I want to start by telling you a story.......
I
was driving in my car when I first heard it — a podcast episode about Preston
Castle. Specifically about the deaths that occurred there. And then, somewhere
in the middle of it, I heard my name, "Historian J'aime Rubio," she
said. I remember smiling. It always means a lot when someone acknowledges your
work, especially in the paranormal and history world where so many people take
information without giving any credit at all.
I even sent her an email. Something simple — a thank you for the mention. I never got a response. I didn't think much of it at the time. People are busy. Inboxes get full. I let it go.
But
a few weeks later, I sat down and listened to the entire episode from beginning
to end. And as I listened, something started to feel off. There was a
familiarity to it that I couldn't quite place at first — a strange déjà vu. And
then it hit me.
I
was hearing her speak, and I felt it was all too familiar — because it was my
own words.
I want to give you some context before I show you the evidence, because it matters.
In
December of 2019, I published a blog post titled "Deaths at Preston
Castle" right here on this blog. That post was not something I threw
together in an afternoon. It was the result of years of primary source research
— death records, California State Archives, county newspapers, the Preston
School of Industry's official Biennial Reports, and more. I tracked down
documents that most people don't even know exist. I dug into cases where the
records conflicted with each other and I found the truth buried in documents no
one had ever bothered to look at.
I
do this work because I believe these people deserve to be remembered
accurately. Every ward, every employee, every soul who passed through those
doors — they are real people. They are not props for ghost stories. And it is
my mission to be a voice for the voiceless and to honor the forgotten ones so
they will be forgotten no more.
That
blog post — the original, the documented, the cited one — is still right here
on this blog where I published it in 2019.
I am not going to name this person in this post. That is an intentional choice, and I want to be clear about why: this post is about the evidence, not about creating a spectacle.
But
I do want you to understand who we are talking about, because it matters to the
story. This is not a small or unknown content creator. This is a well-known,
nationally recognized paranormal celebrity with a very large and dedicated
following. She has appeared on television and has had her own paranormal television series. Her name carries significant weight
in the paranormal community. She has a platform that most independent
historians and researchers could only dream of.
And
she used that platform to present my research as her own.
The
one time she did credit me — specifically when she mentioned that
"historian J'aime Rubio dug further" and found a conflicting death
record for Grant Walker — proved that she knew exactly where her information
was coming from. She acknowledged me once, for one finding, and then went on to
use the rest of my research without a single additional credit. That single
mention is not a courtesy. In context, it is evidence.
Below is a comparison of my original blog text (published December 30, 2019) alongside excerpts from her 2021 podcast transcript. I will let you read it and draw your own conclusions.
|
Case |
My Blog — December 2019 |
Her Podcast — 2021 |
|
Grant Walker |
"you will
notice he is listed as one of the boys who died from illness...typhoid fever.
However, the 1896 Biennial report lists two deaths that year and one of the
deaths was from accidental burns, intestinal ulceration. It is as if he
ingested something toxic which burned his insides." |
"At first, it
seems like he may have died from typhoid fever. However, historian Jamie
Rubio dug further and found a conflicting death register that suggests Walker
may have died from severe internal burns after ingesting something
toxic." Note: This is the one
case where she credited me. |
|
Herman Huber &
John Kirrane — Escape & Shooting |
"Herman and
another friend, John Kirrane, attempted to escape the school...The night
watchman J.D. French went after them. Although French claimed he only meant
to shoot a warning shot...another ward claimed that he watched French shoot
Herman in cold blood." |
"Herman Hubert
and fellow Ward and friend John Karaine made an escape just as the dinner
bell rang...night guard J. D. French pursued the two escapees and fired his
weapon...French claimed he tried to fire a warning shot, but Karaine
maintained that French shot Herman in cold blood." |
|
Tahema Vann —
Drowning |
"Tehama
claimed that he could swim 'dog fashion'...Two boys, Robert Rains and Albert
Rubidoux tried to dive in after him, to no avail. It wasn't until the next
morning that they were able to retrieve his lifeless body that had sunk to
the bottom of the pond. He is buried at the Preston Cemetery." |
"Tahama Van,
confident about his doggy paddle, dove in...Robert Raines and Albert
Rubideaux tried to save Van...It wasn't until the next morning that they were
able to retrieve his lifeless body that had sunk to the bottom of the pond.
He is buried at the Preston Cemetery."
The final two sentences are nearly word-for-word identical. |
|
Frank Cardarella —
Epilepsy & Suicide |
"Frank was
found in his cell...He had ripped his sleeping shirt into pieces, fashioning
for himself a makeshift noose...the day before, he had been suffering from
seizures due to epilepsy. Instead of the staff sending him to the
infirmary...they took him back to his cell and left him there." (my original post had his date of death listed as Valentine's Day, February 14th, however this was a typo.) |
"Frank
Cardarella had epilepsy and experienced seizures because of it. Instead of
receiving treatment, Frank was kept in his cell...Frank died by suicide after
making a noose from his shredded night shirt." She also repeated the typo I had made on my blog, as Frank did not actually die on Valentine's day as she stated. I later corrected my mistake to reflect the correct date, but since she didn't actually research the story, she repeated the error. |
|
Sam Goins — Fatal
Escape |
"J.E. Kelly,
who had gone after Sam, shot aiming at Sam's leg to stop him...he tripped. As
he fell, the bullet hit him in the back and this wound proved to be
fatal...He was twenty years old and only two months away from being
released." |
"John Kelly of
Preston Guard accidentally shot Samuel in the back. Samuel died from the
wound. He was twenty years old and only two months from being released from
Preston." |
|
Edgar Hough &
Leland Price — Football Fight |
"During the
middle of a Saturday night football game at Preston, a fight between wards
Edgar Hough and Leland Price broke out. As a punishment the two were locked
in the basement alone...Price was knocked down...fracturing his skull on the
concrete floor. He fell into a coma from which he never recovered. He died
the following morning." |
"Wards Edgar
Howe and Leland Price got into a fight during a Saturday night football
game...they were locked together in Preston's basement...Price's skull was
fractured after hitting the ground and he fell into a coma. Leland Price died
the next morning." |
|
William Reppert
& Henry Herstein — Buried Alive |
"While digging
a sewer ditch on the school property, six boys were buried alive when the
trench...caved in. Four of the boys were saved, but both William and Henry
perished in the ground." |
"nine wards
were digging a ditch on the property for sewage...the ditch caved in and
trapped six boys. Four were extracted, but two remained buried. William
Reppert and Henry Herstein both died after being buried alive." |
|
Cemetery Closing
Detail |
"In total,
there are 18 boys buried in the Preston Cemetery." |
"There are
eighteen boys buried in a small cemetery on the property." |
Every single one of the cases above — the names, the dates, the specific details, the narrative structure — came from my original research that took years to compile. There is no way this podcaster miraculously came up with the same exact, nearly word-for-word chronological list of deaths.
Why I'm Writing This
I have a responsibility — to myself, to my readers, and to the people whose stories I have spent years protecting. The wards of Preston Castle were voiceless in life. They deserve to have their stories told truthfully and with credit given where it is due. It isn't right when people go around taking the research of others to profit off of it and don't bother to cite their sources, nor is it right to blatantly read another person's work verbatim.
My research belongs to me. It is documented. It is dated. And if you are going to share it with the world — which I genuinely encourage — please do so with a link, a name, and an acknowledgment that someone spent years making it possible for you to tell that story.
These are not ghost stories. These are real people. And their histories deserve to be handled with care, and respect given to the keeper of the histories, the ones who actually do the research to honor these forgotten souls. --
Copyright © J'aime Rubio 2026 | www.jaimerubiowriter.com
© J'aime Rubio | prestoncastlehistory.blogspot.com |
www.jaimerubiowriter.com
Original blog post: "Deaths at
Preston Castle" — Published December 30, 2019
All research is the intellectual
property of J'aime Rubio.

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