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The sinister letters that terrorized an Ohio town… and the chilling truth investigators say still remains hidden

by London Mail
January 1, 2026
in Science
Reading Time: 6 mins read

‘I know where you live, I’ve been observing your house and know you have children,’ read a letter scrawled in blocky capitals, a note that marked the start of a terrifying saga in Circleville, Ohio.

The 1976 letter, sent to school bus driver Mary Gillespie, was the first of hundreds of threatening messages targeting residents of the small town, which is home to just 11,700 people and famous for its pumpkin festival.

The letters escalated over nearly two decades, culminating in a booby-trapped mailbox aimed at Gillespie and a car crash that killed her husband Ron, events some believe were staged.

Early letters, postmarked from Columbus, claimed Gillespie was having an affair with the school superintendent, Gordon Massie, whom she later married.

Other notes threatened her children if she did not acknowledge the affair. Authorities attributed Ron’s death to a drunk-driving accident, though his family insisted he did not drink, and a fired gun’s missing bullet added to the mystery.

Local man Paul Freshour, Gillespie’s brother-in-law, was eventually jailed for ten years after investigators linked his gun to the booby trap.

Yet letters continued while Freshour was behind bars, raising questions about whether he had been wrongly convicted or if another person was responsible.

Private investigator Martin Yant, who spent years probing the case, told Daily Mail that Circleville’s story remains unresolved, and many details, including the presence of a man near the booby trap, were never fully investigated.

Hundreds of the letters were sent to local residents

Hundreds of the letters were sent to local residents

Hundreds of the letters were sent over the years

Hundreds of the letters were sent over the years

Yant, author of Justice Denied, said: ‘I don’t think people completely buy the official version.’ He said he still communicates with enthusiasts worldwide, fascinated by the unresolved case and its lingering mysteries.

After the booby-trap incident, Freshour was convicted, but the letters persisted, casting doubt on his guilt. 

Yant uncovered claims from a woman familiar with both families that Freshour’s son had stolen his father’s gun and given it to her mother, but Freshour allegedly forbade disclosure.

Yant began investigating wrongful convictions in the 1980s after encountering Freshour’s legal filings asserting his innocence. 

He was struck by the unusual behavior of Freshour’s ex-wife, who harassed him with bizarre late-night calls, questioning his qualifications to investigate and repeatedly warning him to stop.

The ongoing letters affected Freshour’s attempts at parole; prison authorities monitored him closely, restricting pen access and strip-searching him after visits.

Yant noted that upon release, Freshour spent limited funds to pursue legal action to overturn his conviction, a move Yant says is unlikely for a guilty man.

‘My impressions of him were he didn’t have a vicious bone in his body,’ Yant said. ‘He just wanted to clear his name, even at his own disadvantage.’

Bus driver Mary Gillespie started receiving the letters in the 70s

Bus driver Mary Gillespie started receiving the letters in the 70s

Local man Paul Freshour, brother-in-law of Mary Gillespie, ended up serving years in prison

Local man Paul Freshour, brother-in-law of Mary Gillespie, ended up serving years in prison

The booby trap used local man Paul Freshour's gun

The booby trap used local man Paul Freshour’s gun

Local Sheriff Radcliffe, who succeeded his father, had investigated incidents including Ron Gillespie’s fatal crash. 

Yant criticized Freshour’s trial as unfair, noting that potential exculpatory evidence, such as the unidentified man near the booby trap, was never presented in court.

The investigator, who spoke to family members and local people over a number of years, said there are still important unanswered questions and that he does not believe Freshour had a fair trial. 

‘To me, the most important unanswered question is who the heck was the guy standing right where the booby trap was found a few minutes before it was found and no one followed up on that at all,’ he said.

Even decades later, Yant receives calls from people claiming to have solved the case, though none of the leads have been confirmed. Interest in Circleville surged with the internet, with people nationwide sharing tips, evidence, and theories.

‘I think there are still people down there in Ohio who feel that Paul Freshour got framed,’ Yant said. 

‘If he did not receive a fair trial, then you can’t say he was the letter writer.’

Early letters, postmarked from Columbus, claimed Gillespie was having an affair with the school superintendent, Gordon Massie, whom she later married

Early letters, postmarked from Columbus, claimed Gillespie was having an affair with the school superintendent, Gordon Massie, whom she later married

Questions remain over the car crash in which Ron Gillespie died

 Questions remain over the car crash in which Ron Gillespie died

These letters are a dark past Circleville, Ohio

These letters are a dark past Circleville, Ohio

Yant emphasized several unresolved clues, including the man spotted near the booby trap, the gun allegedly given to a woman by Freshour’s son, and the notion from a witness that the booby trap may have been crafted by someone other than Paul, possibly his mother’s boyfriend.

‘The evidence strikes me as very important,’ Yant said. ‘And some statements, like the girlfriend of Paul’s son admitting he stole the gun, were sworn not to be used.’

The letters terrorized Circleville for nearly 20 years, affecting not only the Gillespie family but the broader community. 

Residents recall the fear of receiving anonymous threats in the mail, the constant paranoia, and the way the small-town police struggled to solve the case. 

Some letters were cryptic, while others revealed intimate knowledge about private lives, heightening the sense that someone close, or someone meticulously observing, was behind them.

Yant said: ‘That’s what makes this case so chilling. It wasn’t just random; it was personal, targeted. And even now, decades later, the sense of unease lingers in the town.’

‘It’s a combination of unanswered questions, suspicious circumstances, and the fact that people believed Freshour was innocent that keeps the story alive,’ he added.

‘Every time I get a call or an email from someone with a theory, it reminds me that this case hasn’t been forgotten.’

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