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  • Florida mom describes rescue after being held captive by estranged husband: “I’d been pulled from hell”

    Florida mom describes rescue after being held captive by estranged husband: “I’d been pulled from hell”

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    Florida man Trevor Summers manipulated his children into believing he just wanted to get back together with his estranged wife, Alisa. He even encouraged one of his daughters to leave a window open in Alisa’s home so he could slip in claiming he wanted to talk to her about making the family whole again. That daughter had no way of knowing the fake reconciliation would turn into a horrific 55-hour ordeal that involving kidnapping, assault and attempted murder.

    Sgt. Christopher Steele: This is … the bedroom window that Trevor Summers was allowed into the home through.

    Sgt. Christopher Steele is with the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office.

    Peter Van Sant: And who opened that window for him?

    Sgt. Christopher Steele: His eldest daughter would have been with — in the home unlocking and making it ready for him to enter.

    Window that Trevor climbed through
    Alisa’s estranged husband, Trevor Summers – who was ordered by a court to stay away from her – climbed into her home through an open window. He had enlisted their 14-year-old daughter Arden to leave that window open for him by telling Arden he was going to talk to Alisa about reconciling.

    Hillsborough County State Attorney’s Office


    Arden Summers: My dad had sat me … down and discussed … reconciling with my mom and fixing the marriage and bringing our family back together.

    Arden Summers was eager to help her father make her family whole again. Her parents, Alisa and Trevor Summers, had separated after 15 years or marriage and there was a restraining order keeping them apart. Arden and her four siblings had been living with their dad.

    Arden Summers: He wanted me, my … younger siblings, to go over to my mom’s house and spend the night … And then I would let my dad in the window … after my siblings and my mom went to bed.

    Arden thought her dad could then talk her mom into getting back together. But Trevor Summers supposed attempt at reconciliation was actually an act of manipulation — using his children as pawns — in a plot involving kidnapping, assault and attempted murder that would go on for 55 hours.

    Alisa Mathewson: The clock, it was a digital clock and it said exactly 3 a.m. I was startled awake.

    Alisa Mathewson, formerly Alisa Summers, will never forget the disorienting fear that began in the early morning hours of March 11, 2017. She was awakened in her pitch-black bedroom. Two of her children were lying beside her: 7-year-old Bryn and 5-year-old Grady.   

    Alisa Mathewson: And I felt my face was wet … And I started screaming, “who’s in my room? What are you doing here?” …  I’m in a panic, an absolute panic.

    Her estranged husband Trevor had entered her home in Valrico, Florida, dripping water on her head and was standing over her.

    Alisa Mathewson: I’m still screaming, and he says, “Calm down, it’s just me.” … I just start in full panic throwing things from my end table at him. And he grabbed my ankles and pulled me off the end of the bed.

    Peter Van Sant: This must be terrifying.

    Alisa Mathewson: It’s terrifying. … Bryn and Grady are running out of my room screaming, “Daddy, daddy, don’t kill mommy!”

    But how did it come to this? The couple first met in 1995 in high school in suburban Philadelphia and started dating three years later.

    Alisa Mathewson: He was spontaneous and charming and just seemed that he always put me first.

    Trevor Summers and Alisa
    The couple first met in 1995 in high school in suburban Philadelphia and started dating three years later. They married in 2001.

    Alisa Mathewson


    The couple married in 2001, eager to begin their life together.

    Alisa Mathewson: He wanted to start a family right away. … When I had Arden … It was everything I envisioned for my life. I envisioned myself being a stay-at-home mom.

    Peter Van Sant: And then over the years, it was Arden times five. You had five kids, right?

    Alisa Mathewson: (Laughs) Yes.

    The Summer children
    The Summers children.

    Alisa Mathewson


    After Arden, came Landen, Bryn, Grady, and Cooper.

    Alisa Mathewson: The more kids, it seemed that the more love, the more happiness. … I wanted to have this picture-perfect life.

    Alisa says Trevor initially started a landscape and pool design company, and he dabbled in real estate. But he really fancied himself as an entrepreneur.

    Alisa Mathewson: He would open up businesses … for a little while and then he would move on to a new business.

    The family moved several times, says Alisa, as Trevor chased opportunities: from Pennsylvania to Florida, to Vegas, to California, and eventually back to the Sunshine State, where the children were home schooled.

    Arden Summers: We would very often host people, have sleepovers, friends over birthday parties, all kinds of stuff.

    Arden, now 20, remembers good times.

    Arden Summers: We would go the beach. We had a beach fairly close to our house … play video games as a family and board games, stuff like that.

    Arden says while she was close to her mother, she had a special bond with her father.

    Arden and Trevor Summers
    Arden Summers with her father, Trevor.

    Alisa Mathewson


    Arden Summers: I was definitely the definition of a daddy’s girl … We would go out on little dates together, go out for dinners, just him and I.

    Meanwhile, Alisa says her relationship with Trevor was changing. With each move and birth of another child, she says her husband was slowly taking control of her life.

    Alisa Mathewson: I had to wear what he … would select … I couldn’t have men on my Facebook page.

    She couldn’t even sit next to a man in church — or anywhere.

    Alisa Mathewson: I couldn’t ride in a car alone with a man. … I was to have no communication with any men other than Trevor.

    Alisa was also overhearing snippets of Trevor’s business conversations.

    Alisa Mathewson: There were some things that just … weren’t adding up.

    Alisa says Trevor was frequently in financial trouble — not paying debts and bouncing checks. He was arrested several times. But she says he always blamed his problems on others and the crisis would seem to pass.

    Alisa Mathewson: Every single time it would happen, it would be “it’s a misunderstanding.”

    Peter Van Sant: He’s having these incidents with — with the law … What are you thinking?

    Alisa Mathewson: Yeah, at the same time, I was walking on eggshells … Don’t question him, OK, and smile and nod.

    Peter Van Sant: Did he have a temper?

    Alisa Mathewson: As long as we stayed in his good graces … then it was fine.

    Alisa Mathewson
    Alisa Mathewson says after she asked for a divorce, Trevor’s possessive behavior worsened.

    CBS News


    In 2016, Alisa finally had enough, and asked for a divorce. Trevor begged her to stay, wanting to keep the family together. Alisa agreed, but, she says, Trevor’s possessive behavior worsened.

    Alisa Mathewson: He took my cellphone. He took my car. … I was being held in my own home … as like a prisoner. … It became very apparent that this is domestic violence, this is domestic abuse. I need to start working on my plan.

    She wanted to escape. But Trevor Summers had his own plans for Alisa.

    CONTROL AND FEAR

    Alisa Mathewson: I had been just stuck staying in the house with him watching me.

    By October 2016, Alisa says she felt like an inmate in her own home, with her husband Trevor monitoring her every move.

    Alisa Mathewson: He was always with me for several weeks.

    Until one day Trevor finally left to go to work. That’s when Alisa called a domestic violence organization.

    Alisa Summers: And I said, you know,” these are the things that have been going on: my husband hadn’t gone to work in weeks, this is the first time I’ve been alone.” … And the more and more I asked them, and I talked to them about this, they said, “your situation is very serious.”

    But before Alisa could get out of the house that day, Trevor burst through the door.

    Alisa Mathewson:  He came in and he attacked me … And he — every time I would try to get away from him, he’d block me from leaving.

    Alisa says that after some time, Trevor reluctantly agreed to let her leave with the children. She sought refuge in the home of a friend.

    Alisa Mathewson: He was going crazy over this, and he — he found out where I was, and he would be showing up there.

    After a week there, she felt safer moving with her children to a shelter for abused women, leaving everything behind.

    Alisa Mathewson: We had nothing. We had the clothes on our backs.

    Alisa Mathewson
    Alisa Mathewson

    CBS News


    Over the course of several months, Alisa started rebuilding her life.

    Alisa Mathewson: When I got out of the shelter … I got myself a home and a car and a job as well.

    She filed for divorce, and even tried online dating. But Trevor was not out of her life, as they shared custody of the children.

    Alisa Mathewson: I was forced to see him twice a week to exchange children with him.

    By January 2017, Alisa says Trevor seemed resigned to the fact their marriage was over. And about a month later, Alisa she says she agreed to go by Trevor’s home to sign the divorce papers.

    Peter Van Sant: So, you’re in the house. What happens?

    Alisa Mathewson: (Sighs) He said that he just needed to talk to me. … He was like “I have to — I have to get everything off of my chest so we can get divorced. I have to tell you I’ve had multiple affairs. … I really messed up.”

    Trevor was also in serious legal trouble – facing real prison time. According to court records, he was awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty to wire fraud charges for one of his failed business ventures. His perfectly controlled life was quickly imploding.

    Alisa Mathewson: As I was leaving … he said “you’re not going anywhere” …  with one hand holding me down, he used the other hand and pulled a knife … and held it right up at my chest by my throat.

    Peter Van Sant:  How long was the blade?

    Alisa Mathewson: It was a machete.

    Peter Van Sant:  And he’s got this machete right under

    Alisa Mathewson: Right at my neck. … And he says, “I won’t tie you up if you just stay still and listen to me” … and then he held me there for a few hours.

    Eventually, Alisa says Trevor agreed to let her go, after she calmed him down and promised not to call the police. A promise she did not keep.

    Alisa Mathewson: I immediately called 911 when I left his home.

    But when investigators interviewed Trevor, he denied threatening Alisa’s life.

    Alisa Mathewson: The police didn’t believe me. … I wasn’t left with any marks. There was no evidence of what I was saying.

    Sgt. Christopher Steele: The Sheriff’s Office treated it as a concern from the beginning

    Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Sergeant Christopher Steele was not involved in responding to the 911 call, but says investigators were looking into the case.

    Sgt. Christopher Steele: It’s not like we could have simply arrested him that day based on the statements of just the two that were involved. We needed more.

    mathewson-family.jpg
    Both Alisa and Trevor filed for restraining orders against each other, and Alisa says Trevor used the incident to turn their children against her.

    Alisa Mathewson


    Both Alisa and Trevor filed for restraining orders against each other, and Alisa says Trevor used the incident to turn their children against her.

    Alisa Mathewson: He told the children I lied to the police … “She is trying to get me thrown in — in prison.”

    He told them their mother was responsible for the marriage falling apart. 

    Arden Summers: He would constantly talk about how she was supposedly cheating on him. … he, you know, acted so heartbroken.

    Peter Van Sant: What did you think of your mother?

    Arden Summers: I felt like she was awful.

    mathewson-wall.jpg
    “There was graffiti all over the walls … There was Kool-Aid poured on my bed,” Alisa Mathewson told “48 Hours.”

    CBS News


    Then, just two days later, Alisa arrived home to find the place vandalized.

    Alisa Mathewson: There was graffiti all over the walls … There was Kool-Aid poured on my bed.

    Arden Summers: The Kool-Aid was his idea. The chalk and writing on the walls was my idea.

    Peter Van Sant: What had you written on the walls?

    Arden Mathewson:  I had written things like “traitor” …  I wrote “thanks for being an ass****.” Right above the bed.

    Alisa was incredulous when she learned Trevor had convinced Arden to take part.

    Alisa Mathewson: It was devastating. … my kids had a key to my home, and they used … their key … and did this.

    A few weeks later, Alisa got an unexpectedly cheery phone call from Arden.

    Alisa Mathewson: And Arden says, “Mom, we really miss you. I — I’ve just. I’m sorry. I’ve been thinking of you. I want to come over and just you and I talk things through, hang out like old times.”

    Within days, Arden, Bryn and Grady were back visiting Alisa, while Cooper and Landen were at Trevor’s house.

    Alisa Mathewson: I especially was feeling like Arden was starting to come around.

    Alisa says she and Arden had no idea they both were being manipulated by Trevor.

    Arden Summers: He had mentioned before that he was really hoping to reconcile with her and to put the family back together and be almost like the savior of the family.

    Peter Van Sant: The goal was something noble in a way —

    Arden Summers: Yes.

    Peter Van Sant: — that you were participating in? That maybe they can get them back together … and we can be a family again.

    Arden Summers: Yes.

    So, on the evening of March 10, 2017, as Alisa was in bed with Bryn and Grady, Arden was in another room, secretly texting her father —

    Arden Summers (reading text): “just checked … she’s fast asleep…”

    — letting him know the coast was clear for him to enter Alisa’s home. 

    55 HOURS OF TERROR

    Just after midnight on March 11, 2017, Trevor Summers left his 3-year-old son Cooper home alone, asleep in bed, and drove with 12-year-old Landen to his estranged-wife’s house where Arden was already waiting.

    Arden Summers: He told me that he was going to talk to my mom.

    Following his instructions, Arden had left a window open for Trevor. They passed each other as she went out to wait in the car with Landen. That’s when Alisa says she remembers waking up to water dripping on her face.

    Alisa Summers: At that point, it’s full-on terror.

    Alisa says Trevor dragged her to the living room. Grady and Bryn, the two young children who were in bed with her, woke up and screamed.

    Alisa Mathewson: He looks right at them, and he says, “get back in your mother’s room. Don’t come out.”

    Alisa says they struggled as she tried to escape.

    Alisa Mathewson: And I’d get my hand onto the door, and he’d grab me and throw me backwards.

    Peter Van Sant: Are you wondering “where is Arden?”

    Alisa Mathewson: Yes. I’m thinking – Arden’s going to hear this, Arden’s going to call 911. Like, where is she?

    Arden was sitting in the car, hopeful that her parents would come out after talking, and they would all return to Trevor’s house together. But around 5 a.m., Trevor sent a text that the plan had changed.

    Alisa Mathewson: She walks in and doesn’t even look at me. And that’s when I realized she’s not going to call 911. … She wants him to be there.

    Arden says her dad told her to drive Landen, Bryn and Grady back to his house and wait. Then 14 years old, Arden’s only driving experience had been in a parking lot.

    Arden Summers
    Trevor had convinced Arden he needed her help so he could talk to Alisa about getting back together. But what Arden didn’t know is that his plans were far more sinister.

    CBS News


    Arden Summers: It was very terrifying. … I was doing exactly the speed limit, and I just followed all the traffic laws to not get pulled over.

    Alisa Mathewson: Once the children were out of the house, that’s when it even escalated further … He … threw me onto my bed and took these scarves and wrapped me — my hands, my wrists together. … he is tying me to the bed frame with the Christmas lights and crisscrossing them across my body to hold me down.

    That’s when Trevor told her why he was there.

    Alisa Mathewson: “I came to say goodbye. I am leaving. I’ve chartered a boat. I’m going out into international water. … And I’m going to disappear.”

    Alisa says he claimed he had millions of dollars in offshore bank accounts. Alisa didn’t believe any of it. She says she had a plan: stay quiet, and perhaps he would let her go.

    Alisa Mathewson: I don’t want to infuriate this man. … just sitting back, listening, and letting him do the talking.

    She says over the course of several hours, Trevor raped her — twice.

    Peter Van Sant: Did he have any kind of a weapon on him?

    Alisa Mathewson: He did. … A razor blade.

    Alisa says she felt drowsy because Trevor made her take cold medicine.

    Alisa Mathewson: He had been using NyQuil throughout the day to keep me sedated.

    Alisa says Trevor tied her ankles and wrists behind her with the scarves, and a nylon rope.

    Alisa Mathewson: I was in excruciating pain.

    He used her thumb to unlock her cellphone and recorded those videos.

    Trevor Summers cellphone confession
    Trevor Summers recorded a confession on Alicia’s cellphone: “I am here with Alisa at her house, where I’m not supposed to be … And I woke Alisa up and I have been holding her against her will.”

    Alisa Mathewson


    TREVOR SUMMER CELLPHONE VIDEO: I am here with Alisa at her house. … she’s virtually unharmed. She’s got a couple of bruises today but — from the — tying her up.

    Alisa says Trevor told her he was making the videos so she could prove to authorities he was there before taking the boat trip. But Trevor didn’t immediately leave. It was around 5:40 p.m. when he came back into the room.

    Alisa Mathewson: He put a pillow over my face, and he pushed down with all of his upper body … And I thought about my kids. … and I — and I lost consciousness.

    Moments later, Alisa says she remembers the pillow being removed.

    Alisa Mathewson: He looked at me. And I said … “Please, I’ll do anything. Please don’t kill me.” He says, “You agree to go with me?” I said, “Yes, I’ll go with you.” …

    Peter Van Sant: To the boat? To the islands?

    Alisa Mathewson: Yes.

    Alisa says she still thought the boat story was a lie but agreed to go with him to buy time. With her hands tied, Alisa says Trevor loaded her into her SUV. Later, he went into that Walgreens to buy more cold medicine. It was the moment she’d been patiently waiting for.

    Alisa Mathewson (with Peter Van Sant outside Walgreens):  I pulled the door handle to open the door. … and, so, I’m running and I’m stumbling … through this parking lot … and I could hear him coming at me and grabbed me.

    Peter Van Sant: Did he lift you off the ground?

    Alisa Mathewson: — and lifted me off the ground, pushed me back to the car.

    mathewson-walgreens.jpg
    A Walgreens employee taking a smoke break saw Alisa in the parking lot and called 911. ‘Some chick just ran out of dude’s car, looked like her hands were tied and she ran out of the car screaming help me. He just, uh, grabbed her and put her back in the car.”

    Hillsborough County State Attorney’s Office


    That’s when a Walgreens employee called 911.

    911 CALL: She ran out of the car screaming “help me” … trying to get the license plate. … it’s a dark-dark blue SUV … he’s pulling out right now.

    The employee managed to get that license plate number. Hillsborough County Sheriff’s deputies realized it was Alisa’s vehicle and began a statewide search. As they sped into the night, Alisa says Trevor was irate.

    Alisa Mathewson showing wrist scar
    Trevor drove through the night. At one point, Alisa says Trevor stopped and cut her wrist with a blade. “He said, ‘that’s for getting out of the car at the Walgreens.’” 

    CBS News


    Alisa Mathewson: He’s screaming at me … “you agreed to go with me, why are you doing this?” … he cut from over here, all the way across, over to here (tracing the scar on her left wrist). … He said, “that’s for getting out of the car at the Walgreens.”

    Alisa says Trevor spent hours driving along backroads down the Tampa Bay coast. They stopped several times, including at a secluded rural area where they hid out for over a day.  Here he wrote letters detailing what he done: a confession, and a chilling farewell to their children. Alisa read an excerpt:

    Alisa Mathewson: “We should have never gone down the road of divorce that tore our family apart … So, we have ended it for your sake … and will be watching you from heaven.”

    Alisa says Trevor raped her two more times.

    Alisa Mathewson: I just needed to stay alive. I just need to stay alive.

    On the morning of March 13, Trevor drove to Little Harbor, a resort area where they used to go as a family. Alisa says Trevor pulled the SUV over, parked right behind a dumpster, and climbed into the back seat.

    Alisa Mathewson (in a car with Van Sant): And a rope came over my head and came around my neck.

    Peter Van Sant: Is there any doubt in your mind what he’s attempting to do at that moment?

    Alisa Mathewson: No — he is killing me behind a dumpster. … suddenly, he’s behind me and he lets go, and he dove through the car, jumped into the driver’s seat, and took off.

    Alisa Mathewson: There’s no talking. He is laser focused and he is driving.

    Trevor believed he’d been spotted. Panicked, he pulled into a home’s carport.

    Alisa Mathewson: He pulls out the razor blade and he starts slitting his throat. … I’m screaming at him to stop. … And at this point, the police come up around … guns drawn, screaming.

    Alisa remembers an officer helping her.

    Alisa Mathewson: He puts me right into the front seat and he gets in and he takes off and goes down this road.

    Peter Van Sant: Just takes off and boom? You’re out of here.

    Alisa Mathewson: Boom. That fast. … Suddenly, I’m saved. … I’d been pulled from hell.

    Alisa Mathewson evidence photo
    Alisa still had rope around her arms when she was rescued and spoke with law enforcement. 

    Hillsborough County State Attorney’s Office


    Following Alisa’s rescue, investigators took photographs. While still receiving medical attention, Alisa told her story.

    ALISA MATHEWSON (to investigators): My hands were behind my back, and he slit my wrist …  And I just kept begging and begging, “please don’t kill me, please don’t kill me.”

    Trevor Summers also spoke to investigators from his hospital bed, where his wounds were stitched up. Law enforcement says it amounted to a confession:

    INVESTIGATOR: What did you tie her up with?

    TREVOR SUMMERS: Just some rope. Nylon rope. … I grabbed a pillow and put it over her face …

    But bizarrely, Trevor also claimed Alisa voluntarily went along with him.

    TREVOR SUMMERS (to investigator): She willingly let me tie her up.

    Trevor was later charged with 11 counts, including attempted murder, kidnapping, sexual battery, and child neglect. Trevor pleaded not guilty. But Alisa’s ordeal was far from over. She would come face-to-face with Trevor yet again, at his trial.

    A TRIAL TWIST

    Alisa Mathewson: I’m not afraid of him anymore. And I’m going to say this is what happened. And this is what you did.

    By 2022, five years had passed since Trevor Summer’s arrest on charges including attempted murder, kidnapping and sexual battery. During that time, the couple’s divorce was finalized. Now, after legal and COVID-related delays, a jury would decide if Trevor’s mission had been to kill Alisa or to reconcile with her.

    Anthony Marchese: There was no murderous intent. … he stopped. Otherwise, she would be dead.

    Anthony Marchese, Trevor Summers’ court-appointed attorney, says his client believes he did nothing illegal.

    Anthony Marchese: So, in his mind … he could see consent … He would think that he could show everyone that no crime was committed.

    Peter Van Sant: Even though she is tied up. … even though there’s been alleged physical violence — he still believed that the sex they had was consensual?

    Anthony Marchese: Yes, I mean … in his mind, if this tying up or other things happened, those were temporary. Then from there she would consent. … I’ve never had a client like Mr. Summers … He was always a gentleman, always very polite … very intelligent. … But — he doesn’t understand the distinction between consent and acquiescence.

    Marchese was the latest of seven different lawyers who had been on and off the case.

    Jennifer Johnson: Trevor Summers’ plan was always to take Alisa and to harm her that night.

    Jennifer Johnson and Jessica O’Connor, prosecutors with the Hillsborough County State Attorney’s Office, built the case against Trevor Summers.

    Jennifer Johnson: The strongest evidence that we have was the post-Miranda statement, the handwritten confession, as well as the videotaped confession. 

    TREVOR SUMMERS CELLPHONE VIDEO: And I woke Alisa up and I have been holding her against her will. 

    Those pieces of evidence would play a crucial role as Trevor Summers’ trial began in August 2022.

    JENNIFER JOHNSON (in court): Alisa Summers thought she was living out the last few days of her life. She believed that the defendant Trevor Summers was going to kill her.

    ANTHONY MARCHESE (in court): The testimony from Mrs. Summers will be that she was tied up … that she had no alternative, but there’s some inconsistencies.

    Peter Van Sant: This case, in many ways, rests on your shoulders, your ability to deliver, so as you take the stand what’s going through your mind?

    Alisa Mathewson: Oh, gosh. What’s going through my mind was …just tell them what happened.

    ALISA MATHEWSON: He used the Christmas lights to tie me to the bed rails … and used the vacuum cord to go underneath the mattress.

    Over the course of several hours, the prosecution questioned Alisa regarding Trevor’s actions.

    ALISA MATHEWSON: Being hogtied. The pain was so incredible … He pushed down the pillow on my face.

    The prosecutors anticipated the defense would question if Alisa was raped or consented to having sex, so they raised it first, with Alisa detailing the alleged assaults.

    ALISA MATHEWSON (in court): He started to remove my bottoms and proceeded to have sex with me.

    JENNIFER JOHNSON: Did you tell him no?

    ALISA MATHEWSON: No.

    JENNIFER JOHNSON:  Why is it that you did not tell him no or fight back?

    ALISA MATHEWSON: Because I didn’t want to get hurt.

    Peter Van Sant: You finish your testimony. And now it’s time for the defense attorney to cross-examine you. What happens?

    Alisa Mathewson: So, we’re taking a break to then do cross-examination. And Mr. Marchese stands up and gets the judge’s attention

    Marchese informed Judge Christopher Sabella that he had just been fired. His replacement to now cross-examine Alisa would be the man on trial for attempting to kill her: Trevor Summers himself.

    Peter Van Sant: The man you believe kidnapped you, on at least two occasions … attempted to murder you, is now going to do what?

    Alisa Mathewson: Stand in front of me and ask me questions.

    Jennifer Johnson: That was his way to manipulate and to abuse her again, to represent himself.

    Defense attorney Marchese was permitted to remain as stand-by counsel, but he was not permitted to speak with Trevor while court was in session.

    Alisa’s questioning by her ex-husband — her alleged tormentor, went on for more than four hours, much of it focused on the issue of consent.

    Trevor Summer in court
    Despite Trevor’s cellphone confession, he would later claim that Alisa was willing and he denied being violent with her. Charged with 11 counts ranging from kidnapping to child endangerment, sexual battery, and attempted murder, he pleaded not guilty to all of them. It made for an interesting trial – with yet another twist—Trevor would decide to represent himself and question Alisa.

    Courtesy of Law & Crime Network


    TREVOR SUMMERS (in court): Did I threaten you or force you to have sex with me?

    At times, Alisa refused to look at Trevor, focusing instead on the jury, and objects in the courtroom.

    Alisa Mathewson: I was in my head starting off. … Him standing in front of me and questioning me about the things he did to me, how, how is this possible? … And then as it went on, my confidence built.

    Alisa Mathewson
    Alisa chose not to look at her tormentor as he questioned her in court.

    Courtesy of Law & Crime Network


    ALISA MATHEWSON (in court): You did tie me up. You did attack me. And you did break into my home when I was sleeping. You raped me.

    TREVOR SUMMERS: So, you’re calling it rape?

    ALISA MATHEWSON: It is. That is the definition of rape, to come into someone’s home and attack them and tie them up and then have sex with them. That is the definition of rape.

    Jennifer Johnson:  That was the probably the most powerful incident — situation in the entire trial.

    Trevor also questioned some of his own children about the events that night. Bryn was 13 years old at the time of trial.

    TREVOR SUMMERS (in court): Do you remember, Miss Bryn, if I was yelling anything back at mommy?

    BRYN SUMMERS: No.

    And Arden was 19 at the trial:

    TREVOR SUMMERS: Arden, did you ever see us physically fighting in the home when you came in?

    ARDEN SUMMERS: Not physically, no.

    Sergeant Edward Remia was asked about that hospital interview he conducted with Trevor after he was treated for the self-inflicted knife wound.

    Summers argued that, despite seeming coherent, and agreeing to be interviewed, he was not in stable enough condition to have been questioned.

    TREVOR SUMMERS (in court): Did you see me before the surgery?

    SGT. EDWARD REMIA: I am not aware that you had any surgery.

    TREVOR SUMMERS: Did you notice a large cut and stitches and bandages on my neck?

    SGT. EDWARD REMIA: Correct. Again, I think we are probably going to differ on our definition of getting stitches and surgery.

    Peter Van Sant: Now, the man that you interviewed is cross-examining you. Had you ever had that happen in your career before?

    Sgt. Edward Remia: I’ve never had that happen before.

    Peter Van Sant: Never?

    Sgt. Edward Remia: Never. … it just poses, you know, a unique set of circumstances when he’s interviewing with his own children, when he’s interviewing his ex-wife — what’s his goal? … Is this his last-ditch effort to cause any mental anguish he can possibly do or is it his last-ditch attempt to show everybody that everything was OK, that I was in control of the whole situation, and that I’m not guilty of a crime.

    NEW BEGINNINGS

    After three days of testimony in Trevor Summer’s trial, closing arguments began.

    JESSICA O’CONNOR (in court): What this comes down to is a scorned lover. The defendant was not willing to come to grips with his divorce.

    Trevor had decided not to testify. Now, his life was in his own hands, as he would have to counter the prosecution’s claims.

    TREVOR SUMMERS (in court): We spent a lot of time that weekend just talking, just trying to figure things out. … I’m in a confused state of mind, we’re going through a divorce, we don’t know what’s going on.

    Trevor tried to cast doubt that he was violent with Alisa in her home.

    TREVOR SUMMERS: There was not broken glass or dents in walls. There’s not scratches on countertops or blood splatter. 

    And he questioned the legitimacy of that interview he gave to police at the hospital.

    TREVOR SUMMERS: If you were in that position, you would feel vulnerable. You feel taken advantage of. … I was captive and possibly coerced. 

    Trevor also disputed Alisa’s description of being tied up and held against her will at the Walgreen’s parking lot. 

    TREVOR SUMMERS: How do you get out of the car with your hands tied behind your back?

    In the prosecution’s rebuttal, Jennifer Johnson returned to the video Trevor had recorded.

    TREVOR SUMMERS CELLPHONE VIDEO: I have spent a lot of time with mom the last few hours and the things she has told you about me being good about manipulation and control and lying is true … and tying her up.

    JENNIFER JOHNSON (in court):  That is Trevor Summers in a nutshell —manipulative, lying, controlling.

    It was now up to the jury to decide Trevor Summer’s fate. And about five hours later, they had.

    Peter Van Sant: The verdict is read. Tell us what you heard.

    Alisa Mathewson: It was just guilty all the way across, all 11 charges, a guilty. … It’s emotional

    By Alisa’s side to support her was Jeff Mathewson, whom Alisa had met shortly before the 2017 attack.

    Alisa Mathewson: I just had my hand on his shoulder, and I was holding his hand.

    Throughout it all, Jeff stood by Alisa. And they stood up together, getting married in 2018.

    Jeff Mathewson: I think Alisa knows so long as I’m around her, she’s safe. And — and I will, you know, protect her with my life, and the kids.

    Another step toward protecting the family would come about a month after the verdict, at sentencing.

    ALISA MATHEWSON (in court): I suffered horrific pain during the 55-hour ordeal.

    Alisa spoke about the impact of Trevor’s actions, as did several of their children, including Arden, who had been manipulated by her father into letting him into the house that night.

    “48 Hours” asked Arden to read from her victim impact statement. 

    Arden Summers: “For five-and-a half years, I have struggled with what happened to my family, especially for the part I took in it… While no one else blamed me for what happened, I did.”

    The guilt, all misplaced, has caused Arden profound pain. 

    Arden Summers: I’ve had so many issues with trusting people after what happened and just the guilt that I lived with for so long before I finally told myself that this isn’t my fault, but … most of my teenaged years I spent just absolutely traumatized because of him.

    Arden’s trauma was not lost on the judge, who addressed her directly as he prepared to give his sentence.

    JUDGE SABELLA: To Arden, you should not feel guilty for anything that you did in this case. I assure you of that.

    mathewson-trevor-sentencing.jpg
    Trevor Summer was sentenced to three life sentences, followed by 224 years of prison.

    Courtesy of Law & Crime Network


    Judge Sabella’s address to Trevor Summers had quite a different tone.

    JUDGE SABELLA: The testimony and evidence that I heard clearly make you a monster in every stretch of the imagination. … Mr. Trevor Summers will spend the rest of his life in Florida State Prison.

    Jessica O’Connor: The judge sentenced him to three life sentences … and then followed by 224 years of prison.

    Peter Van Sant: And what a sentence. I’ve never heard of a sentence of that length. Have you?

    Jessica O’Connor: I have not.

    Alisa Mathewson: My focus, when that sentence came over, were the kids, and my focus was moving forward with them.

    mathewson-family3.jpg

    Alisa Mathewson


    The family once so broken, is whole again. The healing, says Alisa, is a process – and ongoing.

    Alisa Mathewson: We’ve already come so far.

    Alisa now hopes to raise awareness of domestic abuse, sharing her experience — and recovery— with other victims. And she works fulltime as an insurance agent. What she does not do, is dwell on Trevor Summers.

    Alisa Mathewson: I’ve been dealing … with him since I was 19 years old. … That man means nothing to me. And I’m moving forward with my life.

    Alisa Mathewson:  We have the life, more than I’ve ever envisioned us to have now.

    Jeff Mathewson: We’re on the road to kids’ happiness. 

    Bryn Summers: A healed family.

    Alisa Mathewson: This is a happy ending. This is a happy story.

    Trevor Summers declined “48 Hours”‘ request for an interview, citing his decision to appeal his convictions.

    If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233.


    Produced by Ruth Chenetz, Murray Weiss and Lauren Clark. Elena DiFiore is the development producer. Iris Carreras is the field producer. Marlon Disla, Jason Schmidt, Ken Blum, Grayce Arlotta-Berner and Phil Tangel are the editors. Anthony Batson is the senior broadcast producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

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  • Christy and Hilda’s Last Dance

    Christy and Hilda’s Last Dance

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    Christy and Hilda’s Last Dance – CBS News


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    After a night out, two women were dumped outside hospitals by masked men. Were the men good Samaritans or did they play a role in the women’s deaths? “48 Hours” contributor Jonathan Vigliotti reports.

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  • Digital evidence leads to clues in death of two friends who were drugged and dumped outside LA hospitals by masked men

    Digital evidence leads to clues in death of two friends who were drugged and dumped outside LA hospitals by masked men

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    Hilda Marcela Arzola-Plascencia, a doctor in Durango, Mexico, was used to handling medical emergencies. But nothing prepared her for the call she got about her eldest daughter and namesake Hilda Marcela Cabrales.

    Dr. Hilda Marcela Arzola-Plascencia: I received the phone call in the middle of the night saying that she was so ill, she was very bad, she was intubated.

    Hilda Marcela Cabrales-Arzola
    Hilda Marcela Cabrales

    Fernanda Cantisani


    The 26-year-old architect was fighting for her life in the ICU at Kaiser Permanente Hospital in Los Angeles.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: You are a doctor, what was going on in your mind at the time?

    Dr. Hilda Marcela Arzola-Plascencia: What happened? What — what happened to her? Why is she that bad?

    Another mother in Corner, Alabama, was also getting shattering news. Dusty Giles’ daughter Christy was in the ER at a completely different Los Angeles hospital — the Southern California Medical Center.

    Dusty Giles: I was just told, “I’m very sorry to inform you, Ms. Giles. … But she was dropped off at our hospital on the outside, kind of like a bag of garbage.” And, um … “she didn’t make it.” … And I said, “what do you mean she didn’t make it?”

    Dusty Giles: And they said … “it is now a police matter.” … I hung up and I fell apart.

    Christy Giles
    Christy Giles

    Dusty Giles


    Christy Giles, who had just turned 24, was dead of a drug overdose. But when detectives heard how she was dropped off, they immediately suspected foul play.

    Hospital staff told investigators a black Prius without license plates pulled up to the ER entrance. Two men told the staff they found the woman “passed out on the curb somewhere nearby …” and were trying to be good Samaritans by bringing her to the hospital. They left without giving their names or phone numbers.    

    Barry Telis: It was appalling to me.

    Barry Telis, a former Los Angeles Police Department homicide detective and CBS News consultant, says nothing about that story made sense.

    Barry Telis: Nobody just drops somebody off and says, “Hey, by the way, we were driving down the street. We found this girl passed out on the sidewalk.

    It was an unfathomable ending to a life bursting with exuberance.

    Misty Weldon: When Christy came into a room she was like a tornado. Her personality was big, it was loud, and you just couldn’t help but love her for it

    Her big sister, Misty Weldon, says life for Christy was one big adventure.  

    Misty Weldon: There was nothing in the world that she was afraid to do.

    Misty Weldon: Christy went skydiving. Christy rode camels in Morocco. We rode donkeys around the Grand Canyon.

    When not out adventuring, Christy was traveling the world as a high fashion model for Wilhelmina. The onetime soccer star traded in her cleats for a pair of heels at age of 15. She ultimately made L.A. her home.

    At 21, her life took a dramatic turn.

    Misty Weldon: I got a text message from her that said, “I did something. Don’t tell Mom.” … I thought, “Oh no What has she done?”  And I got a text message … that said, “I got married.” And I thought, “To who?”

    To a South African born artist, photographer and special effects editor 17 years her senior named Jan Cilliers. They met through friends at an art gallery in L.A.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: I understand that before all of this, you were not the marrying type.

    Jan Cilliers: I don’t know where you heard that, but it’s true … once I was with her, you know … it was different.

    giles-cilliers2.jpg
    Christy Giles and Jan Cilliers

    Jan Cilliers


    Jan planned to pop the question just seven months after meeting at the Burning Man arts festival in the Nevada desert. But, in the moment, they figured why wait.   

    Jan Cillier: Instead, we just decided to elope. We just got married right there.

    Christy’s mom and dad Leslie never expected to hear their daughter’s name in the same sentence as elope and Burning Man. Needless to say, it did not go over well.

    Dusty Giles: “Christy, I can’t believe you’ve done this. Your dad didn’t even get to walk you down the aisle.” And she goes, “Oh, no, no, no, no. We got married. But we are full-on having a wedding in Alabama.”

    The newlyweds came to Alabama, and Christy and her mom found the perfect wedding dress to wear at a later date.

    Back in L.A., Christy started studying interior design, which led to a new friendship with Hilda Marcela. Hilda was an architect from Mexico who had just moved to L.A to start her dream job in interior design.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Do you remember when she said she wanted to go to Los Angeles? And how did you feel when she told you that?

    Luis Cabrales: I feel very happy for her, but very sad for me, because we are — we are very close.

    Luis Cabrales checked in with his daughter every day she was in L.A.

    Luis Cabrales: Message, “Daughter, I miss you.” “I miss you, too, father.” Never told me daddy, always told me father.

    No one was surprised that the summa cum laude graduate of the prestigious university in Monterrey, Mexico, was thriving in L.A. Fernanda Cantisani and Alan Betancourt, who called her Marcela or Marce, were two of her closest friends in Monterrey.

    Fernanda Cantisani: She always gave her 100 percent in everything she did … in her … friendships with her family, with her job, with herself, too.

    She had already lived in South Korea and traveled the world.  

    Jonathan Vigliotti: how many countries in all?

    Luis Cabrales: Twenty-two countries.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Twenty-two countries for such a young girl.

    Alan Betancourt: She was very determined. … she also knew how to have a good time.

    Fernanda Cantisani: She loved to dance. … she loved to dress up. … every single person that met her loved … loved Marcela.

    Hilda Marcela Cabrales and Tomas.
    Hilda Marcela Cabrales and Tomas

    Fernanda Cantisani


    Including her dog — a Weimaraner named Tomas. She left him with Alan when she moved to L.A. but planned to call for him when she got her bearings.

    That call would never come. Just four months after moving to LA, Hilda was in a coma — her life in the balance.  Her frantic parents and sister Fernanda racing to her side.

    Fernanda Cantisani: … and I thought, when we are there, things will change. She will, she will wake up.

    FENTANYL-LACED OVERDOSES AND THE DATE RAPE DRUG

    Hilda Marcela, the vibrant young architect who loved laughing with friends, traveling the world with her sister and playing with her dog Tomas, looked nothing like the Hilda Marcela her family saw when they arrived at the hospital in Los Angeles.

    Luis Cabrales: My heart broke in thousand pieces. Because I saw … my baby, unconscious, and … fighting for her life.

    Dr. Hilda Marcela Arzola-Placencia: I said, “is this real? Am I dreaming? … I took her hand and I said … “Mom’s here with you. You’re not alone.”

    Fernanda Cabrales-Arzola | Hilda’s sister: I was very shocked, very impressed. I never expected looking at her like this.

    Like Christy, Hilda had suffered a drug overdose. Toxicology reports would later reveal that she had cocaine, MDMA or ecstasy, and elevated levels of fentanyl in her system. But her friends and family were sure that this early to bed, early to rise, health-conscious young woman would never have willingly taken such a toxic cocktail of drugs.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: When you heard overdose, you immediately thought drugged?

    Fernanda Cabrales-Arzola: Yeah, drugged … I was sure someone did this to her.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: When you were told that the cause of death was an overdose, did that add up to you?

    Jan Cilliers: Absolutely not. … definitely not something that she would have done to herself ever. … that’s just not her.

    Christy’s autopsy showed she had cocaine, fentanyl, and GHB — known as the date rape drug — in her system. In the hours and days after Christy’s death, Jan was determined to get to the truth.

     Jan Cilliers: I wanted to get to the bottom of … what exactly what happened that night.

    Jan began putting the puzzle pieces together starting on the evening of Friday, Nov. 12, 2021 — the night of the warehouse party. He made a timeline based on what he knew about Christy’s plans, conversations with Christy’s friends, and the digital trail she left behind.

    Jan, who had gone to San Francisco to visit his dad, says Christy spent the early evening doing what she loved most.

    Jan Cilliers: She was enjoying a lovely sunset. She took our cat for a walk on the beach

    Christy Giles with Loki

    Christy Giles/Instagram/Jan Cilliers


    Jan Cilliers: Those were the last pictures she sent me of this herself. And she said, “I wish you were here,” and I will forever wish that I was there, too.

    Christy, Hilda, and a friend who does not want to be identified, had planned a girl’s night out. They kicked it off at the Soho House in West Hollywood, then moved onto a warehouse party after midnight where photos were taken.

    Christy Giles and Hilda Marcela Cabrales
    Christy Giles, left, and Hilda Marcela Cabrales photographed in the VIP section at the warehouse party.

    Jan Cilliers


    Cellphone video posted on social media shows Hilda and Christy dancing in the VIP section.

    Jan Cilliers: An area which is more protected and safer to be in.

    By then, Jan had gone to bed. When he woke up the next morning – it was now Saturday, November 13 — he saw that Christy had texted him.

    Jan Cilliers: I texted her back and sort of didn’t hear anything from her.

    At first, he just assumed she was sleeping in. But after a few hours with no word, he noticed something strange. They shared locations on their phones.

    Jan Cilliers: I saw that she was at a location that I didn’t recognize.

    Her phone was located at 8641 West Olympic Boulevard.

    Jan Cilliers: So … a little orange flag at the back of your head.

    Jan Cilliers: I still hadn’t heard back from her, and I saw her location had suddenly moved … to the hospital.

    Jan Cilliers: I called the hospital. They told me that she was in the emergency room and at that point, like, I’m in real panic.

    Jan raced to the airport to catch a flight back to LA.

    Jan Cilliers: I called her parents … let them know that something terrible had happened and that she’s in the emergency room … and then, her mom called the emergency room and called me back probably five minutes later, letting me know that Christy passed away.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: In less than 24 hours, your world was turned upside down.

    Jan Cilliers: Shattered.

    Jan went straight to the hospital. Christy and Hilda’s friend who had been at the warehouse party with them, but left early, was already here. She had been desperately trying to get in touch with Hilda but couldn’t reach her. They were about to find out why.

    Jan Cilliers: She … got a call from a different hospital like two hours later saying that Hilda was just checked in there … And then — like, obviously, all our alarm bells are going off in our heads when both girls are dropped off at two different hospitals, two hours apart. Like something terrible happened that night.

    And Jan believed, whatever happened, took place at that mysterious address on Olympic Blvd. He put it on Instagram asking for help.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: You blast out this address and very quickly, you got responses.

    Jan Cilliers: Yeah.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: What are those responses?

    Jan Cilliers: That there’s somebody that lives at this location that is very unsavory person, um, that there’s a lot of stuff out on the Internet about him.

    His name was David Pearce.  Hilda and Christy were believed to have met him for the first time at the warehouse party.

    Barry Telis: David Pearce flew under the radar … for a long time.

    But his past was about to catch up with him as he faces serious charges, says former prosecutor Mary Fulginiti.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: So, at best, a con man. At worst?

    Mary Fulginiti: A criminal, a sexual predator … a drug dealer.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: A murderer?

    Mary Fulginiti: A murderer.

    RETRACING CHRISTY AND HILDA’S NIGHT OUT

    As Hilda Marcela lay in a hospital bed fighting for her life in LA, Dusty and Leslie Giles were preparing to bury their daughter Christy in Alabama.

    Half her ashes would go to Jan to scatter in the places they loved. Dusty placed the rest in an urn inside a butterfly box and gently wrapped it in the wedding dress she never had the chance to wear.

    Christy Giles ashes and wedding dress
    Half of Christy Giles’ ashes would go to  to her husband to scatter in the places they loved. Her mother placed the rest in an urn inside a butterfly box and gently wrapped it in the wedding dress she never had the chance to wear.

    Dusty Giles


    Dusty Giles: It was important because I know how happy she was when she found it. She swirled like a princess literally in it.

    Within hours of Christy’s death, detectives on the case were following clues from Christy herself.  Her pinging phone had led them straight to the apartment of David Pearce at 8641 West Olympic Blvd.

    Barry Telis: Police drive over there. Oh, my God. There’s the car. Boom. There’s the car. … Same car.

    Telis says police believed it was the same black Prius with no license plates that dropped Christy off at the hospital.

    Barry Telis: And it’s like, OK, I think — I think we have our man.

    They retraced the movements of the women that night, which would become the basis of a police affidavit. When they combed through those pictures from the party at the warehouse, there was David Pearce with Hilda partying it up in the VIP section.

    David Pearce
    David Pearce

    Getty Images


    Jonathan Vigliotti: it sounds like VIP access gave David Pearce … instant credibility.

    Barry Telis: Absolutely. It’s all part of the manipulation … He must be a good guy. He’s in the VIP section.

    It was likely all part of a plan to meet women — a plan that included drugs, says the retired detective.

    Barry Telis: Based on the witnesses’ statements and the police investigation… David Pearce comes with a bag of cocaine — an ounce estimated — and David Pearce came here to share it with whoever he could meet.

    According to Telis, cocaine is a hot ticket at these parties, at least on that night, even for Hilda and Christy.  The police recovered this text exchange between the two women starting at 4:21 a.m. while still at the warehouse party: “Do you want coke?” asks Hilda. “Yes,” replies Christy. Hilda texted back “I’m in the kitchen. Let’s do a line.”

    According to the police affidavit, a witness “observed Pearce provide what looked like cocaine to Giles and Cabrales who consumed it.”

    surveillance video
    Surveillance video screenshot highlighting Christy Giles and Hilda Marcela Cabrales  leaving the warehouse party on the night of Nov. 12, 2021.

    Jan Cilliers


    Police say half an hour later, surveillance video obtained by “48 Hours” shows Hilda and Christy leaving with David Pearce and two other men — his roommate Brandt Osborn and their friend, photographer Michael Ansbach. They all get into Osborn’s car.

    At 5:11 a.m., according to the police affidavit, surveillance video — which has not been released because of the ongoing investigation — shows Osborn’s car arriving in front of the apartment. According to the affidavit, several people got out of the vehicle and headed to the entrance of the residence.

    Christy and Hilda's text
    The last text messages between Hilda Marcelas Cabrales and Christy Giles at 5:30 a.m. on Nov. 13, 2021.

    Jan Cilliers


    Nineteen minutes later, at 5:30 a.m., Christy sends — from inside Pearce’s apartment — a wide-eyed emoji text to Hilda saying, “let’s go.” Hilda replies “I’ll call an Uber 10 min away.”

    Thirteen minutes later, according to the affidavit, a car, believed to be the Uber, pulls up. After waiting five minutes it drives away without Christy and without Hilda.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: How did you process that?

    Jan Cilliers: I mean it’s just confirming my worst fears again that they were there at that place against their will. They didn’t want to be there. They wanted to leave.

    Mary Fulginiti, a former federal prosecutor and defense attorney and a CBS News consultant, has reviewed the police affidavit and court documents. She says this text is an important piece of evidence.

    Mary Fulginiti: Something or someone stopped them in their tracks because they never got out and they never left.

    No one knows exactly what went on inside that apartment for the next 13 hours. But, according to the affidavit, a neighbor heard someone “in pain and moaning on-and-off during the hours of 10:30 a.m. …until 4 p.m.” For reasons not known, the neighbor did not call police.

    Mary Fulginiti: She’s clearly in a distressed state that everyone seems to just be ignoring. And when I say everyone, not just Pearce or Osborn, but there’s a third individual that appears to have been at that apartment, at least for part or all of the night, and that’s Michael Ansbach.

    Whatever happened inside the apartment was hidden from public view, not so outside the apartment. Another key piece of evidence: images captured on security cameras.

    Barry Telis (standing outside Pearce’s apartment): But the cameras are in the adjacent building right next door, pointing right in this direction.

    Although Telis has not seen the video, the police affidavit describes it in detail. At 4:19 in the afternoon — 11 hours after they’d arrived at the apartment — Pearce and Osborn are caught on camera carrying Christy down the back stairs.

    Barry Telis: It shows Pearce exit the door … the back door, looks … in both directions.

    Barry Telis: Making sure the coast is clear … making sure there’s not gonna be any witnesses that sees me carrying this body to my car.

    Both men get in the Prius. According to the affidavit, the men are captured on security cameras trying to disguise themselves.

    Mary Fulginiti: You see them putting on a hat, a mask and a hoodie. And then they drive away, and they drive to a hospital. Southern California Medical Center.

    Shortly after, according to police, Ansbach leaves the residence carrying bags “of unknown items.”  Pearce and Osborn return to the apartment to get Hilda. They carry her partially clad body out to the Prius.

    Mary Fulginiti: And again, they leave … They don’t go to the same hospital. They go to a different hospital, Kaiser Permanente.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Why not bring them at the same time to the same hospital?

    Barry Telis: Who knows? They’re trying to conceal their actions. They’re trying to keep the police at bay, and they don’t want to hit the radar.

    Mary Fulginiti: And they do the same thing … They drop the body, they tell the same story, and then they take off without leaving their name, their phone number or anything to identify themselves with.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: And Hilda … what is her state at this point.

    Barry Telis: Hilda was still alive … when they got her to the hospital … and then she was declared what we call brain dead.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: How did you process that when you heard that news?

    Luis Cabrales: The worst day of my life.

    A BREAK IN THE CASE

    After almost two weeks on life support, it was time for Hilda Marcela’s family to say goodbye.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Hilda, what were your final moments with your daughter?

    Dr. Hilda Marcela Arzola-Plascencia: Oh, they were so hard you know … and I just was asking God to not let her suffer more.

    Fernanda Cabrales: I remember telling her that you can leave … and just thanking her for being my sister.

    Luis Cabrales: I told her … “baby, when I pass away, I will see you again and I give you a big hug, a kiss.”

    The family decided to donate Hilda Marcela’s organs. Her mom remembers the medical staff lining the halls as the family accompanied Hilda to the OR.

    Dr. Hilda Marcela Arzola-Plascencia: The medical team was clapping … to honor her, to say thank you for giving life to others

    Hilda Marcela Cabrales
    Hilda Marcela Cabrales

    Fernanda Cantisani


    Hilda Marcela Cabrales was pronounced dead one day before her 27th birthday. Back in Monterrey Mexico, her friends gathered to remember her all dressed in white at her favorite park.

    Fernanda Cantisani: We brought her favorite thing to drink and her favorite cake … at first … we were crying. … But at some point … we put her favorite music on … and we just started dancing and we were laughing and hugging. And it was beautiful. … I felt, like, she was there. 

    Three weeks after Hilda’s death, a break in the case.

    NEWS REPORT: Police have arrested three men in connection with the deaths of a model and her friend last month.

    David Pearce, Brandt Osborn, Michael Ansbach
    David Pearce, 39, Brandt Osborn, 42, and Michael Ansbach, 47, were arrested in connection to Hilda and Christy’s deaths, but not officially charged. Osborn and Ansbach were eventually released; Pearce was held on four unrelated sexual assault charges.

    David Pearce, 39, Brandt Osborn, 42, and Michael Ansbach, 47, were arrested in connection to Hilda and Christy’s deaths, but not officially charged. Osborn and Ansbach were eventually released, but not Pearce. He was held on four unrelated sexual assault charges.

    KCAL ANCHOR/REPORTER:  New tonight, a Beverly Hills man has been charged with sexually assaulting four different women.

    Barry Telis: When this case … hit the media, more victims showed up said … I know that guy. He did this to me.

    The prosecution is alleging — in cases dating back to 2010 — that Pearce lured four different Jane Does to his apartment and gave all but one a “special drink” causing them to get dizzy or black out.

    Mary Fulginiti: The allegations include forcible rape, sexual penetration with a foreign object … having sex with someone who’s unconscious.

    Erica Bergman, who also goes by Erykah Poe, is not one of the Jane Does. But she says she was so traumatized by Pearce, she tried to warn other women about him on a blog called “The Dirty” as far back as 2013. She discovered she had a lot of company.

    Erica Bergman: There’s a lot of commonalities in our stories.

    Erica says she met Pearce at a low point in her life – she was getting a divorce and money was tight. Initially, she says she was taken in by him.

    Erica Bergman: He would talk a lot about celebrities that he knew and introduce himself as a producer for Paramount Pictures. So, he was really larger-than-life kind of personality.

    But she says it didn’t take her long to realize that Pearce, who often introduced himself as “Dave from Paramount Pictures,” lied. He never worked at the movie studio.

    Erica Bergman: David Pearce … is a very bad person.

    Erica believes that one night he drugged her. She slept until 4 p.m. the next day and woke up feeling strange and groggy.

    Erica Bergman: And Dave is bouncing around the room, kind of laughing and giddy. … and he started to tell me how while I was passed out, he had assaulted me while I was sleeping, sexually assaulted me, and the things that he had done to me. And it was incredibly degrading.

    Erica says she wanted to leave but felt trapped. She says he threatened to send compromising pictures to her estranged husband whom she was battling in divorce court. She reluctantly stayed, but she says the violence only got worse.

    Erica Bergman: He slammed my head onto the … marble floor and the sound in my ears was like an egg cracking, and I can’t get that sound out of my ears.

    Erica says she was too scared to press charges, but she soon left for good. Then it all came rushing back when she heard about Christy and Hilda.

    Erica Bergman: My first gut instinct was that this was not an accident, that … he had his name all over it.

    In May 2022, the prosecution added three more counts of sexual assault against David Pearce.

    DEPUTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY CATHERINE MARIANO (to reporters): We’ve added three additional sexual assault charges with three additional victims.

    And there was more.

    CBS NEWS LOS ANGELES: 40-year-old David Pearce has been charged with murder in connection with the women’s deaths.

    After a seven-month investigation, the DA had enough evidence to indict David Pearce on two counts of murder, claiming David Pearce gave Christy and Hilda lethal amounts of fentanyl, a deadly synthetic opioid drug dealers often mix with other drugs, unbeknownst to the user.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: It took months before David Pearce was charged with murder. What was your reaction?

    Jan Cilliers: I mean, definitely relief, but also very sad.

    The police did not find any fentanyl-laced drugs in Pearce and Osborn’s apartment, just drug paraphernalia. But Osborn, who has been charged as an accessory to murder after the fact, may have unwittingly explained why. According to the police affidavit, Osborn told coworkers if cops had found the “drugs hidden underneath the cash” inside the car they would’ve been in “big trouble.”

    Not finding fentanyl-laced drugs creates a big challenge for the prosecution, says Fulginiti.

    Mary Fulginiti: They’re going to have to prove that David Pearce gave the girls these drugs and he knew at the time that it could harm them, and he did so with conscious disregard. … so, they’re gonna have to prove that David Pearce intended to kill these young women. That’s not an easy threshold to overcome.

    Especially in light of witness statements that the women were doing drugs willingly — cocaine at the warehouse and earlier in the evening, as well. Friends told police Christy and Hilda both had taken cocaine and ketamine, a popular club drug.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: How does this work in the defense’s favor?

    Josh Ritter: Because fentanyl is a problem in this country … And people are dying from fentanyl that they take recreationally because they believe that they’re only taking cocaine.

    Josh Ritter: If you’re the defense, that’s the point you want to continue to drive home. It’s, how do you hold these two men responsible for an epidemic that’s really plaguing the entire country?

    That does not mean it will be an easy defense, says Josh Ritter. The former Los Angeles Assistant DA is advising Jan on legal issues and is now a practicing defense attorney.

    Josh Ritter: The problems that they’re going to have, though, is … how do you get around … how those girls were treated afterwards. And how do you get around the history that this man has?

    And how do you get around the fact that Christy had the so-called date rape drug, GHB, in her system?

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Is GHB, is the date-rape drug something these women would have taken knowingly?

    Mary Fulginiti: Absolutely not … that is a drug that’s usually used by sexual predators, guys that want to, you know, take advantage of women and don’t want them to remember and know about it.

    Hilda and Christy were still coherent at 5:30 a.m. on Saturday morning when they exchanged that text about calling an Uber — the text punctuated with a wide-eyed emoji.

    Jan Cilliers: Something happened inside those 10 minutes between them calling the Uber and the Uber leaving that incapacitated them.

    According to the timeline in the affidavit, Christy remained in that apartment for the next 11 hours, Hilda for 13, with one of them, according to a neighbor, moaning and groaning in pain most of the day.

    Barry Telis: These two women could still be alive had David Pearce or Mr. Osborne called 911. Three digits on a phone. That could have changed everything.

    SEEKING JUSTICE

    If found guilty of all charges against him, David Pearce could face 128 years to life in prison.

    Jonathan Vigliotti:  What is David Pearce currently charged with?

    Mary Fulginiti: David Pearce is charged with 11 counts, seven counts of drugging and sexually assaulting, forcibly raping and/or sodomizing several women, two counts of murder and two counts of providing a … controlled substance, that being fentanyl.

    David Pearce
    David Pearce in a Los Angeles Superior Courtroom in July 2022.  He has been charged with two counts of murder, two counts of providing a controlled substance (fentanyl), and seven sexual assault charges from seven other victims, unrelated to Christy and Hilda’s case. The seven other charges date back as far as 2010.  Pearce remains in custody at an LA County Jail. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

    AP Images


    In a bold decision, the state will combine the sexual assault and murder charges in one trial.  

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Why include sexual assault charges in a murder case?

    Mary Fulginiti: If you look at this case in its totality, I mean, this is David Pearce’s MO. … He lures women back to his apartment. He provides them with a drink. … And then they start to feel dizzy or they blackout, and he sexually assaults them.

    While Christy and Hilda’s autopsy stated there was no physical or sexual trauma, nurses who treated Hilda noted slight bleeding in her vagina, and a review of her sexual assault examination found a small abrasion.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: I know this is a difficult conversation. Do you think Hilda and Christy were potentially raped that night?

    Dr. Hilda Marcela Arzola-Plascencia: Of course, I believe that. … That’s the reason why they drugged them.

    Josh Ritter believes the testimony of the women who were allegedly drugged and raped by Pearce will help jurors see a dangerous pattern of behavior.

    Josh Ritter: Their testimonies are going to be huge … one woman … perhaps the defense can poke holes in that. … Two women, it begins to sound like … is this really a coincidence or not? But three or four women or more and you realize you’re dealing with … with a monster.

    It turns out David Pearce had been on the police radar for years. According to the police affidavit, he was arrested in 2014 for sexual assault, along with an additional rape case. But these cases are often difficult to prove and were ultimately rejected by the District Attorney’s Office — something Christy’s sister Misty finds unforgivable.

    Misty Weldon: To know that … he had been arrested and had been released … is just appalling to me … It’s really sad that two beautiful girls had to die in order for him to be in jail right now.

    David Pearce has pleaded not guilty to all charges against him.

    Brandt Osborn, who is charged as an accessory to murder after the fact, has also pleaded not guilty and is out on bail. “48 Hours” caught up with him outside of court.

    GREG FISHER | “48 Hours” producer: Do you have any comment?

    BRANDT OSBORN: I have no comment. I’m innocent.

    Pearce’s lawyer also had no comment, but at the time of the incident, Pearce told detectives, “At the end of the day, I didn’t do anything wrong … I just tried to make the situation, you know, right.”

    So far, the prosecution has “declined” to charge Michael Ansbach. “48 Hours” has learned that he’s cooperating with prosecutors and will likely testify against his two friends.

    But until the case goes to trial, Dusty and Leslie Giles — thanks to a social media campaign — will be at every court hearing, never letting David Pearce forget that Christy was more than just a name on a court docket.

    Dusty Giles: She was a real person. She was a daughter, a sister, a granddaughter. She was her daddy’s best friend.

    Leslie Giles: I miss my daughter.

    Hilda Cabrales and Christy Giles
    Hilda Marcela Cabrales, left, and Christy Giles.

    Fernanda Cantisani/Jan Cilliers


    In Mexico, Hilda Marcela’s friends and family cherish the mementos she left behind.

    A lock of hair. A diploma.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: So, she wasn’t just smart. She was the top of her class.

    Luis Cabrales: She was the top of the top.

    And a dog named Tomas who now lives with Alan.

    Fernanda Cantisani: The love we have for Marce. … It’s going to Tomas. … he reminds us about her so much.

    Alan Betancourt: And he has become my emotional support, my emotional fortress … Um, I would be very lost, so yeah.

    Dr. Hilda Marcela Arzola-Plascencia: Here is always and will always be a hole and nothing can fill it … she loved to live. And I think that’s the way we can honor her, living our lives in the best way.

    Dr. Hilda Arzola: This is a tragedy. But maybe this was the way to stop them.

    Jan Cilliers: That’s the only justice we can get.

    A trial date has not been set for David Pearce or Brandt Osborn.


    Produced by Liza Finley. Alicia Tejada is the field producer. Michelle Fanucci, Greg Fisher, and Michelle Sigona are the development producers. Diana Modica, Michael Baluzy, Gregory F. McLaughlin and Gregory Kaplan are the editors. Lauren Turner Dunn is the associate producer. Anthony Batson is the senior broadcast producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer 

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  • Hilda Marcela Cabrales: Architect’s American dream tragically cut short

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    Hilda Marcela Cabrales: Architect’s American dream tragically cut short – CBS News


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    Hilda Marcela Cabrales, 26, left her Weimaraner, Tomás, with a friend when she moved to Los Angeles from Mexico. She planned to call for her beloved dog when she got her bearings — but tragically, that day never came.

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  • Kassanndra Cantrell murder: How investigators pieced together the final moments of the Tacoma woman’s life

    Kassanndra Cantrell murder: How investigators pieced together the final moments of the Tacoma woman’s life

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    Kassanndra Cantrell murder: How investigators pieced together the final moments of the Tacoma woman’s life – CBS News


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    Using security videos and cellphones, investigators pieced together the final moments of Kassanndra Cantrell’s life — which helped them find the man suspected of kill

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  • Kassanndra’s Secret

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    Kassanndra’s Secret – CBS News


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    A young woman vanishes. Eerie surveillance video captures a man in a hat. Investigators learn the two are linked by a secret. “48 Hours” contributor Natalie Morales reports.

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  • Investigators follow a digital trail – and the man in the hat –  to solve the murder of a pregnant Tacoma woman

    Investigators follow a digital trail – and the man in the hat – to solve the murder of a pregnant Tacoma woman

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    For Marie Smith, the realization that her daughter Kassanndra Cantrell had been missing for more than two days was almost more than she could take.

    Marie Smith: I called everybody … anybody I could think of, and nobody had heard from her. … I was … hoping that she might be alive somewhere (emotional).

    Marie Smith: I never thought … that I’d be the person sitting here … talking about my daughter. … I wanted her found.

    Kristi Sinclair: I don’t even know how to explain how wrenching it is.

    Smith’s close friend, Kristi Sinclair, says it was agony.

    Kristi Sinclair: This can’t be happening. This isn’t real. … she lost her phone. She lost her car. She had no money. … I don’t know. … Anything but what you don’t want to think about, anything but that (emotional).

    As Kassanndra’s family and friends grappled with her disappearance, police got to work. Pierce County Sheriff’s Detective Franz Helmcke was assigned to the case. His first step was to talk to those who knew Kassanndra best.

    Natalie Morales: How did Marie describe Kassanndra?

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Normal.

    Natalie Morales: Responsible.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Yeah. Responsible. She would call and let her know where she was going.

    Kassanndra Cantrell
    Kassanndra Cantrell

    Kassanndra Cantrell/Instagram


    Detective Helmcke learned Kassanndra was close with her family and good about staying in touch. She enjoyed making YouTube shopping videos and loved being on stage. She’d even once joined a local production of the “Rocky Horror Picture Show,” where people act alongside the movie. Smith says it was a perfect fit for her daughter.

    Marie Smith: She was with a group of people who were … a little wacky like her.

    Cheri Mueller: She was good. … She was just adorable.

    Cheri Mueller, the show’s producer, recalls Kassanndra’s natural talent.

    Cheri Mueller: She was playing a character by the name of Janet Weiss … She also learned the character of … Columbia.

    By all accounts, at the time of her disappearance, Kassanndra was a happy 33-year-old, and not someone who would run off.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: This wasn’t the — the typical … missing person that was going to come home in a — in a couple of days.

    Detective Helmcke canvassed the area around where Marie and Kassanndra lived and found, on a neighbor’s security camera, a clip of Kassanndra’s white Mazda on the morning of August 25. It was seen leaving the neighborhood.

    Natalie Morales: Did you see any video of the car coming back?

    Det. Franz Helmcke: No.

    As the hours ticked by with no sign of Kassanndra, her family and friends tried to remain hopeful. It was particularly difficult for Kassanndra’s twin brother, Rob. Growing up, the two were inseparable and would stay up late at night to watch scary movies.

    Natalie Morales: She was never scared of that stuff?

    Rob Cantrell: No.

    Natalie Morales: No? Wow. She’s tough —

    Rob Cantrell: We laughed at most of it.

    Natalie Morales: OK. She’s a tough girl, then.

    Rob Cantrell: Yeah.

    As they got older, their shared passion for movies evolved into collecting memorabilia. They even dreamed of opening their own collectibles shop.

    But as close as they were, Rob couldn’t imagine where his sister went, and he was filled with remorse about their last conversation.

    Rob Cantrell: We were having an argument … she wanted to actually come over on the 25th … but I ignored her.

    The 25th of August 2020 – the day Kassanndra went missing.

    Natalie Morales: That’s a big regret I imagine still for you.

    Rob Cantrell: Yeah, because then she probably would have told me what she was doing that day. And I would have … at least known … where she had gone.

    Kassanndra’s family and friends organized searches.

    Natalie Morales: I can’t imagine what that must feel like to be out there searching and — and knowing what you could possibly be looking for.

    Kristi Sinclair: You put it in the back — you don’t think about that. … just help me find a clue, help me find a clue.

    Kassanndra Cantrell's car
    Three days after Kassanndra vanished, police found her white Mazda unlocked with the keys still inside in an industrial area where groups of homeless people often camp. 

    KIRO


    And then, three days after Kassanndra vanished, police found her white Mazda unlocked with the keys still inside. 

    Det. Franz Helmcke: It was … almost underneath Interstate 705 … which … goes into the heart of the downtown Tacoma.

    It’s an industrial area where groups of homeless people often camp.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Her car’s in the area. … did something happen down here?

    Natalie Morales: Strange place for a young woman to park a car then —

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Yeah.

    Natalie Morales: — and then go missing.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Yeah.

    Natalie Morales: Are alarm bells going off, then?

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Yeah, yeah. Increasingly.

    Marie Smith: She had clearly gotten ready to go somewhere. … Where did — where did she go? Who did she go to see?

    Detective Helmcke had ordered an emergency trace on Kassanndra’s cell phone to try and find her last known location. And he discovered her phone last pinged about 2 miles south of a tower on Vashon Island in the Puget Sound.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: One of the first things I did was just get on Google Earth and strike an arc from that tower to see where — where it lands. … and it — it showed as landing … around this shoreline at Owen Beach or Point Defiance Park.

    cantrell-morales-detectives.jpg
    Natalie Morales with detectives at Owen Beach.

    CBS News


    Natalie Morales (at Owen Beach): And when you’re … seeing this huge body of water, you thinking, “we’re just never gonna be able to find this”?

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Yeah.

    A SECRET REVEALED

    Investigators chasing that last ping from Kassanndra’s cell phone knew it was somewhere in the vast waters of the Puget Sound which is nearly 100 miles long.

    Natalie Morales: What’s the next step about trying to recover that?

    Det. Franz Helmcke: We debated about that because … it’s a needle in a haystack … it’s a … huge body of water.

    But Detective Helmcke had a starting point. He knew someone likely had tossed the phone into the water from Owen Beach. Finding it was a longshot, but Det. Sgt. Brent Van Dyke was up for the challenge. He brought the Pierce County Metro Dive Team out to the beach on a summer day. 

    Det. Sgt. Brent Van Dyke: We got lucky with the tides that day. The tide was extremely low, so it made our search area a little less.

    Van Dyke had a plan to dramatically reduce the area where the phone might be. First, he asked members of his team to throw stones from the beach to simulate how far someone could throw a cell phone.

    Det. Sgt. Brent Van Dyke: If you picture throwing something from here, it limits the distance that I would have to search for what you threw.

    cantrell-05.jpg
    Investigators had ordered a trace on Kassanndra’s cellphone to try to identify her last known location. The phone pinged about two miles south of a tower near Puget Sound. Based on that location, they believed her phone was likely somewhere in the water near Owen Beach in Tacoma’s Point Defiance Park. The Pierce County Metro dive team went to the beach and formed a line and searched the area underwater. 

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    The dive team then formed a line, essentially creating an underwater dragnet.

    Det. Sgt. Brent Van Dyke: We had a boat out in the water and … a line of people on snorkel that day, just looking down.

    They were told that Kassanndra’s phone had a case decorated with glitter. The dive team was in the water for little more than an hour when incredibly …

    Det. Sgt. Brent Van Dyke: One of the guys on the line said, “Hey, I think I got it.” They saw a sparkle. … “I think I got the phone” and it was the phone.

    Kassanndra Cantrell's cell phone in Puget Sound
    Incredibly, after a little over an hour, one of the divers spotted Kassanndra’s cell phone with its sparkly case.

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    The phone was sent to a specialist to determine if any information could be recovered. The hunt to find Kassanndra was intensifying as detectives learned more about her.

    Natalie Morales: She felt like she could … tell you pretty much everything about what was going on in her life, right?

    Alexandra McNary: (Laughs) Yes.

    Natalie Morales: Even her deepest, darkest secrets, she would tell you first.

    Alexandra McNary: Yup.

    Kassanndra Cantrell and Alexandra Mcnary
    “Kass is … a rare person,”Alexandra McNary says of her best friend. “She didn’t care what you thought of her … She didn’t care if you liked her. She didn’t care if she was too loud or too in your face. She just was. “

    Alexandra McNary


    And a month before she disappeared, Kassanndra confided a secret to her best friend.

    Alexandra McNary: She texted me a positive pregnancy test and said, “I think I might be preggers.”

    And the day she was supposed to meet McNary, but never showed up?  It was going to be her first ultrasound. For Det. Franz Helmcke, learning Kassanndra had been pregnant at the time of her disappearance changed everything.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: This is what is now piquing my — my interest.

    Natalie Morales: Normally in a situation where a pregnant woman disappears … you look at who the partner is first.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Correct.

    Kassanndra had also told her mother she was pregnant but didn’t provide details.

    Det. Franz Helmcke:  I ask Marie … “did she tell you who the father was?” … and she says, well, it was some guy … she met online or through a dating app.

    Marie Smith: She told me … it was not somebody that she was actually seeing. … and that he didn’t even live in the area.

    It was no secret Kassanndra was actively dating, using apps like Tinder. And Smith told detectives about an old boyfriend Kassanndra was still in touch with, Colin Dudley. The two had dated back in 2006 while in the Rocky Horror acting group. The show’s producer, Cheri Mueller.

    Colin Dudley
    Alexandra McNary says Kassanndra told her the father of her future baby was an ex-boyfriend that she had been seeing again: Colin Dudley. He and Kassanndra met in 2006 during a local production of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” and dated for a few months. Dudley then began a relationship with another “Rocky Horror Picture Show” cast member, and by 2020 they were living together. 

    Sue Evans


    Cheri Mueller: Colin played a character called the Criminologist on stage. Outside of the stage, when he wasn’t performing, he was the head of tech. And he kind of ran the cast.

    But after dating for several months, Dudley and Kassanndra broke up. Colin started a relationship with another cast member, Rebecca, and the two eventually moved in together. Steve Ammann hung out at their home regularly to play a game called Dungeons & Dragons.

    Natalie Morales: Explain what Dungeons & Dragons is … it’s not a board game, right?

    Steve Ammann: No, not a traditional board game. Uh, it’s more of a theater of the mind-type gameplay. … doing things that you wouldn’t normally do in real life … role play a wizard, a rogue, a fighter.

    The game always took place in Dudley’s basement. 

    Steve Ammann: Colin was kind of the Dungeon Master of it. The one who ran the show.  

    And Ammann liked being around him. Dudley was quick to help if someone needed money, he says, and he still remembers the meals Colin cooked for game nights.

    Steve Ammann: He was a chef by profession, so it was nice food.

    In 2014, after Dudley’s father died, he rekindled a friendship with Kassanndra.

    Marie Smith: She assured me … you know, that she was just there to be a friend. … She’s like … “He’s got a girlfriend.”

    According to Smith, Kassanndra and Dudley would sometimes watch movies or grab a bite to eat. At some point, McNary says, even though Colin was living with Rebecca, his relationship with Kassanndra once again turned romantic.

    And Kassanndra told McNary that Colin Dudley was the father of her baby.

    Alexandra McNary: She was very excited. She talked about, you know, names and games she wanted at the baby shower … She — she had an Amazon registry already made.

    Kassanndra’s only hesitation: whether she should tell Dudley. He was with Rebecca and had mentioned he didn’t want to have kids. But McNary says Kassanndra did tell Colin she was pregnant, and he was fine with it.

    Alexandra McNary: She called me … and she said, “Well, I told him.” … and “it went better than expected.” … He was calm and said not to worry about it, and that they would talk.

    Detective Helmcke wondered if Dudley knew where Kassanndra was.

    DET. FRANZ HELMCKE: We’re just trying to follow up with people who knew Kassanndra, you know … places she likes to go that we could maybe look.

    Colin Dudley sat and talked with Detective Helmcke on his front porch – and the conversation was recorded.

    DET. FRANZ HELMCKE: This is a recorded statement … we are going to be taking from Colin Patrick Dudley.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: So, you know, we just kind of begin with just simple, hey, tell us about … you and Kassanndra. … “How did you meet?”

    COLIN DUDLEY: I met her at “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” … we were in a relationship for a couple of months and then we broke up in 2006.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: I then started kind of running some of these things by him that — that people were telling me.

    DET. FRANZ HELMCKE: Talking to other people, talking to Kassanndra’s family and some of the friends … They reported that she was about 10 weeks pregnant … and what we’ve been hearing is that she’s been telling people that you are the father.

    COLIN DUDLEY: No way. No. Hell no.

    Dudley was adamant. He and Kassanndra were not in a relationship, and he was most definitely not the father of her child. 

    Det. Franz Helmcke: I asked him, are you sure? You know, no — no one-night stands? No, you know, hookups after the fact or anything like that? No, absolutely not, he says.

    In fact, Dudley insisted he hadn’t seen or spoken to Kassanndra since they broke up back in 2006, except once, when he ran into her at the mall.

    DET. FRANZ HELMCKE: You haven’t had any – no contact with her. No messages? Or no Facebook or anything?

    COLIN DUDLEY: No.

    Helmcke believed Dudley was lying. But could he prove it? It turned out a clue to finding the answer was in Smith’s paperwork. 

    THE MAN IN THE HAT

    Detective Helmcke believed Colin Dudley was lying when he said he had not seen or spoken to Kassanndra for years. But it was Kassanndra’s mother Marie Smith who provided some proof. She had been combing through Kassanndra’s old phone bills, where she noticed a mystery number that kept reappearing.

    Marie Smith: We didn’t know … whose it was … because it didn’t have a name attached to it.

    Natalie Morales: Going back how far in the past?

    Marie Smith: Oh, we looked back … months and months, you know … as far back as we could see that this number kept popping up.

    And the last time it popped up, Smith told Detective Helmcke, was the morning Kassanndra disappeared.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: I said, “OK, so what — what’s that number?” And she tells me … And … I immediately know it’s Colin’s.

    Helmcke wanted forensic investigators to take a closer look at Dudley’s phone, which Detective Helmcke had taken when they’d met on Dudley’s front porch.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: I told him … I have a warrant to seize your phone. I read him the warrant. Grabbed the phone … and we left.

    Investigators later obtained the phone records for both Kassanndra and Dudley’s phones. They were turned over to Detective Ryan Salmon, the cell phone forensics analyst for the sheriff’s department. Salmon noticed something curious: the name “Kassanndra” never appeared in Dudley’s phone.

    Natalie Morales: What name was he using for Kassanndra?

    Det. Ryan Salmon: He had it under Velma.

    Natalie Morales: Why Velma?

    Det. Ryan Salmon: We learned later through … Kassanndra’s mother that she had gone as Velma from “Scooby Doo” as a Halloween … costume.

    And it’s likely, Salmon said, that Colin Dudley did not want his live-in girlfriend to know he was still in touch with Kassanndra. Even without the information from her water-logged phone, Salmon was able to see when and where she and Dudley interacted simply by having those phone records.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: It’s … extremely helpful … in determining where somebody was … during a critical time frame … people have a cell phone with them almost all day, every day.

    The phone records showed Kassanndra’s white Mazda driving to the spot where it was found. But had Kassanndra or someone else parked it there? Detective Helmcke knew the city’s light rail system was nearby and asked their security people if they could find any footage of Kassanndra’s car. What they found proved crucial.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: “We have the video you want. … you need to get down here and look at it.”

    Man in the hat surveillance video
    On Aug. 28, 2020, police found Kassanndra’s car parked on a street in an industrial neighborhood; it was unlocked, with the keys on the center console. A light rail system operated along that same street, so investigators requested its train camera footage from the Aug. 25. One video showed a man in a dark hat walking away from Kasssanndra’s car and continuing to the nearby light rail station around 11:50 that morning. 

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    The videos have never been shown publicly. In one video from a moving light rail train taken the late morning of August 25, Helmcke could see a man in a black hat walking away from where Kassanndra’s car was parked. Then, a different camera shows that same man from a much closer angle.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: He’ll cross right in front of this camera. … So, he comes walking across and you can see –

    Natalie Morales: Fedora.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: — all black, the blue gloves, then the fedora … And he just sits down at the stop.

    The time was 11:50 a.m. The man sits for four minutes and then keeps walking.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Now he gets up, continues walking …

    The man in the hat
    Surveillance image of the masked, gloved man in the black fedora.

    PCSD


    His face, covered by some type of mask, is hard to see but, based on his build and gait, Helmcke suspected that Colin Dudley was the man wearing that fedora. The detective had been told that Dudley often had asked — demanded even — that people call him “Hat” or “Hat Man.”

    Alexandra McNary had heard all about it from Kassanndra.

    Natalie Morales: Was he always wearing a hat?

    Alexandra McNary: He would put it on and switch into his persona of the Hat Man and preferred to be called the Hat Man. The persona was basically the main character from “Clockwork Orange.” Very dark, intentionally so. Morally dubious.

    Natalie Morales: Did you see the security video at all of the man in the hat?

    Alexandra McNary: I — did get to see it.

    Natalie Morales: Did you look at it and say, “that’s Colin?”

    Alexandra McNary: Well, who else would it be?

    In that video from the light rail system, the man in the hat keeps walking — right into the Tacoma Dome Station parking garage, only blocks away from where Kassanndra’s car was found. Helmcke asked security personnel at the garage if they had any footage. The answer was a resounding “yes.”

    Det. Franz Helmcke: They find him walking into the parking garage to a truck.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: You can see him using … a remote-control opener, gets into the truck … And then as he exits the parking garage, you can see pretty clearly in the video the license plate which comes back to Mr. Dudley.

    That was Colin’s Chevy truck, proving, the detective said, that the man in the video and Colin Dudley were one and the same. 

    Detective Helmcke was convinced that Colin had done something to Kassanndra, and he wanted to get into Dudley’s house—immediately.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: We don’t have a body. We don’t have … any true evidence that … Kassanndra is dead. We’re still hoping … maybe she is tied up in the basement.

    Six days after Kassanndra Cantrell vanished, a SWAT team burst into Colin Dudley’s house.

    “THE MAJOR BREAK IN THE CASE”

    Authorities were out in force after they raided Colin Dudley’s house, but they found no sign of Kassanndra.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Kassanndra was … not found inside … but Colin … was detained temporarily for us to do the fingerprints and DNA.

    Investigators seized several items from the house, including Colin’s Chevy Colorado truck and a black fedora.

    cantrell-fecdora-evidence.jpg
    Investigators seized several items from Colin Dudley’s house, including his Chevy Colorado truck and a black fedora.

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    DET. FRANZ HELMCKE: I don’t know if it’s the same one he’s wearing in the video or not … there were numerous areas that they identified in the basement where there was possible DNA, blood evidence … And they said that the cadaver dogs showed particular interest in the basement … specifically a brown sofa in the basement. 

    Det. Helmcke believed something terrible had happened to Kassanndra. Dudley had stopped talking to investigators, but his live-in girlfriend Rebecca Fischer, a carpenter, agreed to sit down for an interview.

    DETECTIVE: Do you think he would be capable of hurting Kassanndra?

    After a 13-second pause:

    REBECCA FISCHER: Physics would say yes, he’s got size and strength on her. I don’t think he would … No, he would not.

    And investigators could not prove otherwise. Dudley was free to go.

    Natalie Morales: Why can’t you arrest him?

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Well … he’s guilty of something. But … what is he guilty of?

    Det. Helmcke wanted to know every move Dudley made on August 25, the day Kassanndra went missing. And he said it became clear that Dudley had hatched a well-thought-out plot to get rid of Kassanndra.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: He had planned this, and he probably was pretty meticulous in his planning.

    In his police interview, Dudley said that early on the morning Kassanndra disappeared, he’d visited Costco.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: So, the first stop he makes is at a Costco gas station.

    That was at 6:31 a.m. Then he went to a second Costco to pick up supplies for what he had told detectives was a “spring cleaning.” Investigators subpoenaed receipts and the store provided video. Surveillance cameras pick up Dudley in the store around 7 a.m.

    Colin Dudley on surveillance at a Costco
    Colin Dudley is seen on surveillance video at a Costco store the morning of August 25 — the day Kassanndra went missing. Dudley told detectives he was shopping for supplies for a “spring cleaning.”

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    Natalie Morales: This is where he said he stopped because he needed supplies for his spring cleaning.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: Correct. Yes.

    Natalie Morales: The video is so crystal-clear.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: We think that’s probably the garbage sacs.

    Store records show that Dudley purchased a box of heavy-duty trash bags.

    Natalie Morales: Goes back to his house.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: Right.

    Detectives say then Dudley dropped off the supplies at home and drove to the Tacoma Dome Station parking garage arriving at 8:17 a.m.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: We have surveillance video for that, too, which shows that truck again … Now, in the back, you’ll see a bike. … And then you’ll see him get out and put on a helmet and get on a bike and ride it away.

    Dudley left his truck in the garage and began pedaling home. It’s about a 20-minute ride. Investigators believe he wanted to be home by 9 a.m. because, as it turns out, he and Kassanndra had made plans to meet at his house.

    Sure enough, text records show that Kassanndra was outside Colin’s house at 8:49 a.m.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: She said, “I’m a bit early, that ok?”

    Natalie Morales: And he says?

    Det. Ryan Salmon: He says, “Yep, come on down.” And those two messages were both deleted out of his phone.

    Natalie Morales: And, so, the two phones are then pinpointed in that same location at the house for a couple of hours.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: Right.

    For a little more than two hours, neither phone showed any movement, and it was during this period of time investigators believe Colin Dudley likely killed Kassanndra Cantrell.

    Natalie Morales: It … shows you the amount of premeditation –

    Det. Ryan Salmon: Right.

    Natalie Morales:  — that went into planning this.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: Right.

    It appears, investigators say, that around 11:40 a.m., Dudley turned off his cell phone as Kassanndra’s phone shows it moving away from the house. Det. Salmon says that’s because Dudley had her phone with him as he drove her car to the spot where he abandoned it near the light rail station.

    Natalie Morales: He turns his cell phone off, but doesn’t turn her cell phone off and is driving around with it? What was he thinking?

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Apparently … he wasn’t — he wasn’t thinking well enough … not as smart as he thought he was.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: You’ll see Kassanndra’s car –

    Natalie Morales: Is that it right there?

    Det. Ryan Salmon: Yep, that white one coming down.

    cantrell-dudley-busstop.jpg
    Surveillance video shows Colin Dudley seated at the light rail station stop. Det. Salmon believes he was gathering himself after murdering Kassanndra.

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    And then you see Dudley in the hat walking away from her car. Remember how he paused for a few moments and sat down? Det. Salmon believes he was gathering himself after murdering Kassanndra.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: I think he is just physically tired because of probably how violent the incident was.

    Detectives say Dudley then retrieved his truck from the garage where he had stashed it earlier that day, drove to Owen Beach and tossed Kassanndra’s phone into the Puget Sound.

    Natalie Morales: And what time roughly was … that last ping?

    Det. Franz Helmcke: It was around 12:45 p.m.

    But while investigators had discovered her phone in the water, they still hadn’t found Kassanndra. They had no idea what Dudley had done with her, but they did have his Chevy Colorado truck, and Helmcke had an idea.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: As an investigator, I’ve been exposed to … different technologies … and we knew cars had … electronic … evidence contained in them.

    Almost every car or truck has reams of data that can be extracted.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: So, this is where the major break in the case, you know, came through.

    Natalie Morales: You can turn your cell phone off and not necessarily be able to track. But you can’t turn your car’s black box off.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: Exactly.

    Black box from Colin Dudley's truck
    The black box from Colin Dudley’s truck had a record of Dudley’s movements on August 26 — the day after Kassanndra visited his house.

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    Helmcke got a warrant to remove the truck’s black box—essentially a computer that tracks and records nearly every move a vehicle makes. He reviewed the data which confirmed much of what they already knew from the phone records. But there was something new that caught everyone’s attention. The truck’s black box had a record of Colin Dudley’s movements on August 26 — the day after Kassanndra visited his house.

    Natalie Morales (looking at a monitor): And this is the next morning.

    Det. Ryan Salmon: Correct. So, now, we’re at 6:00 a.m. … And then, of course, we noticed where the vehicle stops … that there’s a large, wooded ravine.

    On Sept. 22, 2020, Det. Sgt. Brent Van Dyke rushed to that ravine, which is 8 miles from Dudley’s house. It was nearly a month since Kassanndra had gone missing.

    Det. Sgt. Brent Van Dyke:  I, uh, got there first and looked over the hillside, and, uh, you could clearly see that there was, uh, a … garbage can halfway down the hill. … you could see that the garbage can had, uh, a bag liner and, uh, some ropes around it …

    He also spotted blood.

    Natalie Morales: So, you clearly at this point knew you had remains?

    Det. Sgt. Brent Van Dyke: Oh, absolutely.

    Helmcke, also at the scene, wanted to make a quick identification and he knew that Kassanndra had a distinctive tattoo.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: I asked them to take a picture of it. So, they took a picture and came walking up the hill.

    Helmcke recognized the tattoo immediately. Kassanndra Cantrell was dead. Helmcke’s heart sank when he thought about calling Kassanndra’s mother.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: So, I called Marie and … I told her that I had information that I needed to share with her.

    Marie Smith: My first question was, “is she OK?” (emotional)

    Natalie Morales: Mm-hmm.

    Marie Smith: And he said … “No, I’m sorry, she’s not.”

    Kassanndra’s twin brother Rob overheard that phone call.

    Rob Cantrell: The second I heard her screaming, I knew that they had found her.

    Colin Dudley was arrested that night and later charged with first-degree murder.

    Investigators felt they had built a strong case, so strong that they decided not to try and retrieve the information on Kassanndra’s waterlogged phone.

    The case barreled toward trial for two years, and then Kassanndra’s friends and family heard that prosecutors were considering making a plea deal with Dudley. They could not believe it.

    Marie Smith: It was premeditated … it was literally cold-blooded.

    Kristi Sinclair: I have no words.

    Natalie Morales: A lot of anger, though.

    Kristi Sinclair: A lot.

    HONORING KASSANNDRA

    Alexandra McNary: She was an optimist. … She never lost that even up until the end. I believe that she entered his house hopeful.

    Hopeful that Colin Dudley was getting comfortable with her pregnancy. Instead, investigators believe he brutally murdered her. An autopsy revealed exactly how brutal.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: There were fractures, major fractures to her skull.

    Natalie Morales: So, hit over the head. Many times.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Cause of death was blunt force trauma.

    Investigators say they were never able to identify a murder weapon. But they did find those traces of blood — likely Kassanndra’s — in Dudley’s basement.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: Basement floor, walls, a stainless-steel table and the laundry room sink.

    Police suspect Colin cleaned the basement multiple times after killing Kassanndra and kept her body there overnight, before dumping her in that ravine the next morning. And they believe Colin’s live-in girlfriend Rebecca was home during some of that time.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: And thinking about, you know, Rebecca’s there in the house, too.

    Natalie Morales: That was my next question. Was there any thought that she had to have been involved?

    Det. Franz Helmcke: There was — I mean, some people thought that.

    Investigators confronted Rebecca.

    DETECTIVE: Did you have anything to do with her disappearance of Kassanndra on any level?

    REBECCA FISCHER: Nope.

    Det. Franz Helmcke: We did not find any information that … she knew that it went on, that she had anything to do with it. … They kept separate areas of the house. And so, I could see, you know, her doing her own thing and … not going down the basement. 

    But Rebecca did confirm to police that Colin never wanted to be a father.

    REBECCA FISCHER: He does not want to be a dad.

    Pierce County Deputy Prosecutors Brian Wasankari and Patrick Vincent went to work on proving Dudley’s guilt.

    Brian Wasankari: I thought this was a very strong case, at least circumstantially. I mean, oddly, it’s not one in which we had a great deal of physical evidence. … It was a case that relied on essentially digital records.

    Like that video of Colin leaving Kassanndra’s car, those phone records placing Kassanndra at Colin’s house the morning she disappeared, and the data showing Colin’s truck where Kassanndra’s remains were eventually found. For the prosecutors it seemed like a lot, but they were concerned about convincing a jury at trial.

    Brian Wasankari: We don’t have an eyewitness, we don’t have a murder weapon, we don’t have a confession.

    So, when the defense offered to accept a deal, the prosecutors negotiated. Eventually, Colin Dudley agreed to plead guilty to murder in the first degree for killing Kassanndra. The prosecutors brought the deal to Kassanndra’s family. They were furious.

    Colin Dudley pleads guilty
    Colin Dudley was arrested that night and was Charged with first-degree murder Colin Dudley would plead guilty and the case did not go to trial. On Nov. 14, 2022, he was sentenced to just over 26 years in prison for the murder of Kassanndra Cantrell. 

    KIRO


    But on Nov. 14, 2022, Colin Dudley formally entered his guilty plea.

    JUDGE: With regard to the charge, Murder in the First Degree, how do you plead, guilty or not guilty?

    COLIN DUDLEY: Guilty.

    He was sentenced to 26 years in prison.

    Kristi Sinclair: I have no words that would even encompass the frustration, anger, sadness, heartache.

    Kassanndra’s family and friends had wanted a trial where the full story was told. They are also upset that someone guilty of murdering a pregnant woman would only get 26 years in prison.

    Natalie Morales: Do you think the system is broken?

    Kristi Sinclair: Very broken in this case. … How is it that somebody can do what he did and not have to spend his life in prison?

    It was a sentiment Steve Ammann shared. He felt betrayed by his one-time friend and had even written a letter to the judge saying, “He should not be out at all. He won’t learn from this.”

    Colin Dudley likely will get out. And with good behavior, he could be free again as early as 2044.

    Marie Smith: He should never see the light of day again.

    Natalie Morales: Because when he gets out, he could be in his early 60s.

    Marie Smith: Yeah. … and he’s still got all that time to live.

    Kassanndra’s family wants to make sure that no one else suffers the way they say they have. They would like a law in Washington State that if someone is guilty of knowingly killing a pregnant woman, they would automatically get a life sentence.

    Rob Cantrell: No possibility of parole. You die in jail. … Until there’s any sort of resemblance of justice, I’m not letting this go.

    And while the family wages that fight, Kassanndra’s twin brother is trying to honor his sister in other ways she would have loved. 

    Natalie Morales: You did, though, finally open that dream that you had together, your own store.

    Rob Cantrell: Yes. I got a big mural of her hanging in the window and then photos throughout the store of her. It’s a living tribute to her.

    cantrell-angel.jpg
    Rob Cantrell is trying to honor his twin sister in other ways she would have loved — including a mural of Kassanndra and photos of her in the store they had once dreamed of opening together.

    CBS News


    The store is not far from Kassanndra’s grave, where he and his mom go to visit her.  

    Marie Smith: You know, say hi, keep her headstone clean. … bringing her flowers.

    Natalie Morales: Do you think what life could be like with her now if she had had the chance to live her life and be a mom?

    Marie Smith: Yeah. I think about it a lot because she had all of these plans …She had all of these sweet plans. (emotional)

    Marie says her daughter lived life to fullest, immortalized by that distinctive tattoo she had of her favorite quote.

    Marie Smith: “We don’t stop playing because we grow old. We grow old because we stop playing.” 

    Marie Smith: she always had something up her sleeve. She would spring little surprises on me … and that’s what I miss most. It’s just a happy presence.

    Kassanndra Cantrell’s family has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Colin Dudley.

    It is scheduled to go to trial in August 2023.

     


    Produced by Betsy Shuller, Paul La Rosa and Lauren Clark. Greg Fisher is the development producer. Morgan Canty is the associate producer. Doreen Schechter is the producer/editor. Joan Adelman and Marlon Disla are the editors. Patti Aronofsky is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer. 

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  • Kassanndra Cantrell disappearance: Inside the investigation

    Kassanndra Cantrell disappearance: Inside the investigation

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    Marie Smith


    Days after a young woman vanishes, a man in a distinctive hat is seen walking away from her car. Who is the man in the hat?

    On Aug. 25, 2020, Kassanndra Cantrell, a 33-year-old woman from Tacoma, Washington, disappeared. Her mother Marie Smith recalled saying goodbye to Kassanndra early that morning, but says Kassanndra didn’t return home later that day, and had stopped responding to phone calls and texts.

    Not like her

    Kassanndra Cantrell and Alexandra Mcnary

    Alexandra McNary


    According to Kassanndra’s friend, Alexandra McNary, the two had plans to meet on Aug. 26, 2020, but Kassanndra never showed up. The next morning, Kassanndra’s mother texted McNary to see if Kassanndra was with her to which Alexandra replied that she was not. Marie Smith called the police later that day.

    Where did Kassanndra go?

    Kassanndra Cantrell's car

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    Pierce County Sheriff’s Detective Franz Helmcke spoke with Kassanndra’s family and friends and scoured footage from local surveillance cameras for clues. On a neighbor’s security camera, they found video of Kassanndra’s white Mazda leaving her neighborhood on the morning of Aug. 25, the day she went missing. 

    The man in the hat

    Man in the hat surveillance video

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    On Aug. 28, 2020, police found Kassanndra’s car parked on a street in an industrial neighborhood; it was unlocked, with the keys on the center console. A light rail system operated along that same street, so investigators requested its train camera footage from August 25. One video showed a man in a dark hat walking away from Kasssanndra’s car and continuing to the nearby light rail station around 11:50 that morning. 

    Searching for clues

    cantrell-05.jpg

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    Investigators had ordered a trace on Kassanndra’s cellphone to try to identify her last known location. The phone pinged about two miles south of a tower near Puget Sound. Based on that location, they believed her phone was likely somewhere in the water near Owen Beach in Tacoma’s Point Defiance Park. The Pierce County Metro Dive Team went to the beach and formed a line and searched the area underwater. 

    An amazing find

    Kassanndra Cantrell's cellphone in Puget Sound

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    Incredibly, after a little over an hour, one of the divers spotted Kassanndra’s cellphone with its sparkly case. It was sent to a specialist to determine if any information could be recovered from it. Marie Smith, meanwhile, had combed through Kassanndra’s phone records. She noticed correspondence with an unfamiliar number with no name assigned to it. The last time that phone number appeared in Kassanndra’s phone record was the morning she disappeared.

    An added urgency to find Kassanndra

    Kassanndra Cantrell text

    Alexandra McNary


    The investigation was operating on several fronts. Investigators had also learned that at the time she went missing, Kassanndra was around 10 weeks pregnant. Kassanndra had texted her friend Alexandra McNary a picture of a positive pregnancy test, and their planned meeting on August 26 had been to attend her first ultrasound scan. 

    A secret romance

    Colin Dudley

    Sue Evans


    Alexandra McNary says Kassanndra told her the father of her future baby was an ex-boyfriend that she had been seeing again: Colin Dudley. He and Kassanndra met in 2006 during a local production of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” and dated for a few months. Dudley then began a relationship with another “Rocky Horror Picture Show” cast member, and by 2020 they were living together. 

    However, Kassanndra had told friends that she and Dudley had secretly rekindled their romance. Kassanndra had also said Dudley had previously told her he did not want kids. McNary told “48 Hours” contributor Natalie Morales that Kassanndra called her after revealing her pregnancy to Colin. “… she said, ‘well, I told him … and it went better than expected … He was calm and said not to worry about it, and that they would talk.’”

    Interviewing Colin Dudley

    Colin Dudley's house

    CBS News


    Detective Helmcke went to Colin Dudley’s house to arrange an interview and left his number. Dudley called him back and agreed to speak with him the next day. When Det. Helmcke asked about Kassanndra, Dudley said he hadn’t had contact with her in years. 

    Remember that mysterious phone number Marie Smith had found in Kassanndra’s phone records? It was the same number Dudley had called Helmcke on to set up the interview. Helmcke confronted Dudley about Kassanndra’s claims that he was the father of her baby, and Dudley denied it and any involvement in her disappearance. 

    Following the man in the hat

    The man in the hat

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    When Det. Helmcke viewed the footage from the light rail system where Kassanndra’s car had been found, something stuck out. The man walking away from her car on Aug. 25 looked similar to Colin Dudley, but was wearing a mask and a black fedora. He appeared to walk away from the station towards a nearby parking garage, so Helmcke asked the garage security team to search their video recordings for any sign of the man in the hat.

    Colin Dudley’s truck

    Colin Dudley surveilllance

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    The video from the garage did show the man in the hat walking in just after he had left the light rail station on the morning of Aug. 25, 2020. In the video, the man walked to a gray Chevy truck parked in the garage, got in, and drove out. As the truck left the garage, the license plate was visible. It was registered to Colin Dudley.

     

    The pieces come together

    cantrell-12.jpg

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    As they scanned back through the garage footage from even earlier in the day on August 25, investigators found the Chevy truck had been parked there around 8 a.m. That video showed what appeared to be Colin Dudley in a different shirt driving the truck in and then riding off on a bike. Investigators believe Dudley was putting his truck in place for when he would later drop off Kassanndra’s car.

    A planned meeting

    cantrell-13.jpg

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    Cellphone provider data revealed that Kassanndra Cantrell and Colin Dudley would often text about meeting up at his house, and that Kassanndra had texted Dudley at 8:49 a.m. the morning she went missing: “I’m a bit early, that ok?” Dudley responded, “Yep, come on down.”

     

    Investigators search Colin Dudley’s house

    cantrell-14.png

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    Investigators searched Colin Dudley’s house but didn’t find Kassanndra. They did take evidence, including his truck, a bike, and a black fedora hat. Cadaver dogs showed particular interest in the basement, especially a brown couch. But it wasn’t enough to make an arrest. Detective Helmcke told “48 Hours,” “He’s guilty of something. But … what is he guilty of?”

    A new lead

    cantrell-15.jpg

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    Once investigators were able to zero in on Colin Dudley, they got a warrant to remove his truck’s black box to collect its data and track the truck’s movements on the day of Kassanndra’s disappearance. 

    Something that caught their attention was Dudley’s movements on August 26, the day after Kassanndra was at his house. Early that morning, Dudley’s truck drove to an area near a wooded ravine and stopped for several minutes. On Sept. 22, 2020, nearly a month after Kassanndra’s disappearance, investigators rushed to that ravine, only eight miles from Dudley’s house. 

    Police data shows Colin Dudley’s movements on the morning of Aug. 26, 2020. The yellow dots represent Dudley’s vehicle driving to the location where Kassanndra Cantrell’s remains were found.

    Kassanndra Cantrell’s remains are found

    Kasssandra Cantrell found

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    In the area near where Colin Dudley’s Chevy had parked, investigators found a trash bin with a bag liner, blood and human remains. Det. Helmcke was able to identify the remains by a distinctive tattoo Marie Smith had told him Kassanndra had. It was a quote that read, “We don’t stop playing because we grow old. We grow old because we stop playing.” Kassanndra Cantrell had been found.

    Colin Dudley pleads guilty

    Colin Dudley pleads guilty

    KIRO


    Colin Dudley was arrested that night and was charged with first-degree murder. He later pleaded guilty and the case did not go to trial. 

    On Nov. 14, 2022, Dudley was sentenced to just over 26 years in prison for the murder of Kassanndra Cantrell. With good behavior, he could be out as early as 2044. 

    cantrell-hat-man

    The man in the hat

    PCSD


     Surveillance image of the man in the hat

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  • Kassanndra Cantrell murder: “48 Hours” obtains never-before-seen footage of the mysterious killer known as the “Hat Man”

    Kassanndra Cantrell murder: “48 Hours” obtains never-before-seen footage of the mysterious killer known as the “Hat Man”

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    Detective Franz Helmcke had a problem. He’d caught a new case and had very little to go on. Thirty-three-year-old Kassanndra Cantrell had disappeared from her mother’s house near Tacoma, Washington, and none of those closest to Kassanndra — her twin brother Rob, her mother Marie Smith and her closest friend Alexandra McNary — had any idea as to her whereabouts.

    Once upon a time, Kassanndra’s disappearance may have turned into a cold case, but these days digital breadcrumbs are ubiquitous. And so are cameras, as her heartbroken mother Marie pointed out: “The world is so wired, you know, with cameras. So many people have Ring cameras … so many businesses … there is just no way that somebody didn’t see something.”

    Detective Helmcke was all too aware of that, and he also knew how to tap into all the digital material that is omnipresent in our day-to-day lives. Over the course of one month in 2020, he and his fellow investigators used cellphone records, deleted texts, vehicle location data, store receipts, surveillance videos and even an underwater dragnet to find the remains of Kassanndra Cantrell and build what they felt was a strong homicide case against her ex-boyfriend Colin Dudley.

    The full story of that successful digital investigation is the subject of an all-new “48 Hours” reported by contributor Natalie Morales. “Kassanndra’s Secret,” airs Saturday, April 8, 2023 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount +.

    Helmcke and his fellow investigators were unable to identify a murder weapon, never located any eyewitnesses or obtained a confession. Still, they were able to build a compelling digital case that seemingly tracked Dudley’s every move as he tried to cover up his crime.

    Kassanndra Cantrell's car
    A neighbor’s security camera captured Kassanndra Cantrell’s white Mazda leaving her neighborhood on the morning of Aug. 25, 2020, the day she went missing. 

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    The trail of evidence began the very day Kassanndra was reported missing. Helmcke canvassed her neighborhood and spotted a neighbor’s security camera. That camera provided the first clue — a quick video clip of Kassanndra’s white Mazda driving away from her mother’s house at 8:25 a.m. on August 25, 2020. There was no video of the car returning.

    Helmcke also ordered an emergency trace put on Kassanndra’s cellphone to learn its last known location. It showed that her phone had last pinged about two miles south of a cell tower on an island in the Puget Sound.

    “One of the first things I did was just get on Google Earth and strike an arc from that tower to see where it lands,” Helmcke told Morales. “It showed it landing … around this shoreline at Owen Beach [in] Point Defiance Park.”

    Days later, the Pierce County Metro Dive Team led by Det. Sgt. Brent Van Dyke assembled at Owen Beach on a busy summer day. The Puget Sound is nearly 100 miles long but at least they knew Kassanndra’s cellphone had likely been tossed in the water from Owen Beach.

    Kassanndra Cantrell's cell phone in Puget Sound
    Kassanndra’s cellphone was found in the Puget Sound after a little more than an hour when a member of the Pierce County Metro Dive Team spotted the sparkle from Kassanndra’s cellphone case. 

    Pierce County Sheriff’s Department


    Thanks to a low tide and some ingenious guesswork, the dive team found Kassanndra’s cellphone in the water after a little more than an hour when one member of the team spotted the sparkle from Kassanndra’s phone case. The phone was sent to a specialist to see if any information could be recovered.

    But even without that information, Det. Ryan Salmon, the cellphone forensics specialist for the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department, used phone company records to see when and where Kassandra and Dudley interacted. And they later found texts from Dudley’s phone that revealed she was meeting her old boyfriend at his house on the morning she disappeared.

    “She said, ‘I’m a bit early, is that okay?’” said Det. Salmon. 

    “And he says?” asked Morales.

    “He says, ‘yup, come on down.’” And those two messages were both deleted out of his phone,” Salmon replied.

    “And so, the two phones are then pinpointed in that same location at the house for a couple of hours?” asked Morales.

    “Right,” the detective said.

    Detectives were in possession of Dudley’s phone at that point and could see that he had deleted those two texts. They also determined that Kassanndra and Dudley had been in regular contact in the months leading to her disappearance. When asked about her, Dudley told Helmcke that he had not spoken to Kassanndra in years.

    Knowing Dudley was lying to him, the detective began looking closely at his movements. Dudley said he had visited a Costco on the morning of Kassanndra’s disappearance, so Helmcke subpoenaed store receipts and found that Dudley had bought a box of heavy-duty trash bags around 7 a.m. The store provided video of Dudley buying those bags.

    The investigation was moving ahead on several fronts. Police had located Kassanndra’s white Mazda with the keys inside on a street near downtown Tacoma. The location was near the city’s light rail system, so Helmcke asked security personnel there if they could find any video of the car. Their cameras showed a heavyset man in a black fedora walking away from Kassanndra’s car around the day she disappeared.

    The man in the hat
     Surveillance image of the man in the hat

    PCSD


    Helmcke had interviewed Dudley in person and felt certain from the man’s gait and build that he was looking at was Colin Dudley. He had also been told that Dudley often wore a fedora and liked to be called “Hat” or “Hat Man.”

    Helmcke watched as cameras caught the man in the hat going into the Tacoma Dome Station parking garage around 11:40 a.m. that morning. He is then seen on the garage cameras getting into a truck and driving away. In one shot, the truck’s license plate is visible, and investigators determined it belonged to Dudley. He and the “Hat Man” were one and the same.

    Dudley apparently was carrying Kassanndra’s cellphone with him as he left the garage because her phone records show it moving to Owen Beach where investigators believe Dudley threw it into the Puget Sound around 12:45 p.m. on August 25.

    At that point, investigators still did not know where Kassanndra’s body was located so they raided Dudley’s house. They seized several items including a black fedora and Dudley’s Chevy Colorado truck. But, after providing his fingerprints and DNA, Dudley was free to go.

     “Why can’t you arrest him?” Morales asked Helmcke.  

    “Well … he’s guilty of something. But what is he guilty of?” he replied.

    That’s when Helmcke leaned on digital forensics yet again. He said he knew that nearly all modern cars and trucks have computers within them that contain reams of information that can be extracted. Detectives pulled the so-called black box from Dudley’s Chevy truck and sent it out to be analyzed.

    A company that specializes in extracting that data sent it back to Helmcke on a flash drive. When downloaded, the data showed that Dudley’s truck drove very early in the morning of August 26 — the day after Kassanndra visited his house — to a wooded ravine. Investigators rushed to the scene where they found Kassanndra’s remains in and around a garbage can.

    In November 2022, Colin Dudley pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and was sentenced to 26 years in prison. 

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  • The Mysterious Death of Tiffiney Crawford

    The Mysterious Death of Tiffiney Crawford

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    The Mysterious Death of Tiffiney Crawford – CBS News


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    A young mother found dead in her car. Could she have shot herself twice? “48 Hours” contributor David Begnaud reports.

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  • Husband’s 911 call key in reaching verdict in Alabama mom’s murder, says juror

    Husband’s 911 call key in reaching verdict in Alabama mom’s murder, says juror

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    It was just after 11 p.m. on May 2, 2017, when then-37-year-old Jason Crawford called 911 from right outside his home in Cullman, Alabama, about 50 miles north of Birmingham.

    911 DISPATCHER: 911, where is your emergency?

    JASON CRAWFORD: Uh, my wife is shot. I need someone out here, please

    911 DISPATCHER: Sir, is she breathing?

    JASON CRAWFORD: I don’t know … I’m trying to pick her— lift her up so I can see.

    Jason remembers that night vividly.

    Jason Crawford: It felt like it was taking longer and longer for anybody to get there … And eventually, I saw some headlights.

    Body camera footage shows what Cullman County Sheriff’s deputies found when they first got to the scene.

    DEPUTY: EMS is on their way, OK?

    Jason’s wife, 32-year-old Tiffiney Crawford, was slumped over in the driver’s seat of her own van. There was a pink revolver in her left hand, which Jason says she kept in the driver’s side door of her vehicle for protection. When one of the sheriff’s deputies tried to check Tiffiney for a pulse, the gun fell out of her hand.

    DEPUTY: What happened tonight?

    JASON CRAWFORD: Uh, I—We were arguing. … I gave her—her stuff, so she can go. I didn’t let her in the house. … And the last thing I remember, she said she loved me, and I was going in the house, and I heard a shot, a scream and then another shot.

    crawford-bodycam4.jpg
    Tiffiney Crawford had two gunshot wounds to her head — one shot was to the left side of her jaw and the other was to her left temple. At least one sheriff’s deputy at the scene believed she had taken her own life. The paramedics tried to revive her, but it was too late. “And they came over and told me that she was dead,” her husband Jason Crawford told “48 Hours.” “It just made me feel sick in my stomach.”

    Cullman County District Attorney’s Office


    Tiffiney had been shot twice in the head. Paramedics tried to revive her

    Jason Crawford: And I was thinking that maybe there’s a chance she’s still alive.

    —but it was too late.

    Jason Crawford: And they come over and told me that she was dead … It just made me feel sick in my stomach.

    To at least one of the deputies on the scene that night, it appeared pretty clear that this was a suicide.

    DEPUTY: There’s nothing here so far that says anything to me other than a suicide.

    And it wasn’t long before deputies realized who Jason Crawford was — the son of Ronda Crawford, who works as an office manager at the sheriff’s office.

    DEPUTY: You know it’s Ronda’s daughter-in-law.

    Cullman County Sheriff Matt Gentry soon got word.

    Sheriff Matt Gentry: The chief deputy called me … and said, ‘Hey … it appears that … Ronda’s daughter-in-law … had shot herself.” … I said, “I’ll go out there and check on them.”

    By the time the sheriff got there, Ronda Crawford was already on scene. It was Ronda – Jason’s mother – who called Tiffiney’s mom, Cheryl McGucken to tell her what happened.

    Cheryl McGucken: I felt like I was kind of frozen in time in that moment. … And I said, “Is Jason there? Can I talk to him?” And he was already speaking with the police.

    Cheryl McGucken: And so, um, I got off the phone and … I tried to figure out what my next step was (cries).

    Cheryl’s thoughts soon turned to Tiffiney and Jason’s children. They shared a 5-year-old son and a 4-year-old daughter. Tiffiney was also stepmom to Jason’s then-14-year-old son, Logan. All the kids were inside the house that night; the two youngest were asleep. For Cheryl, life really hasn’t been the same since then.

    David Begnaud | “48 Hours” contributor: What are the things that you miss about her?

    Cheryl McGucken: You know, the things I miss about her is her spontaneity. … Tiffiney was an individual that had a huge heart, and she just wanted to engulf everyone around her and help them find joy.

    That is why Cheryl says Tiffiney devoted much of her spare time to a support group that she had started on Facebook called “Mothers Helping Mothers.” 

    TIFFINEY CRAWFORD VIDEO: We’re there to laugh with each other, to love each other, and to just build you up in everyday motherhood.

    crawford-09.jpg
    “She saw a vision that there were … other mothers … that needed somebody to talk to,” Cheryl McGucken said of the “Mothers Helping Mothers”   Facebook group. “And that group took off like a wildfire and spread all over the country.” At the time of Tiffiney’s death, the group had about 9,000 members.

    Tiffiney Crawford/Facebook


    Cheryl McGucken: She saw a vision that there were … other mothers … that needed somebody to talk to … And that group took off like a wildfire and spread all over the country.

    Tiffiney and Jason had been married a little more than six years when she died.

    David Begnaud: What did you think of Tiffiney when you first met her?

    Jason Crawford: I thought she was striking and beautiful. She was outgoing. A lot of things I wasn’t, you know? So, it was more of, like, I guess opposites attract kind of thing.

    When they started dating, Jason had been divorced for several years. His first wife, he says, had cheated on him. Tiffiney was in a relationship at the time — married, in fact. It wasn’t exactly a fairytale beginning from the outside looking in, but Jason says, for the two of them, it was.

    Jason Crawford: It was like fireworks from — in the beginning.

    Tiffiney eventually got divorced, and that is when she and Jason married and started their family. Just what led up to her death on that night in May 2017 would be up to the investigators to find out. Sheriff Gentry remembers a conversation he had on the scene with the coroner.

    Sheriff Matt Gentry: He says, it appears to be a suicide. He said the only weird thing is there’s two shots.

    David Begnaud: What do you recall about what you thought in that moment?

    Sheriff Matt Gentry: Well, that’s weird. It’s strange. … Now, has that happened before? Yes. But it’s not normal.

    One of the shots was to her left jaw area, the other was to her left temple.

    Sheriff Matt Gentry: I said because of his mother’s connection to our office, for transparency, there has to be an autopsy done.

    Sheriff Gentry says his investigators went on to process the scene that night.

    Sheriff Matt Gentry: We investigate every suicide like a homicide … So, the van was searched. Evidence that was needed to be was seized.

    But the next morning, Sheriff Gentry decided to turn the case over to the Alabama State Bureau of Investigation.

    Sheriff Matt Gentry: I could have told our guys to work it. … But because of the potential for conflict … I want full transparency.

    Joe Parrish is the state agent who got the case.

    David Begnaud: What’s the first thing you do?

    Joe Parrish: I went to the District Attorney’s Office … And asked him about the van.

    Parrish wanted to get his hands on that van in which Tiffiney was shot so he got a search warrant for it, but there was just one problem: the van had been released to the Crawford family, and by the time Parrish got to it — less than 24 hours after Tiffiney died — it had already been cleaned by Jason’s family members. The sheriff’s office had given them the go ahead.

    Crawford van
    The first thing SBI investigator Joe Parrish did was obtain a search warrant for Tiffiney’s van. But there was a problem: the sheriff’s office released the van to the Crawford family the night before. By the time Parrish got to it — less than 24 hours after Tiffiney died – it had already been cleaned by Jason’s family members. They had received permission from the sheriff’s office.

    Cullman County Court Clerk


    Jason Crawford: I didn’t want the kids to see anything. I was worried about them when they woke up in the morning.

    David Begnaud: What did you make of that, that the van had been cleaned?

    Joe Parrish: It was odd that they would clean it up that quick after something like that.

    But Sheriff Gentry defends his decision to release the van.

    Sheriff Matt Gentry: There was nothing of evidentiary value to the van. … They processed it, took, uh, pictures. They did everything they normally would do on a crime scene, uh, that night.

    David Begnaud: Right. But if you’re treating it like a homicide, I’m not turning the van over to the family.

    Sheriff Matt Gentry: Sure. So — so and I — I mean, I completely understand. So, it was treated — we worked it like a homicide, but it was treated like a suicide. … Every bit of evidence that was needed was taken.

    But as it turns out, that van would be significant. And so would what Jason and Tiffiney were arguing about right before she died.

    THE AFFAIR

    Jason Crawford says that in the months leading up to his wife Tiffiney’s death, he noticed a change in her.

    Jason Crawford: Yeah— I could tell something was going on because she was getting more distant…

    Jason Crawford: She had been drinking a lot … too … two or three bottles a week sometimes.

    David Begnaud: So, you had a feeling something was up?

    Jason Crawford: Yes.

    Tiffiney Crawford
    Tiffiney Crawford had been shot once to the left side of her chin and a second time to her left temple. The gun was found in her left hand, but Tiffiney was right-handed. Two shots to the head are rare in suicide attempts says Joe Parrish, but two shots using a nondominant hand to pull the trigger seemed nearly impossible to the longtime investigator.

    Tiffiney Crawford/Facebook


    And he says his suspicions were confirmed the night Tiffiney died. Just hours before she got home, Jason found messages on their computer suggesting that she was having an affair.

    Jason Crawford: I started calling her, you know, just trying to see if she would tell me anything. And… She’s like … I don’t know what you’re talking about, denying it. And I was like, “OK, well, I think you need to get home.”

    Tiffiney’s mom, Cheryl, says she knew about the affair.

    Cheryl McGucken: She called to let me know she was on her way home. And that, um, Jason and her were going to have to have a discussion about their problems …

    David Begnaud: Did she sound worried?

    Cheryl McGucken: She did not sound worried. She sounded kind of hyper and, you know, anxious. … I just said, “Well, I love you. Be careful.”

    Tiffiney’s friend, Lyndsy Luke, says she also knew about the affair. Lyndsy says Tiffiney told her she was making plans to leave Jason, and that she got a job at a local grocery store to save up money for a new life on her own.

    Lyndsy Luke: She knew what she needed to leave him and how she was so close.

    David Begnaud: Was Tiffiney afraid that Jason was going to find out about the affair?

    Lyndsy Luke: Yes. And she didn’t want him to because she didn’t want to hurt him.

    But that night, when he did find out, Jason says he was hurt and angry. This was the second time a wife had cheated on him. When Tiffiney got home, he says that’s when he confronted her, and refused to let her go inside.

    Jason Crawford: I kept telling her she’s not staying the night. … She asked me, “why can’t I stay?” I was like … “you’ve destroyed the sanctity of our marriage.”

    David Begnaud: You were really angry.

    Jason Crawford: Uh, yeah, I was angry, but I was controlled anger.

    Jason claims they argued for more than an hour, and when he remained insistent that Tiffiney was not going inside, he says she asked him to go and get her work clothes.

    Jason Crawford: I went in and grabbed some clothes and threw them to her. And then … I told her I’m done talking. Um, so, I went in the house. And as soon as I went in the house … I heard a shot, her scream, and then another shot.

    David Begnaud: And then you did what?

    Jason Crawford: Went right back outside.

    David Begnaud: And what position was the door in — the car door?

    Jason Crawford: The car door. It was pulled to or closed.

    Jason says that’s when he called 911. But in that call and the police body camera footage from that night, Jason never mentioned an affair.

    JASON CRAWFORD (dash cam video): Last thing I remember, she said she loved me …

    Lead investigator Joe Parrish says authorities didn’t learn about the affair until the next day. Also, when Parrish listened back to that 911 call, there was more that caught his ear.

    Joe Parrish: It was very cold … It didn’t sound like somebody that was worried about his wife.

    911 DISPATCHER: I’m gonna need some more information from you …

    And there was one question that the 911 dispatcher kept asking Jason that he wouldn’t answer.

    911 DISPATCHER: Who shot her in the head?

    Joe Parrish: Who shot your wife? … He was avoiding the question.

    David Begnaud: I would like to play the 911 call for you.

    Jason Crawford: OK.

    911 DISPATCHER: 911, EMS and Fire, where is your emergency?

    JASON CRAWFORD: Uh, my wife is shot.

    David Begnaud: You seem cool as a cucumber.

    Jason Crawford: Well, maybe that’s just the way my tone of voice is.

    911 DISPATCHER: She’s been shot? Who’s she been shot by?

    JASON CRAWFORD: Please send an ambulance now, please.

    Jason Crawford
    “Did you kill your wife?” “48 Hours” contributor David Begnaud asked Jason Crawford in his only interview on the case. “No,” Crawford replied.

    CBS News


    David Begnaud: She asked you who’s she been shot by. And you didn’t respond. Why not?

    Jason Crawford: Yeah. I just felt like if I said it into existence, it’d be true.

    JASON CRAWFORD: She’s been shot in the head.

    911 DISPATCHER: Did she shoot herself in the head?

    David Begnaud: This lady gave you an opportunity to say yes.

    Jason Crawford: Yeah.

    David Begnaud: And you didn’t respond?

    Jason Crawford: Well, I don’t know how many more times I can tell you. … I just froze in thought.

    David Begnaud: Do you understand how somebody listens to that and says, yeah, ’cause he did it?

    Jason Crawford: Yeah. I can understand that.

    And that’s exactly what Joe Parrish thought. A week after Tiffiney died, and with her autopsy results still pending, Parrish decided to bring Jason in for questioning.

    During that interview, Jason spoke in detail about discovering the affair and the argument that he had with Tiffiney:

    JASON CRAWFORD: I said, “You’ve ruined our home.” I was like, “You’re no longer a part of this …”

    Jason Crawford questioned
    A week after Tiffiney died, and with her autopsy still pending, Joe Parrish brought Jason Crawford in for questioning.  For the first time, Crawford spoke in detail about a discovery he made the night his wife died. He told Parrish that Tiffiney had been having an affair, and that’s what they were arguing about.

    Robert Tuten’s Office


    And he also answered a question that Parrish believed was key:

    AGENT JOE PARRISH: Was she left or right-handed?

    JASON CRAWFORD: She’s right-handed.

    AGENT JOE PARRISH: Right-handed.

    JASON CRAWFORD: Yeah.

    Tiffiney was right-handed, but the gun had been found in her left hand.

    David Begnaud: How often, in your experience, do suicides happen where the individual uses their non-dominant hand?

    Joe Parrish: I’ve never seen it personally.

    Jason Crawford: It’s not like I know she’s like so predominantly right-handed that she couldn’t use her left hand.

    But why would Tiffiney, a woman who devoted so much time to helping others, suddenly kill herself?

    Lyndsy Luke: There was nothing suicidal about her.

    Even Jason finds it hard to explain.

    David Begnaud: Had she ever spoke about wanting to kill herself?

    Jason Crawford: Not that I know. Not to me.

    After Parrish interviewed Jason, he was free to go. But about a week later, he was brought back in for questioning —- this time by Parrish’s colleague. Jason agreed to take a polygraph, and investigators told him he failed.

    POLYGRAPH EXAMINER: Your reactions were off the chain. OK? … You’re saying that there’s no way that you shot your wife?

    JASON CRAWFORD: Correct.

    It wasn’t long before things turned contentious.

    INVESTIGATOR: I don’t want to hear that — that, “I didn’t shoot my wife …” … Because I know that’s a f****** lie.

    JASON CRAWFORD: I can get up and leave because I’m not under arrest, right?

    INVESTIGATOR: Huh! You listen to me, huh! … (Jason walks out the door) Walk out that f****** door.

    That interview also ended with no arrest. Because of a backlog, it would take nearly a year to get the missing piece of the puzzle: those autopsy results. You see, the manner of death was ruled a homicide, and that is when the decision was made to present the case to a grand jury. Jeff Roberts was the Cullman County Assistant District Attorney at the time.

    Jeff Roberts: I have no doubt in my mind he’s guilty at all. … I think the forensics tipped the case.

    But would a grand jury indict Jason? Even Tiffiney’s mother had her doubts.

    Cheryl McGucken: Even though I didn’t want to believe it was a suicide, naturally, I wouldn’t want to believe my son-in-law killed her either.

    TIFFINEY’S DEATH RULED A HOMICIDE

    Cheryl McGucken: It’s a sad situation, whether on one side you believe somebody committed suicide or somebody committed murder. … Neither one of those scenarios work in my mind.

    Tiffiney Crawford and Cheryl McGucken
    When Cheryl McGucken learned about her daughter’s death, she said, “I felt like I was kind of frozen in time.” She said of her daughter, “Tiffiney was an individual that had a huge heart, and she just wanted to engulf everyone around her and help them find joy.”

    Cheryl McGucken


    In the year following her daughter Tiffiney’s death, Cheryl McGucken says she had a hard time believing that her daughter could have killed herself — but she also couldn’t imagine that her son-in-law, Jason, would’ve pulled the trigger.

    David Begnaud: Did you ever call the investigators and say, I want to know every bit of details you have? I want to know all the details.

    Cheryl McGucken: No.

    David Begnaud: Why not?

    Cheryl McGucken: I suppose I didn’t want to, um, let that cloud, my time with my grandkids and my relationship with Jason and his family —

    Jason Crawford: My family and friends … they never questioned that I wouldn’t kill my wife.

    Jason did have a lot of support, but not from the investigators or then-Cullman County Assistant District Attorney Jeff Roberts and his legal assistant Debra Ball.

    Debra Ball: She was too out there to help other people. … She’s not gonna kill herself.

    Jeff Roberts: There’s no way that that’s what happened.

    Once Roberts had received word that the medical examiner had ruled Tiffiney’s death a homicide, he decided, along with lead investigator Joe Parrish, to seek an indictment against Jason.

    Jeff Roberts: I couldn’t figure out who else did it. He’s the only one who had a motive to do it, for one thing.

    Agent Joe Parrish: The grand jury came back with an indictment for murder for Jason Crawford.

    Cheryl McGucken: Jason called me and told me. … It was very shocking. And very confusing.

    Jason Crawford arrest photo
    On May 21, 2018, just over a year after Tiffiney’s death, Jason Crawford surrendered at the Cullman County Sheriff’s Office. He was only in custody for 30 minutes before he was released on bond.

    Cullman County Sheriff’s Office


    On May 21, 2018, just over a year after Tiffiney died, Jason surrendered.

    Joe Parrish: Walked in, I told him he was under arrest. He didn’t seem to be worried. 

    David Begnaud: He didn’t seem to be worried?

    Joe Parrish: No.

    Jason wasn’t in custody for very long. In fact, he was released on bond and Robert Tuten and Nickolas Heatherly became his defense attorneys.

    Robert Tuten: We don’t believe Jason is guilty of this at all. … There’s no evidence … They did not see blood or anything on him. They found nothing that would indicate he had, had fired a, a firearm recently.

    But the night of the shooting Jason was never tested for gunshot residue, and his house was never searched for bloody clothing. Still, Tuten and Heatherly say they believe Jason, who says he was inside the house when the gunshots rang out.

    Robert Tuten: His oldest son … heard his father come back in the house right before the first gunshot.

    And about that polygraph test that Jason was said to have failed?

    Robert Tuten: Police investigators use those as an investigative tool. If they think somebody is guilty, they tell them that they have failed the polygraph and insist they tell / what really happened.

    David Begnaud: They gave you a lie detector test and you failed it.

    Jason Crawford: Hmm, yeah. … They can make those read how they want to.

    Jason’s defense team also downplayed that 911 call — the one in which Investigator Parrish noticed Jason sounded calm, even evasive.

    Robert Tuten: If someone’s never been in a high-pressure situation like that where they’ve just been shocked by what they’re seeing, they probably would not understand how that affects somebody.

    Jason Crawford: It just felt like I was outside my body not knowing what was going on.

    But the prosecution was confident that Jason was guilty. Dr. Valerie Green was confident, too. She is the medical examiner who conducted Tiffiney’s autopsy.

    David Begnaud: Do you remember saying … to yourself … “I got a feeling there’s more to this story”?

    Dr. Valerie Green: Oh, yes, definitely. … I think the thing that made me think that there could be something else going on with this case is … that gunshot wound on the left side of Ms. Crawford’s head.

    Dr. Green says that based on the absence of gunpowder particles and abrasion around the wound to Tiffiney’s left temple, she concluded that the shot had to have been fired from at least 10 inches away.

    Dr. Valerie Green: That’s indicating that, you know, she’s holding her arm outward beyond 10 inches and trying to shoot herself. … not saying … that it’s impossible. But it’s not likely.

    It is especially unlikely, says Dr. Green, because Jason reported that he found Tiffiney in the driver’s seat of her own van with the gun in her left hand and the car door closed.

    DEPUTY: Where’s the gun, sir?

    JASON CRAWFORD: It’s right here in her hand.

    Dr. Valerie Green: That was concerning to me because I mean … For you to be able to hold up a gun and shoot yourself in the head … it would be difficult to do, and that’s such a small space.

    That’s not all, says Dr Green. Neither of Tiffiney’s injuries were contact wounds.

    David Begnaud: She didn’t have a contact wound here and she didn’t have a contact wound here.

    Jason Crawford: Correct.

    David Begnaud: Most suicides involve the barrel, or the tip of the gun being placed on the skin.

    Jason Crawford: Yeah. And you said most, not all.

    But there was something else Dr. Green noticed, specifically about that van.

    Crawford van door
    “I remember looking at pictures of the driver’s side door,” Dr. Green told “48 Hours. “And I didn’t see any blood on that door. I didn’t see any blood on the glass.” This led Dr. Green to believe that the door was not closed when Tiffiney was shot. “And I think that that door is open because he was standing there,” Green said.

    Cullman County Court Clerk


    Dr. Valerie Green: I remember looking at pictures of the driver’s side door … And I didn’t see any blood on that door. I didn’t see any blood on the glass or the window. I didn’t see anything even low on the door. … That makes me think that the door was not closed. … And I think that that door is open because he was standing there.

    Despite the autopsy report, and the fact that a grand jury had indicted Jason, Tiffiney’s mom continued to support him.

    Cheryl McGucken: I never changed how I felt towards Jason. I mean, what purpose would that serve? You know, he’s also somebody’s child. And he’s the remaining parent to my grandchildren.

    More than four years would pass before the case ever went to trial. During that time, the defense would retain their own medical examiner—the former chief medical examiner for the state of Alabama — and he had a drastically different opinion than Dr. Green.

    Dr. James Lauridson: I believe it’s a suicide.

    THE TRIAL OF JASON CRAWFORD

    In November 2022, more than five years after Tiffiney Crawford died, her husband, Jason Crawford, went on trial for her murder. Prosecutor Jeff Roberts was confident in his case, but he knew there would be challenges.

    Jeff Roberts: The fact that … it was considered by the officers on the scene apparently consistent with suicide, I thought this is going to be really tough to overcome.

    Jason’s defense attorneys Robert Tuten and Nickolas Heatherly also felt that they had their work cut out for them.

    Robert Tuten: Simply because there’s no way to really find a definitive answer for exactly what happened. 

    “48 Hours” was only allowed to film the trial from outside the courtroom, through a windowed door. Tiffiney’s mother, Cheryl, who said she didn’t want to hear the details surrounding her daughter’s death, chose not to attend the trial.

    Cheryl McGucken: I knew that there would be things said on both sides that I … didn’t want to have in my head.

    But she did go on day one—solely to testify. She was the prosecutor’s first witness.

    Cheryl McGucken: He assumed that I was on their side

    Instead, Cheryl says she told the jury how she really felt about Jason.

    CHERYL MCGUCKEN: I’ve never had any issues with Jason.

    Megan Brock was a juror on the case.

    Megan Brock: She was telling everybody, me and Jason have a great relationship. … I was, like, “really?”

    David Begnaud: You thought it was weird that his mother-in-law—might still be supporting him—as he’s on trial for murder?

    Megan Brock: Mm-hmm. Yup.

    Jason and Tiffiney Crawford
    Before her death, Tiffiney and Jason had been married for more than six years. But when they first started dating, it wasn’t exactly a fairy-tale beginning. Jason had already been divorced for several years after he says his first wife cheated on him. Tiffiney was married at the time. 

    Amber N. West


    Undeterred, the prosecution moved on with what they felt was evidence of Jason’s alleged motive: anger over his wife’s affair. A friend of Tiffiney’s testified that Jason called her after learning that Tiffiney had been cheating on him, and that he said, “He couldn’t go through this again,” referencing the fact that his first wife had also had an affair. Jason claims he didn’t say that.

    David Begnaud: His first wife cheated on him. Tiffiney cheated on him. Isn’t it plausible for somebody on the jury to think, hey, look, the guy snapped … so he killed her.

    Robert Tuten: I don’t think that happened at all. He didn’t snap over his first wife. … They remained friends even to this day.

    Jason’s 911 call was also played for the jury, and they saw some of that police body camera footage, too.

    The prosecution also called DNA analyst Angela Fletcher, who examined swabs taken from Tiffiney’s gun. She testified she couldn’t say for sure whether there was any female DNA on the gun because there was only a trace amount of DNA detected. But she was certain that both the grip and the trigger contained male DNA.

    David Begnaud: Is it Jason Crawford?

    Angela Fletcher: No. The profile was so limited that I was unable to do any type of comparisons.

    Jason Crawford: There are other people that have touched that gun that were males. My dad gave her the gun, so his DNA may be on it. … Her brother also shot it.

    With so little DNA detected, the prosecution argued that Jason must have wiped the gun and then planted it in Tiffiney’s hand.

    Robert Tuten: There’s no proof. There’s no evidence of it at all, no.

    Jeff Roberts: Her DNA would have had to be on that gun if she did it herself.

    But perhaps the most damaging testimony against Jason came from Medical Examiner Dr. Valerie Green. She told the jury how she believes the gunshot wound to Tiffiney’s temple was fired from more than 10 inches away.

    Dr. Green explained that based on the absence of gunpowder particles and abrasions around the left temple wound, she concluded that the shot was fired from at least 10 inches away. “That’s indicating that … she’s holding her arm outward beyond 10 inches and trying to shoot herself,” Dr. Green said. And she believed that to be unlikely, especially because Jason Crawford reported that he found Tiffiney in the driver’s seat of her own van with the gun in her left hand and the car door closed.

    Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences


    Jeff Roberts: Which is way more consistent with him standing outside the car, shooting her than … her trying to hold a gun, you know, over 10 inches away.

    But the defense showed the jury a pre-recorded deposition with their own medical examiner, Dr. James Lauridson.

    DR. JAMES LAURIDSON: I believe that — that Mrs. Crawford shot herself first in the left side of the face and then shot herself in the left side of the head.

    Dr. James Lauridson
    The defense showed the jury a pre-recorded deposition with the former chief medical examiner of Alabama, Dr. James Lauridson. “I believe that … Mrs. Crawford shot herself first in the left side of the face and then shot herself in the left side of the head,” Dr. Lauridson said. He also testified that there was no way to tell how far away the gun was when the shot to Tiffiney’s temple was fired because her hair was in the way.

    Robert Tuten’s Office


    Dr. Lauridson also testified there is no way to tell how far away the gun was when that shot to Tiffiney’s temple was fired — because her hair was in the way.

    Dr. Valerie Green: I do realize that scalp hair can filter out gunpowder particles … but that was taken into consideration. … I would expect more abrasions to have been able to filter though her hair.

    The defense also argued that Tiffiney had been struggling emotionally. She had started seeing a counselor just one day before she died. And friends of Tiffiney testified that she had been drinking excessively, and that she was upset because the man with whom she was having an affair had recently broken up with her.

    Robert Tuten: He told her he didn’t want to have anything else to do with her.

    Robert Tuten: Basically, her whole life is falling apart, and I think she just gave up.

    Tiffiney Crawford's journal
    Tiffiney’s journal was also entered into evidence and portions of it were read out loud to the jury. In an entry dated on May 2, 2017 – the day she died – she wrote, “I’m struggling with figuring out what to do with myself.”

    Cullman County Court Clerk


    Tiffiney’s journal was also entered into evidence. And in an entry dated the day she died, she wrote that she was “…struggling with figuring out what to do with herself” and that she was “… trying to avoid breaking down.”

    David Begnaud: Isn’t it possible that she was having thoughts of suicide?

    Jeff Roberts: I would say no. … She had started seeing a counselor. That’s somebody who was looking forward in life.

    Jason’s son, Logan, also took the stand for the defense. He testified that he heard his father inside the house when the gunshots went off that night. But the prosecution questions his memory.

    Jeff Roberts: When he keeps hearing the same story, his stories will start matching up somewhat like all 14-year-olds would.

    Nickolas Heatherly: His story never changed. He was interviewed by law enforcement, and it stayed consistent.

    Jason Crawford trial
    On the last day of the trial, Jason Crawford took the stand. He told the jury that he loved Tiffiney and denied killing her. 

    CBS News


    As the trial was drawing to a close, the defense made a bold decision. They called Jason to the stand. He testified that he loved Tiffiney and denied killing her, but both the prosecution and the defense acknowledge there was a point where he lost his cool.

    Robert Tuten: He argued a little bit with the prosecutor.

    Jeff Roberts: The person on the stand was the person that you could easily see doing this.

    Jason also testified that he called Tiffiney a degrading name that night she died.

    David Begnaud: You said to the jury, I was trying as best I could to make her hurt inside as much as I was hurting.

    Jason Crawford: Mm-hmm. Yeah. … I was just basically talking down to her … like she was not human. … I feel sorry … because I feel like maybe that contributed to what pushed her to — over the edge to do that.

    Even though Jason’s testimony likely did him no favors, there was still no direct physical evidence pointing towards his guilt.

    Robert Tuten: There’s no evidence that Jason fired the gun.

    And after four days of testimony, the case went to the jury.

    Megan Brock: I said, “Oh, God, here we go. … I don’t know if this man did it or not.”

    HOW THE JURY REACHED A VERDICT

    It was Nov. 18, 2022, and Jason Crawford’s fate was now in the hands of a jury. Behind closed doors, Megan Brock says she and several fellow jurors were on the fence about his guilt.

    Megan Brock: And I was, like, “So, we’re gonna sit here for the next, however long it takes?”

    Cheryl McGucken: My stomach was in knots.

    Cheryl McGucken admits she was nervous for Jason and his family.

    Cheryl McGucken: You know, this is my son-in-law.

    After several hours deliberating, the jury requested access to that body camera footage. Then they asked for the 911 recording.

    JASON CRAWFORD (to 911): …My wife is shot. I need someone out here, please.

    About 30 minutes later, they announced they had reached a decision. Cheryl was in the courtroom, only for the second time.

    David Begnaud: And who were you with for the verdict?

    Cheryl McGucken: I was sitting with my husband right behind Jason’s parents and the rest of his family.

    As for the verdict, this is how Megan says the jury came to their decision.

    Megan Brock: When we listened to that 911 call again, that was it.

    David Begnaud: So, the 911 call sealed the deal?

    Megan Brock: That was it.

    David Begnaud: Really.

    Megan Brock: The … operator, she keeps asking him, you know, “who shot her?” Finally, she was, like, OK, well, where is the gun at? And he said, laying beside her. … And we were like, like, wait what?

    911 DISPATCHER: Where is the gun at?

    JASON CRAWFORD: It’s laying beside her.

    Megan Brock: He clearly said “the gun is laying beside her” … When in fact, the body cam footages showed her holding the gun, barely, but holding the gun.

    David Begnaud: The gun wasn’t laying beside her.

    Jason Crawford: It was beside her because it’s on her side, in her hand.

    David Begnaud: They found the gun in her hand?

    Jason Crawford: Yes.

    David Begnaud: You understand the difference between in her hand and laying beside her?

    Jason Crawford: To some people, yes. Like, beside her, it’s beside. Like laying on her — it’s beside her. … I just chose the wrong words to say.

    But the jury did not see it that way.

    Megan Brock: I said, “Oh f***. He’s guilty.” Everybody said the same thing. They were like, “he’s guilty.”

    Jason Crawford verdict
    Thirty minutes after the jury listened to Jason Crawford’s 911 call, they went back into the courtroom and delivered a guilty verdict.

    CBS News


    David Begnaud: The verdict was guilty.

    Jason Crawford: Yes. … It just felt like it shouldn’t be happening … it was unbelievable. So, I was just stunned.

    Cheryl McGucken: You know, I had a friend that said … “hallelujah.” And that really bothered me. Because that wasn’t anything to cheer about. … There’s no justice here. Everybody loses.

    David Begnaud: You are a grandmother.

    Cheryl McGucken: Mm-Hmm.

    David Begnaud: And there are two kids left behind who had nothing to do with this.

    Cheryl McGucken: Right. Exactly.

    David Begnaud: But at the end of the day, this man was put on trial.

    Cheryl McGucken: Mm-hmm.

    David Begnaud: The evidence was heard.

    Cheryl McGucken: Mm-hmm.

    David Begnaud: He was convicted.

    Cheryl McGucken: Mm-hmm.

    David Begnaud: So, he is a killer in the eyes of the law.

    Cheryl McGucken: You know, they’re going to do an appeal. I don’t want to misspeak on this at all.

    David Begnaud: But when you say they’re doing the appeal, what do you mean? Are you protecting him?

    Cheryl McGucken: I — I don’t have any reason to protect him, um, but I’m going to let things play out as they will.

    Following this interview, Begnaud asked Cheryl if she had any interest in seeing the evidence.

    David Begnaud: You said you did. You asked if we could show it to you. We provided you with what was in the public record.

    Cheryl McGucken: Yeah.

    David Begnaud: What do you now believe?

    Cheryl McGucken: Well, I now believe that he did kill her.

    Cheryl McGucken: Reading the evidence, going through what was said during the trial. It — it — it made it painfully obvious.

    On March 10, 2023, Cheryl McGucken took the stand again at Jason’s sentencing hearing. But this time, she spoke for her daughter.

    CHERYL MCGUCKEN (reading): I couldn’t understand how my son-in-law, Jason, could look me in the eye for five-and-a-half years, if he had murdered my daughter.

    Cheryl McGucken
    “Jason, if not you, who?”  Cheryl McGucken asked her son-in-law at his sentencing hearing.

    CBS News


    “48 Hours”‘ cameras were again outside the courtroom looking in, so Cheryl shared with us, what she said directly to Jason.

    CHERYL MCGUCKEN (reading): Jason, if not you, who? You were there. You know the truth. … I pray you will someday find wisdom and strength to speak the truth.

    She said that in front of her grandchildren, too — they were sitting in the very front row. Cheryl didn’t know that Jason’s parents were going to bring them.

    As the judge prepared to sentence Jason Crawford, his lawyers were still pleading his innocence, just as Jason did when Begnaud first spoke with him.

    David Begnaud: If I could interview Tiffiney today, what do you think she’d tell me?

    Jason Crawford: Probably that she’s sorry. She’s — didn’t realize that it would affect so many people like — like it did.

    David Begnaud: She wouldn’t tell me that you’re a liar and a killer?

    Jason Crawford: No. I don’t think so.

    Jason was sentenced to 99 years in prison. But under Alabama law, he will be eligible for parole in 15 years.

    David Begnaud: What do you think Tiffiney would say now, having seen you on the stand?

    Cheryl McGucken: I can hear her saying, “I’m proud of you, Mama.”

    Tiffiney Crawford
    “She was my first born. My only daughter,” Cheryl McGucken said. “She was very involved with her children. … She used to dance and sing with them all the time.”

    Now, Cheryl just wants to make sure that her grandchildren are proud of their mother, and never forget who Tiffiney was and what she stood for.

    Cheryl McGucken: She was just an angel that came down from heaven for a short time to teach all of us … how to love and be kind and be giving.

    Tiffiney’s children currently live with Jason’s parents.

     


    Produced by Stephanie Slifer and Judy Rybak. Gabriella Demirdjian is the field producer. Ryan Smith is the development producer. Liz Caholo is the associate producer. Jud Johnston, Wini Dini and George Baluzy are the editors. Peter Schweitzer is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

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  • Sneak peek: The Mysterious Death of Tiffiney Crawford

    Sneak peek: The Mysterious Death of Tiffiney Crawford

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    Sneak peek: The Mysterious Death of Tiffiney Crawford – CBS News


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    A young mother found dead in her car. Could she have shot herself twice? “48 Hours” contributor David Begnaud reports Saturday, March 25 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.

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  • Remembering the Chowchilla Kidnapping

    Remembering the Chowchilla Kidnapping

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    Remembering the Chowchilla Kidnapping – CBS News


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    Twenty-six school children were abducted by three men and buried alive in a trailer. Inside their daring escape. “48 Hours” contributor David Begnaud reports.

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  • Chowchilla bus kidnapping survivor’s lifelong fight to keep her captors behind bars

    Chowchilla bus kidnapping survivor’s lifelong fight to keep her captors behind bars

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    Produced by Chris Young Ritzen, George Osterkamp, Mead Stone and Gary Winter

    In August 2022, after 46 years, the last of three men convicted of kidnapping 26 children and their bus driver was paroled from a prison in California. 

    It was one of the largest kidnappings in U.S. history. A school bus with 26 children was stopped by three armed gunmen as they headed home from the Dairyland Elementary School in the small California town of Chowchilla.

    The men were wearing pantyhose over their faces.

    “And then this man came up with a stocking over his head with a gun and said, “Open the door,’” said survivor Jodi Heffington, who was 10 at the time. Heffington relived the ordeal publicly for the first time in an interview with “48 Hours,” and shared emotional details of her life after.

    “Where their eyes were, it was like, it almost looked hollow,” recalled survivor Larry Park, just 6 years old at the time. “It was like looking at death.”

    The children and their school bus driver were transferred to vans and were driven for nearly 12 unbearable hours before being buried alive inside a truck trailer underground — held hostage in the dark for another 16 hours before they made a harrowing escape.

    WHERE ARE THE CHILDREN?

    Just outside Chowchilla on July 15, 1976, the frightening journey began.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde | Survivor: We start driving down the road …

    Larry Park | Survivor: I’m wondering how it was going to feel to die.

    Larry Park: I was too scared to move.

    Twenty-six terrified children – some as young as 5 – were staring down the barrel of a sawed-off shotgun. Three masked men had hijacked the Dairyland Elementary school bus. One had the shotgun, one drove the bus, and one followed behind in the white van they’d used to block the road.

    Jodi Heffington | Survivor: It’s a hard thing to explain, ’cause I never been around guns.  You only seen bad guys in the movies with stockings on, you know, so I knew it wasn’t good.   

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: Edward … kept telling his kids just be quiet, sit down, do what they say. … Edward was speaking in a harsh tone, and that normally was not the Edward that we knew and loved.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: Eventually, the bus went off the road, down into a dry riverbed. 

    Larry Park: Into this big grove of bamboo that were taller, actually, than the bus.

    chowchilla-hiacked-bus.jpg
    The kidnappers drove the hijacked school bus into a dry riverbed and hid it in tree brush.

    Alameda County D.A’s Office


    Jennifer Brown Hyde: And then as I looked out one of the side windows, I saw that there was another van that was parked there …

    AUDIO: JENNIFER BROWN, AGE 9: …They parked the bus.  And there was another green — there was a green van down there waiting for us.

    Even at the age of 9, little Jennifer Brown seemed to know the horror that day should be documented.  She later made this recording with her mom:

    AUDIO: JENNIFER BROWN, AGE 9: And those two guys standing from the bus door to the van door with guns with pantyhose over the head so we wouldn’t run out. … and then, see, they pulled the van right up to the bus door.

    The kidnappers herded the stunned children from the bus into those two vans. 

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: We had to jump from the bus to the van.

    AUDIO: JENNIFER BROWN, AGE 9: So they wouldn’t see any feet prints.

    Jodi Heffington: When it was my turn to get on the van … he stopped me. He held a shotgun to my stomach. And I said, “I was doing what you said.” And I had to stand there with this gun in my gut until that one van drove away and they backed the second van up. It felt like forever. I thought he was going to shoot me. I actually did. 

    Jennifer, Larry and the rest of the children followed Jodi into the second van, along with the bus driver, Ed Ray.  Then the kidnappers closed the doors. 

    Jennifer Hyde: It was pitch dark.

    The vans had been converted into makeshift jail cells by installing wood paneling and even painting the windows.  No one could see in or out.

    The kidnappers sped off with the children caged in those mobile prisons. 

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: And I felt like I was an animal going to the slaughterhouse.

    Around that time, Jennifer’s mom, Joan Brown, came home from work and the house was empty.

    Joan Brown: The children were not there.  No peanut butter on the counter, no chairs out there, well … they just weren’t there.

    As one hour turned to two, worried parents began helping the police retrace the school buses route, crisscrossing dozens of rural roads.       

    Joan Brown: Where were those children?  Twenty-six of them and a bus driver?  Nowhere. 

    And then, just before sunset, a police pilot spotted the big bus about seven miles outside Chowchilla, hidden in the dry riverbed. 

    Sheriff Ed Bates | Madera County, California: You would only see it from the air.

    Madera County Sheriff Ed Bates rushed to the scene. His deputies had already found the bus empty.  The children and their driver gone. 

    The tire impressions found in the sand led straight to the front door of the bus.

    Sheriff Ed Bates: Obviously someone had backed their vehicle up to the doors of the bus.

    Sheriff Bates was convinced the children of Chowchilla had become the victims of a brazen and bizarre, mass kidnapping. 

    Sheriff Ed Bates: I called the governor.  I said, “I need some help down here.”

    Sheriff Ed Bates: I had the parents all assembled there in the fire station. … Well, you could just look at their faces, and the anxiety and the fear was there.

    Sheriff Ed Bates: I told them, I called the FBI. … And all of a sudden, I have 30 FBI agents there.

    chowchilla-kidnappers-white-van.jpg
    The stunned children were herded from their bus into two vans. They were forced to jump from the bus to the vans so that they would not leave behind any footprints.

    Alameda County D.A.’s Office


    As Sheriff Bates continued to widen the investigation, the children continued to suffer inside the sweltering, pitch-black vans. 

    Jodi Heffington: We’d bang on where the drivers panel would be —like, “let us out, let us out” … and they would just say “shut up”. 

    Jennifer Brown Hyde:  And we drove what seemed like for hours upon hours upon hours.

    Larry Park: And I remember that I kept falling asleep … and coming back awake. … I would dream … about being – [takes a long pause] — I would dream about being up in the forest where my family would go camping.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: We all tried to comfort each other.

    AUDIO: JENNIFER BROWN, AGE 9: And a few of my little friends that are 5 and 6, they came over and started laying on me and crying. And I told them be brave because it’s going to be alright …

    Then, the vans started to slow down. The kids could feel it pulling off the road, lurching from side to side on rough terrain, before coming to a stop – after nearly 12 unbearable hours. 

    Larry Park: They opened up the door and they took Ed Ray out first.  They shut the doors back. And then there was nothing. There was no sound.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: And I remember they would just grab the first kid that was inside the door … They opened the door and they grabbed somebody else.

    Larry Park:  And they just kept doing that. They would open up the door …

    Jodi Heffington: They’d take the next kid out. And they would close the doors. But when they opened the doors you don’t see them. I thought they were basically killing us each one at a time. 

    Jennifer Brown Hyde … and I kept scooting to the back of the van, and I thought maybe if I hide in the corner, they won’t come for me.

    But they did.

    “THE HOLE”

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: I didn’t know if it was in the desert, at the beach. In the side of a mountain? I had no idea where we were. I didn’t even know if we were in California.

    After almost 12 hours in darkness, 10-year-old Jodi Heffington was the last to be taken out of the first van.

    Jodi Heffington: Being the last one … you don’t know what’s going to happen because you don’t see nobody else. …What happened to them? If you didn’t kill them, where are they at? They had flashlights kind of like shining in their faces. And then one shining on your face. And they said, “What’s your name?” And I actually — I have a little bit of a smart-ass in me. And I said, “Puddin Tang — ask me again and I’ll tell you the same.” I was pissed and I was scared at the same time. They said, “if you don’t tell us your name, you’re never going to see your mom and dad again, do you understand?” … And they took all my belongings … And then they said, “you’re going to go down in this hole right here.

    The hole led to an old truck trailer buried underground. Ed Ray and the children from the first van were there.

    Larry Park: There was a table set up in the back. It was surrounded with jugs of drinking water …

    Jodi Heffington: On some of the mattresses, they had some cereal, a loaf of bread and some peanut butter.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: … in the wheel wells, they had cut holes in ’em for toilets. We could hear fans. So, we knew that there was some sort of ventilation. 

    Interior of the hole
    Bus driver Ed Ray and the children were taken out of the van, one by one, and sent down into a hole inside an old truck trailer buried 12 feet underground.  

    James Palmer / AP


    Michael Marshall, 14, was still in the other van with some of the youngest children.

    Michael Marshall | Survivor: The kids got a hold of me and were holding onto me. And … just scared out of their – you know, we were all – just scared out of our wits. 

    As they did before, the kidnappers removed the children one by one. Michael and the youngest, 5-year-old Monica Ardery, were the last ones left in the van. 

    Michael Marshall: It was just me and her.

    Not knowing what had happened to the other children or if they were even alive, Michael says he couldn’t bear to hand Monica over to the kidnappers. So, when they opened the doors again, he went first.

    Michael Marshall: I had to take her hands from mine and rip —and tear them apart, say it would be OK. And go with them and leave her. … That was hard.

    chowchilla-adult-arry-park.jpg
    “I remember it just went dark. … And then you just hear the material getting thrown on us … we were being buried alive,” said survivor Michael Marshall.

    CBS News


    Michael Marshall: As soon as I got on that ladder and took a step down … and I heard the rest of the kids say, “It’s Mike. … It’s Mikey. Michael.” And I realized that everybody was alive.

    And to his relief, not long after, Monica came climbing down the ladder. They were all together again.

    Michael Marshall: We’re OK. We’re OK. We’re OK. So right now, so far, we’re alright.

    But the sense of relief was short-lived.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: Before I knew it, the ladder was gone. They threw a roll of toilet paper down and said, “We’ll be back for you.” And that was it.

    The kidnappers then covered the opening with a manhole cover.

    Michael Marshall: I remember it just went dark. … And then you just hear the material (moves his hands in a digging motion) getting thrown on us … we were being buried alive.

    They were buried 12 feet underground.

    Jodi Heffington: I just remember looking up at that hole. I wanted to stay close. I wanted to be like right there. Because that was the way out.

    Larry Park: Ed Ray and Mike Marshall they looked at every corner, every wall … for an escape route. They got underneath the manhole cover and pushed up on it. And they couldn’t move it. So, Ed Ray determined that it was time for everyone to get some rest.

    The minutes and hours ticked by.

    Michael Marshall: … It would be silent and then somebody would bust out crying and the hole would just erupt. Everybody’s crying.

    Michael Marshall: The thing that made me cry was not being able to say goodbye to my mom. … And I’m remembering the last time that I saw her [gets emotional] and wishing I could have told her goodbye.

    CBS NEWS REPORT: Throughout much of this day, parents and other family of the missing children came to the command post set up in downtown Chowchilla to try desperately to fathom some reason out of this madness. Carol Marshall’s 14-year-old son Mike was another on the bus.

    REPORTER: Any chance at all this could be a terrible hoax or joke that someone is playing?

    CAROL MARSHALL: I imagine there is a chance. I hope that’s all it is.

    This was one of the largest kidnappings in U.S. history.

    CBS NEWS REPORTSo far there’s been no word from any abductors …  

    Sheriff Ed Bates: Two heavily-laden [sic] vehicles had taken 26 children and their bus driver. That’s not easy to do. And how did they control them? And what did they do with them?

    As investigators intensified their search, Jennifer and Jeff’s mom Joan waited by the phone hoping to hear news about her children.

    Joan Brown:  I remember later that day, praying and saying to God that if you bring them back … I will promise you that I will — and then I stopped because there was nothing I can offer in exchange for my children.

    They had been in the hole for almost 12 hours and the conditions were deteriorating.

    chowchilla-jennifer-brown-hyde.jpg
    Jennifer Brown Hyde was 9 at the time of the kidnapping. “My little brain started to grasp the concept of we may really not go home.”

    CBS News


    Jennifer Brown Hyde: We had eaten the food. … The fans on the ventilators stopped.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: My little brain started to grasp the concept of we may really not go home.

    Larry Park: There was this one boy. … And he kept kicking blocks out from underneath the 4×4 pillars. And so, the roof of the van was starting to cave in. The seams were breaking. Dust was flowing through. And I remember children just screaming and crying. … The sides of the van were bowing in. … I knew that I was going to die. I knew it.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: We thought, and they said —  the older kids and Edward —  if we’re going to die, were going to die trying to get out of here.

    THE ESCAPE

    Jennifer Brown Hyde | Survivor: As a young kid, you don’t have a lot of sense of time. … There was no sunlight. So, you couldn’t tell if it was day or night. … We were out of food, we were out of water, the roof was caving in…. It just was a desperate situation.

    Jodi Heffington | Survivor: Everybody got the mattresses and stacked them up as high as we could go.

    Larry Park | Survivor: … right underneath the manhole cover.

    Jodi Heffington: People started standing on each other’s shoulders. … I was a very tall girl and very strong, so they stood on my shoulders when they didn’t stand on Edward’s. 

    chowchilla-trailer-ceiling.jpg
    The children tried to stay calm as the minutes and hours ticked by. After being in the hole for almost 12 hours, conditions started to deteriorate. The roof started to cave in, and they were running out of food.

    Alameda County D.A.’s Office


    They took turns pushing up on the manhole cover.

    Michael Marshall: … And I’m giving it everything I got, and all the kids are cheering me on. You know, “Come on Mike, you can do it. You can do it.” And then all of a sudden, they said, “It moved, it moved.”

    But they were far from being free. The kidnappers had put truck batteries and dirt on top of the manhole cover and had constructed a wooden box around it. Once the manhole cover was moved, that box was just big enough for Michael to stand in. 

    AUDIO: MICHAEL MARSHALL, AGE 14:  Edward squeezes me through this half-foot hole.

    Like Jennifer, Michael Marshall made a recording about his experience.

    AUDIO: MICHAEL MARSHALL, AGE 14I get on top of it and I start pounding on this box. Start hitting and pounding, hitting and pounding.

    Larry Park: He dug until he was exhausted and then he kept on digging. There was no quit in him.

    AUDIO: MICHAEL MARSHALL, AGE 14None of us knew if when we got out, they were just going to be standing there with shotguns at our head and stuff, so we were kind of … pretty scared.

    Larry Park: Then suddenly this ray of sunlight [cries, then pauses]. This ray of sunlight came down into the opening. And it was catching the dust. And the dust particles looked like a bunch of shooting stars. … There was this airflow that came out of the van and I knew we were free. I need a minute. [Gets up from his chair, overcome with emotion.]

    chowchilla-michael-marshall.jpg
    Michael Marshall, 14 and bus driver Ed Ray piled up mattresses that were left in the hole — and after 16 hours in darkness managed to dig their way to safety. 

    Michael Marshall


    Michael Marshall [sighs, then pauses]: The air and the light it was beaming coming through …

    Larry Park: Mike Marshall, actually, brave person that he is, crawled out of the hole first.

    Michael Marshall: And I stuck my head out and … I didn’t see anybody. … I could see we were in the hills …

    Jodi Heffington: He said “the coast is clear.” And so we started taking the little ones and putting them up there. And Mike grabbed them. …That part was kind of scary too because we’re out now. … We don’t know who’s out here.

    It was approximately 8 p.m. on July 16. They had been in the hole for nearly 16 hours.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: We all just scurried like a bunch of little mice. … We saw conveyor belts and excavators … It looked like “The Flintstones.” … And all these men with hard hats on came to us and looked at us like, “who are you?”

    The kidnappers had buried them in a rock quarry in Livermore, California, 100 miles away from Chowchilla. When police arrived, as evidence, they took photos of every child.

    Jodi Heffington: An Alameda County jail bus came. (Sarcastically laughs) It was like, “yeah, they put us back on a bus.”

    Then they transported them to the closest place that could hold them — the Santa Rita Rehabilitation Center — a local jail.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: I remember going in — in the bus and you could see the prison wire. … And you thought well, “they’re taking us into jail.”

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: They took us into what looked like classrooms. … They brought us apples and soda.

    chowchilla-jennifer-brown-after-escape.jpg
    At the Santa Rita Rehabilitation Center, the children were given apples and soda, and examined by doctors. Jennifer Brown, 9, is pictured at center.

    Alameda County D.A.’s Office


    AUDIO: JENNIFER BROWN, AGE 9: They had these coveralls. … And all these little kids go into ’em and we had to roll the pants about 10 feet. And we rolled the arms up and we were all sitting there — some of ’em didn’t roll our arms up and we sitting there flapping our arms. We said, “Hey we can fly!?”

    Over the next few hours, Ed Ray and the children were examined by doctors. They were also questioned by police.

    Jodi Heffington: Each one of us was interrogated by ourselves to tell our story.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: How do you describe somebody that has pantyhose over their face? 

    Chowchilla students after escape
    Finally, approximately four hours after escaping, the children boarded yet another bus – this time, to go home.

    Alameda County D.A.’s Office


    After four hours of questioning, they were finally allowed to go home.

    Michael Marshall: They put us on a Greyhound … escorted us back to Chowchilla.

    Larry Park: It was time for mom and dad. I just wanted my mom and dad.

    It had been almost 36 hours since their traumatic ordeal began.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: The scene was like a mob scene … news cameras and TV lights.

    AUDIO: JENNIFER BROWN, AGE 9: Everybody stated saying, “are you all right Jennifer” and all this stuff and I said “Yeah. I’m fine.” Then whenever we got into this room, I found my mom and my dad.


    AUDIO: MICHAEL MARSHALL, AGE 14: We pulled up to Chowchilla and I was asleep. … So, when I got off the bus everybody started taking pictures of me saying, “Hi Mike, how you doing? What was the pit like?”

    Jodi Heffington: They just let us off the bus with all these people … And you didn’t know where your parents were (emotional).  

    chowchilla-larry.jpg
    Survivor Larry Park, 6, after being reunited with his parents. “I finally felt safe again,” he said.

    AP Photo


    Larry Park: This man carried me off the bus. And he put me in my mom’s arms, and I said, “Hi mom,” and fell asleep on her shoulder. …. I felt like I was finally safe [emotional].

    Jodi Heffington: Nothing was ever the same. Nothing was ever the same after that. (emotional)

    Joan Brown: We had no idea what our kids had been through. None whatsoever. 

    HAROLD DOW | CBS NEWS: How does it feel to be a big movie star?

    JENNIFER BROWN, AGE 9: I don’t know. I’ve never been a movie star before.

    CBS NEW REPORT: For 9- year-old Jennifer Brown, the experience has allowed her to still see the world with compassion. 

    HAROLD DOW | CBS NEWS: Why do you suppose that they would do something like that?

    JENNIFER BROWN: I don’t know. They didn’t have enough love.

    Joan Brown: She had horrible nightmares. … she would run screaming into our bedroom, and she wasn’t even awake … And she would tell us later that she dreamt that they were lined up and shot.

    Larry Park: One night … I was dreaming that I …. was falling down this hole and I was trying to get out. … I started screaming for my mom. Mom came in. … And all I could do was cry. And all she could do was hold me. There was nothing more that could be done.

    THE KIDNAPPERS

    In the days following the kids escape, investigators searched the rock quarry and the van that had been their underground tomb hoping they would find clues that would lead them to the kidnappers.

    chowchilla-buried-tractor.jpg
    “Today in this rock quarry, they unearthed the truck that was prison and very nearly a tomb for 26 children and their school bus driver. Unearthing the ‘who’ and ‘why’ of all this is much harder,” reported Richard Threlkeld for CBS News.

    Alameda County D.A’s Office


    Prosecutor Jill Klinge | Alameda County: They looked to see who would have keys to the quarry. … In order to have access to bury this moving container undetected, you would have to have access.  Fred Woods had keys to that quarry.

    Frederick Newhall Woods, 24, the son of the owner of the quarry, immediately became a person of interest.

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: …Then they looked at the ledger, surveillance tapes and started to put it all together at that point.

    Security guards told investigators they had seen three young men digging a large hole in the quarry months before the kidnapping. One of them they said was Fred Woods.

    And Woods had a record.  Two years earlier, he had been charged with grand theft auto. Arrested with him were two of his friends – James Schoenfeld, Fred’s partner in a used car business, and James’s younger brother, Richard. All three were from wealthy families who lived in San Francisco’s nicest suburbs. They escaped with a fine and probation. 

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: They’re young. … They’re wealthy. I think it added a component of fascination to the story because it was so unlikely that three men such as these would commit such an atrocious crime.

    Investigators executed a warrant to search Fred Woods’ father’s estate. 

    RICHARD THRELKELD | CBS NEWS: For the last two days, the Woods estate has looked like an armed camp, dozens of officers looking for anything.

    What they found there was a treasure trove of evidence.

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: We were able to recover one of the guns that was used during this kidnapping.

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: This crime was planned out for a year-and-a-half in intricate detail.

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: You actually have a document labeled “plan.”  And it sets out … the way they were going to commit the kidnapping and then they on the right-hand side put … how they would compensate or deal with what could go wrong.

    They also recovered a draft of a ransom note.    

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: The draft of the ransom note says $2.5 million, but in actuality, they were going to ask for $5 million from the State of California. 

    chowchilla-ransom-draft.jpg
    Investigators executed a warrant to search Fred Woods’ father’s estate and found a treasure trove of evidence – including the kjdnappers’ detailed plan and this draft of a ransom note.

    Alameda County D.A.’s Office


    But the kidnappers were never able to deliver their demand.

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: They tried to call the Chowchilla Police Department. Because of the number of calls that were coming in worldwide … the phone lines were jammed. They couldn’t get through. So, they took a nap.  And by the time they woke up, they saw on the news that the kids had been found. So, they were never able to request the ransom. 

    RICHARD THRELKELD | CBS NEWS: And so the search is on nationwide for these three men …

    Arrest warrants were issued. Richard Schoenfeld turned himself in. Fred Woods and James Schoenfeld fled California, but not for long.

    HAROLD DOW | CBS NEWS: James Schoenfeld was captured at dawn today. Police say he ran hard, all over the Western United States, but he did not run well. … Frederick Woods was arrested by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police this afternoon, just across the Washington State border in Vancouver. 

    Jodi Heffington: I remember being physically ill when I actually saw them. … After that you kind of did have a sense of (takes a deep breath) … you can breathe.  …They’re behind bars. 

    So, what drove these young men, seemingly well off, to kidnap young children for money?  James Schoenfeld eventually told police, despite their parents’ wealth, he and Fred Woods were in serious debt.  

    chowchilla-mug-combo.jpg
    The kidnappers, from left, Fred Woods, James Schoenfeld, center, and his younger brother Richard Schoenfeld

    Alameda County Sheriff’s Office


    He would later tell the parole board: “We needed multiple victims to get multiple millions, and we picked children because children are precious. The state would be willing to pay ransom for them.  And they don’t fight back.”

    Sheriff Ed Bates: I think that the two Schoenfelds did it just on pure persuasion by Fred Woods. Fred Woods … in my own personal opinion, and I have a master’s degree, I think he was a sociopath. Some might call him a psychopath.  

    With the overwhelming evidence against them, Woods and the Schoenfelds pleaded guilty to 27 counts of kidnapping for ransom and robbery. But they refused to plead guilty to the eight counts of bodily harm. Those charges would send them to prison for life without the possibility of parole. So, 16 months after their abduction, Jennifer, Michael and some of the other children faced the kidnappers in court.

    Jodi Heffington: You’re in this little box … and they’re there looking at you, just glaring at you and staring you down.

    They testified that in addition to the emotional trauma, they had suffered physical wounds like cuts and bruises.

    Jodi Heffington: And I looked over at them and I just broke down. …That was the first time I cried. … So, they allowed my father to come sit by me and that made me feel a lot safer.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde:  And the kidnappers were sitting to my left at a table. … I remember giving my dad my gum because I told him I was going to spit my gum at ’em. 

    REPORTER AT COURTHOUSE: You say they would give you this funny look. What did that make you feel?

    JENNIFER BROWN: Scared. 

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: I did my testimony.  I answered my questions.  And I left that courtroom with my head held high. And there was no way that I was going to let them see me cry.

    WALTER CRONKITE | CBS EVENING NEWS ANCHOR: A California judge today imposed mandatory life prison sentences without parole on those three young men who kidnapped 26 Chowchilla school children …

    Joan Brown: Life in prison without the possibility of parole. That was all we needed. That’s what we needed.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde:  I remember thinking they are going to jail … they’re not going to do this to anybody else. And that’s all that I need to know.

    With the kidnappers sentenced to prison for the rest of their lives, the survivors thought their nightmare was finally over. But it was just beginning.

    THE SURVIVORS

    Just five weeks after being buried alive, the gutsy children of Chowchilla and their bus driver Ed Ray were hailed as heroes. There was even a trip to Disneyland.

    Larry Park: And everyone thought that was great because the good memories of Disneyland would overshadow the bad memories of the kidnapping.

    chowchilla-survivors.jpg
    Many of the survivors of the Chowchilla kidnapping gathered for a photo at the Ed Ray Day celebration on August 22, 1976. Ray, the school bus driver, is pictured back row center next to Michael Marshall. 

    Jennifer Brown Hyde


    It wasn’t that simple.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: In a way you try to be normal.  But … when you’ve gone through something that’s so traumatic, it’s hard to go back and be a normal kid again.

    Jodi Heffington: Sometimes it’s like life is an act.  You try to be good for everybody else so they don’t worry, but they worry anyway, so … I advise everybody else not to do it that way. 

    The survivors struggled to move forward.  But just four years after the kidnappings – a critical turning point.

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: The kidnappers’ lawyers appealed the finding of bodily harm. And the appellate court overturned it. And while acknowledging the horrific nature of the crime, stated that the injuries suffered did not rise to the level of bodily harm under the law. 

    So, Fred Woods and the Schoenfeld brothers were resentenced to life with the possibility of parole.

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: They would get a parole hearing every one or two years.

    Larry Park: I felt like I had been betrayed by the justice system.

    Just six years after the kidnappings, the parade of parole hearings began.

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: Every time one of the kidnappers came up for parole … it triggered all their fears and trauma …

    The hearings took place inside the prison. 

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: They sit in the same room, and it’s not a large room, with the kidnapper.

    Jodi Heffington: The first time, I was terrified.

    For all three kidnappers, there have been more than 60 parole hearings to date. Jodi Heffington went to nearly all of them.

    Jodi Heffington: It just seems like every three years I go. And I go three times, every time. … It’s excruciating and the aftermath is — never good.

    Jodi and the other survivors watched helplessly as Richard Schoenfeld was the first to be granted parole in June 2012, 36 years after the kidnappings.  Three years later, James Schoenfeld was paroled, too.

    Prosecutor Jill Klinge: As far as I know, they have not been in any kind of trouble.

    fred-woods-parole-hearing.jpg
    Fred Woods at his 15th parole hearing in 2018.

    CBS News/George Osterkamp


    The same could not be said for Fred Woods. He repeatedly broke prison rules. He was caught with pornography and cell phones.

    AUDIO FROM 2018 PAROLE HEARING:  Hello. My name is Jodi Medrano. I was Jodi Heffington.

    Jodi Heffington at parole hearing
    Jodi Heffington, right, at a 2018 parole hearing for Fred Woods, went to almost all of the parole hearings for the three convicted kidnappers. 

    George Osterkamp


    In 2018, “48 Hours” was at Fred Woods’ 15th parole hearing and recorded audio of Jodi’s testimony.

    AUDIO FROM 2018 PAROLE HEARING | JODI HEFFINGTON MEDRANO: To listen to him talk about his poor childhood … (sarcastically laughs) I don’t know if I want to laugh, cry, cuss him or what … Because where did my childhood go?

    Jodi Heffington: Like I told him, Mr. Woods – you’re not a kidnapper, you’re a thief.  You’re a thief of lives.  Not just the kids that were in the bus.  But they stole our families’ lives, and what we all had before that.

    After that hearing, Woods was again denied parole.

    It was 28 hours of terror that will always be with Michael, Jennifer, Jodi and Larry — all who have managed to find ways to get on with living.

    Larry Park: Healing continues if you allow it.

    Larry Park, who spent his 20’s and 30’s abusing drugs, now owns a handyman business and volunteers as a pastor at a local church.  His nightmares have finally stopped.  And he is sober.

    Larry Park: I have nine years sober.

    His sobriety was motivated by an epiphany about the kidnappers.      

    Larry Park: My resentment for them … was killing me. … One night … I was laying in bed … and I said, “God help me to forgive them.”

    chowchilla-park-kidnapper.jpg
    After years of anger and resentment, Larry Park. left,made peace, forgiving his kidnappers. Here he is pictured with Richard Schoenfeld, who was granted parole in June 2012, 36 years after the kidnappings.

    Larry Park


    Larry met the men, shook their hands, and did forgive them.  Here he is…with Richard Schoenfeld.

    Larry Park: It changed my life. … Something washed over me. … And there was peace like I had never known.  And I knew that day that I would be OK.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde – a wife, mother and executive assistant – says it took her decades before she could even sleep without a night-light.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde: I’ve had family and church family … and co-workers that have piece by piece helped put me back together. … And I want people to know that that little girl that was kidnapped and buried alive has managed to live a wonderful life.

    Michael Marshall had lost his way after the kidnapping.

    Michael Marshall: I went to bed at 18 drunk and hung over and blacked out. And woke up about 48, you know, with a hangover, blurry.

    He is sober and has found happiness as father and a long-distance trucker. He tries not to think about those kidnappers.

    Michael Marshall: What they put my mom and dad through is something I cannot forgive.

    Jodi Heffington
    ” Nothing was ever the same. Nothing was ever the same after that,” Jodi Heffington said of the 1976 kidnapping.

    CBS News


    Jodi Heffington never left the Chowchilla area. She opened her own hair salon and raised a son, but she struggled to find peace of mind.

    Jodi Heffington: How that day affected me, has affected me every day in some way or another. … I think it made me not a good daughter, not a good sister, not a good aunt and especially not a good mother.  And probably not a good friend. … I try to be those things, but it seems like it, um, it just took something from me that I can’t ever get back. And I can’t tear it down — no matter how hard I try and no matter what I do. 

    In January 2021, Jodi Heffington passed away. She was 55 years old.

    Fourteen months after her death, Fred Woods went before the parole board for the 18th time. This time, he was granted parole.


    Produced by Chris Young Ritzen and George Osterkamp. Gary Winter and Mead Stone are producer-editors. Jordan Kinsey and Hannah Vair are the associate producers. Joan Adelman is the editor. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

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  • Remembering the Chowchilla kidnapping: A never-before-seen interview with a survivor

    Remembering the Chowchilla kidnapping: A never-before-seen interview with a survivor

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    In the summer of 1976 three young men from wealthy families kidnapped a school bus full of children in the small town of Chowchilla, California. Twenty-six children ages 5 through 14 and their bus driver were on their way home from summer school when they were taken hostage at gunpoint. It is believed to be the largest kidnapping ever in the United States.

    Jodi Heffington was one of the kids on the bus. She was just 10 at the time. In a never-before-seen interview, Heffington spoke in detail about her memories from the horrific experience. 

    Chowchilla bus kidnapping survivors
    Jodi Heffington, 10, left, with other survivors of the 1976 Chowchilla bus kidnapping. 

    Alameda County DA’s Office


    “And this man came up with a stocking over his head with a gun and said ‘open the door’ … I never been around guns. You only see bad guys in the movies with stockings on, so I knew it wasn’t good … He held a shotgun to my stomach … I thought he was going to shoot me,” Heffington told “48 Hours” in this week’s episode, “Remembering the Chowchilla Kidnapping,” airing Saturday, March 18 at 10/9c* on CBS and streaming on Paramount +.

    The kidnappers then drove the frightened children and their bus driver Ed Ray in two locked and darkened vans for more than 100 miles before taking them out of the vans one by one.

    Heffington recalled the moment. “They’d take the next kid out. And they would close the doors. But when they opened the doors, you don’t see them. I thought they were basically killing us one at a time,” she said.

    The kidnappers buried them alive in an underground truck trailer in a rock quarry. Remarkably, after enduring horrific conditions in what felt like an underground prison, the children and their bus driver escaped by digging their way out. They had been underground for nearly 16 hours.

    But instead of taking the survivors to a hospital or hotel, police decided to put them all back on a bus and transported them to the closest place that could hold them – the Santa Rita Rehabilitation Center — a local jail. They were questioned for four hours and then finally taken home. Heffington painfully recalled being reunited with her family, “Nothing was ever the same. Nothing was ever the same after that …”

    Although most of the children didn’t have any physical injuries from the kidnapping, they all had been through an unimaginable emotional ordeal. At that time, sending them to the “Happiest Place on Earth” – Disneyland — was a way many felt could help the children forget the trauma they endured. Larry Park, who was just 6 years old when he was kidnapped told “48 Hours,” “Everyone thought that was great because the good memories of Disneyland would overshadow the bad memories of the kidnapping.”

    Chowchilla children at Disneyland
    Five weeks after being buried alive, the gutsy children of Chowchilla and their bus driver Ed Ray were hailed as heroes. There was even a trip to Disneyland.

    Jennifer Brown Hyde


    But it wasn’t that simple. Many of the children struggled to move forward and suffered from lifelong psychological wounds. Unfortunately, back in 1976, less was known about how to treat childhood trauma. In many cases, parents didn’t know much about or encourage therapy.

    Heffington told “48 Hours” that she struggled her entire life to find peace of mind. “How that day affected me has affected me every day in some way or another,” she said. “I think it made me not a good daughter, not a good sister, not a good aunt, and especially not a good mother … I try to be those things. But it seems like, it just took something from me that I can’t ever get back. And I can’t tear down … no matter how hard I try and no matter what I do.”

    The kidnappers, Fred Woods and brothers Richard and James Schoenfeld, were eventually sentenced to life with the possibility of parole. That meant, they would get a parole hearing every one or two years. Jill Klinge was an assistant district attorney for Alameda County. She told “48 Hours” the parole hearings were extremely painful for the survivors. She said, “Every time one of the kidnappers came up for parole, it triggered their fears and traumas.”

    Jodi Heffington at parole hearing
    Jodi Heffington, right, at a 2018 parole hearing for Fred Woods, went to almost all of the parole hearings for the three convicted kidnappers. 

    George Osterkamp


    For all three kidnappers, there have been a total of more than 60 parole hearings to date. Jodi Heffington went to nearly all of them and even testified at some. “It’s excruciating, and the aftermath is never good,” she told “48 Hours.” But she said she went because she wanted to make sure the kidnappers stayed behind bars.

    Heffington and the other survivors watched helplessly as Richard Schoenfeld was granted parole in 2012 followed by James Schoenfeld in 2015.

    Jodi Heffington
    Jodi Heffington

    CBS News


    Heffington passed away in January 2021. She was 55 years old. Fourteen months later, the last of the three kidnappers, Fred Woods, went before the parole board for the 18th time. He was granted parole.  

    Heffington left behind a son, Matthew Medrano, who wants his mother’s voice to be heard. He wrote a letter to “48 Hours, “I ask for all the little girls who’ve been forced into feeling scared, stifled or unrepresented to please let Jodi’s words and her truth to be told.” 

    PROGRAM NOTE*: Due to the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament on CBS, “48 Hours” may be delayed in the east and central time zones.

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  • What Angelina Saw

    What Angelina Saw

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    What Angelina Saw – CBS News


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    A young girl peeks out of her bedroom to see blood on the floor and her mother in distress. As an adult she looks back on a night that changed her life. “48 Hours” correspondent Peter Van Sant reports.

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  • The Trial of Alex Murdaugh

    The Trial of Alex Murdaugh

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    The Trial of Alex Murdaugh – CBS News


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    “48 Hours” explores the double life of a once prominent lawyer and his stunning fall from grace. Murdaugh is now an admitted drug addict, thief and convicted murderer. “48 Hours” contributor Nikki Battiste reports.

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  • How Paul Murdaugh testified

    How Paul Murdaugh testified

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    It was a field trip to a ghost town.  Off a country road, the procession turned slowly up the long driveway of the imposing property. The convoy held the jury in the double murder trial of Alex Murdaugh.

    “Moselle” is the hunting lodge of the Murdaugh family —  Alex, his wife Maggie, and sons Paul and Buster.  

    Alex Murdaugh trial evidence
    On June 7, 2021, Maggie and Paul Murdaugh were found dead at these dog kennels on the Murdaugh family property off of Moselle Road in Colleton County, South Carolina. 

    Colleton County Court


    The jury was taken to the dog kennels and the small feed room where Paul had been shot at close range with a shotgun. A few yards away, Maggie was shot several times with a 300 rifle. Neither weapon has ever been found.

    There was a time when this estate reflected the vast power and prestige of the Murdaugh legal dynasty. Now, the withered grounds seem to echo Alex Murdaugh’s steep fall from grace: from a rich powerful lawyer to an admitted drug addict, thief and convicted murderer

    This is where Alex Murdaugh’s life unraveled on June 7, 2021.

    911 OPERATOR: What’s your emergency? 

    ALEX MURDAUGH: This is Alex Murdaugh.  My wife and child have been shot badly.  

    That night, when Murdaugh was interviewed by investigators, he was quick to offer up an explanation for the murders of his wife and son.

    Alex Murdaugh
    In the first weeks of the trial, the jury was shown Alex Murdaugh’s interviews with police. In this one from late on the night of the murders, Murdaugh tells investigators about finding the bodies of his wife and child at the kennels.

    Colleton County Court


    ALEX MURDAUGH (to investigators in patrol car): My son Paul was in a boat wreck … There’s been a lot of negative publicity about that and there’s been a lot of people online, just really vile stuff.  

    The crash that would kill 19-year-old Mallory Beach happened about 2:20 a.m. on February 24, 2019, when a boat carrying six young friends smashed into a bridge. Connor Cook made the frantic call to 911. 

    911 DISPATCHER: 911, where’s your emergency? 

    CONNOR COOK: We’re in a boat crash on Archers Creek.  


    CONNOR COOK: There’s six of us and one is missing. 

    911 DISPATCHER: Who’s missing?  

    CONNOR COOK:  A female, Mallory Beach is missing. … She’s in the water.  

    Lynn Reavis: Mallory, she was just this wonderful, fun-loving, happy girl. And everybody loved her. 

    Lynn Reavis and her niece Mallory were extremely close. 

    Lynn Reavis: You always got a hug hello and a hug goodbye. And the last thing she told me was she loved me (cries). 

    In piecing together events, investigators learned earlier that night, 19-year-old Paul Murdaugh used his older brother Buster’s ID to buy beer at a convenience store.

    Paul Murdaugh
    In this still image taken from security camera video, Paul Murdaugh appears to be celebrating that he was able to successfully purchase alcohol, says Michael DeWitt, the editor of The Hampton County Guardian, who has covered the story. Seconds later, he can be seen loading the cooler in the boat.

    South Carolina Division of Natural Resources


    Michael DeWitt: And if you look at the video footage when Paul comes out of the store, he’s holding the beer up. … He’s celebrating.

    After staying at a party for several hours, the group took the Murdaugh family’s boat to a bar, where Paul and Connor had more to drink around 1 a.m. 

    Michael DeWitt: They went in, pounded a couple of shots.

    Michael DeWitt is an author and editor of the Hampton County Guardian, part of the Gannett | USA Today Network. 

    Michael DeWitt: Somewhere around 1, 1:30, you see the video footage of them leaving the boat dock. 

    Anthony Cook and Mallory Beach
    As Anthony Cook and Mallory Beach made their way back to the boat, surveillance cameras captured one of the last images of Mallory alive.

    South Carolina Division of Natural Resources


    Michael DeWitt: It was kind of a sad, touching moment when you see Mallory and her boyfriend … I think, is the last moment that anybody … captured an image of her alive. 

    It was around 1:15 a.m. when they took off again on the boat. 

    MILEY ALTMAN (police interview): Paul was just driving, doing doughnuts.

    Passenger Miley Altman told investigators tempers were running short. 

    MILEY ALTMAN (police interview): And, so, Connor starts driving for a little bit and then Paul, he like stops Conner and he’s like, “No, this is my boat,” like, “let me drive …” 

    MILEY ALTMAN (police interview): I saw the bridge coming …

    CONNOR COOK to 911: What bridge is this … Paul, what bridge is this? 

    First responders’ dash cam video captured the mayhem.  

    OFFICER: Where’s everybody else at? 

    UNIDENTIFIED: At the bridge, at the bottom of the bridge. 

    Then-Beaufort County Deputy Sheriff Steven Domino was one of the first on the scene.  

    Stephen Domino: Everybody was crying, scared, shocked, just worried about their friend.  

    After Domino got Mallory’s distraught boyfriend Anthony Cook into his patrol car, Paul Murdaugh came into sight. 

    Stephen Domino: He was walking up from where the boat was. 

    ANTHONY COOK (to Domino): Get that m———– right there away from me.

    Stephen Domino: He actually tried to rush through me to get to Paul because I guess he saw him smiling.

    Nikki Battiste | “48 Hours” contributor: Paul was smiling while Anthony’s girlfriend is missing in the water?

    Stephen Domino: Correct. 

    ANTHONY COOK [to Paul Murdaugh]: Why are you f—— smiling like it’s f—— funny? My f—— girlfriend’s gone, bro.

    That’s when Anthony Cook definitively identified the person he said was driving the boat.   

    ANTHONY COOK: Do y’all know Alex Murdaugh?

    STEPHEN DOMINO: Yeah, I know that name.

    ANTHONY COOK: That’s his son.

    STEPHEN DOMINO: That’s the one driving the boat?

    ANTHONY COOK: Good luck.

    Stephen Domino: That’s when he indicated that he couldn’t be touched. 

    Mallory’s body was found a week later.  

    Michael Dewitt: And in the weeks after that … we’re just waiting … Is someone going to make an arrest? Is there going to be an admission of guilt or responsibility? 

    Michael Dewitt: I think that from day one, ground zero, the effort was … what can we do to get Paul out of this? 

    A MOTHER AND SON MURDERED

    Nikki Battiste: Who do you think is responsible for Mallory’s death?

    Lynn Reavis: I think Paul Murdaugh was.

    A month after the fatal boat crash, frustrated that there was no arrest, Mallory Beach’s family filed a wrongful death suit against members of the Murdaugh family, which allowed them to depose the survivors about what happened that night.

    Michael DeWitt: Paul was allegedly acting rash and reckless.

    In his deposition, Paul’s friend Connor Cook said that the morning of the crash he didn’t tell investigators that Paul was driving the boat because he was afraid. And, while at the hospital, he says he was told by Alex Murdaugh that he “didn’t need to tell anyone who was driving.”

    Michael DeWitt: Alex … reportedly went from room to room to try to communicate with the other boat crash passengers and get them all on the same page. 

    At the hospital several hours after the crash, Paul’s blood alcohol level was three times over the legal limit.

    Michael DeWitt: He was getting belligerent with the nurse’s staff according to court records, just being loud and troublesome.

    But that morning, and for weeks to come, many felt that Paul Murdaugh was not treated like a suspect in a crime.

    Lynn Reavis: We didn’t think he was gonna be charged. 

    Nikki Battiste: Why?

    Lynn Realis: Because it was takin’ so long. We just didn’t think we’d see that day. 

    Paul Murdaugh
    Nearly two months after the boat crash, on what would have been Mallory’ Beach’s 20th birthday, Paul Murdaugh was charged with three felony counts, including boating under the influence of alcohol or drugs, and causing the death of Mallory Beach. He pleaded not guilty.

    South Carolina Attorney General


    Nearly two months after the boat crash, Paul was charged with causing the death of Mallory Beach. He pleaded not guilty and remained free after posting bond — and the Murdaugh name began to tarnish.

    Two years passed. And on June 7, 2021, as Paul Murdaugh was awaiting trial in the death of Mallory Beach, gunfire erupted on the Murdaugh family estate. 

    ALEX MURDAUGH to 911: This is Alex Murdaugh at 4147 Moselle Road.

    Maggie and Paul Murdaugh
    Maggie and Paul Murdaugh

    Maggie Murdaugh/Facebook


    At 10:06 p.m., a panicked-sounding Alex Murdaugh called 911 saying he had just arrived home to find his wife of nearly 28 years, Maggie, and their son, Paul, shot.

    911 OPERATOR: Is he moving at all? Your son? I know you said that she was shot. But what about your son?

    ALEX MURDAUGH (cries): Nobody  they’re not — neither one of them’s moving.

    Maggie’s friend Caroline Price called her godson, Buster Murdaugh, when she heard the terrible news.

    Caroline Price: I said, “Please tell me this isn’t true.” And he said, “Yes ma’am, Ms. Caroline, it is.” And he immediately without prompt said, “It was premeditated and revenge.” … they were tryin’ to say that … it was associated with the boat crash.

    Nikki Battiste: That someone was angry at Paul. 

    Caroline Price: Right. 

    Due to the Murdaugh family’s close ties with local law enforcement, the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, known as SLED – the state’s top investigative agency – took over the case.

    Shellie West: It was amazing to me how quick this rumor mill started.

    Maggie’s friend Shellie West heard about the murders from a friend.

    Shellie West: And I just said, “Do you think Alex did it?” And he said, “No. There were two guns on the scene.”

    Nikki Battiste: But it actually crossed your mind that he might have done it —  even early on.

    Shellie West: Yeah, I mean, yeah. I mean, that was my first initial reaction … a lot of —  lotta times the husband’s the first suspect.

    And Price says she had a strange conversation with him after Maggie and Paul’s funeral.

    Caroline Price: He talked a lot about Paul. The fact that he wasn’t gonna get his day in court, he wasn’t gonna get to clear his name. 

    Maggie and Alex Murdaugh
    Maggie and Alex Murdaugh.

    Maggie Murdaugh/Facebook


    Murdaugh offered a $100,000 reward as rumors and speculation swirled. Reports at the time raised questions about their marriage and claimed that Maggie was consulting with a divorce attorney. 

    Caroline Price: Marian, her sister, asked me, “Do – do you know anything about this?” And I said, “No.” And she said, “She never said anything to me, and she tells me everything.”

    Nikki Battiste: Maggie never mentioned there was any trouble in the marriage?

    Caroline Price: Uh-uh (negative).

    At a hearing a few months later, “48 Hours” contributor Nikki Battiste questioned the Murdaugh family attorney Dick Harpootlian about the Murdaughs’ relationship.

    Nikki Battiste: Were there any problems in Maggie and Alex’s marriage?

    Dick Harpootlian: Absolutely none, none.  And — trust me, I was with them for almost two years … Always affectionate, always courteous … just a picture of domestic bliss.

    And as for the theory that the murders were in retaliation for the boat crash, Maggie’s friends say she never mentioned any threats against their family.

    Caroline Price: She talked about how unkind everybody was —  and mean.

    Shellie West: The looks and the sneers …

    Caroline Price: They didn’t seem to feel unsafe. I mean, they were still carryin’ on with their normal routine, day to-day activities and things.

    As investigators tried to figure out who would want Paul and Maggie Murdaugh dead, and why, a call came in to 911 that another member of the family was under attack.

    Michael DeWitt: It’s almost been a case of episodic television where, “Tune in this week and we’ll see what’s next from Hampton County, home of the Murdaughs.”

    MORE MURDAUGH MYSTERIES

    Three months after the shooting deaths of Maggie and Paul, Alex Murdaugh again called 911 – this time claiming he’d been shot. 

    ALEX MURDAUGH to 911: Somebody stopped to help me … and they tried to shoot me.

    Murdaugh told investigators he was changing a flat tire on a rural road when a person in a pickup truck passed by, asked Murdaugh if he was having car trouble, and then shot him in the head. 

    Murdaugh’s conversation on the way to the hospital was captured on police body cam:

    OFFICER (body cam video): Do you know what kind of gun it was?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: No, I don’t know what kind of gun it was. But it sounded – it sounded like a shotgun. 

    On Sept. 6, 2021, two days after being shot, Alex Murdaugh released this statement: “I have made a lot of decisions that I truly regret” he said, and announced he was leaving the law firm.

    LISA WEISMANN | WCSC NEWS: “Alex Murdaugh put out a statement saying… he’s going into rehab.”

    Alex Murdaugh said he had been addicted to opioids for two decades. It wasn’t only claims of drug abuse now staining his reputation. He was also accused of stealing millions from his own law firm and was asked to resign the day before he was shot. 

    Michael DeWitt:  Friday, the law firm has a come to Jesus meeting with him … we know you’re allegedly stealing money, you’re out … Saturday, the reported shooting … Monday, Alex releases a statement saying, “I’m going into rehab.’” 

    Then, came the even more bizarre news that Murdaugh had allegedly hired his distant cousin, Curtis Smith, to shoot him.

    Nikki Battiste: He wanted you to kill him.

    Curtis Smith: Yeah, he wanted me to kill him.

    Authorities say Murdaugh wanted his killing to look like murder so his surviving son Buster could collect a $10 million life insurance payout. Smith says he refused. 

    Curtis Smith: Yeah. Ain’t happening.

    It’s unclear exactly how Murdaugh came to be shot.

    Nikki Battiste: Why did you leave the scene?

    Curtis Smith: I didn’t know anything else to do.

    murdaugh-handcuffs.jpg
    On Sept. 16, 2021, Alex Murdaugh appeared in court for allegedly trying to plan his own death — by conspiring with Curtis Smith to shoot him.

    WTOC


    Smith was charged in connection with the shooting but has not entered a plea. On Sept. 16, 2021, facing charges of insurance fraud, conspiracy, and filing a false police report, Alex Murdaugh turned himself in.

    Michael DeWitt: The fact that a Murdaugh sat in a chair in a jumpsuit with handcuffs is somethin’ I’ve never seen in my lifetime.

    Alex Murdaugh was released on bond and allowed to go back to rehab. While Murdaugh was there, investigators were looking into all of his business dealings and the suspicious death of Gloria Satterfield.

    Ronnie Richter: Gloria was the housekeeper for the Murdaugh family for more than 20 years.

    Ronnie Richter is an attorney for the Satterfield family.

    Ronnie Richter:  She literally helped raise Alex Murdaugh’s sons, Paul and Buster.

    Gloria Satterfield
    Gloria Satterfield

    In 2018, the 57-year-old died after a fall at the Murdaugh estate.

    Ronnie Richter: What’s been reported is that she was at the house that day on the front steps. The dogs got a little rambunctious and gave her a push and she fell down the stairs.

    Satterfield’s death was ruled “natural,” and no autopsy was ever performed.

    Ronnie Richter: There is nothing natural about a 57-year-old woman falling down a flight of steps and dying from head trauma.

    At Satterfield’s funeral, Murdaugh did something very odd, says Richter. He recommended Gloria’s sons file a wrongful death lawsuit, against him. Murdaugh even steered them toward an attorney — his friend, Cory Fleming.

    Ronnie Richter: A lot of trust was placed in both Alex and in Cory to do the right things, and it really went south from the outset.

    Court documents show a $4.3 million payout by Murdaugh’s insurance company, but none of the money ever went to Satterfield’s family.

    Nikki Battiste: Where did that money go?

    Michael DeWitt: Well, allegedly it went into Alex Murdaugh’s pocket.

    Alex Murdaugh was charged with two felonies for his role in the Gloria Satterfield insurance fraud. This time, a judge ordered him to be held without bond.

    As Murdaugh sat in jail, he was indicted on dozens more charges for defrauding clients out of millions of dollars. And then in July of 2022, more than a year after the grisly murders —

    NORAH O`DONNELL | CBS EVENING NEWS: Disgraced South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh was indicted today in the high-profile murders of his wife and son last year.

    Alex Murdaugh was charged with killing his wife Maggie and son Paul. Maggie’s friends were relieved that the case was moving forward.

    Caroline Price: I was kinda like, “Phew.” You know, “Finally. … maybe we’re gonna get some answers.”

    PAUL MURDAUGH’S CELL PHONE HOLDS CRITICAL CLUE

    On Jan. 25, 2023, 19 months after Maggie and Paul were gunned down near the dog kennels at their family hunting estate, prosecutor Creighton Waters began laying out the state’s case against Alex Murdaugh.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: The defendant Alex Murdaugh, over there, told anyone who would listen that he was never at those kennels.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: The evidence is also going to show from these things that every one of us, most of us, carry around in our pockets that he was there. He was at the murder scene with the two victims.

    SGT. DANIEL GREENE | Colleton County Sheriff’s Office: I could see Mister Murdaugh down at the end of the driveway.

    SGT. DANIEL GREENE (body cam): Central 717… Scene is secure … both gunshot wounds to the head.

    First responders described the harrowing scene captured by their body cams.

    SGT. DANIEL GREENE: The male victim was close to a small shed and the dog kennel on the left. There was a large deal of blood that had pooled around his body.

    SGT. DANIEL GREENE (body cam): Turn around for me.

    ALEX MURDAUGH: I don’t have anything.

    SGT. DANIEL GREENE: Yes, sir I see that.

    SGT. DANIEL GREENE: This is your wife and son?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: Is it official they are dead?

    SGT. DANIEL GREENE: Yes sir, that’s what it looks like.

    Investigators interviewed Murdaugh in a patrol car.

    ALEX MURDAUGH: My boy over there, I could see, it was … (cries).

    Murdaugh said he spent time with Paul earlier in the evening, riding around the property. After Maggie got home, he dozed off on the couch and when he got up, there was nobody around.

    ALEX MURDAUGH (in patrol car): I called Maggie, didn’t get an answer. …Maggie is a dog lover … And I knew she’d gone to the kennel. … And I left to go to my mom’s. …my mom’s late-stage Alzheimer’s patient.

    His visit with his ill mother would become his alibi. Murdaugh told investigators when he returned around 10 p.m., there was still no one home, so he drove down to the dog kennels. That’s when he found Maggie and Paul. 

    ALEX MURDAUGH: I tried to turn Paul over first. … Then I went to my wife, and I mean I could see. … I touched them both. … I tried to take their pulse on both of them.

    Detective Laura Rutland interviewed Alex Murdaugh that night and told the jurors she noted despite his claim of touching the blood-soaked bodies of his wife and son, he appeared clean.

    PROSECUTOR JOHN MEADORS: How would you describe the defendant’s hands when you saw him?

    DET. LAURA RUTLAND: They were clean.

    JOHN MEADORS: How would you describe his T-shirt?

    DET. LAURA RUTLAND: Clean.

    JOHN MEADORS: Did those clothes appear to be fresh?

    DET. LAURA RUTLAND: They did.

    JOHN MEADORS: Like they just came out of laundry?

    DET. LAURA RUTLAND: It could be.

    Maggie and Paul died from multiple gunshot wounds. Daily Beast senior national reporter Pilar Melendez shared the investigators’ findings.

    melendez-kennel.jpg
    Daly Beast reporter Pilar Melendez points to the area where Paul Murdaugh’s body was found. 

    CBS News


    Pilar Melendez: So, Paul was shot first … he was shot twice with a shotgun.

    Pilar Melendez: Paul was found here next to the feeding room. … Very close by … right here is where Maggie was found.

    Maggie was killed with a 300 Blackout rifle and suffered five gunshot wounds. A crime scene specialist described her final moments.

    KENNETH KINSEY: The shooter was right here (demonstrating with a pointer) … The second shot was not as close, but it still wasn’t at long distance. It was approximately here into the crown of the head.

    Three days after the murders, building their timeline, investigators talked to Alex Murdaugh again.

    ALEX MURDAUGH (in patrol car): We sat around and ate supper … we hung around the house for a little while. I know that Maggie went to the kennels. Um, I don’t know exactly where Paul went, but he left the house, too. … I stayed in the house. … and I actually fell asleep on the couch.

    AGENT DAVID OWEN |SLED: The last time … you saw Paul and Maggie is when you all were eating supper?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: Yes, sir. (cries)

    The Murdaughs were avid hunters and had more than 25 weapons on the property.

    During a search, SLED agents found spent shell casings and ammunition that matched the bullets that killed Maggie and Paul. But the murder weapons were never found.  

    Murdaugh trial evidence
    When investigators first arrived at the scene, Maggie Murdaugh’s phone was missing. But with the help of the “Find My iPhone” feature, it was located the next day along a road not far from the Moselle property.

    Colleton County Court


    Maggie’s cell phone was also missing. The day after the murders, investigators found it on the side of the road, half a mile from the property. SLED analyzed the data from Alex, Maggie and Paul’s cell phones.

    At 7:56 p.m., Paul sent a Snapchat video of his dad to a friend. Paul is heard laughing in the background.

    Pilar Melendez: Around 8:30, Paul’s phone starts moving towards the dog kennels. He’s also calling and texting two friends then … responding to Snapchats – until about 8:40, when he gets on a four-minute phone call with his friend Rogan Gibson.

    Rogan Gibson told investigators their phone call was about his dog who was staying at the kennels. Rogan thought he heard Alex in the background.

    Pilar Melendez: That immediately sets a red flag for law enforcement, because that totally messes up Alex’s timeline. And how could he be at the dog kennels at 8:40 when he claims he was … sleeping?

    Two months after the murders, agents interviewed Alex Murdaugh again, this time at a SLED office. They asked him if he went down to the kennels that night.

    SLED AGENT: I’ve got information that … you were heard in the background. … Was it you?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: No, sir, not if my times are right.

    SLED AGENT: Who do you think it could have been?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: I have no idea.

    Alex Murdaugh claimed for months that he had not been at the kennels on the night of the murders. But in a video taken on Paul’s phone only minutes before the murders likely took place, Alex Murdaugh’s voice can be heard, placing him at the kennel that night. This is a screenshot of that video, showing Paul’s hand and a friend’s dog in the kennel.

    Colleton County Court


    In November 2022, there was a breakthrough in the investigation. Agents showed Gibson a video of his dog Cash that they had found on Paul’s phone. Paul had shot it at 8:44 p.m., minutes before he was killed.

    CELL PHONE VIDEO: Voice 1: It’s guinea. Voice 2: It’s a chicken. Voice 3: Come here, Bubba …

    PROSECUTOR JIM GRIFFIN: What voices did you hear?

    ROGAN GIBSON: Paul’s, Ms. Maggie, and Mr. Alex. 

    JIM GRIFFIN: How sure are you now? 

    ROGAN GIBSON: Positive. 

    JIM GRIFFIN: 100%? 

    ROGAN GIBSON: That’s correct.  

    The prosecutor says Murdaugh is heard saying “Come here Bubba” — calling the family dog.

    Pilar Melendez: This is a huge piece of testimony because it places Alex in the kennels roughly five minutes before prosecutors say Maggie and Paul were murdered.

    Authorities believed Maggie and Paul were shot around 8:49 p.m. when their phone screens were locked and never opened again.  The prosecutor asked several other witnesses if they recognized Murdaugh’s voice on that video.

    Pilar Melendez: Every single witness has said with a 100% certainty that that’s Alex in the background of that video … it completely shatters his alibi.

    Alex Murdaugh’s car and cell phone data showed he drove to his mom’s house shortly after 9 p.m. Between then and until he returned and dialed 911 at 10:06 p.m., he made 10 calls to family and friends, including five to Maggie.

    Pilar Melendez: Prosecutors basically allege that … after killing Paul and Maggie, Alex took steps to cover up … and show that he is … talking to all these people, so how could he murder his wife and son?

    As to the motive, the state had a theory that a perfect storm was gathering for Alex Murdaugh.

    Pilar Melendez: Alex was scared about information coming out that he had been stealing money from his clients and his law firm for years.

    On the day of the murders, Murdaugh was confronted by his firm about missing legal fees of almost $800,000. Also, that week, he was due in court for a hearing on the boat crash civil case. Murdaugh was being sued for $10 million by Mallory Beach’s family.

    Pilar Melendez: The prosecution is alleging that, in order to dissuade further questions about his financial crimes and garner sympathy from the community and his law firm, he killed his wife and son.

    Pilar Melendez: It’s the actions of a desperate man.

    After the judge ruled Murdaugh’s alleged financial schemes could be brought in, the state called the firm’s CFO Jeannie Seckinger.


    CFO of Alex Murdaugh’s former law firm testifies

    03:10

    PROSECUTOR CREIGHTON WATERS: Was anyone concerned about … those missing fees after the murders happened?

    JEANNIE SECKINGER: We weren’t because we were concerned about Alex … we weren’t going to go in there and harass him about money when … his family had been killed.

    The Beach family’s attorney Mark Tinsley also testified and told the jurors, in the wake of the murders, the civil case against Alex Murdaugh would have gone away.

    MARK TINSLEY: If Alex is the victim of a vigilante, no one is going to hold him accountable. … The case would be over.

    As the state rested its case, Alex Murdaugh made the risky decision to take the stand.

    MURDAUGH’S “TANGLED WEB”

    JUDGE CLIFTON NEWMAN: Have you made a decision as to whether you’re gonna testify?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: I am going to testify. I want to testify

    Against his attorney’s advice, Alex Murdaugh decided to take the stand in his own defense. Under questioning by attorney Jim Griffin, Murdaugh is hoping the jury will look past his lies and believe that now he’s telling them the truth.

    DEFENSE ATTORNEY JIM GRIFFIN: Did you kill Maggie?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: No, I did not kill Maggie. I did not kill Paul. I would never hurt Maggie and I would never hurt Paul. Ever. Under any circumstances.

    Alex Murdaugh
    When he took the stand in his own defense, Alex Murdaugh admitted that it was his voice on the video, and that he had lied to investigators about not being at the scene of the crime that night. He claimed that his decades-long opioid addiction had made him paranoid, and he feared he would be suspected if he told the truth.

    Pool


    After all the testimony identifying him on that kennel video, Murdaugh is forced to admit he was with his wife and son minutes before prosecutors say they were gunned down.

    JIM GRIFFIN: Were you, in fact, at the kennels at 8:44 p.m. on the night Maggie and Paul were murdered?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: I was.

    KENNEL CELL PHONE VIDEO: “Come here Bubba.”

    JIM GRIFFIN: Did you continue lying after that night, did you not?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: Once I lied, I continued to lie. Yes, sir.

    JIM GRIFFIN: Why?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: Oh, what a tangled web we weave. But once I told a lie, I mean, I told my family, I had to keep lying.

    Murdaugh claims he’d been compelled to lie because of an opioid addiction he battled for 20 years, spending tens of thousands of dollars a week and taking up to 60 or more pills per day.

    ALEX MURDAUGH: As my addiction evolved over time, I would get into situations or circumstances where I would get paranoid thinking.

    But he dismisses the prosecution’s theory of mounting pressure from his addiction and alleged financial crimes leading up to the murders.

    JIM GRIFFIN: Mr. Murdoch, on June the 7th, did you believe that your financial house of cards was about to crumble?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: Absolutely not.

    During a six-hour cross-examination over two days, Prosecutor Creighton Waters grills Murdaugh about his long history of lying to his financial victims.

    ALEX MURDAUGH: And Mr. Waters, just to try to get through this quicker, I admit —

    CREIGHTON WATERS: I know you want to get through it quicker, but we’re not. So, answer the question please.

    ALEX MURDAUGH: What I – what I admit is that I misled them. I did wrong. And that I stole their money.

    Waters contends it was only because he’d been caught in his lie about being at the kennels that Murdaugh finally came clean.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: The reality is … you, like you’ve done so many times over the course of your life, had to back up and make a new story that kind of fit with the facts that can’t be denied.  Isn’t that true, sir?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: No sir, that’s not true.

    Waters then tries to box him in to his new timeline on the night of the murders, zeroing in on four minutes — between 9:02 and 9:06 p.m. —  when his phone logged 283 steps, right before he left to visit his mom.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: That’s far more steps in a shorter time period than — than any time prior that you’ve seen from the testimony in this case. So, what – what were you so busy doing? … Going to the bathroom?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: No, I don’t think that I went to the bathroom.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: Getting on a treadmill?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: No, I didn’t get on the treadmill.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: Jog in place?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: No, I didn’t jog in place.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: Doing jumping jacks?

    ALEX MURDAUGH: No, sir. I did not do jumping jacks.

    Murdaugh reasserts his theory of the murders.

    ALEX MURDAUGH: I believe that boat wreck is the reason why Paul Paul and Maggie were killed … Because I can tell you for a fact … that the person or people who did what I saw on June the 7th, they hated Paul Murdaugh, and they had anger in their heart.

    Murdaugh family
    Paul, Maggie, Alex and Buster Murdaugh

    Maggie Murdaugh/Facebook


    Throughout the trial, the defense makes the case that Alex Murdaugh was a devoted family man. His son Buster describes a dad who’d coached his Little League teams and was now stricken with grief.

    BUSTER MURDAUGH: He was destroyed. He was heartbroken. I walked in the door and saw him and gave him a hug and just — just broken down.

    The defense calls a crime scene analyst who, based on blood spatter, position of shots fired, and the fact that two different guns were used, says there was more than one shooter.

    TIM PALMBACH: My opinion is the totality of the evidence is more suggestive of a two-shooter scenario.

    The prosecution disagrees.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: This is Alex the prosecutor, the lawyer. He’s thinking through this. He’s thought through this. He’s going to use two guns because it is going to confuse people that perhaps there were two shooters.

    In his closing to the jury, Waters argues that all the evidence points to Alex Murdaugh.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: Paul, who had stippling from that first shot at close range, shot with no indication that he detected a threat from the person who fired that weapon. And why? Cause it was him (points at Alex Murdaugh)! Maggie sees what happens and she comes running over there. … She was running to her baby … she got mowed down by the only person we have conclusive proof was at that scene just minutes before. And who lied about that very fact.

    And he describes how Murdaugh could have cleaned up at the kennels afterwards.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: Wouldn’t take long to strip down and wash yourself off. … Get in that cart and get back to the house.

    JIM GRIFFIN: Here we are with a Mr. Clean theory … He takes a hose and washes himself off? He gets in a golf cart —  butt naked I guess —  and drives to the house?

    Defense attorney Jim Griffin pushes back on the prosecution’s theory.

    JIM GRIFFIN: He would have to be a magician to make all that evidence disappear. … The shooter’s covered in blood. The shooter’s gun is covered in blood. … Common sense thing here is there were two shooters.

    Instead, said Griffin, investigators zeroed in on Murdaugh to the exclusion of other suspects because he was an easy target. 

    JIM GRIFFIN: Longtime drug problem, his financial issues, misconduct were exposed … easy, easy, easy, easy target for SLED … the evidence is crystal clear … they started fabricating evidence against Alex.

    Griffin tells the jury SLED also presented false evidence to the grand jury when seeking an indictment against Murdaugh.

    JIM GRIFFIN: They came up with a report that says Alex’s T-shirt had high velocity blood spatter on it. 

    The lead SLED agent testified he had not received an email update that further testing had shown there was no blood.

    DAVID OWEN | SLED Agent: I did not see that report. I was not made aware of its existence.

    JIM GRIFFIN: SLED failed miserably in investigating this case. And had they done a competent job that Alex would have been excluded … a year ago.

    Then he addresses the single most problematic piece of evidence for the defense.

    JIM GRIFFIN: Really, we’re back to the lie. … ‘Cause that’s all they have in this case … He lied because he had a closet full of skeletons. …. But what he didn’t lie, what he didn’t lie for is because he was covering up for the fact that he killed Maggie and Paul. … Alex would not have killed the people he loved most in the world.

    CREIGHTON WATERS: This defendant … has fooled everyone, everyone. … And he fooled Maggie and Paul too, and they paid for it with their lives. Don’t let him fool you, too.

    After hearing from 75 witnesses in more than five weeks, the jury deliberates for just under three hours before returning with a verdict. Murdaugh is found guilty of murdering his wife and son.

    At sentencing the next day, Judge Clifton Newman gives Murdaugh one last chance to appeal to the court.

    ALEX MURDAUGH: I respect this court, but I’m innocent.


    Alex Murdaugh sentenced to life in prison after murder convictions

    02:31

    Unmoved, Judge Newman sentences him to two consecutive life terms in prison.

    JUDGE CLIFTON NEWMAN: I know you have to see Paul and Maggie during the nighttime when you attempt to go to sleep. I’m sure they come and visit you.

    Nikki Battiste: I can’t stop thinking about the fact that it is a video on Paul’s own phone that really was critical in this case.

    Creighton Waters: Well, I think it is ironic … in a murder case the victims can’t testify, but in many ways, they do … they leave something behind that lets you know what happened to ’em. And in this case, it was Paul’s video. … It’s Paul testifying from the grave.

    Alex Murdaugh
    Alex Murdaugh

    Alex Murdaugh has been transported to Kirkland Reception and Evaluation Center in Columbia, South Carolina.

    He’ll be assessed there before being assigned permanently to a maximum-security prison.

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  • Jurors hear closing arguments in Alex Murdaugh’s murder trial

    Jurors hear closing arguments in Alex Murdaugh’s murder trial

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    Jurors hear closing arguments in Alex Murdaugh’s murder trial – CBS News


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    Closing arguments got underway Wednesday in the double-murder trial of disgraced former South Carolina attorney Alex Murdaugh, who is charged with killing his wife and son. The jury also visited the home where the killings took place. Nikki Battiste has the latest.

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