[ad_1]
A millionaire is willing to shell out $80,000 to have someone kill his model wife. What could possibly go wrong? “48 Hours” correspondent Troy Roberts reports.
[ad_2]
[ad_1]
A millionaire is willing to shell out $80,000 to have someone kill his model wife. What could possibly go wrong? “48 Hours” correspondent Troy Roberts reports.
[ad_2]
[ad_1]
Viktoria Nasyrova is accused of using cheesecake as a murder weapon. Her motive was to steal the identity of Olga, who looks a lot like her. “48 Hours” correspondent Peter Van Sant reports.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
In the early morning hours of Dec. 16, 2022, St. Paul, Minnesota, homicide detectives Abby DeSanto and Jennifer O’Donnell were called to a downtown apartment building to investigate a reported suicide. A 32-year-old woman named Alexandra Pennig had been found dead in her bathroom with a single gunshot wound to the head.
For the detectives, what really happened to Pennig is something that still haunts them to this day. And it’s the question at the center of “The Strange Shooting of Alex Pennig,” reported by “48 Hours” contributor Natalie Morales airing Saturday, Oct. 26 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
Terri Randall/Mary Jo Pennig
When detectives DeSanto and O’Donnell arrived at the apartment, they found out Pennig had not been alone at the time of her death. A man named Matthew Ecker was also there. Ecker and Pennig were both nurses and had met two years earlier when they worked at the same clinic. Ecker told first responders the gun was his, and that Pennig had grabbed it, locked herself in the bathroom, and then fired the shot. “I thought everything was fine,” he said. “And then she just grabbed the gun.” Ecker told first responders that after he heard the shot he immediately broke open the bathroom door: “I tried to do what I could. And then I washed my hands … That’s why I don’t have anything on my hands.” Ecker said he then called 911. But it was too late. He said he didn’t know why Pennig would do this.
In Pennig’s apartment, there was alcohol and six bottles of prescription medication, including antidepressants, all prescribed to Pennig. For the detectives, it suggested Alex might have been depressed, and they wondered if Ecker’s story that she took her own life was true.
But they also noticed something that seemed to contradict Ecker’s story. He had said he washed his hands in the bathroom sink before calling 911, but DeSanto recalled the first responders told her the sink was dry. “The sink was dry. If he had said, you know, he called the police right away, that sink probably would’ve been still wet,” DeSanto explained, “but it was very dry in there.”
When O’Donnell looked into Pennig’s background, she learned from Alex’s parents that Alex had struggled in the past with depression and addiction. “I had asked, um, if she had been suicidal in the past, um, and dad said, she had, um, tried, uh, to overdose before,” said O’Donnell. According to Alex’s father, Jim Pennig, several years prior, Alex had taken a handful of pills “and then had told her mom that she was attempting suicide.” After that, Alex’s parents told the detectives they sent her to rehab, and she eventually got clean. Despite her past struggles, Alex’s parents told O’Donnell they had just seen her at Thanksgiving. And her mom, Mary Jo Pennig, had just talked to her that evening. “She was doing well,” she said. For them, the idea that their daughter had died by suicide did not make sense. “Knowing your kid, it didn’t fit,” Mary Jo Pennig said.
Since Ecker was the last person to see Alex Pennig alive, the detectives zeroed in on him. “He’s the only one that can tell us what happened. He was the only one that was there,” said O’Donnell. They questioned Ecker about what had happened that night. He said he and Alex Pennig had gone out to several local bars, and when they arrived back at her place, everything was fine: “We were laughing on the way home,” said Ecker. DeSanto asked him if, once they got into the apartment, they had gotten into a fight. Ecker said they did not.
DET. ABBY DESANTO: You guys weren’t arguing or anything?
MATTHEW ECKER: No.
DET. ABBY DESANTO: There’s no fight with you two?
MATTHEW ECKER: Not between us.
For hours, Ecker continued to say Pennig had locked herself in the bathroom, fired the shot and then he broke open the door to try and help her: “That gun went off behind a closed door … I did not shoot her.“
Ramsey County District Court
But the detectives had their doubts. Then they got a call from the forensic unit that was still processing the scene. And according to O’Donnell, what they found changed everything. “Once Alex was moved, they found underneath where Alex had been laying was a round metal piece,“ she said. It was the shape of a ring, and about the size of a quarter. O’Donnell said it was part of the lock from the bathroom door, and the fact that it had been discovered under Pennig was key. “For us, it meant that the door was forced open before she was shot.”
The detectives felt the discovery of the metal ring proved Ecker had lied and had not broken the door open after he heard the shot. The detectives suspected Pennig and Ecker had argued and that she had locked the bathroom door to get away from him. Then Ecker broke open the door, the metal part broke off and fell to the ground, and then he shot Pennig and she landed on top of it.
Ecker was charged with second-degree murder. In February 2024 he was convicted and later sentenced to 30 years. He is appealing his conviction.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
In April 2018, in the sleepy Florida Gulf Coast town of Eastpoint, it appeared a killer had struck.
“I received a call that a body was located .. off of Highway 98,” Lt. Ronnie Jones, from the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office, told “48 Hours” correspondent Peter Van Sant.
Badly beaten and with no identification, the woman became a Jane Doe. Her killer’s identity was also a mystery.
“What you worry about then is, are they loose in our community?” said Jones. “What type of individual am I dealing with or individuals?”
Less than 24 hours later, Jones received a call about another crime scene at the nearby Sportsman’s Lodge Motel.
As investigators worked to see if the two were connected, they learned that the woman’s unconventional relationship held the answers.
For Franklin County assistant prosecutor, Jarred Patterson, the sleepy, Gulf Coast town of Apalachicola and surrounding countryside are among the last remnants of a bygone era.
Jarred Patterson: Apalachicola, Florida is a wonderful small place … It’s certainly still harkens back to a time before there was condos on every inch of the beach and before there were high-rises. … We’re referred to here, the counties along this area of the coast, as the Forgotten Coast.
But when a couple heading to a nearby fishing pond discovered Aileen Seiden’s battered body on April 23, 2018, Patterson wondered what had brought a killer to Florida’s Forgotten Coast?
Jarred Patterson: The horror that it really was … It absolutely shocked people.
Ronnie Jones: It looked like … someone was in a hurry. Whoever it was dumped the body and took off.
Lead investigator Lt. Ronnie Jones, then with the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office, says documenting Aileen’s unsettling dump site was the first of two ominous events over the next 24 hours. He was soon dispatched to the second crime scene at the Sportsman’s Lodge Motel and a bloody spectacle inside room 15.
Peter Van Sant (inside the motel room): So, what’s it like for you to be back in here?
Ronnie Jones: Uh, brings back some pretty bad memories.
Jones’ memories live in stark contrast to the tree shaded grounds of the otherwise peaceful motel.
Ronnie Jones: As soon as I came in, I noticed the bed. I mean, it’s — you couldn’t miss it. … I mean, this whole area was covered and had blood stains on it.
Peter Van Sant: And when you saw that kind of blood loss, what did that tell you?
Ronnie Jones: I just put two and two together and I automatically put that back to the, um, body that was found the day before.
Peter Van Sant: You did that quickly, like (snaps fingers) that?
Ronnie Jones: Had to have. … It wasn’t just somebody cut theirself and bled a little bit on the bed. I mean the amount of blood that was on this bed tells me that whoever was here was probably deceased.
Jones recalled there was a smell of vinegar in the room.
Peter Van Sant: And what did that tell you?
Ronnie Jones: That someone attempted to clean the crime scene.
Franklin County Clerk of Court
A luminol test for traces of human blood revealed what an apparently hasty clean up couldn’t hide.
Ronnie Jones: The whole entire bathroom lit up.
Peter Van Sant: So, that was the scene of perhaps some of her most vicious attacks — was inside that bathroom.
Ronnie Jones: Yes.
And Jones says the shower curtain rod was a possible weapon.
Ronnie Jones: On the rod was located a palm print and also, uh, blood.
Peter Van Sant: And that’s significant evidence, right?
Ronnie Jones: That’s right.
Testing would soon confirm that it was Aileen’s blood in the motel room. Now came the gut-wrenching duty to notify Aileen’s sister, Franceasca Seiden.
Franceasca Seiden: He said my sister was murdered. … I don’t know, like, what do you do? You look for support. That’s all I could do. …I didn’t understand why, like, it was given to me, again, like to handle another loss.
While growing up in Miami, then-16-year-old Franceasca and 9-year-old Aileen faced their first tragedy when their beloved mother, Murtha, passed away from cancer.
Peter Van Sant: How did the two of you deal with this?
Franceasca Seiden: We didn’t talk about it. … because it was so fast.
Six years later, their father Frank—a successful furniture manufacturer who Franceasca says shared a special bond with Aileen —suddenly died from a heart attack. It left Aileen, then 14, an orphan, and 22-year-old Franceasca with a decision to make.
Franceasca Seiden: I signed the papers, and I became her legal guardian.
Peter Van Sant: And what did that mean? What were your responsibilities?
Franceasca Seiden: I became a parent. … I had to take her to school. I had to pick her up from school. … I had to finish my own school. I was working. … I didn’t have time to grieve. And I don’t think that she did either.
Seven years later, Franceasca moved to Los Angeles on her own. That’s when she says Aileen, by then in her 20s, began grieving their parents.
Franceasca Seiden: She started to think a lot. … She became more sensitive.
Allie: Something like losing her parents … has … long-lasting effects throughout your life. And it’s obvious that it did.
Aileen Seiden/Facebook
Aileen’s best friend, not wanting her name associated with this case, has asked “48 Hours” to refer to her as “Allie.” She remembers a strong and determined Aileen making it on her own in Miami.
Allie: She worked as a property manager … She lived in a great apartment, you know, she paid her own rent, she made her bills. She was very independent.
Franceasca saw that independence firsthand when Aileen made an extended visit to L.A. in 2016.
Peter Van Sant: Looking back, do you wish she had stayed with you?
Franceasca Seiden: 100% percent. … Because whatever happened when she went back to Miami is when she reconnected with Zach.
Zach was Zachary Abell, who Aileen had known since they were teenagers.
Allie: I’m not sure if he had the best reputation in high school. … At first, she wasn’t really sure about him.
But years later, she and Abell started dating.
Allie: I think in the beginning Aileen found Zach fun, but I think it changed pretty quickly.
Investigators in Franklin County would soon learn all about Zach Abell. They discovered that Zach, Aileen and another woman named Christina Araujo had all been seen in the Apalachicola area. Detectives also learned the three shared a room at the Sportsman’s Lodge Motel: room 15.
Jarred Patterson: We needed to know what happened inside that hotel room outside of three people entered and two came out carrying a body.
Off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Captain Mike Picavet sets sail on his 50-foot boat.
Mike Picavet (on his boat): It’s kind of weird, uh, trying to remember any good times. There just weren’t. There was always some issue.
Back in 2018, Picavet would play a central role in Aileen Seiden’s murder investigation. He knew Aileen and her boyfriend Zach Abell well.
Mike Picavet: Zach is just, um, very entertaining. … He’s very extroverted.
Picavet had met Abell by chance at a bar about seven years earlier.
Mike Picavet: He came up to me at Duffy’s and said, “Hey, I like your shirt.” And I’m like, “OK …”
Mike Picavet: And then, uh, Christina came up.
Franklin County Clerk of Court
Christina Araujo — Abell’s girlfriend at the time. The two had been dating for about four years. Picavet says Araujo immediately started boasting about her powerful father.
Mike Picavet: Right outta the gate, she said, “Oh, yeah, my dad’s a major with the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Department, and if we ever get into any trouble with the law, he can take care of it.” And I was like, “What?” Who says that?
Despite their odd first meeting, Picavet says he began hanging out with the couple. What followed were years of wild nights, wild parties, and lots of heavy drinking.
Mike Picavet: That was their go-to thing: “OK, we’ve gotta do shots of this, shots of this.”
But Picavet says there was an interesting power dynamic in the couple’s relationship with Araujo, who is eight years older than Abell, calling the shots.
Mike Picavet: She was very controlling and very directing. … He would follow her lead with stuff.
One day in 2016, Abell stopped by Picavet’s boat — but not with Araujo. Instead, Abell introduced Picavet to Aileen Seiden. Picavet could tell Abell now had two women in his life.
Mike Picavet: It was the weirdest thing. … If your relationship’s not working, just end it and move on.
However, Picavet says that Abell couldn’t make a clean break from Araujo, who was also his business partner.
Mike Picavet: He tried so many times. He just didn’t know how to … and then also, uh, all the threats all the time that she could make him disappear. … Every time she got drunk, she’d say some weird things.
Aileen’s best friend, Allie, says Abell and Aileen began to secretly date.
Allie: She seemed to love him so much that she was still hoping that he would, you know, decide to be with her. … He would lead her on to think, he was trying to end it with Christina.
In 2017, Aileen unexpectedly lost her job as a property manager.
Allie: She was really starting to lose control of her own life.
Allie says that may explain why Aileen eventually started working at Abell and Araujo’s used car dealership.
Allie: It wasn’t the independent life that she had always lived.
Allie says Aileen continued to pressure Abell to break up with Araujo for good. But when Abell finally tried to end things with Araujo, she countered with an unconventional proposal.
Allie: It was not the answer that anyone expected. … Christina came back and said, “Well, why don’t we try and all be in a relationship then?” … It now became this opportunity for this “throuple”, three-way kind of relationship.
A throuple is a romantic relationship among three people. Allie says Aileen was against the idea.
Allie: Aileen said, “Absolutely not. There’s no way. It’s never going to work.” And there was kind of crickets for a few weeks.
But Allie says Aileen later changed her mind. The trio was now a throuple.
Allie: I was in shock really. … But also a little bit happy for them that maybe this could work.
But it didn’t work. Before long, there was trouble.
Allie: This whole dynamic started to change where one of them always seemed to be the odd man out or was jealous. … And at that point it just started to spiral out of control.
According to Picavet, things escalated, leading to irrational behavior and fights fueled by alcohol. He says Aileen and Araujo traded punches often — usually resulting in black eyes — on one or both of the women; that they’d sometimes hide behind big sunglasses.
Mike Picavet: It was an everyday thing — every second day thing, I could say.
Allie remembers things differently. She says Abell was the main aggressor in the relationship.
Allie: Aileen would call me … and would say, “You have to come over here, like he hurt me again.” And I’d rush over there and photograph her and beg her to go to the police.
But Allie says Aileen refused, fearing Araujo’s law enforcement connections would work against her.
Aileen’s sister Franceasca was furious when she learned of the abuse.
Franceasca Seiden: I wanted my sister out of the situation … I wanted her out.
Peter Van Sant: It’s hard to leave.
Franceasca Seiden: It’s hard to leave. … And … I had this feeling that Christina was more … violent of the two.
Allie: It was really difficult to see her going through a time like this. It was just so hard. … And she was scared to death.
Once, Allie says the abuse got so bad, she took Aileen to the emergency room.
Allie: I took her to the hospital because … they have to report things. But she wouldn’t say where the bruises came from.
Aileen’s best friend had to deliver a hard truth.
Allie: “Aileen, you have to break up with this guy. Someone’s gonna end up dead.”
Allie: When Aileen was in real trouble, it was hard to get anyone to come rescue her.
The path that led to Aileen Seiden’s murder may have begun weeks earlier. In 2018, Allie was surprised that despite the physical violence in their relationship, Aileen had decided to move in with Zach Abell and Christina Araujo. The throuple was now working together, sleeping together, and living together.
Franklin County Clerk of Court/Franceasca Seiden
Allie: Aileen was trapped in the relationship because she was trapped financially. … But she felt that that was one last chance to make it work. … It was like a one month or two-month trial.
But within a few weeks, Allie says Aileen had had enough.
Allie: Aileen … was going to move out. … She was really done with the relationship.
But Aileen’s plans to leave were halted on April 7, 2018, after Abell and Araujo had gotten into a violent fight. Allie says she got a call from Aileen on Abell’s phone.
Allie: She was going to leave and get Zach out of the house. But like to go to a coffee shop. … The next call I got was from Christina. … She was angry and furious.
Allie says Araujo threatened to report the car Aileen and Abell were driving in as stolen in an apparent attempt to keep them from leaving her behind. Allie immediately warned Aileen and Abell.
Allie: Instead of coming around and coming back, like I thought they would, they hit the gas and went to Georgia. … I said, “What are you doing, Aileen? You don’t have your phone. You don’t have a wallet. This is crazy.” … She said, “We’re going on a road trip. … This is a good thing.”
But the road trip wasn’t a good thing to Christina Araujo. She began harassing Abell and Aileen, sending a storm of angry texts: “U 2 deserve each other.” Araujo sent more than 150 texts in roughly 24 hours. All went unanswered, including this one: “My dad will be calling u.” Later, Araujo issued this threat: “you f***** me over and now I’m f****** u over“
Allie: I was just trying to tell her, “Christina …why don’t you worry about … your own life?”
About 48 hours into the road trip, Abell and Aileen were heading to Texas and Araujo seemed to have a change of heart, texting: “… if you want to come back home come back. You never have to question my love …”
For reasons that are unknown, instead of coming home, Abell invited Araujo to join them, and she flew to Dallas.
But with the throuple united, the old problems returned.
Allie: Aileen started to call me from Zach’s phone at night saying, you know, “This is getting bad. And I don’t know what to do.” … It wasn’t until Christina arrived, that that started to happen. … I was really worried someone would get hurt.
By day 10 of the road trip, Aileen’s older sister, Franceasca was also worried. She hadn’t heard from Aileen in a while. When the trio stopped in New Orleans, Aileen finally called Franceasca and shared an alarming suspicion.
Franceasca Seiden: She’s like … “I think they’re gonna kill me.” No joke. … So I was like, “Aileen, run to the nearest gas station.” … “Go tell the person —”
Peter Van Sant: Call 911.
Franceasca Seiden: Yeah! … “Run to like —” I said “run, get the — get out of there.” … “Go!” …She’s like, “I can’t.”
Franceasca, desperate to help, tried to get more details from Aileen.
Franceasca Seiden: If I had where the address was, I would’ve called the police then and there, but she had to go, she had to get off and she hung up. … I was extremely frustrated but I — and I was scared.
With no way to help her sister, Franceasca hoped Aileen would stay safe.
The road trip continued into its second week. The trio then headed to Panama City, Florida, but a missed exit led them to the Forgotten Coast.
David Adlerstein: The road trip is difficult to understand; partying one day and murdering the next.
David Adlerstein is a reporter for The Apalachicola Times, one of the oldest newspapers in Florida.
David Adlerstein: I’ve been covering the Aileen Seiden case since the week it happened.
On the evening of April 21, the trio — captured on surveillance footage — stumbled into the quiet peace of Franklin County.
David Adlerstein: They went to a popular restaurant, the Red Pirate, played miniature golf, partied.
At the recommendation of a local, the throuple headed to the nearby Sportsman’s Lodge Motel. They reserved the last vacancy of the night: Room 15. The next morning, on April 22, 2018, the throuple made a plan.
David Adlerstein: They decided they’d spend another day there, not get back on the road, and make it a — a party. So they got up in the morning and went to the liquor store.
Franklin County Clerk of Court
Here they are in a screenshot from the store’s surveillance footage. While there, the trio purchased large bottles of vodka and Fireball whiskey.
David Adlerstein: When I went to investigate … their path that day and went to the liquor store … the clerk, she pointed out that the Fireball that they bought was the largest bottle you could buy, and this is just the three of them.
The throuple then returned to the Sportsman’s Lodge Motel.
Allie: I don’t think Aileen was having fun. I think she was just trying to maybe get by and stay alive.
Allie says she spoke to Aileen that day.
Allie: Aileen said … “I need to leave him. I’m telling you. I’m like a sex slave. He has this really scary look in his eye. It’s very scary. It’s different.” … And she said, “I need your help.”
Allie says the two friends had crafted an escape plan: Aileen would get on a bus from Tampa — the trio’s next destination.
Allie: I bought her a Greyhound ticket because she didn’t have a wallet.
The bus would drop Aileen off near Miami and Allie would take her home. Aileen just needed to get on that bus, and she’d be safe.
Allie: And then, you know, I never heard back. I never heard anything after that …
The next night, hundreds of miles away in Fort Lauderdale, Mike Picavet was home and alone. There was a knock at the door. It was Christina Araujo and Zach Abell.
Mike Picavet: I was like, “OK, where’s Aileen?” And right away, Christina says, “Oh, she ran away.” … And I said, “Bulls***.” I said, “Where is she?” And Zach right away … started to choke up, and he said, “She’s dead.”
The news was shocking enough, but Picavet says once Araujo was out of earshot, Abell told him what happened.
Mike Picavet: He said that Christina killed her. He woke up. … She was dead next to him. And, uh, he tried to give her CPR, then, uh, wanted to call 911. Christina said “No” and told him, “You can’t call 911.” … For some reason, he kept on saying he had to protect Christina. …And I’m like, “What do you gotta protect her for?”
Picavet says he wanted to protect both of his friends. He feared a violent outcome if he called 911.
Mike Picavet: I didn’t want them to get killed … I just wanted to make sure that … they were brought in in a safe, uh, way. … The only thing that I could think about … is to go talk to her father.
Christina’s father, Colonel Tony Araujo. The one, Picavet says, Christina had always bragged could make her problems go away. When Abell and Christina fell asleep on the sofa, Picavet took a photo of Abell and Araujo on his couch, and says he went online to search for Christina’s father — a man he had never met.
Mike Picavet: So, I was panicking, trying to find his phone number.
When Picavet finally got ahold of Colonel Araujo, he didn’t immediately reveal the deadly news.
Mike Picavet: I said, “I gotta talk to you. It’s about Christina. It’s very important.”
Picavet says Araujo’s father directed Mike to meet him at an odd place: a gas station.
Mike Picavet: So I went up there … I said, “Christina killed somebody.” And he says, “You know I’m a cop, right?” And I’m like, “Yes, sir. I do.” … He right away said, “Wait right there.”
Picavet says Araujo’s father then brought him to the sheriff’s office to make a formal statement.
Mike Picavet: He did what was the right thing to do. … He … got two other people to ask me all the questions.
Broward County Sheriff’s Office
Later that day, Picavet was shown a photo, and he was the one to identify the battered body of Aileen Seiden. With that confirmation, police descended on Picavet’s home as Abell and Araujo were about to leave. They were arrested and brought back to Franklin County. The pair was later charged with first-degree murder. It would take almost six years before they would face a jury — and by then, only one of them would stand trial.
For almost six years, Franceasca Seiden lived in agonizing limbo as her sister Aileen’s case — complicated by having two defendants — faced delay after frustrating delay.
Franceasca Seiden: (crying) You’re healing, you’re doing the things that you need to heal and then you’re stopped. … And now you’re gonna get ready for this big moment. … and then it stops again.
Finally, in January 2024, at the Franklin County Courthouse in Apalachicola, Florida, Zach Abell was about to face trial. He had pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and would stand before the jury alone. Eight months earlier, Christina Araujo took a plea deal for a lesser charge of second-degree murder.
Peter Van Sant: So, she admitted taking part in this?
Jarred Patterson: Yes. … she implicated herself … in the actual beating of Aileen.
After studying a mountain of evidence, prosecutor Jarred Patterson believes Abell was more responsible in Aileen’s murder. And the state is relying on the jury believing Araujo’s version of what happened inside room 15.
Jarred Patterson: The only one who has told us anything about what happened in that room is Christina Araujo.
David Adlerstein: Once Christina made her plea deal, she would become the prosecution’s star witness.
Print reporter David Adlerstein, camera in hand, was there as Christina Araujo transported the courtroom back to the evening of April 22, 2018. Araujo testified that she, Zach Abell and Aileen were relaxing in the room at the Sportsman’s Lodge Motel after a day of heavy drinking.
David Adlerstein
JARRED PATTERSON (in court): When Zach drinks, does he act differently?
CHRISTINA ARAUJO (in court): Yes … He becomes very aggressive, very mean.
Abell became violently enraged, says Araujo, when Aileen posed a seemingly innocent question.
CHRISTINA ARAUJO (in court): She said, “Christina, guess what?”
Peter Van Sant: And she looks over at Christina and says, hey “Christina, guess what …” How would that sentence be finished?
Jarred Patterson: I have no idea ’cause she never got to finish it.
CHRISTINA ARAUJO (in court): Zachary got up immediately and went over to her, and was in her face, hitting her. … He’s just yelling at her, telling her, “You always start problems.” (crying)
Araujo admits to also hitting Aileen as she demanded to know what she was about to say. She never got an answer.
CHRISTINA ARAUJO (in court): And I got so frustrated, I just went and got — I left the room.
After stepping outside room 15 for a few minutes, Araujo claims she returned to find Abell and Aileen in the bathroom.
CHRISTINA ARAUJO (in court): When I opened the door, he had something white in his hand, like if he was poking at her.
Jarred Patterson: The medical examiner was able to identify small circular bruising to the body of Aileen that … could be consistent with a shower curtain rod.
Like the shower curtain rod investigators recovered that had palm print impressions in Aileen’s blood.
Peter Van Sant: Whose palm was it?
Jarred Patterson: The palm print belonged to Zach Abell.
The assault continued near the beds says Araujo, where she says Abell reached for his wooden walking stick.
CHRISTINA ARAUJO (in court): He hits her several times with it. … When he hit her in the — the back though, the stick broke.
Jarred Patterson: We had actually found pieces of that wooden staff in the hotel room … we didn’t realize the significance of it until we found the other piece in the vehicle that contained our victim’s DNA.
Araujo says she watched in terror as Abell began using that stick to sexually assault Aileen.
David Adlerstein: Christina’s description of the crime was … horrifying to listen to. … Aileen clearly suffered a terrible death.
Adlerstein recalls the medical examiner saying Aileen’s injuries reminded him of those he had seen in motor vehicle crashes.
David Adlerstein: As a reporter, I try very hard to not be emotional. I distinctly remember … fighting back tears.
Araujo claims she eventually put herself between Abell and Aileen, and the attack finally stopped. Aileen was badly beaten but still alive, she says. And the exhausted trio just fell sleep.
CHRISTINA ARAUJO (in court): I didn’t think she was gonna die from it.
Araujo claims it wasn’t until she woke up the next morning that she realized Aileen was dead. She says she only participated in the coverup out of fear of what Abell might do to her.
David Adlerstein: She seemed to me genuinely remorseful … Others had different opinions.
Peter Van Sant: Who is Christina Araujo in your book?
Alex Morris: Manipulative, cunning, a chameleon. … I think that there’s evil in her.
Alex Morris is Zach Abell’s attorney. He says Christina Araujo acted alone.
Alex Morris: I believe that she is the murderer.
Franklin County Clerk of Court
Morris says, it was Christina Araujo who beat Aileen, and that photo taken by Mike Picavet at his home after the murder shows she had injuries to her hands and feet.
Peter Van Sant: Which tells you, Christina must have been the attacker.
Alex Morris: That’s right.
Araujo was the one with homicidal intent, says Morris, triggered when Abell and Aileen took off with her in the rearview mirror. And he says those threatening texts that she sent to Abell’s phone before joining them on the road trip read like a confession.
Alex Morris: There are threats of bodily harm to both Aileen and Zach in the messages.
Peter Van Sant (reading Araujo’s text): “You come near me hoe, I will kill you.”
Alex Morris: I think it speaks for itself. And that’s exactly what happened.
After Aileen’s murder, Morris says Araujo wiped down the motel room—using the vinegar that Ronnie Jones would later smell. He says Abell’s palm prints on the curtain rod got there when he moved it during the cleanup.
Alex Morris: He was instructed to pick the curtain rod up over there and put it over there.
Peter Van Sant: By?
Alex Morris: Christina.
A toll booth surveillance photo from after the murder shows that Christina Araujo, and not Zach Abell, was the one driving the car. And therefore, Morris says, she was the one in control.
Franklin County Clerk of Court
Alex Morris: The evidence indicates Christina to be … the one giving the directions … and had everything to be able to manipulate the situation.
Manipulating Zach Abell, says Morris, because of those threats she had been making for years about her father’s influence in solving her problems.
Alex Morris: Bottom line is Zach was fearful of Christina’s father.
Abell chose not to testify. When Morris made his final arguments to the jury, he concluded the evidence showed there was only one person who wanted Aileen Seiden dead.
ALEX MORRIS (in court): They haven’t proven any motive as to why Mr. Abell would be interested in murdering Ms. Seiden, but I’ll tell you where motive lies and it’s clear as day, and that’s with Ms. Araujo.
Alex Morris: The motive being: I want rid of the person who’s taken my man.
Peter Van Sant: So jealousy?
Alex Morris: Yes.
In his closing, Patterson said Christina Araujo already accepted her role in this crime. He asked the jury to hold Zach Abell accountable for his part by finding him guilty of murder.
JARRED PATTERSON (in court): They lived together. …They worked together. They own a business together. … They went to the Sportsman’s Lodge together. … They emptied out the room together. … They ran away together. … They got arrested together. The only thing they didn’t do together was kill Aileen Seiden? No way.
But who would the jury believe?
Ronnie Jones: She wasn’t born here. … And she didn’t live here. But she was left here. And she’ll always be remembered by Franklin County.
Aileen Seiden/Instagram
Residents of Florida’s Forgotten Coast will now long remember Aileen Seiden, says Ronnie Jones. Almost six years after her death, the community waited for justice for the stranger they now had come to embrace as one of their own.
Peter Van Sant: What was going through your mind as the jury begins its deliberation?
Ronnie Jones: Make it quick.
David Adlerstein: I was told by the jury foreman that when they first went in … there was 10 in favor of first-degree premeditated murder with two holdouts.
After about five hours of deliberations, the jury reached a consensus.
JUDGE ALLMAN (in court): In the case of the State of Florida vs. Zachary Ray Abell … the defendant is guilty of the lesser included offense of second-degree murder.
CBS News
Second-degree murder just like Christina Araujo. Adlerstein says the jury foreman told him they just couldn’t decide if Abell had actually intended to kill Aileen.
David Adlerstein: They knew that, uh, Christina had pled guilty to second, and I think they eventually said … we’re going to give him the same.
Mike Picavet: It doesn’t tell me that they’re equally responsible.
Mike Picavet says even with the verdict, he is convinced his friend played no part in Aileen’s death.
Mike Picavet: To me, there’s an innocent man sitting in jail.
Ronnie Jones: I think they’re both just as guilty as the other.
Now retired from law enforcement, Ronnie Jones spends his days tending his bar in Apalachicola. He says he’s still left wondering what really happened inside room 15.
Peter Van Sant: Is this case a mystery to you?
Ronnie Jones: It’s not a mystery on exactly what happened, but exactly why it happened … That is what still bothers me to this day. Why?
Like what Aileen might have been about to say that sparked the attack.
Ronnie Jones: It was my understanding in the rumors … that she was fixing to disclose the fact that she was pregnant.
Peter Van Sant: Pregnant. And was she pregnant? Did you learn that at the autopsy?
Ronnie Jones: I was at the autopsy, and she was not pregnant. … I don’t know if she thought she was or not.
When it was time for sentencing, Abell finally spoke and told the courtroom another twist in this tortured story.
ZACH ABELL (at sentencing): I had stopped, and I had grabbed a Ring Pop. And I proposed to her with a Ring Pop and asked her to marry me. And she said, “Yes.” … And me and Aileen were gonna go our way and leave Christina out of it.
Peter Van Sant: Zach spoke at his sentencing and said that he’d actually proposed to Aileen during this trip.
Franceasca Seiden: Uh, I think that is just … BS. … Uh, it’s a great story, but no.
JUDGE ALLMAN (at sentencing): I have been in the justice system in one form or another, for 40 years, rarely have I seen the sort of injuries … that I saw on Aileen Seiden.
The judge told Abell he wished he could impose a harsher punishment before sentencing him to the maximum: life in prison.
Jarred Patterson: In the state of Florida, life means life, we don’t have parole.
At her sentencing, Araujo’s father Colonel Tony Araujo set the record straight. He said he never used his influence to benefit his daughter, and he recalled the conversation he had with her after the murder.
COL. TONY ARAUJO (at sentencing): “You will own up to the truth. You will accept responsibility. You will be the voice of the victim, and you will testify under oath in a court of law. … And then whatever is sentenced to you, that’s fine.”
Jarred Patterson: There was no agreement with her as to the length of sentence … She gave her statement with the knowledge that she could still receive life in prison.
CHRISTINA ARAUJO (at sentencing): I think about that day every day of my life. … The details haunt me, and the memories keep me up.
The judge acknowledged her cooperation, and sentenced Araujo to 25 years.
Ronnie Jones: Justice has been served. He won’t beat up anymore females; neither will she.
Allie: I think that every woman kind of thinks, “I would leave if I was in that situation. I would just get up and leave. I would never tolerate that.”
Aileen’s best friend Allie hopes there will be more compassion for those trapped in abusive relationships.
Allie: It’s always that, “I’m sorry. It’s never going to happen again.” … and you believe it, because you’re in love and things are good 95% of the time. But the 5% that are bad are so bad.
Franceasca Seiden
Peter Van Sant: With your sister gone, how do you want her to be remembered?
Franceasca Seiden: I want her to be remembered as a sweet, loving human being whom … unfortunately had … lost her parents at such a young age, but she was still so sweet. Like she was such a sweetheart. Her soul was so kind.
Christina Araujo is scheduled to be released in 2043. She will be 63 years old.
If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233
Produced by Lauren A. White and Richard Fetzer. Marlon Disla and Phil Tangel are the editors. Ryan Smith and Tamara Weitzman are the development producers. Chelsea Narvaez is the associate producer and Cameron Rubner is the broadcast associate. Anthony Batson is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Police in Missoula, Montana, have released security camera video showing 23-year-old Jermain Charlo, who has been missing for more than six years. The video was released exclusively to “48 Hours” to help generate leads.
Charlo disappeared in Missoula in the early morning hours of Saturday, June 16, 2018. Missoula Police detective Guy Baker, who has been leading the search for Charlo, says the security camera video shows the last known images of her before she vanished.
Baker tells “48 Hours” contributor Michelle Miller that searches for Jermain Charlo have “come up empty-handed.” Miller reports on Charlo’s disappearance and the search for answers in ” in “Where is Jermain Charlo?” airing Saturday, Oct. 12 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
Missoula Police Department
Just before midnight on Friday, June 15, 2018, Charlo is seen on video walking down a street in downtown Missoula. A man is walking a few paces behind her. In a second excerpt, Charlo is socializing outside a local bar called The Badlander. The same man is standing behind her. Just before midnight, Charlo and the man leave the area and disappear into the night.
Missoula Police Department
Baker, the lead detective on the case, says “Jermain walks out of view, so maybe somebody saw something that never thought about contacting us. So, if anybody has any information about that night or any aspect of this investigation, I encourage them to call me.”
Six years later, with no arrest and no publicly named suspects, authorities are hopeful the release of the security video will lead to new clues about Charlo’s disappearance.
Police have identified the man with Charlo that night as Michael DeFrance. He’s her ex-boyfriend and the father of their two sons. The couple had an on-again, off-again relationship. According to Charlo’s family, the couple broke up for good in 2017, but there was tension between them.
Police believe DeFrance was the last person to see Charlo before she disappeared in the early morning hours on Saturday, June 16, 2018. When Baker interviewed DeFrance, he told him he dropped Charlo off around 1 a.m. near a food market in downtown Missoula.
DeFrance said Charlo told him she was going to meet a friend named Cassidy. Police never found anyone named Cassidy, but they did learn Charlo had been visiting Missoula regularly because she had been dating a man named Jacob who lived in that neighborhood.
The couple had recently begun dating and had been in communication in the hours prior to her disappearance. Jacob was out of town in a different state the weekend Charlo vanished. When Jacob spoke with police, he told them he had tried to call Charlo shortly before 1 a.m. on June 16 and thought it was strange the phone rang several times and then went to voicemail. Jacob told police he thought someone purposely ended the call.
According to authorities, phone records determined that the call was silenced by someone.
Jacob also told police that the day before Charlo disappeared, she told him DeFrance had been yelling at her, asking her if she was dating anyone and that he wanted to get back together with her.
Police say Jacob cooperated with the investigation and he was never considered a suspect in Charlo’s disappearance.
Police discovered the morning Charlo disappeared her phone was pinging from 2 a.m. to 10 a.m. approximately 14 miles from downtown Missoula in an area known as Evaro Hill on the Flathead Reservation.
Charlo lived on the Flathead Reservation and is a member of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai tribes. She loved nature and animals. Her dream was to attend the Institute of American Indian Arts.
In Montana, Indigenous persons make up only about 6% of the population, but 24% of the state’s active missing persons cases.
Jermain Charlo has not been found. The investigation into her disappearance remains open and active.
There have been numerous police and community searches for Charlo throughout Missoula and the Flathead Reservation since her disappearance in June 2018.
CBS News
Jen Murphy, an educator in Montana who came up with the idea to put Charlo’s missing poster on a billboard, has joined several searches. “They’re heartbreaking. Every little step that you take … it’s a grid search, so you can’t be any farther than an arms-length apart … so that you don’t miss anything. So, grid searching a mountain with trees that are right next to each other is almost impossible.”
Charlo’s disappearance is just one of many unsolved cases of missing and murdered Indigenous women known as MMIW.
“I feel like we’re all of the human race and should be looked for the same. It’s not like we’re asking for special treatment, we’re just asking for the same treatment. We’re not going to stop looking for our people. We’re not. Our lives matter,” says Murphy.
Police wanted to know what happened to Charlo’s cellphone. Turns out DeFrance provided an answer. He told police he had her phone and attempted to get into it after she disappeared, and that he then got rid of it.
DeFrance, who had been working as a truck driver, told Baker he disposed of Charlo’s phone in Idaho at mile marker 94 on Highway 12. Law enforcement searched the area, but never found the phone.
“Why would you get rid of the cell phone if someone was around to give the phone back to ’em?” says Baker.
DeFrance has not been named as a suspect in Jermain Charlo’s disappearance. “48 Hours” requested an interview through his attorney. The request was declined.
Baker’s work phone number is on Charlo’s missing poster billboard. He wants people to call him with any information about her disappearance. While the searches for her haven’t turned up any new information, Baker believes someone knows what happened to Charlo.
Charlo’s family believes she is no longer alive. Authorities are investigating the disappearance as a no body homicide.
If you have any information about Jermain Charlo’s disappearance, contact Missoula Police detective Guy Baker at 406-396-3217.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Kootenai County Sheriff’s Deputy Miranda Thomas will never forget coming face to face with a distraught Dan Howard, a former state trooper, at his home in Northern Idaho on a cold winter’s morning in February 2021.
Deputy Miranda Thomas: He would scream and yell, but there were no tears in his eyes. At any point he would, um, act like he was gagging … But nothing would ever actually happen.
Thomas was one of the first responders to Dan Howard’s home, a place he shared with Kendy, his wife of 26 years.
Kootenai County District Court
DEPUTY (bodycam): Dan, I know this is hard but, when — when is the last time that you saw your wife alive?
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): (crying, unintelligible)
DEPUTY THOMAS (bodycam): Dan, do you want medical to look at you at all?
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): No.
DEPUTY THOMAS (bodycam): OK.
Dan Howard told police he discovered his wife in the bathtub. He said she had shot herself in the head. Kendy’s own pistol was at the bottom of the tub in murky water.
Kootenai County Sheriff’s Detective Jerry Northrup arrived before midnight.
Peter Van Sant: Were you dispatched … to a possible suicide?
Det. Jerry Northrup: Yes sir. … It was identified as a suicide.
Northrup immediately began analyzing what was before him.
Det. Jerry Northrup: For a woman to shoot herself in the tub, nude, is unusual. It doesn’t mean it can’t happen It just means that it’s unusual.
Northrup, a crime scene expert, says something was missing from this death scene — especially considering Kendy had suffered a head wound.
Det. Jerry Northrup: There would be a lot more blood that was produced. And I just didn’t see that on her face, on her body or in the tub.
Thomas also saw some curious things.
Deputy Miranda Thomas: I went into the house and found a packed duffle bag. … Was someone planning on leaving the house?
In the laundry room, the dryer was running. It was full of clean bath towels and mats.
Deputy Miranda Thomas: Having a … dryer running at midnight, very odd, because I don’t do laundry at midnight. Sure, you could but …
And despite the shock of finding his wife dead, Dan Howard appeared to have recently showered, changed his clothes, and applied fresh deodorant.
Deputy Miranda Thomas: You can tell that he’s got deodorant lines on his T-shirt.
Peter Van Sant: Did something seem un-suicide-like to you?
Det. Jerry Northrup: Certainly. … There was no, other signs of like a suicide note.
It’s often standard procedure to check people at a shooting scene for GSR, gunshot residue. And as a former state trooper, Dan Howard would know that. Yet Northrup says Dan was uneasy about being tested.
Det. Jerry Northrup: Mr. Howard stuck his hands into his coat pockets, and then he began twisting them to and fro, back and forth repeatedly, until we told him to stop and remove his hands.
Peter Van Sant: Back and forth as if he’s trying to wipe something off?
Det. Jerry Northrup: Yes. That was the impression that we were getting …
Peter Van Sant: What was the result?
Det. Jerry Northrup: It was negative.
Peter Van Sant: It was negative.
Even though detectives were suspicious of all those little pieces of evidence that didn’t seem to add up, they could not rule out the possibility that Kendy Howard could have taken her own life.
Kendy’s sudden passing stunned those who loved her.
Michelle Lampert: She loved life … I have never had so much fun with somebody … no care in the world.
Michelle Lampert was one of Kendy’s best friends.
Michelle Lampert: She always laughed. … my favorite is spin class … and then to the brewery … nothing like spin class and brewery, but she felt like that was OK.
Brooke Wilkins: She was a great mom.
Brooke Wilkins is Kendy’s daughter from an earlier relationship.
Peter Van Sant: Tell me about your mom. She just seems really special.
Brooke Wilkins: She was. She had a big personality. … She was happy to talk to anyone and make a friend and joke around.
Kendy was a small town girl from northern Idaho — sporty and outdoorsy, says her brother Brian Wilkins.
Brian Wilkins: She … rode her horse a lot, had sheep for 4H and … and, well, she had a goat, too, at the same time.
Brian Wilkins
Kendy was just 22 when she married former Marine-turned-Idaho state trooper Dan Howard. He was six years older.
Peter Van Sant: Did she talk about the attraction?
Brooke Wilkins: She did think he was very handsome. And I think the sense of security is a topic that was brought up quite a bit.
The couple settled on 10 acres in the town of Athol, just a speck on the map, located 21 miles north of Coeur D’Alene. They had a son together, Wyatt. Like his dad, Wyatt became a Marine. A neighbor, Cari Maitland, says Dan and Kendy’s marriage seemed strong.
Cari Maitland: They were affectionate towards each other and … they were generally respectful to each other.
Kendy worked at a local medical center. During 26 years of marriage, they made good money in real estate in this fast-growing state. By the time of Kendy’s death, the couple had more than $2 million in assets. And yet, money created friction between them.
Michelle Lampert: Her money was his money and his money was his money. … He never wanted to spend money.
And there was more friction in the marriage, according to friends, after Dan Howard — working as a trooper for the Idaho State Police — shot and killed a woman during a traffic stop. Dan was cleared of all wrongdoing, but the incident took its toll on Kendy.
Cari Maitland: I do believe … she did become depressed.
Years later, Dan Howard would leave the Idaho State Police.
Cari Maitland: And things kind of changed between them.
Kendy’s brother Brian Wilkins helped Dan find work on the North Slope — the oil fields of Alaska. He’d work three weeks straight and then come home for three weeks.
Michelle Lampert: She was free for three weeks is when she really decided to experience life.
Brian Wilkins says the couple grew apart.
Brian Wilkins: There was arguing, bickering pretty much the whole time I’d be up there around him. But I didn’t think it was anything.
But Brooke Wilkins says it was the beginning of the end of their relationship. Kendy was frustrated and lonely.
Brooke Wilkins: She’s very vocal that she does not love him; that there’s no love in this marriage.
Lampert says Kendy had an affair, and even planned plastic surgery.
Michelle Lampert: She was just super excited.
And that’s when Kendy told Dan she was moving out and wanted a divorce. And she had started the process of buying a new house.
Michelle Lampert: And I think she really felt that it would be OK.
By the end of January 2021, just days before her death, Kendy met with a divorce lawyer. When Dan came home from work —
Michelle Lampert: She just told him … I mean, she just told him everything. And I think [at] that point I did get scared. … She said he was fine. He wasn’t fine.
Michelle Lampert: It never made sense to me. It never made sense.
When first responders examined Kendy Howard’s body in her bathtub, she had a gunshot wound to the back of her mouth and her pistol was in the water. Dan Howard told everyone that Kendy had taken her own life.
Peter Van Sant: Were you buying that?
Brian Wilkins: No. … I couldn’t see her leaving her kids and granddaughter.
When he learned his sister was dead, Brian Wilkins rushed over to her house. He walked right up to Dan Howard.
Brian Wilkins: There was no emotion. He wasn’t crying. … I asked him if he’d ever hurt my sister. … he wouldn’t look at me in the eye and he said, “no.”
Kendy’s friend, Michelle Lampert, was also certain Kendy had not taken her own life.
Michelle Lampert: Kendy was not depressed. … You don’t think about doing plastic surgery. You don’t go work out. You don’t go to spin class.
But Cari Maitland, Kendy’s neighbor, says Kendy had been deeply unhappy. Months earlier she says Kendy told her about problems in her marriage.
Cari Maitland: She’s just crying and crying and crying. … And — and she’s like, “I don’t even deserve to be here.”
Maitland doesn’t think there’s any mystery about what happened in that bathroom.
Cari Maitland: I do believe that Kendy committed suicide.
In the hours following Kendy’s death, Northrup said he had questions about Dan Howard’s version of events.
Det. Jerry Northrup: There’s a — an order to things and a logical order … it did not make sense.
Kootenai County District Court
One thing that didn’t make sense that night was the clothes dryer running when first responders entered the house. There were still six minutes showing on the display. So Northrup did some digging.
Det. Jerry Northrup: I went to the manufacturer’s site, pulled up the specifics about the times for cycles … And then took that information and compared that against the time at which the 911 call was placed.
Peter Van Sant: And what do you learn?
Det. Jerry Northrup: That it was started within a minute of the 911 call.
Det. Jerry Northrup: It suggested that he was doing actions like starting laundry … rather than his claim that he was checking on Kendy Howard and — and that he was inconsolable and upset … it just — it didn’t add up.
And there were other red flags for Northrup.
Peter Van Sant: Did you find any signs of a struggle, that there’d been some sort of a physical confrontation between these two?
Det. Jerry Northrup: Yes, we did. Up in the master bedroom, we noted on the floor that there were pieces of broken glass.
Kootenai County Sheriff’s Office
And there was that question of the amount of blood in the bathtub.
Peter Van Sant: With a wound to the head, that water will be much darker red-colored, right? From the blood?
Det. Jerry Northrup: Yes, sir. Based on my experience, that would be consistent. That the — the fact that there wasn’t — was inconsistent.
Peter Van Sant: Inconsistent, suggesting it might not be a suicide?
Det. Jerry Northrup: Correct. … Everything started directing us to the path that this was a staged crime scene.
Detective Sergeant Ken Lallatin, now retired, was the lead investigator.
Det. Sgt. Ken Lallatin: Nothing about this case felt right from the beginning.
DET. SGT. KEN LALLATIN (bodycam): Hi Dan … So what happened tonight?
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): Marital problems … she wants a divorce one day … she doesn’t the next … So she brought home divorce papers, just preliminary ones.
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): We just grew apart, I guess.
Lallatin says he quickly became convinced Dan Howard was playing them.
Det. Sgt. Ken Lallatin: I had the sense that Dan had a story that he had planned to share with us that evening … it felt very contrived.
Peter Van Sant: Almost scripted in a way?
Det. Sgt. Ken Lallatin: Absolutely. Yeah, definitely scripted.
One example, Lallatin says, was Dan Howard telling him that Kendy had once put a gun to her head.
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): She put the gun to her f****** head … it freaked me the f*** out… and um I thought for sure… ‘here we go’ and she dropped the gun and f****** shot through the floor.
DETECTIVE (bodycam): Same gun?
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): Same gun.
Lallatin says Dan Howard told him, that after a heated argument that night over splitting their finances, Kendy went upstairs to take a bath. A short time later Dan heard what he described as a “thud.”
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): It sounded like something hit the floor or something. I don’t know.
But he didn’t investigate for more than an hour. That’s when Dan Howard says he found her: dead in the tub.
Peter Van Sant: How many times have you ever described a gunshot as a thud?
Det. Sgt. Ken Lallatin: I don’t think I’ve ever described a gunshot as a thud. … I certainly would not expect someone who served in the Marine Corps, served … approximately 20 years in law enforcement, someone who was a firearms instructor, someone who had been on their SWAT team. I think if anybody’s going to know what the sound of a gunshot is from inside a residence, it’s going to be Dan Howard.
As the morning came, Dan Howard called his stepdaughter Brooke Wilkins, and told her the news … it didn’t go well. Lallatin says he could hear Brooke shouting at Dan through the phone.
DAN HOWARD (bodycam, shouting back at his phone): What? What are you talking about? …
DET. SGT. KEN LALLATIN (bodycam): Who was that Dan? …
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): It was my daughter, Brooke …
DET. SGT. KEN LALLATIN (bodycam): Did she just accuse you of this?
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): No.
DET. SGT. KEN LALLATIN (bodycam): That’s what it sounded like. … Why would she do that Dan? Why would she think you did this? … I haven’t heard someone that angry in a long time … I’ll be honest with you. I was not expecting anything like that … I was across the room and I could hear her. She’s angry …
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): Kids don’t want to believe their moms would do that.
Det. Sgt. Ken Lallatin: Not one time have I ever been to a suicide or even heard of one where one of the family members … call and accuse her stepdad of murdering her mom. … it was a very powerful moment. … and I literally was able to see Dan Howard almost physically shrink down.
Peter Van Sant: Like the walls are closing in?
Det. Sgt. Ken Lallatin: Oh, a hundred percent.
In the early morning of Feb. 3, 2021, Dan Howard’s behavior continued raising the suspicions of Kootenai County detectives. They had just overheard that phone call from his stepdaughter, Brooke Wilkins, accusing him of killing her mother.
Brooke Wilkins: I’m hysterical. I’m crying pretty hard.
Peter Van Sant: And you’re believing that no way she shot herself.
Brooke Wilkins: Right. … I tell him that … I don’t know what happened, but … “I know you did this.”
Detective Sgt. Ken Lallatin confronted Dan about Brooke’s accusation:
DET. SGT. KEN LALLATIN (bodycam): I gotta tell you, that phone call put chills down my spine. …
DET. SGT. KEN LALLATIN (bodycam): You did it, didn’t you Dan?
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): No, I didn’t.
DET. SGT. KEN LALLATIN (bodycam): I didn’t think so, but now, after listening to that, I think you did, didn’t you?
DAN HOWARD (bodycam): How the hell, how the hell — she doesn’t know. She wasn’t here.
Brian Wilkins
Within minutes, Dan Howard stopped responding to questions. Detectives were now very suspicious, because, as an ex-cop, he had special skills.
Det. Sgt. Ken Lallatin: Dan knows things that most normal people, ordinary people don’t know.
Peter Van Sant: Things like what?
Det. Sgt. Ken Lallatin: Things like killing someone and staging it to look like a suicide.
Kootenai County Sheriff’s Office
But there wasn’t enough physical evidence at the scene to arrest him. What’s more, later that day, an autopsy was done. The medical examiner concluded Kendy died from that gunshot. Brooke Wilkins was perplexed. She says her mother never took her gun out of the safe.
Brooke Wilkins: Mom never touched a gun. She wouldn’t have used a gun. … there’s something not making sense here. And … I’m so lost and confused because … you know, Dan’s not arrested.
What Brooke Wilkins didn’t know was that the investigation was zeroing in on Dan Howard. Just hours after Kendy’s death, Kootenai County Prosecuting Attorney Stan Mortensen was called in to consult with detectives. They pieced together a detailed timeline of the couple’s relationship.
Peter Van Sant: What did you learn about Dan Howard?
Stan Mortensen: So we learned … that Dan Howard was not the person that we thought he was … at home and behind and closed doors, he was a different person.
Investigators focused in on an alarming incident Dan Howard was involved in from 2013, when he was still a state trooper. Dan had found out Kendy was having an affair with a neighbor — who also happened to be Dan’s good friend. Enraged, Dan confronted him at his office.
Det. Jerry Northrup: He … threatened to — I believe his words were — splatter his brains all over the walls.
Peter Van Sant: Threatened to kill him?
Det. Jerry Northrup: Threatened to kill him.
Dan Howard was accused of repeatedly harassing the neighbor, and eventually pleaded guilty to two felonies and served almost four months in jail in connection with that incident. He was allowed to resign from the Idaho State Police. After that, Kendy’s friend Michelle Lampert says the couple’s relationship seemed to change.
Michelle Lampert: She was stuck to him like glue, just like glue, like hanging all over him. And she was never that way before. .. I think back, going, was she scared?
In the years that followed, Lampert says Dan was controlling and quick to anger — especially when it came to Kendy’s spending.
Michelle Lampert: Dan never wanted to go do anything cause that would spend money. … I just don’t think she was her full personality when he was around.
But when Dan was about to head back to Alaska for work —
Michelle Lampert: She was a totally different person … I think she realized the more she was free, the more she loved life. And she didn’t have to be under his thumb.
They continued to grow apart. Then Kendy told Lampert about an explosive argument, just seven months before her death.
Michelle Lampert: She had hidden credit cards and he found the bills and that started that argument … He … grabbed her and held her and there was bruises on her neck and her … She sent me pictures … You could see ’em. Clear as day in the pictures. … She just told me not to tell anybody.
Kendy never reported any kind of abuse from Dan Howard to authorities.
Peter Van Sant: How long had this physical abuse been going on? Do you have a sense?
Stan Mortensen: We — we really don’t know. It had been going on at least … six months before she died.
Then, just four nights before Kendy Howard’s death, deputies were called to the Howard home. Kendy’s mother had asked for a welfare check, after hearing a panicked Kendy on the phone. A visibly nervous Kendy answered the door.
DEPUTY (bodycam): You mind if we talk to you guys really quick?
DAN HOWARD (bodycam, sitting on couch): Sounds fine to me.
Hours earlier, Kendy had picked Dan up at the airport, coming home from the oil fields of Alaska. And apparently upset him by saying she wanted a divorce. Kendy tells a deputy she needs to get something from the bedroom.
KENDY HOWARD (bodycam, stuttering): And — so, I can go?
DEPUTY (bodycam): Yeah, do you mind if I follow you?
That let the deputy speak with Kendy away from Dan Howard.
Kootanai County District Court
KENDY HOWARD (bodycam) I asked for a divorce and he just got home. He’s not taking it good.
DEPUTY (bodycam): OK.
KENDY HOWARD (bodycam) I can’t say what he was going to do …
DEPUTY (bodycam): Did it ever become physical?
KENDY HOWARD: I think I had woke up in time so it wouldn’t.
DEPUTY (bodycam): OK. When you woke up, where was he?
KENDY HOWARD (bodycam): Standing over me …
DEPUTY (bodycam): Was he yelling? Was the argument like a —
KENDY HOWARD: No, that’s the thing —
DEPUTY (bodycam): So he’s always kind of just that calm?
KENDY HOWARD (bodycam): (unintel) It’s weird.
DEPUTY (bodycam): OK. Alright.
KENDY HOWARD (bodycam): I know what I seen. I know what he was going to do …
The deputy helped Kendy leave the house. But investigators would later say they couldn’t arrest Dan Howard because Kendy never told deputies Dan had physically harmed her. Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Julia Schoffstall later learned that Kendy had told friends what had happened.
Julia Schoffstall: She wakes up in early morning hours to Dan standing over her … wearing dark clothes … black latex gloves … a pillow in his hand … the look in his eyes … it was a look that she had never seen before and that she wholeheartedly believed in that moment that he was going to kill her.
But later that day, Kendy, returned home.
Julia Schoffstall: She told friends and family that … he wasn’t stupid enough to try something again, that she felt like she had some level of safety …
Peter Van Sant: What’s the tragedy in this case to you? The biggest tragedy of all?
Julia Schoffstall: That she was so close to getting out.
In the text messages to Kendy, Dan Howard said it was all a misunderstanding and he was willing to work things out. But there were other signs he wasn’t OK. The day before Kendy’s death, her brother Brian Wilkins took a long road trip with Dan.
Brian Wilkins: He started asking me about who Kendy was having an affair with.
Brian Wilkins says Dan Howard figured out Kendy was seeing the real estate agent who was helping her buy that new house near her hometown.
Brian Wilkins: You could tell, he was mad.
The next day, Kendy Howard was dead. To prosecutors, the circumstantial evidence against Dan Howard was adding up. After reviewing Kendy’s autopsy and photos taken of Kendy’s body, investigators discovered that, in fact, Kendy had multiple bruises all over her body.
Stan Mortensen: Her body was riddled from head to toe with bruises and some lacerations.
And her jaw had been broken.
Stan Mortensen: I believe that Kendy was beat severely by Dan.
So what really happened that night? The theory that Kendy’s death scene could have been staged began to take on a new light.
Stan Mortensen: Kendy did not die from a gunshot wound …
Peter Van Sant: Wait, wait. Stop. She was shot, I understand, in the mouth … the bullet lodged in her vertebrae. And it didn’t kill her?
Stan Mortensen: Exactly. We believe that Kendy was already dead when she was shot.
Julia Schoffstall: Dan always had a level of control over Kendy. And I think by February 2nd, he had realized that that control was gone.
Brian Wilkins
Weeks into the investigation, prosecutors believed the circumstantial evidence showed Kendy Howard died at the hands of Dan Howard. But with the medical examiner’s ruling that Kendy had died from a gunshot wound, and no DNA evidence linking Dan Howard to Kendy’s gun, prosecutors faced challenges. So, they called in other experts to take a second look at the evidence, including forensic pathologist Dr. Jennifer Nara.
Dr. Jennifer Nara: I looked at the autopsy report, I reviewed all the photos … all the X-rays, the toxicology results … I did not agree with the original cause of death, that she died from a gunshot wound at the head.
Nara walked “48 Hours” through her analysis.
Dr. Jennifer Nara: When … I looked at what the trajectory was, the path the bullet took inside Kendy’s mouth, I thought that was unusual … cause it was going in a slightly downward direction. Typically in gunshot-wound suicides, they go either straight back to the mouth or go slightly upward.
Peter Van Sant: And can you demonstrate the path of this bullet?
CBS News
Dr. Jennifer Nara (demonstrating): Yeah, I sure can. So, I have a skull model here … I’m gonna take this rod to show the direction that the bullet traveled through the mouth, through the tongue. … and it tore through the tongue … like a torpedo. … it just went through the center of the tongue.
Peter Van Sant: Would there have been a lot of blood?
Dr. Jennifer Nara: Absolutely. … it’s gonna bleed like crazy.
Peter Van Sant: Because the heart is beating at the time that the bullet went through that tongue.
Dr. Jennifer Nara: Exactly.
But, when Nara reviewed the photos of the crime scene, she says she didn’t see the amount of blood she would have expected to.
Dr. Jennifer Nara: There was not enough blood.
And there were those bruises on Kendy’s body and her broken jaw, which Nara says were sustained before Kendy had died.
Peter Van Sant: Injuries that — that suggested a physical struggle of some sort.
Dr. Jennifer Nara: Correct. … She’s got bruises throughout her body. She’s got bruising on both sides for her neck, which is consistent with her being possibly choked.
Peter Van Sant: What did you conclude?
Dr. Jennifer Nara: I believe that … Kendy Howard was already dead when she sustained that gunshot wound. … she was already strangled or choked to death. And when she was placed in the bathtub, she was already dead.
So, how then did Kendy die? Prosecutors say Dan Howard used a restraining technique he learned back in his days as a state trooper.
Julia Schoffstall: We believe that he utilized a technique known as a carotid restraint.
Peter Van Sant: Show me how it works.
Stan Mortenson (demonstrates): So, what you would do is, you’d place your arm around somebody’s neck and head, and their chin is gonna be in the crook of your elbow.
Prior to becoming an attorney, prosecutor Stan Mortenson had been a sheriff’s deputy, and, like Dan Howard, had been trained in administering the carotid restraint hold — rarely used, as it cuts off blood flow to the brain.
Stan Mortenson: If it’s applied too long, it can cause death. … And that right there was our theory on how Dan killed Kendy.
Peter Van Sant: It’s an interesting theory, but you do concede it is a theory, right? … no witness came forward to say that Dan told me he did this or … there’s no physical evidence that proves that he did this, right?
Stan Mortenson: Not the carotid restraint technique, correct. … but Dan knew how to use this technique and taught other people how to use it. So, we weren’t just grabbing this theory out of thin air. This was something that Dan actually knew.
Kootenai County Sheriff’s Office
It took two years for the prosecutors to build their case. Finally, in April 2023, Dan Howard was charged with murder. He was also charged with domestic battery from that incident seven months before Kendy’s death, when she took those photos of her bruises and sent them to her friend Michelle Lampert. He pleaded not guilty and posted bail. Dan Howard was ordered to wear an ankle monitor while he awaited trial.
In his opening statement, prosecutor Stan Mortenson said Dan and Kendy Howard had fought over finances that night, and it turned physical, with Dan bruising Kendy, breaking her jaw, then killing her with the carotid restraint hold. Then, he said, Dan Howard staged the scene by placing Kendy’s body in the bathtub and shooting her.
STAN MORTENSEN (in court): Ladies and gentlemen, the evidence will come in and will demonstrate that this was not a suicide. … Evidence will show that Kendy died of asphyxiation. … Evidence will show that Dan Howard is guilty of murder.
Dan Howard’s lawyer, Jason Johnson, countered the state’s claims by asserting that an emotionally troubled Kendy Howard has shot herself.
JASON JOHNSON (in court): She is struggling with whether she wants to leave Dan.
He pointed out that Dan Howard’s DNA was not even on Kendy’s gun.
JASON JOHNSON (in court): The gun had Kendy’s blood on it. … But Dan is excluded.
And he dismissed the State’s assertion there was a physical fight that night.
Jason Johnson: Kendy did not have any … DNA under her fingernails. … there were no defensive marks on Dan.
Johnson also said the investigators were all wrong about the lack of blood at the scene, pointing out that several hours had passed before some of the crime scene photographs of the bathtub had been taken and some of the water could have drained.
JASON JOHNSON (in court): How much blood went down that drain?
Johnson attacked the prosecution’s claim that Kendy Howard was dead from asphyxiation before she was shot by calling that medical examiner who performed Kendy’s original autopsy.
JASON JOHNSON (in court): Your cause of death is gunshot wound?
DR. JOHN HOWARD (in court): That’s my opinion.
More than a week into the proceedings, the trial recessed for a long weekend break. That night, prosecutors learned of a new, dramatic development that seemed to be right out of a television crime show. It seemed Dan Howard was making a run for it.
With his trial winding down, Dan Howard, who was out on bail with an ankle monitor, suddenly took off.
Peter Van Sant: This was the great escape. He was hoping to get away?
Stan Mortenson: He did it right after we finished with all of our evidence.
A deputy was tracking Dan Howard that night.
Stan Mortenson: You know, this is I-90, going 70 miles-an-hour. He abruptly took an exit and then got back on the highway … you know, looking in his rear-view mirror, “is somebody following me?”
About an hour later, Dan Howard made it to the Spokane International Airport.
Peter Van Sant: He’s right there at the airport terminal.
Stan Mortenson: He’s right there at the airport terminal. Dan was taken out of the car. He was put into handcuffs.
Dan Howard claimed he had gone there to help a friend return a rental car — not to make a run for it.
Stan Mortenson: And I think it’s possible that he was gonna cut the ankle monitor off, leave it in his car and then drive away in another rental car.
Instead, Dan Howard’s drive was a short one back to a jail cell in Coeur D’Alene, Idaho. His bail was revoked. Days later, the prosecution made closing arguments.
JULIA SCHOFFSTALL (in court): Ladies and gentlemen, the state has shown you … this was not suicide ’cause a dead person cannot shoot themselves in the mouth.
The jury was not told about Dan Howard’s escape attempt. His defense attorney insisted that Kendy took her own life.
JASON JOHNSON (in court): The scene is consistent with suicide.
And that Dan Howard did not have the skills to “stage” a murder scene.
JASON JOHNSON (in court): There’s no evidence that he worked as a detective. No evidence that he had any sort of homicide training. Uh, no evidence of the knowledge of staging a scene.
After 10 days of trial, 62 witnesses and just over eight hours of deliberations, the jury reached a verdict: guilty of second-degree murder.
Brooke Wilkins: I cried. There was — I think I gasped that — there was crying and —
Peter Van Sant: And did you look at Dan?
Brooke Wilkins: I’m looking at him and as he turns there’s just — there’s no expression. There’s no look of remorse.
Dan Howard had shown no emotion. But two months later at his sentencing, he begged the judge for leniency.
Pool
DAN HOWARD (in court): I love my wife, and I miss her. (cries) And … I am not that monster, I assure you, that, um, people have portrayed me to be. Kendy and I had, um, 28 years together. And, um, raised a family. Had mostly a good marriage and a good life. … I’m not that animal that they portray me to be. … It is not my intention to anger the court or disrespect the process that, uh, I used to believe in … But, your Honor is about to sentence an innocent man to prison.
But the judge wasn’t moved.
JUDGE LAMONT BERECZ (in court): What we know beyond a reasonable doubt is that you strangled your wife. You murdered her. And then you staged her naked body in the bathtub, shot her through the mouth, and tried to pass this off as a suicide. … You killed a mother. You killed a grandmother. You killed a sister. … You snuffed that out because of your own pride, greed, and anger.”
“Pride, greed, and anger,” said the judge. But others kept coming back to the word “control.”
Julia Schoffstall: To me, this case was about a man who thought that he could control a woman. … And if he couldn’t get his way, he was going to force it.
Brooke Wilkins: I cried. … it’s such a relief. … that … people got to hear what actually happened.
Brooke Wilkins’ daughter Kenly was just 8 when her beloved grandmother was murdered. Now 12, she treasures these glass chickens that her grandma collected.
Peter Van Sant: Do you feel a connection to your grandmother when you — when you see these?
Kenly Wilkins: Yeah.
Brooke Wilkins: She had had a china hutch.
Kenly Wilkins: Yeah, a china hutch. It was just full of chickens. So I’d always just try and like, look at how many different colors there were.
Peter Van Sant: Pretty cool grandma. You loved her, didn’t you?
Kenly Wilkins: (Nods yes)
Brian Wilkins
Peter Van Sant: What is the hardest thing for you?
Kenly Wilkins: Probably her smile.
Peter Van Sant: It’s tough, isn’t it?
Kenly Wilkins: Yeah. (cries)
Michelle Lampert: I want justice for Kendy. … what I hope they get from the story that you don’t have to live like this. … I wish I could have stopped it. I’m still shocked that we’re still talking about domestic violence … And that sometimes you can’t do anything. (cries)
Dan Howard was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233.
Produced by Chuck Stevenson and Lauren Clark. Cindy Cesare, Danielle Austen and Sara Ely Hulse are the development producers. Megan Kelly Brown is the associate producer. Greg Kaplan and Michael Baluzy are the editors. Anthony Batson is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]