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'Trainwreck: P.I. Moms': Inside the True Story Involving a Fake Lifetime Reality Show
'Trainwreck: P.I. Moms': Inside the True Story Involving a Fake Lifetime Reality Show

Yahoo

time23-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

'Trainwreck: P.I. Moms': Inside the True Story Involving a Fake Lifetime Reality Show

Disgraced investigator Chris Butler's illegal activities are chronicled in Netflix's 'Trainwreck: P.I. Moms' In 2010, a reality television series following a private investigation firm staffed by soccer moms was in the works — but one local journalist would uncover that there was nothing 'real' about it. The series, called P.I. Moms, was set to debut in early 2011 on Lifetime Networks. The premise was reminiscent of the popular film Charlie's Angels: Former cop Chris Butler ran the San Francisco-based firm and managed a team of moms moonlighting as investigators. Butler and his so-called "P.I. moms' tackled everything from insurance scams to cheating husbands, and gained media attention in the process. But as one local journalist, Peter Crooks, would learn, Butler's enterprise was all a facade. An anonymous source tipped off Crooks that Butler wasn't just faking stings and investigations — he was also involved in criminal activity that included dirty cops, drug deals, prostitution rings and more. The downfall of Butler and his reality television dreams is the subject of Netflix's Trainwreck: P.I. Moms, which begins streaming on July 22. The latest installment of the documentary series — which has also told the stories of the Astroworld tragedy, the real-life Project X and the infamous Carnival Triumph disaster, among others — features first-hand accounts from the television producers, journalists and former P.I. moms who were duped by Butler. In a bizarre story that seems stranger-than-fiction, here's everything to know about Chris Butler, the P.I. moms and the journalist-informant duo who helped take down a major crime ring. Who is Chris Butler? Butler was born in upstate New York and moved to California with his family in 1973, Diablo magazine reported. He worked as a police officer in the city of Antioch for 11 years before acquiring his own private investigation firm, which he named Butler and Associates Private Investigations, Inc., in 2000, CBS News stated. Butler left the police force because 'law enforcement administration often had trouble understanding [Butler's] tactics and drive, as they were well above the standards of routine performance,' according to his now-defunct website, per Diablo. 'Christopher brings the same tactics, drive, and creativity into the private sector,' it read. Butler first staffed his private investigation firm with off-duty cops and former law enforcement officers, who were all men — but he found them 'competitive, impatient and difficult to deal with,' he told Diablo. So, instead, he tapped into a different demographic: Moms. 'I hired a mom, and she was the best investigator I had worked with,' Butler told the magazine. 'She was patient and a good team player, and she could multitask.' Who is Carl Marino? Carl Marino first met Butler around 2008, when he answered a Craigslist ad looking for someone with both law enforcement and acting experience, according to This American Life. Marino had spent 17 years as a sheriff's deputy in upstate New York, CBS News reported, before relocating to San Francisco to pursue modeling and acting, per Diablo. The Butler and Associates role appeared to combine the two. Butler hired Marino and made him the director of operations at Butler and Associates. Marino described their work at the PI firm as 'always on the fringe' to CBS News. Who were the P.I. moms? After Butler hired a team of moms as private investigators, the firm began to attract nationwide media attention. In 2010, Butler and the P.I. moms appeared on The Dr. Phil Show and the Today show and were also featured in magazines. During these segments, he shed more light on why he believed moms made superior investigators. 'They come into this field prepped for the type of work that they're gonna be encountering. ... They're very good listeners,' Butler said on The Dr. Phil Show (via CBS News). 'They're probably more sensitive to people lying to them.' But it wasn't just their keen listening skills and sensitivity that made these moms useful to Butler's operation: He also deployed the moms as 'decoys' in operations, he explained on Dr. Phil. In one such sting, he used one of his P.I. moms to tempt and seduce a husband suspected of cheating at a hotel bar — a tactic even Dr. Phil questioned. Despite Butler's unconventional methods, his team's media coverage caught the attention of reality television producers. Butler opted to work with Ben Silverman, the producer behind the U.S. versions of The Biggest Loser and The Office and their concept, P.I. Moms, was pitched to multiple networks. Butler told Diablo magazine that Lifetime Television 'bought it on the spot.' The show, which focused on Butler and five female team members, began production and filming in late 2010. It was slated for a March 2011 debut on Lifetime. Who is Peter Crooks? Peter Crooks is a journalist who, in the late 1990s and early 2000s, was a writer and senior editor at Diablo magazine, a Bay Area lifestyle magazine. In August 2010, Crooks received a pitch from a Los Angeles-based publicist to write a story on Butler and his P.I. moms, in light of their recent publicity and upcoming reality show. 'It seemed like a no-brainer that we would, that we would cover that story,' Crooks told CBS News. As part of Crooks' research for the article, he rode along with Butler and the P.I. moms to witness a potential sting in action. Butler informed Crooks that his firm had been hired by a wealthy woman who suspected her younger fiancé of cheating, and they were headed out to potentially catch him in the act. Crooks tagged along in the back of a minivan with two P.I. moms as they tailed the subject one day in September 2010. During their 10 hours of surveillance, the trio witnessed the man pick up a female date, take her shopping and out to lunch in Napa Valley, and check into a local hotel. Throughout their day-long tryst, the couple also frequently kissed in public. The P.I. moms captured the indiscretions on video camera and informed the client that her suspicions were confirmed. What happened with Peter Crooks' article about the P.I. moms? Crooks' article about Butler and the P.I. Moms was slated to run in March 2011, timed in conjunction with the release of the Lifetime reality show. But in January, Crooks received a troubling email from an individual named 'R. Rutherford' who alleged that the entire ride-along Crooks had taken part in was staged. 'Chris totally played you,' the email read, according to Diablo magazine. 'The case that you sat in on was totally scripted. All of the participants were employees or paid actors.' Crooks contacted Butler and revealed the accusations, which the private investigator vehemently denied. However, when asked for proof of the case's legitimacy, Butler became evasive — dodging Crooks' repeated requests to speak with the client and see photo evidence of her relationship with the subject. Butler eventually claimed that the email had originated from a disgruntled former intern who had had an affair with one of the P.I. moms that ended badly. However, when Crooks attempted to arrange an in-person meeting with a fact-checker to discuss the details of the article, Butler claimed he was too busy with his cases and filming to meet. What else was Chris Butler accused of? R. Rutherford's accusations didn't stop with the supposedly faked ride-along: 10 days after the initial email, Crooks received a second message from Rutherford alleging that Butler was involved in 'some serious criminal activity' that included police corruption and drug dealing. Rutherford went on to accuse the commander of the Contra Costa County Narcotics Task Force, Norm Wielsch, of taking drugs and explosives seized from raids and giving them to Butler to sell. Rutherford alleged that Butler was selling large amounts of marijuana, prescription painkillers and steroids, as well as C-4 plastic explosive. The source also appealed to Crooks for help, asking for a trusted person in law enforcement to inform them of this alleged operation. What happened to Chris Butler? Thanks to the information Rutherford passed along to Crooks, in February 2011, undercover officers captured Wielsch stealing three pounds of crystal methamphetamine out of the Contra Costa Sheriff's drug locker and then meeting up with Butler to sell one pound of it to a confidential informant. The transaction was captured on video, and the pair were arrested and hit with 28 felony drug and weapons charges each, Diablo reported. The investigation into Butler and Wielsch revealed that their crimes extended beyond the drug operation: The two also allegedly ran a brothel posing as a massage parlor and set up stings to steal money from competing prostitutes, according to SFGate. Butler was separately accused of being paid by attorneys to place illegal eavesdropping devices in people's cars, as well as supposedly setting up 'dirty DUIs,' where women would hire Butler to have their estranged partners arrested for drunk driving. The scam involved attractive women, employed by Butler, plying the targets with alcohol before they got behind the wheel. Butler would then tip off the police to a suspected drunk driver, leading to an arrest, the East Bay Times reported. Butler ultimately took a plea deal, pleading guilty in May 2012 to seven felony counts, including methamphetamine and marijuana distribution, theft, conspiracy, extortion, robbery and illegal wiretapping. In his confession to authorities, he admitted to his involvement in the array of crimes and ended up testifying against his partner, Wielsch. (The narcotics officer was convicted and sentenced to 14 years in federal prison in 2013.) In September 2012, Butler was sentenced to eight years in federal prison and fined $20,000. 'I want to apologize to the law enforcement community for the betrayal and embarrassment I inflicted upon it,' Butler said at his sentencing. 'I want to apologize to my family and friends who supported me through all of this.' Who was the whistleblower 'R. Rutherford'? In another shocking twist to the Butler case, Marino, Butler's director of operations at his firm, was responsible for exposing the private investigator's crimes. Marino revealed to This American Life that during the early days of filming the reality show, Butler approached him about selling large amounts of marijuana that had been seized in drug raids by Wielsch. Marino ended up paying for the drugs himself to satisfy his boss, but then Butler asked him to move more contraband, leaving Marino in a precarious situation. He was afraid to contact the authorities, unsure of which cops he could trust, and didn't want to go to the local news media, fearing to tip off Butler and Wielsch. 'Literally it was that day when I first saw those drugs that I knew I was gonna do something about it,' Marino told CBS News. 'I had no idea what it was, how I was gonna do it, when I was gonna do it. But knowing where those drugs came from, I knew something had to be done.' Marino ultimately decided to tip off Crooks, first with the information about the staged ride-along to see if the journalist would bite. When Crooks began looking into that, Marino knew he could trust him with more and sent the information about the illicit drug operation. Crooks connected the source he only knew as Rutherford with a trusted police contact, which led to the large-scale investigation into Butler and Wielsch. Marino ended up serving as a confidential informant, wearing multiple wires that captured sound and video. Marino went on to portray Joe Kenda in Investigation Discovery's docuseries Homicide Hunter for nine seasons from 2011 to 2020. What happened to the reality show P.I. Moms? As Butler's criminal enterprise crumbled behind the scenes, so did his hopes of becoming a reality television star. In January 2011, with questions about the legitimacy of his investigations looming, several of the P.I. moms handed in their resignations, Diablo reported. By early February, Lifetime had pulled the plug on the reality show. 'We eventually stopped filming because Chris Butler told us there would be plenty of cases to film, and that simply wasn't true,' Lucas Platt, the reality show's executive producer, told Diablo. 'The network was willing to invest millions of dollars in a show, and he was not able to come through." Platt added that he also had his doubts about Butler. 'The whole time I worked on the show, Butler never once looked me in the eye,' the showrunner said. 'I definitely felt that he was less than honest.' The moms employed by Butler, however, denied having any knowledge of the faked stings and investigations, according to a follow-up episode of Dr. Phil. Read the original article on People Solve the daily Crossword

Almost 200,000 new historical records released to mark 103rd anniversary of Four Courts fire
Almost 200,000 new historical records released to mark 103rd anniversary of Four Courts fire

Irish Independent

time30-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Irish Independent

Almost 200,000 new historical records released to mark 103rd anniversary of Four Courts fire

The 175,000 records have been released to mark the 103rd anniversary of the fire at Dublin's Four Courts that destroyed the Public Record Office of Ireland, along with 700 years of Irish history. Available to view for the first time are more than 60,000 names from the 19th century census destroyed in the 1922 fire, which occurred during the Civil War. Compiled from transcriptions preserved in the National Archives of Ireland and the Record Office of Northern Ireland, the recovered transcripts contain details of the lives of ordinary people across Ireland in the decades around the time of the Famine. Started three years ago, the VRTI project is led by Trinity College Dublin and supported by the Department of Culture, Communications and Sport. 'We are excited to release our latest collections freely online for citizen researchers, students, and the academic community. The scale, scope, and significance of these materials is remarkable,' Trinity historian Dr Peter Crooks said. 'They will be of huge interest to anyone exploring Ireland's story as a global island. "Thousands of names of individuals from before and after the Great Famine; extensive intelligence reports from the Tudor era; and a host of medieval records presented in English alongside the original Latin parchment – these vast and varied collections are a testament to the power of collaboration.' In the three years since it was launched, the VRTI has put together more than 350,000 records and 250 million words of searchable Irish history. Other new additions to the VRTI include documents telling stories from the 1798 Rebellion and Irish links to the American Revolution, and five million words of Anglo-Norman Irish history from 1170 to 1500 translated into English. 'A stand-out for me is the extraordinary detective work by our research team and partners in Dublin and Belfast on the pre-Famine census returns. Millions of names were lost, tragically, in 1922 when those records went up in flames,' Dr Crooks said. 'But today, on the 103rd anniversary of the fire, we are releasing more than 60,000 names newly recovered from those very census returns. "It's a tremendous achievement. What we have uncovered after years of painstaking archival work will help families across the world trace their story deeper into the Irish past.'

175,000 new historical records released to mark 103rd anniversary of Four Courts fire
175,000 new historical records released to mark 103rd anniversary of Four Courts fire

Irish Independent

time30-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Irish Independent

175,000 new historical records released to mark 103rd anniversary of Four Courts fire

The records have been released to mark the 103rd anniversary of the fire at Dublin's Four Courts that destroyed the Public Record Office of Ireland, along with 700 years of Irish history. Available to view for the first time are more than 60,000 names from the 19th century census destroyed in the 1922 fire, which occurred during the Civil War. Compiled from transcriptions preserved in the National Archives of Ireland and the Record Office of Northern Ireland, the recovered transcripts contain details of the lives of ordinary people across Ireland in the decades around the time of the Famine. Started three years ago, the VRTI project is led by Trinity College Dublin and supported by the Department of Culture, Communications and Sport. 'We are excited to release our latest collections freely online for citizen researchers, students, and the academic community. The scale, scope, and significance of these materials is remarkable,' Trinity historian Dr Peter Crooks said. 'They will be of huge interest to anyone exploring Ireland's story as a global island. "Thousands of names of individuals from before and after the Great Famine; extensive intelligence reports from the Tudor era; and a host of medieval records presented in English alongside the original Latin parchment – these vast and varied collections are a testament to the power of collaboration.' In the three years since it was launched, the VRTI has put together more than 350,000 records and 250 million words of searchable Irish history. Other new additions to the VRTI include documents telling stories from the 1798 Rebellion and Irish links to the American Revolution, and five million words of Anglo-Norman Irish history from 1170 to 1500 translated into English. 'A stand-out for me is the extraordinary detective work by our research team and partners in Dublin and Belfast on the pre-Famine census returns. Millions of names were lost, tragically, in 1922 when those records went up in flames,' Dr Crooks said. 'But today, on the 103rd anniversary of the fire, we are releasing more than 60,000 names newly recovered from those very census returns. "It's a tremendous achievement. What we have uncovered after years of painstaking archival work will help families across the world trace their story deeper into the Irish past.'

Pioneering project releases more lost Irish records spanning 700 years
Pioneering project releases more lost Irish records spanning 700 years

Irish Examiner

time30-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Irish Examiner

Pioneering project releases more lost Irish records spanning 700 years

Seven centuries of lost historical records covering espionage, political corruption and the lives of ordinary people in Ireland have been recovered and are being released. A pioneering project to fill gaps in Irish history is making 175,000 more records and millions more words of searchable content freely available to researchers and members of the public. The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland, a global academic collaboration led by Trinity College Dublin, deployed historians, computer scientists and other specialists to digitally recreate parts of a vast archive destroyed in Ireland's civil war. The project launched in 2022 on the centenary of the burning of the Public Record Office in Dublin in a five-day battle that began on 28 June 1922. It is now marking the 103rd anniversary of the calamity by adding freshly recovered material that takes in the Anglo-Norman conquest and the 1798 rebellion and a genealogical trove from 19th-century censuses. 'It's a very significant scale of data,' said Peter Crooks, a Trinity historian and academic director of the project. HISTORY HUB If you are interested in this article then no doubt you will enjoy exploring the various history collections and content in our history hub. Check it out HERE and happy reading 'It's an enormous stretch of time from the 13th century up to the 19th century. The scale of what can be brought in, in terms of reconstruction, continues to amaze me.' Once the envy of scholars around the world, the six-storey Public Record Office at the Four Courts by the River Liffey contained priceless troves dating from medieval times. It was obliterated as troops of the fledgling Irish State battled former comrades hunkered in the building. It was long assumed that all was lost but the project enlisted 75 archives and libraries in Ireland, the UK and around the world to source transcripts and duplicates of documents, many of which had lain, forgotten, in storage. The latest troves to be catalogued and digitised bring the total to 350,000 records and 250m words of searchable Irish history. Culture minister Patrick O'Donovan said international collaboration underpinned the 'riches' that had been rediscovered. 'It offers an invaluable historical resource for people of all ages and traditions across the island of Ireland and abroad, and democratises access so that our shared history is more accessible and engaging for everyone.' The project has fused old-fashioned academic investigation, artificial intelligence and support and expertise from institutions that contain Irish records, notably the National Archives of Ireland, the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland, the UK National Archives at Kew and the Irish Manuscripts Commission. 'The circle of collaborators has widened and deepened,' said Mr Crooks. The latest material includes 60,000 names from the lost censuses, creating a data hoard for genealogists and Irish diaspora descendants, among others, to trace family lineage, says Ciarán Wallace, a Trinity historian and co-director of the project. 'This is only a fragment of what's missing but 60,000 is a huge improvement on a blank slate.' The project's 'age of conquest' portal contains parchments in Latin and 5m words of Anglo-Norman Irish history, spanning 1170 to 1500, that have been translated into English. Uploaded State papers, spanning 1660 to 1720, comprise 10m words, including extensive intelligence reports from the Tudor era when English monarchs tightened their grip on England's first colony. A diary that ended up at the US Library of Congress is now accessible and sheds light on dodgy deals that led to the abolition of the Irish parliament in 1800 and Ireland's incorporation into the UK. 'You find out about some of those underhanded dealings,' said Joel Herman, a research fellow who works on the project. 'One member of parliament said he can't vote for it because of the corrupt methods that have been used to win votes.' Along with the new material, a search tool called the Knowledge Graph Explorer is being introduced that can identify people, places and the links between them. The Guardian

Pioneering project releases more lost Irish records spanning 700 years
Pioneering project releases more lost Irish records spanning 700 years

The Guardian

time30-06-2025

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Pioneering project releases more lost Irish records spanning 700 years

Seven centuries of lost historical records covering espionage, political corruption and the lives of ordinary people in Ireland have been recovered and are being released. A pioneering project to fill gaps in Irish history is making 175,000 more records and millions more words of searchable content freely available to researchers and members of the public. The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland, a global academic collaboration led by Trinity College Dublin, deployed historians, computer scientists and other specialists to digitally recreate parts of a vast archive destroyed in Ireland's civil war. The project launched in 2022 on the centenary of the burning of the Public Record Office in Dublin in a five-day battle that began on 28 June 1922. It is now marking the 103rd anniversary of the calamity by adding freshly recovered material that takes in the Anglo-Norman conquest and the 1798 rebellion and a genealogical trove from 19th-century censuses. 'It's a very significant scale of data,' said Peter Crooks, a Trinity historian and academic director of the project. 'It's an enormous stretch of time from the 13th century up to the 19th century. The scale of what can be brought in, in terms of reconstruction, continues to amaze me.' Once the envy of scholars around the world, the six-storey Public Record Office at the Four Courts by the River Liffey contained priceless troves dating from medieval times. It was obliterated as troops of the fledgling Irish state battled former comrades hunkered in the building. It was long assumed that all was lost but the project enlisted 75 archives and libraries in Ireland, the UK and around the world to source transcripts and duplicates of documents, many of which had lain, forgotten, in storage. The latest troves to be catalogued and digitised bring the total to 350,000 records and 250m words of searchable Irish history. Patrick O'Donovan, the culture minister, said international collaboration underpinned the 'riches' that had been rediscovered. 'It offers an invaluable historical resource for people of all ages and traditions across the island of Ireland and abroad, and democratises access so that our shared history is more accessible and engaging for everyone.' The project has fused old-fashioned academic investigation, artificial intelligence and support and expertise from institutions that contain Irish records, notably the National Archives of Ireland, the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland, the UK National Archives at Kew and the Irish Manuscripts Commission. 'The circle of collaborators has widened and deepened,' said Crooks. The latest material includes 60,000 names from the lost censuses, creating a data hoard for genealogists and Irish diaspora descendants, among others, to trace family lineage, says Ciarán Wallace, a Trinity historian and co-director of the project. 'This is only a fragment of what's missing but 60,000 is a huge improvement on a blank slate.' The project's 'age of conquest' portal contains parchments in Latin and 5m words of Anglo-Norman Irish history, spanning 1170 to 1500, that have been translated into English. Uploaded state papers, spanning 1660 to 1720, comprise 10m words, including extensive intelligence reports from the Tudor era when English monarchs tightened their grip on England's first colony. A diary that ended up at the US Library of Congress is now accessible and sheds light on dodgy deals that led to the abolition of the Irish parliament in 1800 and Ireland's incorporation into the UK. 'You find out about some of those underhanded dealings,' said Joel Herman, a research fellow who works on the project. 'One member of parliament said he can't vote for it because of the corrupt methods that have been used to win votes.' Along with the new material, a search tool called the Knowledge Graph Explorer is being introduced that can identify people, places and the links between them.

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