Share The Women of Death Row
Share to email
Share to Facebook
Share to X
By Mariel and Amanda
4.3
3838 ratings
The podcast currently has 33 episodes available.
In this episode, Mariel tells the story of Courtney “Tailor” Clenney, an Instagram and OnlyFans "model" who has been charged with second-degree murder for stabbing her boyfriend, Christian “Toby” Obumseli, to death at their luxury apartment in Miami’s Edgewater neighborhood on April 3, 2022.
The 22-year-old had 2 million followers on Instagram and has been claiming that she only acted out of self-defense during yet another intense argument amid a “violent and toxic” relationship. All the evidence unearthed so far says otherwise.
Listen in as we go through the unsettling videos that have been unearthed during the discovery phase; piece together the documentary evidence, witness and expert testimonies, and Courtney’s own version of events to illustrate the events of April 3, 2022; and what to expect at upcoming hearings.
Photos for this episode and all episodes can be found on our Instagram!
Sources
● https://www.eonline.com/news/1342507/inside-the-polarizing-murder-case-against-onlyfans-model-courtney-clenney
● https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/miami-onlyfans-models-bruised-body-seen-in-photos-after-boyfriends-killing/2904929/
● https://www.tampabay.com/news/crime/2022/11/11/florida-onlyfans-model-courtney-clenney-miami-murder-trial-flee-us/
● https://www.tmz.com/2022/11/02/onlyfans-courtney-clenney-boyfriend-stabbed-secret-recordings-racial-slurs/
● https://ktla.com/news/husband-wife-lose-teaching-jobs-after-students-find-explicit-onlyfans-account/
Get in touch and keep up with the latest episodes on our website
Thank you so much for listening!
This episode we discuss Lisa Montgomery updates the case of Taylor Rene Parker, execution methods, racial disparities in capital punishment cases, and the Pope's prayer to end capital punishment. Followed by strange stories that are not related to crime.
Palate cleansers
1. A tomato spill makes a major California highway a marinara mess
2. An overturned truck and Memphis covered the road with Alfredo sauce
3. Truck collision turns a Florida Highway into a silver sea of beer cans
4. An Oklahoma state lawmaker introduced a bill for Bigfoot hunting season
Happy Halloween! Thank you for listening!
-Mariel
Website
Notable Quotes
● Surely an American government should not elect to execute its citizens based on a television program; this is sadly fairly typical of capital punishment, where those without capital get the punishment.
● Punishment is supposed to be painful; the idea of a killer dying easily would be the opposite of justice.
● Since 1947, the Nuremberg Code has stated that no human experiment should be conducted where there's reason to believe that death or disabling injury will occur, so perhaps we should accept that our grotesque human experiments should be left in centuries past where they belong.
● Capital punishment offers no justice to victims but rather encourages revenge, and it prevents any possibility of undoing a possible miscarriage of justice.
● The death penalty is morally inadmissible, for it destroys the most important gift we have received; life. Society can ensure public safety without definitively depriving the offenders of the possibility of redeeming themselves, making capital punishment unnecessary as a legal tool.-Pope Francis
● Always in every legal sentence, there must be a window of hope. Let us not forget that up to the very last moment, a person can convert and change. Each day, there is a growing no for the death penalty worldwide. Let us pray that the death penalty, which attacks the dignity of the human person, may be legally abolished in every country.
● History shows us that blackness has been devalued since the founding of America. Still, the truth is that black victims matter as much, even if the legal system and society have not recognized their value.
● We must make the radical choice to uproot systems like the death penalty that allowed the anti-black biases in our national consciousness to not only thrive but to be just to do otherwise is to perpetuate a system where black lives matter less. When we accept that the death penalty reveals that black deaths do not matter, it becomes apparent that there is not an anti-racist fix for the death penalty other than its abolition.
● Remember that if you have anything negative to say, reevaluate your life choices because you're taking time out of your day to criticize something that truly does not impact you in any way.
In this episode of The Women of Death Row podcast hosts Amanda and Mariel explore the case of Lisa Graham. Relying on monstersandcritics.com, the news on Alabama.com, mycrimelibrary.com, and the Ledger-Enquirer as sources, Amanda shares Lisa’s story. In May 2015, Lisa was sentenced to death in Alabama for hiring Kenneth Walton to kill her 21-year-old daughter, Shea Graham. Shea had recently been arrested on an aggravated assault charge in a drive-by shooting case in Georgia but was released after her parents posted a $100,00 bond on her behalf. However, Lisa expected her daughter to skip town, and the financial ramifications of such an action represent the suspected motive behind Lisa’s next steps. Lisa hired family friend Walton, who also worked for the family construction business, to kill Shea, and provided him with a 9mm pistol. Shea’s friends testified that the last time they saw her, she was leaving a gas station with Walton, who had picked her up under the pretense of finding her a car so she could leave town.
On July 5, 2007, Shea’s body was found in rural Alabama by a passerby. The body was half nude on the side of a dirt road, and Shea had apparently been shot twice in the head and four times in the chest before being run over and abandoned. After hearing the testimony of friends who witnessed Walton pick up Shea in his truck, police questioned him and quickly received a confession. Walton readily admitted his actions and explained Lisa’s role in the crime. Police then found the 9mm pistol in the care of Lisa’s neighbor, affectionately called “Papa,” to whom she had given the gun for cleaning. Walton pled guilty, offered gruesome details of his crimes, and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Lisa’s trial, however, was a long time coming. The case passed through many hands and faced a number of appeals and delays before finally being tried. Lisa, who has told a number of witnesses that Shea was ruining her life and that she’d kill Shea if she could, was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. Her appeals after the trial were unsuccessful, and the conviction has been upheld.
While Amanda and Mariel agree that the actions of both Lisa and Walton were appalling, they are intrigued by the different sentences given to each, and consider the possibility of gender bias underlying the discrepancy. Moving forward, they also discuss a variety of other topics, from Lisa Montgomery and approaches to the death penalty, to the recent holidays, to their current favorite television shows and podcasts. The hosts comment on The Office, a recent study of events following the Holocaust, and even - going down an extensive rabbit trail - a couple of strange diseases and the unusual way residents of “Nub City” found a way to get money!
Learn more about The Women of Death Row.
Connect on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
Don’t forget to rate, review, and share the podcast with friends!
In this episode of Women of Death Row, Mariel tells the story of Dame Alice Kyteler, a woman condemned and burned to death at the stake for witchcraft in Ireland on November 3, 1324. We also discuss breaking news of the confirmed date for Lisa Montgomery’s execution, Eric Menendez’s retrial, and why the new Netflix documentary film American Murder: The Family Next Door shook us to the core.
Listen in as we discuss how Bishop Richard de Ledrede’s declaration that his diocese was filled with devil worshipers led to the imprisonment and death of the supposed witch and demon worshipper Alice Kyteler. Digressions include more death penalty stuff, particularly in light of the cases of Lisa Montgomery and Scott Peterson. Thanks for listening!
Sources:
Dame Alice Kyteler
The Sorcery Trial of Alice Kyteler by Bernadette Williams.
Williams, B. (1994). The Sorcery Trial of Alice Kyteler. History Ireland, 2(4), 20-24.
Narrative of the proceedings against Dame Alice Kyteler for Sorcery. A.D. 1324. (, 1843). Camden Old Series, 24, 1-40. doi: 10.1017/s2042169900003242
Reichl, K. (2011). Medieval Oral Literature. Berlin: De Gruyter.
Get in touch and keep up with the latest episodes at WomenofDeathRowPodcast.com
The podcast currently has 33 episodes available.