The inherited disorder has a high mortality rate, and can kill infants before it's even diagnosed, according to the U.S. While she was in custody, Patricia gave birth to another son who was later diagnosed with methylmalonic acidemia - a rare genetic disorder that mimics the symptoms of antifreeze poisoning. However, "Unsolved Mysteries" investigated the case and called attention to a previously undisclosed element of the case. Patricia was convicted of first-degree murder in 1991 and sentenced to life in prison. 1, 1989 - again with tests showing high levels of ethylene glycol in his body. Ryan died after his mother visited him on Sept. Doctors postulated that Patricia had poisoned her son and he was placed in protective custody. There, tests performed on Ryan showed high levels of ethylene glycol in his blood - the main ingredient in antifreeze, according to The National Registry of Exonerations. Stallings became sick the night of Jand his mother Patricia took him to the hospital. Such was the case in the 1989 death of infant boy Ryan Stallings. "Unsolved Mysteries" also helped cleared the wrongfully convicted.
UNSOLVED SERIAL KILLERS 2019 SERIES
In a series of interviews in 2011, Bell claimed he killed 11 young girls - though officials were unable to find evidence linking him to the cold cases and he later denied a written confession to the killings, the Galveston County Daily News reported.īell died in prison in 2019 at age 82, the Express-News reported.
It turns out Bell was also a potential serial killer, according to the Associated Press. He was convicted and sentenced to prison in 1993, according to the Orlando Sentinel. McConaughey was partially correct, as Bell was caught soon after the show aired - but he was actually arrested at a yacht club in Panama, according to the Galveston County Daily News. They found him around Bryan, Texas, about two weeks after that show," McConaughey recalled to Entertainment Weekly in 2014 about his experience playing Dickens in a re-enactment. Although Bell was immediately arrested following Dickens' killing, he was able to post bail and disappeared for nearly 14 years, according to the San Antonio Express-News. The episode showed how Dickens was shot to death by Edward Howard Bell, whom Dickens had confronted after he saw Bell exposing himself to a group of children. Strickland remains incarcerated at the Thumb Correctional Facility in Michigan, according to online jail records.Ī 1998 episode featured the killing of Texas oil field worker Larry Dickens in 1978 - though the episode is particularly famous now for being one of the first credited acting roles for Oscar-winner Matthew McConaughey.
Munday, who had two children with Strickland, faced lesser charges in juvenile court, according to the AP. Strickland was convicted and received a mandatory sentence of life in prison. The pair were charged with murder, but Munday cut a deal with prosecutors that saw her testify against Strickland in exchange for prosecutors dropping murder charges against her, according to the Associated Press. The Washington Post article credits the show in the headline reading "TV CRIME SHOW LEADS TO ARRESTS IN MURDER CASE." Immediately after an "Unsolved Mysteries" episode aired on NBC, police in Moses Lake, Washington received more than a dozen calls from residents reporting they knew Munday and Strickland, who were apparently lying low in the community. Munday, then 17, and Strickland, then 26, were wanted in Michigan for the murder of Elmer DeBoer in 1987, and had been on the run for about a year, The Washington Post reported at the time. The 1988 case of fugitive couple Missy Munday and Jerry Strickland was where "Unsolved Mysteries" appeared to have the most immediate impact.