
Weeks pass with no sign of Talina. Her friends, as well as the online sleuths and the local sheriff start to uncover strange clues—a burned mattress, a missing persons poster—all casting suspicion on Talina’s roommate, Kore. As the pressure builds, Kore shares her side of the story.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Chapter 1: What happened to Talina Zarr?
I'm on day nine of this virus, and I am pretty sure it has reached my lungs.
We had talked about COVID. She didn't seem particularly worried about it. She didn't seem to be, like...
the sky is falling kind of thing, which is what this post sounded like. I made the decision at the onset that if it got bad enough, I would not go to the hospital.
And at the time when I read it, I'm like, that just sounds weird. That doesn't sound like Talena.
Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley Season 1. I just knew him as a kid. Long, silent voices from his past came forward.
And he was just staring at me.
And they had secrets of their own to share.
I'm Gilbert King. I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott.
I was no longer just telling the story. I was part of it.
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Chapter 2: What clues were found in the search for Talina?
They said there was some sort of travel trailer or a trailer of some sort in the driveway.
Oh, a white cargo trailer.
Yeah.
I think it was a white. It sold.
It sold.
Yeah.
And so the reason I ask is because someone brought that up and I said, I didn't see a trailer when I was in the driveway.
No, we sold that.
Okay. When, when did that sell?
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Chapter 3: What role did Kore play in Talina's disappearance?
Corey says she sold it to a friend of a friend for $1,000. Weber asks if she has some sort of receipt, and Corey says she's sure she signed something, but he gave her cash, and actually, trailers don't have to be registered in Oklahoma, so there's no official paper trail.
What's a trailer got to do with... It was mine. It wasn't Talena's, so... Okay.
Well, the only reason it has to do with anything is just because my understanding... It was there one day, and now it's not. And so I'm just trying to... I'm looking at anything that's, you know, seems unusual. Yeah. It doesn't mean it's anything. It just means I'm answering questions ahead of people asking them.
What I'm getting from all these questions is that people online have already made up their mind because they can't find resolution somewhere else.
Corey seems frustrated by the line of questioning. Why is Weber kowtowing to these nosy internet hacks with nothing better to do?
I'm asking questions because they're throwing suspicion on me and it would be dumb of me not to ask because I need to... I need to be able to honestly say I've done everything we can do. Yes. We've checked everywhere we can check. Yes. And if I don't ask these questions, someone's going to go, why didn't you ask that?
I want that too.
Detective Weber adds, if the online sleuths start hassling her, she should reach out to the sheriff's department for help. He too seems a little fed up by their persistence.
You're not going to solve it online. Nobody's going to find her on Facebook. But by God, there's plenty of theories.
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