Crime: Reconstructed Podcast
Thank you Emily Dill [https://substack.com/profile/497064548-emily-dill], Brenda Jorgensen [https://substack.com/profile/43130512-brenda-jorgensen], and many others for tuning into my live video! Join me for my next live video in the app. 🎙️ Episode Overview Today’s episode lays out the six load-bearing assumptions underneath the Mitchell case’s dominant theory — that Deputy Mitchell interrupted the disposal of two already-dead bodies and was killed for it. Each assumption is presented as a premise to be tested, not a fact to be defended, in keeping with the week’s structural condition, the Load-Bearing Coincidence. 🔍 In This Episode * Assumption 1: The occupant(s) of the van at the moment of the stop are the same person(s) who killed Mitchell * Assumption 2: Allan Shubert and Nicole Welch were already dead before Mitchell made contact * Assumption 3: Whoever killed Mitchell then drove ~20–27 minutes to the Cosumnes River deliberately to dispose of the van * Assumption 4: Mitchell was killed specifically because of what he interrupted, not for an unrelated reason * Assumption 5: A single offender or coherent group is responsible for all three deaths * Assumption 6: Shubert and Welch’s deaths were a homicide requiring concealment, not an accidental poisoning * Sgt. Tony Turnbull’s own on-record characterization of the “interrupted disposal” sequence as “one of the theories” — the case’s own built-in hedge 🧠 The Assumption Stack — Six Premises * Same actor at both scenes. Whoever was in the van at the moment of the stop is assumed to be the same person who killed Mitchell. No forensic or eyewitness evidence publicly ties one specific individual to both scenes — it’s inference from timing and geography, strong but unconfirmed. * Already dead before the stop. Shubert and Welch are assumed to have died before Mitchell made contact with the van. Sgt. Turnbull himself calls this “one of the theories,” not a finding — the case’s own built-in hedge. * A composed disposal drive. The 20-to-27-minute drive to the river is assumed to reflect a deliberate act of disposal. It could just as easily reflect panicked flight that happened to end at a river, with no plan at all. * Motive tied to the interruption. Mitchell is assumed to have died specifically because of what he interrupted. No source confirms what he actually saw or reported before the radio went silent. * A single offender for all three deaths. This assumption is really wallpaper over Assumption 2 — if the deaths are one continuous event, one actor is the simple explanation; if not, it was never freestanding. * THE LOAD-BEARING ONE — homicide, not accident, for Shubert and Welch. Carbon monoxide poisoning does not by itself prove murder. No source states a manner-of-death classification for either victim. Every other assumption in this stack depends on this one holding. 🧠 Key Concept: Testing the Stack An assumption stack is not a list of suspicions — it’s an inventory. Every investigation runs on premises nobody restates out loud because they seem obvious. The discipline is in writing them down anyway, in order of how much weight each one carries, so you can see exactly which one is doing the most work to hold the story together. In Mitchell’s case, Assumption 6 — homicide versus accident for Shubert and Welch — carries more weight than any other, because if it falls, the entire “interrupted disposal” narrative loses its foundation. 📋 Week 19 Arc Monday — “Seven Minutes on Meiss Road” — The inherited story and the Load-Bearing Coincidence introduced. Tuesday — “The Van That Told Two Stories” — The six-assumption stack, laid out to be tested. Wednesday — “Twenty Minutes to the River” — Each assumption pressed against the evidence. Thursday — “What the Water Took” — The four-category map. Thursday Night Master Class — “First Officer on Scene” — The responding deputy’s fourteen-minute drive, reconstructed in three passes. Friday — “The Wall They Never Tested” — The after-action and the case’s central question. 📌 Key People Deputy Jeffrey Vaughn Mitchell — victim, Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office. Killed October 27, 2006. Allan Shubert, 43 / Nicole Welch, 28 — found dead of carbon monoxide poisoning in the van recovered from the Cosumnes River. Victims; ruled out as suspects in Mitchell’s death. Sgt. Tony Turnbull — homicide detective, on record describing the disposal sequence as “one of the theories.” ⚠️ Why This Case Most weeks test assumptions about a suspect. This week tests an assumption about the case’s own architecture — whether two death scenes were ever proven to be one event. That’s a different kind of stress test, and it’s why this case earns its place after last time’s foundation-level failure: two different ways an investigation can be organized around something nobody actually confirmed. 📄 Companion Article Paired with today’s Substack Post, “The Van That Told Two Stories.” 🎧 About the Show Crime: Reconstructed applies investigative methodology to real cases — not to relitigate verdicts, but to teach the principles of sound investigation. Host Morgan Wright spent decades in law enforcement, intelligence, and forensic analysis. Because justice matters. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit crimereconstructed.substack.com [https://crimereconstructed.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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