Bonus Episodes
"Teresita Basa: Voice from the Grave"
Part 1: The Murder Investigation
Part 2: The 1979 Trial
If the Walls Could Talk Podcast™
A struggling Chicago hospital did just about anything to admit patients. During the ’90s and 2000s, Edgewater Hospital performed hundreds of unnecessary heart surgeries on patients just to pad its bottom line. Multiple patients died. Hear what lengths the government went in order to stop the fraud and why many believe the owner got away with it. Former employees, patients, investigators, and urban explorers recount the tangled history of what happened within the walls of Chicago’s Edgewater Hospital.
Teresita Basa was found dead in her Chicago apartment with a knife in chest. The beloved Edgewater Hospital employee had been murdered and set on fire in 1977. With few leads, the case went cold…until Teresita’s ghost returned from the grave to identify her killer: another Edgewater Hospital employee named Allan Showery. Hear the shocking true story of one the most unusual murder investigations in Part 1 of this Bonus Episode.
See pictures and learn more about the unusual murder of Teresita Basa on our website: IftheWallsCouldTalkPodcast.com.
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Hear the complete true crime series about Chicago’s Edgewater Hospital beginning with Episode 1 of If the Walls Could Talk Podcast.
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This episode was written and produced by Todd Ganz.
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If the Walls Could Talk Podcast™ – Bonus Episodes: “Teresita Basa: Voice from the Grave”
In February 1977, the body of Edgewater Hospital employee Teresita Basa was found badly burned in her apartment. Firefighters were shocked to discover a knife protruding from the center of her chest. After months of investigation, detectives found little to no clues and the case went cold. Things changed in the summer of 1977 when Teresita’s ghost returned from the grave to identify her killer. The “ghost” inhabited the body of another hospital employee named Remy Chua and identified the killer as Allan Showery — who also worked at Edgewater Hospital. Sounds unbelievable, right? Allan Showery confessed to the murder, but later said he was “just kidding” and recanted his confession. The case finally went to trial in 1979 and made headlines all across the world.
Did Teresita’s ghost really help to solve her own murder? Would a jury actually believe this story? And what other notorious criminal with roots at Edgewater Hospital was involved? We explore the shocking story from beginning all the way to the unexpected conclusion in our two-part bonus series of If the Walls Could Talk. We also answer your questions in a special Teresita Basa: Q&A bonus episode.
Some other tidbits about the Teresita Basa story:
- Although many characters from this saga are still alive today, no one has seen or heard from Allan Showery since the early-2000s
- At least three other Edgewater Hospital employees reportedly saw the ghost of Teresita Basa — but none of them wanted to come forward
- The sister of Illinois Governor James Thompson was one of the lawyers who defended Allan Showery; Gov. Thompson used to fly by helicopter from Edgewater Hospital’s helipad to and from the state’s capital in Springfield
- The original Unsolved Mysteries with Robert Stack profiled this case in 1990 (watch the clip on YouTube)
- The series’ co-creator ranks the Basa murder as one of the show’s Top 10 Creepiest Cases ever profiled
- Following the arrest of Allan Showery, Detective Stachula became the butt of many jokes among fellow policemen — his colleagues would leave him phone messages from people who were dead
- Unsolved Mysteries changed the Chua’s name in order to protect their privacy — yet the Chua’s already had authored their own book about the story in 1979
- Those working on the Chua’s book reported unusual activity at their offices like mysterious phone calls and notes flying around the room
- Reme’s husband, Dr. Jose Chua, worked at Franklin Boulevard Community Hospital in Chicago — which later became Sacred Heart; Sacred Heart closed in 2013 after the feds unraveled a fraud scheme similar to what happened at Edgewater Hospital
- A made-for-TV movie about the story called Voice From the Grave aired in the 1990s on NBC. It starred Kevin Dobson and Megan Ward
- Along with the Chua’s book, another comprehensive book about the case was published by journalists John O’Brien and Edward Baumann called Teresita: The Voice from the Grave
- In another odd twist, Teresita’s remains were flown to her native Philippines to be buried — but the cemetery where she’s said to buried…does not exist
In Part 2 of our Teresita Basa Bonus Episode (“The Trial”), hear who testified in the unusual murder trial of Allan Showery and learn how Allan nearly walked away a free man. Plus, Acadia Einstein who hosts the podcast Strangeful Things will share one theory about what people believe really happened. Listen to his light-hearted take in an episode called “The Teresita Basa Murder Mystery“.
We answer a dozen of your questions in our Q&A episode including: were there other suspects? What happened to Allan’s first wife? Why was Teresita’s door locked when the fire department arrived? How long does a jury have to deliberate before a judge can call a “hung jury”? What were the other bizarre connections to Edgewater Hospital?
Support us on Patreon and learn more in-depth stories about the Teresita Basa story — including why one of Allan’s lawyers was later disbarred, who all of the other suspects were and the bizarre connection Edgewater Hospital administrators Peter Rogan and Roger Ehmen have to this case.
Unlock hours of bonus material about Edgewater Hospital in our weekly “Second Opinion” episodes. Plans start at just $11/month.