True Crime with Tiff Kline

Vanished on the Carolina Coast: The Search for Tyler Doyle

Tiffany Kline Season 3

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When 22‑year‑old Tyler Doyle set out for a routine duck‑hunting trip off the coast of South Carolina, nothing suggested it would be his last known moment. Within hours, his boat was found taking on water, his belongings scattered, and a search effort unlike anything the community had seen began. But as days turned into weeks, the questions only grew louder.

In this episode, we walk through the timeline of Tyler’s final known movements, the frantic rescue efforts, the evidence recovered, and the theories that have divided the public. We explore who Tyler was beyond the headlines — a young husband, a soon‑to‑be father, a friend fiercely loved — and how his disappearance shook an entire community.

This is a story about uncertainty, about the power of hope, and about the people who refuse to stop searching.
What happened on the water that day, and where is Tyler Doyle now?

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SPEAKER_00

Hey guys, welcome back to True Crime with Tiff Klein, giving criminals the disrespect they deserve. This is season three, episode two, and I know I just put on an episode a few days ago, and most podcasters release an episode on certain days and times, but that's not how I roll. I do podcasts when I feel like doing podcasts. And it could be three a week, it could be one a week, it could be every other week because I don't like to force them. Not saying anybody else does, but it's just my style. I've I'm chaotic. I have, I even have a cat named Chaos. My life doesn't go by a schedule. So I do it when I feel like I have the energy and the focus. And today I want to bring a case back into the limelight that was huge in 2023 from South Carolina. A missing man named Tyler Doyle disappeared allegedly in the water. Now, last night I received a Facebook message from a man named Brian Doyle. I've never heard of Tyler's case, never heard about the story, but a follower of mine, Emily, referred him to me and asked if I would look into his son's case for more answers. Absolutely. Now, even though this happened in 2023, it doesn't mean I still shouldn't look into it. If someone asks me, I'm going to do my best. Um, so after speaking to Brian, I in deep diving, I watched videos last night, you know, I read a lot of comments in those videos and I got as much info as I could. And I told Brian that I would dive deeper. And I would try and connect him with some other people I know through the true crime uh industry community, whatever you want to call it, and hopefully get some more attention on this. So after researching, piecing together info, and then getting facts from Tyler's dad, I got a lot of information. And again, you guys know if you've been listening to me for three seasons, I don't like to just put out my opinion without backing it up. I don't like to put out facts that I think are facts or the internet thinks are facts, but the family hasn't confirmed them. I got as much information as Brian as I could and asked questions. He confirmed, and um, those will be, you know, talked about in this episode. But I'm I don't like getting on here and speaking for somebody else. You know, unless it's like a big case that has been around for years and there's so much information on it, I still don't really like to give my opinion, but I try to verify the facts first. And we mess up, we're human and and we don't do it on purpose. Um, I've noticed lately my brain has been so scattered because of work and crime con. And sometimes I say the wrong name or the wrong date, and I truly apologize. It's not my intention. And then when after you do an episode for almost two hours to go back and re-edit it, it's just you re-listen to it, and you're like, oh my God, I said the wrong name. So while I'm saying that, in the crime con episode I did on season three, episode one, I talked about crime con and I gave a shout out to a voice for the voiceless, and I kept calling her Bethany. Her name is not Bethany, it's Whitney. And I know Whitney. I've met Whitney, I've talked to Whitney online, and for some reason the name Bethany kept coming out of my mouth. So, Whitney, if you're hearing this, I apologize. I wanted to correct that. Um, so let's get into the Tyler Doyle case missing since 2023 in South Carolina. Buckle up. It's a long one, guys, but it deserves to have more eyes and ears on this case because there's some sketchy shit going on. The disappearance of Tyler Doyle, a 22-year-old duck hunter from North Myrtle Beach, occurred on January 26, 2023, off the coast of Little River, South Carolina. The South Carolina Department of Natural Resources, also known as SCDNR, along with multiple state and local emergency agencies, led an extensive investigation and search. On the afternoon of January 26th, Tyler Doyle and a friend, Christian Holden, went out duck hunting in a 16-foot John boat near the Little River jetties. Jetties are rock structures located near the South and North Carolina border. And a small craft advisory was active at the time, making the sea conditions notably rough. So they went out, you know, weather's bad, they're duck, you know, they're putting out ducks, decoy ducks to um, as they call it, jump the ducks. And they were separated because Tyler dropped Christian off at the jetties and then went back out in the water to set the duck decoys. So while they were separated, Tyler called his friend to report that the boat was suffering mechanical issues. The motor had cut off and the vessel was rapidly taking on water and drifting. The friend Christian flagged down another boat and called 911. First responders arrived within minutes and rescued the friend from the jetty rocks. Rescuers located Tyler's submerged boat with only about a foot of the bow showing above the water. The water temperature was recorded that day at 50 degrees Fahrenheit, but the air temperature was 39. Guys, that's still cold, even for South Carolina. If the water was only 50 and the air temperature was 39, those boys were not warm. Following a Freedom of Information Act, as most of you know as FOIA, it's a release of case data, right? So including witness statements, 911 calls, independent cellular and life 360 GPS tracking location data, the SCDNR investigators confirmed that all evidence completely corroborated the friend's account of the event. The SCDNR firmly stated that no foul play is suspected, and that rumors circulating on social media regarding criminal intent or pending charges were entirely unfounded. The incident was ruled an unfortunate hunting and boating accident caused primarily by severe weather conditions coupled by sudden mechanical failure. Now, after reading into this case and reading the stats and the reports and the information that was put out, and then talking to his dad, mmm, two plus two equals four, right? I mean, I I'm not the best with math. People who know me know that, but I'm I'm 100% sure that two plus two equals four. So how there's other things that aren't adding up here, and I will get to that in a second, I just want you to remember that a size 12 is not a size 14. So just keep that in mind. There is released audio from the 911 logs that paint a harrowing picture of how fast the situation deteriorated on January 26, 2023. Christian Holden, again, the friend that was on the North Jetty, called 911 frantically, explaining that Tyler had just dropped him off to jump up some ducks. When the boat's motor failed, he reported watching the 16-foot boat drift out past the protection of the jetties into the ocean. Now, one second. A lot of things I read claimed he called in frantically, but I listened to the 911 calls and I will add it to this podcast. Um, you will hear it. I, I don't know about you, I can't speak for anybody else. This is for my own ears. Don't think he was being frantic. Now, I'm not the only one in the world who thinks that this guy, Christian, had something to do with this case, and there's more reasons why true crime sleuths and couch detectives and other people think that this, all of this didn't actually happen, the way Christian explained that happened. And I gotta sit with the social media's true crime sleuths on this one. Now, there are some far-fetched theories that couch detectives come up with. We know that. Sometimes it hurts investigations, we know that. Sometimes it twists things around and spreads rumors and it can hurt the victim, the victim's family, can it can hurt the investigation, the trial, the case, what have you. But sometimes, guys, sometimes the answers are right in front of our faces. And that's couch, us couch detectives. I just sat crime con and Nancy Grace banked us in the crowd. She goes, Because civilians like myself and you listening have helped solve so many cases of missing persons, murders, anything like that. Just because we watch, we want justice for victims, we invest ourselves, we research and we research. And you know, the police do all, I'm not gonna say all, a lot of the things that they can do. They can do a lot more. Um, a lot of cases get pushed aside. They end up on a shelf in a box. Um, things get pushed aside because of bigger cases and more quote higher status cases, if you will. Um, so sometimes all it takes is an extra set of eyes and ears, right? And there's been cases that people have looked over and looked over and looked over, and then 20 years later a new detective comes on or a new sheriff or a new deputy and somebody looks at looks at the case again, and then they catch something that they didn't catch the first time. So just because a cold case is quote closed or a cold case is still cold, it doesn't mean that it should be forgotten. They're not dead cases, they're cold cases, right? And I got that from Brittany Phillips' mom, Maggie. She travels across the country in a caravan. She's done 25 trips, 340,000 miles, because her daughter was murdered and she's out to get justice, but she's also helping other people find their missing loved ones and get answers for their murdered victims. And that's what it's about. So she always says a cold case is not a dead case. Don't leave them out in the cold, right? So I don't want to leave Tyler out in the cold. I know this case is a few years old, but sometimes people come forward later. It could take five years, 10 years, 20 years, a day, a month, a week. Somebody knows something. And I am not convinced that this case is just an unfortunate hunting and boating accident caused primarily by severe weather conditions coupled with sudden mechanical failures. So again, they released the audio from 911 blogs, which paints a harrowing picture of how fast the situation deteriorated on January 26, 2023. You will hear Christian, the friend who was on the North Jetty that Tyler dropped off, allegedly, and he called 911, quote, frantically, explaining that Tyler had just dropped him off to quote, jump up some ducks. When the boat's motor failed, he reported watching the 16-foot boat drift out past the protection of the jetties into the open ocean. He says, I don't see him anymore. Within minutes, Holden lost sight of the boat entirely as the rough waters and strong currents swept it westward. He noted to dispatchers that Tyler did have a life jacket on board and was attempting to put it on as the boat began taking on water. Now, after talking to Brian's dad and reading posts from Brian's dad and seeing videos, Brian's dad or Tyler's dad went out to the jetties. I'm sorry if I kept saying Brian's dad. Tyler's dad, Brian, went out to the jetties himself and stood there and wanted to see how far he could see. Now, he could see pretty far standing on those jetties out into that ocean, but somehow Holden couldn't see anything and the 16-foot boat drift out past the protection, and all of a sudden in minutes, he lost the sight of the boat, lost sight of Tyler. If you watch the video I watched from Tyler's dad Brian standing on the jetties, you can see for miles. Sorry, babe. Get your eyes checked, you need a new prescription. I don't know what get some meta glasses, do something, because there's you can see for miles. Unless the day was very like smoggy, foggy, hazy. I I could understand it. I'm not a million percent sure how the how the um trying to think how the sky was that day. I I I didn't see anything uh about it being foggy or thick fog or hazy or anything like that. So God needs to get his eyes checked. So again, you're gonna listen to this 911 call. I'm gonna add it in here. And I don't know about you, but I I don't think he's frantic. He seems pretty calm to me. Considering, I mean, if I'm out on jetties and it's cold, right? And I see my friend's boat sink. You know, I'm my favorite movie is Titanic, and this is probably pretty morbid, but I'm sorry. If my friend was out on a boat and it was sinking, my instinct would be to swim towards them, do something, scream for help. Now, he claims he was flagging people down, and he called 911 and they sent out the Coast Guards officers and whatnot, and they were trying to Christian was trying to get another boat's attention, and Tyler just disappeared. Now, when you listen to this 911 call, I want you to listen to it very carefully. It does sound like other voices, which Tyler's dad, Brian, said it does. Other people online said it does. I personally think it sounds like somebody in the 911 center, or it's the person who recorded these videos, you like kind of talking under their breath, like commentating on it. Um, but I I don't know. Um, and it just he had made multiple calls to 911, but it it just seems too calm. Like if my friend or anybody was drowning or sinking or needing help, I mean, how far, how many miles out was he? Not far, apparently. I mean, far enough, but not far. I know it's cold, but like, wouldn't your adrenaline and instincts kick in to like swim and go try to save somebody? Or would you stand there like an asshole and just call 911 and stand there and just watch your friend drown? Like, I I don't I don't know what you would do in that situation, but I just feel like in my instincts would kick in to like go help try to save somebody, especially if he knew that Tyler had waders on, which waders are those boots that hunters wear. They're um in PA they're called um oh god, I can't think of it, muck boots, kind of. They're kind of like muck boots, but they're you know, they look like rain boots, but they're weighted, and you can go through slush with them in like uh, you know, swampy areas. And if you're in a barn, you can wear them with horse shit and you can walk, you know, if you're fishing. Well, if your friend had those on, wouldn't you like go out to try to save them because you knew that they were sinking? I don't know, it just seems very odd to me. That's one thing that jumped out. But when I put put out when I put on the 911 call, I just want you to really listen to the sound of his voice, the dictation, the emphasis on certain words, and then I want you to come back and tell me what you think. So a second friend, I don't know what's going on here. I I I was putting the pieces together, but a second friend called 911 from his workplace, stating he just received a panicked phone call directly from Tyler, saying that his boat was actively sinking before the line cut out. Christian Holden was the sole companion with Tyler Doyle during their duck hunting trip on January 26, 2023. So Tyler picked up the phone, called somebody else, I guess, from his workplace. Um, from what I put together, when Tyler had called somebody, which was his friend, his friend also called 911 from where he was working. That's what it is. Sorry. Tyler was in the boat, realized it was sinking, called his friend, and his friend was at work. That friend picked up the phone, called 911, and stated that he just received a pang phone call from Tyler saying that his boat was actively sinking before the line cut out. Christian Holden was the sole companion with Tyler that day during their duck hunting trip on January 26, 2023. Tyler used the 16-foot John boat to drop Holden off on the North Jetty so he could stand on the rocks and quote, jump ducks, jump up ducks, like I said earlier. And once Holden realized Tyler's boat was actively sinking and drifting out into the open ocean, past the protection of the rock barriers, again, he called 911 and gave emergency and dispatchers his location. Emergency first responders arrived on the scene within approximately nine minutes of the dispatch and safely rescued Christian Holden off the jetty rocks.

SPEAKER_05

Oh yes, ma'am. I need to get a hold of Coast Guard or something like that. I'm stuck in the ocean, drifting out in the ocean. I cannot get nobody to answer. Okay, are you is anybody injured on your boat? No, ma'am, there.

SPEAKER_04

I'm standing on the jetty rocks and the boat, the motor's cut off on the boat, and it's drifting out in the ocean, eating in it, and sinking. Is anybody in the boat? Yes, ma'am. Who's in the boat? Uh, Tyler or Buddy. All right, hold on, honey, I'm gonna bring in the Coast Guard. Don't hang up.

unknown

Alright.

SPEAKER_04

Sir, are you here with me? Don't hang up, it'll stop that in a minute.

SPEAKER_05

This ma'am?

SPEAKER_04

Just stay on the line with me here, okay, honey? What's your name?

SPEAKER_06

What's your telephone number we're call you're calling me from in case we get disconnected? Are you on the north jetty?

SPEAKER_04

Yeah, I'm in the jetty the little river. Yeah. Just stay on the line with me, sweetie. I'm gonna get you some responders here. So you you the boat is uh starting to sink?

SPEAKER_05

Yes, ma'am, it's filling up with water. He's d I don't even see him no more. He's drifted out past the jetties in the ocean.

SPEAKER_04

Was there anybody else on board besides him?

SPEAKER_05

No, ma'am.

SPEAKER_04

Was it do you know if the boat was where it was drifting? Was it going south?

SPEAKER_05

Was it going for if you're looking out towards those for the gate, it's kinda going left. I don't know how to explain it. I'll just take all the freaking out.

SPEAKER_04

Is he you said he was the only one, right? One person?

unknown

Yep, ma'am.

SPEAKER_04

And what kind of boat is it?

SPEAKER_05

It's an Excel, uh, tiller handle Excel aluminum boat uh jumbo.

SPEAKER_04

And did you know if anybody was in the water? Did he know if he jumped out or were you able to see? Did you know if that boat had any markers on it or or a name or anything else on the side like numbers? It had orange stickers on it. Had orange stickers on it?

unknown

Yes, ma'am.

SPEAKER_04

Did he have a life jacket on board with him? Yes, ma'am, he put it on. Other than your cell phone, do you have any other type of uh communications? Um does he have any type of communication?

SPEAKER_05

He got a cell phone.

SPEAKER_04

Do you know what his number is?

SPEAKER_05

I do.

SPEAKER_04

What's his number, honey?

SPEAKER_06

Okay.

SPEAKER_04

And uh where did y'all where did he put out from? Where'd he launch from?

SPEAKER_05

Uh the swing bridge at Little River. There's a boat coming out now.

unknown

Okay.

SPEAKER_04

And were there any other hazardous materials or anything involved on the boat?

SPEAKER_05

Uh we're out here hunting, so there is a firearm on the boat. Okay. And nobody is sick or injured? No, ma'am, not that I know of. I haven't he hasn't called me. I have I cannot see. Yes, ma'am.

SPEAKER_04

All right, so do I do have it entered in. We've got him on the way to you. Yeah, honey?

SPEAKER_05

Yes, ma'am, I hear ya. I'm trying to get this boat to come to me now, but they're not paying attention.

SPEAKER_04

Yeah. Um, like I said, we're sending somebody to help you. Stay on the line. If it's anything to do so you just uh do you have a life jacket with you in case you need it? I do I do not. All right. You do not? Alright, you stay right there on the Jitty, okay? All right. Listen, we've got some help coming to you. Is is your phone fully charged?

SPEAKER_05

It is.

SPEAKER_04

It's on forty two percent. So I need I can't gotta get a hold of him. Well, you can honey, but if you have to you can call me immediately back. Just make sure you save your your Power on this phone, okay? All right.

SPEAKER_00

Here's where I'm gonna add in the 911 call. Again, you guys listen to it, come back and leave some comments. Tell me what you think. Because of the severe winter weather and this specific coastal currents at Little River Inlet, the focus of the search shifted rapidly from South Carolina into North Carolina waters. Over the weeks following the accident, search crews volunteers located several of Tyler's personal belongings scattered miles away along the North Carolina coastline. Like I get it, things wash ashore, right? The wind takes it with the wave. I get it. But these are the things that don't make sense to me. Tyler's hunting waiters. Now, there was a pair of hunting waiters that washed ashore. Tyler wore a size 14, but the waiters that washed ashore were a size 12. And the reason why this isn't significant is because Tyler's wallet was inside one of the waiters. Now, your boats don't shrink two sizes in a few days. And I told Bri Brian this, Tyler's dad, if your boat is sinking, no matter how big or small, you're in a panic. You're gonna try to survive. I don't think the first thing you're gonna think of is let me get my wallet out and s make sure it's in my waiter. I mean, I I don't know, I don't think that would be my first thought of, well shit, I better grab my wallet and put it in my boot. Like, I I just I I I wasn't there. I I'm not Tyler. I don't know what went through his head. I don't think he did that, considering his shoe sizes, two sizes bigger than the boots that were found. I don't think in a moment of panic and adrenaline, his first thought was to take his wallet out from his pant pocket or wherever it was in the boat, wherever it was, take his waiter off. Now you'd think he has to take the time to take the waiter off, take the wallet out of his jean jacket, his or his jeans or pants or somewhere on the boat, and then stuff it in his wallet, or stuff his wallet in the waiter, and then take the time to put the waiter back on. Or have the waiters on. Follow me here. Have the waiters on, take them off, think quick enough to grab your wallet from wherever it is, stuff it in the waiter and say, Let me put my wallet in the waiter because I gotta take my waiters off or I'm gonna sink and because they they're gonna weigh you down, right? And if I put my wallet in the waiter and I just release them, hopefully they'll just make it to shore and somebody will find this if something happens to me. Like I I'm not trying to be an asshole, but I just don't think in a time of freezing cold, your boat's sinking, you're trying to stay above water, you're going to take the time to take your waiters off, put your wallet in them, and for some reason send them to a shore, hoping that it, you know, it's like a message in a bottle, hoping that somebody finds your waiters that weren't your your size to begin with, and find your wallet in them. Like that, that to me is the biggest red flag of this entire case. Again, I gotta talk about this again because it I don't understand the logic of someone thinking that he was in a frantic moment, freezing, and thought, you know, I only have a few seconds here. I think the best idea would be take my waders off, which are gonna take a, you know, a minute or two if they're already wet and heavy. Oh crap, I gotta find my wallet. Where's my wallet? I gotta put my wallet in my in my shoe, one of my shoes. And I can't put my waiter back on because my waiters will weigh me down. So I'm gonna put my wallet in my waiter and send, send my waiters to drift. And hopefully it will be like a message in a bottle and someone will find it. They'll find my wallet inside. Like, guys, do you hear the asinine logic behind this? And not to mention, the waiters that were found were two sizes too small. The waiters that were found were a size 12 and Tyler was size 14. Make it make sense, guys. Several duck decoys from the vessel also washed above to shore. That I can understand. It falls out of the boat, it drifts, the wind carries it, but a wallet placed inside of a wader of a waiter of the wrong shoe size just doesn't make sense. The discovery of the waiters, wait, hold on. I just had a thought. So as the boat's sinking, Christian said that he's trying to put his life jacket on. So that means he's taking even more time to put his life jacket on, to find his wallet, to take his waiters off, to put the wallet in the waiters and drift, let them drift away, hoping they've reached the shoreline in a pair of boots that weren't his size. Alright, just hold up. Just keep that in the back of your mind. Alright. The discovery of the waiters led to significant public speculation, but outdoor safety experts noted it is common for individuals submerged in freezing water to attempt to shed heavy, waterlogged boots and waders to prevent being dragged under. I just said that. I'm reading what I wrote last night. However, it still has no reasoning to back up why his wallet was placed in one of them. If anything, the wallet would have been left in the boat. And when the boat flipped or capsized, whatever you call it, it would have gone to the bottom or it would have stayed in the boat. I know there was air trapped into it because of the foam. It was either in Tyler's pocket or it was on the boat. Nobody's going to sit and say, well, damn, in case something happens, I better put my wallet in a boot. Come on, come on. The official rescue operation was massive, involving the U.S. Coast Guard, SCDNR, North Myrtle Beach Fire Rescue, Brunswick County Sheriff's Office, that's from North Carolina, and specialized nonprofit groups like Wings of Hope and Chaos Divers. Crews utilized side scan sonar, helicopters, drones, tracking dogs. However, winter sea conditions, high winds, and treacherous underwater currents repeatedly stalled diving operations due to safety concerns. After 43 days of active, continuous patrolling, the SCDNR officially concluded its large-scale daily search operations, transitioning the case to a routine tracking and recovery status to ensure complete transparency and address public pressure. SCDNR later requested that the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, also known as SLED, most of you know from the Murdoch murders, to review their investigative files. SLED fully backed SCDNR's findings that it was a tragic, weather-induced boating accident. I think these family members need to get a hold of Adventures with Purpose. They have seemed to find many cars underwater with bodies in them. I'm not quite sure if they've only found bodies, but it's worth something. Tyler's disappearance was uniquely heartbreaking for his family and the tight-knit local community. At a time of his disappearance, Tyler's wife was pregnant with their first child, and local family and friends continued walking the shorelines for months in hopes of bringing him home. There were vigils held continuously at the boat ramps, and independent search groups, organized family and friends that continued walking the shorelines. Tyler Doyle has never been found. Now I'm gonna back up here for a second. There's a lot of things I read online, and already people have been commenting on my uh TikTok and Facebook about Tyler's wife being pregnant, and there were rumors going around that it was Christian's baby and she had something to do with it, and they both got rid of him. I didn't get that verification from Brian. I did not get that verification from anything other than rumors online. So I'm not going to sit here and even say that's a possibility because I hasn't it hasn't been brought up with Tyler's dad. But that is a speculation online. But again, that can go that goes back to people starting rumors for no reason. And there's no proof that that happened. Now, somebody said that his wife started dating another one of his friends. I don't have all the details on that either. I didn't really dive in a lot on his wife. Um, so I'm not gonna focus anymore on that, but just know that it is a speculation, but it wasn't discussed with Tyler's dad, so I can't confirm if that is a rumor or not. But so I'm gonna just go ahead and say it's a rumor. When Hori County and North Myrtle Beach rescue boats arrived at the coordinates of the distress call, the physical state of the 16-foot John boat gave immediate answers to how the vessel went down. John boats are flat bottomed and ride relatively low in the water. Investigators noted that with the heavy weight of a mud motor on the back, now pay attention to this. Investigators noted that the heavy weight of a mud motor on the back, a large payload of heavy duct decoys, and the weight of the water rushing over the stern, which is the back of the boat, the vessel lost buoyancy rapidly once it forward momentum stopped. All right, I'm gonna say that one more time because I want you to ask yourselves something in a second. Investigators noted that with the heavy weight of a mud motor on the back, a large payload of heavy duck decoys, and the weight of the water rushing over the stern, the vessel lost buoyancy rapidly once its forward momentum stopped. So allegedly Tyler takes this boat out with Christian in it. So that's the weight of two men, plus the mud motor on the back, plus the heavy duck decoys, and the John boat lays low in the water. That was fine. That didn't sink or anything. Nothing like that happened, but it went under when it was just Tyler and the heavy duck decoy and the large motor. So you took a full-size grown man out of the boat and then it sank? The hunter, my brothers are. So my dad and my brothers are pretty well versed in the hunting and water uh environments. And even they're not dumb enough to think. So you have two large men in a boat. What a boat, mind you, that's low in the water. Two grown men and heavy duck decoys and a mud motor. That wasn't that was nothing. That didn't cause the the mechanical issue. It was only when the other full-sized man got out of the boat, then all of a sudden there's a mechanical issue. Okay. Okay. A small craft advisory was actively producing rolling swells outside the protection of the jetties. Once the motor stalled, the boat naturally turned broadside or stern into the incoming waves in 50 degree water. Now remember the air temperature was 39. It takes only one or two large swells breaking over the transom of a flat bottom boat to fully swamp it. I still can't get over the fact that two large grown men with heavy duct decoy and a mud motor were fine. But it wasn't until Tyler dropped Christian off on the jetties that then there was a prop. Then it sank. All right. I think we need to call James Cameron in here because he could probably build a model of this and test it out for you, like he did with the Titanic. When located, the boat was completely upright but vertically submerged. So standing up and down, just submerged. The heavy motor anchored the back to the sea floor, while air trapped in the bow that kept the tip of the nose breaking the surface. So you guys have seen Titanic. The ship splits and it bobs up and down out of the water. This one didn't split, it stayed vertical. But because there was um the anchored back to the sea floor, the air trapped in the bow kept the tip of the nose breaking the surface. So it sunk vertically. It didn't flip over, it didn't go over sideways, it didn't sink down or horizontally, it sank vertically. The discovery of Tyler's hunting waders on a beach in North Carolina sparked massive viral conspiracy theories online, with internet sluice claiming it was possible for someone to drown and leave their boots behind. Now, I went over this 20 times earlier. Yes, someone can leave their boots behind because they know it's going to weigh them down. But who is going to stop to think, geez, let me put my wallet in the wader just in case? However, survival experts and SCDR address this directly. Modern and breathable waders do not inherently pull a swimmer down like an anchor. However, once they fill completely with water, they add roughly 20 to 30 pounds of massive dead dragging weight. When a person tries to pull their legs up to tread water or climb out, it is standard water survival training for water flowers to immediately kick off heavy boots and shrug out wader suspenders if they find themselves submerged in open water. Doing so is exhausting, desperate physical struggle, which explains why the waiters were found unbuckled and floating separately miles away. Okay, Tyler's a seasoned waterman. He's a seasoned hunter. Maybe his first thought was to take his boots off. But it still doesn't explain why his wallet was placed in them, and it doesn't explain why they were a size 12 when he were a size 14. Now, I could imagine he, if he's a seasoned waterman, sure, kick your boots off because it's common sense, you know they're gonna weigh you down. So he unbuckled them, took them off. But why put your wallet in there? That's what it all comes back to. Why not just leave it on you? I I I I don't know. I just that I don't get that part. The Tyler Doyle case became a prime example of how social media speculation can actively disrupt a real-world missing person's investigation. Because Tyler was young, a newlywed, and about to become a father, the case gained millions of views on TikTok and Facebook. When the active rescue search paused after 43 days, rumors exploded online. TikTok accounts began accusing the friend, Christian, on the jetty of foul play, inventing elaborate backstories about fights and claiming Tyler had been spotted alive in other states. The public pressure became so intense that it forced on present addented steps. Did I say that right? On-pre-cented steps from state officials. SCDNR took the rare step of publicly releasing a massive cache of evidence via FOIA, including the exact timestamps of the Life 360 tracking app from Tyler's own phone, which proved the timeline of the boat sinking matched the 9-1-1-1 calls perfectly. Okay, so just because the phone Life 360 tracked doesn't confirm that Tyler was on the boat, who's to say that something didn't happen to Tyler before the boat went out, and Tyler's phone was on the boat because it was planted and staged. Before I go any further, I'm going to interject from my experience of watching true crime for 30-some years. There's a high possibility that Tyler was never in that boat. There's a high possibility that Jesse himself drove that boat to the jetties, had Tyler's phone, wallet, left it in the boat, had a separate pair of waiters, mind you, weren't a size 14, hopped out of that boat and let it go. Now, I don't think he let it go with the wallet and the waiters inside the boat. My first reaction would be, and I I had told Brian Doyle this, maybe Jesse drove the boat to the jetties and caused damage to that boat for it to sink. Because he knew there was a mechanical issue from the weekend before, guys. And he held on to the waiters and the wallet and left the phone on the boat. Because some people are so sociopathic and crazy that they have a high IQ, and he probably thought, well, they're gonna track his phone. Let's sink the phone. And by doing so, he kept the waiters and the wallet back. And he placed the wallet into the waiter and let them drift ashore. But they were the wrong size waiters, ladies and gentlemen. Does it all start to make sense now? As mentioned, the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division was brought in purely to review the local handling of the case to prove to the skeptical public that nothing had been covered up or overlooked. Ultimately, the case remains an open missing persons recovery file, officially classified as a devastating textbook example of how quickly cold water, mechanical failure, and rough winter seas can overcome even experienced outdoorsmen. Yeah, especially when they're not in the boat. A major question during the multi-state search was why the rescue team shifted their focus so far north into Brunswick County and Oak Island, North Carolina when the boat sank in. The Little River inlet is where the intracostal waterway meets the Atlantic Ocean. On January 26th, the outgoing tide was pushing water out of the inlet at the exact same time a heavy weather system was moving in from the southwest. This created a powerful longshore current, an ocean current that moves parallel to the shoreline. The tracking data showed that once a vessel or object cleared the rock barrier of the South Jetty, it was instantly caught in an eastward-northward conveyor belt, hauling everything toward the North Carolina beaches at a rapid pace. This explains why lightweight items like his duck decoys and floating waders drifted miles away within days, but it still does not explain why there was a wallet in the waiter. You know that song like Wade in the water. I'm gonna be like, wallet in the waiter. Like, I just it does not does not make sense. And the fact that the boots were two size too small. Come on. Sorry, I get heated, guys. It's just, it's right in front of your face. Like, I don't understand why they're blaming it on weather and mechanical issues. The technological forensic reconstruction was incredibly precise, relying on cellular pings and Tyler's Life 360 app data, which his family provided to investigators. Okay, we know that the Life 360 matched up going blank when the 911 calls happened. Okay, Tyler's phone was out there, but it doesn't mean Tyler was. The digital timeline matched the 911 audio second for a second. The GPS coordinates showed Tyler's phone. The GPS coordinates showed Tyler's phone moving at a steady hunting speed, and then suddenly dropping down to a slow, powerless drift velocity as the motor died. There's no proof that Tyler's coordinates moved at a steady hunting speed and then suddenly dropping down to a slow, powerless drift velocity as the motor died, just his phone. The Life 360 app stopped transmitting entirely at a specific set of coordinates just outside the mouth of the inlet. Investigators determined this exact spot was where the incoming waves finally swamped the boat's electrical system and submerged the device, cutting off the cellular connection instantly. Okay, guys, we got that. Phone went into the water, boom, done, dead, gone. It tracked the phone, but they could have placed the phone in the boat. Are you with me? Is this making sense? In the wake of Tyler's disappearance, the local duck hunting and boat boating community in the Carolinas experienced a major reckoning regarding cold water safety gear. Many coastal duck hunters use heavy mud motors, which are surface drive engines, because they allow shallow water navigation through marsh grass. However, their extreme weight at the stern makes a small John boat highly susceptible to taking on water from behind if the boat stalls in open, rolling ocean swells. Local waterfowlers began heavy, heavily advocating for the use of self-inflating personal flotation devices that fit over every hunting jacket without restricting movement, as well as the absolute rule of never taking small, open-haul, flat bottom boats past the safety lines of an ocean jetty during small craft advisories. So let's back up because this is a big case. Again, two full-grown men in a boat with heavy duck decoys and a mud motor that was very heavy, didn't weigh the boat down. But as soon as Christian got out and went on the jetties, it had a malfunction and started sinking. That's when the water started coming in the boat after another grown-sized man got out of the boat. The phone lost service when it hit the water. Doesn't mean Tyler was in the water, but the phone was. Tyler possibly took his boat boots off. That weren't his size. Keep that in mind. They were a size 12, he wore a size 14, and his wallet was inside of them. But he was still putting on his life jacket. So he had enough time to call his friend, whose friend from work called 911, who had enough time to put a life jacket on, think about taking his waiters off, taking the waiters off, thinking about where he should put his wallet, somehow put his wallet in the waiters, and then decided to put his waiters at sea. Okay. Waiters that weren't his size. Remember that. Yeah. Okay. Makes makes so much sense. I'm being sarcastic. So what's the word extreme weight at the stern makes a small John boat highly susceptible of taking on water from behind if the boat stalls? So two grown men in the boat doesn't add to this extreme weight. Just only one Christian gets out. Okay. Okay. When Hory County Fire Rescue arrived on the scene exactly nine minutes after the 911 dispatch, the physical State of Tyler's 16-foot John boat offered immediate grim answers to how fast the disaster unfolded. The boat didn't flip over or capsize in the traditional sense. It sank vertically because John boats are flat bottomed with low gun whales, which the upper edges of the boat's sides. Okay, they rely completely on forward momentum to shed water when waves hit the bow. Once the motor stalled, the heavy mud motor anchored the stern down. With a massive payload of heavy water logged duck decoys and the weight of the motor at the back, the stern dipped below the waterline. It took only two or three rolling swells from the active small craft advisory to fully swamp the hull from behind. When rescuers reached the boat, only about 12 inches of the very tip of the bow was breaking the surface. The remaining 15 feet of the vessel was entirely submerged, suspended vertically by the air trapped in the bow's flotation foam, while the heavy mechanical stern dragged it towards the seafloor. So there's a lot of weight on that boat without two grown men. There's a lot of weight on that boat without two grown men. But while there's two grown men on the boat, it it's fine. That extra weight doesn't cause more issues for the extreme heavy weight that's already on there. Again, I never did that well in math. I'm an English and art person, but I know two plus two equals four, and I know gallons and pints and liquids and liters and cups and all that jazz equate to something. And I just don't see how it's already packed with waterlogged duct decoys and the weight of the motor on the back and extremely heavy supplies. Two grown men are completely fine, but take one out and then we have a problem. Oceanography experts assisting the search noted that the wind-driven currents along the Carolina coast that afternoon were moving at roughly two knots. In open water, a two-not current can carry a floating object or a swimmer nearly 48 miles in a single 24-hour period. This rapid, rapid northward drift is why the search perimeter quickly stretched all the way up to the Cape Fear Memorial Bridge in Wilmington, North Carolina, nearly 50 miles away from where the boat stalled. The tragedy left a profound mark on Tyler's family, creating a sharp divide between the real-world grief of his loved ones and the cold reality of internet culture. Tyler's father, Brian, spoke out to local media expressing the excruciating pain of facing the holidays and major milestones without a son, noting that the hardest part was the simple, agonizing reality of not knowing. Tyler's wife gave birth to their child months after his disappearance, stepping into parenthood surrounded by a community still grieving the loss of her husband. The family was forced to completely retreat from public online spaces due to the toxic nature of internet sleuths. Now, again, you could consider me an internet sleuth, a couch detective, a true crime podcaster, a volunteer for the Gabby Pesito Foundation, whatever you want to call me. So you would think, well, Tiff, you're contributing to this. Brian asked me to. Compounding the community tension, the family noted they had not heard from Christian Holden, which was the friend that was rescued from the jetty. Following the incident, they did not hear from him. While investigators completely cleared Holden based on rock solid Life 360 data, cellular pings, and matching timelines, the emotional fractures within the local hunting community remained deep. When an individual goes missing at sea, the legal process for the family is often incredibly complicated and emotionally exhausting. In many states, a person must be missing for several years before they can be legally declared dead. However, because the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources and the U.S. Coast Guard had extensive definitive physical and digital evidence, which is the sinking timeline, the Life 360, the GPS coordinates, recovered personal items, and the 911 calls, these exceptions were made to expedite the process. A legal declaration was eventually processed to provide necessary structural and financial stability. For Teller's estate and his wife, who gave birth to their daughter just months after the accident, coastal engineers and seasoned maritime pilots often point to the little river jetties themselves to explain exactly why this specific location is so notoriously ungiving. Jetties are long rock walls designed to keep ship channels clear by narrowing the flow of water. This creates a massive funnel effect. When the tide falls, an immense volume of water from the marshes and intercoastal waterway is forced out through a tight gap into the Atlantic Ocean. Still doesn't make sense on why a seasoned waterman and huntsman knew that there was small watercraft advisories and bad weather coming in, would go out past the lines that they're supposed to to jump up some ducks and apparently and allegedly, according to Christian, go further than he's supposed to, and then he just lost sight of them. If you're that seasoned, I don't think you're gonna be going out that far, just saying. Just saying. On the afternoon of January 26, 2023, the outgoing tide was fighting directly against a severe southwest wind. When a strong current moves in one direction and a heavy wind blows from the opposite direction, the waves don't roll smoothly. They stack up vertically, creating a steep, unpredictable walls of water. For an open, low-riding 16-foot John boat navigating this washing machine without motor power is a near-instant catastrophic scenario. Okay, we get it. Physics happened. We I'm not gonna fight science, but I can fight evidence and circumstantial evidence and say that this does not make sense. This makes as much sense as the stupid education program they put into place a few years ago, Common Core, where my brother had was asked on a test, three plus three equals five, eight, ten, or twelve. And I looked at it and I said, What? And he goes, Yeah, it's common core. I'm like, the answer is six. Why is that not an answer? He goes, because we have to guess on how close we can get to it without finding the actual answer. So said the question is three plus three, but you're not supposed to put the actual answer. You're supposed to say five, ten, twelve, whatever. He's like, Yeah, that's just the way they do it. So I assume that you pick the number five. He says, No, that's wrong. It's number 10. I said, How in the fuck do you get number 10 from three plus three? At least pick number five. No, because uh after the number five, you round up. The answer is six, guys. That that's what I'm getting at here. Tyler's boots were two sizes too small. I do not think he took the time to put a w his wallet in the boot. I don't think he was on that boat. I think they put the cell phone on the boat. The but the cell phone sank with the boat, and Tyler, something happened to Tyler before they even got to the water. I don't think Tyler was ever on that boat with Christian going up to the jetties. I think Christian was the only one on that boat or had an accomplice with him. And I'll get to that in a second. The waterfowl hunting community across the Carolinas heavily transformed their safety conversations following Tyler's disappearance. The tragedy sparked several structural safety recommendations that are still widely taught in regional hunter education courses. A renewed emphasis was placed on never leaving a single operator alone in a boat in an open ocean conditions, even briefly to scout. Huh. Well, gee whiz, look at that. Tyler allegedly was out on that boat by himself, wasn't he? And who got out of that boat? Good old Christian Holden, standing on the jetties, like Gilligan's Island, just a hoy madey, just standing there, even though they weren't supposed to have two or one person in a boat at a time. If a motor fails when two people are aboard in a boat in open ocean conditions, even briefly to scout, if a motor fails when two people are aboard, one can drop the anchor and manage the filed pumps while the other focuses on the engine or emergency radio. While Tyler and his friend use cell phones to call 911, investigators noted that standard cellular service can drop or lag in heavy swells. The maritime community used this case to advocate that all coastal hunters carry a mounted or handled VHF marine radio, pressing the digital selective calling DSC distress button on a modern VHF radio instantly transmits exactly GPS coordinates directly to every rescue vessel and commercial ship within miles, bypassing the time delay of a standard 911 dispatch relay. So let's rewind here. Do you remember when I said that Tyler used his phone while the boat was sinking to call a friend and that friend was at work and called 911? So people will argue and say, well, if he wasn't on that boat, then how did he call his friend? Maybe, maybe somebody was pretending to be Tyler and picked up the phone and called. Or maybe Tyler did call and then something happened to Tyler. But I don't think Tyler was on that damn boat. The localized response to Tyler's disappearance remains deeply respectful. The T. Craig Campbell boat landing in Little River, where Tyler launched his boat for the last time, became the permanent focal point for his memory. For a long time after the active search concluded, the landing featured a makeshift memorial wall filled with ribbons, duck decoys signed with messages of hope and written prayers from local fishermen. A core element of the final incident report focused heavily on the mechanics of the boat's power source. Many heavy-duty coastal duck hunters opt for specialized air-cooled mud motors. While they are highly effective for cutting through thick marsh, like I said, and shallow mud flats, they lack the enclosed pressurized water cooling systems of standard outboards. When exposed to continuous, freezing salt spray in open turbulent ocean swells, such as the active small craft advisory conditions outside the little river jetties, the exposed carburetors and electrical components of these motors are highly susceptible to sudden catastrophic moisture stalling. Sorry, that's a mouthful. Once the motor stalled, Tyler's boat immediately entered a dead ship state. Without the forward propulsion required to force the low bow up and over oncoming waves, the boat immediately began to subject to the rolling swells, breaking broadside over the low aluminum gun whales. And again, Tyler was a seasoned waterman and huntsman. I'm going to repeat this. Many heavy-duty coastal duck hunters opt for specialized air-cooled mud motors. These are highly effective for cutting through thick marsh vegetation and shallow mud flats. They lack the enclosed pressurized water cooling systems of standard outboards. When exposed to continuous freezing salt spray and open turbulent ocean swells, such as the act of small craft advisory conditions outside the little river jetties, the exposed carburetors and electrical components of these motors are highly susceptible to sudden catastrophic moisture stalling. So why would Tyler, a seasoned, heavy-duty coastal duck hunter, subject himself and a so-called friend with a boat that he knows could be dangerous when there is a weather advisory and a small craft advisory outside the little river jetties? Why why would he go out in bad weather when there's a small craft advisory with a boat he knows could be dangerous when it comes to the ocean swells and the freezing salt spray when it was freezing outside? This wasn't his first duck hunt. This wasn't his first rodeo, guys. Put the evidence in front of you. I do not believe Tyler took the boat out in freezing salt sprays with ocean swells, with a small craft advisory warning them that the weather was bad. If he was a heavy duty coastal duck hunter, doesn't make sense. And I don't think he was in the boat. I think the phone was placed in the boat, and I think a pair of waders were used that weren't his. And they planted his wallet in it to make it look like they were his that washed up on shore. Search and rescue medical officers detailed the severe psychological challenges present during the initial minutes of the incident, explaining the compounding effects of the elements on January 26, 2023. In 50 degree water, an individual experiences an immediate cold shock response upon emerging. This triggers a sudden, involuntary gasp for air, which can cause immediate water inhalation if waves are breaking over the person. Within less than 10 minutes, the physical ability to coordinate fine motor movements, such as unbuckling gear, pulling a manual FD cord, or treading water is completely lost due to muscle incapacitation. So regardless of a person's physical strength of swimming proficiency, muscle, muscles tend to completely lose their function when they're in the really, really, really cold water. So again, let's let's backtrack. And I keep backtracking because I want you to really like solve that two plus two is four and three plus three is six year. So we have a heavy-duty duck ducksman, okay, hunter, who knows the water, who knows how to duck hunt, who would know better not to go out in bad weather on a boat that could be dangerous during bad weather. And it's in freezing weather, so he knows if it's dangerous and catastrophic, he wouldn't take the boat out. And if he did, why would he do it if he was that seasoned and a veteran with it? So let's say let's go with the theory that he sunk with the boat. So it's freezing, and he got an immediate cold shock, right? After minutes. It just said it can cause you to take breaths in when the waves are breaking over the person, and less than 10 minutes the physical ability to coordinate fine motor movements, such as unbuckling gear. So he's freezing, he's probably losing motor function, but still had enough time to remove his boots that were two sizes too small. Think of his wallet, remove his wallet out of his clothing, take his waiter off, put the wallet in, and send them off to drift. But he was in submerged in freezing water and probably lost motor control because his muscles weren't incapacitated. So, mmm, but math ain't mathing. When the primary high visibility aerial and surface search operations concluded after 43 days of continuous patrolling, the recovery effort entered a highly technical subsurface phase utilizing advanced sonar telemetry, specialty dive teams mapping the seafloor outside the little river inlet had to contend with incredibly hostile underwater environments. The area directly off the coast consists of a shifting sand bottom topography characterized by deep migrating underwater trenches and heavy silt deposits. Oceanographers noted that heavy winter storms and high velocity currents moving at two knots can completely bury heavy objects under inches of sediment with 24 to 48 hours. This extreme surface shifting made sonar differentiation incredibly difficult, as targets could be obscured by sand movement almost as fast as teams could map the grids. So wait a second here. If Tyler sank and went to the bottom, he could have been buried under heavy objects and sand within 24 to 48 hours, or he could have drifted 48 miles in a 24-hour period. Or was never even on that boat. If I shake a magic eight ball and I say, was this staged? I'm pretty sure my eight ball is gonna say all signs point to yes. Just if I had to put, you know, if I was playing roulette in Atlantic City and I had to put black on 31, I'd go ahead and say that, but I don't think he was on that boat. So to ensure local or I'm sorry, to ensure total objectivity, SCDNR explicitly handed over all electronic logs, forensic findings, and interview transcripts to the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, SLED, for a comprehensive top to bottom procedural audit. Now you know how trustworthy SLED can be. SLED's independent analysis completely confirmed the initial findings, the digital footprint from Tyler's cellular carrier data, the independent GPS tracking from his location sharing apps, the synchronized timing of the emergency calls, and the physical state of the recovered boat left absolutely no operational gaps. Okay, that makes sense. If they're tracking the phone and the GPS from, you know, his location app and it times up with the 911 calls, okay, yeah, fine, there's proof on all that. But where's the proof that Tyler was on the boat to begin with? So Brian had told me last night that um there was somebody involved with the case that could have gotten access to phone records and surveillance cameras. So those um were c were supposed to come from Officer Ronnie Floyd with SCDNR. He was supposed to obtain video footage from several different locations to see if Tyler was even on the boat, and he never did anything. He said he was going to do, and he also turned down a variable, very valuable resource like the USA Air Force out of Miami, who offered to bring in new technology, equipped helicopters and troops to help search for Tyler, and the SCD and R claims they had spent $100,000 searching for Tyler, but they only left the boat landing maybe three times. And they never did any questioning of Christian or gathered any evidence about Tyler's case. And now the sled has the case, but they have not done anything with it. Officer Floyd here. Connections, maybe? Why would an officer decline surveillance footage from different locations that was being offered to him for free to confirm if Tyler was on that boat? Why would he turn down valuable resources like the U.S. Air Force and getting new technology, equipped helicopters, and troops to help search for Tyler? And how did they spend $100,000 if they only left the landing three times? Huh. Interesting. The Freedom of Information Act, FOIA, tracking data from the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources, mapped the exact operational sequence of events on January 26, 2023. The data explicitly highlighted that the transition from a standard mechanical failure to complete submersion took less than seven minutes. The low profile structure of the 16-foot John boat simply lacked the necessary freeboard, which is the height of the watertight sides above the water line, to withstand the rolling swells of a small craft advisory once forward momentum stopped. The breakdown of search asset deployments, because the ocean conveyor belt carried debris rapidly toward North Carolina, a multi-agency grid was deployed to handle different geographic zones along the coast. Local fire departments and North Myrtle Beach rescue squads utilized specialized jet skis and shallow draft vessels to navigate the dangerous rock gaps along the little river jetties. Heavy undertows frequently trapped objects. The U.S. Coast Guard deployed medium-range recovery helicopters out of station, Savannah Charleston, to run systematic sweeping grids further out into the Atlantic Ocean, anticipating that the path of the two-knot longshore current. The nonprofit organization Wings of Hope brought in specialized scent tracking canines trained in water recovery. These teams focused heavily on the sandy beaches of Sunset Beach, Ocean Isle, and Holden Beach in North Carolina. Wait, what was that? Holden Beach, where Tyler's waiters and wallet eventually drifted ashore? Wait a minute, what's Christian's last name? Holden? And yet Tyler's so-called waiters that were two sizes too small with his wallet inside drifted ashore to Holden Beach in North Carolina. Jeez. What a coincidence. So you have Kid going out in a boat with someone he barely knows, who's a seasoned waterman and huntsman, knows not to go out in bad weather, but allegedly goes anyway. His boots, well, waiters, are two sizes too small and wash up ashore on Holden Beach with his wallet inside one of them on Holden Beach. The last name of Christian, who just happened to be in the boat with Tyler allegedly, and then dropped off on the jetties, called 911, not as frantic as people put it out to be. Tyler's cell phone gets in the water, loses traction on Life 360 in all service. Officer Floyd denies help with surveillance cameras and U.S. Air Force, and ends up at Holden Beach, which is the last name of Christian. Was the officer tied in to a family that had money? Perhaps? South Carolina people, ma'am. Because Tyler vanished and his body was never recovered. Holden, there's that name again, unfortunately became the target of intense online speculation, rumors, conspiracy theories across platforms like TikTok and Facebook. However, state law enforcement thoroughly investigated his account investigators, utilized a massive cache of digital data, including Holden's 911 calls, dispatch reports, witness statements, cellular pings, and Life 360, GPS tracking data from Tyler's phone. Again, the SCDNR stated that the electronic and physical evidence matched Holden's timeline and account second for second. Both the SCDNR and the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division formally cleared Holden of any wrongdoing, reiterating that no foul play was suspected and that the incident was entirely a tragic boating and weather related accident. But they're forgetting one thing. There's no proof that Tyler was even on that boat. They're forgetting one thing. The waiters that washed us shore were two sizes too small. They're forgetting one thing. When your body goes into that kind of temperature in the water, you go into shock. Less than 10 minutes, you lose motor functions. So how was Tyler able to take his waders off and think fast enough to put his wallet in one of the waiters? According to statements made to local media by Tyler's family, the emotional toll of the tragedy created fractures within their circle. Tyler's father noted in interviews that the family had not heard from Christian following the incident. Holden, there's that name again, like Holden Beach, has kept a completely private profile since the investigation concluded to avoid the ongoing online speculation surrounding the case. Because Christian Holden, like the Beach, was the last person to see Tyler Doyle alive, investigators treated his initial statements with standard forensic skepticism. To verify his account, detectives did not just rely on his word. They cross-referenced. They cross-referenced it against a complex web of digital forensic data. Here we go with the digital evidence again. Okay, we get it. Times match, digital evidence match, but there's still no proof that Tyler was on that boat. Investigators interviewed independent boaters and citizens near Little River Inlet. Multiple witnesses confirmed seeing a lone individual matching Holden's description stranded on the treacherous, slick rocks of the North Jetty, frantically waving his arms to flag down any passing vessel. But did any of those witnesses confirm seeing Tyler out on the water past the boundaries he was supposed to be in? Did any of those witnesses see him go under? Did any of those witnesses watch him take his waders off and place his wallet in it and let them drift out to sea like a message in the bottle? Hmm. Why isn't that mentioned? Detectives subpoenaed call logs from both Holden's and Doyle's cell phone providers. However, Brian Doyle, Tyler's dad, told me that, yes, they got Tyler's cell phone information, but Holden did not provide logs like Tyler's. He sent screenshots. There was no actual logs pulled on Holden's end. Hmm. Holden name, man, really stands out. I wonder if Holden Beach is connected to Christian Holden, which I'll let you decide. And if Robert Officer Robert Floyd is involved in any of this, you know, kind of like how Murdochs have a name and things just get erased. Today actually is July uh June 7th, and it is the fifth anniversary of Paul and Maggie Murdoch's murder. So that's ironic that I'm talking about this, but you know, things are covered up. Seems like they do that a lot in South Carolina, and it seems when you have a name, you get off scot-free. Now, if you were out on a jetty, waving your arms, trying to get someone to help you and your friend, you talk to your friend's parents and tell them what happened. Why wouldn't you go public with your story and be out there searching for your friend? Why would you disappear off the face of the earth to hide from public view if he was your friend? Wouldn't you want to go out and be a part of the community and tell your story a million times in hoping that maybe somebody has Tyler, maybe he washed up on shore somewhere, or maybe somebody saw him or has more information. Wouldn't you work with the family? Wouldn't you shake the father's hand and look him in the eye and tell him what happened? No, no, not not not Christian. No. He just kept a completely private profile and he avoided ongoing online speculations. Sounds to me like wait, who does that remote? Oh. They're dirty laundries from the Gabby Petito case. The parents of Brian Laundry who pled the fifth and didn't say a word. Jeez, all these stories sound the same. I mean, I'm not a I'm not Cheryl McCollum. I'm not a crime scene investigator in the Hall of Fame. I mean, she's my friend, but no, I'm not Nancy Grace. I mean, I've met her, but I'm not dumb. And I know both of those ladies. And I think a lot like both of them. What about Scott Peterson when his wife, Lacey, went missing in 2002 and she was eight months pregnant? He tried to flee the country to Mexico. Hmm. When the attention was brought on him, he too went private. You know, he did show up to a vigil or two and pretended that he was looking for Lacey, but then had a mistress on the side and was lying to her and said he was in Paris, but he still tried to go MIA and disappear. Interesting. Interesting how all these psychopaths kind of are the same way. So again, if this was my friend, I would be with the parents. I would tell them over and over and over and over again the details of the story. I would be out there at a vigil. I'd be out there searching. I would be doing everything I could to help find my friend. Instead, this guy goes completely private, avoids any kind of online speculation. You know, he's investigated, that's it. He goes silent, pleads the fifth, basically. And because Christian was the last person to see Tyler alive, investigators treated his initial statements with standard forensic skepticism. To verify his account, detectives did not just rely on his word. They cross-referenced it against a complex web of digital forensic data. Investigators interviewed independent boaters and citizens near the Little River Inlet. Multiple witnesses confirmed seeing a lone individual matching Holden's description. Like I said, but did anybody say they saw Tyler? The exact timestamps of the incoming calls to Holden's phone matched the frantic tone, he did not have a frantic tone, and duration he described to dispatchers. Furthermore, the towers handling the cellular handoffs placed Holden precisely at the mouth of the inlet, exactly where he claimed to be. The most definitive piece of evidence clearing Holden was the real-time GPS telemetry from Tyler's phone. This is getting so it's putting me like it's making me irate. How many times are they going to use the cell phone that Tyler had as evidence that proves Holden's innocent and proves that there was nobody else involved or proved that nobody else was involved? Let's just say maybe it wasn't Holden. Let's just say in general, nobody else was involved because Tyler's phone just matched up. Yeah, because it went out of service as soon as it hit the water. It does not mean it was on Tyler. It does not mean it was with Tyler, and it does not mean Tyler was in the boat. Data showed the boat moving away from the jetty after Holden was already stationary on the rocks. The digital footprint pr proved it was physically impossible for Holden to have any physical contact with Tyler on the boat when it began taking on water and subsequently sank because Tyler wasn't on the boat. Of course Holden didn't have any physical contact with Tyler when Tyler wasn't on the boat, but the cell phone was. When the audio logs of Holden's 911 calls were reviewed by investigators and later scrutinized by the public upon release, his demeanor on the tape heavily supported a sudden, catastrophic emergency rather than anything premeditated. Get the hell out of here. This is from the research I found, and then I listened to the 911 call. He was not.

SPEAKER_05

It is, it's all 42%. I can't try to get a hold of him.

SPEAKER_04

Well, you can, honey, but if you have to, you can call me immediately back. Just make sure you save your battery power on this phone, okay?

SPEAKER_02

All right. 911 was the location of the emergency.

SPEAKER_05

I don't know her number.

SPEAKER_02

One of your buddies being lost?

SPEAKER_05

Yeah, she's I she told me to call her right back to try to get a hold of him. Try to get a hold of him, but I do I can't get a hold to him.

SPEAKER_02

Were you able to make contact with your friend?

SPEAKER_05

No, I was not. There's a boat here now looking with me. They're actually pulled up. But I cannot see him. I have I do not know where he was. The boat last time I talked to him, the boat was thinking, and now I can't get him to answer.

SPEAKER_02

You said the boat is sinking and you can't you can't get him to answer?

SPEAKER_05

No, sir.

SPEAKER_02

You you're calling him on his phone?

SPEAKER_05

Yes, sir. What do you see? All I see is the ocean. There's a boat here now going out in the ocean. I got I forgot communication with them, and they were helping me try to look to see if they can find him and just get him off the boat.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. Yeah, do you see the Coast Guard? Oh sorry, don't so we got some communication going on here, okay? So just uh just stay with me. What are you what are you looking at?

SPEAKER_05

I'm standing on the jetty rocks. He dropped me off. We were hunting. And he dropped me off on the jetty rocks to stand here while he took the boat and went out and tried to jump up some ducks. And the boat cut off on the boat. You said what's the motor?

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_05

The motor cut off on the boat. What's your what's your friend's name? Power.

SPEAKER_02

What's your last name for me? Dolph. Dolph D-O-V-E.

SPEAKER_05

D-O-Y-L-E Dolph.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, you said he went out to to ruffle up some ducks and when he jumped up, the motor fell off the boat.

SPEAKER_05

No, the motor cut off, and he could not get back.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. Okay, alright. We got help on the way. Okay. I'm close. Can you hear me? Yes, sir. Alright, so we got help on the way. Alright, I'm gonna go ahead and disconnect because I don't want you to use we don't want you to uh use up all your batteries. You need to please battery life on your phone, okay?

SPEAKER_01

But help is on the way, okay? Okay. Alright. Now I'm on with address of your emergency.

SPEAKER_03

Hey, uh, my buddy, he got his he's out on the on the waterway and um his boat is sinking. And I I've tried to call everyone, but nobody's answering the phone, and I don't know what to do, and he's not answering the phone anymore. Um his I guess his last coordinates were 33.85029 north 78.

SPEAKER_01

Hold on, what time is what? 33 what?

SPEAKER_03

Point eight five zero two nine north seven eight uh seven eight point five four seven three two west.

unknown

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

What's your name, sir? I have actually the fire department actually going out there. What's your phone number? Was he was he doing was he hunting or something out there with somebody or what?

SPEAKER_03

I think he was hunting, but I don't know if he was with anybody. I was at work and he called me. And I I just I don't know, and he hasn't answered the phone in a probably 10 minutes.

SPEAKER_01

What's your friend's name?

SPEAKER_03

Tyler Doyle D-O-C-O-Y-L-E.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, sir. What's Tyler's phone number? We did like said a fire department on the way out there to that area, okay?

SPEAKER_03

Uh okay, out on the water.

SPEAKER_01

Uh there actually there's there's a couple on a boat trying to go out that way. Let's see if we can find. Okay.

SPEAKER_06

Alright, thank you, boy. He was not screaming on the phone.

SPEAKER_00

He was not in a panic, he was not scared, he just was calmly calling 911 just to let them know that my friend's boat's sinking and I don't know what to do. And you know, it he repeatedly to struggle to get the give dispatchers exact coordinates because of the sheer disinter the sheer dysenteration of watching his friend's boat get swallowed by rolling swells in a matter of minutes. Now, what I think actually happened, and I it's rare, guys, that I give my opinion, but on this case I have to. What I think happened was he forgot the exact coordinates because maybe he forgot to write them down. Maybe he forgot when he staged all of this. And it's all alleged. I can't prove that he did it. And it's not slander because all of this is public information from the FOIA Act. Maybe maybe, maybe. He was not prepared to be asked that question. And maybe his setup was making him freak out just a little bit because he was scared he was gonna get caught rather than scared that his friend was drowning. But again, when you listen to these 911 calls, he doesn't sound scared. So I don't know where these filers are getting that he was frantic. He's he wasn't frantic. I mean, you have John Bene Ramsey's mom, frantic, because I'm not even gonna give my thoughts on that, because I promised people I wouldn't. She's frantic. And then you have this guy who's frantic. Okay. Frantic! Frantic. Like, just stay with me here. So Holden stayed on the line with emergency routing until the exact moment Hory County rescue boats arrived to pull him off the rocks. Due to the relentless viral campaigns on TikTok and Facebook, where true crime accounts accused Christian Holden of everything from personal disputes to orchestrating a disappearance, the public pressure on local law enforcement became immense. Now, again, I'm not in local law enforcement. I have friends that are. I'm not stupid, and I know that three plus three equals six. I look at the evidence. But circumstantial evidence is evidence. And if it's used the right way and found the right way, it can convict somebody. Now, you could sit here and say that I'm slandering Christian. I'm not. I'm basing my opinion off of information publicly given to me. I can't prove that he did or didn't. I'm not saying he did it. I'm saying theoretically, if he did, this is what I think happened. But it could have been somebody else on that boat. It doesn't mean it was Christian. And that brings me to the next person, TJ Brown. Now, last night when I was talking to Brian, he had mentioned a TJ Brown. TJ Brown was friends with Christian Holden. Two men that Brian never heard of until the day Tyler went missing, but yet said they're buddies of Tyler. Now, this is where it gets really sketchy. This is where it gets really sketchy. TJ Brown, a friend of Christian Holden, claimed that he and Christian were buddies with Tyler, but Brian never heard of them until the day Tyler went missing. And Brian was with Tyler every single day. So he would have heard about these guys. So that's another flag. Why is why is Tyler going out hunting in bad weather with two guys he barely knows? But that's besides the point. Do you know what TJ Brown did? I'm gonna let you sit and think about that for a second. Do you know what TJ Brown did? TJ Brown came to the jetties or the landing, wherever wherever Christian was with his firearm and other items, and TJ Brown got rid of them for Christian. Yeah, yeah. So why did TJ come and pick up Christian's firearm and other items before the police and rescuers even got there? To me, possibly to get rid of evidence. So how did Teller or how did TJ get out there to begin with? And how was he able to get there faster than the police and rescuers? And why is he taking things from a potential crime scene? I mean, at that time it wasn't a crime scene, but it could have been, and they could have taped off an area, they could have sealed the evidence, but TJ comes strolling in. Now, again, I don't know if he drove up, if he was on site with Jesse with I keep wanting to call him Jesse, I don't know why. On site with Christian on the jetties. Was he was he the other one in the boat with Jesse? Was he in the boat with Tyler while Jesse was on the jetties? Was he involved with something with Christian and Tyler before they got in the water? And Tyler helped I'm sorry, TJ helped Brian. I'm getting tired. TJ helped Christian cover something up. Because I still don't think Tyler was ever on that boat, but I do think I do think TJ had something to do with this whole thing. And I don't think Christian acted alone. Especially if he comes out to get Christian's firearm and other items before the police and rescuers even get there. So I wanted to I wanted to bring that up because I thought that was significant. Um, I don't know. I just I don't think that again, if I shook a Magic 8 ball, I still think all signs point to yes. So that's my theory on that, which I don't give a lot of theories on my podcast, because you know, I I like to stay away from them, but I can't help it with this one. I just I I have to point out the obvious. And here's your sign. You know what I mean? So again, despite absolute clearance from the SCDNR and the South Carolina law enforcement, online backlash against Holden was severe. True crime communities on TikTok and Facebook scrutinized his past, his relationship with Tyler, and even his body language during family private moments. The digital harassment forced Holden to completely withdraw from his community. He deleted every trace of his social media presence, changed his phone numbers, and went into absolute isolation to escape the constant influx of threats and baseless accusations. To this day, he remains completely silent publicly, processing the sudden, traumatic loss of his friend away from the public eye. If my friend died allegedly, theoretically, and all that happened, and they were accusing me, that would make me speak up even more to prove my innocence. I get people don't like conflict, and maybe the guy felt like he's he's damned if he does and damned if he doesn't. But why would you go completely MIA if you are innocent? That just screams guilt to me. But again, that is a theory, guys. I I cannot prove that this happened. I just don't think I personally would disappear if my friend was killed. And I think I would cooperate with the family and the police and voice my story and be an advocate and you know, try to help find my friend, not go MIA off the face of the earth. But he told the investigators that once the motor cut out, the wind immediately turned the flat bottom John boat broadside into the steep rolling swells. And it's a detail that perfectly matched the vertical sinking position in which the boat was recovered. When Hory County fire rescue pulled Holden off the slick, treacherous rocks of the North Jetty, his immediate physical and psychological state was documented by first responders. Holden had been stranded on the exposed rock wall in 39 degree Fahrenheit air temperatures with sustained wind gusts exceeding 20 knots. He was showing early signs of hypothermia, shivering violently and soaked from the freezing ocean spray crashing over the rocks. First responders noted in their logs that Holden was in a state of visible shock and panic, screaming and pointing out toward the open ocean where Tyler's boat had vanished into the swells. He had to be physically assisted off the rocks due to the freezing conditions and the slick terrain. One of the most definitive tools investigators used to clear him was the minute-by-minute velocity and location tracking from Tyler's phone. When detectives mapped the data, it showed a clear, indisputable story. The GPS tracked the boat arriving at the North Jetty where it paused briefly. This matched Holden's statement that he was dropped off on the rocks. The phone's GPS then showed the boat moving away from the jetty at hunting speed, traveling out toward the open water. Meanwhile, cell phone tower handoffs confirmed Holden's own phone was completely stationary on the rocks, while Da he had his phone on him. The tracking speed suddenly dropped from a motorized pace down to a slow current driving drift velocity of roughly 1.5 to 2 knots. The data proved that the boat was drifting completely out of Holden's physical reach before the distress calls were made. Mathematically eliminating any possibility of physical confrontation or foul play. Yet no, because Tyler wasn't in the boat. And maybe the boat went out by itself and there was damage to it because they wanted to make it look like there was a malfunction. And Taylor's phone was on that boat. I mean, did they not stop and think of any of this? Holy shit. Like, local reports indicate that the sheer trauma of surviving the freezing elements on the jetty combined with agonizing loss of his hunting partner and the subsequent public backlash caused an absolute fracture with Christian. He has maintained total silence ever since, choosing to process the tragedy out of the public eye. Despite absolute clearance, like I said, from SNDR and SLED, true crime communities of TikTok and Facebook scrutinized his past, his relationship with Tyler, and even his body language during family private moments. When volunteer search organizations and canine handlers arrived with tracking dogs, the initial scent swept matched, I'm sorry, the initial scent sweeps matched Holden's statement precisely. The canines firmly picked up Tyler's scent trailing to the rocks, where Holden was dropped off, but showed that Tyler has never stepped foot onto the jetty itself, confirming Holden's account that Tyler stayed entirely with the vessel. Holden provided investigators with a crucial technical detail regarding the boat. 35 horsepower mud motor. He noted that the engine had a history of minor spudding when cold, which gave marine forensics a specific starting point. When mechanics audited the recovered vertically submerged vessel, they confirmed that moisture infiltration into the electrical components matched the exact stalling pattern. Okay, we get that. They can prove that with science. So the dogs pick up Holden's scent, but it couldn't get Tyler's scent onto the rocks. So they did the sweets, matched Holden's statement, and the canons firmly picked up Tyler's scent trailing to the rocks where Holden was, but showed that Tyler never stopped to the rocks. So if Tyler was in that boat, which I still don't think he was, his scent could have been in that boat, but doesn't mean Tyler was in the boat. Um, it just, yeah, it's gonna call it's gonna back up his story. But again, I mean, his items could have been in that boat, Tyler's, and could have smelled like him. Doesn't mean he was on the boat. And I really wish Officer Ronnie Floyd would have gotten those surveillance cameras, because then it would at least give his parents answers and confirm if Tyler was actually on the boat. When Sled stepped into the audit, the forensic audio specialists analyzed Holden's 911 calls, and the calls made to secondary friends. Analysts verified that the ambient background noise on Holden's phone lines perfectly matched the atmospheric conditions recorded by the National Weather Service at the Little River Inlet at 4 o'clock PM. The audio picked up sustained wind, howling over 20 knots and heavy crashing surf, with directly corroborated how disoriented Holden was when trying to maintain visual contact when drifting boat. The exact length of the calls between Tyler and Holden matched the cellular tower handoffs down to the exact second. Of course. Tyler's phone was pinging towers further out into the ocean while Holden's phone remained locked to the mainland tower serving the north. Okay, we know. And I'm getting mad at the stuff I wrote already wrote because it's like, how many times I can't, I think, and I'm writing what I've seen over and over again. And it's like, how many times did they have to verify that Holden's phone worked and Tyler stopped when it hit the water? Just because his phone was out there and lost service does not mean Tyler was on that damn boat. So, what I've learned after speaking to Tyler's dad, to wrap all this up, Tyler wore a size 14. Yet the waiters that washed ashore with his wallet tucked inside were a size 12. After the incident, Christian never once reached out to him or the family, had never spoken publicly, couldn't look Brian in the eye, and discontinued, or I'm sorry, disconnected from all social media. And Brian thinks that Christian or someone Christian knows potentially had something to do with the disappearance of Tyler. And I have to agree. When Brian stood in the same exact spot on the jetties that Christian did, he could see the ocean for miles, yet Christian claims he couldn't see anything. Tyler never went hunting in that spot before. And Brian doesn't think, nor do many online sleuths, believe he was even out there that day. The phone records Christian gave Ronnie Floyd were only screenshots, and no official phone records were submitted from the phone company like Brian did with Tyler's phone. Ronnie Floyd never got the video surveillance from the places that were going to give it to him for free. And if he did, Brian would have confirmation Tyler was or was not on the boat that day. The boat was going, according to Brian, 74 miles per hour, going towards the jetties. And Brian knows, and this goes back to what I said earlier, Brian knows that the John boat won't go that fast with two people inside the boat, hunting supplies, and everything else they brought with them. Brian never heard of Christian until that day. He never heard of TJ Brown until that day. Christian Holden had a firearm, but his friend TJ Brown came and picked up Christian's gun and other items before the first responders arrived. Brian said, I don't think Tyler even knew much about Christian before that day because I was with Tyler every single day and I have never seen him before. Again, guys, as you know, I try to be as factual and as ethical as I can be in respect to the victim and their families. I so all the things I mentioned above with Brian are the information that he gave me, information that I confirmed, and information I found online. I discussed some of my thoughts with him, and he agrees. So everything I'm saying in this is not made up. It's not me just having a quote opinion. It's not me being disrespectful. I've talked to Tyler's dad. Okay. My first question was: why would Tyler be out on the ocean in the cold when bad weather was coming if he was a seasoned waterman and hunter? Especially in a place he's never been, right? That was question number one. I said, I don't think in a state of panic one would think to remove both waiters and take the time to place a wallet inside of one of them. I mean, I get taken the waiters off to help from dragging you down, but the ones that were found were even his size. And if the water was that cold, he would have been into shock. And I don't think we'd have enough time to think about taking his waiters off, pulling them up, putting his wallet in them, and letting them go out to see if he was losing motor control. Just saying, why was Tyler out with two guys he barely knew? Who's to say that Christian didn't drive the boat to the jetties, hop off, and let the boat go? Or was someone else driving the boat? Why did TJ come and pick up Christian's gun and other items before police and rescuers even got there? To get rid of evidence? This is a big question I keep asking. Was Tyler even out there that day, or did something happen to him elsewhere and it was staged? Again, I'm going to post the 911 calls. You can also watch him on TikTok, YouTube. Um, and there's videos on TikTok of Brian and Tyler's brother Reed, and as well as his mom and his aunt speaking in videos on TikTok. I don't have much information on Tyler's partner. I haven't confirmed anything about her with Brian yet, so I'm not posting or saying anything. I just said earlier there was speculation of some stuff, but that's not confirmed, so I'm not gonna, I'm not going to um add two rumors and I'm just not. Um, if I find information that confirms it or doesn't, I'll update. But as of right now, I'm not even putting her in the picture. So to this day, Tyler's case remains one of the most widely known and deeply felt coastal tragedies in the modern South Carolina history. Remembered by a community that still holds vigils and honors his memory as passionate, dedicated outdoorsmen. The act of daily surges by organizations like the Wisconsin-based Wings of Hope eventually concluded after weeks of grueling, freezing, work, leaving Tyler's case as an agonizingly permanent open missing person's recovery file. Thank you for listening to that. I know that's a lot of information, guys, but I really wanted to point out the obvious here and really point out the things that just seem to be ignored. It seems like this case was only focused on uh the weather and the boat mechanical. It didn't seem like they were interested in anything else. So um again, this case was huge in 2023, but we're bringing it back to life. And Brian Doyle, thank you for reaching out to me. Emily, thank you for referring him. I never heard of this case, and this is one that's making me scratch and want to pull my hair out. And I think, you know, I know it's still an open missing persons case. I hope we can get answers. This is not a closed case, guys. If you know something, say something. It takes one set of eyes, one set of ears, a like on a post, a share of a flyer to bring a loved one home, to give families an answer. I've met a lot of families of missing loved ones. And, you know, when I go to crime con, I see a wall full of missing persons' flyers, and I hear people speak about how 20 years ago they they lost a loved one and still have no answers. Don't be a part of that problem. If you see something, say something. You know, anonymous tip lines, 911, your governor, whatever, FBI, your local police department, the family, say something. Don't look the other way, guys. I guarantee you somebody out there knows what this actually happened. And I really don't think this was an accident based on weather and a mechanical failure. I don't. I really don't. And that's again, it's rare when I give my opinion on my time on my podcast, but like this one I had to because it's just, it's just it's disheartening how it just got pushed aside and it wasn't thoroughly, thoroughly investigating. This kid just went off the face of the earth, the Christian Holden, and then Holden's attached to the beach name that Teller's belongings washed up on, and then the officer didn't want to get free surveillance and help from helicopters and the US Air Force. Like, some things are not matching up, guys. So dig into this, dive into this, share my post on Facebook and Instagram. Um, remember, every time you like, share, or comment on a missing person's post, it boosts the algorithm and it shows it to more people. And one person could see something and know something. You scroll all day, like and share, guys. Like and share a missing person's flyer. It takes one second. And if it was your loved one, you would want the same thing from everybody else on this planet. So don't be a hypocrite. Like and share these things. I don't care if you share one a month, one a week, one a day. Do something that matters. And let's try to get Tyler Doyle home. This is true crime with Tiff Klein, giving criminals the disrespect they deserve.