Missing Pieces
Hans Reiser, born on December 19, 1963, in Oakland, California, was an extraordinarily gifted individual raised by a mathematician father and a photographer mother. By age 13, he dropped out of middle school due to a lack of academic challenge and miraculously gained admission to the University of California, Berkeley at age 15. Though his academic path was highly unconventional—taking 13 years to finish his computer science degree and dropping out of a PhD program—he proved to be a brilliant programmer. He created the groundbreaking ReiserFS and Reiser4 file systemsfor the Linux operating system and founded a highly successful company called Namesys, making him a millionaire.Despite his wealth and intellect, Hans lacked interpersonal skills. In 1998, while recruiting programmers in St. Petersburg, Russia, he used a "mail-order bride" catalog to meet Nina Sharanova, a 24-year-old obstetrician and gynecologist. Communicating initially through a translator, they married in 1999 and relocated to the United States. Nina became his company's Chief Financial Officer, and the couple had two children.Their marriage eventually collapsed. Hans's relentless focus on his business meant he was rarely home, leaving Nina feeling isolated and functioning essentially as a single parent. Their relationship was further strained by Hans's father baselessly accusing Nina of corporate embezzlement, and by intense parenting disputes—most notably Hans's insistence on letting their four-year-old son play violent video games to "make him a man". After Nina posted an ad online seeking a male companion, they separated in May 2004. The subsequent divorce and custody battles were incredibly bitter; Nina won sole custody of the children, while Hans was issued a restraining order in December 2004 due to erratic, stalking behavior.The conflict ended in tragedy. On September 3, 2006, Nina dropped their children off at Hans's mother's house, where Hans was living. She subsequently vanished, missing a scheduled evening with a friend and failing to pick up her children from school on September 5. On September 9, her abandoned Honda was found with groceries still sitting inside.Hans immediately became the prime suspect. Neighbors reported seeing him inexplicably hosing down his driveway on the day of her disappearance, and his car temporarily vanished. Investigators soon found Nina's DNA inside Hans's home and vehicle, and noted that a rear passenger seat had been completely removed from his car. Furthermore, records showed that on September 8, Hans had purchased books detailing how to commit and conceal a murder.Hans was arrested and demanded a speedy trial, which began in December 2006. He maintained his innocence throughout, while his defense bizarrely suggested that Nina had fled back to Russia. However, on April 28, 2008, a jury found him guilty. Facing a severe prison term, Hans finally struck a plea deal: in exchange for a reduced 15-year sentence, he confessed and led authorities to Nina's buried remains, which were located just 800 meters from his mother's house. Following his conviction, their children were sent to live with their grandmother in Russia and were later awarded $60 million in damages in 2012. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].
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