |
0:08.0 | I'm Brandy Egan. |
0:09.0 | Let's go to court. |
0:10.0 | On this episode, I'll talk about a reluctant lottery winner and I'll be talking about |
0:16.4 | betrayal upon betrayal upon betrayal upon betrayal |
0:21.2 | I can't handle all this betrayal. There's so much betrayal! |
0:27.0 | Okay, that was the most vague intro you've ever done, but I'm so intrigued. Right. Hmm. Hmm. It was October 2nd 1999 when 75 year old |
0:41.9 | Stephen Beard was startled awake in his Austin, Texas bedroom. |
0:47.0 | He felt unbearable pain in his abdomen and when he reached down to kind of touch it and feel it was a knife sticking out of it |
0:57.4 | instead of finding his belly. Uh-huh. His hands landed on his intestines. Oh no. Oh God. Right? Yeah. Oh. Oh. |
1:11.3 | Stephen was conscious, but he was in great pain when he reached for the phone to dial 911. |
1:18.0 | I need an ambulance, he told the dispatcher. |
1:22.0 | My guts just jumped out of my stomach. Oh what buddy? They blew out. |
1:26.7 | Oh God. Yeah, they blew out of my stomach. They're just lying on my stomach. |
1:33.0 | Oh my God. |
1:35.0 | Okay, said the 911 operator. |
1:39.0 | They're lying on your stomach? |
1:43.0 | Yeah, how the hell did that happen? |
1:46.0 | I'm in awful pain, Stephen said. |
... |
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