ReportWire

Tag: 48 Hours

  • DNA left at crime scene links former soldier to Virginia artist’s unsolved murder

    [ad_1]

    Cold case detectives Melissa Wallace and Jon Long of the Fairfax County Police Department began reviewing Robin Lawrence’s murder case in April 2021. They were struck by the sheer violence of the attack on the 37-year-old mother.

    Det. Jon Long: … that’s like your worst nightmare.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: It looked brutal.

    Det. Jon Long: … that’s the reason why you tell your loved ones to make sure that your doors are locked at night … he is … the boogeyman.

    Investigating the murder of Robin Warr Lawrence

    On Nov. 20, 1994, Robin’s friend Laurie Lindberg had entered her home to check on her and saw blood on the bedroom walls and Robin’s 2-year-old daughter Nicole wandering around. Alarmed, Lindberg called 911 – and then rushed the little girl to the hospital. Although Nicole did not appear hurt, she had undergone a liver transplant after she was born, and her health was fragile.

    Laurie Lindberg: Because, of course, she’s taking immunosuppressive medications. … I mean, this is life-saving medication. … She needs to have it.

    Anne-Marie Green: Because you don’t know how long she’s been in that house by herself.

    Laurie Lindberg: Right.

    Lead crime scene Detective Mark Garman was one of the first on site.

    According to Garman, who photographed the evidence, the intruder came through a window off the back deck — the one Lindberg had used to get inside. He entered the house the same way.

    Det. Mark Garman: I had no idea what the scene looked like until I walked around the corner in — into the master bedroom.

    Anne-Marie Green: Tell me the state that Robin was in when you saw her.

    Det. Mark Garman: … very damaged, a lot of knife wounds, severe gaping knife wound in her neck … unbelievable number of defensive wounds on her hands, knife wounds in her back, on her legs.

    He says signs of a struggle were obvious in the room.

    Police say Robin Lawrence’s bedroom showed signs of a struggle and blood on the walls.

    Fairfax County Police Department


    Det. Mark Garman: This is the phone that was on the floor, um, near Mrs. Lawrence.

    Det. Mark Garman: The phone cord was cut.

    Det. Mark Garman: She was assaulted in the bed and then fought her way outta the bed, and, um, continued to fight and struggle …

    Garman says one of the first things that stood out were bloody tissues, scattered around the house and near Robin’s body. He believes it was Robin’s daughter, Nicole, who left them behind — trying to help her mother.

    Det. Mark Garman: … even at that age, kids know what blood is and bloods come from … wounds and cuts. And they know that mom puts, tissues on them or Band-Aids. … I think she was trying to stop the blood.

    And there was another heart-wrenching discovery: empty baby bottles had been left around her mother’s body.

    Det. Mark Garman: Having kids … When they got hungry, they brought you your baby bottle. … And that’s what I’m thinking. … Nicole would’ve taken it to mom.

    While investigators processed the scene, officers at the hospital asked Lindberg to call Robin’s parents.

    Laurie Lindberg: Robin’s dad answered. … I think I said Robin is dead. … But what I remember is, um, Jessie, her mom, must have just been in the — or overheard, cause … She was just wailing, just a sort of primal anguish. … that was really horrible. … That’s probably the most horrible thing that’s ever happened to me  is calling (crying).

    Robin Lawrence

    Robin Lawrence and her daughter, Nicole. For two days after her mother’s murder, Nicole, just 2 years old at the time, roamed the house alone before Robin’s body was discovered.

    Warr Lawrence Family


    Robin’s father, Robert Warr Sr., a World War II veteran and now 101 years old, says he tried to forget that call but one memory has never left him.

    Robert Warr Sr.: My granddaughter was … right next to where she was murdered. … I’ll never forget that. Never.

    He had to break the news to his surviving children, including his daughter Mary Warr Cowans and his son Robert Warr Jr.

    Mary Warr Cowans: … after the words “Robin is dead,” I — it was like —

    Robert Warr Jr.: A nightmare.

    Mary Warr Cowans: Yeah. You’re just like — your world shattered.

    Cowans says, in those first few days, they didn’t have a clear picture of what had happened to their sister.

    Mary Warr Cowans: … the details were very sketchy and slow to come and the police … asked, well, do you know anybody who had a grudge or something against Robin? And of course, the answer is no.

    Robin was a gifted artist with a fine arts degree from Carnegie Melon University. After college, she was selected to mold the first medal for The Martin Luther King Jr. Nonviolent Peace Prize, which was awarded to Rosa Parks. 

    Robin Warr Lawrence

    Robin Warr Lawrence designed the mold for the first medal for The Martin Luther King Jr. Nonviolent Peace Prize.

    Mary Warr Cowans: That was a big deal. And for my parents who grew up in Memphis, Tennessee … during Jim Crow and they could not ride in the front of the bus, they could not go to the zoo except on Tuesdays. … that was a big deal.

    Robin’s father says his daughter’s accomplishments were his greatest source of pride.

    Robert Warr Sr.: She was a powerful lady in this world … Her drawings are not just paintings, they are powerful.

    Lindberg first met Robin in ballet class.

    Laurie Lindberg: I was like, oh my God, this woman’s beautiful. … But what … was really fun about Robin was she’s very personable, very fun loving, just very down to earth.

    Lindberg and Robin shared an apartment in Washington D.C. around the time Robin was dating her future husband, Ollie. Lindberg says they were a great match.

    Laurie Lindberg: Ollie … he has a very calm and kind demeanor and you kind of feel very confident around him, very at ease with him.

    The couple were married on New Year’s Eve 1989. Three years later, they welcomed their daughter, Nicole. At the time of her death, Robin was working in advertising. Ollie Lawrence, who was away on a business trip in the Bahamas, was an executive at an airline.

    Mary Warr Cowans: Well, I think they had a relatively what I call normal family life. … they were working on doing home improvements, getting the yard fixed up.

    Now that home with so much promise, was an active crime scene. 

    Det. Jon Long: There were valuables that were in the bedroom. There was cash. There was jewelry. … There wasn’t … anything stolen …

    Investigators suspected Robin was killed by someone she knew.

    Det. Jon Long: They started looking at the family dynamic. They started looking at the marriage.

    Anne-Marie Green: Was Ollie cooperative?

    Det. Jon Long: He was.

    But as authorities dug further, they learned something. Ollie had been having an affair with a colleague.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: Then what does that mean? … you think, oh how convenient, the weekend you go out of town for three days, your wife is brutally murdered.

    The case goes cold

    Mary Warr Cowans: It just was surreal. It really was like, for me, walking in a —- through a dream state. … cause you just can’t make sense of it.

    Just three days after what would have been Robin’s 38th birthday on Nov. 26, 1994, her family and friends gathered for her funeral.

    Mary Warr Cowans: We were still very much just bewildered and lost.

    Cowans says Robin’s injuries were so severe, the family had a closed casket.

    Mary Warr Cowans: … that was hard for me cause I had never got a chance to see her one last time. I always wanted to be able to say goodbye and see her. (emotional)

    As Robin’s family mourned her death, investigators pieced together a timeline and determined that the last time anyone had heard from Robin was around 6 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 18.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: We believe Robin was killed around 9:30-ish.

    Ollie, Nicole and Robin Lawrence

    Ollie, left, Nicole and Robin Lawrence.

    Warr Lawrence Family


    Her body was discovered two days later. Investigators zeroed in on her husband, Ollie, who they had discovered was having an affair. They followed up on his alibi.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: The detectives flew down to the Bahamas, confirmed that he was on the flight he was supposed to be on. He was at the hotel he was supposed to be at.

    Detectives also interviewed Ollie’s lover but found no evidence she was involved. Robin’s sister and brother were surprised to learn about the affair but they say they never believed Ollie had anything to do with Robin’s murder.

    Mary Warr Cowans: I never thought that Ollie — that he harmed her.

    Anne-Marie Green: And how about you? Did it ever cross your mind maybe he’s involved in this somehow?

    Robert Warr Jr.: No, I didn’t think that. He’s not that type of person.

    Ollie chose not to talk to “48 Hours” about his experience. Investigators didn’t have much else to go on. The killer left no fingerprints – but something had caught crime scene detective Garman’s eye while he was documenting the bathroom.

    Det. Mark Garman: … on the towel rod to the sliding tub door. There’s a washcloth.

    Det. Mark Garman: I do notice a small stain on this towel right here. … Small brownish stain.

    That brown stain turned out to be blood and authorities extracted DNA from it. It didn’t match anyone close to the case, including Ollie or the woman he had had a relationship with. Detectives believed it belonged to Robin’s killer and uploaded it to the FBI’s national database, CODIS.

    But CODIS also returned no matches. And with no new leads, the investigation stalled.

    Anne-Marie Green: How much did the adults tell you?

    Lauren Ovans: Nothing.

    Mary Warr Cowans’ daughter, Lauren Ovans, was just 8 years old when her Aunt Robin was killed.

    Lauren Ovans: I remember her being angelic.

    She says even though her family avoided the topic, she could feel the void Robin’s murder left behind.

    Lauren Ovans: Out of all of my family members, she was the most like me. … So everybody always called me Robin. … I just knew that they were still thinking of her.

    Anne-Marie Green: Can you describe what you lost when you lost Robin?

    Lauren Ovans: I think I lost an extension of myself because … she was the one who just taught me to be comfortable with who I was. So you – you — I lost a piece of me.

    Ovans says she stayed close with her cousin Nicole who rarely spoke about her mother.

    Lauren Ovans: I think she didn’t know much about her mother. … So there wasn’t really much to share. And I didn’t want to ever bring it up because I didn’t want to make her anxious or make her nervous. Um, it was better just left unsaid.

    The family eventually resigned themselves to the idea that the case may never be solved.

    Mary Warr Cowans: When my mother died, I, that was kind of like, well, she went to her grave not knowing what happened to her child. And — and at that point I said, well, just, I have to just kinda let it go. … I have to let it go.

    Then, decades later in 2019, investigators turned to Parabon NanoLabs, a DNA technology company, hoping genetic genealogy could identify Robin’s killer. Ellen Greytak is the director of bioinformatics at Parabon.

    Ellen Greytak: We take DNA from a crime scene. … We upload it to GED Match and to Family Tree DNA, which are two databases. … And what they give us back is … people in our database … who share DNA with your unknown person.

    Greytak says that while their analysis showed Robin’s killer likely had European ancestry, tracing him through his relatives proved nearly impossible.

    Ellen Greytak: So in this case, the — the database matches were just really distant. They only shared little, tiny pieces of DNA, which means that their shared ancestor with our unknown person was pretty far back in time. And that means that those people had a lot of descendants today.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: Parabon gave us a solvability rate of zero on the case, and essentially said, you do not have the time nor the money … to get it moving forward …

    Investigators say they could have walked away. But Liz, an amateur genealogist and volunteer with the police department — who asked that her last name not be used — offered to take on the case in her spare time for free.

    Liz: I just felt I wanted to give something back to the community. … And I believed that I could actually be helpful in solving some of these cases.

    Investigators gave Liz everything Parabon had uncovered about the suspect’s ethnicity.

    Liz: … it was about half Eastern European, about 25 percent Irish. Another 25 percent was a combination of I think English and Italian and Scandinavian. 

    Along with a list of cousins who shared his DNA.

    Liz: And so what I got … was … approximately 1,500 cousins.

    Liz: I was not certain that I could crack it … there were no first cousins or second cousins … It was really more fourth to six.

    As Liz worked to trace the suspect through his family tree, Wallace turned to another DNA tool and asked Parabon to produce a phenotyping sketch of Robin’s killer.

    Ellen Greytak: DNA phenotyping … it means actually predicting what that person looked like from their DNA.

    But would anyone recognize him?

    Volunteer genetic genealogist identifies a possible suspect

    In 2021, nearly 30 years after Robin Lawrence’s murder, Parabon NanoLabs was tasked with producing a composite of the man investigators believed was her killer.

    Thom Shaw | Forensic artist: So I get a report from our bioinformatic scientist, and it lays out all the predictions from the DNA …

    Scientists created a facial model based on the DNA predictions.

    Thom Shaw (working on a composite): … it starts off with … his skin color, which he’s predicted to have very fair or fair skin color.he’s most likely gonna have a larger chin than average, wider jaw, or cheeks than average … kind of a narrower nose … than average.

    Thom Shaw, a forensic artist at Parabon, says his job was to refine the model by applying other details like hair and eye color.

    Thom Shaw: I’ve kind of outlined where his eyes are because I’m gonna be putting new ones in … kind of that dark blue that are predicted.

    Thom Shaw: I’ll … do eyebrows … kind of, most likely like a lighter brownish hair. … And so I gave him a little bit lighter eyebrows to match what his hair color is gonna be … I’ll go and find … a hairstyle, something generic …

    Shaw says DNA doesn’t reveal a person’s age, so the composites are generated as a young adult — typically around 25 years old.

    Lawrence murder suspect

    Scientists at Parabon NanoLabs created a facial model based on DNA predictions.

    Parabon NanoLabs


    Thom Shaw (showing finished composite): So this is him.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: Did this look like their mailman? Was this the neighbor’s kid? … Was it somebody from work?

    Detective Melissa Wallace set up a video call with Robin’s husband Ollie to see if he recognized the man in the composite.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: I was really hoping that when Ollie saw that, that he would go, oh my gosh, that looks exactly like so and so.

    Anne-Marie Green: And did he?

    Det. Melissa Wallace: He did not. … He said that doesn’t spark my memory at all. It looks like nobody I know.

    The investigation stalled again. But behind the scenes, volunteer genealogist Liz kept working with that list of 1,500 cousins distantly related to the suspect.

    Liz had eventually traced some of the suspect’s ancestors to Canada, where they had settled. That’s where she found two cousins that were not related to each other.

    Liz: And so I ended up with two trees that were highly reliable … And they were the people that uh, that were truly cousins to the suspect.

    Liz says if she could figure out where those two trees were linked, through a marriage, the suspect would be a descendant of that couple.

    lawrence-liz.jpg

    Liz, a Fairfax County Police Department volunteer, shows how she came up with a possible suspect through a family tree using genetic genealogy.

    CBS News


    Liz (showing family tree): And what I found was this woman on this tree married this man on this tree. … that was it, that was the aha moment … that was when I realized that … he’s a descendant of this couple right here.

    After three-and-a-half years, Liz finally had a lead — and it pointed her to a man named Stephan Smerk.

    Liz: I felt like this really was him. … I didn’t know it for certain, but I believed it was. … I contacted the detectives.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: So, she sends me an email … she says, I think I found someone of interest.

    Anne-Marie Green: What happens as you start looking into him?

    Det. Melissa Wallace: Well, we find out — computer programmer up in New York, married to a defense attorney, two kids in high school, nice house in the suburbs, not so much as a speeding ticket on his background.

    Melissa Wallace: I’m thinking … there’s no way this is our guy.

    But according to Det. Jon Long, things got a bit more interesting when they found his yearbook photo — at age 16.

    Det. Jon Long: It looked very similar to the phenotyping sketch. … we’re like, well … maybe this does make sense.

    Stephan Smerk and Parabon composite

    A photo of 16-year-old Stephen Smerk, left, and his DNA phenotyping composite.

    Ancestry.com/Parabon NanoLabs


    Stephan Smerk lived in Niskayuna, a town in upstate New York, so investigators decided to pay him a visit.

    Anne-Marie Green: Does he know you’re coming? 

    Det. Jon Long: No. No. 

    They were hoping he would cooperate and provide his DNA. Wallace and Long say he appeared to be home alone, so they knocked on his door.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: All we said is we are detectives from Fairfax County, Virginia, and we’re looking into a cold case from the 90s. … Do you mind if we come in and talk to you? He said, sure. He invited us in, and —

    Anne-Marie Green: Hold on a minute … So, you say we’re from Virginia … We’re investigating this murder. His initial reaction. 

    Det. Jon Long: No reaction. None.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: None.

    Det. Jon Long: Stone-faced.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: There was no surprise. There was no fear. Nothing.

    They found his demeanor unusual.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: When … we’re asking for … DNA, this conversation typically takes a solid 45 minutes … People generally have a lot of questions. … Like, what do you mean someone in my family has committed a murder? … Who was killed? … There was not a single question from him.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: We were in and out of his house in five minutes with his DNA. … Consent form signed, swab collected, packaged up. That was it.

    After the visit, detectives checked into their hotel. But then Wallace got an unexpected call.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: … it’s Steve Smerk calling me … And he says, “I’m at the police department to turn myself in.” And I said, “turn yourself in for what?” And he said, “I’m here to turn myself in for the murder.”

    Det. Melissa Wallace: A million things start going through my mind.

    Smerk told the detective he was having trouble getting into the Niskayuna Police Department, which was locked.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: So, then I’m thinking it must be a smaller police station … And I said, OK, what I need you to do is we’re gonna hang up. … I need you to call 911 and tell them that you’re there.

    Smerk’s call was recorded:

    911 OPERATOR: 911, what’s the address of your emergency?

    STEPHAN SMERK: I’m actually here to turn myself in for a cold case crime.

    911 OPERATOR: You’re here to turn yourself in?

    STEPHAN SMERK: Well, they collected DNA, so —

    911 OPERATOR: OK, what’s your —

    STEPHAN SMERK: — it’s only a matter of time.

    911 OPERATOR: — last name?

    Anne-Marie Green: Wow. So, when do you tell him [Det. Long]?

    Det. Melissa Wallace: Oh my God. I was freaking out. so.

    Det. Jon Long: She freaked me out. 

    Det. Melissa Wallace: I run down to his room … and I’m banging on his door … I’m like, we got to go to the police department. … He’s turning himself in.

    Wallace also reached out to local police, and Stephan Smerk was taken into custody.

    Stephan Smerk arrest

    Stephan Smerk,  a married 52-year-old father of two, was arrested outside of the Niskayuna, N.Y., Police Department after calling 911 to turn himself in for the 1994 murder of Robin Lawrence in Springfield, Virginia.

    Niskayuna Police Department


    Det. Melissa Wallace: The adrenaline was pumping so hard because the reality hit … And, um, it sounds like he’s gonna talk to us about it.

    Detective Long says they had to refocus fast and figure out how they would handle Stephan Smerk’s interrogation.

    Det. Jon Long: … we need to make sure this is a sound interview. … that could potentially be used in court, down the road. 

    When they finally sat down with him —

    STEPHAN SMERK: Where do you wanna start?

    — investigators say he didn’t need much prompting.

    STEPHAN SMERK:  It was 100 percent intentional.

    STEPHAN SMERK: I am a serial killer who’s only killed once.

    A stunning confession brings closure to a decades-old mystery

    When investigators met with Stephan Smerk on Sept. 7, 2023, they were skeptical.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: … this doesn’t happen every day. … So, we, we had to … really think through, well, why is he doing this?

    Detectives had not yet received the results of the DNA sample Smerk had provided, linking him definitively.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: … we needed to be very careful … to make sure that we weren’t getting a false confession.

    Anne-Marie Green: So, then what was your approach gonna be?

    Det. Jon Long: We started talking about things like hey, let’s make sure that … he’s gonna bring up details of the case without us telling him first.

    STEPHAN SMERK (interrogation): Can you remind me of her name again? Can you say that?

    DET. MELISSA WALLACE: I can. Do you remember anything about the person?

    STEPHAN SMERK: She was African American.

    DET. MELISSA WALLACE: OK.

    STEPHAN SMERK: That’s all I remember.

    Det. Jon Long: He starts volunteering information which is great.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: So it was just like he wanted to talk about his weekend or, uh, some other family event that he went to. It was a very calm conversation, nonchalant.

    STEPHAN SMERK (interrogation): I was, uh, not in the right frame of mind.

    Smerk told detectives that in November 1994, he was a 22-year-old soldier stationed at Fort Myer in Arlington, Virginia, and on the night of the murder he had been drinking beer.

    STEPHAN SMERK: (interrogation): I was, uh, drunk and under ephedrine …

    He says he had been taking ephedrine pills, a stimulant.

    lawrence-smerk-interrogation.jpg

    During questioning, Stephan Smerk told detectives, “I honestly believe that if it wasn’t for my wife and my kids, I probably would be a serial killer … I am a serial killer who’s only killed once.”

    Fairfax County Police Department


    STEPHAN SMERK: (interrogation): … something inside me said that — it’s hard to explain … I knew that I was going kill somebody. I did not know who I was going to kill.

    STEPHAN SMERK: (interrogation): … it was like this overbearing thought in my brain that … I just had to kill somebody.

    Smerk said he drove to Robin’s neighborhood because he was familiar with the area — he’d visited friends who stayed in a house nearby.

    DET. JON LONG (interrogation): … had you had any contact with her, spoke to her or anything like that?

    STEPHAN SMERK: No, I didn’t even, to be honest with you, I don’t — didn’t even know who lived there …  I never met this person before or seen her or anything …

    Smerk confirmed he entered the house from the back deck and told detectives he was wearing a ski mask and leather gloves.

    STEPHAN SMERK (interrogation): I went in and noticed that she had … a baby in one of the rooms.

    He said he went down the hall to Robin’s bedroom.

    STEPHAN SMERK (interrogation): I startled her, she got out of bed. … She was on her knees … she was just begging for her life. … I cut her up pretty good. … I did everything they taught me in the military, hand-to-hand combat.

    STEPHAN SMERK (interrogation): I’m highly, highly influenced by demons …

    He told investigators one of the reasons he enlisted was because he wanted to kill.

    STEPHAN SMERK (interrogation): I want to tell you right now that I — she’s the only person that I’ve killed. … I’m married, I have kids, but I honestly believe that if it wasn’t for my wife and my kids, I probably would be a serial killer.

    Robin Lawrence murder evidence

    DNA evidence was found on a wash cloth in Robin Lawrence’s bathroom. 

    Fairfax Police Department


    Detective Wallace knew it was critical to link him to that washcloth found in the bathroom, so she asked him if he’d been injured that night.

    STEPHAN SMERK (interrogation): … she clawed at my face. I had a little bit of a scar here.

    DET. MELISSA WALLACE: Did you ever go into her bathroom at all?

    STEPHAN SMERK: I don’t remember that. If I did go into the bathroom, it would’ve been to look at what she did in my face.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: That’s when I knew that — that we were in business with putting him in the bathroom and why his DNA was there … that was the biggest confirmation.

    As the interview wrapped up, Long asked Smerk if he wanted to express any remorse to Robin’s family.

    STEPHAN SMERK (interrogation): Um, how do I say this? I know you’re recording. I don’t feel anything for the family. … I can’t say that any other way. … I feel bad that I did it because I knew someday my personal freedom would be affected.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: I think what you see is 100 percent what you get from him, arrogance, ah, entitlement. He wanted to do it so he did it, and that’s it.

    Detective Wallace believes Smerk confessed because he knew he was caught and wanted to turn himself in on his own terms.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: It wasn’t because he was sorry. … It wasn’t because he was tired of running for 30 years. … He wanted to maintain control.

    Former FBI profiler Mary Ellen O’Toole, who reviewed the case for “48 Hours,” agrees that Smerk wanted to control the narrative.

    Mary Ellen O’Toole: … he was prepared that he was gonna tell his version of the story. …

    O’Toole says she doesn’t buy Smerk’s claim that Robin’s murder was random. She classifies it as a mission-oriented homicide.

    Mary Ellen O’Toole: He brought the weapon with him. … he had a mask, he had gloves.

    Mary Ellen O’Toole: …it also happens to be … on an evening when the victim’s husband is in a travel status.

    Mary Ellen O’Toole: This was purposeful … he went inside somebody’s home … took enormous risk. … So that suggests to me more of a targeting than it does randomness.

    In her analysis, O’Toole says she was struck by Smerk identifying as a serial killer.

    Mary Ellen O’Toole: He did come across as someone that had admiration for them.

    Anne-Marie Greene: So here’s kind of like the big question, though. … do serial killers stop killing? 

    Mary Ellen O’Toole: Yes, they do.

    According to O’Toole, serial offenders can sometimes channel their compulsion to kill into other crimes, like stalking or voyeurism.

    Mary Ellen O’Toole: I think it’s also possible that he engaged in other behaviors, much less serious than homicide that um, satisfied him.

    Anne-Marie Green: He has no criminal history of any kind. How unusual is that?

    Mary Ellen O’Toole: Not very unusual. … But here’s the important thing to keep in mind, the absence of a rap sheet does not mean that criminal behavior is absent. … It means that they didn’t get arrested for it.

    After his confession, Stephan Smerk was arrested and charged with the murder of Robin Lawrence. Detective Wallace says her first phone call was to Robin’s daughter, Nicole.

    Det. Melissa Wallace: You could tell the shock, but she didn’t, um, break down or crumble. I could tell that she was like, OK, now my job is to notify the rest of the family.

    Mary Warr Cowans: How is it that he could live his life with his family when he blew up our family 30 years ago. … Where is the justice in that?

    Robin’s family prepared for the next step.

    Mary Warr Cowans: We really wanted to do a trial. … We wanted the world to know what he did, and … I think we wanted the spectacle of that as satisfaction. 

    But would they get that chance?

    Robin Warr Lawrence’s spirit lives on through her art

    A week after Stephan Smerk’s interview with police, forensic testing confirmed Smerk’s DNA was a match to the blood on the washcloth found in Robin’s bathroom.

    Steve Descano: It’s a one in over 7 million chance that it would not have been his DNA.

    On April 4, 2024, Fairfax County Commonwealth attorney Steve Descano’s office presented the case at a preliminary hearing to determine if there was enough evidence to move forward.

    Steve Descano: Look, I’ve dealt with murderers before .. I can tell you that in my mind, Stephan Smerk stands alone as somebody who represents a true danger to the community.

    Stephan Smerk booking photo

    Stephan Smerk

    Fairfax County Police Department


    Robin’s family saw Smerk for the first time at the hearing.

    Lauren Ovans: I was amazed how big he was. … he needed two … bailiffs around him. … The first thing I thought of was, like, my aunt didn’t stand a chance.

    Prosecutors played Smerk’s confession, and the family heard the details of Robin’s murder in Smerk’s own words.

    Lauren Ovans: There was no emotion … It – it didn’t feel real … just made me feel angry. … like how could he have done that?

    The judge found probable cause that Stephan Smerk killed Robin Lawrence and allowed the case to proceed to a grand jury. On April 15, 2024, a grand jury indicted him. But six months later, he accepted a plea deal for first-degree murder.

    STEVE DESCANO (to reporters): We get guaranteed accountability …

    Descano says the agreement ensured Smerk would be held accountable.

    Steve Descano: We had the challenge of some witnesses passing, other witnesses, their memories uh, becoming a little bit cloudy and not as sharp.

    Robin’s family, however, say they were disappointed.

    Mary Warr Cowans: We wanted him to be put on trial.

    On March 7, 2025, Smerk returned to court for sentencing. As part of the mitigation strategy for a more lenient sentence, his attorney Dawn Butorac told the judge that in the early 90s, Smerk was a troubled young man, struggling with alcohol and substance abuse.

    Dawn Butorac: … he eventually decided, I’m gonna join the military, thinking that that would be a good choice for him to maybe get his life stabilized.

    Anne-Marie Green: He said he joined the military so he could kill people. What did he mean by that?

    Dawn Butorac: I never asked him what he meant by that. … I think it was … an idea that if I go, maybe I can take my anger out on this. … Maybe this will get me back on the right track.

    According to Butorac, Smerk was also crippled with an undiagnosed mental illness.

    Dawn Butorac: It wasn’t until several years later that he eventually was diagnosed with bipolar II disorder. … And when you add ephedra and alcohol … he was struggling a lot.

    The FDA banned some ephedra products in 2004, and Butorac says that was in part because when abused with other substances, they could trigger dangerous psychiatric side effects.

    Anne-Marie Green: Did Steve Smerk tell you that he ever had hallucinations … or heard voices —

    Dawn Butorac: No, no, no.

    Anne-Marie Green: — anything along those lines – 

    Dawn Butorac: No, no.

    Anne-Marie Green: — while taking ephedra?

    Dawn Butorac: No. … But you have to remember at the time also he had undiagnosed bipolar. So it’s hard to figure out exactly what his mental state was attributable to.

    She says by the time investigators came to Smerk’s door nearly 30 years later, Smerk had sought help for his mental health problems and become sober. Butorac says her client confessed and waived his right to a trial because he felt genuine remorse.

    Anne-Marie Green: But over the 30 years, did he think about Robin?

    Dawn Butorac: Every day.

    Anne-Marie Green: Every day? Every day, he’d think about it.

    Anne-Marie Green: But during his statement to investigators … He doesn’t express empathy or remorse.

    Dawn Butorac: He always wanted to accept responsibility. … Acceptance of responsibility is one form of remorse.

    In the end, the judge sentenced Stephan Smerk to the maximum sentence allowed under the plea deal: 70 years, with the possibility of parole.

    Mary Warr Cowans: I think what he got as long as he never comes out of prison – ever — brings closure for me.

    After the sentencing, Ollie Lawrence gave a statement to the press.

    OLLIE LAWRENCE (to reporters): The Warr and Lawrence family are grateful that justice has finally been done for the murder of our beloved Robin …

    Niece Lauren Ovans answered a few questions with Robin’s daughter Nicole by her side.

    LAUREN OVANS (to reporters): As much as it’s a sign of relief, we still have to live with this, it just doesn’t go away so – (Nicole pats her back)

    Lauren Ovans and Nicole Lawrence

    Robin Lawrence’s niece, Lauren Ovans, left, talks to reporters with Robin’s daughter Nicole by her side.

    CBS News


    Lauren Ovans: … she’s strong … she stood next to me and she held my hand … Oh my God, if her mom could see us. Um, it was great.

    Anne-Marie Green: How do you want people to remember your aunt?

    Lauren Ovans: I want people to remember her as … creative, exuberant, very vocal, caring, a beautiful mother.

    Mary Warr Cowans: She just had a light that shined from within.

    Anne-Marie Green: I feel like she is living through her art because her art —

    Mary Warr Cowans: is everywhere.

    Anne-Marie Green: — emotes.

    lawrence-robin-art.jpg

    “She was a powerful lady in this world,” Robert Warr Sr. said of daughter Robin. “Her drawings are not just paintings, they are powerful.”

    Warr Lawrence Family


    Anne-Marie Green: So when you do look at her art, what … do you see?

    Mary Warr Cowans: I kind of see the spirit of Robin, who she was, how she looked at the world through her eyes … and it was good things, happy things, warm things.

    Stephan Smerk will be eligible for parole in 2037 when he turns 65.


    Produced by Asena Basak. Stephen A. McCain is the development producer. Emma Steele is the field producer. Chris Crater and Grayce Arlotta-Berner are the editors. Anthony Venditti is the content research manager. Lourdes Aguiar is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • New York man confesses to Virginia cold case murder, claiming he’s “a serial killer who’s only killed once”

    [ad_1]

    When Stephan Smerk called Fairfax County Police Detective Melissa Wallace on Sept.7, 2023, she was shocked to hear what he had to say.

    “He says, I’m at the police department to turn myself in,” Wallace told “48 Hours” correspondent Anne-Marie Green, in “Closing the Cold Case of Robin Lawrence,” airing Saturday, Oct. 25 at 10/9c on CBS and Paramount+. “And I said, turn yourself in for what?”

    Smerk, a married 52-year-old father of two living in Niskayuna, New York, was calling to confess to the 30-year-old cold case murder of Robin Warr Lawrence.

    “A million things start going through my mind,” Wallace said. “The adrenaline was pumping so hard because the reality hit … of what this means and that we’re getting ready to close this case.”

    Robin Warr Lawrence with her daughter Nicole.

    Warr and Lawrence Family


    Robin Warr Lawrence, an artist and mother, was brutally murdered in her home in Springfield, Virginia, in 1994. For two days, her daughter Nicole, just 2 years old at the time, roamed the house alone before her mother’s body was discovered. And for three decades after that, detectives tried to figure out who could have done this to Robin.

    “Who would do such a thing? Why?” said Mary Warr Cowans, Robin’s sister. “I remember thinking at the funeral, Robin’s killer could be in this room with us. We didn’t know.”

    It took decades, but eventually the family would get their answers. DNA evidence — in the form of blood left on a washcloth — had been found at the crime scene back in 1994, and at the time it had turned up no matches when investigators ran it through CODIS — the FBI’s national database. Years went by and new techniques were developed, including a process called genetic genealogy.

    Robin Lawrence murder evidence

    DNA evidence was recovered on a washcloth in Robin Warr Lawrence’s bathroom. 

    Fairfax County Police Department


    In genetic genealogy, a suspect’s DNA is used to find their relatives. Then investigators research those relatives’ family trees until a potential person of interest is found — someone who would have been the right age and in the right place at the right time to commit the crime. Parabon NanoLabs, a DNA technology company that often works with law enforcement, did not have high hopes for solving Robin’s case using this technique because the database matches were very distant.

    “Parabon gave us a solvability rate of zero on the case,” said Wallace.

    Fairfax County Police Department volunteer Liz, who asked that her last name not be used, thought she’d take a crack at it anyway. The process proved difficult. “I was ready to give up a number of times,” Liz told “48 Hours.” “But I kept thinking, well, I’ll just finish this or just do this one more thing.”

    After three years of doing just one more thing, Liz came up with a possible suspect. He’d lived in Virginia in 1994 and would have been around the right age to commit the murder. His name was Stephan Smerk.

    “I wasn’t very hopeful at the time,” Wallace said. “I was just looking at this guy’s background. I’m thinking, there is no way.”

    Smerk had a completely clean record, without so much as a speeding ticket. He worked as a computer programmer in suburban Niskayuna.

    Though they had their doubts, Detectives Melissa Wallace and Jon Long took the trip up to Niskayuna to talk to Smerk. Their goal was to get his DNA, to see if he was related to the person who had left their DNA at the crime scene – or if he was that person.

    “He comes to the door right away,” Wallace said. “All we said is we are detectives from Fairfax County, Virginia, and we’re looking into a cold case from the 90s.”

    Smerk, detectives say, had no reaction. “Stone-faced,” said Long. Smerk gave his DNA willingly, and Wallace and Long went back to their hotel. Then Wallace got that call.

    “I was freaking out,” Wallace said. “I run down to [Long’s] room, while I’m still on the phone, and I’m banging on his door, and he comes to the door, like, what is the problem? I’m like, we got to go to the police department.” 

    When they met Smerk at the Niskayuna Police Department, officers had taken him into custody and he was ready to talk. Wallace and Long sat him down in an interrogation room, and without much prompting, Smerk confessed to the murder of Robin Warr Lawrence. He had gone to Robin’s home that night in 1994, he told them, for no other reason than wanting to kill someone.

    “I knew that I was going kill somebody,” Smerk told the detectives. “I did not know who I was going to kill.” At the time, Smerk was in the military and posted at a base nearby and was familiar with Robin Warr Lawrence’s neighborhood because a friend had stayed there. He said he had no idea who lived in Robin’s house.

    “There could have been 50 people in that house. I don’t know. They could have all had guns and shot me dead. I wasn’t even thinking about that.” All Smerk was thinking about, he told detectives, was killing. He said he had compulsions that he couldn’t control.

    “I honestly believe that if it wasn’t for my wife and my kids, I probably would be a serial killer,” Smerk said. “I am a serial killer who’s only killed once.”

    lawrence-smerk-interrogation.jpg

    During questioning, Stephan Smerk, who confessed to killing Robin Warr Lawrence, told detectives, “I honestly believe that if it wasn’t for my wife and my kids, I probably would be a serial killer … I am a serial killer who’s only killed once.”

    Fairfax County Police Department


    “It’s such a shocking statement,” Wallace told “48 Hours.” “It makes no sense. You know, if you’re a serial killer, you don’t kill once. But, on the other hand, he was very candid and open and honest throughout the rest of the interview. So, it could be true that he has only killed one person.”

    Is it possible for someone with the impulses of a serial killer to kill just once? Former FBI profiler Mary Ellen O’Toole says it can happen.

    “We have learned over the years with cases like BTK and the Golden State Killer and other cases where they do stop,” she explained. “The compulsions don’t go away … they tell us that they rechannel it. They put it into a different activity. So that activity can be something that is less than murder, but it could involve, for example, Peeping Tom behavior, autoerotic behavior … but you don’t just cut those urges off. Something has to replace them.”

    Smerk had zero incidents on his record. O’Toole says it’s possible he never committed another crime, but she doubts the ideas in his head went away. She said she’d like to know more about his ideation in order to determine whether he could be a threat in the future.

    “That ideation that really led to the murder in the first place, that would be troubling to me until I knew a lot more about that. What triggered it? What are you doing with it now? Don’t tell me it’s never there. Don’t tell me that it just went out the window after you committed that murder.”

    In his interview, Smerk expressed no remorse for what he had done. When asked if he had anything he’d like to tell Robin’s family, he replied, “How do I say this? I know you’re recording … I don’t feel anything for the family. …I feel bad that I did it because I knew someday my personal freedom would be affected.”

    Smerk pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 70 years in prison. He will be eligible for parole in 2037, when he is 65. Robin’s family said they are glad to have closure as long as Smerk spends the rest of his life behind bars, but the consequences of his actions will never leave them.

    “It helped to know that a person was found and being held responsible,” Warr Cowans said in her statement to the judge at Smerk’s sentencing, “but it didn’t help to know what he did to [Robin] and how she suffered … it doesn’t help and it doesn’t bring her back. She would have been in our lives for the past thirty years. But that was taken from us.”

    She told “48 Hours” that for a long time she lived in fear, not knowing who had committed this horrible crime.

    “I actually felt afraid at home, in my bed,” she said. “Thinking about someone just from out of the blue could show up from anywhere and kill you in your house … That’s just a scary thought that you’re not safe anywhere.”

    “It’s scary,” echoed Long. “From a community perspective, that’s like your worst nightmare. Like, that’s the reason why you tell like your loved ones to make sure that your doors are locked at night. He is the boogeyman.” 

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Jade Janks and the Secret Photos

    [ad_1]

    A woman discovers explicit photos of herself on her stepfather’s computer. Soon after, he’s found dead. Jade is a likely suspect, but did she do it? “48 Hours” correspondent Tracy Smith reports.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • The Pact

    [ad_1]



    Watch CBS News



    A 15-year-old boy goes to a dance and never returns. Teen killers keep a secret for 40 years – until one of them cracks. “48 Hours” correspondent Richard Schlesinger reports.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • My Uncle Joe’s Murder

    [ad_1]



    My Uncle Joe’s Murder – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    A young woman mourns her uncle’s murder … and questions whether the convicted killer was the only one involved. “48 Hours” contributor Nikki Battiste reports.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Family of murdered D.C. photographer wonders if his convicted killer acted alone

    [ad_1]

    The investigation of Joe Shymanski‘s murder began as a missing persons case. It was Sept. 4, 2023, at 7:47 p.m. when sheriff’s deputies in Calvert County, Maryland, were called to the home of the well-known photographer.

    His ex-wife, Heather Snyder, met them in the driveway. She would tell authorities she had arrived by car at about 7 p.m. from her home in Pennsylvania to hand off custody of their then-8-year-old daughter and 7-year-old son.

    HEATHER SNYDER (bodycam video): Um, I was supposed to return the kids to him.

    DEPUTY: OK.

    HEATHER SNYDER: At 7 o’clock tonight …

    HEATHER SNYDER (bodycam video): … kids went in the house cause he did — he usually just comes right out, like he knows that they’re coming.

    But nobody was home. Heather Snyder had checked with the neighbors and called 911.

    HEATHER SNYDER (bodycam video): Yeah, I don’t know what I even should do at this point. 

    HEATHER SNYDER: … everything about it’s weird.

    DEPUTY: OK.

    What happened to Joe Shymanski?

    All the signs suggested Joe Shymanski should be there. His car was in the driveway, his keys and phone were in the house. Authorities started searching the property – even using a drone.

    Joe Shymanski

    Facebook


    DEPUTY (bodycam video): Do you know if he ever goes out hiking in the woods or anything?

    HEATHER SNYDER: I mean, I wouldn’t put it past him.

    Heather Snyder: I answered their questions about everything they asked, you know, the situation …

    Among other things investigators wanted to know about was Heather and Joe’s divorce from the previous year.

    Alison Stinson-Pounsberry: I know it was very contentious. So there was a lot of arguing … specifically the drop-off location for the kids was their biggest argument.

    Shymanski’s neighbors Alison Stinson-Pounsberry and Colton Pounsberry were home that night when Heather Snyder knocked on the door.

    Alison Stinson-Pounsberry: She had asked me if Joe was here. I said, no.

    Nikki Battiste: How was Heather acting?

    Alison Stinson-Pounsberry: So, Heather was acting a little annoyed … She was annoyed that he wasn’t here for drop-off after she had already driven four hours.

    The Pounsberrys went to Joe Shymanski’s home, telling authorities they hadn’t seen Joe since the previous afternoon.

    COLTON POUNDSBERRY (bodycam video):  Yeah, we saw him yesterday about 4 o’clock. He was helping me with some drywall.

    DEPUTY: OK.

    COLTON POUNSBERRY: We gave him some dinner …

    DEPUTY: Any depression issues?

    COLTON POUNSBERRY: None that I noticed.

    DEPUTY What do you think is going on?

    HEATHER SNYDER: I have no idea.

    DEPUTY: OK. Alright.

    The Pounsberrys ended up giving Heather and the kids places to sleep for the night. But first Heather went inside Joe’s house.

    Heather Snyder: I didn’t have any clothes for the kids … So it was late at night they let me go in and get … pajamas.

    Nikki Battiste: Do you remember how you were feeling when you went inside?

    Heather Snyder: Upset … It was surreal. 

    Heather Snyder bodycam video

    Heather Snyder seen crying in an image from a deputy’s bodycam inside her ex-husband’s home after reporting him missing the evening of Sept. 4, 2023. 

    HEATHER SNYDER (bodycam video): I’m sorry. (crying)

    DEPUTY: No, You’re fine. Absolutely fine. It’s a lot to deal with …

    HEATHER SNYDER: I just feel bad for my kids. What am I gonna tell them? (crying)

    Ted Shymanski: How could he not be there? Especially knowing that the kids were going to be there.

    It was about two-and-a-half hours later that Heather Snyder called Joe’s older brother Ted Shymanski and Ted’s wife – also named Heather.

    Heather Shymanski: I felt like I was like punched in the stomach.

    Ted Shymanski:  So there was no way in the world that Joe woulda missed … this meeting with the kids. … This isn — something’s wrong.

    It fell to Ted Shymanski to deliver the news to his sister Mary Shymanski.

    Mary Shymanski: When I heard that Joe … was missing, I fell to my knees and said a prayer. … Because this was such a bizarre situation it felt like I needed, I needed something greater than me right away …

    And then the morning after Joe disappeared, investigators noticed something they’d been unable to see at night. There was blood in his driveway.

    Nikki Battiste: Did Joe have any enemies?

    Alison Stinson-Pounsberry: Not that we knew of.

    An investigator asked Heather Snyder to come to the station.

    INVESTIGATOR JOSHUA BUCK (questioning): Do you know of anybody that — that’d be, uh, an enemy of his?

    HEATHER SNYDER: No …

    INVESTIGATOR JOSHUA BUCK: .… are you in any relationship right now?

    HEATHER SNYDER:  No.

    INVESTIGATOR JOSHUA BUCK: No boyfriends or —?

    HEATHER SNYDER: No.

    But Heather Snyder told them she had recently broken up with someone who lived near her in Pennsylvania.  

    HEATHER SNYDER (questioning):  I had a boyfriend but, briefly. But I don’t –

    INVESTIGATOR JOSHUA BUCK: Recently?

    HEATHER SNYDER: Yeah, within the last couple months, yeah.

    INVESTIGATOR JOSHUA BUCK: What’s his name?

    HEATHER SNYDER: Brandon Holbrook.

    Mary Shymanski: The name Brandon Holbrook entered the scene quite quickly.

    The Shymanskis say Joe told them he’d never met Brandon Holbrook.

    INVESTIGATOR JOSHUA BUCK (questioning): How long were you and Brandon together?

    HEATHER SNYDER: We were friends for a while. Um, since 20 – 2022? I wanna say.

    INVESTIGATOR JOSHUA BUCK: OK.

    HEATHER SNYDER: Or it might have been, like, November 2021.

    Authorities then decided to look more closely at Brandon Holbrook.

    Brandon Holbrook van

    Brandon Holbrook’s van was registered in Pennsylvania. Investigators discovered a camera had picked up Holbrook’s license plate near Joe Shymanski’s house in Maryland.

    They pulled his car registration and discovered a camera had picked up his license plate near Joe Shymanski’s house the very day Joe vanished. Investigators now had a person of interest, and headed to Pennsylvania, notifying police there.

    A grisly discovery

    On Sept. 5, 2023, Sgt. John Chester of the Mifflin County, Pennsylvania, Police Department got a call that Maryland authorities were investigating a homicide. They wanted to talk to a person of interest: Brandon Holbrook.

    Sgt. John Chester: We’ve arrested Mr. Holbrook in the past.

    Over the years, Holbrook had pleaded guilty to at least five counts of indecent exposure. They approached his house at about 11 p.m. 

    An investigator noted Holbrook’s eyes were bloodshot, and that there was a strange, particular smell — both on him and the covered bed of his pickup in the driveway.

    SGT. JOHN CHESTER (bodycam video):  This truck reeks.

    BODY CAM DEPUTY: … man, that smells terrible.

    SGT. JOHN CHESTER: It smelled like death.

    Holbrook told authorities he was a driver for a Pennsylvania plant that processes chicken slaughterhouse waste. He denied being near Joe’s house or anywhere in Maryland the day Joe disappeared.

    Sgt. John Chester:  We knew his truck was in Maryland …

    Brandon Holbrook

    Brandon Holbrook

    Facebook


    One police report indicates he also denied any contact with Joe. Another says he “was not being entirely truthful … and appeared nervous.”  So, in the early morning hours of Sept. 6, 2023, investigators arrested Brandon Holbrook for the murder of Joe Shymanski.

     By then, Detective Jessica Aurand had reported for duty.

    Det. Jessica Aurand: I was called in when they got back to the station with him.

    Aurand helped them get warrants for Holbrook’s truck and house.

    Sgt. John Chester: We still didn’t know … the magnitude of what we were dealing with …

    In the truck cab, investigators found gloves and plastic sheeting and in the truck bed, something described as human blood.

    Sgt. John Chester: It looked like a homicide scene.

    There were firearms in the house and plastic garbage bags, bleach, Lysol, and wet tools in a trailer outside. 

    Cleaning items  in Brandon Holbrook's trailer.

    Cleaning items found in Brandon Holbrook’s trailer.

    In the garage, Aurand says, “there was an open tool case.” And next to it, an open package of power saw blades. But investigators didn’t spot a matching saw.

    Nikki Battiste: Is that a tool that’s powerful enough to dismember a body?

    Det. Jessica Aurand: Possibly.

    Authorities with cadaver dogs began following a dirt road catty-corner to Holbrook’s house, leading into the woods. The next day, they made a grisly discovery in a clearing near a creek.

    Det. Jessica Aurand: They found the jawbone … with some of the ear … and some teeth still intact.

    Incident reports show there was also a burn barrel which smelled of decomposition. Scattered nearby — piles of ash. Authorities sent the material off for testing, but they had a strong hunch they were human remains, and a strong hunch whose.

    Fearing the worst, Joe Shymanski’s family and friends gathered in Washington.

    Alton McDougle:  He was a person that would give you his shirt off his back, even in a rainstorm …

    Joe Shymanski

    “My Uncle Joe’s creativity made his photography so special,” said niece Janine Shymanski. “He had the eye of a child. … His sense of humor was unmatched and it really showed through all of his art.”  

    Facebook


    Joe Shymanski met Alton McDougle in 2000 after coming to D.C. to teach middle school history and social studies. McDougle says Joe became his mentor, exposing him to new ideas — and to photography.

    Nikki Battiste:  He taught you how to see the world?

    Alton McDougle: Yes. Through a lens.

    They eventually became friends, says McDougle, and partnered in the photo business at Eastern Market. That’s where Joe first started dating Heather Snyder. She was then a single mom of three kids and was running a vegetable business.

    Heather Snyder: He was fun … very charming.

    Nikki Battiste: And then he swept you off your feet?

    Heather Snyder: He did …

    Heather Snyder and Joe Shymanski married in July 2014 and bought a house in rural Calvert County. Heather Snyder gave birth to a daughter and a son a year later, but Joe’s family and friends say by 2020, the marriage was in trouble. 

    shymanski-joe-snyder.jpg

    Joe Shymanski and Heather Snyder

    Heather Snyder


    Mary Shymanski: Heather Snyder and Joe Shymanski were never on equal footing financially.

    Alton McDougle: The spending was definitely a problem …

    McDougle says Joe wrote Heather Snyder a check for thousands of dollars to pay off a debt on a house she owned, then he gave her more money to help her launch a new business.

    Alton McDougle: I used to tell him all the time … she’s using you.

    Heather Snyder says that’s not true. She was never after Joe’s money. She blames the difficulties in the marriage on Joe, saying he could behave erratically, and that he started pushing her and her older children away after their own kids were born.

    Heather Snyder: Joe’s attention was just on … those two children. He was almost obsessive to a degree. It was, he cared less about what I thought or what I was saying … and it was all about those two.

    She says Joe was emotionally abusive to her. And there was one instance, she claims, when he got physical.

    Heather Snyder: He bodychecked me into a car. And that was after chasing me around the house …

    The Shymanski family says Heather Snyder’s abuse allegations don’t match the Joe they knew. By 2021, Snyder says she’d had enough.

    Heather Snyder: I was afraid he was gonna snap and hurt me and then my children were gonna see it …

    Nikki Battiste: You just left?

    Heather Snyder: I left.

    Mary Shymanski: He was devastated.

    Joe’s friend Anneli Werner noticed it too.

    Anneli Werner: That spark that made Joe “Joe” was gone, it was gone!

    Heather Snyder had moved back to her hometown of Newport, Pennsylvania. She told investigators that it was a few months later that she began seeing Brandon Holbrook. All the while, say Joe’s friends and family, he and Heather Snyder were arguing over custody and cash. It got so bad Heather Snyder says she began recording their interactions around the kids. Werner says Joe was also upset and made recordings too, about Heather Snyder, for their children to hear one day.

    JOE SHYMANSKI (audio recording): Mom has a way of manipulating everyone.

    JOE SHYMANSKI (audio recording): Everyone. She’s toxic. Honestly, I am honestly afraid for your mental and emotional safety.

    JOE SHYMANSKI (audio recording): There’s no safety in mom for me. It’s dangerous to be close to mom for me.

    Anneli Werner: Joe was in a contentious, ugly divorce.

    But Werner says things had slowly started going Joe’s way. Though he and Heather had joint legal custody of the kids, he had primary physical custody when school was in session. He’d bought a million-dollar life insurance policy naming the children as beneficiaries. And just weeks before he vanished, the court had reduced the settlement he owed Heather Snyder.

    Anneli Werner: Joe had started winning! …

    A haunting conversation

    In mid-September 2023, forensic experts matched the remains that they found in that clearing near Brandon Holbrook’s house to Joe Shymanski. Mifflin County Coroner Andrea Alcalde.

    Nikki Battiste: What was Joe Shymanski’s cause of death?

    Coroner Andrea Alcalde: Uh, he had a gunshot wound to the head.

    Nikki Battiste: What was his manner of death?

    Coroner Andrea Alcalde: Homicide.

    Brandon Holbrook

    On Sept. 6, 2023, investigators arrested Brandon Holbrook for the murder of Joe Shymanski.

    INVESTIGATOR: Could you just state your name?

    BRANDON HOLBROOK:  My name is Brandon Holbrook.

    BRANDON HOLBROOK: This is — thing has my whole head messed up.

    Authorities had uncovered evidence that didn’t look good for Brandon Holbrook.

    Sgt. John Chester: We knew the white truck had been in Maryland based on … the license plate reader had read the … tag and the tag matched the vehicle that was sitting here.

    And with the saw blades in Holbrook’s garage, the cleaning supplies and tools in his trailer, and Joe’s remains in the clearing nearby, it all seemed to suggest that Holbrook had killed Joe in Maryland and brought his body to Pennsylvania. But for all the evidence investigators had, the case still contained some inconvenient truths.

    Nikki Battiste: Did you find any of Joe Shymanski’s remains on Brandon Holbrook’s property?

    Det. Jessica Aurand:  No.

    Nikki Battiste: Did you find the murder weapon?

    Det. Jessica Aurand:  No.

    In addition, records show Holbrook’s phone had only pinged towers near his Pennsylvania home the afternoon and evening Joe disappeared. And remember, images of Holbrook’s truck in Maryland did not show who was driving. And when the blood in the truck bed was tested, it wasn’t human. It was animal.

    Det. Jessica Aurand: Because he had access to the … chicken plant, did he put stuff in there and cover it up with the chicken remains?

    Joe’s family and friends had trouble believing Holbrook could have devised such an elaborate plot without help.

    Mary Shymanski: I do not believe that Brandon Holbrook is the only person involved in my brother’s death. I think he was highly inspired by Heather Snyder. … Heather Snyder is the common denominator in this entire picture.

    Heather Snyder

    Heather Snyder

    Heather Snyder


    Alton McDougle also thinks Heather Snyder was involved. A few days before Joe went missing, McDougle says they were hanging out and Joe told him Heather Snyder was coming over to drop off the kids instead of meeting halfway between their homes like they usually did. McDougle says he told Joe that concerned him. 

    Alton McDougle: I just don’t want her to come to your house, dude … I just don’t trust her.

    He says Joe dismissed his concern, but the conversation haunts him to this day.

    Alton McDougle: I get chills right now. (crying)

    Nikki Battiste: What are you feeling? That if he listened to you, he might still be here?

    Alton McDougle: I mean, he might be, right?

    Joe’s family and friends acknowledge their suspicion of Heather Snyder was just a gut feeling, and that the investigation hasn’t turned up any evidence of her involvement. Nevertheless, McDougle says he shared his speculation with authorities.

    Alton McDougle: Heather, at least, planned it. … her boyfriend had at least helped …

    He says he and the family find it strange that Heather Snyder reported Joe as missing before he was even an hour late.

    Heather Shymanski: You’re jumping to –

    Ted Shymanski: He’s missing … then he’s gone … call the police …

    Heather Shymanski: — then he’s missing like … I mean and you’re gonna call 911?

    Especially, they say, because she had then waited more than two-and-a-half hours to notify them.

    Mary Shymanski: That seems like extraordinary long period of time before she’d let the immediate family know that Joe was missing.

    And they question  Heather Snyder’s behavior when she went in Joe’s house with investigators.

    Anneli Werner: And she walks in the house … and she begins to cry … sobbing over her ex-husband that she would do anything to get away from. 

    They suspected it was all an act, something Heather Snyder denies.

    Alton McDougle:  She just wanted to paint a picture that he was missing because she knew the plan.

    And the Shymanskis believe she was untruthful with investigators about Brandon Holbrook.

    INVESTIGATOR JOSHUA BUCK (reprise questioning): … are you in any relationship right now?

    HEATHER SNYDER: No.

    Mary Shymanski: She told the police that … she broke up with him and that they were no longer together. B——-.

    Janine Shymanski says she suspects Heather Snyder had used Holbrook to get rid of Joe Shymanski.

    Janine Shymanski: … So she just needed it done and she found her person that would do that for her.

    Nikki Battiste: You think Heather Snyder was the mastermind?

    Janine Shymanski: Yes.

    Nikki Battiste: Was there any doubt in your mind?

    Janine Shymanski: No.

    Holbrook was in custody and authorities had combed the clearing. But weeks later, Mary Shymanski was visiting the site when she found more burnt remains. She acknowledges searchers may have simply missed them in the woods, but she and Coroner Andrea Alcalde believe there’s another possibility.

     Coroner Andrea Alcalde: I think the more likely is that there were remains dumped after the fact.

    That would mean they were dumped by someone else.

    Nikki Battiste: That’s a bombshell.

    Coroner Andrea Alcalde: Yeah …

    But Alcalde says Maryland authorities seemed skeptical. The Calvert County Sheriff’s Office declined “48 Hours”‘ request for an interview. Still, the theory that someone else was involved in Joe Shymanski’s death is a point Holbrook’s attorneys will argue from the start of his trial.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: Only one person’s life is better today than it was before the murder of Joseph Shymanski. And that is Heather Snyder. 

    Nikki Battiste: Did you have anything to do with Joe’s death?

    Heather Snyder:  I did not.

    The trial of Brandon Holbrook

    On March 31, 2025, the trial of Brandon Holbrook for the murder of Joe Shymanski got underway. Prosecutors wanted a conviction on premeditated murder. They argued Holbrook fatally shot Joe Shymanski in Maryland, drove him back to Pennsylvania, put chicken parts in his truck to cover his tracks and then disposed of Joe’s remains in that clearing near Holbrook’s house. And they brought in the barrel searchers found, suggesting it was used to burn him. But Holbrook’s defense team says it was a tactic.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: It was there for the emotional impact.

    There were no cameras allowed in court. Defense attorney Brendan Callahan tried to turn the jury’s attention away from Brandon Holbrook and towards Heather Snyder. She was mentioned more than 400 times at trial, though she hasn’t been charged with a crime.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: The only person with an obvious motive … was Heather Snyder. She was in a — a heated custody fight that was not going well for her …

    And Callahan told the jury Heather Snyder had a million other reasons, too. If Joe Shymanski was dead, Callahan said, she might stand to gain control of his life insurance payout since her children, the beneficiaries, are still minors.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: When you throw in … a million-dollar life insurance policy … the — the motives write themselves.

    Heather Snyder told “48 Hours” she knew nothing about Joe’s life insurance before he died.

    Prosecutors kept the focus on Holbrook. They introduced videos of his truck near Joe’s house in Maryland the day Joe disappeared, Holbrook shopping for cleaning supplies in Pennsylvania the morning after, and video that’s hard to see, but that they say shows Holbrook near his white truck dumping something which turned out to be burned human remains. It put the defense in a corner.

    Brandon Holbrook

    Brandon Holbrook is seen shopping for cleaning supplies in Pennsylvania the morning after Joe Shymanski’s murder.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: There’s evidence that he is involved at some point, but there’s very little evidence that he’s the one who committed the actual murder.

    And while Holbrook’s truck might have been spotted near Joe’s house that day, Callahan says someone else could have been driving it.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: Brandon Holbrook had absolutely no reason to kill Joseph Shymanski.

    The state contended Holbrook did have a motive: love for Heather Snyder and hate for Joe Shymanski intense enough that Holbrook took matters into his own hands.

    Mary Shymanski: This man was obsessed with Heather Snyder …

    Prosecutors painted a picture of that obsession — showing an image taken nearly seven months before the murder, of a car Holbrook also owned, near Joe Shymanski’s house. And they showed a text exchange between Heather Snyder and Holbrook from Jan. 21, 2023, also months before the murder, in which she is complaining about Joe. “… I’m just tired of the abuse.” Heather Snyder told him, “It’s been years upon years. …” Holbrook later suggested she see a therapist but added:  “I have other solutions in mind, but probably not the best way to go.”

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: That could mean a lot of things. I mean it’s very easy to read in it – the  most nefarious intent and that’s what the State tried to do in this case. But it could mean just about anything. It could be a joke.

    Whatever it meant, Heather Snyder didn’t respond to Holbrook immediately. She later texted him:  “I’m looking for a therapist.”

    Nikki Battiste: Do you think, how could Heather Snyder possibly not know?

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: There’s a lot in this case that you could say that for about Heather Snyder … and her behavior around the … time of the incident is overall very suspicious.

    Callahan’s co-counsel Thomas Mooney points to texts between Heather Snyder and Holbrook suggesting they were still involved shortly before the murder.

    Defense Attorney Thomas Mooney: She indicated to the police that … the relationship had —

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: On the outs.

    Defense Attorney  Thomas Mooney: — had cooled.

    INVESTIGATOR JOSHUA BUCK (questioning): No boyfriends or —?

    HEATHER SNYDER: No.

    Defense Attorney Thomas Mooney: … but the text messages seemed to suggest otherwise.

    Six days before the murder Holbrook wrote: “I like the smell of your hair on my pillow …” And later in the day, she texted: “… Wish I was in your bed.” The next morning, he wrote back: “You can come to my bed anytime. Xo”

    Mary Shymanski: Heather Snyder is … lying to the police and saying that she didn’t have an involvement with Holbrook.

    In another text, Heather Snyder complained specifically about her custody agreement with Joe: “… I keep thinking karma is going to catch up with him,” she wrote. “But I’m tired of being patient.”

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: Anything that suggests that there were other people involved makes Brandon Holbrook’s role in this unclear. And therefore, is suggestive of his innocence …

    But prosecutors introduced texts suggesting Heather Snyder was surprised to find Joe missing when she got to his house. “I have no idea, where he is” she wrote to Holbrook. “The car is here …” Both the defense and the prosecutors wanted to question Heather Snyder under oath. But when she was called as a witness, she declined to testify — invoking her Fifth Amendment privilege.

    Nikki Battiste: What does Heather Snyder pleading the Fifth say to you? 

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: That a truthful answer could tend to incriminate her.

    And Callahan wanted the jury to consider something else about Heather Snyder.

    Nikki Battiste: She had a gun?

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: She did …

    Heather Snyder had told authorities about a gun Holbrook had given her before the murder but there were never any bullets or casings found, so it would have been impossible to tell if it was the murder weapon. Still Callahan says authorities were slow to collect it from her.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: That wasn’t investigated until … weeks before the trial started, even though they knew about it.

    And he says they failed to ever search Heather Snyder’s home or property.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: She has acres of land that the police are on that land, and they don’t even ask to look around. They just take her word for everything.

    Prosecutors say there was a thorough investigation and they saved what might be the most explosive evidence for near the end of their case. There’s no way Heather Snyder could have killed Joe Shymanski, they say. Why? The afternoon Joe disappeared, you can see Heather Snyder on video, buying pizza in Pennsylvania about three hours away.

    Heather Snyder store surveillance

    Heather Snyder is seen on security video at a Pennsylvania store around the time Joe Shymanski disappeared from his Maryland home.

    Nikki Battiste: Heather Snyder has an alibi. I mean, she’s on surveillance video buying pizza … miles away.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: Yes.

    Nikki Battiste:  She couldn’t have physically gotten there in time.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: Yes. … but … there are all sorts of different roles that one can play in a crime.

    Callahan says Heather Snyder could have encouraged Holbrook or at least known about his plan. Holbrook doesn’t take the stand but in closings, his attorneys remind the jury there’s no proof he was even in Maryland that evening, let alone at Joe Shymanski’s house.

    Defense Attorney Brendan Callahan: The burden is on the state … and we thought that they presented … a strong case that he was involved after the fact, but we’re still waiting on the evidence that he was ever in that driveway.

    But it took just 80 minutes for the jury to reach a verdict. Brandon Holbrook is guilty of the first-degree premeditated murder of Joe Shymanski.

    Nikki Battiste:  How are you feeling?

    Janine Shymanski: Extremely happy.

    Joe’s loved ones were happy but not satisfied. At sentencing, Werner presented a photo montage of Joe, that also included some of those audio recordings about Heather Snyder that he made for their children: 

    JOE SHYMANSKI (audio recording): And I’m worried about you guys growing up in a world where you’re afraid of mom. She takes her love away from you and if you piss her off you’re done …

    And then a number of friends and family addressed the court — suggesting Heather Snyder could also be at least in part to blame for what happened. The judge gave Holbrook life without parole and said he was not closing the book on the case.

    Nikki Battiste: You’re at the center of this case.

    Heather Snyder: I am.

    A conversation with Heather Snyder

    Nikki Battiste: Do you remember the last time we saw each other before this story reconnected us?

    Heather Snyder: I believe it was at homecoming in 1998.

    It was more than 25 years ago on our high school sports fields in tiny Newport, Pennsylvania. Heather Snyder and I had grown up together. In fact, I was the 1997 homecoming queen and she was my successor.

    Heather Snyder and Nikki Battiste.

    Heather Snyder, left, and “48 Hours” contributor Nikki Battiste in 1998, when Battiste crowned Snyder as her successor as homecoming queen at their Pennsylvania high school.

    Nikki Battiste


    Nikki Battiste: I put a crown on your head and now here we are.

    Heather Snyder: And we’re back.

    We hadn’t communicated since then, until reporting this story brought me back to some of the most familiar terrain of my life. But it’s taken me into uncharted territory in the process — confronting someone from my youth. Heather Snyder told me she wanted to set the record straight. She agreed to the interview with no questions off limits. She acknowledged she was upset with Joe Shymanski during their custody fight.

    Nikki Battiste: … did you ever say to Brandon Holbrook, I wish Joe were dead?

    Heather Snyder: No. … The most I said to Brandon was that I thought Joe should be in jail for the way he was acting.

    Nikki Battiste: Did Brandon tell you he wanted to kill Joe?

    Heather Snyder: Nope.

    Nikki Battiste: Did you help him cover up?

    Heather Snyder:  Nope. Nope.

    So what about those texts between her and Holbrook, like when he mentions “…other solutions…” to help deal with Joe?

    Heather Snyder: I thought it was a — just a joke.

    Nikki Battiste: It didn’t cross your mind for a second —

    Heather Snyder: No.

    Nikki Battiste: — that he might hurt Joe?

    Heather Snyder: No.

    As for her text about karma catching up with Joe, in which she wrote she was “… tired of being patient” —

    Heather Snyder: That’s how I was feeling …

    Nikki Battiste: Do you think … that may have triggered Brandon?

    Heather Snyder: I don’t know.

    Heather Snyder, who at the time was in that custody fight with Joe, says she ended her relationship with Holbrook about a month before the murder when Holbrook had been arrested again for indecent exposure.

    Nikki Battiste:  What was the reason that you told Brandon you needed to end the relationship?

    Heather Snyder: Because of his charge.

    The Shymanskis suspect Heather Snyder was actually worried if Joe heard she was dating a sex offender, she would lose custody of their kids. They believe Heather Snyder continued to secretly see Holbrook.

    Nikki Battiste: About a week before Joe went missing, Brandon Holbrook texts you. “I like the smell of your hair on my pillow.”

    Heather Snyder: He did. Mm-hmm.

    Nikki Battiste: Were you with him?

    Heather Snyder: … I stopped by his house …

    Nikki Battiste: It sounds like you’re still involved.

    Heather Snyder: We were friends.

    Nikki Battiste: … that you were intimate then.

    Heather Snyder: We were friends.

    Heather Snyder also texted Holbrook “… Wish I was in your bed.”

    Nikki Battiste: Weren’t you and Brandon still involved this whole time?

    Heather Snyder:  We weren’t. We weren’t.

    Nikki Battiste: People are gonna watch and say you’re lying.

    Heather Snyder: We were friends … it was hard to give up a friend.

    Nikki Battiste: Why was there a smell of your hair on his pillow?

    Heather Snyder: Because I was probably laying on his pillow.

    She says they were only talking.

    Nikki Battiste: What did you talk about?

    Heather Snyder: That was the last time. It was just like, it was almost like a goodbye, honestly.

    Nikki Battiste: … what did Brandon say? Was he upset?

    Heather Snyder: We were both upset. We were both crying.

    Heather Snyder told us that even after Joe’s murder — 

    Heather Snyder: I still have love for Brandon …

    Nikki Battiste: Wow. 

    Heather Snyder: Wow is right.

    Nikki Battiste: How?

    Heather Snyder: I don’t — I think obviously, psychologically, he snapped over something. …. It’s not like I don’t think he should be in jail. I think he did something horrible, horrific. He hurt my family. He hurt me.

    Nikki Battiste: If you could see him face to face, what would be your first question?

    Heather Snyder: Why? What happened?

    And while she hasn’t seen him in person, she did have a chance to ask him. Shortly before his sentencing, she accepted his call from jail.

    Heather Snyder tells Holbrook she believes Joe’s family is trying to incriminate her. 

    HEATHER SNYDER (jail phone call): The Shymanskis are trying to prove that I did something wrong …

    BRANDON HOLBROOK: … never in a million years would I say you had anything to do with this. I — I swear.

    HEATHER SNYDER: Mm, well, cause I didn’t. I just wish I knew what happened. I just want the truth.

    Holbrook tells her:

    BRANDON HOLBROOK (jail phone call): I would love to tell you everything that I know … but I’m not going to do it on one of these recorded lines.

    And then he denies killing Joe Shymanski.    

    BRANDON HOLBROOK (jail phone call): I’ll tell you one thing for sure … I never saw Joe, talked to Joe, had any interaction at whatsoever with Joe, his entire life. I promise you that.

    Heather Snyder says Holbrook never confessed to her – and she never had an inkling of his plans. She says there is nothing suspicious about her calling 911 so quickly when she didn’t find Joe at the house. She says it was her divorce attorney who advised her to make the call and a criminal lawyer who advised her to plead the Fifth in the trial.

    Nikki Battiste: Did you have something to hide?

    Heather Snyder: No.

    Nikki Battiste: If you don’t have anything to hide, why not just get up there and testify?

    Heather Snyder: People twist your words.

    And the words Joe used to describe Heather Snyder in those audio messages? 

    Heather Snyder told us Joe was twisting reality at the time. She says Joe was the dangerous one. And she created a website, “Heather’s Abuse Story,”  detailing her side.

    We also asked Heather Snyder about that gun she says Brandon Holbrook gave her before Joe’s murder. She says it was only for target practice.

    Nikki Battiste: is there any chance that gun is the murder weapon?

    Heather Snyder: I don’t — no. No. I mean, obviously it was locked in my closet.

    shymanski-snyder-interview.jpg

    In an exclusive interview, Heather Snyder answered questions about her relationship with Brandon Holbrook. She has an alibi and emphatically told :48 Hours” she had no involvement in her ex-husband Joe’ Shymanski’s murder. She has never been identified by authorities as a suspect or charged with a crime in connection with the Shymanski case.

    CBS News


    Nikki Battiste: Is there anything … you’re not telling us?

    Heather Snyder: No.

    Nikki Battiste: Look me in the eye. Are you lying about anything?

    Heather Snyder: I am not.

    Nikki Battiste:  Either you’re a bold-faced liar or you are extraordinarily unlucky.

    Heather Snyder: I am unlucky.

    Heather Snyder says her focus is on raising her and Joe’s children, and she’s sad that they’ll grow up without a father.

    Heather Snyder: They have very happy memories of their father and I try … I try to do what I can to honor and keep that safe.

    She knows the Shymanskis want to see the kids but says Joe’s relatives can’t expect a full relationship with them while publicly pointing a finger at her.

    Heather Snyder:  There needs to be a place we move on other than this, where they’re constantly blaming me for something that I didn’t do.

    Nikki Battiste: Are you afraid authorities will come for you?

    Heather Snyder: No.

    Nikki Battiste: Not at all? …

    Heather Snyder: I’m not worried at all, no …

    Ted Shymanski: If Joe never met Heather Snyder, Joe would be alive today. (crying)

    Heather Shymanski: Alive.

    Calvert County, Maryland’s, top prosecutor Robert Harvey declined “48 Hours”‘ request for an interview, but wrote to us that there was “… a thorough and exhaustive investigation …” into Mr. Shymanski’s death. “Mr. Holbrook received a fair and impartial trial … Because Mr. Holbrook’s case is under appeal … it remains open. Therefore, I am not going to respond to questions regarding the investigation and I am not going to speculate on what may or may not happen in the future.”  

    And when we asked Pennsylvania authorities about Heather Snyder —

    Nikki Battiste: Is there a current investigation into Heather Snyder?

    Det. Jessica Aurand: I can’t answer that question.

    Nikki Battiste: Should there be?

    Det. Jessica Aurand: I can’t answer that question.

    Nikki Battiste: Do you think Heather Snyder is involved in this crime in any way?

    Det. Jessica Aurand: I can’t answer that.

    Nikki Battiste: But you do know the answer.

    Det. Jessica Aurand: Yes. But I’m not allowed to say.

    Nikki Battiste: So many people watching are gonna be frustrated –

    Heather Snyder: Uh-huh.

    Nikki Battiste: — and they’re gonna think it — it just — logically, you have to had known something.

    Heather Snyder: Right. But I didn’t. That’s the torturous part, because people will — it’s almost like they want to believe that I was involved with it. They want that true crime narrative. And it just simply wasn’t the case.

    Brandon Holbrook is appealing his conviction. 

    A scholarship has been established in Joe Shymanski’s name for photography students in Washington D.C. public high schools. 


    Produced by Josh Yager. Shaheen Tokhi is the field producer. Michelle Sigona is the development producer. Atticus Brady is the producer-editor. Michelle Harris is the editor. Patti Aronofsky is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • “48 Hours” contributor finds herself in uncharted territory investigating D.C.-area murder

    [ad_1]

    As a reporter, you see a lot of strange things. You witness the most dramatic and traumatic parts of other people’s lives. You count on being able to control how it all affects you. But you never expect investigating someone else’s past will lead you back into your own.

    And that’s exactly what happened to me, reporting on the case of Joe Shymanski, a Washington, D.C., photographer murdered in 2023. Covering this story took me back into some of the most familiar terrain of my life — my tiny, Pennsylvania hometown. But it also took me into unfamiliar territory: confronting someone I grew up with caught up in a murder case. 

    Heather Snyder, left, and “48 Hours” contributor Nikki Battiste in 1998, when Battiste crowned Snyder as her successor as homecoming queen at their Pennsylvania high school.

    Nikki Battiste


    Heather Snyder and I hadn’t communicated since 1998, the year I literally crowned her my successor as high school homecoming queen. Fast forward to 2025, and I discovered that the very same Heather I knew was a central character in this story. She was now Joe Shymanski’s ex-wife. She was the one who reported Joe Shymanski missing and it was Heather’s boyfriend after leaving Joe Shymanski, Brandon Holbrook, who became authorities’ prime suspect in Joe’s murder.

    In an exclusive interview, Heather answered my questions about her relationship with Holbrook. She has an alibi and emphatically told us she had no involvement in Joe’s murder. She has never been identified by authorities as a suspect or charged with a crime in connection with the Shymanski case.

    But Heather was the only known link between Joe Shymanski and Holbrook. And Joe Shymanski’s loved ones started asking questions about her.

    “She just needed it done and she found her person that would do that for her,” Joe’s niece Janine Shymanski said.

    Janine Shymanski and other friends and relatives spelled out their suspicions of Heather Snyder and Heather addressed those suspicions in “My Uncle Joe’s Murder,” an all-new “48 Hours” airing Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025, at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+. 

    Heather said she began dating Joe Shymanski when they were vendors at a weekly Washington, D.C., food and crafts fair at the historic Eastern Market. Joe Shymanski sold his photographs there and Heather had a vegetable business. She had three children from a previous marriage, but wanted a big family and she remembers being excited to learn that Joe Shymanski wanted kids. She said that in the beginning, he was funny, charming and swept her off her feet.

    “It was like a fairy tale,” Heather said.

    They married in July 2014, Heather said, and bought a house in Calvert County, Maryland. She gave birth to a daughter and a son a year apart. But she says Joe Shymanski soon became obsessive about his kids and started to push her and her three older children aside. She says he became emotionally abusive to her and in one instance, she claims, he got physical.

    The Shymanski family and friends say Heather Snyder’s allegations do not match the Joe Shymanski they knew. One friend told me Heather was attracted to Joe Shymanski’s money — an allegation she denies. Snyder says the pandemic only made things worse. She took the kids and left Joe Shymanski in July 2021, moving back to our hometown in Pennsylvania. Before long, she says, she began seeing Holbrook, who she met online. But Joe Shymanski’s friend Anneli Werner said the turbulence of Heather and Joe’s relationship was far from over.

    “Joe was in an ugly, contentious divorce,” Werner remembered.

    By the summer of 2023, Joe Shymanski had bought a million-dollar life insurance policy listing his two minor children as beneficiaries. The court had awarded him and Heather joint custody of the kids but gave Joe Shymanski primary physical custody when school was in session. And the judge had also reduced the amount Joe Shymanski owed her in the settlement.

    “Joe had started winning,” Anneli said.

    Joe Shymanski reported missing

    It was Labor Day 2023 at 7:47 p.m. when authorities got the call from Heather to report Joe Shymanski missing. She told them she had driven to her ex-husband’s house to drop off their children in a custody exchange but had not found him home. So, she said she checked with the neighbors and then called 911. Investigators found Joe’s keys and phone inside his house. When a sheriff’s deputy escorted Heather inside to get pajamas for the kids, his body camera shows her getting emotional.

    Joe Shymanski

    Joe Shymanski

    Facebook


    The next day, Calvert County investigators questioned Heather at the sheriff’s office.

     “Are you in any relationship right now?” asked Calvert County investigator Joshua Buck. “No,” Heather replied. “No boyfriends or — ?” Buck continued. “No,” she answered. “I had a boyfriend but, briefly. But I don’t.”

    Heather told Calvert County investigators she had recently broken up with Holbrook, who also lived in Pennsylvania. But they soon unearthed an image of his truck and license plate near Joe Shymanski’s house in Maryland the day Joe disappeared. The Calvert County, Maryland, Sheriff’s Office, which declined “48 Hours”‘ request for an interview, sent investigators to Pennsylvania. With the help of Pennsylvania police, they approached Holbrook’s house at about 11 p.m. on Sept. 5, 2023.

    When they brought Holbrook to police headquarters for questioning, he told them he was a driver for a plant that processed waste from chicken slaughterhouses. Despite the camera images showing his truck near Joe Shymanski’s house, Holbrook claimed he hadn’t been there — or anywhere in Maryland — around the time Joe disappeared. But investigators found items that struck them as curious. On Holbrook’s property, there were firearms, plastic tarps, rubber gloves and cleaning fluid. There was also an open package of power saw blades without a matching saw.

    “Is that a tool that’s powerful enough to dismember a body?” I asked Mifflin County, Pennsylvania, Detective Jessica Aurand, who helped investigate the case. “… Possibly,” she answered.

    By this point, authorities had also noted a strange smell coming from Holbrook’s truck in the driveway, said Mifflin County Police Department Sgt. John Chester. In the back, they found something an investigator noted appeared to be human blood.

    “It looked like a homicide scene,” Chester said.

    But the blood in the truck would turn out to have come from an animal.

    “Because he had access to the … chicken plant, did he put stuff in there and cover it up with chicken remains?” Aurand wondered aloud.

    Despite having no body, authorities arrested Holbrook shortly afterward. The next day in a field near Holbrook’s house, they located human remains that later turned out to match Joe Shymanski.

    All of this happened only about 45 minutes from where Heather Snyder and I grew up.

    Both our families still live in Newport, Pennsylvania, home to only about 1,500 people. Even when you add up the cars and the horse-drawn, Amish buggies, there still isn’t enough traffic for a single stoplight. As a kid there, I never dreamed I would become a contributor to “48 Hours.” And if you’d told me I was one day going to interview a former teammate mentioned in connection with a murder case, I would have said you were crazy.

    It was downright surreal when a “48 Hours” producer first told me that a murder victim’s family had questions about someone I knew in my youth. The Heather I remembered was a top student, a cheerleader and the treasurer of her class. We played field hockey together.

    I knew Heather might not want to talk to me. If I could convince her to do an interview, I also knew it would mean asking her the toughest questions. When I learned another national news program was looking into the story, I contacted Heather. As I suspected, she told me it was too soon to talk to me. She said she wouldn’t consider meeting until after Holbrook’s trial last spring.

    The trial of Brandon Holbrook

    Prosecutors would argue Holbrook shot Joe Shymanski to death in Joe’s Maryland driveway, then drove his body back to Pennsylvania, dismembering him and disposing of his remains. They showed the images of Holbrook’s truck near Joe Shymanski’s house that night and video showing Holbrook shopping for cleaning supplies the next morning. They even showed video of Holbrook dumping what turned out to be human remains next to the parking lot outside the store.

    Brandon Holbrook

    Brandon Holbrook

    Facebook


    Holbrook’s defense team had little choice but to acknowledge there was evidence he was involved in disposing of Joe’s body. But they pointed out that there were no forensics tying him to the murder itself — nothing placing him at Joe Shymanski’s house — the images of his truck near Joe’s house hadn’t been clear enough to identify the driver, nor anything proving Joe Shymanski — alive or dead — was ever at Holbrook’s house.

    Defense attorney Brendan Callahan insisted Holbrook had no motive to want Joe Shymanski dead and that his client may not have been the only one involved. Callahan said authorities failed to sufficiently investigate Heather Snyder and were slow to recover a gun she told them she had at home. He says they never searched her property.

    “Only one person’s life is better today than it was before the murder of Joseph Shymanski,” said Callahan. “And that is Heather Snyder.”

    Callahan argued Heather might have stood to gain custody of her two youngest children and, since they were minors, control over any life insurance payout they received.

    In all, Heather Snyder was mentioned more than 400 times in the Brandon Holbrook murder trial – so many times it felt to me like she was on trial too.

    Both sides had listed Heather as a witness. Everyone in the crowded courtroom wanted to hear what she had to say under oath. On the fifth day of trial testimony, she was called to the stand. But Heather invoked her Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. The jury gasped. But prosecutors later introduced Heather’s alibi: photos taken in her Pennsylvania home and video showing her buying a pizza in a Newport grocery store around the time Joe Shymanski was killed about a three-hour drive away.

    It took the jury just 80 minutes to convict Holbrook of first-degree, premeditated murder. As I said, Heather Snyder has never been charged with a crime in this case.

    Questions for Heather Snyder

    After the trial, I met with Heather to talk about doing an interview. I think it’s fair to say she was reluctant, but she told me she understood she was the best person to tell her story. She also seemed keenly aware that Joe Shymanski’s family felt she was somehow involved in his death. She said she wanted to set the record straight and ultimately, she agreed to sit down with me for our “48 Hours” report. No questions were off limits.


    Former homecoming queens reunite to discuss murder case by
    48 Hours on
    YouTube

    On a rainy night in May 2025, our team set up our gear in a converted barn just minutes from both of our parents’ homes. As I was waiting for Heather to arrive, I recorded my thoughts in a kind of video diary.

    When we began the interview itself, Heather seemed nervous, but before long, she became more poised.

    “Did you ever say to Brandon Holbrook, I wish Joe were dead?” I asked her. ”No,” she said, and continued, “… the most I said to Brandon was that I thought Joe should be in jail for the way he was acting.”

    “Did Brandon tell you he wanted to kill Joe?” I asked. “Nope,” she said. “Did you help him cover it up?” I continued. “Nope. Nope,” she answered.

    Heather told me that a criminal lawyer advised her to invoke her Fifth Amendment privilege at the Holbrook trial. “If you don’t have anything to hide, why not just get up there and testify?” I asked. “… People twist your words,” Heather replied.

    shymanski-snyder-interview.jpg

    In an exclusive interview with :48 Hours,” Heather Snyder answered questions about her relationship with Brandon Holbrook. She has an alibi and emphatically said she had no involvement in her ex-husband Joe Shymanski’s murder. She has never been identified by authorities as a suspect or charged with a crime in connection with the Shymanski case.

    I asked her about texts with Holbrook in which he suggests “other solutions” for her problems with Joe.

    “I thought it was a — just a joke,” Heather said. “It didn’t cross your mind for a second –.” “No,” she responded. “That he might hurt Joe?” I continued. “No,” Heather said.

    I also asked her about text messages about her hope that karma would catch up with Joe in which she had said she was “tired of being patient.”

    “That’s how I was feeling …” Heather told me. “Do you think … that may have triggered Brandon?” I asked. “I don’t know,” she said.

    “Are you afraid authorities will come for you?” I wanted to know. “No,” Heather said. “Not at all?” I asked. “I’m not worried at all, no …” she said.

    We asked Calvert County’s top prosecutor, Robert Harvey, for an interview about the Joe Shymanski murder investigation and about Heather Snyder. Harvey declined our request but wrote to us that there was “… a thorough and exhaustive investigation …” into Mr. Shymanski’s death. “Mr. Holbrook received a ‘fair and impartial trial …'” Harvey continued. “Because Mr. Holbrook’s case is under appeal … it remains open,” Harvey continued. “Therefore, I am not going to respond to questions regarding the investigation and I am not going to speculate on what may or may not happen in the future.”

    We also asked Pennsylvania authorities about the status of the case:

    “Is there a current investigation into Heather Snyder?” I asked. “I can’t answer that question,” said Aurand. “Should there be?” I continued. “I can’t answer that question,” Aurand responded. “Do you think Heather Snyder is involved in this crime in any way?” I continued. “I can’t answer that,” Aurand said. “But you do know the answer,” I asked. ”Yes. But I’m not allowed to say,” Aurand said.

    Heather Snyder told me despite it all, she wants to keep Joe Shymanski’s memory alive for their children. She knows the Shymanski family wants to see them and says she is open to the idea, assuming they stop publicly pointing a finger at her.

    She added she still has love for Holbrook, though she believes he belongs behind bars. “I think obviously psychologically he snapped over something,” she told me. “I think he did something horrible, horrific. He hurt my family. He hurt me.” Last July, a judge sentenced Brandon Holbrook to life in prison with no parole.

    “So many people watching are gonna be frustrated,” I said. “Uh-huh,” she agreed. “… and they’re gonna think it — it just — logically you have to had known something.” “Right,” she said. “But I didn’t. That’s the torturous part, because people will — it’s almost like they want to believe that I was involved with it. They want that true-crime narrative. And it just simply wasn’t the case.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • A Death in the Stairwell

    [ad_1]



    A Death in the Stairwell – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    After her husband is found dying at the foot of the stairs, a woman accused of murder fights to clear her name. “48 Hours” correspondent Peter Van Sant reports.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Police say an Indiana man’s death was no accident; His wife fights to prove she’s no murderer.

    [ad_1]

    August 12, 2023, New Haven, Indiana. Shortly before morning broke in the home he rented with his wife Alison, at the base of a steep stairway, Kevin Davis‘ blood seeped onto the floor.

    OFFICER GARRETT SHANEBROOK | New Haven Police Department (bodycam video): Where’s that blood coming from?

    CORPORAL CADE HETRICK | New Haven Police Department: His face and his nose.

    Det. James Krueger: The amount of blood, it was alarming. It was — it was everywhere.

    Alison Davis had already given lead Detective James Krueger of the New Haven Police Department permission to search the house.

    DET. JAMES KRUEGER (bodycam video):  If you do agree to that, I need you to sign there saying that you understand …

    But she warned them about the bedroom, where their pit bull mix, Willow, would sometimes growl at strangers who approached.

    ALISON DAVIS (bodycam video): She’s up in the bedroom, and she’s a guard dog.

    DET. JAMES KRUEGER: OK.

    ALISON DAVIS: And I don’t know if she’d do anything, and I don’t want anything to happen to her.

    DET. JAMES KRUEGER: Right now, what I won’t do is, I won’t go in that room.

    ALISON DAVIS: OK.

    AN ACCIDENTAL FALL?

    Kevin had been rushed to Parkview Regional Medical Center in critical condition. After speaking with first responders and breaking the tragic news to her loved ones, Alison also headed to Parkview.

    Peter Van Sant: So you go to the hospital?

    Steve Krause: Yes.

    Steve Krause watched his daughter try to will Kevin back to consciousness.

    Steve Krause: Their favorite phrase for one another was “babe.” … And Alison’s up there, “Hey babe you’re gonna be OK. Hey babe, you know, I’m here with you. Hey babe, I love you.”

    Kevin and Alison Davis

    Krause Family


    Kasey Klemm: She had like blood on her fingernail, cuticles, and on her phone. I could tell that she had been crying but she kind of just looked like in shock.

    Alison’s best friend Kasey Klemm.

    Kasey Klemm: They had her in like a little small waiting room with a chaplain. And I was trying to calm her down to ask questions, you know, like what was going on?

    Back at the house, Krueger lifted restrictions and cleared the bloody scene. It was horrific. But at this point, he believed it was an accident.

    Det. James Krueger: Well, maybe he took a head plant down the stairs. I don’t know. I wasn’t there.

    Kasey Klemm: The detective said … I think we’re done here.

    Alison stayed at the hospital. But back home, all that blood needed to be cleaned up.

    Kasey Klemm: You don’t think about that right? … Like, who cleans it up?

    Steve Krause: I said well, I will go do it.

    Peter Van Sant: You had permission to do this?

    Steve Krause: Correct.

    Peter Van Sant: Permission from the lead detective in this case?

    Steve Krause: Correct.

    Peter Van Sant: How upsetting was this process of cleaning?

    Steve Krause: Well it’s very upsetting. … sometimes I’d get — become overwhelmed and need to gather myself, um, to finish, um, what I’d come to do.

    Including tending to Willow, who had been left upstairs in their bedroom with the door closed.

    Steve Krause: Alison was concerned that this dog hadn’t been left out … They had no children, so the dog was … like a child.

    Throughout that frantic morning, Alison and her family quietly prayed.

    Steve Krause: I’m praying can we just, you know, wake up, you know, wake up. You look like you’re sleeping, just wake up.

    Kevin and Alison were a part of a tight group of friends who were regulars at the East Haven Tavern where Jodi Espy and Jessica Eakright take care of the crowd.

    Jessica Eakright: Our customers become our family around here.

    The news that Kevin was in critical condition hit hard.

    Jodi Espy: Everybody was just talking like, “Oh my gosh, he was just here. That’s so sad.”

    Kevin and Alison had been at the Tavern just hours earlier.

    Jessica Eakright: It was hard not to be a friend of Alison’s because she just made everybody feel like you mattered.

    Kevin, a skilled landscaper, had a big personality that matched his big heart.

    Todd Spessert: Kevin Davis was, uh, just a nice guy … always hard working … ready to help anybody out at any time.

    Close friends Todd Spessert and Jason Young scrambled to see Kevin.

    Jason Young: We all met at the hospital.

    Todd Spessert: Yeah.

    Jason Young: We talked to Alison and her parents.

    Jason Young: … definitely she had been crying, but she was holding back.

    Todd Spessert: She was —  she was a mess.

    Peter Van Sant: She was devastated?

    Jason Young and Todd Spessert: Yes.

    The scene was overwhelming.

    Todd Spessert: Yeah, he … he’s uh brain dead, there’s nothing left in there.

    Peter Van Sant:  God, just a few hours earlier he was sitting right over here, right?

    Todd Spessert: Correct.

    Peter Van Sant: Do you say anything to Kevin?

    Jason Young: Oh yeah, yup. … I told him it’s like … I feel really bad about this. And it shouldn’t have happened, and wish you were still here. 

    Peter Van Sant: And did you have a chance to say goodbye to your friend?

    Jason Young: Yeah. I said goodbye there. Yep.

    Todd Spessert: They were — yeah, then they were talking about, you know, donating his organs and stuff. And I was like — I was like, wow.

    Peter Van Sant: He was an organ donor?

    Kasey Klemm: Yes, yes. She was very proud of him for that, too.

    His life support would be disconnected. Soon, 40-year-old Kevin Davis was gone. At 33, Alison was a widow.

    Kasey Klemm: They were just happy type of couple that would dance in the kitchen to music together, just the two of them. Like that’s just who they were. They were great together.

    It shook their friend Deontae Bristol.

    Deontae Bristol: I was just holding back tears because we were just hanging out. Like I was just hanging out with this guy.

    Jessica Eakright: It’s devastating. Not just because he’s no longer here, but because the circumstances surrounding it are traumatic.

    Deontae Bristol: It had to be an accident.

    Jodi Espy: Nobody ever thought it was anything but a fall.

    Davis staircase

    Police initially believed Kevin Davis’ death was from a fall down the stairs, an accident.

    New Haven, Indiana, Police Department


    And that’s what Krueger concluded, too.

    Det. James Krueger: I just didn’t see any need in a small department to tie up all our resources and hold the house for an accident scene. 

    But the scene did raise questions. Despite a huge amount of blood, first responders didn’t see any lacerations on Kevin’s head.

    Det. James Krueger: I was just told that he was bleeding out of his … nose and mouth … there was no obvious wound on the side of his head. 

    That same day, a doctor at Parkview treating Kevin felt compelled to speak up.

    Det. James Krueger: One of the doctors of the ER staff … had some concerns with those injuries.

    The CT scans showed internal wounds — multiple skull fractures. She also noted bruising to his face and scalp and concluded, “Kevin’s injuries were not consistent with a fall down a stairway.” 

    Det. James Krueger: That … definitely raised some red flags in my mind.

    She alerted the coroner’s office, who ordered an autopsy.

    Peter Van Sant: When did this accident scene become a crime scene?

    Det. James Krueger: After the autopsy. … Once they told me that he had a crushed-in skull … definitely is not consistent with a fall from the stairs. … that’s when I started … to dig a lot … deeper into this case.

    KEVIN DAVIS’ AUTOPSY RESULTS RAISE SUSPICIONS

    Three days after Kevin’s death, the autopsy was completed and the provocative findings were turned over to police.

    Det. James Krueger: I get the autopsy report … saying that his skull is crushed in, definitely is not consistent with a fall from the stairs.

    But Krueger says it is consistent with a violent physical beating.

    Peter Van Sant: And you now are going … we may have a homicide on our hands.

    James Krueger: Right.

    Peter Van Sant: Do you have a suspect in this case?

    James Krueger: Yeah, Alison’s definitely our suspect. … You have two people in a house. One is murdered.

    It seemed a routine step to launch the murder investigation of Alison Davis. But the New Haven Police Department had a huge challenge — created by its own decision.

    Peter Van Sant: By releasing the scene that meant that family members could –

    Det. James Krueger: That meant that anybody —

    Peter Van Sant:  — reenter the house …

    Det. James Krueger: — yeah, the house is back to her. 

    Peter Van Sant: But when people other than law enforcement enter a house once it’s been released there’s a problem right?

    Det. James Krueger: There is.

    Peter Van Sant: There can be contamination of a crime scene.

    Det. James Krueger: Yeah.

    The day after police received the autopsy, four days after Kevin’s death, Krueger got a search warrant. That same day and the next he returned to the house, a bodycam rolling.

    DET. JAMES KRUEGER (bodycam video): I have a couple more search warrants here, OK? First one is I gotta take your phone from ya.

    ALISON DAVIS: OK.

    Police had been looking for more evidence — including a possible murder weapon or traces of blood. But by then, Alison’s dad had already straightened up as best he could.

    Steve Krause: I basically cleaned up the area that I could visually see blood. And it was around where Kevin was on the floor. … It’s right there at the bottom of the steps.

    DET. JAMES KRUEGER (bodycam video): So if I could gather the phone first?

    ALISON DAVIS: Yes, let me grab that.

    Alison shared with Klemm a growing unease she couldn’t shake.

    Kasey Klemm: She was really upset that they took their phones …

    DET. JAMES KRUEGER (bodycam video): Is that password protected?

    ALISON DAVIS: Yes.

    Kasey Klemm: … cause that was a lot of their memories. … pictures to … look back on.

    Alison would say she initially spoke willingly to investigators, doing all police asked of her.

    Peter Van Sant: She would talk to whomever wanted to speak with her, is that right?

    Kasey Klemm: Yeah. She had nothing to hide. Why would she?

    Steve Krause: There’s … nothing that suggests there was anything other than a fall down the stairs.

    Peter Van Sant: And for you this was a tragic accident.

    Steve Krause: Of course … It was!

    And as the spotlight turned to Alison Davis, at the East Haven Tavern, there were plenty who voiced their support.

    Jodi Espy: There’s no way.

    Peter Van Sant: There’s no way what?

    Jodi Epsy: That she could’ve done that, she could’ve killed him. There’s no way.

    Jessica Eakright: I could not imagine in any world where she would be wanted for murder.

    The tavern crowd tells the story of that night. Alison was working retail at Victoria’s Secret. When she finished, she headed over. As usual, Kevin was waiting for her. 

    Peter Van Sant: On that night … where was he sitting?

    Jodi Espy: He was sitting over here at the bar.

    Peter Van Sant: And his mood that night was?

    Jodi Espy: Was good, he was happy, he was friendly.

    Jason Young: I was here with him.

    Peter Van Sant: You were here?

    Jason Young: Mm-hmm.

    It was around 9 p.m. when Alison walked in.

    Jodi Espy: Typical night.

    Jessica Eakright: There was nothing out of the ordinary in — in the slightest.

    Kevin had a second, then a third beer and some vodka shots. Alison sipped on her usual — a sweet cocktail.

    Jessica Eakright: It didn’t seem that she was drinking excessively at all.

    The East Haven Tavern regulars carried on. Kevin could get a little loud, his friends say, but they knew, that was just Kevin being Kevin.

    Jodi Espy: I mean, he was — he was just “a lot.”

    Peter Van Sant: What does “a lot” mean?

    Jodi Espy: He was very opinionated.

    Jessica Eakright: But she — she loved him through it.

    Soon it was after midnight; time to turn in.

    Jessica Eakright: They were calling it a night, winding down.

    Alison left the tavern first, with Kevin following shortly after.

    Jessica Eakright: I think it was about one.

    Kevin and his buddy Jason Young started texting.

    Peter Van Sant:  Now those texts, do you still have them?

    Jason Young: Mm-hmm.

    Peter Van Sant: Can you show them to me?

    Jason Young: Yeah. … You can just start here. You just start scrolling through. …

    Peter Van Sant: So this starts at 1:11 a.m. …

    Young asked, “You guys make it back?” Kevin responding, “Oh ya sry…. L O L.”  A moment later Kevin confides, “Ya we are good bro… I’m just listening to music… L O L.”

    Jason Young: … just being funny, you know … all that was basically going on til … about 2:31.

    But Klemm says, Alison told her it was late, and she had told Kevin to quiet down. She was tired, and all she wanted was to get some sleep.

    Kasey Klemm: She said, Kevin, I have to get up early for work. … I’m gonna go downstairs and sleep if you don’t stop. I need to sleep.

    Kevin sent Jason a seemingly innocent text.

    Jason Young: He says …  “I’m putting my phone on silent, laugh my ass off, gotta go to bed. The wife.

    “The Wife.” After the autopsy results came back, and Krueger got Alison and Kevin’s phones. He  studied that text and the ones before it. He thought they didn’t seem innocent at all.

    Det. James Krueger: He was obviously annoyed at her about something.

    Remember, Alison had told first responders that they’d had a fight.

    ALISON DAVIS (police bodycam): Just now, I woke up, I — we got in a fight last night …

    Det. James Krueger: Who knows what was said. It obviously aggravated her.

    Det. James Krueger: This is a wife that lost it and beat her husband to death.

    Steve Krause: There’s nothing to suggest that Alison did anything. … This is just strictly an accident.

    THE INVESTIGATION FOCUSES ON ALISON DAVIS 

    With evidence showing that Kevin Davis’s skull had multiple fractures, everything was being reexamined to determine if those injuries were accidental —or intentional.

    911 DISPATCHER:  911. What’s the address of your emergency?

    ALISON DAVIS: My husband just fell down the stairs and there’s blood everywhere …

    ALISON DAVIS: … I don’t know if he’s alive or dead.

    Detective Krueger’s team analyzed that 911 call and concluded Alison was acting.

    Det. James Krueger: … this is rehearsed. … Because she wanted to listen to what the 911 dispatcher had to say and then she went into her whole rehearsal.

    911 DISPATCHER: OK, and what happened to your husband?

    ALISON DAVIS: Um, he fell down the stairs, just now. I was sleeping downstairs. All I heard — all of a sudden, I heard a loud noise.

    Det. James Krueger: She never asked them to hurry up. Almost every 911 call you listened to, hey, hurry up, I need you now, you know?

    Det. James Krueger: This call is about her. It’s not about Kevin.

    And even as their bodycams rolled, police officers Hetrick and Shanebrook questioned if Alison was genuinely concerned, as Kevin lay dying.

    Peter Van Sant: Typically, based on your experience, how is the spouse reacting in a situation like this?

    Cpl. Cade Hetrick: Usually just absolute panic.

    And when EMT’s lifted Kevin, brain-dead, into an emergency vehicle —

    Peter Van Sant: Did she attempt to get into the ambulance?

    Cpl. Cade Hetrick: Not once.

    Peter Van Sant: Not once. Was she crying?

    Cpl. Cade Hetrick: I — I don’t ever recall witnessing her cry.

    But they say they did hear her laughing.

    Officer Garrett Shanebrook: Uh, we both noticed it.

    Cpl. Cade Hetrick: When she was also talking to the paramedics, my body camera captured her kinda laughing … with the paramedics.

    CORPORAL CADE HETRICK (bodycam video): Is there somewhere we can get clothes for ya?

    ALISON DAVIS: Um, cause you can’t. I’m not sure.

    CORPORAL CADE HETRICK: Yeah. That’s the problem right now, like I said.

    ALISON DAVIS:  I mean, it is what it is at this point.

    CORPORAL CADE HETRICK: OK. OK.

    Also strange, to these police officers, is what they observed at the bottom of the stairs.

    CORPORAL CADE HETRICK (bodycam video): This just doesn’t look like a fall to me.

    OFFICER GARRETT SHANEBROOK: No.

    Officer Garrett Shanebrook: If he fell down the stairs why wasn’t he more either wedged up against the doorway … not laying perfectly flat in a horizontal position?

    Det. James Krueger: It’s almost like he was laid down at that base of the stairs. It didn’t make sense.

    Police would come to think they knew why.

    Cpl. Cade Hetrick: It didn’t add up to a tumble down the stairs.

    Peter Van Sant: What did it add up to you?

    Cpl. Cade Hetrick: Blunt force trauma …

    A beating, police say — several severe blows to the head until Kevin’s skull caved in.

    CORPORAL CADE HETRICK (bodycam video): Right now, we’re treating this as a crime scene due to his condition, OK? Alright?

    Police uncovered something else. Alison told different stories as to where she and Kevin were sleeping. Remember, first responders heard this story:

    Alison Davis police bodycam image

    Alison Davis, seen on police bodycam video, telling first responders she and Kevin “got in a fight last night.”

    New Haven, Indiana, Police Department


    ALISON DAVIS (bodycam video): We got in a fight last night. And I was sleeping on the couch, and he was sleeping upstairs.

    But that’s not what investigators say Alison told Kevin’s mother, Alta Beers.

    Det. James Krueger: Alta tells me that, um, Alison told her that … they were in bed together … I said, OK, that’s interesting.

    Peter Van Sant: But she had told you she was on a couch.

    Det. James Krueger: Yeah. Completely different.

    Krueger says Alison didn’t share with Kevin’s family just how critically he was hurt.

    Det. James Krueger: She is minimizing this entire situation, especially to Kevin’s family.

    Peter Van Sant: Why do you suppose Alison minimized his injuries –

    Det. James Krueger: Because she caused the injuries. That’s why she minimized them. … She’s caught lying …

    The detective’s theories: the 911 call — faked.

    ALISON DAVIS (to 911): My husband just fell down the stairs and there’s blood everywhere, and I can’t flip him over.

    Alison’s behavior — unnatural. Kevin’s body — it had been moved.

    Tesa Helge: It looks to me like he’s been positioned in a way that does not consistent with falling down the stairs.

    Prosecutor Tesa Helge teamed with Krueger and the doctors who had treated and examined Kevin.

    Peter Van Sant: So your experts are looking at a man they believed basically was beaten to death.

    Tesa Helge: That’s exactly what they believe.

    Peter Van Sant: Beaten by someone.

    Tesa Helge: Right.

    Peter Van Sant: And that someone you believe was?

    Tesa Helge: Alison Davis.

    But the prosecutor sensed the investigation faced some serious challenges.

    Peter Van Sant: Where’s the murder weapon?

    Tesa Helge: It’s a great question.

    Peter Van Sant: And what triggered this?

    Tesa Helge: Between them? I don’t know. I wish I knew.

    But Helge and Krueger became convinced, they had learned something important about Alison and Kevin’s marriage that could suggest a motive.

    Det. James Krueger: I spoke with Kevin’s mother, Alta, and she had informed me that there were having some marital issues.

    Tesa Helge: You know a domestic relationship that has gone bad … It is on the rocks.

    And remember these texts from the final hours of his life between Kevin and his friend Jason Young?

    Jason Young: He said, “I’m putting my phone on silent, laughin’ my ass off, gotta go to bed. The wife.”

    Peter Van Sant: Gotta go, the wife.

    Det. James Krueger: The wife.

    Investigators suggested that message reflected tensions in the marriage. Young believes that’s ridiculous.

    Peter Van Sant: Did he ever say to you my marriage is in trouble.

    Jason Young: No.

    Kasey Klemm: She would’ve told me if there was something going on and never was that hinted.

    Alison’s supporters say she was just being honest with investigators when she mentioned the argument. But, with detectives bearing down on her, Alison had stopped talking to them about her marriage or anything else.

    Det. James Krueger: She went completely silent after that and uh.

    Peter Van Sant: The cooperation stopped.

    Det. James Krueger: Over with, yep, yep.

    On Oct. 17, 2023, after two months of investigation, police declared Kevin’s death a homicide. And two months after that, a warrant was issued for Alison’s arrest for the murder of her husband.

    Steve Krause: I mean that — this is unbelievable … So we get a recommendation for criminal defense team in Indianapolis.

    Steve Krause: Andrew Baldwin and Max Wiley.

    Andrew Baldwin: I spent quite a bit of time with her, and she’s just a wonderful person …

    Three days before Christmas, Alison Davis walked into the Allen County Jail with her parents.

    Steve Krause: She said … I’m Alison Davis, and I’m here to turn myself in.

    Peter Van Sant: Did they handcuff her right in front of you?

    Steve Krause: Yes.

    Peter Van Sant: Do you believe Alison Davis had anything to do with her husband’s death?

    Max Wiley: No.

    Wiley and Baldwin thought they knew exactly why cops hadn’t found a murder weapon: because there was no murder.

    Peter Van Sant: What was the instrument that you believe caused Kevin’s death?

    Max Wiley: The banister at the bottom of the stairs.

    ALISON DAVIS ARRESTED

    Indiana rarely allows bail on a murder charge. Alison Davis was locked up in the Allen County Jail. She pleaded not guilty.

    Steve Krause: We know Alison. … and we know she isn’t capable of what they accused her of.

    Peter Van Sant: Does she have a temper?

    Steve Krause: No, she’s never has a temper.

    Peter Van Sant: Does she have a criminal record?

    Steve Krause: No, she does not have a criminal record.

    Her father, Steve, hoped he’d given Alison tools to survive behind bars and face the anxious wait until her trial.

    Steve Krause: Our family is faith-based, and Alison leaned on that faith.

    Kasey Klemm: It was so hard.

    Kasey Klemm searched desperately for a way to help her friend.

    Kasey Klemm: It’s like there’s nothing I can do for her, except pretend to be strong and remind her that I’m here.

    Kevin and Alison Davis

    Kevin and Alison Davis

    Krause Family


    While loved ones missed Alison, she told them that she missed Kevin.

    Kasey Klemm: You know she would say, I haven’t been sleeping because I just keep seeing it in my head and … I just miss him and I want him. … and you know she would just talk about how all she wants more than anything in the world is just to hear him call her babe again and hold her.

    Friends and family were denied any direct contact.

    Steve Krause: No visitation.

    Peter Van Sant: Were you able to see her on a video, Facetime kind of situation?

    Steve Krause: No, we were not.

    Only her attorneys, Max Wiley and Andrew Baldwin, could see Alison. Through plexiglass, they got to know their client and developed a sense of her relationship with Kevin.

    Peter Van Sant: Do you buy into this notion that it was a troubled marriage, headed toward a cliff?

    Max Wiley: Not at all. … No one is coming to the detectives, you know, right after this happened and saying there was a problem in the marriage, you need to investigate this. Nobody.

    But remember, four weeks after Kevin died, Krueger spoke with Kevin’s mother, Alta. He says she told him Kevin and Alison were having marital problems.

    Det. James Krueger: It was looking like it was leaning towards a separation.

    Tesa Helge: I think it’s fair to say that he was concerned about the marriage, and that he had shared those concerns with his family.

    As Helge prepared, she believed she had a compelling story to share with a jury. It wasn’t about love and marriage —

    Tesa Helge: This case is going to boil down to a lot of science …

    Dr. Bill Smock: I’m Dr. Bill Smock. I’m a consultant to the Allen County District Attorney’s Office in the death of Mister Davis.

    Tesa Helge: When I brought Dr. Smock in, and I provided him all our materials … I did not tell him what anyone else thought.

    The defense retained a medical expert of its own: Dr. L. J. Dragovic, a forensic pathologist and neuropathologist.

    Max Wiley: He studies brains. He studies brain injuries. He’s passionate about it.

    The two experts would come to radically different conclusions.

    Dr. Bill Smock: Mr. Davis was beaten to death.

    Dr. L.J. Dragovic: Kevin Davis died as a result of falling and striking his head … on a bottom post of the stairway banister …

    They worked to make sense of a tragedy that started with a phone call.

    Steve Krause: I have not heard the call.

    Peter Van Sant: Would you like to hear it?

    Steve Krause: Sure.

    Peter Van Sant: You ready?

    Steve Krause: I’m ready.

    ALISON DAVIS (to 911): My husband just fell down the stairs and there’s blood everywhere, and I can’t flip him over. I don’t know if he’s alive or dead.

    Steve Krause: Listen to her.

    Steve Krause: And I can’t believe they did this to her. It’s unbelievable. Such injustice!

    At the East Haven Tavern, the regulars were torn.

    Jodi Espy: A lot of people think she’s guilty. A lot of people think she’s innocent.

    Jessica Eakright: There’s just not a bone in my body that thinks she could have done this.

    Jodi Espy: I believe that she’s not guilty.

    Peter Van Sant: What do you believe happened that night?

    Todd Spessert: I have no idea.

    Peter Van Sant: In your mind, is Alison Davis a killer?

    Todd Spessert: I don’t know.

    May 5, 2025. Alison has been locked up for 17 months.

    Jessica Eakright: The, um, trial starts tomorrow.

    On the morning of May 6,  former Det. James Krueger — now Police Chief Krueger after a promotion — heads to court.

    Chief James Krueger (driving to court): I’m anxious. … What’s at stake today is either Kevin Davis gets justice for what was done to him, or we let a — a murderer walk free.

    Max Wiley: I just, you know, kept thinking … what evidence do they have to say that Alison murdered him and there just … wasn’t anything.

    Krueger admits the investigation was flawed, but he isn’t making any excuses.

    James Krueger: So, I was responsible for gathering the evidence, making sure everything was completed … if something got messed up or if I missed something, that — that falls on my responsibility … That’s my baby.

    He knows there are challenges — starting with a most basic issue.

    Chief James Krueger: He was a big guy. You know, the jurors may have a hard time believing that she was even capable of causing this injury to him.

    And if the chief was a betting man?

    Chief James Krueger: I give this one a 50-50 … I believe there’s a very good possibility that this jury will hang and there won’t be a verdict.

    At the Allen County Courthouse, both sides are set to go.

    Andrew Baldwin: The prosecution has no murder weapon.The prosecution has nowhere to hide from the paltry evidence that it’s about to present to you.

    Tesa Helge: There’s no doubt that Kevin was murdered.

    And like Krueger, Helge knows this case is a tough one. So many people think Alison Davis simply could not be a killer.

    Deontae Bristol: That’s not Alison. That’s not who she is. … She had no reason … Kevin was her world.

    Peter Van Sant: Are you convinced that Alison Davis murdered her husband?

    Chief James Krueger:  I’m 100 percent convinced. Yes.

    A DRAMATIC VERDICT

    Inside Fort Wayne’s historic courthouse, no cameras are allowed. “48 Hours” is allowed a sketch artist. Investigators, doctors and loved ones testify. But all eyes are on Alison.

    Alison Davis trial sketch

    A sketch of Alison Davis at her trial for the murder of her husband Kevin Davis.

    CBS News/Karen Moriarty


    Peter Van Sant: And what do you see on her face?

    Steve Krause: I see love.

    But it isn’t love, it’s forensics that define this trial. Doctors Smock and Dragovic, and their radically opposing theories.

    Dr. Bill Smock: Mr. Davis sustained blows to the head … not just on one side, but on the back and on the left side as well.

    At trial, Smock presents a CT scan highlighting Kevin’s injuries, the multiple fractures to his head.

    Dr. Bill Smock: What that says is that Mr. Davis sustained multiple blows to multiple areas of his head.

    Dr. Bill Smock: I told the jury that Mr. Davis was the victim of a homicide … He did not fall down those stairs.

    He believes Alison wielded a weapon that was never found.

    Dr. Bill Smock: For example, a kettle bell, a weight … It certainly could be the end of a baseball bat.

    Dr. L.J. Dragovic: Kevin Davis was not killed as a result of impacts by baseball bat.

    Dr. L.J. Dragovic: He suffered only one — one impact to the head as his head slammed into that — that post of the banister.

    That one impact, Dragovic says, led to multiple fractures. He says the same impact then caused Kevin’s brain to ricochet inside his skull.

    The shattered bone fragments acted like shrapnel, tearing Kevin’s brain.

    Dr. L.J. Dragovic: They claim that Kevin was beaten. … they got it wrong.

    Dr. Bill Smock: I would say Dr. Dragovic got it wrong.

    Doctor Smock says just look at the police bodycam video. The banister post appears clean. There’s no evidence Kevin’s head struck it. 

    Davis investigationbodycam image

    Bodycam video shows New Haven, Indiana, police officers inspecting the scene at the bottom of the staircase in the Davis’ home.  

    New Haven, Indiana, Police Department


    Dr. Bill Smock: There was no blood, no tissue, no hair on the top of that banister.

    But remember, Dragovic argues the post is clean because Kevin’s injuries were internal.

    Dr. L.J. Dragovic: Kevin never had any open wound anywhere on his body.

    Blood that was found by first responders was on the floor, beneath Kevin’s body. It came from his nose and mouth.

    Chief James Krueger (at staircase banister): According to the defense, his skull hit this.

    Chief Krueger tells “48 Hours” what he believes happened to Kevin.

    Chief. James Krueger: I believe that he made some comments to Alison who was laying down here on the couch.

     Peter Van Sant: And he’s walking away from her?

    Chief James Krueger: … he’s walking away from her … and Alison grabs an object … he takes that blow to the back of the head.

    Legally intoxicated and immobilized by more blows –

    Chief James Krueger: … and somewhere in this area is where he loses it and falls.

    Investigators believe Alison dragged 219-pound Kevin across a portion of the floor.

    Chief James Krueger: Mrs. Davis sees these stairs and says, well this is my scapegoat. I can make it look like this is an accident.

    Chief James Krueger: And he was pulled just enough to make it look like he fell down the stairs.

    And Krueger says there’s more evidence of Alison’s guilt: Kevin’s cold body temperature.

    Chief James Krueger: Core body temperature was 91 degrees.

    Doctor Smock says he knows why.

    DR. BILL SMOCK: Kevin Davis was lying there for at least two hours before 911 was called.

    But in his testimony, Dragovic counters Kevin’s low temperature is due to something else: the impact with the post destroyed a key part of Kevin’s brain called the hypothalamus.

    Dr. L.J. Dragovic: … that part of the brain is the actual thermostat for the body.

    The result:

    Dr. L.J. Dragovic: Your body temperature is out of control. … It’s, uh, kaput.

    Dr. Bill Smock: There are so many inconsistencies with that theory.

    davis-willow.jpg

    Willow, a black and white female pit bull mix loved by her owners, didn’t seem destined to become a key figure in a murder investigation.

    Krause Family


    Krueger took “48 Hours” upstairs to that bedroom Willow the pit bull mix shared with Kevin and Alison. Alison had warned Krueger, Willow might attack.

    ALISON DAVIS (bodycam video): She’s up in the bedroom, and she’s a guard dog.

    DET. JAMES KRUEGER: Right now, what I won’t do is I won’t go in that room.

    ALISON DAVIS: OK.

    Peter Van Sant:  Did you ever get into this room?

    Chief James Krueger: I never did. Not on that morning. … I 100 percent wish I would’ve gotten into this room on the morning of the 12th.

    Peter Van Sant: Because?

    Chief James Krueger: The murder weapon could have been in there.

    Chief Krueger has been at the house several times. This is the first time Alison’s lawyers were able to get inside.

    Andrew Baldwin: Wow. 

    Max Wiley: Oh my goodness.

    Andrew Baldwin: That’s the staircase right there. … And there’s the post … So, you hit that and you —you end up, yeah your feet over here.

    Max Wiley: Let’s see how steep these stairs are, they are really steep. Aren’t they?

    Peter Van Sant: And narrow.

    Max Wiley: Yeah. And narrow.

    Andrew Baldwin: It’s powerful to be in this house.

    And to picture what they believe were the final, fatal steps of Kevin Davis.

    Andrew Baldwin: … it’s an intoxicated guy that fell down the stairs and hit his head on that post right there …

    The trial lasts four days. Alison does not take the stand.

    MARCUS TRUSCIO | WANE Reporter: The jury is now out … they just heard closing arguments for about two hours.

    Which story will the jury believe?

    The courthouse is dark except for the jury room. Some 21 grueling months have passed since the heartbreaking death of Kevin Davis. If convicted of his murder, Alison Davis could spend the rest of her life in prison. At 11 p.m., word comes of a verdict. Alison’s family and attorneys emerge.

    Max Wiley: Not guilty.

    Meghan Hodge | Family member:  Oh my God she’s coming home! Oh my God! Oh!

    Alison Davis is found not guilty.

    Just moments before, Steve had locked eyes with his daughter as her verdict came down.

    Steve Krause (outside courthouse): She was crying with joy, and it was a wonderful moment.

    Andrew Baldwin (outside courthouse): That family over there — that’s why we do this work. That’s exactly why we do this work.

    Kevin’s mother Alta doesn’t want Kevin to be forgotten.

    Alta Beers: He’s my son. I’ve always loved him and always will.

    She accepts the verdict.

    Alta Beers: I’m OK. I’m dealing with it. She’s still my daughter-in-law, no matter what.

    But where is Alison? Back in jail — waiting for her release paperwork. A cold but joyous crowd stands vigil. Then, at 2:12 a.m., the jailhouse door cracks open.

    Steve Krause: Alison comes out and everybody just erupts with joy.

    Alison Davis freed

    Alison Davis is greeted with hugs from family and friends following her release from jail.

    CBS News


    Peter Van Sant: It was the group hug of the ages.

    Steve Krause: Yes … tears and saying Alison we missed you so much. It’s so good to have you in our arms again.

    Alison Davis: It’s a lot of emotions, really.

    There is no joy for those who believe the jury got it wrong.

    Chief James Krueger: I was like ugh, unbelievable, unbelievable.

    Peter Van Sant: You were stunned by that?

    Chief James Krueger: I was, yeah.

    “48 Hours” spoke with a juror who asked us not to show her face or use her name.

    Juror: Well the prosecution didn’t have a strong case, like there was no weapon, there was no this is where she did it, and how she did it.

    Juror: The — the prosecution’s theory had a lot of holes.

    And the jury believed the theories of Dr. Dragovic.

    Juror: He explained everything in very clear terms that we could understand, and it just made sense. It made sense to the injuries.

    Peter Van Sant: And for Kevin’s family, what would you have to say them?

    Jodi Espy: Just that I’m so sorry for your loss. It’s — it’s so devastating.

    Peter Van Sant: What do you hope for her?

    Jessica Eakright: I hope that she can … find her place … to get back to that smiling happy person that she was.

    Jessica Eakright:  She didn’t deserve a year and a half of her life taken away sitting in jail. … So, I was really happy for her.

    Alison Davis has left New Haven and is living with her parents and her dog Willow.


    Produced by James Stolz. Kat Teurfs is the field producer. Rebecca LaFlam is the associate producer. Michelle Sigona is the development producer. Richard Barber, Michael Vele and Gregory McLaughlin are the editors. Peter Schweitzer is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Indiana police say a dog may have been used to conceal a murder weapon, but are they wrong?

    [ad_1]

    “Willow,” a black and white female pit bull mix loved by her owners, didn’t seem destined to become a key figure in a murder investigation. But that’s exactly what happened. It was Aug. 12, 2023, when the dog became known to law enforcement in New Haven, Indiana.

    That morning, police would hear about Willow, and how she was a protective guard dog. But they wouldn’t meet her. And that’s one of many places where this story gets fascinating as correspondent Peter Van Sant reports in “A Death in the Stairwell,” an all-new “48 Hours” airing Saturday, Oct. 11 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.

    Alison Davis and Willow

    Willow belonged to Kevin and Alison Davis, a married couple. Steve Krause, Alison Davis’ father, tells Van Sant how much Kevin and Alison loved each other, calling each other “babe.” Alison Davis’ best friend, Kasey Klemm, says they were a happy couple who danced together in the kitchen. Krause explains, “They had no children, so the dog was … like a child” to them. Their friend, Jason Young, says that Willow was “a big barker and kind of intimidating at first,” but that in “two minutes the dog doesn’t care about you anymore.”

    The night Kevin Davis sustained his injuries, he and Alison Davis had been out together at a local tavern. Friends and the tavern staff say it was a typical night and that they seemed happy when they headed home around 1 a.m. Alison Davis would later tell police that when they did get home, she and Kevin had an argument, so she went to sleep on a couch downstairs. Kevin Davis headed to their upstairs bedroom – where Willow was too. Alison Davis says she was awakened by a loud noise. She says she found Kevin Davis unresponsive, face down, in a large pool of blood. Alison Davis would tell a 911 operator and first responders that Kevin Davis had fallen down the stairs.

    Kevin and Alison Davis

    Kevin and Alison Davis

    Krause Family


    After emergency responders rushed Kevin Davis to the hospital, Det. James Krueger would question Alison Davis. She would sign paperwork, giving consent to police to enter and search the home. But Alison Davis warned the detective about Willow: “She’s a guard dog. I don’t know if she’d do anything, and I don’t want anything to happen to her,” said Alison Davis.

    Krueger told her he wouldn’t go in that room. He says when he went upstairs, “I could hear the dog walking around in there … So I cracked the door open … I got the teeth, and the growls and everything. And there was no way that dog was letting me in that room.” Krueger looked around the rest of the house. He felt “everything checked out” and that Alison Davis’ story was true — this was a tragic, fatal fall.

    Kevin Davis had massive traumatic injuries to his head. He would not survive another day. Family and friends say Alison Davis was devastated by the loss of the husband she loved. But police came to think differently. Four months later, Indiana authorities would charge Alison Davis with murder. Detective Krueger concluded, “This is a wife that lost it and beat her husband to death.” Authorities say she used an improvised weapon, like an exercise weight, perhaps a baseball bat. But no weapon was ever found.

    After 17 months of incarceration, Alison Davis — who has always maintained her innocence — would go on trial for murder. In just six hours, the jury would come to its verdict. Alison Davis is not guilty.

    Krueger, who had been promoted to chief of police, believes the verdict might have been different if only he had gotten into Willow’s room that August morning. “I think that dog may have been intentionally put in that room to keep me out,” Krueger tells Van Sant. Krueger adds, there could have been “the blunt force object … in that room … something in that room that would’ve helped with the case.”

    After the trial, a juror told Van Sant that the prosecution’s case “had a lot of holes.” And that there were strong reasons why the jury had voted to acquit Alison Davis. Still, Police Chief Krueger says he will always wonder if there could have been a murder weapon in Willow’s room.

    “There’s no evidence … It’s unbelievable. Such injustice,” says Krause. “This is just strictly an accident.”

    Alison Davis is free, now living with her mother and father. She’s trying to put her life back together, without Kevin, the man her dad says always called her “babe.” And by her side, as she always has been, is Willow. 

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Who Wanted Nicki Lenway Dead?

    [ad_1]



    Who Wanted Nicki Lenway Dead? – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    A crime scene investigator is gunned down in broad daylight. The harrowing scene is captured on surveillance video. Who pulled the trigger? “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty reports.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Sole Survivor

    [ad_1]



    Sole Survivor – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    A young girl plays dead to live through a shooting that destroyed her family — and describes her remarkable story of survival. “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty reports.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Murder in the Parking Garage

    [ad_1]

    A masked killer spray paints security cameras to hide his crime. “48 Hours” contributor Natalie Morales reports.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Security video helps lead Oregon detectives to a masked killer who tried to hide the crime

    [ad_1]

    Detectives Stephanie Winter and Devin Rigo of the Hillsboro, Oregon, Police Department had never encountered a crime scene like the one they encountered in January 2023. 

    Natalie Morales: How would you two characterize this case when you first got it? What did you think? 

    Det. Stephanie Winter: You know, I just thought that it’s a wild case.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: It was in the evening … after nine.

    Det. Devin Rigo: So we all got a page on our department cell phones saying that there was … death at Intel.

    Intel, the giant tech company known for its innovative computer chips, had several large production facilities in Hillsboro, outside of Portland. 

    Det. Stephanie Winter: It didn’t make sense. … He looked like he had passed peacefully. … there was minimal blood within the car. 

    POLICE FIND A DEAD BODY INSIDE AN OREGON PARKING GARAGE

    The deceased was Kenneth “Kenny” Fandrich, age 56, a contract pipe fitter at the plant. His wife, Tanya, had reported him missing when he was late getting home. Like many couples, they shared their locations on their phones. Tanya tracked him to the Intel parking lot. 

    Kenneth “Kenny” Fandrich

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    TANYA FANDRICH (police bodycam video): What’s wrong? 

    OFFICER: We — we’re not sure right now.

    She was already there at the garage when police arrived with body cameras rolling.

    OFFICER (police bodycam video): So, we’re going to have the fire — we’re gonna have the medics — 

    TANYA FANDRICH: Where is he? …

    OFFICER: He’s here in the garage somewhere … 

    A short time later, she learned that her husband was dead.

    The Hillsboro Police Mobile Command Center was stationed at the scene, and that was where detectives first talked to Tanya. 

    Natalie Morales (Inside the Mobile Command Center): That night, you — you brought Tanya Fandrich, right in here … What did she seem like to you?

    Det. Dayanna Mesch: She was very monotone … in the way she was speaking.

    Detective Dayanna Mesch was first to interview Tanya Fandrich.

    Det. Dayana Mesh: She seemed very out of her body. Like she didn’t react as —

    Natalie Morales: Mm-hmm.

    Det. Dayanna Mesch: — as much as you would think somebody would … but I had to kind of pull a lot of the answers out of her.

    Mesch learned more about why Tanya had been at the scene.

    Det. Dayanna Mesch: She told me that they had some issues in the past with their marriage … now … they would check in on each other more often. …

    Natalie Morales: Do alarm bells sort of go off here?

    Det. Dayanna Mesch: Yeah. There was some suspicion … we always look at the people closest to the deceased.

    But Mesch knew better than to draw conclusions right away.

    Det. Dayanna Mesch: Everybody grieves differently … it just was different than other victims I’ve seen … 

    There was a lot to process for Tanya and investigators. The scene did not appear violent.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: His lunch bag … his lunch, his keys, his phone, all set neatly next to him in the passenger seat.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: My first thought was, how are we going to figure this out? 

    Their first clues would come from those surveillance cameras. 

    fandrich-full.jpg

    Security cameras capture a masked man wearing glasses and a hard hat spraying security cameras with blue paint inside a Hillsboro, Oregon, Intel parking garage.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    Det. Devin Rigo (watching security video): So he will pop up right here, uh, next to that column that we’re seeing right here in the — in the corner. Just kinda waits for a camera and then just pops up.

    The detectives discovered a man wearing a hard hat and red-mirror tinted glasses had actually spray painted those cameras around 7 a.m. earlier that same day — his movements undetected by Intel security. 

    Det. Devin Rigo: I wanna say about six or seven cameras.

    But there were also cameras that had not been sprayed. And investigators locked in on images of a vehicle they believed belonged to the suspect.

    Det. Devin Rigo: We’re looking at early afternoon now, and then we see this maroon van come in the parking garage. And no front plate on the car.

    It was an older, maroon-colored Dodge van. They tracked the van’s movement’s camera by camera before it disappeared. Under a layer of blue spray paint, moments later they could just make out the van pulling into a parking spot. 

    Det. Devin Rigo (watching security video): So right here, you can see that the van is this shadow right in here. 

    Natalie Morales: OK, right. 

    Det. Devin Rigo: And then, this vehicle right here is actually Kenneth Fandrich’s black Honda Civic.

    fandrich-kenny-garage.jpg

    Kenny Fandrich seen in the parking garage at 3:21 p.m. on Jan. 27, 2023.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    It was 3:21 p.m., just after Kenny had finished his shift.

    He is seen on video walking back through the garage. And then… very hard to see… behind the blue spray paint.

    Det. Devin Rigo (watching surveillance video): You can see a little bit of movement right here — 

    Natalie Morales: Mm-hmm. 

    Det. Devin Rigo: — in the — in the thing. And that is Kenneth walking back to his car. 

    Det. Devin Rigo: You just kind of have to watch the — kind of shadows essentially what’s going on —  

    Natalie Morales: Mm-hmm. 

    Det. Devin Rigo: — between the two vehicles.

    Det. Devin Rigo: — you start seeing the headlights flash a couple times like, you know … somebody be unlocking their car.

    Detectives say the headlights on Kenny’s Honda flashed as he unlocked his car with his key fob. That’s when they believe the masked man grabbed Fandrich, still holding onto his keys. 

    Det. Devin Rigo  (watching security video):  You see a lot of movement happening all of a sudden. 

    Natalie Morales: Then you see a lot of lights. 

    Det. Devin Rigo: A lot of lights.

    Detectives say that’s Kenny desperately pushing his key fob as the masked man dragged him into that maroon van.

    Natalie Morales: What do you think that’s what’s going on in there during that when you see those lights flashing? 

    Det. Devin Rigo: We think … that’s when the person in the van is murdering Kenneth.

    Detectives say Kenny was killed inside that maroon Dodge van before the killer staged Kenny’s body in his black Honda.

    That meant the van itself would be a critical piece of evidence – the actual murder scene.

    Det. Devin Rigo: There could have been … clothing … and who knows … what … else in that minivan. 

    But finding the van would be a challenge. They couldn’t see the license plates or the driver. 

    The results of the autopsy would reveal – Kenny Fandrich had died from “blunt and compressive trauma of the neck.”

    His neck had been broken. But who would want to kill Kenny Fandrich?

    Det. Devin Rigo: It was really … initially like this big whodunit for us, a big mystery.

    A mystery they hoped might be solved when Intel security staff told investigators about another incident — additional video images from the garage recorded a month earlier.

    Det. Devin Rigo: … we learned that, hey, FYI, we — about a month prior, we reported our cameras being spray painted as well.

    That incident was investigated — a criminal  mischief call — but they never figured out who it was. 

    Det. Devin Rigo:  … it was a man dressed in a — 

    Det. Stephanie Winter: A construction — 

    Det. Devin Rigo:  — construction helmet, black glasses, a mask. And we’re like, well, that’s a clue. 

    Fandrich masked killer

    Security cameras in the parking garage captured a masked man spray-painting cameras in the same parking garage a month before Kenny Fendrich’s murder, left, and the day of, right.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    Investigators were 100 percent certain it was the same person, wearing different glasses, and they say these new images revealed an unusual clue.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: We had this — this distinctive forehead crease that we could see in this photo. 

    Natalie Morales: That little bit of forehead that you see. 

    Det. Stephanie Winter: Just the little bit of forehead. That’s — that’s what we got. 

    Natalie Morales: That’s a very odd clue right there 

    Det. Stephanie Winter: It is … But for us it was a big — a big deal. 

    And the detectives had one other “big deal” — something Tanya Fandrich told them the night her husband died. 

    OFFICER (police bodycam video) Has he — has he been having any issues lately? 

    TANYA FANDRICH: No, but he has a stalker. 

    A stalker — who had been harassing her husband. And she had proof: a video from their own home security camera.

    Det. Devin Rigo: You actually see the person … kinda crawl and move around a bit underneath the — the trailer right there.

    WHO WAS STALKING KENNY FANDRICH?  

    In the early hours of the investigation into the murder of Kenny Fandrich, his wife Tanya told detectives her husband had a stalker — seen on the couple’s home security cameras in the carport of their home in Oregon City, Oregon. 

    Fandrich carport security video

    A person, pictured far right on the ground, is captured on home security video from the carport of the Fandrich home.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    Devin Rigo: Here’s …some sort of like utility trailer right here. … And you’ll notice right under the trailer — you actually see the person … kinda crawl and move around a bit underneath … the trailer right there.

    Tanya told detectives the stalker was her old boss, Dr. Steven Milner. Milner was a well-to-do veterinarian, worth millions. She had worked with him in his clinic as a vet tech. 

    Friends Cheryl Choquette and Darlyn Robinson were longtime clients of the vet.

    Natalie Morales: What was he like — 

    Darlyn Robinson: He was —

    Natalie Morales: — as a vet? 

    Darlyn Robinson: — he was wonderful. He was very compassionate, caring, kind.

    Cheryl Choquette: He was a great vet.

    Choquette even took part in a video Milner made for his clinic, which had aired on the local news.

    Natalie Morales: The kind of vet that get — gets down at the level of the dog? Like on the floor with them? 

    Cheryl Choquette: Definitely on the floor.

    And both Choquette and Robinson knew Tanya — at least by sight.

    Darlyn Robinson: She was there for, I think 19 years and … she was the one who would come out and get us to take us back to the room and kind of do the intake on the animals.

    Cheryl Choquette: Just a sweet, nice lady, very, you know, kind of quiet … but super friendly and very caring.

    Steven Milner

    Dr. Steven Milner

    The Wayback Machine


    Detectives soon learned about a complicated relationship between Tanya and Milner. Tanya told investigators she and Milner had once had an affair — it began in early 2017. At the time, Milner was separated, and Tanya said her relationship with Kenny hit a rough patch.

    Natalie Morales: Did you notice any interactions between her and Dr. Milner?

    Cheryl Choquette: Just completely professional. … It was just, you know, he comes in, she goes out of the room.

    Natalie Morales: He was the boss?

    Cheryl Choquette: Mm-hmm. Yeah. 

    But Robinson thought she noticed something.

    Darlyn Robinson: There came a point where my brain just kind of went, I wonder if there’s, you know, something going on, cause …. just looks they would give each other. 

    Milner and Tanya tried to keep their affair quiet, say investigators. Milner even gave her a secret name: Kiki.

    Mahalee Streblow: One of the nicknames … was Kiki Essex.

    Prosecutor Mahalee Streblow worked on the case.

    Mahalee Streblow: It’s one of those, that’s like … you know, the name of your first pet and then the street that … you grew up on. 

    But the couple’s affair was exposed after a few months in July 2017, when they attended a wedding together. Prosecutor John Gerhard.

    John Gerhard: There were employees from the veterinary clinic that were there.

    Mahalee Streblow: She was under the impression that Kenneth was out of town for work.

    John Gerhard: Tanya indicated that they had both been drinking and that they were engaging in more physical intimacy in front of the employees during that wedding.

    As the night ended, Tanya went home with Milner.

    Mahalee Streblow: Lo and behold, Kenneth was not out of town for work.

    When Tanya didn’t return home that night, Kenny went to Milner’s house.

    Mahalee Streblow: And that’s how they got caught.

    Det. Devin Rigo: Kenny didn’t confront or make a big scene at the house. He kind of left the house and then started calling, um … to try to figure out what’s going on. 

    According to Tanya, she ended the affair soon after they were caught.

    Det. Devin Rigo: After that … the relationship with Tanya and Steve Milner kind of stopped — 

    And that’s when Kenny Fandrich said Dr. Milner started harassing him. 

    Michael Fuller: When Kenny came to me, he was terrified. 

    Michael Fuller was Kenny’s attorney. 

    Michael Fuller: This stalking issue had basically consumed his life. 

    Fuller says Milner started with harassing calls, then escalated from there.

    Michael Fuller: Milner literally coming onto his property in the middle of the night … following him, to work, threatening him, those type of things. 

    Tanya eventually left Milner’s clinic. But Milner continued to track Kenny. Detectives found plenty of evidence of exactly how he did it.

    Det. Devin Rigo (looking at evidence with Morales): Tanya actually provided this to us. … and this is one of the actual tracking devices that Steven Milner had placed on one of their vehicles.

    Natalie Morales:  — is this the device there?

    Stephanie Winter: So this — so this is the device.

    Natalie Morales: Uh-huh.

    Stephanie Winter: We believe this to be the battery pack. And what they had done and put it in this case with the magnets –

    Natalie Morales: Mm-hmm.

    Stephanie Winter: — and then put it up underneath their vehicle.

    In August 2019, roughly two years after Tanya said she ended the affair, Kenny applied for an order of protection against Milner. But detectives would learn the harassment continued – and the vet’s infatuation with Tanya deepened. 

    Stephanie Winter: He wanted Tanya, and he wasn’t going to stop.

    THE VETERINARIAN’S OBSESSION

    Within days of Kenny Fandrich’s death, investigators set their sights on a suspect: veterinarian Dr. Steven Milner. Detectives learned he was obsessed with Tanya.

    There were love notes.

    John Gerhard (reading letter aloud): One of them was: “the one absolute rock, solid truth is that I love you. I have never loved anyone that way. … I am consumed by your soul.”

    He wrote letters like that for years even after Tanya had said the affair was over.

    Detectives also learned more about Tanya’s relationship with her husband Kenny.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: It was a tumultuous relationship. … Alcohol came into play between them. … they were often, you know, as you can say, hot and cold … They argued a lot.

    Kenny had been charged with domestic violence years before but the charges were not pursued, and the couple reconciled. Then, in August 2021 — years after Tanya says she ended the affair with Milner — the couple had another fight; this time she was arrested.

    The next day, something surprising happened.

    Det. Devin Rigo: Somebody posted her bail. She had $25,000 bail … when she leaves the jail, Steven Milner is in the parking lot waiting for her.

    Tanya told investigators she ended up staying with the doctor for a couple of days before returning to Kenny. She insisted nothing romantic happened. Milner was just helping her out as a friend.

    Det. Devin Rigo: To this day … none of us can figure out how Steven Milner actually found out she had been arrested that night.

    That case was later dismissed and the couple reunited again. But Milner’s campaign of harassment continued.

    Natalie Morales: What do you think his end goal was … what did he think he could do — end their marriage and then end up happily ever after —  

    Det. Stephanie Winter: Exactly.

    Natalie Morales:  — with Tanya?

    Det. Devin Rigo: Yeah.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: Exactly. … He wanted Kenneth out of the picture. So, he could be that white knight to save Tanya.

    In March 2022, just ten months before Kenny’s murder, Milner followed Kenny from Oregon City all the way to Hillsboro — a 45-minute drive.

    Kenny spotted him and called police. Milner was pulled over as body cameras captured the interaction.

    OFFICER EDWARDS (police bodycam video): Hi, Officer Edwards, Hillsboro police. … Do you know why we’re stopping you today?

    DR. STEVE MILNER: Yeah. I’m trying to get a hold of this guy that — I’m following him.

    Steven Milner police bodycam

    Dr. Steven Milner seen on police bodycam video after Kenny Fandrich called police to report he was being followed by Milner.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    The responding officer learned from dispatch that there was history between the two men.

    OFFICER (police bodycam video): What’s your role in the whole thing?

    DR. STEVE MILNER: Uh, she has been a friend of mine for 20 years. 

    Milner told police he believed Tanya was in danger because she had allegedly told him Kenny was abusive. 

    DR. STEVE MILNER (police bodycam video):  I’m the only person who gives a sh** and I’m not allowed to give a sh** …

    OFFICER: So here’s my advice to you, OK? And this is very, very strong advice. Leave them alone. He wants nothing to do with you. She wants nothing to do with you. … If you show up at their house, if you contact them, anything like that, you’re gonna go to jail.

    After that traffic stop, Kenny filed for a new order for protection. The original one had expired years earlier.

    Michael Fuller: Kenny was absolutely in — in fear of his life.

    And two weeks later, he was so stressed out, he told police he crashed his car.

    Kenny Fandrich police bodycam video

    Kenny Fandrich, seen on police bodycam video from March 28, 2022, talks with an officer after crashing his car.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    KENNETH FANDRICH (police bodycam video): … my wife and I have been fighting today —

    OFFICER: Sorry.

    KENNETH FANDRICH:  — and um, I thought she was at her boss’s house, where I’ve caught her cheating on me.

    OFFICE: I’m sorry.

    KENNETH FANDRICH: And I was driving over there, and he’s just like right down at road and, I lost control on my car. I just –

    Kenny’s attorney says his client had every reason to be stressed out.

    Michael Fuller: Kenny told me that Milner … said, “Hey, I’m a veterinarian. I’ve done surgeries and I have the tools to chop you up into little pieces.” 

    In August 2022, after Kenny found another tracking device under his car, Milner was criminally charged and was awaiting trial.

    Michael Fuller: It was pretty clear to me that Milner was not in his right mind. 

    Just a month later, Kenny filed a civil suit seeking hundreds of thousands of dollars for invasion of privacy and infliction of emotional distress — allegedly brought on by Milner’s stalking, harassment, and trespass.

    Five months later Kenny Fandrich was dead.

    Just days after the murder, detectives were convinced that Steven Milner was that man behind the mask, but they needed more evidence.

    Det. Devin Rigo: We need to get eyes on Steven Milner because we know there was some sort of violent confrontation. We want to see if he had any injuries.

    Not wanting to tip him off – investigators asked him to come in for a check in about the stalking case.

    Det. Devin Rigo: So, we arranged a meeting for Steven to come in to sign some paperwork. … Detective Winter was inside at a reception desk.

    Natalie Morales: And your goal sitting there at the receptionist desk — sort of as an undercover, right?

    Det. Stephanie Winter: I wanted to see if he had any injury to himself. … He walks in. He looks extremely nervous.

    Another person in the office noticed something. 

    Det. Stephanie Winter: She says, “Hey, he has got makeup on his face.” 

    Makeup, investigators say, Milner used to cover up a scratch on his nose.

    Natalie Morales: Bingo. You’re thinking we got our guy?

    Det. Stephanie Winter: I — I — yep. At that point, I thought, this is him. This is our guy that — that did this.

    Moments later, after Milner walked out the door —

    DEPUTY DAVIS (police bodycam video):  Hi sir, I’m Deputy Davis, the Sheriff’s Office. We’re being recorded by my camera. So, everything is going to be audio and visually recorded. … Do you understand that?

    DR. STEVE MILNER: Yes.

    DEPUTY DAVIS: OK, sounds good. … Right now, you’re being detained.

    Steven Milner

    Police noticed that the masked man and Steven Milner shared the same facial feature – a deep vertical forehead crease. Were they the same person?

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    On Jan. 31, 2023, four days after Kenny Fandrich was found dead, Steven Milner was taken into custody. Within days, Milner was charged with second-degree murder and stalking. 

    With Milner in custody, Rigo and Winter were quickly able to connect one important clue from those surveillance camera images: that unusual crease in the masked man’s forehead.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: There’s that very prominent forehead crease that I don’t — he couldn’t hide if he tried.

    Natalie Morales: There is no amount of makeup hiding that crease.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: No. 

    Natalie Morales: Do you feel at this point like you’ve got like a pretty solid case?

    Det. Devin Rigo: We had a lot of circumstantial pieces, like putting the puzzle together, but we are just at the tip of the iceberg of what we still need to find out.

    More puzzle pieces would be found in Milner’s house.

    CONNECTING THE PUZZLE PIECES

    Det. Stephanie Winter: It was shocking that somebody this successful … a doctor … now suspect in a murder. 

    With Dr. Steven Milner now in police custody, Hillsboro Detectives Stephanie Winter and Devin Rigo set out to find evidence that could prove Milner was at the scene when Kenny Fandrich was murdered.

    Det. Devin Rigo: So, as soon as he is arrested … We’re getting search warrants for his DNA to be taken … we’re getting search warrants for his house as well.

    And detectives weren’t quite prepared for what they found at his home.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: We found a cardboard cutout behind a mirror of Steven Milner’s face placed on a very oiled, masculine man with a dog paw tattoo over his heart.

    Natalie Morales: Very odd memorabilia — to have in your bedroom.

    Det. Devin Rigo: Yes.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: I would say so. 

    And there was more.

    Det. Devin Rigo: In the nightstand, in Steven’s master bedroom, is a bunch of items that we kind of refer to as a shrine to Tanya. There was a framed picture of Tanya. There were love notes … there were women’s underwear … just like very like personal keepsakes from, what — their relationship together.

    Natalie Morales: That’s more than just collecting a few love notes and cards. …

    Det. Devin Rigo: Especially from … someone who hadn’t been in a relationship with you for several years at this time period.

    fandrich-minivan.jpg

    Police reviewed surveillance camera images and determined that Kenny Fandrich had been dragged into the maroon minivan, pictured, by a masked man. Police believed the masked man killed Fandrich inside the minivan, before staging his body in the driver’s seat of his own vehicle.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    To build their case, investigators needed to connect the maroon-colored minivan — seen in the Intel parking garage parked next to Kenny’s car — to Milner. But as far as investigators could determine, Milner usually drove the white Toyota SUV he’d been in when he was arrested. 

    Det. Devin Rigo: initially, we didn’t know what evidence this car could provide us.

    So, they ordered an FBI forensic analysis of the SUV’s computer, hoping it might provide some clues about Milner’s movements before and after Kenny’s murder.

    Det. Devin Rigo (showing Milner’s SUV to Morales): So essentially … the computer that’s in the car retains a lot of information.

    Natalie Morales: Mm-hmm.

    Det. Devin Rigo: And luckily one of those things is like GPS data points …

    Natalie Morales: Where was that bit of information? … is that a computer that’s pulled out on top there?

    Det. Stephanie Winter: Yeah. So that’s part of the front dash … And then, it was just … a little … motherboard type thing that had a chip in it.

    Within weeks, they got a call from their digital expert.

    Det. Devin Rigo: She … said, you guys need to look at the Home Depot in Oregon City …  He’s there a lot the day of the murder.

    A Home Depot just 15 minutes down the road from Milner’s house.

    Natalie Morales (in the Home Depot parking lot with detectives): How central did this place become towards a piecing together the evidence that you had?

    Det. Devin Rigo: Like this was essentially like center stage of the investigation.

    The detectives asked Home Depot security personnel if there had been suspicious activity in the lot recently. Amazingly, they said yes: two cars — a maroon minivan and a blue sedan — had been flagged for parking there for long periods of time with only temporary, paper license plates. 

    Det. Devin Rigo: And we learned that there had been a lot of calls created in the past couple months with a suspicious … blue car and … maroon minivan. 

    For the second time in a matter of weeks, parking lot security cameras and the images they recorded, would provide investigators with key clues. In a clip  from Jan. 27, 2023 – the day of Kenny’s murder – detectives say you can see Milner’s white SUV pull up and park. Within minutes, the driver – believed to be Steven Milner – gets into the maroon minivan. Another camera then captured the minivan exiting the parking lot.

    Natalie Morales: So, what was he doing with the cars?

    Det. Devin Rigo: So essentially this was like his staging location. So, he would drive his personal car here and then either pick up the blue sedan or the maroon minivan and then drive that out to Hillsboro. …

    Natalie Morales: What do you call them?

    Det. Devin Rigo: Burner cars.

    Natalie Morales: Burner cars.

    Det. Devin Rigo: Yeah. … everybody kind of is more familiar with like a burner phone … where you have a phone that’s not … traced to you but, you know, you can use it for what you need, get rid of it. … Essentially, he did the same thing, but with a car.

    Investigators believed Milner may have been using those burner cars to secretly follow Kenny to work — even after law enforcement had told him to stop.

    They also learned Home Depot security cameras had images of the driver of those cars shopping in the store about a month before Kenny was murdered.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: he parked right in front of Home Depot …

    Det. Devin Rigo: He went in and … we saw him come to the self-checkout area … and he had bought a pair of like safety glasses. …

    Natalie Morales: Was … his face visible in that surveillance?

    Det. Stephanie Winter: It was.

    Det. Devin Rigo: Oh yeah …

    Steven  Milner at Home Depot

    Dr. Steven Milner is seen on security video after buying a pair of safety glasses at a Home Depot on Dec. 13, 2022 – about a month before Kenny Fandrich’s murder.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


     There was no doubt — it was Steven Milner. And those glasses he bought? Detectives say you can see them in his right hand as he exited the store. The receipt said they had a “red mirror” tint. Winter had an idea.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: We just happened to be sitting near one of the aisles and I was like, I’m going to go see where they sell … the glasses … And then a couple boxes down was … a yellow hard hat that looked very similar to the one … that he was wearing in all of the Intel garage surveillance.

    The detectives were convinced this was where Milner had gotten his disguise to kill Kenny.

    Natalie Morales: You have all of this, but you were missing one big piece of evidence. What was it?

    Det. Devin Rigo: We were, at this point, still missing … the maroon minivan. …

    Natalie Morales: Why is the minivan so important?

    Det. Devin Rigo: Because it’s the minivan that we believe was really our main crime scene. … we thought there was going to be forensic evidence … in that minivan. So, we really wanted to get that minivan to help really put the icing on …  this case.

    Rigo was laser focused on tracking down that maroon minivan and he got an incredibly lucky break. When those suspicious burner cars had been flagged, the VIN number was also recorded. Rigo searched it and found out that van had been found abandoned just a few days after the murder.

    Det. Devin Rigo: The highway people, had … towed it off the side of the I-5 in north Portland.

    Natalie Morales: It had been dumped then.

    Det. Devin Rigo: It had been dumped there. … So, I called the tow company, “Hey, do you have this car?” “No, sorry … We sold it to a scrap metal company.”

    Rigo knew the clock was ticking to retrieve what he believed was the crime scene and all of the key evidence it held.

    Det. Devin Rigo: So, me and another detective drive as quick as we can to north Portland.

    Fandrich crime scene at junkyard

    The maroon minivan, pictured left, moments before  it was crushed by the metal jaws of the scrapyard claw.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    But they were too late. When he asked about the minivan, the scrapyard showed Rigo a video of the maroon minivan police believe Milner drove to the Intel garage to kill Kenny just moments before it was pulverized by the metal jaws of the scrapyard claw.

    Det. Devin Rigo: I was able to watch one of my key pieces of evidence be crushed and taken away.

    Natalie Morales: Before your very eyes.

    Det. Devin Rigo: Before my very eyes — 

    Natalie Morales: Oh my gosh.

    Det. Devin Rigo: — exactly a week too late.

    DOCTOR MILNER ON TRIAL

    On Jan. 13, 2025, Steven Milner went on trial — charged with stalking and murdering Kenny Fandrich. Washington County prosecutors John Gerhard and Mahalee Streblow knew they faced a challenge without that maroon minivan, where they believe Steven Milner murdered Kenny.

    John Gerhard: All the evidence that was inside the van was lost with it. … the biggest disappointment for us is there was likely a lot of forensic evidence …

    But prosecutors had some forensic evidence they say put Steven Milner at the scene: DNA from swabs taken of Kenny Fandrich’s hands.

    Det. Devin Rigo: I remember getting an email of the results and immediately opening it and being like, “Oh my gosh, this is it.” … Steven Milner’s DNA was on Kenneth Fandrich’s hands. …

    Natalie Morales: Now you really felt like you had your case made.

    Det. Devin Rigo: Yes, because there is no way he could explain away why his DNA would’ve been on Kenneth’s body. 

    Steven Milner would have an explanation for that. To everyone’s surprise, Milner took the stand, admitting he did spray paint the cameras and was in the Intel garage waiting for Kenny. He presented what detectives believed was a far-fetched explanation: he was trying to save Tanya. There were no cameras in court, but there is audio of Milner telling Prosecutor John Gerhard why he was in the Intel lot that day.

    STEVEN MILNER (in court): I was trying to get him arrested for driving while he was drunk, or driving without a license.

    JOHN GERHARD: Why was it your responsibility to enforce Oregon traffic laws?

    STEVEN MILNER: I was trying to keep Tanya from getting killed.

    John Gerhard: He had this delusional belief that he needed to protect Tanya Fandrich.

    Mahalee Streblow: The defense case, it seemed to be … to kind of get the jury to maybe feel sympathetic to Milner.

    And Milner insisted it was Kenny who attacked him after Kenny spotted Milner inside the maroon minivan.

    Det. Devin Rigo: Steven essentially said, well, I knew I was caught. So, I opened the door to kinda confront him. And then Kenneth attacked me.

    STEVEN MILNER (in court): We basically fought for a little bit. … there was pushing and shoving … eventually I was able to kind of push him up against the car and — and then shove him into the car. 

    Gerhard challenged Milner’s self-defense story.

    JOHN GERHARD (in court): Is that push that causes him to fall into his seat?

    STEVEN MILNER: He hit up against the car and then kind of tripped at the same time. And I kept pushing. 

    Mahalee Streblow: His testimony … just didn’t line up with the physical evidence at the scene …

    Det. Devin Rigo: To my knowledge — bumping your head on the car door is not going to break your neck.

    After six hours of deliberations, the jury found Steven Milner guilty of murdering Kenny Fandrich, and multiple stalking charges. 

    Steven Milner sentencing

    Steven Milner at his sentencing on Feb. 18, 2025.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    Cameras were allowed for Steven Milner’s sentencing hearing, which took place on Feb. 18, 2025. Tanya, who asked not to be shown on camera, gave a powerful statement directed at Steven Milner. Prosecutor Mahalee Streblow read us her words: 

    Mahalee Streblow (reading aloud): “All you had to do was stop … hear me clearly, when I say you are a vengeful, deceptive, manipulating, self-serving, aggressive, hateful, lying predator… and all you had to do was stop.”

    Milner was sentenced to life in prison, with the possibility of parole after 25 years. Milner did not respond to “48 Hours”‘ request for an interview. 

    Mahalee Streblow: This case highlights the very worst-case scenario … take stalking seriously.

    Kenny’s attorney, Michael Fuller, says what happened highlights the limits of the system that is supposed to protect victims of stalking.

    Michael Fuller: Kenny … called the police. When that didn’t work, he got a lawyer … Kenny did everything he could under the legal system, and it didn’t help him at all.

    After Kenny’s death, Fuller filed a wrongful death suit on behalf of Kenny’s estate asking for damages of several million dollars. Fuller believes Milner made millions from real estate investments and the sale of his business.

    Michael Fuller: In the wrongful death case, my goals are to extract as much money as we can out of Milner … If the estate recovered any money for Kenny, it would go to his wife.

    For Milner’s former veterinary clients, it was hard to reconcile the doctor they knew, with a now-convicted murderer.

    Cheryl Choquette: I could not believe that it was the same guy. …

    Darlyn Robinson: I just believe that he ended up going through some type of psychosis … And I think that … at some point he snapped …

    Det. Devin Rigo: I think it really gets down to, like, you never know what anybody is capable of. … you never know what monster might be inside …

    Natalie Morales: Almost a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde situation?

    Det. Devin Rigo: Yeah, absolutely.

    Det. Stephanie Winter: Yeah. 

    Darlyn Robinson: He had everything to live for. You know, he … could do anything he wanted to do. … And this is where it ended up. … It’s real sad.

     


    Produced by Chuck Stevenson and Lauren Clark. Greg Kaplan and Michael Baluzy are the editors. Lauren Turner Dunn is the associate producer. Cindy Cesare, Danielle Austen and Michelle Sigona are the development producers. Anthony Batson is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • A minivan used in an Oregon murder is found at a junkyard. Can police save it before it becomes scrap metal?

    [ad_1]

    Detective Devin Rigo knew the clock was ticking as he raced to a metal scrapyard just north of Portland, Oregon. Rigo, with the Hillsboro Police Department, had just learned about the discovery of a maroon minivan he believed contained evidence connected to the murder of 56-year-old Kenneth “Kenny” Fandrich, a contract pipe fitter.  

    On Jan. 27, 2023, Kenny Fandrich was discovered in a parking garage at the Intel campus in Hillsboro. Police reviewed surveillance camera images and determined that Fandrich had been dragged into the minivan by a masked man. Police believed the killer had broken Fandrich’s neck and killed him inside the minivan, before staging his body back in the driver’s seat of his own vehicle.

    From evidence found at the scene, investigators believed the murder suspect tried to cover his crime by spray-painting multiple security cameras in the parking garage with blue spray paint. Correspondent Natalie Morales covers the investigation into Kenny Fandrich’s murder and the hunt for the killer in “Murder in the Parking Garage,” an all-new “48 Hours” airing Saturday, Oct. 4, at 10 p.m. ET/9 p.m. CT on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.

    A suspect wearing a hard hat, tinted glasses and a face mask is captured spray-painting the security cameras around Kenny Fandrich’s car the morning of his murder to apparently conceal the crime

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    Soon after police arrived on the scene, Intel security personnel provided investigators with recordings from their hundreds of security cameras in the parking garage. Police soon had images of a suspect – wearing a hard hat, tinted glasses and a face mask – spray-painting the security cameras around Fandrich’s car early that morning, to apparently conceal the crime. At the time, the suspect had not been detected by Intel. But when police looked at the footage, they discovered that the spray paint didn’t cover everything the cameras recorded.

    Police believed that whoever had killed Fandrich waited for him inside that minivan, then attacked Fandrich when he returned to his car after his shift. The killer left the garage in the maroon minivan soon after.

    Kenny Fandrich and Dr. Steven Milner

    Kenny Fandrich, left, and Dr. Steven Milner.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office/The Wayback Machine


    The night that Fandrich’s body was found, his wife, Tanya Fandrich, told investigators Kenny had a stalker: a well-off former veterinarian named Dr. Steven Milner. Tanya Fandrich had worked for Milner at his vet clinic for years, and they had an affair, which Tanya Fandrich said was long over. Police found that Kenny Fandrich had filed several orders for protection against Milner, and that Milner had been warned by Hillsboro police officers to stop following Kenny Fandrich. Just months before Kenny Fandrich’s murder, Milner had been caught placing a tracking device on one of the Fandrichs’ vehicles and was criminally charged. After several days of investigation, police arrested Milner and charged him with the murder of Kenny Fandrich.

    Once in custody, police were able to connect the minivan, and another vehicle, to Milner, who had left them at a Home Depot parking lot for long periods of time.

    To prove the case against Milner, investigators felt they had to find that minivan. “Because it’s the minivan that we believe was really our main crime scene …” said Rigo. “We thought there was going to be forensic evidence … in that minivan.”

    Rigo and his partner, Detective Stephanie Winter, called the vehicles “burner cars.”

    “Everybody kind of is more familiar with like a burner phone …” said Rigo, “where you have a phone that’s not … traced to you but, you know, you can use it for what you need, get rid of it … Essentially, he did the same thing, but with a car.”

    The maroon minivan had been flagged at the Home Depot parking lot and the VIN number had been recorded. Security footage showed the van leaving the Home Depot parking lot shortly before Fandrich was murdered.

    “We are sending flyers to every agency in the area,” said Rigo about the minivan’s VIN number.

    fandrich-scrapyard.jpg

    The maroon minivan, pictured left, moments before it was crushed. Hillsboro, Oregon, police believed the vehicle contained evidence connected to the murder of 56-year-old Kenneth “Kenny” Fandrich.

    Washington County District Attorney’s Office


    The first alert they got was from the Oregon Department of Transportation. The minivan had been towed off the side of the busy I-5 highway in North Portland just days after Fandrich was murdered. Detectives believe it had been dumped there by Milner. Rigo called the tow company and found out the minivan had been sold to a scrap metal company. That’s when he started racing to the scrapyard to see if they could retrieve the minivan, and the key crime scene evidence it may have held. But he was too late. When Rigo arrived and asked about the minivan, he was shown a video of the crime scene being picked up and smashed to pieces. “I was able to watch one of my key pieces of evidence be crushed and taken away,” said Rigo, “before my very eyes … exactly a week too late.”

    Discover how the investigation unfolded, and Milner’s defense at trial, on this week’s “48 Hours,” “Murder in the Parking Garage.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • The Boy Who Killed His Twin

    [ad_1]



    The Boy Who Killed His Twin – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    A teenager stabs his sister – a crime with no known motive. His defense says he was sleepwalking. “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty reports.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Rodney Alcala: The Killing Game

    [ad_1]



    Watch CBS News



    A photographer who was on “The Dating Game” became one of the nation’s deadliest serial killers — eight years after “48 Hours”‘ first report, new victims emerge. Correspondent Peter Van Sant investigates.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • The Lost Boy

    [ad_1]

    More than three decades after 6-year-old Etan Patz went missing, police found a surprising suspect. “48 Hours” and correspondent Richard Schlesinger go inside the investigation. Is the haunting case finally over? (Editor’s note: On July 21, 2025, a federal appeals court ruled that Pedro Hernandez should have a new trial or be released. The Manhattan DA’s Office has stated that it will seek review of the decision in the U.S. Supreme Court.)

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • The Footprint

    [ad_1]



    The Footprint – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    A woman is murdered in her home and the pivotal clue at the crime is a bloody footprint her killer left behind. “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty reports.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Facing a Monster

    [ad_1]



    Facing a Monster – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    A teenager survives a vicious attack by an ex-boyfriend. Years later, she faces him in court after he murders a young mother. “48 Hours” correspondent Anne-Marie Green reports.

    [ad_2]
    Source link