Criminal

Gone

47 min
Jan 16, 20265 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

This episode of Criminal tells the true story of Karen Palmer, who fled California with her two daughters in 1989 after her abusive ex-husband Gil kidnapped their youngest child. The narrative follows her 20-year life in hiding under a false identity, including how she forged documents to establish a new life in Colorado, and her eventual discovery that Gil had died homeless in California.

Insights
  • Domestic abuse victims in the late 1980s faced severe institutional barriers: no anti-stalking laws, police reluctance to intervene, and legal systems that didn't recognize coercive control as abuse
  • Document fraud for survival purposes operated in a pre-digital era where state records were disconnected and identity verification was manual, making it feasible in ways that would be impossible today
  • The psychological toll of living in hiding extends far beyond the initial escape—Karen experienced decades of hypervigilance and fear even after establishing safety
  • Reconciling a false identity with a real one required navigating complex federal systems (IRS, Social Security) that ultimately showed discretion when fraud was motivated by survival rather than financial gain
  • The resolution of trauma doesn't always come from confrontation; Karen's primary emotion upon learning of Gil's death was grief rather than closure
Trends
Evolution of domestic violence recognition: from invisible coercive control in the 1980s to modern legal frameworks acknowledging psychological abusePre-digital identity systems and their vulnerabilities: how analog document management enabled survival strategies no longer possible in networked databasesInstitutional discretion in prosecuting survival-motivated fraud: federal agencies weighing intent and impact over technical violationsLong-term psychological impacts of protective measures: how safety mechanisms create their own ongoing trauma through sustained hypervigilanceIntergenerational effects of parental trauma: children raised in hiding and their eventual agency in family decisions (adoption)
Topics
Domestic violence and coercive controlIdentity fraud and document forgeryWitness protection and relocationParental kidnapping and custody lawAnti-stalking legislation historyFederal fraud prosecution discretionSocial Security and IRS identity reconciliationPre-digital vs. digital identity systemsPsychological effects of living in hidingCriminal justice system gaps in the 1980sAbuser behavior patterns and escalationChild trauma and resilienceLegal name changes and identity integration
Companies
Paladin Press
Boulder-based book publisher where Karen briefly worked; published controversial titles on weapons, explosives, and a...
People
Karen Palmer
Main subject of the episode; fled abusive ex-husband and lived under false identity for 20 years
Phoebe Judge
Host and narrator of the Criminal podcast episode
Gil
Karen's ex-husband who stalked, threatened, and kidnapped their daughter; died homeless in Santa Maria, California
Vinnie
Karen's second husband who helped her escape and lived under false identity for 20 years to protect the family
Quotes
"We really left overnight. You know, I had a job. I was working for a semiconductor firm just outside Santa Cruz, and I just one day didn't go to work."
Karen PalmerEarly in episode
"The abuse was more, I guess, what they call now coercive control. Though there were physical elements to it. He could be bullying and looming and shoving and doing that kind of stuff."
Karen PalmerMid-episode
"It wasn't until getting Amy back and seeing the gun and realizing that it would never be over. It was never going to be over that we decided, okay, that's it, we have to do it."
Karen PalmerTurning point in narrative
"By this point, it had been 20 years and there is not a day in which I did not think about him and filled with apprehension that maybe he will find us after all."
Karen PalmerLate in episode
"I feel sad, but I don't regret it."
Karen PalmerFinal reflection
Full Transcript
Security program on spreadsheets, new regulations piling up, and audit thread? It's time for Vanta. Vanta automates security and compliance, brings evidence into one place, and cuts audit prep by 82%. Less manual work, clearer visibility, faster deals, zero chaos. Call it compliance or call it Com-Pliance. Get it? Join the 15,000 companies using Vanta to prove trust. Go to vant.com. Go to vant.com. We really left overnight. You know, I had a job. I was working for a semiconductor firm just outside Santa Cruz, and I just one day didn't go to work. This is Karen Palmer. That's not the name she was born with. She changed it in 1989 after she and her new husband and two daughters went on the run. Her children, Amy and Erin were three and seven. What did you tell your daughters about what was happening? You know, the little one, she was so little she didn't understand anything. Erin was enough older that she knew what was happening around her on some level, and we told her, we're going to go live somewhere where we're safe. Erin never told a soul. I think, you know, somewhere inside her, she knew that it was important, and she wanted to help. I'm Phoebe Judge. This is Criminal. For almost a year, Karen's ex-husband, Gil, had been threatening and stalking them. It started when Karen left him. They'd been married for eight years. Karen met Gil when she was 17. He owned the office supply company where she worked as a secretary. Gil was talkative. You know, it's like he could gab a million miles an hour, and he had tons of friends, and he had this successful business. He was very charismatic, and he would tell these incredible stories about having grown up in New York and having been in the army and starting the business, and he was a good storyteller, and that interested me. So we would just sit there, and at a certain point, he asked me, do you want to be my girlfriend? And I was taken aback, and he said, you don't have to answer me right now. Why don't you think about it? And we can talk about it another time. And there was something about this approach that was so gentle that I felt, well, why not? Why not? I like him. Maybe I could be his girlfriend. When I think back on it now, I think often, you know, what did he think he was doing with somebody my age? How old was he? He was 36 to my 17. Karen and Gil dated for seven years. They broke up a few times. Once Karen caught Gil cheating on her. But then they would always get back together. They got married in 1980. They had two children. Gil was often out late with people who Karen didn't know. He'd come home drunk a lot. Once he came home with a bruised chest, because he'd crashed their car. Another time, the police showed up at their house looking for Gil. Karen didn't know why. He was doing things that I wasn't aware of. He was selling stolen merchandise. And I did know that he had multiple forms of identification. He had several driver's licenses in different names. And I was just kind of flabbergasted at it. But he would pull that out at parties, like a party trick, that he had been able to do this. And I thought it was just a party trick. One skill locked himself in the bathroom. Karen thought he was doing drugs. When he opened the door, he showed her a gun. He held it up to his head and then pointed it at her stomach. She was pregnant at the time with their second daughter. He said it wasn't loaded. But when she hit the gun out of his hand, it went off in the sink. She thought about leaving, but she says at the time she still loved Gil. They'd been together for about a decade. And she couldn't imagine a life without him. You know, you have the frog being put into water and then the water boils. That's the standard metaphor that people use. I think of the things that went on between us as I wasn't physically abused in the way where I was beaten. The abuse was more, I guess, what they call now coercive control. Though there were physical elements to it. He could be bullying and looming and shoving and doing that kind of stuff. And I didn't know anyone who was a victim of domestic violence. And so it never occurred to me. And I didn't think of myself that way. In 1988, Karen and Gil were living just north of San Francisco. They went down to Los Angeles for business allot. Sometimes they took the kids. They stayed at their friend Vinnie's house. Vinnie had worked for Gil at the office supply company. Karen and Vinnie stayed up late talking with each other. At some point, it became clear to both of us that we were unhappy in our marriages. And we just kind of looked at each other and thought, oh, you, you know, we had very strong feelings for each other. And it was just kind of, it was, it was a surprise. And it was certainly not a convenient surprise. It was, it was very dangerous and awful to have realized this. Karen and Vinnie both filed for divorces. When Karen told Gil, she didn't tell him about Vinnie. But then Vinnie's wife found out about Karen. And so she called up Gil and told him. And that was, that was kind of the beginning of the end. That's when the threats started. Gil moved out of their apartment. But one day Karen came home and realized he had gone through her things. He had caught up photos from their wedding and he had burned some of Karen's old family photographs. She says she found a bullet on top of the stove. Karen decided she had to move out of their apartment. I rented a place for me and the girls in Santa Cruz, which was 90 miles south of where we were living in Moran. Because my attorney told me that I could go 90 miles without having to petition the court. And I thought, well, I'll go far enough that he can see the girls, but he has to call me to set up a time. Like I have to know what he's doing. He can't just show up on my doorstep. And that turned out to be, he could definitely show up on my doorstep. The distance didn't make any difference to him. Gil asked to meet her for lunch. Karen agreed. She thought he wanted to talk about their daughters. But when she got there, he threatened to take away the kids if Karen stayed with Vinny. Later, Karen found rotten meat in her front yard. Another time she found her tires slashed. She suspected Gil. I mean, he got very, very scary, very fast. He told me at some point that he was going to cut my head off and put it in the refrigerator for our daughters to find. Did you report him to the police? You know, I was, for a long time, I was really afraid to report him to the police because he was the kind of person that it would make everything for me and the girls worse if I reported him. You know, he would be like, oh, you think you're going to get, you know, some kind of protective order? I don't believe in protective orders. There were no anti-stalking laws in California at the time. The state wouldn't have any until 1990, the first in the country. Once, Gil showed up at Karen's job. He said he wanted to tell her coworkers that she was a cheat and a liar. When Karen walked him outside, he headbutted her. Karen told her lawyer about it, but her lawyer said it didn't sound like her injuries were that bad. Karen found out that Gil had had a meeting with her lawyer and he said Gil seemed like a nice guy. Once Vinny found dynamite on his truck. He called the sheriff's department. Gil had been calling and leaving death threats on his answering machine. Vinny had even filed reports with the police, but the officers said they couldn't do anything. They didn't have proof it was Gil. For a long time, Karen hadn't wanted to tell her mother what was happening, but she finally did. I didn't want my mom to know how bad the marriage was, and I didn't like it that she didn't like him. So I was always glossing things over and trying to present him in the best possible light. So when all this stuff finally broke and I told her, she didn't know what to make of it, but she was supportive. At one point, Gil called her up and he was trying to convince her what a terrible person I was, and she just wasn't having it. I thought at the time, well, what do you think? You really think my mother is going to take your side over mine? At the end of the school year, Karen's older daughter, Erin, went to visit her mother in Carlsbad about 90 miles south of Los Angeles. They went shopping. They went to the beach. You know, she made her milkshakes every night. My daughter was really happy to be with her grandmother. When it came time for her to come home again, my mother was supposed to take her to the airport and put her on a plane. And just before they were due to leave, Gil showed up. Gil told Karen's mother that he was in town visiting family. He was going to be flying back to San Francisco that day. He said he could fly home with Erin. Karen's mother called her. And I was flabbergasted that he even knew she was there, and that he was able to just show up on mom's doorstep. So my mother, you know, I was on the phone with her and she was running this past me and I was extremely unhappy. But my mother said, I'll see her on to the plane. You know, what can happen? She'll be on the plane with him. They'll get off the plane. There she is. Everything will be fine. You know, you'll be in San Francisco International Airport. So I agree to that. But they got to the airport late. So Karen's mother let Erin and Gil go inside without her. And they went inside. And this was in the days before there were security lines. And you could just go up to the gate and purchase a ticket. So Gil took Erin instead of going to the gate that was the flight up to San Francisco, he took her to a gate that was going to New York. And she made kind of a stink. You know, she's like, well, no, we're not going to New York. We're going home to mommy. And so he wound up buying a ticket for her flight, her original flight up to San Francisco. So he got on the plane with her. And she told me later that he was mad at her and wouldn't talk to her on the plane. When the plane landed in San Francisco, it was after midnight. Karen was waiting with her three year old daughter, Amy. She saw Gil and Erin coming out of the gate. I had Amy in my arms and she wants to get down and she's complaining. And he stuck his arms out. And just as a reflex, I gave Amy to him to hold. So we start walking towards baggage claim. And I see him, he's ahead of me by, you know, a fair amount of distance, but I can see him. And he's got Amy up on his shoulder and her little face is just kind of bouncing over, over his shoulder, looking back at me. And I thought, well, okay, he can get ahead of me. And then we'll go to baggage claim and, you know, it'll be okay. So meanwhile, I'm walking along with Erin and I look at her and she looks completely stricken. And so I knew something was wrong with her, but I didn't know what it was. And I knelt on the ground to hug her and, you know, hold her and reassure her. And then when I stood back up, Gil and Amy were gone. Hi, I'm Maria Sharapova, host of the Pretty Tough Podcast. Each episode, I sit down with high achieving women to discuss the pursuit of excellence without apology. This week, journalist, Dean at USC, and now along with her husband, Bob Iger, owner of the Angel City FC women's soccer team, Willow Bay. I said, Bob, are you interested in doing this? And he said, absolutely. But I was definitely the driving force, I think, in the conviction about Angel City. Check out Pretty Tough, new episodes on Wednesdays. You can watch it on YouTube or listen in your favorite podcast app. Complex and unprecedented, the Spanish authorities are calling it. Passengers who'd been stuck aboard the Hanta or maybe Hanta virus stricken Dutch cruise ship disembarked in the Canary Islands this weekend, prompting the highest stakes game of where are they now since maybe COVID? Some of the evacuees, American and French, have since tested positive for the virus. And yet public health officials seem remarkably calm. We do have one individual who was taken to the biocontainment unit early, early this morning. And we assess that individual. They are doing well. Possibly because this is not the one to freak out over. Today Explained drops every weekday afternoon. When Karen Palmer couldn't find her ex-husband, Gil, and her daughter, Amy, she called the airport police. Their response was, what is your custody arrangement? And the custody had not been settled yet. And so they said, well, he has as much right to her as you do. And we can't really do anything. Karen and Aaron stayed at the airport for hours until morning. The police had put out an alert for Gil, but they didn't find anything. The next day, Karen and Vinnie started calling around airports and bus stations, looking for Gil and Amy. They called Gil's old jobs and his friends and family, including his first wife Rita. She and I, there was not a lot of no love loss between us. And yet she called me every single day that Amy was gone. She told me make sure that Aaron sleeps with you because he'll come in the window and take her to. Karen's lawyer had asked for an emergency custody hearing, but it had been scheduled for a week later. Until then, they couldn't file kidnapping charges. But her lawyer had learned that there was a warrant out for Gil's arrest for not appearing in court for drunk driving. The police in San Francisco said if they found Gil, they could arrest him for that. At the custody hearing, a judge issued an order for Karen to have sole custody of both Aaron and Amy. But they still had no idea where Gil and Amy were. The police in Santa Cruz had also come to Karen's apartment and put a tap on her phone. So if Gil called, they could ask the phone company to try and trace his location. And they told me if and when he calls, keep him on as long as you can. Because Santa Cruz, where I was living, is an old town and the kind of switching stations that they had was it's not like on TV where they turn on a computer and two seconds later they locate where the caller is. This is it had to go from switching station to switching station to switching station all the way to his final location. Ten days after Gil disappeared from the airport, he called Karen. They spoke for 45 minutes. It was the worst phone call of my life. It was harrowing. It was just awful. But I kept him on and at the end of it, they still couldn't get him. They didn't know where he was. Gil said he would bring Amy back if Karen stopped seeing Vinnie. She agreed. Gil gave her an address in San Francisco and told her to meet him there the next evening at 8.30. He told her not to tell the police. And at this point, I was torn between having police there to grab him or terrified that if he sensed police presence that he would do something to Amy or he would vanish that he wouldn't show up. You know, he kept telling me that if you don't do what I want, I'll take her again and I'll take Aaron too or I'll just kill everybody. So I made the decision not to have the police there when I went to get her and I went by myself. Gil told Karen to meet him on the corner of Eddie and Hyde Street in downtown San Francisco. When she got there, she saw Gil holding Amy. Karen saw that he had cut Amy's hair and dyed it brown. The whole conversation was, did you mean what you said? Do you promise? You know what will happen if you don't keep your promise? And you know, this went on and on for several minutes until finally he did give her to me and I went rushing over to the car to open the back door and put her in her car seat and I heard him call my name. So I looked over at him and he had lifted up his shirt and what he wanted to show me was the gun that he had tucked into the waistband of his pants. Karen got in the car with Amy and drove to a diner where Vinny was waiting. Karen says she was worried Gil had followed her. All three of them sat on one side of the booth so she and Vinny could face the door. They had talked a few times about leaving California, but they knew it would be hard and Karen didn't know what Gil would do if they left town. It wasn't until getting Amy back and seeing the gun and realizing that it would never be over. It was never going to be over that we decided, okay, that's it, we have to do it. Karen and Vinny decided they would move somewhere far away and they would change their names so Gil couldn't track them down. They agreed to leave as soon as possible. Vinny had known of this bookstore out in the valley that was a survivalist bookstore and they sold things in there like, you know, how to live off the grid, but they also had stuff on how to change your identity. So we had this guidebook on how to assume a new identity. They started getting ready. Karen and Vinny got married quickly. They cashed out their bank accounts and sold their cars and most of their things. They bought a U-subaru and packed it with clothes, bedding, Aaron and Amy's toys, and a single pot and pan. And then they put Amy and Aaron in the car and drove out of California. They didn't know where they were going yet. Karen had always said she needed to live by the ocean and she thought Gil would look for them first on the coast, so they headed east. They ended up in Boulder, Colorado. We weren't even sure we were going to stay there, but we kind of liked it. We were in a motel and we were wandering around the town and it was within driving distance of Denver, so when it came time to look for jobs, if we couldn't find anything in Boulder, there was a big city nearby, so maybe we could find some employment there. Karen found a job posting in the classifies for a proofreader at a book publisher called Paladin Press. She didn't want to give references to her past jobs, but when she got an interview, they didn't ask. When she came in, she saw some of the titles they sold. Twenty-one techniques of silent killing, deadly brew, advanced improvised explosives, and Hitman, a technical manual for independent contractors. We did an episode about this book. It's called The Manual. Karen got nervous about the work. She decided to look for another job. She started doing graphic design work around town. Vinnie found a job finishing furniture. They picked new names. Karen chose hers because it sounded like her real name, Carrie, and Palmer because it sounded like her actual maiden name. She thought if she slipped up while she signed something, it would look close enough that no one would notice. Vinnie picked a new last name and started going by John Vincent. His real name had been Vincent John. He told everyone just to call him Vinnie. Karen made them new birth certificates. She decided it would be easiest to make them both from New York, where Vinnie was actually born. His New York State certificate was basically just a photo stat, where the top half of it was you know, white typewriter type on a black background, and the bottom was you know, the signatures and that sort of thing. So it was not impossible to duplicate it. She copied pieces of the birth certificate at different copy shops around town, so no one would realize what she was doing. She took all the pieces home, cut them out, and glued them together onto a new sheet of paper. She painted over the edges of each piece of cut paper with black ink. When she made copies, it all looked like one piece. Vinnie's book about changing your identity had information about how to get an embossing stamp for any state. They got one with the New York State seal and stamped their fake birth certificates. Karen kept Amy and Aaron's first names, but changed their last names to Palmer. I would be so worried about what new names and how am I going to get the kids enrolled in school. I mean, were you nervous about how this was going to work? Oh God, yes. It was terrible. It was terrible. But the reason it worked out is because it was a different world then. States were very cut off from each other in terms of their documents and their records. So it was not all computerized. You couldn't connect somebody just by their Social Security number and track them all around the country. When they first got to Boulder, they'd made a deal with a real estate agent to live in a condo for free if they repainted it. For the first week, they didn't go outside much. It rained for days and they were too nervous to be seen. Karen got a TV from Goodwill for Aaron and Amy to watch while she and Vinnie painted. They stayed in the condo for a few months, but that fall, the real estate agent called and said that the condo had sold. They would need to move out. But he said there was a house for sale that they might like. He took them to see it. Vinnie loved it. Karen was worried about how they would buy it. They still didn't even have bank accounts, so they couldn't get a loan and they didn't want to use their real names for a credit check. They decided they had to tell the real estate agent that they were in hiding. He offered to talk with the owner and then they had a phone call with her. She wanted to know why they could only pay in cash. She asked if they were drug dealers. They told her about Gill. The owner agreed to skip the credit report and take their down payment in cash. Karen enrolled her daughters at a private school. She thought they would ask fewer questions. She said she didn't have any of their past school records because they'd been home schooled until now. Karen says she worried all the time about Gill showing up in Boulder. I never knew. I mean, maybe he was driving all over the place and talking to people and hiring private detectives. You know, I don't know. Once Karen woke up in the middle of the night and saw Vinnie looking out their bedroom window, she thought Gill was outside. Vinnie said he could see a police officer standing just outside their fence. A mountain line had gotten into their backyard and the police were waiting for animal control. Another time Karen and Vinnie had put the girls to bed and Karen went upstairs to watch TV. Suddenly she heard someone who wasn't Vinnie calling up the stairs. It turned out to be a police officer checking because someone had reported gunshots in the neighborhood. For a while, Karen couldn't figure out how to get new social security numbers or driver's licenses. We had this kind of catch-22 thing where in Colorado, we couldn't get social security numbers because you had to show a photo ID if you were an adult, you know, if you were not getting a number as a baby or a child. And we couldn't get a photo ID without a social security number. You needed that to get a driver's license. So we were kind of stuck. But I knew that back in California, you could get a driver's license without having to have other photo ID. So we made this trip to my mother's place that was specifically to get California driver's licenses. They left in the middle of the week, in the middle of the night. A friend of her mother's who lived next door let them use a utility bill with her address on it. It was the first time her mother had seen them in a year. We used our forged documents and we went to two different DMVs so they wouldn't connect us together. And, you know, we made up some bologna about being New Yorkers who'd never had to drive. They went back to Colorado. After a few weeks, her mother's neighbors sent them their new licenses. Then they went to the Social Security office. Vinnie said he needed a new card for work. Karen said she'd just gotten out of a rough relationship with an older man who had paid for everything. She'd never worked, so she'd never had a social security number. Before 1987, Social Security numbers weren't issued at birth. Do you remember the first time you used these fake documents? Uh, yes. We used them to open a bank account. It took them two tries. The first time Karen went on her own. After she filled out the paperwork, the bank officer noticed Karen had a new Social Security number. She could tell, by the way, the numbers were sequenced. The bank officer said she had to check with her manager about opening the account. While she was away, Karen took her documents and left. Later, Karen and Vinnie went together to a bank branch in a supermarket. This time, no one said anything about their paperwork. Karen kept in touch with her mother, but never told her where she was. I had a regular sort of phone date with her where I would call her from a phone booth at the supermarket. About a year after they moved to Boulder, Karen's mother said she had to tell her something. My mother's mobile home was broken into. The whole place had been turned over, and nothing was taken except her address book. We'll be right back. Why is this still like burning inside of me that I feel like I am missing something? I prayed so hard for my girl. I prayed like every night, prayed, prayed, prayed, and when I lost my babies, it was so hard. So that when I had them, I thought that was going to be the thing. Like I am finally getting the thing that I prayed for, and it's going to fulfill me. And this is everything I want and more. And it was, but it was also something missing. I'm Revan Arson, and this is Motherhood, the remix from Project Swagger. This series is about defining our own versions of motherhood. I am ringing in a mama I adore and admire. My friend, fellow Peloton instructor Kirsten Ferguson, listen now at Project Swagger. This week on Net Worth and Chill, I'm telling you my entrepreneurial origin story. How I went from working a nine to five and making internet videos on the side to walking away from a $625,000 a year job to take your HBFF full time. I'm breaking down exactly how I knew it was time to make the leap, how I set myself up financially so I wasn't just winging it and what it actually takes to survive and thrive as your own boss. From cash flow to taxes to building multiple income streams, because let's be real, becoming an entrepreneur sounds amazing until you realize you have to figure out all of this yourself. I did, and now I'm giving you the blueprint. Listen wherever you get your podcasts or watch on youtube.com slash your rich BFF. Karen kept expecting to hear something from Gil like a summons to appear in court to negotiate custody for Aaron and Amy. At the time that we left, they had given me sole custody because of the kidnapping. But with the caveat that he can petition the court and try to get his parental rights restored and normal visitation and all the things that divorced families deal with. And as far as I know, he never did any of it. After four years, she and Vinny decided it was safe to tell their families where they were. They went to visit Vinny's parents in Florida. They'd both been diagnosed with late stage cancer. Karen and Vinny hadn't been able to be around for their surgeries while they were in hiding. Did you ever say to Vinny, I'm so sorry I got you into this? Or do you think he knew what he was signing up for? You knew Gil? I think he, he, he knew what he was in for and we were so bonded to each other. It's like we had a version of a wartime romance, you know, where like the bombs were going off all around us. And so we felt so connected to each other and so connected to the girls and so devoted to the idea of making a safe place for all of us that he has never for, for even one second expressed any, any resentment, any anger, any regret. He has felt that we, we did what we had to do. In 1994, Karen's mother had news for her. She'd heard from Gil's stepdaughter that Gil was in prison somewhere in New York. Karen later learned Gil had been convicted of criminal possession of a weapon. He was sentenced to two to six years in prison, but he'd gotten parole. She didn't know where he went after that. In 2005, Karen had been away from California and living under her fake name for over 15 years. She'd started writing and she'd published two novels. Her daughters were grown up, one had graduated college and the other had enlisted in the Navy. She and Vinnie started talking about moving back to Los Angeles. They both missed it. They thought maybe if they went back under their new names, it would be safe. It had been a very long time and the city was huge. Sometimes Karen would Google Gil's name. She usually didn't get a lot of search results. Usually just Gil's appeal to the New York Supreme Court to have his conviction for weapons possessions overturned. By this point, it had been 20 years and there is not a day in which I did not think about him and filled with apprehension that maybe he will find us after all. But I was trying to get myself out of the habit of checking because it had been so long and I thought, you know, I can't live like this. In 2006, Karen hired a private investigator. He'd been recommended by a friend. She learned that Gil was back in California in a town called Santa Maria, just 150 miles from Los Angeles. The investigator couldn't find a phone number or address or any utilities connected to him. He said if she wanted more information, she could hire a local investigator. She decided not to. A couple of years later, in 2008, Karen's daughters were home for Christmas. They gave Vinnie a present. It was a book about how to adopt in California. And when he opened the present, you know, he was kind of looking at it and he and I were initially kind of baffled in our, you know, dense parental unit ways and the girls were laughing and what it was was they wanted Vinnie to formally adopt them. We had never done that because we didn't want our names all associated with each other in case he was looking for us. So, you know, it was very emotional Christmas, lots of, you know, crying and I don't know, it was lovely. After dinner, the three of them went out for a walk and I was sitting in the living room and looking at this guidebook and all of a sudden I thought, oh, but what about Gil? Like, what does it mean for the birth father? Is, are they going to have to contact him? You know, what, what does all this mean? And, you know, I, looking through the index and I found, well, they're adults, so they don't have to get in contact with him. And I was reassured by that, but he was absolutely on my mind. Later that night, Karen couldn't sleep. So I got up and I went into my office and booted up the computer and ran a Google search on him. And initially, all that came up was the same stuff that always comes up, which is very little. And then I thought I would add a search term, Santa Maria. And what came up was a little article that had appeared in the Santa Maria paper about a man, a homeless man who'd been found dead in a local park. And it turned out that that, that person was Gil. Karen went to Santa Maria. She told the corner she was Gil's ex-wife. Karen later got to see Gil's case files at the courthouse. He'd been arrested 18 times in four years for burglary, driving under the influence and assault. He died from a heart attack. What was your daughter's reaction? They were mainly relieved. Where they were like, finally it's over. It's finally over. I think, I was the one who was a little more overt about being kind of grief stricken by this. It was, you know, of course I felt relief, but the larger emotion was grief. Karen also learned that Gil had been evaluated by court psychologists twice while in jail. Their notes were in his file. I kind of came to the conclusion after reading this, that I'm not sure I was on his mind at all. Do you ever doubt the decision to go into hiding? I did for many years. I felt very guilty and I wondered if it was necessary to disappear. And the thing I landed on was that all I could go on was how he was, what he did. And so I don't regret it. I feel sad, but I don't regret it. In 2009, Karen and Vinnie started trying to merge their real identities with the fake ones they'd made 20 years earlier. How hard a process is that? It seems very complicated. Oh my god, it was not fun. It took years to straighten it out. We knew that the big issue was social security and the IRS. And we initially tried to hire a lawyer to straighten this stuff out for us. People wouldn't pursue it for us. So Vinnie and I finally decided that we were just going to have to take care of this ourselves and we would have to come clean and throw ourselves on their mercy, basically. They went to the IRS first. An agent listened to Karen explain what had happened with Gil. The agent told them the first thing they'd need to do was get their social security numbers corrected. Social security, we got this other woman and I had laid out our documents, our original birth certificates and the phony ones. And she kind of swept everything up and said, I can refer you for criminal prosecution for fraud. And I might do that. For a while, they didn't hear anything. And then they got news from the Social Security Office. And it was okay in the end, but it was nerve-wracking. And I think she decided not to try to see criminal charges because we didn't do anything to defraud anybody. That's sort of the criteria. Like, did you do it to get out of paying taxes? Did you do it to swindle somebody in some kind of a business deal? Did you do it to skip out on your credit card debt? We had always gone way in the other direction. Like, when we filed our taxes, we didn't take the deductions we were entitled to because we were afraid of drawing attention to ourselves. So it wasn't like we owed money anywhere. And I think they finally looked at us and said, okay, we're going to let this go. Karen says it took a few years to get everything completely straightened out. Karen Vinnie and her daughter's fake names are now their real names. They've all changed them legally. She says that after so long, she's gotten used to being Karen. The Criminal is created by Lauren Spore and me. Nadia Wilson is our senior producer. Katie Bishop is our supervising producer. Our producers are Susanna Robertson, Jackie Zajico, Lily Clark, Lena Sillison, and Megan Canane. Our engineer is Veronica Seminetti. Julie and Alexander makes original illustrations for each episode of Criminal. You can see them at ThisIsCriminal.com. Karen Palmer's memoir is called She's Under Here. You can sign up for our newsletter at ThisIsCriminal.com slash newsletter. We hope you'll join our membership program, Criminal Plus, now on Patreon. It's the very best way to support our work. You can listen to Criminal, This Is Love, and Feveri's a Mystery without any ads. Plus, you'll get bonus episodes behind the scenes photos and videos, and you'll be able to talk directly with us and other criminal listeners. Learn more and sign up at Patreon.com slash Criminal. We're on Facebook at ThisIsCriminal and Instagram and TikTok at Criminal underscore podcast. We're also on YouTube at YouTube.com slash Criminal podcast. Criminal is part of the Vox Media podcast network. Discover more great shows at podcast.VoxMedia.com. I'm Phoebe Judge. This is Criminal.