This is episode three of our mini series, Operation Night Cat. If you haven't caught up yet, go back and listen to the first two episodes, available in the feed now. This is Operation Night Cat. I'm Nate Hedgie. It was a cloudy spring day in 2023, and fishing game warden Ron Arsonalt had been summoned to an office building near the New Hampshire State Capitol in Concord. He walked into a conference room and sat down at this big round table. Can you tell me about that big meeting? Yeah, I can tell you. There was a lot of people there. A lot of different alphabets, you know. There's like four or five federal agencies involved. Looking around, Ron saw special agents from the FBI, the IRS, the US Postal Service, attorneys from New Hampshire's Department of Justice, and investigators from the state's Public Integrity Unit. Corruption busters. And it was just a meeting of how we had started this case and what we were at and all the other stuff the other guys were finding at the search warrants. You know, it was just spiraling out in spider web in every different direction. It was crazy. This alphabet soup of law enforcement agencies had assembled because of all the potential crimes that Ron had uncovered during Operation Night Cat. First off, there was the illegal poaching. Gray Fox, Bobcat, Gray Fox, Bobcat, Red Fox, Red Fox. Evidence that a group of men were hunting at night, hunting out of season, baiting animals. It's like they're playing Grand Theft Auto behind their house, except with animals. Mostly violations and misdemeanors. But the dead bobcats, a protected species in New Hampshire, were being registered in other states where hunting them is allowed. And that would be a federal crime. Hey, we got some bobcats getting cranked in New Hampshire at night and they're tagging me legally going across state lines. But some of these hunters were also corrections officers at the State Prison for Men, where text messages had uncovered a whole host of other potential crimes. Witness tampering, falsifying physical evidence, and male theft. You have them outrally admitting that they stole my fucking legal men. That's a federal offense. The Alphabet With all these potential charges, this was a huge opportunity for law enforcement. But there were also risks. What the Freds were afraid of was a thing called double jeopardy. So if we charge them for a violation for the bobcats, then they basically couldn't because they've already been charged for that. The Alphabets hashed out a plan to divide and conquer. Each agency got their own set of charges to follow up on, based on their jurisdiction. Ron and his colleagues at Fish and Game, they would handle the lower level hunting crimes. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wanted a stab at the bigger bobcat charges. Meanwhile, the FBI, the U.S. Postal Inspectors, and the State Attorney General's Office would look into what was going on inside the prison. Were you feeling at that point that these guys were going to get their comeuppance for the stuff that they were doing inside the prison? Yeah, I was at the point where like, alright, the people that need to know, we can concentrate on our hunting violations, which is what we did. When I was talking to Ron, he told me there are parallels to hunting a deer and tracking a criminal suspect. Finding of evidence is like the hunt. You catch a poacher that you've been after for years, it's just like a big buck for a hunter. This investigation into Tom Kelly, Randy Inman, and the other poachers. It was like Ron had stumbled upon the biggest buck of his life. More than five sets of law enforcement agencies have seen evidence of these alleged crimes. But when they had them in their sights, most of these agencies never took the shot. Why not? It's the embarrassment. It's the embarrassment to say how in the world did this happen? How did we get here? From an HPR's document team and outside in, this is Operation Night Cat. Episode 3. A Duck's a Duck. It's easy customizable themes that let you build your brand. Marketing tools that get your products out there. Integrated shipping solutions that actually save you time. From startups to scale-ups, online, in-person, and on-the-go. Shopify is made for entrepreneurs like you. Sign up for your $1 a month trial at Shopify.com slash setup. If it ain't broke, what? Stop! Your days of selling phone age broadband are over! Blast! I've spilled the beans! Upgrade to 100% full fiber. Gigaclear, faster broadband for rural Britain from only 19 pounds a month. Price may rise during contract. T-sensees apply. Check availability at gigaclear.com. From an HPR's document team and outside in, this is the final episode of Operation Night Cat. I'm Nate Hedgie. There's something I never mentioned up until now, which is that Ron Arsenault is kind of a reality TV star. For nine seasons, he and his colleagues were the focus of Northwood's Law. It's a folksier version of cops, which aired on Animal Planet. From the white mountains of the northeast to the shores of the Atlantic Ocean, the conservation officers of New Hampshire stop at nothing to protect the wildlife. Did you kill the deer? Tell me the truth right now. In one moment, you might see a conservation officer dinging someone for catching too many bass. And in the next, another one is rescuing an injured loon. I just really don't want to stress this thing out any more than it already is right now. It's a pretty family-friendly show. But to me, the twists and turns of Operation Night Cat have always seemed grittier, like something you'd see on HBO. You can imagine the scenes of Tom Kelly, the guy at the center of the investigation, shooting coyotes from the sniper's nest on his back deck. Scenes of Ron walking through the woods to find Tom Kelly's bait pile. And you can imagine it all culminating in a dramatic arrest. Officers surrounding Tom Kelly's house then bursting through the door. No! Ray, play! Don't move! Don't move! Don't move! Your hand's up against the wall. Your hand's up against the wall. But in the end, that is not how Operation Night Cat went down. We didn't take him out of his house, you know, kicking the screen with handcuffs on. Not like the TV shows. Ron says he just showed up at Tom Kelly's door with an arrest warrant and asked him to come down to the local police station. But make no mistake, even though they were leaving the big charges to the feds, Ron really threw the book at Tom Kelly. Nine counts of misdemeanor illegal night hunting. Sixteen counts of misdemeanor hunting without a license. And nearly two dozen other violations. Illegal baiting, hunting out of season, illegally hunting black bears. Forty-seven charges in all. It was one of those things when we started, I'm not going to cut the guy in break. I'm just going to write him for everything. So that's why I did. That's why there's so many. But then, Ron handed the investigation over to the county attorney's office to actually prosecute the case. Once you basically ask for help, you lose your control of the case. What do you mean you lose your control of the case? So they kind of have control of what they can plea bargain out at the end of the day. A plea bargain. Hunting at night and baiting out of season might be a big deal for fishing game. But for a county prosecutor, these charges are small potatoes. They're dealing with murderers and rapists and stuff like that. So they're like, oh, he shot at night. Okay, well, not a big deal. So they're not vested like the game wardens are. Back when Ron was showing me videos of Tom killing Bob Katz, watching a deer suffer, he told me, When you take it all together and you're like, oh man, these guys are really bad. Yeah, these guys should never hunt again. But when it came to all those charges against Tom Kelly, county prosecutors struck a plea deal. In exchange for pleading guilty, Tom Kelly's 47 charges were whittled down to just seven. He was fined a little under $5,000 and he lost his hunting privileges for just three and a half years. And at the end of the day, everybody's like, well, you know, you won. Well, yeah, we did win, you know, so I guess we won, you know, at the end of the day. Randy Inman, the prison supervisor, he also got charged with nearly 50 violations. But after another plea deal, it amounted to less than $4,000 in fines and he lost his license for 10 years. The other three guys swept up by fishing game in the poaching ring got even less. Even if it wasn't like 100% what we wanted, they were found guilty. After everything Ron had discovered, the biggest case of his career, this was a small victory. But remember, it was also just one small branch of Operation Night Cat. Ron had taken the first shot, but he knew there were more coming. Are you still feeling hopeful that it'll go through? I still feel hopeful for the feds, you know, their investigation and stuff. But the way these multi-agency investigations work, they're pretty siloed. Ron wasn't expecting to be kept in the loop. And when I was driving around with Ron this past spring, all he'd heard so far was silence. You won't hear anything. Yeah. That's just how they work. Which, I mean, it's fine, but I just want to know, like, are you still going forward with it? Still, Ron couldn't help himself. He felt compelled to check in. I feel so. If I didn't do my job, I would certainly hope somebody would be my squeaky wheel to keep me going. Yeah. You know. Because somebody needs to keep these people accountable. Can you hear yourself in the headphones? I can't hear myself. Okay, I got you. Sergeant Kevin Bronson came into our studios at NHPR on an early spring morning. And I brought him into the studio because there is a whole other thread to this investigation that we haven't talked about yet. Hello, hello. Oh, I can hear myself. There it is. It's always a weird feeling too when you can first hear yourself. Yeah. Through the headphones. Like with Northwood's Law, when I first heard my voice on TV, it was cringe-worthy. Kevin was one of the Fish and Game officers who worked on Operation Night Cat. He was in charge of investigating another one of the guys in this poaching group, prison guard Randy Inman. Remember, Randy was the supervisor who allegedly helped Tom Kelly cover up an assault on an inmate. When Fish and Game officers searched Randy Inman's house back in January of 2023, looking for evidence in the poaching case, Kevin noticed something else. I want to ask you a very strange question. What did the house smell like? What does it smell like? Oh, it smells like weed. Yeah, we walked in and we could smell marijuana. Marijuana is illegal in New Hampshire, but it's also been decriminalized. So if you're caught with a small amount, you'll just get a hundred dollar fine. But officers found a lot of marijuana in Randy's house. More than 50 bags of weed gummies, dozens of THC vape cartridges, seeds to grow marijuana, and a kit to make edibles. Most of these were found in a single room where Randy's 19 year old stepson from a previous marriage was staying. And in that room, they also discovered something else, psychedelic mushrooms. There was a mushroom growing in the house. Yes, yeah. And you don't think that was Randy's. You think it was this kid who was living with him or who? It's hard to say. It was all in a kid's room. It wasn't in Randy's room. I asked Randy that night if like, what's the deal? Did he know this was going on? He said, no, I had no idea. You know, kids will be kids type type attitude. I don't go in his room. The feds consider psilocybin, the hallucinogenic compound in psychedelic mushrooms to be a schedule one controlled substance. And growing it carries stiff penalties up to 20 years in prison. Randy told investigators that he was aware of drugs being inside his house. And that some of the paraphernalia found in the living room was his. It was surprising to me that somebody in law enforcement where that's illegal here, I'm smelling marijuana in the house. During the search warrant, Randy also tried to hide his cell phone under a rock. But a fishing game dog named Winnie literally sniffed it out. From there, Kevin extracted a digital copy of Randy's texts, photos and videos. Now, I have seen redacted summaries of these texts in public records. They don't mention mushrooms in particular, but they do suggest Randy was helping his stepson sell drugs by mailing them to other states. Other texts suggest Randy was trading prescription pills. He and another corrections officer texted about leaving envelopes of pills and cash in the gas caps of their vehicles in the prison parking lot. A supervisor at the prison potentially dealing drugs at work. But Kevin never charged Randy with any drug crimes. Just like the other threads of Operation Night Cat, this was out of their wheelhouse as fishing game officers. So, like everything else, it got handed off. We handed off our stuff to the AG's office, I think, and the AG ended up taking that. I thought they were, I'd hope something's still going to come out of it. I am going to save you the suspense about these other lines of investigation. The drugs, the alleged male theft and assault, the bobcats crossing state lines. There have been zero charges related to any of it. What seemed to us and to fishing game wardens, like an explosive set of allegations and evidence, appears to have fizzled away. So what happened? No one we talked to seemed to know or at least wanted to tell us what came after that alphabet soup meeting. So our team filed public records requests to find out. And we discovered that almost immediately, the investigation hit a snag. Before federal investigators could dig into the prison allegations, they needed their own separate search warrant to get the evidence fishing game had already collected. That might sound complicated, but this is actually a pretty straightforward procedural task. And they did this, but then the search warrant sat unsigned in the US District Attorney's office for months. Apparently it sat for so long that the head of New Hampshire's public integrity unit, the state's corruption busters, wrote a letter to the US District Attorney basically saying, what's the deal? The clock was ticking and the state had actually paused its own investigation to let the feds take first dibs. In this letter, the head of the public integrity unit wrote, quote, any potential state level crimes are becoming stale. Now, whatever the reason for the delay, documents show that several weeks after that strongly worded letter, the search warrant was signed and executed. But then, not long afterwards, the FBI and the US Postal Inspection Service decided not to pursue any charges. We asked the US Attorney's office why they decided not to prosecute, and they gave us a pretty curt reply. Quote, Justice Department policy is to not discuss internal deliberations. We also do not confirm or deny the existence of investigations. After the feds declined to pursue charges, they handed the investigation back over to the state's public integrity unit. The job of this unit is to prosecute wrongdoing by government officials like cops, state politicians, or prison guards. Then, just like the feds, they suspended any further criminal investigation. Strange. It's almost as if they're just like concession that, you know, some level of violence like this is going to happen regardless of any articulated justification in the corrections situation. This is Mike Lewis. He's a former prosecutor with New Hampshire's Justice Department. When our team first got a hold of Tom Kelly and Randy Inman's prison texts, it seemed like an open and shut case. The stolen mail, the beating, and the cover-up, it's all laid out right there. But we are not lawyers, and what seems like solid evidence to the public might not cut it in a courtroom. Putting on your prosecutor's hat for a second, you've seen these texts. Are the texts enough to charge someone? The texts alone are not enough, you know, but the texts are really concerning. I mean, they really are concerning. What Mike Lewis sees here is an investigation that never really got off the ground. The text messages should have been the starting point for interviews or more records that could bolster a case. You would want, you know, to see documented photographic evidence, you would want to interview the victim and any other third-party witnesses. But from the documents we received, there is no indication that took place. There are all hard cases to investigate and prosecute. But, you know, hard cases are just as worthy of thinking about as easier cases, even if your interests and freedom are substantially diminished to almost nothing when you're in prison. That doesn't mean that, like, you know, it's open season on hurting you. So the whole point of the Public Integrity Unit is to take investigations further and find facts if they believe there's obvious gaps. This is Julian Jefferson. He's a law professor and former New Hampshire public defender. Like Mike, Julian agrees that the texts alone wouldn't be enough to win a case in court. But also that everything we saw should have merited a more rigorous investigation. Particularly with the drug piece, you know, I over, you know, years now have been representing people where the police are actively patrolling the streets, looking for evidence of drug users using and then charging them with possession of a controlled drug. Then to look at this evidence where you have the text messages of people in positions of authority who, on its face, certainly seems like, you know, they are exchanging in potentially, you know, illegal drugs that there's not this aggressive response to it. You know, and you can look at those things and say, this feels unfair. You know, this feels unbalanced. We reached out to New Hampshire's Department of Justice to ask what happened. And the spokesperson emailed us a statement. He said that while some of the findings were, quote, concerning, there wasn't enough proof to bring criminal charges beyond a reasonable doubt. Instead, he told us, quote, accountability has been administrative rather than criminal. End quote. And here is what that means. After all the agencies passed on pursuing charges, the Department of Corrections conducted their own investigations, basically HR reviews. During those investigations, Randy Inman retired. He's still pulling a penchant from the state. Chris Massey, the guy Tom Kelly was texting with about the stolen mail, he was demoted. And Tom Kelly? Well, Tom Kelly was fired. In his dismissal letter, the prison warden said Tom's conduct would quote, cause a reasonable person to doubt the individual's honesty, fairness and respect for the rights of others and for the laws of the state or nation. There is still one thread, an Operation Night Cat, that may still be open. At one point during this past summer, Ron Arsenal was sure a federal indictment from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service was coming. I called him up to talk about it. Hey Ron, can you hear me? Hey, yeah. How are you doing? Good. This is about the bobcats, the charges Fish and Game left to the feds to avoid double jeopardy. Ron had sources who told him charges were going to become an any day now. Yeah, I'm glad they're doing something with the whole case. I mean, we did get them for some stuff, but we were pretty light, you know, in the contingent that they were going to be doing something. But then the indictment never came. That was months ago. And Ron is still waiting. Investigative reporting takes a lot of time. It's also expensive. And it's a team sport. I'm Jason Moon, one of the producers of this series. Operation Night Cat took a whole year to report and a lot of behind the scenes work to deliver. As you heard in the last episode, we sued the state of the United States to report. We also drove roughly 1700 miles around New Hampshire to interview sources and get documents. We paid fees to get court records. And we hired a fact checker to confirm every single detail in this story. We know these costs are worth it to bring you the truth. We know that the court records are worth it. We know these costs are worth it to bring you the truth. But what's also true is that we can't do this without your support, especially now. Federal cuts to NHPR, the station that produces this podcast, have reduced our funding by hundreds of thousands of dollars. You can make a gift right now on your phone with Apple Pay or on the app of your choice. All you have to do is hit the link in the show notes and thank you. So good. But we need more questions, so please send us the weirdest, wackiest questions about science and the natural world that you can think of. It is super easy. You can call our hotline at 1-844-GO-AUTER. Or even better, send us a voice memo to OutsideInRadio at NHPR.org. Okay, back to the show. This is Operation Night Cat. I'm Nate Hedgie. We tried to reach out to Tom Kelly and Randy Inman for the story. I called, I emailed, I texted, I wrote letters. Tom pointed me to his lawyer, who didn't agree to a recorded interview, but said the prison allegations were, quote, a lot of hot air and gas. He also said that Tom Kelly didn't break the law because, again, no criminal charges were filed. The lawyer also told us that Tom is appealing to try and get his job at the prison back, and that his hunting violations were, quote, minor. As for Randy Inman, I never heard anything from him. I did hear from someone else, though. His ex-wife, Shannon LaBella. It's just disgusting in every way, and I'm disgusting. I was ever a part of his life. Shannon reached out to me after we published a new story about these investigations, and she corroborated one of the allegations suggested by state documents that Randy was using prescription painkillers. She said he had all sorts of substance abuse problems during their marriage, especially with prescription pills and alcohol. But she denied that her son had anything to do with the psychedelic mushrooms Fish and Game found at Randy's house. What was it like to be married to a guy who works inside that prison? It was constant over time, and just stress understaffed and fights, and, you know, just seemed like not much control in there, and everybody did whatever they wanted, as long as they didn't call in sick or refuse over time. Shannon also filled in more details on Randy's hunting and trapping, that he was always out with his buddies. She says they could be reckless and violent. I went a lot of times, not all the time, but pretty often, and one day they were just shooting under a bridge at Pigeon. No rhyme, no reason. They weren't using it to date or for any other purpose, just to kill him. And after that, I never went with them again. Why do you think he liked killing so much? Control, power, dominance. Because that's what he could do at work. I mean, he had total control. And when he was home, and, you know, we'd have an argument, and he wouldn't be in control of it, as, you know, he made sure he regained it some way, somehow, by any means necessary. Back in 2015, Randy was charged with assaulting Shannon. But she told me she was too afraid to take the stand and testify against him. The case was dismissed, and Randy continued working at the prison for another eight years. I don't know if he's just a orphan she's clothing, or if it had to do with his job. Like I said, there is no job out there stressful enough that drives you to kill innocent things that have never harmed you or a day in your life. So to me, that's nothing but an excuse. He's made for the horrible things he's done. After talking to Shannon, I reached out to Randy one more time for his side of the story. He never responded. So let's just start it off actually first. Dean, do you want to give me your first and last name and the kind of work you did and do now? Yes, my name's Dean Williams. I'm the former executive director of the Colorado Department of Corrections, and before that, I was the commissioner of the Alaska Department of Corrections. I wanted to get another perspective on what happened with this case from someone outside of New Hampshire. Dean has led two different state corrections departments, and when he read the investigation reports and the text message threads, it set off alarm bells, but it also didn't really surprise him. Corrections is an interesting world because most other public entities, you know, if there's a plane crash, for example, it's thoroughly investigated, right? Because you want to learn from the mistake, you want to learn why it happened, to try to teach others and in case there's mechanical issues, so it doesn't happen again. That's not what happens though in penal systems. There's a lot of pressure in corrections leaders to sort of bury things. Dean told me that you'll often hear two arguments on why criminal investigations in prisons get buried. The cost if victims sue. And? It's the embarrassment. It's the embarrassment to say, how in the world did this happen? How did we get here? And that's the kind of situation the state of New Hampshire knows all too well. Most victims of the systemic decades-long abuse inside the Youth Development Center are still waiting for settlement checks from the state. Five years ago, a former resident of the state's juvenile jail came forward. He said he was physically and sexually abused there. And then, a dam broke. More and more victims came forward. More than a thousand of them, including Sean Cochran, the guy from the last episode. These allegations span more than six decades. A culture of abuse that was taking place, unchecked, behind another brick wall. Millions of dollars in settlements being paid by the state over this scandal, AKA being paid by you, the taxpayer, are just one way to measure the cost. And over and over and over again, people have wondered, how could this have happened? If you start down the road and say, well, look, this is embarrassing to us. This is going to make us look bad. This is going to cost us some money. This is the driving factor. It perpetuates and reinforces this is the way we do business. And so then you have another event. Then you have another event after that. And these things, you know, becomes a chronic issue. And that's where assistance gets messed up. They get screwed up. Man, it will cost you sooner or later, but it will cost you way more than if you just fixed it at the beginning. The last time I met up with Ron Arsenault was in October of 2025. I was there to show him the report from the state saying they wouldn't pursue criminal charges against Tom Kelly, Randy Inman, and the other corrections officers. Now, up to this point, as far as he knew, the case was still open. Nobody had ever told Ron the state closed the case. Take your time. It's about nine pages. Really? I mean, you can read through it or we can go to the end, which is the thing I really want to show you. We sat quietly as Ron read through the report on my phone. Now, normally, Ron has the energy of a Labrador retriever, but now he looked tired and shut down. How does that make you feel? It just makes me feel like there's just no accountability, you know? That's what it really comes down to. Remember, Ron went above and beyond his line of duty to report what he had found. He spent hours pouring through text messages, calling attorneys, hoping there would be justice. And after going through all of it, you know, at the end of the day, I don't know if I'd do it again, because of all the stuff that just happens. It's like you just did all that work for what? Yeah. You know, and it's like, ugh. So it just grinds on you, you know? And eventually you're like, all right, I'm done. I'm a game warden. I'm finding out the hunting violations. That's what I'm here for. I'm not here for the drugs or the mail or, you know, the integrity units. Like, that's not my problem. I pointed that out, and if they want to go with it, go with it. You know, we have a thing when a law enforcement officer finds, you know, violations. They have the duty to report, which is exactly what I did. And, you know, we're taught, oh, report all this stuff, you know. It goes all the way down to like sexual harassment, you know, everything. Report it, and we'll do something. Report it. Bullshit. You know, it's like, okay, yeah, you will, and then you won't. Why do you think they don't pursue charges on stuff like this? Because it makes them look bad. It's going to make the state agency look bad, and they're trying to save face. I don't know if I'm supposed to say that or not. I don't know what it is or what it is. And Doc's a doc. When I met up with Ron, he was supposed to be getting dressed up for a big ceremony. New Hampshire's congressional delegation had selected him for a unit citation award for his work on Operation Night Cat. But it was postponed because of a government shutdown. So all he had was a letter from U.S. Senator Jean Shaheen. It's just a letter, more than an award, basically saying you did a good job. I did my job. Does that do anything for you at all? You have a letter from a U.S. senator? No. It's cool, but at the end of the day, yeah, I mean, it'll probably go somewhere in a file. My wife will put it somewhere in... That could be framed? Nah, I got my pictures of the Eagles and stuff in my wall. I can't take them down. So the letter will go into a file somewhere in Ron's house. Just like the investigations into Tom Kelly, Randy Inman, and the other corrections officers are most likely tucked away into hard drives or file cabinets in some government building. Just like that video of Tom killing a bobcat is probably sitting on a laptop somewhere at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Office in Boston. In that video, for a brief moment, after the rifle fires and a game camera flashes, everything is illuminated in light. The naked eye can see it all. The dead bobcat, the white snow. And then, just as quickly, everything goes dark again. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. The dead bobcat, the white snow. Operation Night Cat is a special three-part series from NHPR's document team and outside in. If you like this series, check out more of document's incredible accountability reporting, including their three-part investigation into the scandal at YDC. The Youth Development Center. There's a link in the show notes. This episode was reported and written by me, Nate Hedgie, with help from Lauren Chuljin and Jason Moon. Jason produced and mixed this episode. He also wrote the music. It was edited by Taylor Quimby and Katie Culinary, with help from Rebecca Levoie, Jackie Harris, Dan Barrick, Justine Paradis, Felix Poon and Marina Hanky. Fact-checking by Donia Suleiman. Photography by John Tully, which you can check out at our website, nhpr.org, slash nightcat. The bobcat photo in our logo comes from Jill DeVito. Special thanks to Bill Chapman. Taylor Quimby is the executive producer of Outside In. Rebecca Levoie is director of On Demand at NHPR. And Operation Night Cat is a production of New Hampshire Public Radio. We all need advice, but it's not always clear who to ask, even in 2026. Enter how to. The long-standing advice show and ambi-award-nominated Best Personal Growth podcast that's back with new episodes and a new host, who me, Mike Peska. Each week I tackle a listener question ranging from travel to finance to relationships and beyond, with help from a world-class expert, you know, someone who actually very much knows what they're talking about. 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