Connect with us

Indiana

Haunting new details about Delphi murders are revealed in court – as expert claims Indiana girls’ deaths are ‘textbook’ example of ritualistic killing

Published

on

Haunting new details about Delphi murders are revealed in court – as expert claims Indiana girls’ deaths are ‘textbook’ example of ritualistic killing


The Delphi murders suspect’s lawyers claim a pagan cult sacrificed two teenage girls who were snatched from a hiking trail, and the confessed killer is innocent.

Libby German, 14, and Abby Williams, 13, disappeared on February 13, 2017, while hiking the Monon High Bridge Trail in Delphi, Indiana.

Richard Allen, 51, was charged with their murders in October 2022 after police linked a bullet found at the scene to his gun.

Very little about the case has been revealed over the past seven years, other than leaks from inside the investigation, until three days of hearings this week.

Advertisement

Libby German, 14, (left) and Abby Williams, 13, (right) disappeared on February 13, 2017, while hiking the Monon High Bridge Trail in Delphi, Indiana 

Richard Allen, 50, was charged with the double murder in October 2023. He has pleaded not guilty

Richard Allen, 50, was charged with the double murder in October 2023. He has pleaded not guilty 

The Carroll County court heard the girls were found with their throats cut, branches laid on top of their remains, and Abby’s body wearing Libby’s clothes.

Abby and Libby set out on the trail at 1:35 pm and Libby posted a photo at 2:07 pm of Abby walking along the bridge. Police believe they were kidnapped at 2:14 pm and killed within 18 minutes. 

Prosecutors told the court that Allen confessed to the murders more than 60 times in jail phone calls to his wife and mother, and to another inmate.

Carroll County Prosecutor Nicholas McLeland also claimed Allen’s ‘intent was a sexual assault’ when he allegedly kidnapped the girls.

Allen’s lawyers, led by Bradley Rozzi, claimed the confessions were the result of his degrading mental state due to being locked in solitary confinement.

Advertisement

They last year named four other people as members of a cult to the Norse god Odin, arguing the girls were killed in a ritual sacrifice. 

Indiana State Police Detective Brian Harshman testified about the confessions after listening to 150 hours of phone calls.

He said the confessions began in late March 2023 after he had a ‘come to Jesus moment’, and Allen spoke ‘very specifically’ about details of the crime and why he did it.

Abbie was seen in a Snapchat video posted by her friend Libby in February 2017, moments before both were murdered

Abbie was seen in a Snapchat video posted by her friend Libby in February 2017, moments before both were murdered

Indiana State Police Lieutenant Jerry Holeman also testified that an inmate alleged Allen confessed to him as well, and revealed the murder weapon.

Allen allegedly told him he murdered the girls with a boxcutter, than dumped it in a dumpster outside a CVS.

Advertisement

Defense lawyers want the confessions thrown out because they were a product of Allen’s mental breakdown while being treated like ‘a prisoner of war’ in jail.

They brought in a psychologist contracted by the Indiana Department of Corrections to testify in support of that argument.

Rozzi’s team instead point the finger at the four Odinists, including the father of Abby’s boyfriend at the time of her death.

Dawn Perlmutter, an expert on ritualistic crimes, testified that ‘this crime scene is a textbook for ritualistic murder’.

She claimed the crime scene had seven indicators of an Odinist ritualistic killing, including the positioning of the branches on their bodies.

Advertisement

Perlmutter said she reviewed autopsy records, crime scene photos and social media posts of some of the alleged Odinists, and when asked if he had any doubt the girls were sacrificed in a pagan ritual, she replied ‘none at all’. 

Family members of Liberty German and Abigail Williams at a press conference after Allen's arrest

Family members of Liberty German and Abigail Williams at a press conference after Allen’s arrest

McLeland moved to discredit her testimony by noting she came to the same conclusion in a CourtTV report last year, before she saw any of the evidence.

He asked her what her response would be if the alleged killer ‘said that the intent was a sexual assault.’

The prosecutor also contested her theory that the branches were laid over the bodies to form runic symbols, noting Allen ‘said that the branches were there to cover the girls’ bodies’.

Perlmutter argued blood smeared on a tree in one leaked crime scene photo was painted to form the letter F, which holds significance in Norse mythology.

Advertisement

But Patrick Cicero, a blood specialist and forensics expert from the LaPorte County Sheriff’s Office, said it was more likely a ‘transfer stain’ from Libby’s bloody hand.

Purposely painting a symbol on the tree would have involved the killer repeatedly dipping their hand on blood, he said.

Perlmutter admitted there was no physical evidence tying any of the four men to the crime scene.

Other witnesses claimed one or more of the supposed Odinists also confessed to killing the girls.

Libby German's body was found next to Abby's on a hiking trail the day after they vanished

Abby Williams was wearing Libby's clothes when the bodies were found

The Carroll County court heard the girls were found with their throats cut, branches laid on top of their remains, and Abby’s body wearing Libby’s clothes

Kevin Murphy, a retired Indiana State Police officer who worked on the case from 2017 to 2019, told the court there was an ‘undeniable link’ between Delphi and there Odinist cult in nearby Rushville.

Advertisement

He said police believed the murders were the work of two to six people, and he focused on one of the alleged cultists, Elvis Fields.

Murphy told the court Fields’ sister gave ‘very specific’ information that only someone at the crime scene would know.

In a recorded call with her brother, she blurted out, ‘Elvis, why did you kill those girls?’

Fields denied the accusations to police, but Murphy said he asked them if he would get in trouble if his spit was found on the girls.

Brad Holder, the father of Abby’s girlfriend and accused Odinist, was another person Allen’s defense zeroed in on.

Advertisement

His ex-wife Amber Holder testified that Holder told her a third alleged cultist, Patrick Westfall, confessed to killing Abby – but she acknowledged Holder was drunk when he relayed the story to her.

She claimed he told her ‘to keep my mouth shut and if I didn’t, they’d kill me’.

Allen's lawyers, led by Bradley Rozzi, claimed his 60 confessions were the result of his degrading mental state due to being locked in solitary confinement

Allen’s lawyers, led by Bradley Rozzi, claimed his 60 confessions were the result of his degrading mental state due to being locked in solitary confinement 

Amber told the court Holder had a special knife he used to cut his hands during Odinist rituals, which could be the murder weapon.

Former Rushville Police Department officer Todd Click, who helped with the investigation, told the court he believed the Odinist theory.

He said his theory was the girls interrupted a pagan ritual and were killed for it. He also believed Holder and Westfall were on the trail that day – but there was no ‘smoking gun’ physical evidence tying them to the crime scene.

Advertisement

Click told the court he was ‘shocked and confused’ when Allen was charged, and not any of the four alleged Odinists. 

Holder was cleared by the main investigators based on an alibi of him clocking out of work at a landfill site half an hour from Delphi at 2.45pm, when the crime was believed to have ocurred at 2.30 to 3.30pm.

He then used a key fob to get into a gym in Logansport at 4.08pm.

Prosecutors asked Judge Fran Gull to throw out all testimony claiming the Odinists were responsible and ban the theory from the trial. She is yet to rule on this.

A CrimeNation documentary in February further claimed Libby was almost beheaded ‘out of rage‘ and named yet another suspect.

Advertisement

The admission was seen in texts from someone on the scene that later leaked online, also claiming ‘whoever did it targeted Libby for sure’, and that the 14-year-old ‘fought like hell.’ 

The documentary pointed to the man who owned the property where the girls were discovered, Ron Logan, with chilling new claims from his ex-girlfriend. 

Logan, who died in January 2022 from Covid, was one of the first suspects investigators looked into, and he made several media appearances in the aftermath of the murders as they gained national attention. 

Ron Logan, who owned the property where the teen girls were found, is claimed to be the true killer in the new documentary by his ex-girlfriend. He died from Covid-19 in January 2022

Ron Logan, who owned the property where the teen girls were found, is claimed to be the true killer in the new documentary by his ex-girlfriend. He died from Covid-19 in January 2022 

A key piece of evidence in the case was a grainy video found on Libby’s phone of a man walking along the trail saying ‘guys, down the hill’.

Police released the footage on February 22, 2017, and said the man in the video was the prime suspect. 

Advertisement

When the video emerged, Logan appeared on Inside Edition to claim he didn’t recognize the person or the voice from anyone he’d seen on his property. 

But his ex-girlfriend Connie Dillman has claimed she is in no doubt it was Logan in the clips, and said she insisted to authorities her ex is the killer.

‘That’s your voice,’ she said of Logan. ‘I heard the voice of “down the hill” thousands of times. It’s Ron Logan.’ 

Dillman said she began her six-year relationship with Logan after meeting him in a bar in Delphi, and they quickly bonded over their love of horses and the outdoors.

But she said their relationship went downhill before long, as he began controlling her everyday life and treating her like a ‘sex tool.’

Advertisement

‘When I didn’t want to have sex, he forced it on me,’ she said. ‘I was helpless.’ 

She claimed one time that she tried to leave, he struck her across the head with a wrench, leaving her with seven stitches. 

Shortly after ending their relationship, the murders of the two teen girls rocked the Delphi community and made national headlines – leading Dillman to be sure her former lover was the killer when she saw him on TV.

The last video taken on Libby's cellphone showed a man in a blue Carhartt jacket and jeans approaching the two teens

The last video taken on Libby’s cellphone showed a man in a blue Carhartt jacket and jeans approaching the two teens 

After the murders captured national attention, law enforcement came under fire for not releasing details of the crime, a factor they cited in wanting to keep control over the investigation and not release information only the killer would have known.

Amid the frustration for information, lurid text messages leaked online from someone at the crime scene, which the documentary claimed were shared by Abby’s uncle, David Erskin. 

Advertisement

The text read: ‘Me and my other sisters boyfriend are the ones who found the girls Tuesday. Coroner’s report stated everything was over by 3:30. No rape. Abby was dressed. Libby was nude. 

‘Libby’s top half was covered with leafs (sic) and sticks, almost like they were trying to cover her. 

‘The only DNA would be from Libby’s fingernails. She fought like hell. Whoever did it targeted Libby for sure and knew what they were doing with Abby. It was personal with Libby.’ 

An expert in the case added that there was ‘talk of Libby almost being decapitated, which looks like it was done out of rage.’ 

Scrutiny has fallen on the investigation and arrest of Allen following his arrest, particularly due to the evidence produced in Allen’s probable cause affidavit.

Advertisement
Logan was one of the first suspects to land on cops' radar following the murders, and his ex-girlfriend said he was physically and sexually violent with her

Logan was one of the first suspects to land on cops’ radar following the murders, and his ex-girlfriend said he was physically and sexually violent with her 

Logan's ex-girlfriend Connie Dillman (pictured) said after seeing her former lover on TV following the murders, she was left with no doubt that he was the true killer

Logan’s ex-girlfriend Connie Dillman (pictured) said after seeing her former lover on TV following the murders, she was left with no doubt that he was the true killer 

In November 2022, the affidavit cited just a single piece of evidence linking Allen to the murders, an unspent shell casing from the scene.

The .40 round was found unfired within two feet of the girls, and analysis of the round found it was a match to Allen’s firearm.

It is unclear how the round would have been cycled into the gun, never fired, then ended up between the two bodies. 

Two weeks later, DailyMail.com exclusively revealed that, shortly after Allen’s arrest, one of his neighbors saw police digging in his yard to exhume his family’s dead cat.

The feline’s hair also proved to be a match to samples found on one of the victims.  

Advertisement

The bombshell report also revealed investigators were looking into whether the girls were victims of a botched kidnapping plot by a local pedophile ring. 

Sources close to the investigation claimed that Allen was acting with at least two other men and was involved in a child sex ring, and McLeland openly stated that he believes ‘Allen is not the only actor involved in this’.



Source link

Indiana

‘A symbol’: Central Indiana Catholics back the pope in feud with Trump

Published

on

‘A symbol’: Central Indiana Catholics back the pope in feud with Trump


PLAINFIELD — Light spills from a window above a wooden fixture of the crucifixion at Saint Susanna Catholic Church as parishioners weave through the pews at the close of the 11 a.m. mass on a recent Sunday.

Most leave, but some stick around for coffee and doughnuts, a fundraising effort for the church’s prison ministry, which provides rosaries, Bibles and faith study materials to inmates at the Hendricks County Jail. In the hallway are stacks of letters to U.S. Sen. Jim Banks, Sen. Todd Young and Rep. Jim Baird, urging them to support programs to reduce hunger at home and abroad.

“Cuts to SNAP and international assistance have already put millions at risk,” the letter reads, citing Jesus’ refusal to turn a hungry crowd away in the Bible verse Matthew 14:16. “We can and must do better.”

Advertisement

Those cuts have been hallmarks of President Donald Trump’s administration, which has taken a less generous, and at times adversarial, approach to those in need globally as it looks to reduce spending. The strategy has contributed to a larger tension between Catholicism and the president; at the helm of this opposition is Pope Leo XIV, the first American-born pope, whose criticisms of the war in Iran have increasingly landed him in Trump’s crosshairs.

But Catholics across the nation, including at Saint Susanna, told USAToday and IndyStar that they favor the pope’s approach.

“He has done it elegantly, but yet very stern,” Eloisa Garza, who helps run the prison ministry, said of Pope Leo after mass at Saint Susanna on April 26. “Being an American, which we are Americans, that’s what sometimes other countries look at us to do as leaders.” 

Garza, 70, said she appreciates that Pope Leo has the courage to speak when the world needs a powerful voice rooted in faith. His role as the first American-born pope only adds to the impact, she said.  

Advertisement

She runs the prison ministry along with Harla Lyle, 84, who also commended the pope for his “quiet, serene composure.”

Even when in conflict with some world leaders, Lyle said, Pope Leo sticks to faith.  

“I think that he really is a symbol,” she said. 

The trust in Pope Leo comes as the pontiff fields blistering attacks from Trump. After the pope called Trump’s threat of annihilation in Iran “unacceptable,” the president fired back that Pope Leo was “weak on crime.”

The tension between the two men is sometimes amplified by Vice President J.D. Vance, a Catholic himself who has openly disagreed with the pope and warned him to be “be careful” when discussing theology.

Advertisement

American Catholics have largely backed the pope in the past, and the broader public has continued to view the pope favorably. More than two-thirds of U.S. voters who are Catholic said they view the pope favorably, according to a November 2025 poll. Three-fifths of Americans in general view the pope in a positive light, too, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found in April.

Chicago native John Paloma, who now lives in Camby, Indiana, said he used to live “down the road” from where the pope grew up. Paloma said he appreciated that the pope has not engaged in extended battles with those who criticize him.

“There might be some controversy, but as long as he keeps to the faith, what could you say?” he said, sitting at a table after mass with fellow parishioners. “My hope is still high.” 

Bob Duty, an 84-year-old man sitting with Paloma, shared a similarly positive view. 

“I like the pope,” Duty told IndyStar. “He’s from America.” 

Advertisement

Contact breaking politics reporter Marissa Meador at mmeador@indystar.com or find her on X at @marissa_meador.



Source link

Continue Reading

Indiana

Man dies in 2-vehicle crash on WB I-64 in Southern Indiana

Published

on

Man dies in 2-vehicle crash on WB I-64 in Southern Indiana


A man is dead following a May 4 collision on westbound Interstate 64 west of Corydon, Indiana, according to a news release from the Indiana State Police.

ISP Sgt. Carey Huls said the two-vehicle crash occurred around 5:45 a.m. when Zachary Burdin, 31, was traveling westbound on I-64, and his vehicle collided with the back of a truck with a trailer full of paving equipment.

Burdin was pronounced dead at the scene by the Harrison County Coroner. There were no other injuries reported. Officials do not attribute the crash to any weather conditions.

Advertisement

Huls said the crash was cleared from the highway by about 9 a.m., and there are no current issues.



Source link

Continue Reading

Indiana

Zionsville nature preserve set to open soon on former golf course

Published

on

Zionsville nature preserve set to open soon on former golf course


play

A new nature preserve in Zionsville will open later this month after years of work converting an old golf course into publicly accessible greenspace.  

The Carpenter Nature Preserve is located on the site of the former Wolf Run Club. The club, which closed in 2017, sat at the northwest corner of south Michigan Road and State Road 32 where Eagle Creek runs through the town. Once the 215-acre nature preserve opens, soft and hard-paved trails will lead visitors through woods, prairies and wetlands.

Advertisement

Jarod Logsdon, superintendent of parks and recreation for the Town of Zionsville, said the town is excited to get people out to the property.

“I think it’s a great example of how people and greenspace can be side by side,” Logsdon said. “[Greenspaces] obviously enhance the quality of life for residents, but they’re people’s front door to nature.”

Handshake agreement keeps land undeveloped

The town purchased the land from residents Nancy and Jim Carpenter, who bought it from developers after it hit the market in 2017. The couple held onto the property after then-Mayor Emily Styron asked the couple to keep it free from development, Logsdon said.

Once the town had shored up the money in 2021, it purchased the property from the Carpenters. The town leveraged state and federal grants to acquire the land for $5.5 million and reserve money for the initial construction and mitigation phase.

Advertisement

Nancy Carpenter, in a 2023 news release, said Styron invited them to the property for a visit. The couple immediately recognized how appealing it would be to a developer.

“We couldn’t let that happen,” Nancy said in the release. “You cannot find anything like this in central Indiana that will ever be available again.”

The Carpenters, who cofounded Wild Birds Unlimited and have been involved with Zionsville parks for years, maintained the property prior to selling it to the town. They mowed down old golf cart trails, set up bird boxes and planted gardens to attract pollinators. The couple worked with the town to create the master plan that eventually led to the creation of the preserve.

Education and amenities at Zionsville preserve

The preserve currently is in phase one of construction and planning, Logsdon said, and when it opens it will have more than just trails.

Advertisement

The department built a pavilion with nearby restrooms as well as a nature playground with a nearby seating shelter. The playground isn’t the typical steel jungle gym, Logsdon said, but is built using wood from the Pacific Northwest.

The natural building material in the playground is meant to give visitors “a taste of nature play before they go out into the preserve,” Logsdon said.

A small amphitheater also sits on the grounds, which will host campfires and other events.

These amenities will be complete when the preserve opens to the public. The department plans to build a regional nature center in the future to provide more in-depth environmental education to visitors.

While visitors will be able to visit most of the preserve, about a third of the property will be closed to the public as the Indiana Department of Natural Resources works to rehabilitate wetlands. The state will spend about $4 million to restore and maintain Eagle Creek and its tributaries in the park.

Advertisement

Once the preserve opens, visitors can access the entrance off 900 East, just south of SR32.

Karl Schneider is an IndyStar environment reporter. You can reach him at karl.schneider@indystar.com. Follow him on Twitter @karlstartswithk or BlueSky @karlstartswithk.bsky.social.

IndyStar’s environmental reporting project is made possible through the generous support of the nonprofit Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust.





Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending