Heists, Hustles, and Homicide
This week on Heists, Hustles, and Homicide, we’re walking into a quiet credit union on the Xerox campus in Webster, New York...where what looked like an official FBI security audit turned into a deadly robbery, a murder, and a mystery that would haunt investigators for more than a decade. On the morning of August 12, 2003, employees at the Xerox Federal Credit Union were confronted by a man dressed like an FBI agent. He had the look. He had the badge. He had the bulletproof vest. He had the confidence of someone who expected everyone in the room to obey. He told them he was there for an audit. But the briefcase didn’t hold paperwork. It held guns. Within minutes, the fake federal operation became real terror. Xerox machinist Raymond Batzel, who had simply come in to make a car payment, was shot and killed. Joseph Doud was also shot but survived. The gunman escaped with more than $10,000, leaving behind panic, grief, unanswered questions...and one strange piece of evidence: an umbrella. For years, the case went cold. Investigators had images. They had theories. They had possible suspects. But they didn’t have the one thing they needed most: a name. Then, thirteen years later, a tip came in. A concerned citizen remembered seeing a man wearing what looked like an FBI raid jacket before the robbery. That man was Richard Wilbern, a former Xerox employee who had been fired, had a history with the company, and had allegedly lost a lawsuit against Xerox. But the twist that feels almost too wild for a crime documentary? Wilbern later contacted the FBI himself about a completely separate complaint involving a real estate scam. That gave agents the opening they needed. During one of those contacts, investigators obtained DNA from an envelope Wilbern had licked...and matched it to DNA from the umbrella left behind at the crime scene. The prosecution said the odds of that DNA belonging to someone else were astronomical. The defense challenged the testing, arguing the sample was extremely small and raising questions about reliability, handling, and contamination. So this case becomes more than just a robbery. It’s a story about disguise, ego, revenge, forensic science, a 13-year hunt, and one suspect who may have accidentally walked himself right back into the FBI’s hands. Was it a brilliant disguise or a desperate act? Was the Xerox campus chosen because the killer knew the layout? And how did a fake FBI agent walk into a credit union in broad daylight and turn an ordinary errand into a homicide? This is Badge, Briefcase, and Blood: The Xerox Credit Union Murder. Right here on Heists, Hustles, and Homicide.
64 episodes
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