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Hell in the Heartland: Murder, Meth, and the Case of Two Missing Girls

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The stranger-than-fiction cold case from rural Oklahoma that has stumped authorities for two decades, concerning the disappearance of two teenage girls and the much larger mystery of murder, police cover-up, and an unimaginable truth...

On December 30, 1999, in rural Oklahoma, sixteen-year-old Ashley Freeman and her best friend, Lauria Bible, were having a sleepover. The next morning, the Freeman family trailer was in flames and both girls were missing.

While rumors of drug debts, revenge, and police collusion abounded in the years that followed, the case remained unsolved and the girls were never found.

In 2015, crime writer Jax Miller--who had been haunted by the case--decided to travel to Oklahoma to find out what really happened on that winter night in 1999, and why the story was still simmering more than fifteen years later. What she found was more than she could have ever bargained for: jaw-dropping levels of police negligence and corruption, entire communities ravaged by methamphetamine addiction, and a series of interconnected murders with an ominously familiar pattern.

These forgotten towns were wild, lawless, and home to some very dark secrets.

319 pages, Hardcover

First published July 28, 2020

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9280 people want to read

About the author

Jax Miller

5 books274 followers
Jax Miller is an American author. She wrote her first novel, Freedom’s Child, in her twenties while hitchhiking across America, winning the 2016 Grand Prix des Lectrices de Elle and earning several CWA Dagger nominations. She has received acclaim from the New York Times, NPR, Entertainment Weekly, and many more. She now works in the true-crime genre, having penned her much-anticipated book and acting as creator, host, and executive producer on the true-crime documentary series Hell in the Heartland on CNN’s HLN network. Jax is a lover of film and music, and has a passion for writing screenplays and rock ‘n’ roll

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 419 reviews
Profile Image for 8stitches 9lives.
2,853 reviews1,724 followers
July 19, 2020
Hell in the Heartland is a deep dive into the disappearance of two teen girls from the scene of a double homicide in the small town of Welch in Craig Country and was once one of Oklahoma’s most haunting and enduring mysteries. But while a recent break in the cold case provided some answers, there's still much more to this story than most people know. Lauria spent the night of December 29, 1999, at best friend Ashley’s home to celebrate Ashley’s sixteenth birthday. Early on the morning of December 30, a neighbour called emergency services to report that the trailer where Ashley lived with her parents, Kathy and Danny Freeman, was on fire. Police pretty swiftly ruled that it was arson and after the fire was extinguished they discovered the charred remains of Kathy Freeman who had been executed by gunshot to the head before the fire was set. Danny’s body was not found until the following day (Dec. 31) when Lauria’s parents descended on the rubble of the trailer to look for clues pertaining to their daughter's disappearance when they discovered Danny’s remains; he too died as the result of a gunshot wound. The two girls’ bodies have never been recovered.

There has been much speculation over the years as to what may have happened to the family, and what the fate of Lauria and Ashley could have been. This book brings into focus some of the complex and often intermingling issues at play. Apparently, sometime in December 2017, the sheriff’s department handed over a box of “previously unknown” notes to the OSBI, which eventually led to the discovery of the three suspects. The notes identified Warren Phillip Welch II, David Pennington, and Ronnie Busick as having murdered Danny and Kathy and abducted and later killed Lauria and Ashley. They also contained witnesses who had heard confessions and details of the crime from these three men and seen Polaroid pictures kept by these men of the girls bound and gagged. Per Oklahoma News 4, a private investigator had discovered an insurance card belonging to Welch’s girlfriend at or near the Freeman’s trailer shortly after the murders, and Welch was known to regularly drive his girlfriend’s car. This same private investigator was later warned off the case by the sheriff’s department.

As a self-proclaimed true crime connoisseur who watches countless hours of true crime cases on YouTube and has read many such books, I am rattled by what I've read and uncovered about this case. I can't help but ask a number of questions that came immediately to mind: how is it possible that the police and emergency services at the scene of the fire completely missed Danny’s body? Why was it that the killers felt so cocksure that they openly bragged about the incident and showed polaroids of the girls to several people? As the girls were kept alive for a day or two after they were abducted this places a crucial importance on the fact that the insurance card found by the PI hired by the family was dismissed when brought to the attention of the police. If this had been taken seriously at the time they may have been recovered alive. This is a heartbreaking, compelling and endlessly frustrating case and this book covers it in a compulsive and gripping manner. The author is to be lauded for her sheer tenacity and ceaseless quest for truth. Undoubtedly one of the finest true crime reads that exist. Perhaps all that really matters now is to locate the girls’ bodies.

Did incompetence/ineptitude, small-town police budgets, police threats, corruption, negligence, drug activity and a local vow of silence combine to devastating effect?
Profile Image for Diane S ☔.
4,901 reviews14.6k followers
March 6, 2021
Rural Oklahoma, there is a trailer fire, two bodies found, two young girls missing. So begins a long struggle to uncover the truth. A truth that is hard to find. A truth full of police incompetence from the beginning, a tangled relationship between the police and the family. A seventeen year old son of the same family shot dead the year before. A town that is poverty stricken, rumors of drugs, and still after 20 years no idea of where the girls are nor who set the fire.

Interesting in parts, an important case but so many misses, misdirections that is boys down in places.
Many descriptions of the area, and people which sometimes seem necessary, sometimes not. Maybe just a bit too much misdirection, too lengthy, found myself skimming. A good book but one that could have been better if more streamlined.

ARC by Netgalley.
Profile Image for Marialyce.
2,238 reviews679 followers
March 27, 2021
While there is such a relevant topic covered in this book, the abduction of two young girls and the burning and killing of one of one girl's parents, it was an exhaustive book to read. It presents a case that occurred in 1999 that has stumped the authorities and sent the remaining parents, the Bibles on a never ending search to find out what happened to the girls.

The author, Jax Miller, herself seems to be very caught u in this case that involved murder, abduction, utter negligence and a huge amount of corruption, and many rural Oklahoma communities rampant with meth addiction. It is a story of hard lives, lives that have been destroyed and that feeling of desperation, of poor trailer residing residents, of life on the very dark side.

What made this book not quite the way I envisioned, was the length and the manner of details the author describing. It was as if every blade of grass was investigated by Ms Miller and it made for a book that was often tedious to read. For me, it started to lose its allure about midway through. I so realize that Jax Miller has made this her lifelong ambition to get to the truth, but somehow I think the truth will forever be buried among all the bodies that have perished.
Profile Image for Ellen Gail.
910 reviews434 followers
October 4, 2020
2.5 stars. Really tough to sort out my feelings on this one.

This is a case I've been aware of for years - it's tragic and horrible and the day the news broke that they made arrests in the case I literally cried. I expected to feel the same cathartic emotion when reading Hell in the Heartland. That's what the power of true crime is - to highlight the worst of humanity and (even in unsolved cases) show the hope inherent. For me, it's not about the graphic details or tragedy rubber-necking. It's taking one of the worst things that can happen, and surrounding it with love and passion.

Look at I'll Be Gone in the Dark: One Woman's Obsessive Search for the Golden State Killer - Michelle McNamara helped ensure that the case stayed visible in the media and in people's minds until the killer was finally caught. It elevates our humanity above the violence.

So it's sad that this one fell flat for me. Ultimately, I think this comes down to writing style. I felt like every time I became interested in what was being told, the way it was told grated against it. Enjoyment of a writing style is quite an individual thing, so I wouldn't call this book bad. It's just okay.

I sincerely hope that other readers click with the book and find the true enjoyment that I couldn't.

Thanks to Berkley and Edelweiss for the drc
Profile Image for Valerity (Val).
1,105 reviews2,774 followers
June 12, 2020
I felt something familiar as I read this book, following along as the tension was building. It seemed like I’d heard of some of the main victims before, but I needn’t have worried, the story was totally new to me. It was a horrific story indeed, and one that kept me involved, reading as various agencies and the author investigated over the years, trying to find out for certain who had committed the awful crimes. The mother of the young lady who was staying over on the night the crimes happened, Mrs. Lorene Bible, kept the momentum moving forward on the case whenever law enforcement would lose interest or lack in leads. There was plenty of push back too, as several in the case received threats of all kinds if they didn’t quit looking into the case and go away, including the author plenty of times. This is one nasty true crime case with bizarre elements to it making it very cruel and taking a long time tormenting the families. Advanced electronic review copy was provided by NetGalley, author Jax Miller, and the publisher.
Profile Image for Bette.
10 reviews
September 22, 2020
I love true crime, but I found the writing style to be over-the-top ridiculous. There was entirely too much talk about "the prairie" and the story lacked cohesion, and substance. I didn't mind that the writer inserted themselves into the story; but I felt that the book was more about their experience researching the story than it was really about what happened to the family involved. The poetic asides took me out of the experience and the references to the writer's panic attacks seemed unnecessary, and therefore performative.
Profile Image for Louise Wilson.
3,655 reviews1,688 followers
July 11, 2020
On December 30th 1999, in rural Oklahoma, sixteen year old Ashley Freeman and her best friend, Lauria Bible, we're having a sleepover. The next morning the Freeman family trailer was in flames and the two girls were missing. While rumours of drug debts revenge and police collusion abandoned in the years that followed, the case remained unsolved and the girls were never found.

Kathy and Danny Freeman died in the fire, Jax Miller interviewed everyone with even the slightest connection to the case and goes through every piece of evidence with a fine tooth comb. Sometimes Jax felt her life was in danger it she carried on relentlessly. A lot of people concerned were into the drug and crime scenes. There were so many rumours surrounding the fire. Her investigation is written in great detail. This is a must read for fans of true crime.

I would like to thank NetGalley, HarperCollins UK, HarperFiction and the author Jax Miller for my ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Katie.
519 reviews255 followers
July 17, 2020
Come for the unsolved mystery, but stay for the police incompetence. The book ends on a promising lead, so imagine my surprise when I saw just yesterday that the only suspect who is still alive pleaded guilty to accessory to murder.

It's December, 1999. Ashley Freeman and Lauria Bible celebrate Ashley’s birthday by having a sleepover. The following morning, the two teenagers are missing and the Freeman trailer is found ablaze. As events unfold, both of Ashley’s parents are discovered shot dead beneath the rubble of their home, and to this day, the location of the girls is unknown.

The story that follows is one of gross negligence on behalf of the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, Agent Steve Nutter in particular, and the Craig County police department. We learn that Ashley’s older brother, Shane, was shot dead by a police officer a year prior. The handling of his death has suspicious circumstances of its own and was enough for his father, Danny Freeman, to believe that the police were coming for him next.

There are many twists and turns to this story, and some wild facts about life and death in this particular part of Oklahoma, as well as areas nearby that once showed economic promise but amounted to lead poisoning and poverty.

I think this book comes at a unique time as many across the US are calling to defund the police; this story shows the extent of fear and frustration a community endures when the officials hired to protect you have become so corrupt that they actively work against you. As news continues to unfold, I hope that Lorene and Jay Bible are finally able to locate the remains of their daughter and find some sense of closure after so many years.

Thank you to Netgalley for providing me with an ARC for review.

See more of my reviews: Blog // Instagram
Profile Image for Liz Barnsley.
3,761 reviews1,077 followers
August 31, 2020
My latest foray into the true crime genre came in the form of this book from Jax Miller, who, as comes across in this beautifully written narrative, spent a lot of time and emotional energy looking into the sad case of missing girls Ashley Freeman and Lauria Bible.

I knew a little about the case from other sources but here was a writer who invested an awful lot of herself into trying to get to the truth and that comes across in every passing chapter – her relationship with Lauria’s mother is an anchor throughout and both these women in different ways are absolute forces of nature.

Hell In The Heartland offers a lot of insight, looking at every angle when it comes to the possibilities of what happened to the girls, but more importantly for this reader, tells us who they were, tells us of the huge impact on the loved ones left behind and, indeed, on the author herself.

Some of what happened in the investigation will have you shaking your head, but the strength of this story comes in the way Jax Miller describes this setting, it’s people, its beliefs, the often wild community that sets the backdrop to this melancholy story of two young women who never got the chance to live their lives through and find out who they were.

There has now been an arrest and, much like Jax Miller I imagine, I leave this story with the hope that the families of Ashley and Lauria, will finally find some closure and some peace. I hope this review leads more people to this extraordinary story told by a writer who with the power of words will put you right there. Don’t look away. Ashley and Lauria deserve our attention.

Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Sharon Huether.
1,737 reviews48 followers
August 23, 2020
A cold case involving arson, murder, kidnapping in rural Oklahoma in Dec 1999.
The Freeman family, Danny, Kathy, Shane and Ashley lived in a trailer in a remote area.
Shane had trouble with the law. In 1998 he was shot and killed by a police officer. The family was
going to sue the Police Dept. for wrongful death of their son.
It was the night before the trial was to begin that the trailer was set on fire.

Danny and Kathy were shot and killed before the fire. Daughter Ashley and her friend Lauria were kidnapped and were later assumed to be also killed.

The investigators from out of the county couldn't find Danny's body. A family member spotted him under debris from the fire the next day.
A very important item the investigators failed to act upon, was an insurance card that perhaps fell from the getaway car leaving the murder scene. It could have led them to the killer or killers.

After twenty years, no one was apprehended. When they did find a box of notes, two of the three suspects had already died.

Rumors of drug deals gone bad, revenge, secrets and police collusion lasted for years.
The girls were never found.

I won this free book from Goodreads first reads.

This book was worth the wait. Great writing.
Profile Image for Lobstergirl.
1,921 reviews1,436 followers
August 5, 2021

This is an oddly written true crime book. Miller is a continuous presence; she describes events from her first person point of view, and gives updates on her emotions and physical distress (anxiety, panic attacks, stomach aches) while interacting with meth addicts and killers. She's present in five of the book's photos, including one taken with a convicted killer just released from prison. She organizes and conducts a search of a suspect's property, believing there may be human remains or evidence there, even bringing her own cameraman. She has phone conversations with a man on death row, who tells her husband, "Jax is stressed.....Go draw her a bath. Giver her a nice massage with some rose petals." Yet she never explains who she is, what her background is, and why she was drawn to this Oklahoma cold case of two murdered parents and their missing teen daughter and her best friend.

And while this certainly seems to be true crime - notwithstanding that the book "contains dramatizations" - the Library of Congress has classified it as literature. It has a call number in the fiction section. Maybe because Miller's language is so over-the-top florid?

"Anxiety is a red-hot flash up my breastbone, like the devil licks my sternum."

"My heartbeat is but a demon on my shoulder, tapping the backs of his heels against my ribs."

"I've squeezed a lemon slice to death and fingered little drawings in my gravy on account of my nerves. My senses are still adjusting from the darkness of isolation and the darkness of my mind - the hypersensitivity brought on by this curse. The Oklahoma sun turns everything white-hot, and the sound of a truck rolling by physically hurts my body."

"If Oklahoma was a beautiful woman, then this case was a scar on her face. It hurts the heart when I am swimming through sunsets so spectacular and so wide that they're drowning in color, and welcomed by prairie afternoons when the wheat meets me with a wave that smells like sunshine and youth's foolish first love."

"God forbid the roosters crow before midnight to summon the bad weather or the moon shines on your face while you sleep to make you go insane."

Or her language is too casual: "Having contacted all pertinent agencies, I am left with not much more than some newspaper archives, and my thumb up my ass."
Profile Image for Chris Steeden.
489 reviews
December 20, 2024
30-Dec-1999: Welch, Craig County, rural Oklahoma. The Freemans, Danny and Kathy, trailer goes up in flames. They are way out in the country.

The author, Jax Miller, chose to write about this is late 2015 and begins interviewing in 2016. The reason why becomes clear. In the trailer also on that fateful night were the Freeman’s daughter, Ashley, and her best friend Lauria Bible. Danny and Kathy are found dead in the trailer but there is no sign of the two sixteen-year-old girls. There is still no sign of them by 2015.

I won’t go too far into this as not to spoil it. The authorities are worse than inept in the initial investigation (and onwards as it turns out). They even missed the body of Danny Freeman when they searched the trailer after the fire. What led to this? Was it drugs? Did it have something to do with the Freeman’s 17-year-old son who was shot and killed by the police less than a year before the fire? Many questions but the biggest of them all, where are the two girls?

Miller beavers away with interviews trying to glean any information she can. Not always an easy task it appears. Is this because of a cover-up? She is creating a picture of the Freeman’s life before the fire. Can she connect all the dots? The investigation takes her into areas where meth is king. It is here that we meet some unsavoury characters to say the least. It is the absolute uselessness of the investigating authorities into the crime that is staggering. Is this on purpose? Why did they not find the culprits when ultimately it was pretty obvious? Obvious when Miller lays out all the facts.

A really ghastly true crime story.
Profile Image for Katie (DoomKittieKhan).
653 reviews37 followers
August 5, 2020
Born and raised in northeast Oklahoma, I was just a few years younger than Lauria (pronounced Laura) Bible and Ashley Freeman when they were reported missing in the rural community of Welch, OK. This baffling crime has long haunted me, and many other Oklahomans, from the moment this story of a sleepover gone awry was broadcast on the local news in late 1999.

Like most places, Oklahoma has two sides. Oklahomans in general are some of the friendliest, open people you will ever meet. We take pride in our weird state and occupy a space that was deemed "no man's land", "wasteland", and "flyover country" at various points in our history. We are an easy people and largely of the "live and let live" variety. We believe there is enough space for everyone under our enormous skies. But Oklahoma can also be a dark place, one with a complicated and haunted past. We live in the crosshairs of holding up the Bible Belt and folk beliefs in equal measure. Certified tempestarii of the plains born from the grit of people who came here and didn't - or couldn't - leave. In the larger cities, this collective memory can be easily covered up by modernity, but drive 20 minutes outside of town and you'll start to feel it. The decay, the sense of foreboding and caution, the peculiar quiet of the plains and prairie. It is in this other, tougher, Oklahoma that Lauria Bible and Ashley Freeman lived and presumably died.

On the evening of December 29, 1999, Lauria was spending the night at Ashley's house after celebrating Ashley's 16th birthday with her family. At around 5:30am the next morning a neighbor called 911 and reported that the Freeman home was engulfed in flames. Law enforcement quickly determined that the fire was arson caused by an accelerant. The Craig County Police Department found the charred remains of Kathy Freeman, Ashley's mom, in her bedroom. She had been shot in the back of the head, execution style, before burning. Initially no other remains were found and OSBI (Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation) was called in. It was believed that Danny Freeman, Ashley's father, had murdered his wife and kidnapped the teen girls.

The police negligence that would come to define this case over the next two decades first reared its head on December 31st when Lauria's parents, Lorene and Jay Bible, found hidden beneath a pile of rubble not far from the Freeman home, the remains of Danny Freeman, who had also been shot execution style, and whose body had been missed by the police.

Rumors immediately began to circulate. Perhaps Lauria and Ashley, inseparable friends that they were, had run away and were now living somewhere together. Except that both of their purses were recovered and no cars were missing from the scene. Almost immediately after the story broke, the case went cold. It was as if Lauria and Ashley had been swallowed up by the prairie. Over the years, small half-truths began to emerge about the case. Local men, known criminals and meth cooks commanding the tri-state area, bragged about kidnapping, raping, and later dumping the bodies of Lauria and Ashley in the abandoned, lead-poisoned, and now uninhabitable- Picher, Oklahoma.

Sometimes it takes an outsider to tell a story that we otherwise don't know how to begin. I appreciate Jax Miller for getting the atmosphere of rural Oklahoma towns right, especially ones where meth is a dual-monarch with Jesus. I also supremely appreciate that the author let the people surrounding this case tell their stories and did not edit, deride, or make snide commentary after the fact at how her subjects perceived their spaces and history. I feel this is worth mentioning because this is something rare in works about Oklahoma, and I was worried that Hell in the Heartland would also fall victim to this trend. I was pleased to see that it did not.

Miller tells the story of Lauria and Ashley in a loosely chronological fashion, jumping between the events of December 29th, 1999 and the small breaks in the case that followed, with her real-time investigation. Miller artfully sets this cold case against the backdrop of rural communities with illicit meth rings, grudges with law enforcement, police brutality, lawlessness, the known harboring of criminals, and the vastness of the prairie. It is in this light that the "live and let live" mentality I mentioned above takes on a sour note. Someone, somewhere knows what happened to these girls - and they either aren't talking or they are being protected by their families.

Read this story with an iron stomach as it is riddled with trigger warnings. This tale is an ugly one beyond the nature of the initial murders. You will grieve and you will be angered. Miller talks extensively about her own anxiety with this case while investigating the murders and disappearances. The threats she received, the coded warnings, and the overall sense of dread she felt crossing over the Craig County line for interviews is palpable and reveals in grim detail those darker aspects of small town life. This is one of the most complex cold cases and an absolute must-read for followers of the true crime genre.
Profile Image for Trisha.
5,921 reviews231 followers
February 20, 2021
"Somewhere out there, closure might be found after all this time."

I think it's good, with True Crime, to stare it right in the face. We shouldn't avert our eyes to the crimes and the injustices that people have suffered. We should hold them to the light, hold those guilty accountable even if more time has passed those those who were killed had been alive. But the truth can only come to light if information is shared. And what a tangle of horrible information and screw ups this whole case is.

I remember watching this case when I was very young on Unsolved Mysteries. It was scary then and hasn't lost any of it's horror this many years later. I'm so glad someone like this author and these families were willing to fight for people to listen, people to talk, people to search. How horrible that it all is in the light of day though. I hope in the next year this is true closure for them, or at least the closure they are asking for.
Profile Image for Provin Martin.
417 reviews72 followers
June 16, 2022
This book has been on my list for quite a while and I finally got around to reading it thanks to my book club at choosing it as a book to read. I’ve always been fascinated with the story of Ashley Freeman and Lauria Bible, Two high school age girls who went missing one night after a massive fire at one of the girls houses. Mr. and Mrs. Freeman‘s bodies were both found, but there was no trace of the girls. The girls have never been found although many people have come forward saying they know where their bodies are. Mrs. Bible is one of the strongest people I know. Fighting for over two decades to try and find her child at her child’s best friend. Jax Miller does a great job describing Oklahoma, what goes on in small towns, and what goes on behind closed doors. I hope one day the girls are found!
Profile Image for Andi.
1,676 reviews
gave-up-on
June 20, 2024
This book was the most purple prosey long winded book about something tragic. I got 15% into it and realized I had to DNF.
Profile Image for Shannon.
405 reviews27 followers
June 17, 2020
Thank you to Netgalley and HarperCollins UK, HarperFiction for the arc of Hell In Heartland.


December 30, 1999, in Oklahoma USA, Ashley Freeman who was 16 and her best friend, Lauria, were having a sleepover. next morning, the Freeman family trailer was in flames and both girls were missing.
the case unfortunately remain unsolved and the girls were never found....

In 2015, the Author of this book Jax Miller decided in which to travel to Oklahoma to find out what really happened on that night in 1999,.... What she found was more than she could have ever hoped for:high levels of police negligence and corruption, communities whom are addicted to methamphetamine, and a series/number of interconnected murders with an ominously familiar pattern!!

This true crime case really had me gripped i had a little insight of this before i read this as i have heard a little about this before, and to read more about it was really gripping for me, i thoroughly enjoyed this book, i recommend to all whom like true crime!

5 stars⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Profile Image for Koren .
1,171 reviews40 followers
November 7, 2020
A husband and wife die in a mobile home fire in Oklahoma. Their daughter and her friend are missing. A year before their son was killed by a police officer. The case has been unsolved for over 20 years. A crime reporter who has been interested in the case decides to travel to Oklahoma and learn more about the case. What she finds is an impoverished area that is dominated by drugs and corrupt police. Interesting story. I was surprised that the reporter didnt actually solve the case.
Profile Image for Hewitt Moore.
Author 3 books56 followers
August 29, 2020
Decent book. Wasnt a big fan of the author's descriptive writing.
Profile Image for Paul.
1,190 reviews75 followers
September 3, 2020
Hell in the Heartland – Inept Policing

Jax Miller has investigated and published a true crime book, that looks at an unsolved missing – murder case in Oklahoma from 1999. At first read I thought I was reading a thriller, because some of what happened in this case seems unbelievable.

Miller takes a deep dive into how two teenage girls went missing, from a burnt-out mobile home. As the local police department and sheriff were not on good terms with the family, they called in the state police to run the investigation. Previously, Cromer Country Police had shot dead the son the year before. Rumours abound.

On December 30th, 1999 in rural Oklahoma, sixteen-year-old Ashley Freeman and her best friend, Lauria Bible, we're having a sleepover. The next morning the Freeman family mobile home (trailer) was in flames and the two girls were missing. While rumours of drug debts revenge and police collusion abandoned in the years that followed, the case remained unsolved and the girls were never found.

There are too many stories and leads over the years that have led to dead ends, and the police do not seem to have a coherent plan of really solving the case. The only one actually interested in solving the case have been the Bible family and have actually had to run an investigation because quite frankly they had been let down by law enforcement.

If there were medals for inept policing than the both local and state police departments would be gold medallists. I am sure like many people will be angered by the inaction and total cock-ups from the police.

Read, and get angry.




Profile Image for Jenna Leone.
130 reviews108 followers
Read
February 22, 2023
DNF. Not a fan of the way this is written. The author inserts himself too much into the narrative, and the narration contains so much minutiae for every person that can't possibly have been remembered or recorded that it reads more like fiction than true crime.
Profile Image for Erica.
193 reviews3 followers
July 10, 2020
I didn't realize it at first but as I started reading it I discovered I had listened to a podcast a few months back about this very story. This book gave me so much more insight than the podcast did. I had no idea there was so much corruption, ineptitude and potential cover-ups involved. This is definitely a case of real life being stranger than fiction.

Crime writer, Jax Miller, has immersed herself fully into the case about the Freeman trailer fire that killed Kathy and Danny Freeman and the missing teenage girls, their daughter, Ashley Freeman and her best friend Lauria Bible. Much like Lauria's mother, Lorene Bible, Miller leaves no stone unturned. Interviewing everyone and anyone with even the slightest possible connection to the case and digging into every shred of information she finds. She pushes forth even when she feels her life is in danger. Many of those involved are deep into drugs (methamphetamine, most specifically) and crime and most not to keen on someone digging around about them and their pasts.

Hell in the Heartland details so many of the countless rumours regarding the fire and disappearance of the two girls - everything from bad drug debts to revenge and even to possible police collusion. It's broken down in a way that's easy to follow along and incredibly intriguing. I find sometimes that as much as I enjoy true crime stories that a lot of them can read a little dry like a text book but the pace of this one had me feeling like I was reading a fiction novel.

As a mother, I cannot imagine the pain and anguish this ongoing case must cause Lorene and Jay Bible.

This is a great novel for those that are interested in true crime events. Trigger warnings as there is discussion about drugs, sexual assault/rape and violence.

Thanks netgalley and publisher for this digital ARC in exchange for my honest review
Profile Image for Stephanie .
1,197 reviews52 followers
December 28, 2020
The publisher’s blurb reads “S-Town meets I’ll Be Gone in the Dark,” referencing two outstanding true crime hits of the past couple of years (the first a podcast and the second a nonfiction book about a woman’s obsessive search for the identity of the Golden State Killer). I loved both of those, so I was happy to receive a copy of Jax Miller’s true crime account of this case titled Hell in the Heartland: Murder, Meth, and the Case of Two Missing Girls (from Berkley Publishing and NetGalley in return for my honest review).

I had heard about this crime on at least two of my regular true crime podcasts that I can remember: Generation Why and Crime Junkie. Both times I felt like there must have been more to the story, and I felt like Ashley Freeman and Lauria Bible, the two teenage girls who went missing after the trailer home of Ashley’s family was set on fire with her parents’ dead bodies inside. It seemed like they had led sad lives in a classic poor town in rural Oklahoma in the 1990s and were probably dead.

The case of the missing girls has been a mystery that would have been long forgotten if it were not for the efforts of the two families involved, as they have worked for decades to keep pushing for information. Tragically, the police seemed uninterested when the crime first happened in 1999, finding the body of Kathy Freeman during a very cursory look at the after-fire rubble. They pretty much identified her husband Danny Freeman as a suspect in the abduction of their daughter and her friend Lauria, and there was somewhat of a manhunt for less than a day. They released the burned-out trailer back to the family, who promptly went in, stepped onto Danny’s dead body, and announced that the police hadn’t done any investigating, and they hired their own detectives.

Author Jax Miller became obsessed with the mystery and made many trips to Oklahoma over the years, beginning in 2015, and has written a detailed account of her investigation, including covering the rumors of police collusion, drug debts, and revenge that covered the area.

I really felt like I needed a shower as I read her stories of police negligence, and what looked like clear cases of corruption. The whole area has been ravaged by methamphetamine addiction, and there have been tons of crimes, up to and including murder, that may or may not be related to this case.

I was a bit disappointed by this book (probably because I had expectations of something as good as either S-Town or I’ll Be Gone In The Dark) but it may just be a question of writing style. The author has made her telling of the story very personal, inserting a great amount of detail about her own struggles (addiction and anxiety in particular) into her narrative covering the girls’ stories. I would have preferred a more straightforward journalistic style, although I give her points for her honest and integrity as she shared her efforts and persisted long after many would have given up.

It’s a sad story, and the level of despair that permeates the story is just about overwhelming (and wasn’t evident in the podcasts, but definitely rings true in the book). It contributed to my already rampant geographical bigotry, adding rural Oklahoma to the list of places I hope to NEVER visit. Three stars (and yes, I am a notoriously easy grader).
Profile Image for Jill Meyer.
1,188 reviews121 followers
July 30, 2020
“Hell in the Heartland” is an apt title for Jax Miller’s book about brutal life and brutal loss in northeast Oklahoma. The case she examines began in 1999 with the murder of a couple, Kathy and Danny Freeman, in a trailer fire (after having been murdered by gunfire) and disappearance (and assumed death) of two 16 year old girls. The story has everything the reader might assume, from meth making and distribution, to local and state cops who are not diligent in their duties to make a thorough investigation of the murders and possible kidnapping of the teens.

The crimes actually begin about a year before the murders of the Freemans with the death of their older child in a scrape with the local police. Shane Freeman, a wild child, was killed. The Freemans and their family felt the police didn’t investigate Shane’s death and were even involved in it. The bad blood simmered from there, still affecting lives 20 years later. More people died, some by murder, some by drugs, some by being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

The story of the tiny area of northeast Oklahoma is fairly well told by Jax Miller. What isn’t so well written was Miller’s insertion of herself and her personal story into the larger tale. I’m not sure why authors do this, because it’s not easy to write. Miller’s intrusions breakaway from the telling of the main story and add very little. It reminds me of a recent book, Emma Eisenberg’s “The Third Rainbow Girl” - also a story of a kidnapping and murders of two young women in drug-addled West Virginia. I might be interested in Eisenberg and Miller’s stories if they were told in their own memoirs. As written now, they just become extraneous bits inserted in the lives of others.

However, if you don’t care if an author inserts herself in her work of nonfiction, I can recommend “Hell in the Heartland”.
Profile Image for Crystal Zavala.
456 reviews47 followers
August 14, 2020
I'm predicting that Hell in the Heartland will be my favorite true crime book of 2020!

I have heard of the missing girls - Ashley Freeman and Lauria Bible, but I hadn't heard any updates in quite some time. Jax Miller became fascinated with the Freeman/Bible case and started investigating. At some point during a sleepover at Ashley Freeman's house in 1999, the home catches fire, and when the police arrive it is discovered that Ashley's parents have been murdered and Ashley and Lauria are missing. Jax finds herself caught up in rumors of drugs, police incompetence, and possibly even police involvement. What happened at this trailer? Where are the girls?
There are so many threads to this story. One of the fascinating ones is about Ashley Freeman's brother who was shot and killed by a police officer a year before the fire at the age of 17.
One of my favorite things in any book is when the location becomes a character. Jax does a fantastic job bringing Oklahoma to life. I can picture all of these places and I'm curious about visiting some of these places.
Profile Image for Charlene Intriago.
365 reviews93 followers
December 23, 2020
First off, I have to say I didn't know anything about this case or this book until I was reading a list of the weekly top ten reads for a book store in Oklahoma. It sounded intriguing and I was able to get it from one of my online libraries.

That being said, I really liked her writing style. It clicked with me on the first page. I also liked the way she chronicled the story. In the beginning I'm thinking the county sheriff's really bungled this one. Then it looked like it went higher up to the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigations. But then, Jax Miller investigated everything she possibly could to find out what really happened, went down every rabbit hole, thoroughly investigated the meth aspect - that sounded pretty plausible to me, interviewed every person she could find (even the really unsavory ones), she formed a bond with the families, and did everything she could to bring some closure to this case.

I know there was a television documentary and it helped me to put a face to all the individuals involved. Sad, sad case. A very interesting true crime read.
Profile Image for Bethany.
40 reviews2 followers
February 9, 2021
This book is so bad that I got 125 pages in and realized I was wasting my time. I was interested in the story, not the author who insists on talking about herself. I’m surprised her editors let her get away with it. I didn’t pick up the book to read about her and I was glad to put it down and forget about it.
122 reviews7 followers
August 20, 2020
Heartbreaking

If only.. so many times I said this reading this story. If only. As an Oklahoman I’ve watched this story for 21 years. I knew there had to be more to it. But wow. If only. One small change, and those 2 souls might still be with us.. if only.
Profile Image for Lindsey.
120 reviews13 followers
August 15, 2020
I’m sick and tired of writers involving themselves in cases.
Profile Image for The Book Club.
199 reviews58 followers
July 23, 2020
Hell in the Heartland is a deep dive into a double homicide committed in the small town of Welch, in Craig County and the disappearance of the two teen girls Lauria Bible and Ashley Freeman. The night of the 29th of December 1999 the girls were having a sleepover in the Freeman’s trailer to celebrate Ashley’s birthday. The following morning a neighbour calls the emergency services to report that the trailer was on fire. The police pretty soon declared that it was arson and then managed to recover Kathy Freeman’s body, which they discovered was killed by a gunshot. Danny Freeman’s body was only found the day after, thanks to Lorene Bible, who decided to investigate by herself.
While lately there has been some new discoveries in the case, the bodies of the two girls are still missing.


Many speculations has been de about whatever happened to the family (a drug deal gone bad, police corruption and so on), and what the faith of the girls could have been. And probably we would have had a different outcome today if the sheriff department at the time, followed the leads given them, probably they would have even been able to save the teenagers.
I can’t even imagine what their families have been through and how frustrated at the law system they were, I was while reading this book.
How is it possible that Danny Freeman’s body wasn’t found by the police while inspecting the crime scene? How is possible that the killers felt so safe to show around Polaroids of the raped and then killed girls? Why didn’t the police follow the lead given by the PIs hired by the family? And why did they found the box with all the clues only in 2017?
I can understand why the author was so drowned to Oklahoma, and to this mystery and why she went to the extent she did to try and help the families of the victims. I pray that they will find the teens bodies and find some sort of closure if that’s even possible.
Surely this is one of the finest true crime book I’ve read.
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