STALKERS : The Truth Behind the Obsession

This is an experimental podcast series. All content has been created using A.I. tools. Not all information may be factually correct and the hosts may occasionally suffer AI Hallucinations and fabricate information entirely disconnected from reality.  Independent fact-checking is advised.

Ken Dodd spent decades making audiences laugh, but behind the scenes he became the target of one of Britain's most disturbing stalking cases. Charlie West and Jack Mercer trace the shocking escalation from fan letters and handmade gifts to arson, anonymous threats, and the infamous perfumed dead rat that left investigators stunned.

Along the way, Charlie and Jack explore the psychology of obsession, erotomania, celebrity fixation, and how delusion can turn rejection into dangerous behaviour. It's a dark story—but if nothing else, you'll probably never look at gift wrapping quite the same way again!

Memorable moments:
  •  🐀 The chilling story behind the perfumed dead rat. 
  •  🔥 How a celebrity crush escalated into arson and terror. 
  •  🧠 The psychology of erotomania and obsessive stalking.

CHARLIE WEST
Charlie has a lifelong fascination for the psychology behind criminal obsession. Known for her sharp wit, fearless opinions and ability to find humour in even the darkest conversations, she's never afraid to challenge accepted narratives or ask the awkward questions others avoid!

Stalker Spotlight: Charlie's favourite stalker is the bizarre story of the "Hollywood Letter Stalker"; a woman who became convinced she was destined to marry a famous actor, sending thousands of letters over several years. The case perfectly illustrates the blurred line between fantasy and dangerous fixation, and remains one of the examples Charlie returns to when discussing how obsession can spiral into criminal behaviour. 

JACK MERCER
Jack is a former investigative analyst with a deep-rooted interest in human psychology, particularly the patterns of behaviour that lead to obsession, fixation and control. Calm, measured and highly credible, he brings structure and clarity to even the most disturbing cases, often translating chaotic behaviour into understandable psychological frameworks.

Stalker Spotlight: Jack's favourite stalker is the case is of the “Watcher Letters” in New Jersey, where an unknown individual sent increasingly unsettling letters to a suburban family over several years. For Jack, the case is a stark example of how anonymity, patience and psychological manipulation can create fear without ever needing physical contact.

For more details on STALKERS : https://carrotcruncher.com/stalkers

What is STALKERS : The Truth Behind the Obsession?

Taking you beyond the headlines and into the disturbing world of stalking. Through in-depth conversations, real cases, expert insights and psychological analysis, Charlie & Jack explore what drives obsessive behaviour, how it escalates, and the devastating impact it has on victims.

NOTE: This is an experimental podcast series, created by AI and produced by a human!

Imagine, like, receiving a package in the mail.

It's wrapped really carefully, it's addressed right to

your home.

You bring it inside, and as you hold

it, you notice it emits this very distinct,

actually rather pleasant scent.

Right, like a high-end perfume.

Yeah, exactly, like a floral perfume.

But then, right beneath those bright floral notes,

there's this second underlying order, the unmistakable, totally

stomach-turning scent of, well, wet fur and

decay.

Oh my god.

So you pull back the wrapping, you open

this oddly shaped box, and sitting right inside

is a dead, meticulously perfumed rat.

I mean, it is an image that just

feels entirely lifted from a psychological horror film,

honestly, but it's not.

No, not at all.

It is a very real physical piece of

evidence from one of the most bizarre, unsettling,

and like, psychologically dense stalking cases in British

history.

Hi, I'm Charlie West.

And I'm Jack Mercer.

Welcome to Stalkers.

This is the podcast where we delve into

the truth behind the obsession.

We'll take you beyond the headlines and into

the disturbing world of stalking through in-depth

conversations, real cases, expert insights, and psychological analysis.

And we'll hopefully have a bit of a

laugh at the same time.

But that's not a guarantee because of that

thing called common decency.

It's worth noting that this podcast series has

been created completely by AI and a bit

of human tweaking.

You can find out more at carrotcruncher.com

forward slash stalkers.

That's carrotcruncher.com forward slash stalkers.

Today we are unpacking the total psychological collapse

of a woman named Ruth Tag and her

relentless campaign of terror against the legendary British

comedian Ken Dodd and his partner Anne Jones.

And our mission today for you isn't just

to gawk at a crazy story.

We are diving deep into the absolute darkest,

muddiest waters of the human psyche here.

We are going to decode the why.

Exactly.

Because we aren't just looking at a fan

who sent a few too many glowing letters.

No, we are dissecting the behavioral triggers of

a woman who weaponized her own obsession, right?

A woman who viewed a comedian's long-term

partner as a literal romantic rival and who

just completely crossed the line from superfan into

arson and bespoke biological warfare.

It's intense.

We are going to explore how a mind

fundamentally breaks, how a delusion is constructed piece

by piece, how it defends itself against the

intrusion of reality, and how a polite interaction

can actually serve as the catalyst for a

lethal psychological displacement.

I have to admit, I have a completely

inappropriate fascination with the morbid details of this

case.

It is just so wildly beyond the pale

of normal human behavior.

But before we get to the burning houses

and the fragrant rodents, we have to establish

the playing field.

We need some context, yeah.

Right.

We have to talk about the object of

this intense, destructive desire.

Because the fact that this specific man became

the center of an erotic, violent obsession is,

frankly, the first major psychological hurdle we have

to clear.

You're talking about the immense disconnect between Ken

Dodd's public persona and the romanticized, idealized version

of him that existed in Ruth Tag's mind.

I'm talking about the fact that the man

looked like a cartoon character that had been

electrocuted.

That's one way to put it, yes.

Look, you know who Ken Dodd is?

Our listeners probably know who he is, but

we have to really look at him through

the lens of sexual obsession.

Ken Dodd was a surreal, hyper-energetic, family

-friendly stand-up comedian and ventriloquist from Liverpool.

Specifically, an area called Naughty Ash, which he

built this entire mythological universe around.

Yeah, the Diddy Men and all that.

He started in the 50s, ruled the 60s

and 70s, and his aesthetic was, well, chaotic,

is putting it nicely.

It was anti-romantic by design.

His appearance was notoriously and intentionally eccentric.

He had this massive untameable head of fluffy,

wild hair.

Like a static shock victim.

Right, and he always carried his trademark prop

on stage, a red, white, and blue feather

dustery called his tickle stick, and of course,

the teeth.

Oh man, the teeth.

Famously protruding upper teeth.

Our sources mentioned this was the result of

a childhood accident, actually.

When he was seven, he dared his friends,

he could ride his bicycle with his eyes

shut, promptly hit a curb, and just permanently

altered his face.

Which became his trademark.

Exactly.

And in later years, rumor had it, those

teeth were insured for four million pounds.

But, you know, it wasn't just the stage

persona.

The man's actual day-to-day life was

totally shambolic.

Shambolic is the exact word his own legal

counsel used, actually.

Right.

Look at his 1989 tax evasion trial.

He was charged with 11 counts of tax

evasion, and why?

Because the man literally didn't trust banks.

So what did he do?

He hid 700,000 pounds in cash in

offshore accounts, but mostly in shoe boxes and

suitcases, stuck under his bed in his house.

During this five-week trial, his defense barrister,

George Carmen, literally told the jury, my client

is a shambolic oddball with a poor grasp

of accounting.

It's a bold defense strategy.

It worked.

They played a video of his house in

naughty ash to the court to prove how

disorganized he was.

The video showed absolute hoarding level clutter, and

I am not making this up, a literal

pantomime horse permanently resting in the hallway.

It really painted a picture of a man

who lived entirely in his own eccentric vaudevillian

reality.

Okay, so here's where I have to take

a stand.

I am going to be highly controversial right

out of the gate here.

I am bracing myself.

I am pushing back on this whole stalking

tragedy and narrative for just a second.

You have a guy in his 70s with

wild clown hair, huge protruding teeth waving a

feather duster who lives in a hoarder house

with a pantomime horse and stuffs hundreds of

thousands of pounds in shoe boxes.

I see where this is going.

And some woman in her mid 30s decides

he is the absolute peak of human sexuality.

I'm sorry, but if you look like that

and act like that and you get a

stalker, you don't call the police.

You say, thank you very much.

I appreciate the attention.

You should be deeply, deeply grateful someone is

looking at you with romantic intent.

Okay, I know you're playing devil's advocate for

the sake of humor, but I am going

to pull you right back to the center

here because what you are pointing out, that

massive absurd canyon between the reality of who

Ken Dodd was and the intense romantic obsession

of Ruth's tag that is actually the key

to unlocking the entire pathology.

Wait, really?

The disconnect is the point.

Yes, that disconnect isn't a joke.

It is the defining feature of a very

specific, very dangerous psychological condition called erotomania.

Erotomania.

That's also known as declarable syndrome, right?

Like the absolute delusion that a person of

higher status is secretly in love with you.

Precisely.

And in the psychology of severe stalking, particularly

in these delusional romantic cases, the target is

almost always an idealized blank slate.

Mm.

We assume that stalkers are obsessed with the

real person.

They aren't.

So they just project whatever they want onto

them.

Exactly.

The real person is largely irrelevant.

The stalker is isolating highly specific, fragmented traits

to build a fantasy avatar that fits their

own internal psychological deficit.

So the fact that he has a literal

pantomime horse in his hallway doesn't even register

in her brain.

It is actively filtered out.

The brain of an erotomaniac is incredibly efficient

at discarding any information that contradicts the delusion.

They completely ignore the reality of the shambolic

oddball you just described.

That's wild.

Let's look at the sources to see how

this mechanism actually functioned in Ruth Tag's brain.

During her eventual sentencing, she explained to the

court exactly what triggered this obsession.

And it wasn't his five-hour stand-up

routine about Naughty Ash.

Thank God, because those were exhausting.

She stated that she watched a videotaped performance

where Dodd jokingly imitated a French kiss.

Wait, a joke on a VHS tape?

Yes.

Her exact quote to the court was, I

watched this scene over and over, and I

have never been so aroused in all my

life.

I thought Dodd was incredibly sexy, and it

was then that I realized how much I

wanted him as a lover.

I just, I mean, the mind boggles.

A 70-year-old comedian doing a goofy

bit about a French kiss, and her brain

interprets this as pure uncut eroticism.

It's bizarre, but she followed that up with

a real-world visual that completely cemented the

fantasy avatar.

After seeing him perform, she waited around backstage.

And what did she see?

She saw him backstage, out of costume.

He has wild hair slick back, and he

was wearing a smart tweed suit.

She specifically noted to the court that he

looked so different to the wild-haired comic

on stage.

She thought he looked handsome and distinguished.

Ah.

Okay, so she caught him at a character.

Right.

And her brain seized on those two fragments

a man in a distinguished tweed suit and

a video of a simulated kiss.

She took those two tiny fragments of data

and used them to construct an entire bulletproof

fictional persona of a suave, sexy, romantic lead.

Wow.

The feather duster, the tax evasion, the cartoonish

teeth.

All of that was blocked out by her

psychological disorder because it threatened the fantasy she

desperately needed, likely to survive whatever internal trauma

she was masking.

That makes total sense, honestly.

She's built this imaginary boyfriend out of a

tweed suit and a single joke.

But, I mean, an idealized fantasy in a

vacuum is harmless, right?

People have imaginary relationships with the celebrities all

the time.

Sure, parasocial relationships are common.

Yeah, so for a fantasy in someone's head

to turn into a dangerous, real-world obsession,

it requires a collision with reality, right?

It requires a very specific sequence of psychological

events, yes.

Massive emotional investment, followed by a perceived rejection,

followed immediately by what the stalker interprets as

undeniable reciprocation.

Which creates, like, a rubber band snapping.

It creates an unbearable tension in the mind,

exactly.

Let's look at how that tension built up,

because the sequence of events here is basically

a masterclass in escalation.

So Ruth Tag is in her mid-30s

living in Bristol, and she decides to make

Ken Dodd a gift.

A very elaborate gift.

Right.

She doesn't just buy him a card or

send a box of chocolates.

She spends hundreds of hours and let that

sink in for a second.

Hundreds of hours intricately sewing a massive tapestry

of the two of them.

We really need to pause on the psychology

of that tapestry.

This isn't just a casual craft project.

No, it's a huge undertaking.

It is a tremendous physical investment of emotional

energy.

Think about the repetitive, meditative nature of cross

-stitching or sewing a tapestry.

With every single stitch over hundreds of hours,

she is reinforcing the neural pathways of her

delusion.

Like chanting a mantra.

Yes.

She is weaving her fantasy of their relationship

into physical reality.

It's an artifact of her obsession.

So she puts this masterpiece in the mail

in January 2001, but it's fragile.

The glass frame breaks in transit.

Now, the sources aren't totally clear on the

exact logistics here, whether Dodd's team received it,

saw the broken glass and sent it back,

or if the postal service just returned it

to sender because it was a hazard.

The logistics don't really matter to her psychology,

though.

What matters is that this labor of love

representing hundreds of hours of her life ends

up back on Tag's doorstep, completely broken.

And how does she process that event?

She later stated in court that she felt

insulted and rejected.

Which is a massive, catastrophic, narcissistic injury for

someone suffering from a borderline or psychopathic disorder.

She poured her entire idealized concept of love

into this physical object, and the universe, which

in her mind is controlled by Ken Dodd,

handed it back to her, shattered.

Most people would take that as a sign

to give up, right?

But she doesn't stop.

Despite feeling completely rejected, she relentlessly attends his

live shows.

And keep in mind, you know this, if

you follow UK comedy, Ken Dodd was legendary

for his marathon sets.

Oh, absolutely grueling sets.

We're talking shows that routinely lasted five, sometimes

six hours.

He would go on stage at 7 p

.m. and literally perform until 1 a.m.

And Ruth Tag would sit in the very

front row, staring intently at him, basically unblinking,

for five straight hours.

The sensory overload of a five-hour show

is profound.

The sheer exhaustion of it puts the brain

in a highly suggestible, almost hypnotic state, which

further cements her fixation.

It's like brainwashing yourself.

Right.

Which brings us to the inciting interaction.

The moment the fantasy violently collapsed into reality.

Right.

So she's been staring a hole through him

for hours.

After the show, she goes backstage.

She manages to get face to face with

Dodd.

She tells him that she traveled all the

way from Bristol just to see him.

And Dodd was notoriously friendly with his fans.

He was.

Down to earth.

Lovely guy.

So to show his appreciation, he does something

that completely changes the trajectory of both of

their lives.

He asks her for a kiss and he

presses his cheek against hers.

And the interpretation of that touch is everything.

Oh, she took it straight to the altar.

In court, she described that exact moment saying,

I was over the moon with excitement as

he drew me near and pressed his cheek

against mine.

I felt tremendously happy.

I was walking on air and felt as

if I had fallen in love for the

first time.

There is the catalyst.

Okay, here's where I have to be the

bad guy again.

I am going to use an analogy and

I am going to blame Ken Dodd for

this specific escalation.

I'm sorry, but I am.

I have a feeling I'm going to disagree,

but go ahead.

If you are a massive public figure and

you have a super fan who is sitting

in the front row of your five-hour

shows, just staring at you like a predator

watching prey, and you already know she sent

you a bizarre, obsessive, massive tapestry in the

mail, you do not ask her for a

kiss.

You just being a performer.

It's like feeding a raccoon on your back

porch.

If you leave a bowl of milk out

every night, you don't get to act surprised

when the raccoon moves into your attic and

starts chewing on the wiring.

He blurred the lines of professional distance.

He invited the raccoon into the house.

I am going to stop you right there

and I am going to push back incredibly

hard on that analogy.

That is textbook victim blaming.

It fundamentally misunderstands how the neurobiology of severe

mental illness actually operates.

But he asked for the kiss.

He initiated the physical contact.

He asked for a polite, highly theatrical, utterly

chased cheek-culse, which was entirely standard behavior

for a Vaudevillian performer of his generation, greeting

a fan who traveled a long distance.

No, we cannot hold a victim responsible for

the actions of someone suffering from a psychopathic

disorder simply because the victim adhered to baseline

social norms of politeness.

What you have to understand here, and what

explains why your raccoon analogy fails, is the

immense, dangerous power of cognitive dissonance in a

fractured mind.

Okay, fine.

So if it's not a raccoon moving into

an attic, explain the mechanism to me.

What is actually happening in her brain in

that exact second?

Think about the timeline we just laid out.

Tag had just experienced massive psychological trauma with

the return tapestry.

She is vulnerable, feeling insulted, feeling the raw

pain of rejection.

Her brain is under extreme stress.

Then she gets this backstage interaction.

Now, a healthy mind processes a polite cheek

kiss from a 70-something-year-old comedian

as exactly what it is, which is a

fleeting, friendly thank you for buying a ticket.

Right.

You get your cheek kissed, you wash your

face, you go get a point, and you

go home.

Exactly.

But a mind suffering from erotomania cannot process

objective reality.

To tag, that cheek press wasn't a polite

greeting.

It was overwhelming, undeniable reciprocation.

It was a binding declaration of mutual love.

From a cheek press?

Her mind took the devastating rejection of the

tapestry and violently overrode it with this single

physical touch.

The cognitive dissonance, that agonizing gap between her

internal fantasy of being his lover and the

external reality of being a stranger whose gift

was rejected, it collapsed entirely in that moment.

So it's almost like a psychological immune system

response.

In a way, yes.

Like her brain is faced with the truth

that will destroy her identity, the truth that

she is just a random fan, so her

subconscious immediately generates like a white blood cell

of pure delusion to neutralize the threat.

It converts a polite cheek kiss into a

marriage proposal just so she can survive the

rejection of the tapestry.

That is a brilliant announcement, yes, absolutely.

The delusion is a protective mechanism.

It is a white blood cell attacking reality.

In that moment backstage, she truly believed the

contract of love had been signed, sealed, and

delivered.

Wow.

Okay, so in her mind, they are now

officially a couple.

The problem is solved.

Temporarily, because once she believes they are truly

mutually in love, she has to reconcile a

massive, glaring obstacle that exists in the real

world because Ken Dodd was not a single

man.

Oh, not even close.

And this is where the story shifts from

a slightly creepy backstage encounter into active, hostile

psychological warfare because Ken Dodd had a long

-term partner enter Ann Jones.

Ann Jones was an incredibly significant figure in

his life.

At the time this harassment began, she had

been his partner for over 13 years.

They were together forever.

They were together for a total of 40

years, eventually marrying just two days before his

death in 2018.

But she wasn't just his romantic partner sitting

quietly at home.

She was heavily integrated into his entire existence.

She was his business manager.

She even sang in his live shows under

the stage name, Cibby Jones.

She was a constant, undeniable presence.

So Tag decides to test the waters of

her new imaginary relationship with Dodd.

She starts sending him intense love letters over

a 10-month period.

But interestingly, she doesn't use her real name.

She uses a pseudonym.

She signs them all as Rose Price.

Which is a classic stalking behavior.

By using a pseudonym, she is attempting to

create a secret, exclusive, highly intimate bond that

bypasses the real world.

It's a secret code just for the two

of them.

Naturally, Dodd and Anne ignore these letters.

Because, you know, they're seeing people dealing with

a stalker and you don't engage with the

crazy.

But when the letters are ignored, the tone

of Tag's campaign shifts dramatically.

She escalates.

She sends six highly indecent, explicit photographs of

herself to Dodd's home in Naughty Ash.

And guess who intercepts the male at the

front door?

Anne Jones.

The partner.

The obstacle.

Exactly.

And this is the major pivot point of

the whole case.

Tag realizes Anne isn't just going to quietly

step aside and let her have her tweet

suited prints.

So Tag stops targeting Dodd with love and

starts directly targeting Anne with pure, unadulterated hatred.

The focus completely shifts.

She sees Anne as a direct, literal rival

for Dodd's affection.

Tag sends 12 threatening letters directly to Anne.

And then she sends three intricately embroidered t

-shirts bearing crude, highly offensive slogans about Anne.

The sheer effort involved in that specific form

of harassment is staggering when you stop to

think about it.

I mean, I have to make a very

dark confession here.

I almost admire the craftsmanship.

Oh, no.

No, think about it.

Most haters today, what do they do?

They send a nasty tweet.

They leave a mean comment on a YouTube

video.

It takes two seconds.

It requires zero effort.

Ruth Tag took the time to go to

a store, buy t-shirts, buy embroidery thread,

thread a needle, map out a crude slogan,

and hand embroider her hate mail onto a

textile.

It's incredibly deliberate.

That is bespoke harassment.

That is artisanal hatred.

And honestly, if you force yourself to look

at it from Tag's deeply delusional perspective, you

can kind of see the twisted logic, right?

She's the one who shared the magical, intimate

cheek kiss to her.

Anne is just the other woman stubbornly standing

in the way of true romance.

Well, we can appreciate the dark humor of

artisanal hate mail, but we really have to

cut through the absurdity of embroidered shirts to

analyze what is actually happening clinically here.

Because this isn't just someone being mean.

This is a perfect, terrifying example of a

psychological defense mechanism called displacement.

Displacement, like moving a heavy object from one

room to another, but with your emotions.

Exactly like that.

Let me explain the mechanism.

Remember the foundation of Tag's delusion.

Ken Dodd is a flawless, incredibly sexy man

who is deeply passionately in love with her.

That belief is the core pillar holding her

entire shattered psyche together.

Okay, the pillar is intact.

So when her rose priced love letters go

unanswered for 10 months and her explicit photos

generate absolutely zero response, how does her brain

handle that?

It should just give up.

Right?

A healthy person would realize, oh, he doesn't

want me.

I should move on.

But Tag's delusion cannot accept that Ken Dodd

is rejecting her.

If she accepts that the man she loves

is ignoring her, the core pillar cracks.

Her entire fantasy world collapses, and she would

suffer a catastrophic psychological breakdown.

So she literally cannot blame him.

It's neurologically impossible for her to view him

as the source of the rejection.

She absolutely cannot blame him.

Therefore, all of those horrific feelings of rejection,

inadequacy, and rage, they have to go somewhere.

They can't just evaporate.

Where do they go?

Think of it like a massive steam engine.

The boiler is filling with high pressure steam

that her rage at being ignored.

The main pressure release valve would be accepting

the rejection and being angry at Ken Dodd.

But erotomania has welded that main valve completely

shut.

If the steam doesn't escape somewhere else, the

entire boiler explodes.

So the steam has to blow out a

side pipe.

Precisely.

And that side pipe is Anne Jones.

The rage is violently projected or displaced onto

the partner.

In Tag's mind, Ken isn't ignoring the letters.

The evil Anne is hiding them from him.

Ken isn't rejecting the explicit photos.

The jealous rival is intercepting them at the

door.

You know, you, the listener, you actually do

a mild version of this all the time,

right?

Very common human trait.

Yeah, like, have you ever had a terrible

day at work because your boss completely humiliated

you in a meeting?

But you can't yell at your boss because

you need your job.

So instead, you go home, you walk in

the door, and you completely snap at your

partner because they left a single coffee mug

in the sink.

Right.

That's displacement.

Your brain redirects the anger from a dangerous

target to a safer target.

You aren't mad about the mug, you're mad

at your boss.

That is the perfect everyday example.

Your brain finds a secondary target to absorb

the emotional overflow.

Ruth Tag's brain just executed that exact same

standard human mechanism but on a catastrophic criminal

psychopathic scale.

Wow.

So Anne becomes the ultimate villain of the

story purely out of psychological necessity.

If Anne is the villain, then Ken is

still the perfect lover.

And Tag is still the righteous heroine fighting

for her man.

This is exactly why stalking so often pivots

away from the object of desire and onto

the perceived obstacles, usually spouses, children, or security

personnel.

It turns a tragic, sad, internal delusion into

a highly dangerous, externalized rivalry.

Tag doesn't have to face the agonizing pain

of rejection.

She just has to defeat the rival to

claim her prize.

And as we know from history, that displacement

of rage couldn't stay confined to bespoke embroidered

t-shirts forever?

No, unfortunately not.

The pressure in that boiler was building to

critical mass and it was about to manifest

physically and violently at the couple's home.

Which brings us to the climax of the

terror.

The point where harassment crosses the threshold into

actual criminal violence.

Let's talk about October 11th, 2001.

Ken Dodd and Anne are out for the

day.

Tag travels to a second property the couple

owned in Naughty Ash.

She goes right up to the front door,

shoves burning rags through the letterbox, and starts

a fire.

That is a massive leap.

The blaze takes hold and causes 11,000

pounds worth of damage to the ground floor.

She was later charged with arson, specifically being

reckless as to whether life was endangered.

It's a huge behavioral escalation.

She has moved from invading their psychological space

with letters to literally destroying their physical space

with fire.

But the arson, as insane as it is,

isn't even the most disturbing part of this

climax.

The absolute psychological masterpiece of her harassment campaign

arrives in the mail shortly after the fire.

The parcel.

Yeah.

Tag sends a bizarre, oddly shaped parcel to

their main cottage.

Ken and Anne, understandably terrified at this point,

cautiously unwrap it.

The Guardian sources describe it perfectly.

As they opened it, it emitted a highly

pleasant floral scent mixed with the smell of

wet fur.

Inside the box was a dead rat that

had been heavily sprayed with perfume.

It's just staggering.

I am sorry.

I am completely losing my mind over the

perfumed rat.

It is the most deranged, confusing thing I

have ever heard.

It's like a completely confused Valentine's Day gift.

It certainly is a mixed message.

I genuinely want to know what was going

through her head when she made it.

Isn't this just a terrible attempt at a

romantic gesture gone wrong?

Like she wanted to send him a lovely,

expensive bottle of perfume, but she was out

of gift baskets.

So she just went out to the alley,

grabbed a dead rodent, gave it a spritz

of Chanel number five and thought, that'll do

it.

That's romance.

It is the ultimate mixed signal.

I know the imagery is so absurd that

you have to laugh at it, but your

joke actually highlights exactly why this specific object

is so terrifying to a clench of psychologists.

Oh, really?

Yeah.

That mixed signal you're laughing at.

That is the chilling reality of a complex

personality disorder made physical.

The perfume dead rat is the perfect physical

manifestation of Ruth Tag's completely fractured psyche.

Wait, you're saying there's actual intentional symbolism in

the rat.

She didn't just grab whatever was lying around.

It is profound symbolism.

Whether she consciously designed it that way or

her subconscious dictated it.

Think about the juxtaposition of those two conflicting

sensory elements.

The perfume represents her romantic, erotic delusion.

It's the fantasy.

The love she believes she shares with Dodd.

The desire to be close and intimate.

Okay, that makes sense.

But the dead rat represents the underlying decay.

The hostility, the disease, and the violent threats

directed toward Anne Jones.

Oh my God.

The perfume is the love.

The rat is the hate.

Yes.

When a human mind goes to the trouble

of sending a perfumed corpse through the postal

service, you are looking at a psyche that

has completely collapsed the boundary between love and

lethal violence.

In psychoanalysis, we talk about Eros, which is

the life drive, love, and creation, and Thanatos,

which is the death drive, destruction, and aggression.

And usually those don't mix.

In a healthy mind, these are separated.

But in Ruth Tag's brain at that moment,

Eros and Thanatos are no longer separated.

They're inextricably intertwined at the exact same package.

That is deeply, deeply unsettling.

So it wasn't just a random crazy act.

It was a literal physical map of her

brain at that exact moment.

The love and the violence were the exact

same thing to her.

And if we connect this to the bigger

picture, look at the arson.

Why target the house?

Because the house is the ultimate physical representation

of the domestic life canon Anne share.

It is their safe haven, their nest.

Tag setting fire to the house is a

literal attempt to destroy the domestic reality that

contradicts her fantasy.

She's trying to burn down the evidence that

he is with someone else.

If the house is gone, the relationship is

gone.

Precisely.

She is trying to purge the rival and

the rival's space with fire, leaving only the

perfumed fantasy behind.

Well, fortunately, setting fire to a house and

mailing bespoke biological waste finally caught the full

attention of the police.

Which leads us to the conclusion of this

incredible saga, The Arrest, and a startling look

into the family dynamics that often surround and

enable a stalker.

This is a crucial element.

We have to look at the reality of

how these individuals are perceived by the people

closest to them, and how delusion can be

contagious within a family unit.

Right.

So the police finally track down Ruth Tag

and arrest her in May 2002.

And where did they find her?

At a seaside resort in New Brighton, sitting

prominently in the front rows of a Ken

Dodge show.

Because of course she is.

She hadn't broken the pattern.

The compulsion was just too strong.

No, not at all.

But here is the part that completely blows

my mind, and I know I'm going to

get heated about this again.

The press naturally goes to her elderly parents

in Bristol for a comment.

They want to know how the parents of

an arsonist feel, and her parents publicly defend

her.

It's hard to read, yeah.

Her mother tells the Liverpool Echo, she was

a great fan of Ken Dodge.

She used to go to all his shows.

Not anymore though.

And her father adds, she's enthusiastic about everything

she does.

She just got a bit carried away.

She's a good kid really.

It is a stunning bit of denial.

I am sorry, I have to mercilessly mock

this.

Got a bit carried away.

Getting carried away is eating a whole sleeve

of chocolate biscuits while watching television.

Getting carried away is buying three pairs of

shoes when you only needed one.

It is not committing 11,000 pounds of

arson and mailing perfumed dead rodents to a

70-year-old comedian's wife.

I hear you.

These parents are as delusional as she is.

Honestly, they need to be institutionalized in the

room right next door to her.

She's a good kid really.

She'd bring down a house.

I completely understand the instinct to mock that

because the disconnect between the parents' statements to

the press and the reality of the violent

crimes she committed is intensely jarring.

It sounds utterly absurd.

But if we redirect our focus from mocking

them to looking at the tragic reality of

severe mental illness, this is actually very common,

very well-documented and incredibly sad phenomenon.

Family denial.

Like just ignoring that your kid is a

monster.

It's deeper than just ignoring it.

It is systemic psychological family denial.

You have to understand the immense psychological cost

of admitting that your own child is dangerously,

criminally unwell.

Families often slowly normalize escalating bizarre behavior to

protect their own sanity.

When a loved one slowly descends into a

severe psychopathic disorder, it doesn't happen overnight.

It's a boil the frog situation.

Okay, explain how the parents get boiled in

this scenario.

The parents probably saw her sitting in the

living room making that massive tapestry.

They likely thought, oh, she's enthusiastic about a

hobby.

Then they saw her traveling to the five

-hour shows and thought she's a highly dedicated

fan.

It gets her out of the house.

Right, justifiable steps.

Then she starts writing letters and they think

she's just a bit eccentric.

By the time she crosses the line into

committing arson and mailing dead rats, the parents'

psychological defense mechanisms are so deeply entrenched that

they have to minimize it as getting carried

away.

Because the alternative, looking in the mirror and

admitting that their daughter is a violent, unhinged,

threat society who needs to be locked away,

that would completely destroy their own reality.

So they just minimize it to survive.

They use their own form of cognitive dissonance.

Yes, they rewrite the narrative to protect their

own hearts.

But while the parents minimized it, the UK

legal system certainly did not.

In March 2003, tags leading guilty to arson

and harassment.

The prosecution dropped a more serious charge of

arson with intent to endanger life, accepting her

plea to the lesser charge of arson being

reckless as to whether life was endangered.

And she didn't just go to a standard

prison, did she?

This wasn't a standard criminal sentencing.

No, it wasn't.

Because of the clear psychological pathology at play,

she was remanded to a psychiatric hospital indefinitely

under the Mental Health Act.

The court heard a detailed psychiatric report from

Dr. Jacqueline Short, which concluded that Tag was

suffering from major psychiatric mental illness amounting to

a psychopathic disorder.

So the judge recognized the danger.

The judge, Mr. Justice Moreland, explicitly noted in

his sentencing that she was a dangerous and

frequent menace, not just to Ken Dodd and

Ann Jones, but potentially to the public at

large if her fixations ever shifted.

But the very final detail of this court

case, the absolute last thing that happens before

she is taken away by security, is what

has been haunting me since I read the

sources for this deep dive.

I want you to tell the listener exactly

what she did right after the judge sentenced

her to an indefinite psychiatric stay.

Following her sentencing, as the reality of being

locked away indefinitely was handed down, and as

she was being physically led out of the

courtroom, Ruth Tag shouted out to the judge.

But she didn't use her normal speaking voice.

No, she didn't.

She used a high-pitched, incredibly specific foe

voice meant to sound exactly like one of

Ken Dodd's Diddy Men puppets.

And in that cartoonish puppet voice, she said

to the judge, thank you, my lord, I'm

very grateful.

The Diddy Men.

For those who don't know, the Diddy Men

were the little marionette puppets from the fictional

town of Naughty Ash that Dodd used on

his television shows and stage acts in the

60s and 70s.

They were a core part of his surreal

comedy universe, and she spoke to a high

court judge as she was losing her freedom

using the voice of one of his puppets.

This raises an incredibly important question, and it

provides our final, arguably most profound, psychological analysis

of her state of mind.

Think about what that moment actually means.

Yeah.

Even as she is standing in a court

of law facing the severe, undeniable reality of

being locked away in a psychiatric facility indefinitely.

Her identity was completely irrevocably submerged in Ken

Dodd's fictional world.

She wasn't even Ruth Tag in that moment.

Her ego was completely gone.

Exactly.

She wasn't speaking as Ruth Tag, the woman

from Bristol.

She wasn't speaking as an arsonist.

She was speaking as a character in Ken

Dodd's universe.

It is a psychological death.

It proves the absolute terrifying depth of her

disorder.

The fantasy had entirely consumed her reality.

There was no Ruth left to speak to

the judge.

There was only the delusion.

That is profoundly sad and utterly terrifying.

To lose yourself so completely to an obsession

that your own voice is replaced by a

puppet's voice.

Which brings us to the end of this

incredible psychological journey.

It's quite a ride.

We've seen how the brain can take a

polite, fleeting cheek kiss, combine it with the

painful rejection of a returned cross-stitch tapestry,

and spin it into a lethal case of

erotomania.

We've seen how a fractured mind acting like

a pressurized steam engine will displace its rage

onto an innocent partner, protecting a delusion through

arson and the absolute symbolic warfare of a

perfumed dead rat.

It is a stark, unforgettable reminder of how

fragile the human mind can be when dealing

with perceived rejection, how violently it will defend

its own delusions, and how powerful the draw

of celebrity obsession truly is when it interacts

with underlying trauma.

But here's a final provocative thought.

I want you, the listener, to mull over

on your own as you go about your

day.

This entire nightmare we just described.

It happened in 2001.

It was fueled by physical handwritten letters, returned

cross-stitch tapestries sent through the postal service,

and waiting hours outside physical stage doors in

the rain.

Think about how we interact with public figures

today.

The landscape of fame and access has fundamentally

permanently changed.

Completely.

We live in an era of social media

direct messages 24-7 live streaming access and

algorithmic feeds that are literally designed by tech

companies to create intense parasocial relationships between fans

and creators.

We are encouraged to feel like we really

know these people.

The ingredients for erotomania are far more accessible

now than they have ever been in human

history.

Exactly.

If Ruth Tag could build a dangerous life

-destroying fantasy out of a blurry VHS tape

and a brief cheek kiss in 2001, how

much easier is it today for a vulnerable

mind to find a blank slate on their

smartphone screen, imagine a deeply intimate two-way

relationship through the illusion of the internet, and

turn a virtual perceived rejection into a real

-world physical nightmare.

It's a sobering thought.

The mechanisms of the mind haven't changed, only

the technology that feeds them.

Stay curious, protect your peace, and maybe keep

a safe healthy distance from your favorite celebrities

online.

We'll catch you on the next Deep Dive.

That just about wraps up this episode.

Don't forget to tell them about our release

schedule.

We release fresh new content every Friday.

For more information about this AI-created podcast

series, please visit carrotcruncher.com forward slash stalkers.