The Murderous "Mindf--k" at the Heart of Lover, Stalker, Killer

The Murderous "Mindf--k" at the Heart of Lover, Stalker, Killer

Originally appeared on E! Online

When she brought her car to the repair shop he managed, Dave Kroupa was attracted to Cari Farver right away.

So when the automotive technician ran across her profile on a dating site a few weeks later, he made his move.

Cari, a 37-year-old computer programmer, was "smart and sexy," Dave recalled in the new Netflix documentary Lover, Stalker, Killer. "Out of my league all the way around."

But "wild and free at 35" after breaking up with the mother of his two kids, he wasn't looking to get serious with anyone. And Cari's profile fit the bill, the divorced single mom of a teenage son writing, "Just looking for a fun, casual relationship."

She also happened to work just three blocks away from his Omaha, Neb., apartment, so they started spending time together.

All seemed to be going great when, two weeks into their whirlwind romance, Dave left for work early on the morning of Nov. 13, 2012, kissed Cari goodbye, and then got a text from her at 10:30 a.m. reading, "We should move in together."

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As he recalled in the doc, when he balked at the suggestion, he was met with a barrage of texts from Cari: "Fine f--k you...You've ruined my life...I never want to see you again."

When Dave returned to his place at lunchtime, Cari and all of her stuff were gone.

He was admittedly sad, yet "tried to get on with my life like nothing happened."

Dave never saw Cari again. But this shocking scene was only the beginning of the years-long nightmare unpacked in Lover, Stalker, Killer. And when he finally found out the truth, Dave said, it was "such a mindf--k."

<p>Dave Starts Online Dating</p>

<p>Dave Starts Online Dating</p>


<p>Getting to Know Cari Farver</p>

<p>Getting to Know Cari Farver</p>


<p>The Few Seconds That Changed Everything</p>

<p>The Few Seconds That Changed Everything</p>


<p>Nancy told police that Cari was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and had battled depression in her 20s. Cari "had been seeing therapists and was on medication," Nancy later told <a href="https://abcnews.go.com/US/horrific-stalking-case-jealous-lovers-cover-murder/story?id=74431142" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:ABC News;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">ABC News</a>, though there were periods when she stopped taking her meds.</p> <p>After she'd filed the missing person report, Nancy said in the Netflix doc, she got a Facebook message purportedly from Cari, saying, "I am not missing, I just don't want to come home right now. I love you all very much but I need time." Meanwhile, Cari's 14-year-old son Max was staying with Nancy.</p> <p>Her daughter also texted on Mother's Day, Nancy said, but then the messages got steadily "nastier."</p>


<p>Liz Returns to the Picture</p>

<p>Liz&nbsp;Returns to the Picture</p>


<p>At the same time, the mother of <em>his</em> kids, his ex Amy said she didn't want the children at Dave's place while he was embroiled in this situation. (Amy and their children also ended up on the receiving end of threatening messages from Cari, as would seemingly every other woman he knew and spent any time with. A high school friend of Dave's, <strong>Heather Twedt</strong>, <a href="https://abcnews.go.com/US/horrific-stalking-case-jealous-lovers-cover-murder/story?id=74431142" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:told ABC News;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">told ABC News</a> someone threw a brick through her window while he was over one night in January 2014.)</p> <p>Months after Cari disappeared, Liz called Dave to say one of his windows had been smashed. "Go away whore" had been scrawled in red lipstick over the bed and some of Liz's clothes were lying there, looking as if they'd been slashed with a knife.</p> <p>In August 2013, Liz's house caught fire. Her kids weren't home at the time, but her pets—two dogs, a cat and a snake—were killed. Not long after, she moved away and didn't tell Dave where she was going, he recounted in the doc. As for Dave, he acquired a gun, which he kept in a case on a high shelf in his closet.</p>


<p>A Break in the Case </p>

<p>A Break in&nbsp;the Case&nbsp;</p>


<p>Other than two debits from Cari's bank account made Nov. 19, 2012—six days after Dave saw her last—there'd been no other activity. And, as Jim noted in the doc, "It's hard to exist without money.</p> <p>He and Ryan enlisted the help of IT specialist and volunteer deputy <strong>Tony Kava</strong>—a Soylent-drinking computer whiz who put off having brain surgery at one point because doctors told him it would affect his work on the case—to trace <em>where </em>the hundreds of thousands of text messages and emails had come from.</p> <p>And Tony, using a program he wrote himself to narrow down the IP address, cracked it. He found the digital footprint linked to the home of <strong>Todd Butterbaugh</strong>, a fellow county employee (who actually worked for Tony, small world). When questioned, Todd said his on-again, off-again girlfriend had been living with him ever since her house burned down.</p>


<p>"Such a Mindf--k"</p>

<p>"Such a Mindf--k"</p>


<p>Who Shoots Herself in the Leg?</p>

<p>Who Shoots Herself in the Leg?</p>


<p>Building a Murder Case Against Liz</p>

<p>Building a Murder Case Against Liz</p>


<p>Liz Denies Murdering Cari</p>

<p>Liz Denies Murdering Cari</p>


<p>Where is Liz Golyar now?</p>

<p>Where is Liz Golyar now?</p>


<p>What happened to Dave Kroupa?</p>

<p>What happened to Dave Kroupa?</p>


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