The Crimes of Margo Freshwater | 4. Born to Run
43 min
•Jan 26, 20263 months agoSummary
Episode 4 chronicles Margo Freshwater's escape from prison in 1970 and her 30-year reinvention as Tanya Lynn Myers, a working mother and long-haul trucker in Ohio. The episode culminates in her capture by FBI agents in 2000 after a decade-long investigation, revealing how she built an entirely new identity while raising three children and maintaining her secret.
Insights
- Identity creation in the 1970s was remarkably simple—a mailed Social Security application with minimal verification enabled complete legal reinvention
- Psychological survival mechanisms developed in childhood trauma (witnessing parental abuse, date rape at 15) directly enabled her ability to compartmentalize and maintain a fugitive identity for three decades
- The investigation's success hinged on fingerprint analysis rather than digital forensics, highlighting pre-digital era investigative limitations and the persistence required in long-term fugitive cases
- Family relationships created genuine emotional vulnerability that contradicted her survival strategy of emotional detachment and constant readiness to flee
- Law enforcement coordination across state lines (Ohio, Tennessee) and jurisdictional challenges required prosecutor involvement and judicial warrants to prevent suspect flight
Trends
Identity fraud and document falsification vulnerabilities in 1970s government systems enabled long-term fugitive reinventionPsychological compartmentalization as survival mechanism in individuals with complex trauma historiesMulti-state law enforcement coordination challenges in apprehending long-term fugitives before digital tracking systemsEmotional cost of sustained deception on family relationships and personal identity integrationInvestigative persistence and obsessive case management as critical factors in cold case resolution
Topics
Identity Fraud and Document FalsificationFugitive Apprehension ProceduresMulti-State Law Enforcement CoordinationFingerprint Analysis and Biometric VerificationWitness Protection and Fugitive Survival StrategiesPsychological Trauma and Identity CompartmentalizationSingle Parenthood and Economic SurvivalSearch Warrant Procedures and Judicial AuthorizationCold Case Investigation MethodsCriminal Records and Background ChecksFamily Dynamics in DeceptionLong-Haul Trucking IndustryProsecutor Decision-Making in Fugitive CasesParental Abandonment and Childhood TraumaWorkplace Background Verification Gaps
Companies
Good Shepherd Nursing Home
Tanya's first employment after assuming new identity in 1970, working in housekeeping department
JCPenney
Tanya worked selling insurance at this retailer in Ohio during the 1980s-1990s
MetLife
Tanya's career employer as insurance salesperson that relocated her to Columbus in the 1990s
RWI Logistics
Trucking company where Tanya and husband Daryl worked as a team leasing long-haul trucking services
Woolworth's
Retail location where Tanya had chance encounter with her aunt Leona in the 1970s
Kroger
Grocery store where surveillance team tracked Tanya and Daryl before arrest in 2000
Jolly Pirate Donuts
Breakfast location where surveillance team observed Tanya and Daryl on morning of arrest
Columbus Police Department
Facility where Tanya was fingerprinted and identified as Margo Freshwater in 2000
People
Greg Costa
Special Agent who spent 10 years investigating Margo Freshwater's disappearance and led her apprehension
Greg Elliott
Tennessee Bureau of Investigation agent who coordinated multi-state investigation and flew to Columbus
Ron O'Brien
Franklin County prosecutor who drafted search warrant and obtained judicial authorization for arrest
Stephen Sheerholt
Costa's supervisor at Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation who made initial contact with Tanya at health club
Phil Zimmerman
Tanya's first husband and father of her first two children; struggled with responsibility and jail time
Joe Hudkins
Tanya's second husband and father of her third child; died of terminal cancer in 1988
Daryl McCarter
Tanya's third husband and long-haul trucking partner; present at arrest in 2000
Faye Copeland
Woman who escaped prison with Margo Freshwater in 1970; apprehended by FBI in Baltimore
Leona
Tanya's aunt who visited her in prison; encountered her at Woolworth's without recognizing her
Timothy Allen Hudkins
Tanya's third child with Joe Hudkins; present at arrest and learned truth about mother's identity
Quotes
"I've always believed that everyone has a purpose on this world. And it's once that purpose has been fulfilled, that's when we move on."
Margo Freshwater (as child)•Early in episode
"A clean life starts with a clean page, complete with a new name, of course."
Tanya Lynn Myers•Identity creation section
"I just needed to connect with my past. As fully committed as she was to the life of Tanya, it's like sometimes she'd get homesick for Margo."
Narrator (Cooper Mall)•Woolworth's encounter
"I opened this case in 1993, and Margot Freshwater was a ghost. She was a fictional character. It goes from chasing a ghost, which is what I did for all those years, to fuck, I actually caught the woman."
Greg Costa•Fingerprint confirmation
"She just realized this is it. They finally caught up to me."
Greg Costa•Arrest moment in parking lot
Full Transcript
Listen to all episodes of The Crimes of Margot Freshwater ad-free right now by subscribing to The Binge. Visit The Binge channel on Apple Podcasts and hit subscribe at the top of the page. Or visit getthebinge.com to get access wherever you listen. The Binge. Feed your true crime obsession. The Binge. Colonial Hills in the 1950s felt like every town USA. Small Cape Cod homes, each with its own patch of clipped lawn, stood side by side like siblings in matching outfits. This suburb of Columbus was one of those places where people believed they were building something. Not just houses, but lives. And to the extent that a baby could know there was a great big world beyond it, Little Margo Freshwater seemed determined to explore that great big world. When I was 18 months, my mom had me out in the backyard, and she forgot something inside. She ran inside to get it. She stepped back out, expecting to see her daughter still inside the fenced yard. And I was gone. Just vanished. No gate open, no tracks in the mud. Houdini and diapers. She hunted everywhere. And all the neighbors were looking for me. Every backyard was checked, every corner scanned, until the search party spilled out to the boundary where homes end and danger begins. The houses on Indianola Avenue, the back of their houses face the railroad tracks. At one of those houses, a neighbor stepped out to take out the trash. And as she turned around to go back in the door, something caught her eye. And she turned around and looked and she saw this child on the railroad tracks and a train coming. So she ran and she grabbed me off the tracks. This was Margo's first great escape. I've always believed that everyone has a purpose on this world. And it's once that purpose has been fulfilled, that's when we move on. Stepping into trouble and surviving it would become her signature. the trait that shaped every turn to come. From Sony Music Entertainment and Glass Podcasts, this is The Crimes of Margot Freshwater. I'm Cooper Mall. Episode 4, Born to Run. Greg Costa spent 10 years chasing Margot Freshwater, trying to stitch together the three decades she lived in hiding. He had scraps, paperwork, old applications, secondhand memories, Pieces of a life, but never the full picture. Yet he kept looking. And finally, the trail led him right up to her front door. And up until now, you've mostly heard about that search. You're probably wondering what Tanya was doing all those years. I was too. Before we get to that, I think we need to sit with what makes Tanya's story unusual. In most people's lives, 30 years go by collecting the small, ordinary moments that make up a life. You fall in love. You have kids. You struggle with bills. You change jobs. You suffer losses. You celebrate the wins. It is the slow, uneven rhythm of becoming a person. Tanya lived all that too, but she lived it with a secret that sat right behind her ribcage. She lived three decades of milestones knowing her past could find her at any second. To survive it, Tanya ended up making a set of principles for herself. some rules to live by. She never wrote them down, but her rules were etched into how she moved through the world. When we last left Margo, she jumped on a train in Baltimore, narrowly missing the FBI, who'd just caught up with Faye Copeland, the woman she escaped with. The train took her as far north as it could go, a notch in the Rust Belt, Akron, Ohio. She arrived with nothing but a couple of bags and the hope that the next stranger might be safe to trust. That woman she barely knew from selling encyclopedias, the one Tanya shared her plan to get back to Ohio with, made good on her offer. She'd arranged for her parents to meet Margo at the station. That was the first time I'd ever had an Arby's because they asked me if I'd eaten and I said no. So they stopped at an Arby's and got me a roast beef sandwich. Warm food, a full stomach. it was the closest she had come to comfort in months. Almost as soon as she got to Akron, she moved west to Ashland, where there were more opportunities to earn a living. But starting over required more than just money. Margot needed a past no one could trace, a future built clean. I'm a really ambitious chick, but this sounds like an impossible to-do list to me. Back in those days, things were a lot different. So I wasn't going to steal someone's identity. I was going to create an identity. That's the first rule she made for herself. A clean life starts with a clean page, complete with a new name, of course. And so I had picked the name Tanya Lynn Myers. She chose a name plain enough to blend in, but still feel like hers. It was just totally random because I wanted to go by Tony as a nickname. And so it was just Tony with an A on the end. Tonya. And so I applied for a Social Security card through the mail and filled out the application and everything. In 1970, this was shockingly easy to do. That application was all she needed to get a Social Security number. And with the new identity came a new birthday. And I put that my birth date was 5-23-53. And I picked that date because my older brother's birthday was May 22nd. So I figured that would make it easy for me to remember, and I would make myself five years younger. Don't act like you wouldn't be tempted to do the same. With the drop of an application in a mailbox, Margo Freshwater was gone. Tanya Lynn Myers had taken her place. I applied for a job at Good Shepherd Nursing Home. And I got a job in the housekeeping department. A normal job. The beginning of a normal life. Tanya tried to work hard and keep her head down. Still, she couldn't avoid the world forever. One night, the woman she lived with suggested they go out for a drink. Nothing crazy. Just a little fun. So I went with her. And I got a Coke. And this guy came up to me and introduced himself. His name was Phil Zimmerman. a blue-collar guy who shuffled between handiwork and construction jobs. I found him annoying. He was not her type. He was only like a year older than I, but he was balding and he was heavyset. He was not the plan. But he was a real nice guy. I really wasn't interested in having any relationships with anyone, but he kept pursuing me. And Tanya tried to protect the tiny bit of stability she had built. Relationships meant risk. Attachment meant vulnerability. Still, Tanya caved. They went on a few dates, and the guy she once found annoying, he grew on her. Before they took their relationship to the next level, there was something she had to tell him. So we were talking one night, and I told him, I said, well, you're nice. I like you. but I can't get into a relationship. I'm pregnant. Okay, hold up. Pregnant? How? And by who? I'd only been with the one person, and that was to get the train ticket. She'd just gotten out of lockup after all. She'd only spent one night with a man, Faye's brother, whose offer to get Tanya out of Baltimore came with strings. I didn't want anyone to know because I was afraid that Faye's brother might find out I was pregnant and then come and try to take the baby. And I wasn't going to lose another baby. Her predicament didn't seem to deter Phil in the slightest. He was already a father from his previous marriage. He kept coming around, and as the time went, he told me that he would be the father to my child. On July 5th, 1971, Tanya and Phil welcomed a junior. And Phil put his name on Phil's birth certificate. Phil Zimmerman, Tanya's first son she got to keep. Also Faye Copeland's nephew. Biological nephew, anyway. Can't get enough of the story of Margo Freshwater. Do you need more than the episodes can provide? Real quick, we just launched a free true crime newsletter and community page to go along with our binge shows, including The Crimes of Margo Freshwater. And you can access it at the link in our episode description or at patreon.com slash the binge. You'll get behind the scenes reporting, case updates, and a chance to chat with one of the show's creators and other fans. The newsletter comes out twice a month. It's totally free. And it's where the story continues. I'll see you there. Just hit the link in the description or head to patreon.com slash the binge. I love. This isn't about giving up fun to chase your goals. It's about choosing a better way to do both. You work hard. You play smart. You've earned this. It what I reach for when I want to unwind without feeling foggy sluggish or questioning my life choices the next morning I mean doesn that sound lovely So if that sounds good to you here the deal Visit trynowadays slash crimes to get 20 off your order That's trynowadays.com slash crimes or just put crimes at checkout. Drink responsibly, must be 21 or older. By now, not even a year after escaping prison, Tanya was a working mom in the suburbs. Except the guy she's hitched her wagon to isn't exactly who she thought he was. Phil was part of the picture now, whether by love or necessity. At first, he seemed like a decent guy with potential. But potential didn't pay bills or raise children. Phil was a nice guy, but he was a child in a man's body. He could not accept responsibility. And he was in and out of jail for non-support. Tanya was trying to lay low, but her husband kept landing himself in jail, kept getting on the radar of the very people Tanya wanted to avoid. It didn't take long to realize he was already failing at fatherhood elsewhere. Yet he was the one helping keep a roof over their heads, and it was about to become even harder not to have to rely on him. Although we were using precautions, I got pregnant again. Another child meant more to protect, while the man-besider seemed determined to avoid adulthood at all costs. He said, we need to talk. And I said, about what? And he said, about the baby you're carrying. You need to get an abortion. And I said, no, that's not going to happen. This is your child. Why would you want me to get an abortion? He said, because I just can't handle the responsibility. Tanya Redfield the riot act. And I said, okay, well, let me put it to you this way. I hope you stick around. But if you don't, that's okay. Because I'm having this child. I'm not giving it up. So with or without you, I'm having this baby. It seemed likely that she could end up a single mother. So Tanya started to get ready to run. Again. And if she was going to be hauling two kids around, she needed to be able to drive. I didn't have a driver's license. All I had was my social security card. And I went to the BMV to take my test. A simple task for most people. For Tanya, it was another test of whether the life she built could withstand scrutiny. And I saw on the wall posted what documents you had to have. And I thought, what am I going to do? Because all I've got is a Social Security card. I don't have a birth certificate. When I got up to the desk, I gave her my Social Security card, and she said, well, I need your birth certificate, too. And I said, oh, I didn't realize I had to have my birth certificate. I guess I can go back home and get it. And she stopped, and she said, no, that's okay. Don't worry about that. But Tanya wasn't in the clear just yet. When she asked me for my birth date, I blurted out my real birth date instead of the birth date that I put on my Social Security card. She knew she fucked up, but it looked weirder if she tried to fix it. So she did what she'd been doing the whole time, crossed her heart and rolled with it. So that was it. Tanya's in the driver's seat now with one less thing to depend on Phil for once the baby comes just a year and change after she welcomed Phil Jr. into the world the nurse came over and she said what did you want? I said a little girl and she said what do you think you got? I said a little boy and she put her in my arms and she said you got your little girl her name? Angela Tanya pushed forward alone even with Phil still technically in the house. His loyalty wandered as easily as his attention did. He ran off with another woman, leaving Tanya, Phil Jr., and Angela behind. I didn't want anything to do with him after that. Took my wedding band off and threw it out in the yard and decided that was it. In her guide to disappearing, this is the chapter where the safety net vanishes. No partner to blend in behind. No ready-made family to make her look ordinary. I was raised by a single mom, so I can picture what those years after Phil looked like. The grind of odd jobs, the long hours, the constant moving to wherever the next chance at stability popped up. Most single moms barely have time to shampoo their hair, let alone stop and take stock of how precarious everything feels. tanya eventually landed steady work as a plant secretary at a plastics factory on the other side of ohio she packed up the kids and moved and that's when she met joe hudkins the man who would become her second husband he was your classic tall dark and handsome real easy on the eyes and unlike phil had steady work as a truck driver and three children he was absolutely devoted to Time moved on. We continued to see each other. And he had said he was thinking that he would like to be with me for the rest of his life. So one evening, he asked me to go for a ride. And he took me to a spot where he used to fish. He said it was his favorite spot. It was along the river, and it was quiet, and it was serene and just beautiful. And he proposed to me. And I accepted. We ended up getting married October 29th of 1977. They got a bigger spot to accommodate their blended family of seven and made room for one more. Tanya was pregnant again. Joe asked me, he said, well, what are we going to name him? And I said, well, we're going to name him what you wanted to name him, Timothy Allen. Life with Joe had become something Tanya once thought was out of reach. A real marriage. Kids underfoot. Jobs that kept the lights on. One afternoon, Joe and Tanya met up at Woolworth's on her lunch break. She worked next door at JCPenney selling insurance. While we were sitting there talking, we were sitting on stools and I was facing him. I saw this woman. And when she got closer, I could see that it was my aunt. No fucking way. Leona. You remember her from Agent Costas' adoption ruse. Tanya should have made an excuse to get out of there. If Leona recognized her in front of Joe, the whole facade could collapse. Leona had visited her in prison barely a decade earlier, plenty recent enough to spot her. And if she did, who's to say she wouldn't call the police? But instead, Tanya did something curious. Nostalgic, even. She had just kept walking, and then she went down the stationary aisle. So I excused myself from Joe. I said, I need to go over here for a minute. And I stood at the end of the aisle, which was probably maybe, oh, 15, 20 feet. She glanced up, but she didn't recognize me. So I walked down the aisle, and I casually brushed her shoulder like I bumped her by mistake. And I stopped, and we're looking face to face, and I said, oh, I'm sorry. Tanya was really playing with fire here. What was her plan if Leona recognized her? She didn't have one. It probably broke her heart that her aunt didn't know who she was. No one imagines this part of disappearing. It isn't just avoiding police or changing your name. It's walking past someone who once loved you and acting like you never met. I wanted so much to say, so much more, but I knew I couldn't. So I just said sorry again and then walked on. I would have wrapped my arms around her and told her how much I loved her and missed her. Moments like this stayed with her. They reminded her how thin the membrane was between the life she built and the one she left behind. I just needed to connect with my past. As fully committed as she was to the life of Tanya, it's like sometimes she'd get homesick for Margo. And fragments of Margo's past were woven into Tanya's present, blurring the line between who she had been and who she became. Take when Joe asked Tanya about her family. I said, well, as far as I know, I don't have any family left. I said, my mom wanted me to go to college, which was true. She wanted me to go to college. And I said, I wasn't ready to go to college. And so I wanted to go out on my own at the age of 18. And she told me, if I left, don't bother coming back. And he said, well, don't you want to try to find him? And I said, no, not at this point. And he accepted that. And it wasn't hard to tell that story because so much of it was true. I just put a lot of the truth into the background that I would give. She told Joe what she needed to. Not the truth, but the lie she needed him to believe. That maybe even she needed to believe. There's a part of Tanya's life, Margo's really, that sits in a black box. Opening it is the hardest part of telling her story because inside that box is everything she learned to use to survive long before she stepped into a courtroom or scaled a prison fence. When she was a child, she grew up with an alcoholic father who she repeatedly witnessed abuse her mom. At 15, she was date-raped and pressured into getting an abortion. It set her up for the life she had now as Tanya, the mother of seven. Margot had given up the baby she got pregnant with at 17. That was the son that got her kicked out of her mother house All of this had taught her that when things got bad she needed to get out fast It almost like she been on the run long before she became a fugitive But Tanya's life rarely paused to let her process anything. It just kept coming. And the next turn had nothing to do with her past and everything to do with her future with Joe. One day he was complaining he had a pain in his hip. It was a malignant tumor. Joe was terminal. It could be two years, ten years, but there was no getting out of this alive. The cancer spread fast, and the fateful day came, in less than a year. Tanya remembers when she got the call from the hospital on May 18, 1988. 1988. I ran through the halls and got upstairs and I said, Joe, I'm here. I said, it's okay. I'm here now. Everything's going to be okay. I said, you can go now. And he took his last breath and he was gone. With Joe, she had a real home. And after he died, she once more had to go on the move. I just had to keep going. By the 90s, Tanya's days of odd jobs were behind her. She was a career woman now, selling insurance for MetLife, which brought her to Columbus. Not just a bigger city, but the city she grew up in. There was no man in the picture. I chose not to have anyone permanently in my life until my children were grown. And as they grew up, Tanya held on to a private promise, one she whispered every night when the house was finally still. I would always pray to God, please don't let anything happen, that I get caught until at least Tim is 22 years old, because then I knew they could make it on their own. The fear of getting caught never really disappeared, like a ringing in her ear that simply sat off to the side while real life demanded her attention. And no one questioned the woman she presented to the world because she gave them no reason to. Her past was invisible to everyone but herself. She didn't tell any of her kids the truth. Not a single friend. No one. If you saw her then, you'd never know this woman had been on the run for nearly three decades. Her kids left home and carved their own lives. And Tanya found new ways to fill her time. In April 1999, she broke her ankle on the ice outside her office. Recovery left her restless and up late. It's 2.30 in the morning and I woke up and I couldn't go back to sleep. So I turned the TV on, and there was this ribbon going across the bottom of the show. And it was talking about telepersonals. And so I thought, well, that looks like something I can do, because I was bored. She set up a profile where men could leave her voicemails. If she was interested, she'd call back. This is a lot more involved than a swipe left or right. I would get messages, and then I would call the person. and I'd write down their name and we would talk off and on depending upon whether they were interesting or not. I only ended up meeting three because Daryl was my fourth. Daryl McCarter, a long-haul trucker. I'm noticing a pattern here. Their connection felt familiar in a way she hadn't expected. I remember looking into his eyes and I was looking into Joe's eyes. Slowly, Tanya let herself become someone who could fall in love again. Dates turned into partnership, partnership into marriage, and then they went into business together. A company called RWI Logistics leased them as a team. Trucking became more than work. It was proof that by the turn of the century, Tanya had become someone no one would ever connect to the girl once known as Margot Freshwater. She was a mother to grown children, a grandmother, a long-haul trucker, a widow who rebuilt, remarried, and kept moving. Her life had been completely transformed. And except for her location on a map, nothing in it pointed back to her old identity. Nothing at all. Were you noticing the world around you changing and thinking to yourself, people might be able to find me? Like, were you thinking that at all? No, it didn't cross my mind. which is why she never imagined that on an ordinary night in Columbus, a certain special agent had finally caught up. I've been trying to simplify my wardrobe lately, not some dramatic throw-everything-out kind of way, but just being more intentional. Fewer pieces, better quality, things I actually want to wear over and over again. And that is where Quince has been amazing. They have premium fabrics, thoughtful design, and everyday essentials that feel effortless and dependable, even as the seasons change. I've actually really been enjoying the Mongolian cashmere quarter zip sweater in the olive color. It's one of those pieces that instantly makes you look put together but still feel relaxed. 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Now available in Canada too. Don't keep settling for clothes that don't last. Go to quince.com slash crimes for free shipping and 365-day returns. quince.com slash crimes. brand new series on the first of every month, every month. Search for The Binge Channel on Apple Podcasts or head to getthebinge.com to subscribe today. The Binge. Feed your true crime obsession. Special agents Greg Costas and Greg Elliott had eyes on the apartment. No sirens, no backup, no drama. Just one unmarked car on a quiet Columbus street, and a whole lot of hoping this wasn't another dead end. Costas had been carrying this case for years, but now that he was sitting 20 yards from her front door, he wasn't exactly feeling heroic. More like nauseous. I was a bit of a mess because I thought, look, I've got a whole surveillance team out here. I've got the elected prosecutor working on a search warrant on a Sunday. And with the arrival of Greg Elliott from Tennessee, it was now a multi-state operation. This dude next to me literally got on fucking TBI's plane and flew his own ass here to Columbus, Ohio. And I don't even know who's in that apartment. Finally, the door opens. And here comes a man and a woman. And I'm like, OK, I could breathe a little bit of sigh of relief. Because, like, I don't know if that woman is Margo Freshwater. But at least I know that the woman who we think is Margo Freshwater is here. The minute they saw Tanya walk out that front door, everything kicked into high gear. This was an exciting case for everybody involved. So everybody was kind of on edge. Wherever she went, they went. Simple as that. Her and Daryl come out and they get in the car. They were just running errands, and they went to Jolly Pirate Donuts and had breakfast and got the car washed, and they went to Kroger. Every turn, every lane change, every stop was a chance to lose her. They were running blind, no warrant in hand, and no confirmation this woman was really Tanya. The couple's next move would determine how much time the Greggs had left. They leave Kroger and they drive to Main Street in Columbus. And there's this big shopping plaza. But boom, lo and behold, there's the rig. The Greggs were officially on the clock. And they're putting groceries in the truck. And I'm like, shit, they're getting ready to take another road trip. And truckers don't just go for a drive. They disappear for long stretches at a time. hundreds of miles from where you last saw them. This was a nightmare scenario. We still didn't have a search warrant at this point, so we're still waiting and waiting and waiting. So I called Ron O'Brien, the prosecutor, and I said, where are we, bro? I said, they are loading up this truck. Like, they are getting ready to go somewhere. And he said, I'm almost done. From here, the chase moved from the parking lot to the legal arena. Costas handed the baton to Franklin County prosecutor Ron O'Brien, who now had to put the whole case on paper and convince a judge they finally had the right woman. I drew up the search warrant, and in this case, to get some fingerprints from her and to temporarily detain her so that we could see, as we believe, that she was Margot Freshwater. But of course it wasn't going to be that easy. A piece of paper didn't solve the biggest problem, getting her to actually go with them The concern was that she deny being Margot Freshwater They didn have hard evidence yet And apart from their suspicions Tanya McCarter seemed like a pretty law-abiding lady. O'Brien found a way in. I said, well, let's just get a search warrant that allows us to temporarily detain her and print her, and that if it isn't her, we'll cut her loose. And if it is, then she'll go straight to jail. Now that the legal piece was in motion, the case shifted gears. O'Brien needed a sworn affidavit, and Costas had to leave the field and meet him to get it done. I break off the surveillance team, and I go and meet the prosecutor, and then we go to the judge's house. You're walking in a judge's house Sunday morning, you know what I mean? If they were dragging him into this on a Sunday, the case had to be airtight. Court was held at a dining room table. We sat down with him, and I just laid out my case. And when I laid the plastic on top of the hard copy, he's like, oh yeah, okay. I've seen enough. He'd put Tanya's driver's license on top of Margo's mugshot. He picks up the pen and signs the warrant. Three decades of questions came down to one signature. But the celebration lasted about 10 seconds because just as they were heading out the door... I get a phone call and it's Steve Shearholt, who was my boss at the time, and he says, they're heading to the airport. And I'm like, do not let either one of them motherfuckers get on a plane. Costas didn't come this far to watch Margo slip into the sky. From where we were to where she was, was probably a good 40-minute drive. And suddenly, it was pedal to the floor. The margin for error was almost zero. If she stepped onto a plane, the jurisdiction would blow wide open and the manhunt would sprawl across multiple states. Then a second call came in. What had happened was there was a health club right by the airport and they had a membership. Costas could breathe a sigh of relief. Tanya wasn't boarding a plane. She was poolside with her family. So now we've got my partner. He's inside watching Daryl McCarter, Tanya Hudkins-McCarter, Tim Hudkins, her son, Tim's wife and their baby, who was an infant. And they're swimming. But eyes on the pool were only half the operation. The real machinery was waiting outside in the parking lot, already in motion. The plan was we're going to serve the search warrant on Tanya and we're going to take her to the Columbus Police Department. She's going to be fingerprinted. Then the fingerprint expert is going to examine the fingerprints and tell us whether or not it's her. So finally the guys get back. They've got the search warrant in hand and everything, so we just wait for her to come out. And she came walking out with all of her family and everything. Someone had to take the first step. And that job fell to Costas' supervisor, Stephen Sheerholt. I was nervous, and I was also confident, but just wanted to do it in a very low-key manner. Sheerholt positioned himself, ready for the moment they'd been waiting on. Here they all come walking out. You know, the phrase, your heart is beating out of your chest, mine had burst through and was doing laps around that parking lot. Then they finally closed the distance. He says, are you Tonya Hudkins McCarter? She just got this distant deer in the headlight look. And she didn't say anything. She just stared at us. And it was just like she was staring right through us. Steve says, we are with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation. And we have been conducting an investigation alongside the Tennessee Bureau investigation. And we actually have reason to believe that you're not Tonya Hudkins McCarter, but that you are in fact Margo Freshwater who is a fugitive. And I knew right then, we were about 99, 98% sure that this was our right person. But when I got that right there, it was like, she just realized this is it. They finally caught up to me. Now this is when it turns into kind of a shit show. Picture it, an unsuspecting family in a parking lot and suddenly officers are closing in, telling their mother and wife she isn't who she says she is, that she's an escaped convict who's been running since the 70s. Keep in mind, we're in the parking lot. Everybody's looking around like, what in the hell is going on? She has no emotion, like stoic, like there was no color in her face, but no emotion. So now you're getting the, Daryl is like, you know, what? What are you talking about? That's my wife. And the kid's going, that's my mom. They were upset. Who in the heck are you to come in here with policemen and police cruisers and detectives and accuse my mom or my wife of murder? They felt we had lost our minds. The anger hit hard, but it didn't change what had to happen next. So we told her, we have a warrant for your fingerprints. And she says, fine. Are you going to take him here? and said no we are going to take you down to the columbus police department where they will be taken so at that point she turns and she started walking toward daryl and i remember like stopping her saying whoa whoa whoa and she looked at me and said i just want to say goodbye so she She hugged him, whispered something in his ear, and his face went white. And she hugged her son, and her back was to me. The son was facing me, and she whispered something into his ear, and he burst into tears. Up until then, the family had no idea she'd been someone else all along. We handcuff her, we're walking her to the cruiser, and she looks at Daryl and says, call the attorney. I still couldn't relax yet, but that's when I thought it's got to be her. But surrender was only the beginning. The real confirmation still had to happen. So we took her down to Columbus Police Headquarters and she got fingerprinted. And everyone at the station wanted a front row seat to watch the analyst compare the prints. She's sitting down and she's using one of those eyeglass things, you know, where they go back and forth and everybody was hovering around her. Finally, everybody was like, can you just give her some room? Everybody back up. But Costas, he was VIP. For him, this wasn't just procedure. This was the culmination of a hunt he'd carried for years, finally playing out right in front of him. And then, in an instant, all those years of grind, doubt, and obsession came to a head. She looked right at me and said, it's her. My knees buckled. This was real. Margot was real. I opened this case in 1993, and Margot Freshwater was a ghost. She was a fictional character. It goes from chasing a ghost, which is what I did for all those years, To fuck, I actually caught the woman. I couldn't believe it. I couldn't fucking believe it. For Costas, this moment closed the loop. The ghost he'd chased had turned undeniably human. But for Tanya, this was only the beginning. Every mile she put between herself and the woman she once was began collapsing inward. The pass she tucked so far away was now clawing back into the light, ready to demand answers. Next time on The Crimes of Margo Freshwater, Tanya reveals she was never the Bonnie to Glenn Ash's Clyde. In fact, that night at the liquor store in Tennessee, she tried to set Hillman Robbins free. I bent down and I was trying to untie Mr. Robbins and Nash came back and caught me and slammed me up against the wall That ended any hope of escape Then he told me to step out the back door I got about a foot out the door and I heard some noises I realized were gunshots Unlock all episodes of The Crimes of Margot Freshwater ad-free right now by subscribing to the Binge Podcast channel. Not only will you immediately unlock all episodes of this show, but you'll get binge access to an entire network of other great true crime and investigative podcasts, all ad-free. Plus, on the first of every month, subscribers get a binge drop of a brand new series. That's all episodes, all at once. Search for The Binge on Apple Podcasts and hit subscribe at the top of the page. Not on Apple? Head to getthebinge.com to get access wherever you listen. Delvecchio. Our theme music was composed by Oliver Baines. We use music from MIB and Epidemic Sound. Our production managers are Sammy Allison and Kristen Melchiori. Our lawyer is Michael Belkin. Special thanks to Steve Ackerman, Emily Rasek, and Carrie Hartman. Please rate and review The Crimes of Margo Freshwater. It helps people find our show. Thank you.