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  • Where’s Ray Wright? High-speed chase leads to clues in Sacramento man’s abduction and “revenge” murder

    Where’s Ray Wright? High-speed chase leads to clues in Sacramento man’s abduction and “revenge” murder

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    Ray Wright‘s daughters were worried when their dad didn’t show up at his carpentry shop and didn’t answer any calls or texts. “I knew something bad was happening to him. I felt it,” says Haley Kendall.

    Dean Wright felt it too. He headed to his brother’s house and looked around. That’s when he realized someone was in the house and it wasn’t Ray. The intruder fled but left evidence on the kitchen counter. It would be a while before investigators would figure out who that intruder was. It began with a police chase.

    “It was a very dangerous high-speed chase with speeds of up to a hundred miles an hour,” prosecutor Matt Chisholm tells “48 Hours” contributor Natalie Morales. “There was a terrible accident at the end of that pursuit.”

    The driver was a man named Victor Gray. And in his wrecked van was a treasure trove of evidence. Prosecutors say they found a photograph on Gray’s cellphone of a letter he wrote to a man named Bob. Gray was demanding payment for delivering the “dude” to Bob. Prosecutors say Gray wrote that he “hand delivered you your revenge … “

    To authorities, it sounded like Gray had abducted Ray Wright at Bob’s request, but they had no idea who Bob was — or why he would want revenge.

    RAY WRIGHT VANISHES WITHOUT A TRACE

    Dean Wright was nervous. It was Saturday morning, Jan. 13, 2018, in Sacramento, California.

    Dean Wright: Where’s Ray? … I just wanted to know where Ray is.

    Dean hadn’t heard from his younger brother Ray in two days – highly unusual for brothers who spoke every day without fail.

    Natalie Morales: All of a sudden, middle of January, there’s just —

    Dean Wright: Nothing.

    Natalie Morales: Nothing.

    Dean Wright: Nothing.

    No phone calls, no texts, no social media posts.

    Ray Wright, 55, had missed work. No one had seen or heard from him, including his daughters, Haley Kendall and Kennedy Wright.

    Kennedy Wright: My sister called me, and she was like, “hey, like, have you heard from dad?” Like, “no one has heard from him.”

    Haley Kendall: I immediately … hung up and called him. … And I called, and I called, and I called, straight to voicemail every time.

    Dean Wright: So, I was getting increasingly concerned.

    Dean, left, and Ray Wright.
    Dean, left, and Ray Wright.

    Dean Wright


    Dean had repeatedly checked his brother’s house in Rocklin, a Sacramento suburb, and the shop Ray rented in Rio Linda for his work as a master carpenter. Nothing seemed unusual except the silence of Ray’s absence.

    Natalie Morales: And you didn’t see his truck?

    Dean Wright: No, his truck was not there.

    Natalie Morales: You’re panicked at this point.

    Dean Wright: Right.

    Haley Kendall: I think the first couple of days was when it really started to get real and serious.

    Kennedy Wright: I just felt really powerless over the situation … and it was really scary. … It was the worst thing that could have ever happened.

    Ray’s ex-wife, Peggy Wright, was also upset.

    Peggy Wright: I knew right away when he was out of touch that there was something wrong … 

    Although they were no longer married, Peggy still considered Ray to be the love of her life.

    Natalie Morales: Was he romantic?

    Peggy Wright: Oh God, he was super romantic.

    They married in June 1994 and Ray became an instant dad to stepdaughter, Haley, then 3 years old.

    Peggy Wright: He was meant to be a father and he was so good with her.

    Haley Kendall: He … was always there for me. … First male role model. … He always did everything to the fullest.

    Ray Wright with daughters
    Ray Wright with daughters Kennedy and Haley.

    Dean Wright


    Along came Kennedy nearly three years later. She says her father,  a loving, hands-on dad, would never just up and disappear.

    Kennedy Wright: He was like a T-ball dad. Um, and he would like take me, like, fishing.

    Haley Kendall: Soccer …

    Kennedy Wright: Soccer dad. … Swim meets … 

    Natalie Morales: He could do it all.

    Kennedy Wright: Yeah. He could do it all. He was good at everything.

    But after several good years, Peggy says, the couple found themselves drifting apart.

    Peggy Wright: He was so busy working. I was busy parenting and I also worked.

    They divorced in 2001. Ray remarried and divorced again in 2009.

    Peggy Wright: I think it was the end of his second marriage that kind of put him over the edge. And that’s when he fell off the wagon at almost 20 years sober.

    Ray, a recovering alcoholic, had stayed sober for most of his adult life. But when he went missing, Peggy worried he was in trouble.

    Peggy Wright: You think, oh gosh, maybe, you know, he had a setback or something.

    Natalie Morales: He was sober during your marriage?

    Peggy Wright: Oh, yeah.

    It was Ray’s relapse after his second marriage that sparked a downward spiral, exploding one night in November 2011 when Ray got in a car and drove drunk. He slammed head-on into a vehicle severely injuring a husband and wife. Ray, then 49, was convicted of felony DUI and sentenced to 18 months in jail.

    Haley Kendall: I think that was rock bottom for him.

    Natalie Morales: Rock bottom was getting in this devastating accident?

    Haley Kendall: Yeah.

    Kennedy Wright: And hurting people in the midst of it.

    Ray immediately stopped drinking, rejoined Alcoholics Anonymous and checked in with his sponsor every day.

    Peggy Wright: I think the Ray after that time was even better than the Ray prior to that time, because … he wanted … to be … the best version of … Ray Wright that he could be.

    Just weeks before he went missing, Ray spent Thanksgiving and Christmas with his growing family – celebrations that included Ray’s first granddaughter, Ashtyn.

    Proud mom, Haley, was thrilled for her dad.

    Haley Kendall: And he was super excited. … He built her a custom crib.

    Haley Kendall: He loved being a grandpa and she loved Grandpa Ray.

    Peggy Wright:  Ray was at such a great spot in his life … he had it all.

    And then he disappeared.

    By Saturday afternoon on Jan. 13, more than 48 hours had passed without a single sign of Ray. Dean went back to his brother’s house yet again, knocked on the door, and then let himself in.

    Dean Wright: Said, “Hello, hello.”  And immediately I smelled … marijuana smoke. … And that’s when I knew … this is completely wrong because he didn’t like that. … And I’m getting increasingly tense about it. … So, as I walked forward … I saw a cup. … And that had not been there. … I took another step-and-a-half …

    That’s when a back door burst open.

    Dean Wright: And a guy yelled at me, “Get out of here.” … And I said, “Who are you?” … “Where’s Ray?”

    The man took a step towards Dean, he says, then turned away and ran out the back door.

    Dean Wright: I immediately called 911.

    Rocklin Police arrived. Dean, shaken, filed a missing person’s report and pointed to the soda cup on the kitchen counter, explaining that the intruder must have left it.

    Ray Wright evidence
    The soda cup the intruder left behind in Ray Wright’s home.

    Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office/PRA Request


    Matt Chisholm | Sacramento County Prosecutor: The cup is full of ice. It’s full of soda. It has a lid and a straw and it’s sweating, so it’s fresh.  

    Natalie Morales: When did you start to fear the worst, Dean?

    Dean Wright: Then. Right then. … It was crushing.

    Natalie Morales: And you suspected foul play?

    Dean Wright: Yes.

    A TREASURE TROVE OF EVIDENCE

    Ray Wright, much admired and loved by friends and family — described as generous, creative and vibrant – had seemingly vanished with the snap of a finger.

    Matt Chisholm: No one has any leads as to where he is or what happened to him.

    It was the frightening home invasion just two days after Ray had disappeared that seemed too coincidental, says Prosecutor Matt Chisholm.

    Matt Chisholm: I think that … raised everyone’s concern to a different level.

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: As days go by, it becomes more suspicious.

    Rocklin Police Sergeant Zack Lewis briefly considered Ray’s history of alcohol abuse but dismissed the possibility of a relapse.

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: We checked his bank accounts. There was no activity on his bank. His vehicle had disappeared off of license plate readers. We couldn’t find his vehicle anymore. His phone wasn’t working. … All those things led us to believe that it was more than just him not calling family members back and drinking.

    Ray’s family immediately organized a search.

    Haley Kendall: We all met up at a Target parking lot and passed out flyers.

    Dean Wright: And then we just spread out and went in all different directions.

    Haley Kendall: We were doing everything we could and exhausting everything that we could do.

    Dean Wright


    The resounding question for the Wright family, echoing at all hours of the day and night: where was Ray?

    Ten days after his disappearance, police discovered Ray’s abandoned pickup truck in a North Highlands apartment complex.

    Peggy Wright: In this really high crime area.

    The radio and license plates had been stripped. For police, finding Ray’s vehicle was a break in the case. For Haley, it was just heartbreaking.

    Haley Kendall: That was — the first like real piece of evidence that was like, OK. We know something bad happened to him.

    Matt Chisholm: Rocklin P.D. seized the car and collaborated with the FBI to have it processed for trace evidence.

    In the back of the truck, brown stains barely visible on black carpet liner were later determined to be human blood.

    Matt Chisholm: That was tested for DNA against Ray Wright’s toothbrushes … since we don’t have a body … and it was a match.

    Sixteen days after Ray’s disappearance, something happened that would shift the investigation into overdrive.

    It all began with a harrowing high-speed police chase through Sacramento.

    Victor Gray's van crash
    Victor Gray’s totaled Chevy van after the high-speed chase with police.

    Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office/ PRA Request


    Matt Chisholm: It was a very dangerous high-speed chase with speeds of up to a hundred miles an hour. … There was a terrible accident at the end of that pursuit.

    POLICE DASHCAM VIDEO (Officers approach the van):  Put your hands up! … Open the door! … Is anyone in the car with you?

    Natalie Morales: This is one of those chases that you watch on TV and it’s like, whoa.

    Matt Chisholm: Yes.

    Natalie Morales: Except in this case, the guy who was responsible for that is much more dangerous than we even know.

    The driver, pinned inside the vehicle with a broken leg, was unable to move.

    Victor Gray's 2018 mugshot.
    Victor Gray’s 2018 mugshot.

    Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office/PRA Request


    California Highway Patrol officers cuffed the driver, who appeared to be intoxicated. The man’s name: Victor Gray. He had problems with the law before, and police arrested him this time for felony evasion and DUI.

    Matt Chisholm: He’s taken to a hospital for treatment and is under guard … and has been booked in the Sacramento County Jail.

    It was Gray’s expired registration — with current registration sticker tabs — that caught the attention of a police officer.

    Natalie Morales: Like a stolen vehicle? Is that what they’re thinking?

    Matt Chisholm: Possibly. … Or somebody stole the registration tab and just stuck it on their …  license plate.

    A DMV records search showed the registration tab actually belonged to a 2016 Ford pickup truck that had recently been reported missing along with its owner, Raymond Wright.

    Victor Gray's license plate with Ray Wright's registration tag
    Victor Gray’s license plate with Ray Wright’s registration tag

    Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office/PRA Request


    Matt Chisholm: The registration tab … is actually Ray Wright’s registration tag off of his license plate. … And so, that’s the first connection that they’re able to make between Victor Gray and Ray Wright’s disappearance.

    And then, three months after Ray’s disappearance, another turning point in the case. Investigators got a DNA hit off that soda straw in the cup left behind by the fleeing intruder  who finally had a name – and it’s one the police already knew: Victor Gray.

    Matt Chisholm: So, now we have two pieces of evidence linking him to Ray Wright.

    The DNA match placed Victor Gray inside Ray’s home and at the center of the expanding investigation. Turned out, things were about to get a lot worse for Gray, because his wrecked, smoking van was a smoking gun.

    Natalie Morales: Here you’ve got a treasure trove of evidence. … Where was all of this found?

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: All this was located in the vehicle that Victor Gray was driving.

    In the van’s cluttered cargo area, Rocklin Police and FBI investigators unraveled a black plastic tarp. Inside they found disturbing evidence that deepened the Ray Wright mystery.

    Sgt. Zack Lewis and Natalie Morales
    Sgt. Zack Lewis of the Rocklin Police Department and “48 Hours” contributor Natalie Morales look over the evidence found in Victor Gray’s van.  

    CBS News


    Natalie Morales: The hat. … You pull that hat out, “Ray Wright Design.”

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: It was like a holy s*** moment.

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: This is huge for us.

    Natalie Morales: The yellow rain jacket. That is Ray Wright’s Jacket. And what was found on that?

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: His DNA was found on that jacket.

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: The glasses are just —

    Natalie Morales: Just heartbreaking.

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: They’re just broken into a bunch of pieces.

    St. Zack Lewis: His wallet, which it appeared they tried to burn.

    Natalie Morales: A cellphone that’s clearly been … destroyed, like somebody took a hammer to it, right?

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: That’s what it looked like, yes.

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: We had to run the serial number on the back, and it was registered to Ray Wright’s cellphone carrier.

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: We now were definitely able to tie Victor Gray to Ray Wright going missing.

    But police had not found Ray. There was still a sliver of hope.

    Kennedy Wright: It’s just really hard being patient.

    Matt Chisholm: It’s still a hot investigation. There’s still many details left to figure out.

    Perhaps none more significant than Victor Gray’s cellphone.

    It wasn’t just Ray’s phone in the van; Gray’s was there, too. The violent collision ending the police chase sent Gray’s cellphone sliding underneath the van’s center console.

    Matt Chisholm: The FBI found that and was able to process it for its contents. And inside that cellphone was also a treasure trove of evidence.

    Ray Wright evidence
    The letter that prosecutors believe Victor Gray wrote, demanding payment for delivering Ray Wright to “Bob.”

    Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office/PRA Request


    Astonishingly, there was a photo of a handwritten, three-page letter, prosecutors say, from Gray to someone named “Bob.”

    Matt Chisholm: And at this point we don’t know who Bob is.

    It was dated Jan. 27 – the same day as Gray’s ill-fated chase with police.

    Matt Chisholm: It’s clear that Victor has grievances with Bob. … And the grievances stem about not being paid for delivering the “dude” to you.

    Natalie Morales: Those are his words, the “dude.”

    Matt Chisholm:  Yeah, I “hand-delivered you your revenge.” Now, it’s time to pay me.

    A PLOT FOR REVENGE?

    Natalie Morales: Let’s talk about what was found in that phone. … Text messages that seemed to refer to Ray Wright’s possible kidnapping at that point, right?

    Matt Chisholm: Yes.

    It took months, but investigators eventually dug up a gold mine of evidence from Gray’s cellphone.

    Matt Chisholm: There was a text conversation with a woman, who … appeared to be working as a lookout for Mr. Gray.

    “Rays out fron y of the sjop,” texted the woman, “Kalifornia Katie,” in a series of misspelled texts. It was 9:50 a.m. on Jan. 11, 2018. “Yes im watching out front for any thimg.”

    Tracing “Kalifornia Katie’s” number found in Gray’s cellphone, police identified her as Katie Barnard.

    Ashley Englefield: The text messages with Katie Barnard were invaluable.

    Those messages were sent the very morning Ray Wright went missing, last seen at his workshop. They revealed a plan of sorts, says Placer County District Attorney Investigator Ashley Englefield.

    Englefield showed “48 Hours” Ray Wright’s former workshop in Rio Linda and its close proximity to a neighbor, Katie Barnard.

    Ray Wright workshop
    The view from inside Ray Wright’s former Rio Linda workshop looking towards the trailer where Katie Barnard was staying.

    CBS News


    Ashley Englefield: She happened to be living in a trailer next to Ray Wright’s cabinet shop. … So that trailer right there is where Katie Barnard was staying.

    That morning, Englefield believes, Barnard was watching Ray’s workshop from just yards away.

    Ashley Englefield: She was in a prime spot to be a source of intelligence for Victor Gray. … She’s looking out that window and she’s looking at the shop. 

    Natalie Morales: So where do we think Victor Gray is on that morning?

    Ashley Englefield: During the course of that text conversation, we think Victor is out there on the road. He’s waiting for the text from Katie …

    The one that would tell him when Ray Wright was alone at his shop. It came just before 10 a.m.: “Just u n him bon.”  A few hours later, Ray Wright would disappear.

    Englefield brought in Barnard for questioning in October 2018. Ray had been missing for nearly 300 days.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD (police interview): If we don’t have reasons for why you did certain things … and you lie to us about doing the things we know you did … It makes you look like a killer.

    KATIE BARNARD: OK.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: Are you a killer?

    KATIE BARNARD: No.

    Barnard would grudgingly become a pivotal witness.

    Natalie Morales: What did Katie Barnard think she was doing this all for?

    Ashley Englefield: She told us that she was only involved because she thought that Victor Gray wanted to steal Raymond Wright’s truck.

    Katie Barnard in her interview with police.
    Katie Barnard in her interview with police.

    Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office/PRA Request


    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD (police interview): This wasn’t about Ray’s truck. … This doesn’t start and end — with Victor Gray.

    KATIE BARNARD: OK.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: It starts with somebody else … you were about to say it.

    KATIE BARNARD: Who? Bob?

    Barnard knew the key players, including the mysterious “Bob” named in that letter.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD (police interview): Who’s Bob?

    KATIE BARNARD: Bob is my ex-boyfriend.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: What’s Bob’s full name?

    KATIE BARNARD: Bob Manor.

    Robert “Bobby” Manor.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD (police interview): And so what’s the story then? What’s the whole backstory? …

    KATIE BARNARD: Ray and Bob were in a car accident.

    When Ray Wright drove drunk six years earlier in November 2011, the married couple he struck was Robert Manor and his wife. She nearly died, and Manor suffered multiple broken bones that left him with a permanent limp and lingering pain.

    Matt Chisholm: He was reminded … about it on a daily basis from his injuries. And he could never let it go.

    After Ray Wright’s DUI conviction, he was ordered to pay more than $275,000 in restitution to Manor and his wife.

    Ashley Englefield: He had occasionally made … payments … but not very much.

    Police say Manor was not a man to stiff. He was a feared methamphetamine dealer in North Sacramento, authorities say, who had done time for assault and selling drugs, armed with a gun. And witnesses told police that Manor was enraged and wanted revenge against Ray Wright.

    Natalie Morales: That gives you a motive, right?

    Ashley Englefield: The money and the revenge, mostly.

    A few months before Ray Wright went missing – in a staggering coincidence – police believe that Manor, while visiting Barnard, just happened to see the man who had smashed into him driving drunk years ago – the man he blamed for shattering his life.

    KATIE BARNARD (police interview): He came over one day, and Ray was there.

    Ray Wright was working in his shop about 30 feet away. That might have been the moment, Englefield says, when Manor lit the fuse — igniting his plot for revenge that had smoldered for years.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD (police interview): Truck is gone.

    KATIE BARNARD: Yes. And Ray’s been missing.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: And Ray is gone.

    KATIE BARNARD: Yes.

    Barnard told police when she heard the news that Ray Wright was missing, she realized this wasn’t just about stealing his truck.

    KATIE BARNARD (police interview): I’m freaking out.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: Why?

    KATIE BARNARD: Because, like, it’s obvious, you know like

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: About what?

    KATIE BARNARD: That he’s been taken or hurt or something. The cops come

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: By who?

    KATIE BARNARD: Victor and Bob.

    Barnard says Victor Gray later told her that morning, armed with a gun, he approached Ray Wright and punched him.

    Ashley Englefield: I think he then … somehow secured Ray’s hands and he was able to put Ray into his own truck.

    Then, Englefield says, Gray drove Ray Wright’s truck with a bloodied Ray Wright in the back to Manor’s house a few miles away.

    KATIE BARNARD (police interview): I don’t know what they did with Ray.

    Afraid she might be implicated in Ray Wright’s disappearance, Barnard told investigators she confronted Manor.

    Matt Chisholm: She asked him … about whether he killed Ray Wright, and he tells her that he did. … Manor then grabbed her around the neck, choked her, and told her never to speak about this again.

    According to Chisholm, Manor’s chilling admission came in just three words.

    Matt Chisholm: He says, “I got him.”

    Natalie Morales: “I got him.”

    Matt Chisholm: “I got him.” … We heard that quote from Mr. Manor from multiple witnesses…

    Like Tessa Trimble.

    TESSA TRIMBLE (police interview): I didn’t do anything.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: I’m not saying you did.

    TESSA TRIMBLE: I’m not involved in it.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: I’m not saying that you are.

    In an audio-only police interview, Englefield spoke to Trimble, a massage therapist who had treated Manor’s injuries from the accident. She says they eventually became romantically involved.

    Ashley Englefield: Tessa was very hesitant to speak, initially. And she was also very afraid of Bobby.

    TESSA TRIMBLE (police interview): You’re gonna get me killed. I have to go. I gotta get out of here.

    It would take some time, but Trimble began to talk.

    Ashley Englefield: She received a phone call from Bobby and Bobby had told her “hey, come over to the house, we need to talk.” According to her, what she thought at the time was that they were gonna talk about their relationship.

    But when she saw Manor, Trimble says there was something else on his mind.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD (police interview): What did he talk to you about?

    TESSA TRIMBLE: He told me he took care of — whatever. Something he was trying to take care of for a long time.

    TESSA TRIMBLE: He didn’t give me details, he just told me that he took care of it. He felt good about that.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: When he said that, who did you think he was talking about?

    TESSA TRIMBLE: He was talking about Ray Wright.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: Why would you think he was talking about Ray Wright?

    TESSA TRIMBLE: Because he had a problem with that guy. He mentioned on numerous occasions he wanted to get that guy…

    Ashley Englefield: It — it sounded to me like … one of the only persons … that Bobby could tell about this was Tessa. And so he did.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD (police interview): Bobby’s tellin’ you what? He got him?

    TESSA TRIMBLE: Mm-hmm.

    INVESTIGATOR ENGLEFIELD: Is that what he said is “I got him?”

    TESSA TRIMBLE: Yeah.

    Matt Chisholm: Everyone knew that Manor was talking about Ray Wright. … And then the first time they see him after the disappearance, see Manor, he says, “I got him.”

    In March 2021, prosecutors charged Manor and Gray with the kidnapping and murder of Ray Wright even though police had yet to find Ray. Both men pleaded not guilty. Manor, facing a life sentence without parole, had a very different story to tell.

    Natalie Morales (on phone in jail visiting area): Can you hear me Mr. Manor?

    Robert Manor: I’m innocent.

    Natalie Morales: You had nothing to do … with the murder of Ray Wright?

    Robert Manor: Nothing to do with it.

    RAY WRIGHT IS STILL MISSING BUT THE CASE GOES TO TRIAL

    Ashley Englefield:  It was still a missing person, but we all assumed it was a homicide.

    Natalie Morales: Did they tell you, at any point, we believe your brother is dead?

    Dean Wright: Yes. … Maybe three-and-a-half years in.

    During those agonizing years, Ray Wright’s family – one by one – eventually came to the same conclusion: Ray was no longer alive. And their grief was compounded by not having his body to bury.

    Ray and Kennedy Wright.
    Ray and Kennedy Wright.

    Peggy Wright/Facebook


    Kennedy Wright: That’s definitely still … a source of like pain for us. There was no … laying him to rest. Like he doesn’t get the send away that he deserves.

    Prosecutor Matt Chisholm hoped to provide the family a measure of justice by convicting  Manor and Gray. Approaching trial, Chisholm’s crucial concern was the credibility of his witnesses.

    Natalie Morales: You’ve got … witnesses … who have a history of drugs and drug use. Does that create a complication with the jury?

    Matt Chisholm: Yes. All these witnesses had significant credibility issues.

    Including another witness who had come forward – Victor Gray’s cellmate.

    In an audio-only interview, the cellmate says Victor Gray told him about Ray Wright’s tortured, final hours in Bob Manor’s house.

    GRAY’S CELLMATE: Well, I started off talking to him. And I’m real comfortable talking to him.

    MATT CHISHOLM: What did Gray tell you?

    GRAY’S CELLMATE: He delivered dude to Bobby. Alive though.

    The cellmate claims Gray told him there was plastic sheeting laying on the floor.

    GRAY’S CELLMATE: Plastic everywhere.

    According to  the cellmate, Gray said Manor had Ray poisoned.

    GRAY’S CELLMATE: He poisoned him.  

    The cellmate says Gray also told him that Manor had Ray’s body dismembered.

    GRAY’S CELLMATE: Cut the body up.

    MATT CHISHOLM: Did he tell you what they did with it?

    GRAY’S CELLMATE: Nope. … He didn’t tell me none of that.

    Natalie Morales: Victor was your accomplice in this kidnapping and murder plot.

    Robert Manor: There’s no connection whatsoever with me and Victor … before the incident.

    Robert Manor spoke to “48 Hours” from the Sacramento County Jail.

    Natalie Morales talks to Robert Manor
    “48 Hours” contributor Natalie Morales talks to Robert Manor at the Sacramento County Jail. 

    CBS News


    Robert Manor: They searched my house. … They tore the carpet up. They did everything like that. There was no DNA found.

    Natalie Morales: Well because you put plastic all over the floor.

    Robert Manor: No.

    Matt Chisholm: He was good at covering his tracks. He got other people to do the dirty work.

    People like Victor Gray says Chisholm.

    Matt Chisholm: We find … all the evidence of Ray Wright’s death.

    Natalie Morales: In Victor Gray’s van.

    Matt Chisholm: The cleanup is done, and Victor Gray tells you that on the jail call.

    VICTOR GRAY’S WIFE (jail call): I miss you.

    VICTOR GRAY: I miss you, too.

    In a jailhouse visit with his wife after the high-speed chase with police, Victor Gray made a powerful admission, says Chisholm.

    Matt Chisholm: He … almost kind of confesses to his wife and brings his wife into the know.

    VICTOR GRAY (jail call): To clean up the scene or whatever. I had to clean up. You know what I mean?

    Matt Chisholm: He said, “I had to clean up the scene,” as if he was almost bitter about it.

    VICTOR GRAY’S WIFE (jail call): Such a mess, honey.

    VICTOR GRAY: Yep. But he played me. He used me.

    Matt Chisholm: We believe that Victor was supposed to be paid $10,000.

    KATIE BARNARD (police interview): He was pissed off because he didn’t get paid by Bob.

    That’s why prosecutors believe Victor Gray wrote the three-page letter found on his cellphone. In it, he said, “I’m done waiting and need a fat package today,” meaning the money Gray believed he was owed. He told Bob Manor to take care of him because he had “hand-delivered you your revenge.”

    But Manor never paid, Chisholm says, so Victor Gray decided to deliver some revenge of his own.

    He was on his way to Manor’s house with all the Ray Wright evidence still inside the van, according to Chisholm. That’s when police tried pulling Gray over.

    Matt Chisholm: Had Victor Gray been paid, then maybe he’s not driving across town with this treasure trove of evidence in the back of the van.

    The trial finally began in March 2023, more than five years after Ray Wright went missing.  Since there was still no body, the case had become a no-body homicide

    Matt Chisholm: No-body cases are tough to prove. You lose a lot of information by losing the body. … We developed every single lead possible in order to prove this case.

    As Chisholm fully expected, the credibility of his witnesses came under relentless fire.

    Matt Chisholm: The thrust of the defense was these witnesses are saying whatever the cops want them to say in order to help themselves.

    KATIE BARNARD (police interview): I’m terrified of them.

    KATIE BARNARD (police interview): They’re dangerous people. They have guns.

    But Barnard, who was granted immunity and never charged with a crime, emerged as a star witness, says Chisholm, for her damaging testimony about Gray’s involvement and Manor’s admission.

    Matt Chisholm: And then it was something that Manor was trying to keep under wraps. Even though that he said it to her, it was something that she was to take to her grave.

    In court, Manor and Gray’s defense teams zeroed in on the prosecution’s lack of direct physical evidence against Robert Manor — and the absence of a body.

    Matt Chisholm: I reminded the jury that it’d been 1,889 days and no one on the face of this earth had seen Ray Wright.

    The trial, says Peggy, left her imagining the unimaginable — Ray’s final moments.

    Peggy Wright: It’s even worse … to find out … what it must have been like at the end for him. How scared he must have been. … He knew what was gonna happen.

    After an eight-day trial, the jury got the case. 

    Kennedy Wright: I remember like squeezing Haley’s hand and like thinking I was gonna throw up, like while we were waiting for the verdict.

    “A BITTERSWEET VICTORY”

    Natalie Morales: How long before you got word there’s a verdict?

    Matt Chisholm: The jury was out about four hours.

    It was late afternoon on March 17, 2023. The verdict was in.

    Kennedy Wright: It was the most gut-wrenching day of my life.

    Manor and Gray were found guilty of first-degree murder and kidnapping.

    Kennedy Wright: But it didn’t bring him back. So, it was like — it was a bittersweet victory.

    Peggy Wright: It’s … unthinkable that someone would do something like that. Like, you can’t imagine that your loved one would be swept off the earth like that.

    Victor Gray and Robert Manor booking photos
    Victor Gray, left, and Robert Manor

    Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office/PRA Request


    April 28 – the day of reckoning for Manor and Gray. Before hearing their sentence, they heard from Ray Wright’s family.

    Kennedy Wright: I said, “my dad will be in heaven, like amongst the angels, like where he belongs, and you’ll be in prison for life … where you belong.”

    Peggy Wright: We’ll never be the same. None of us. You just can’t imagine how it impacts the family.

    Manor and Gray were sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. Gray never responded to “48 Hours”‘ request for an interview. But Manor insisted there had been a miscarriage of justice.

    Robert Manor: I did not have anything to do with anything to do with Ray Wright’s disappearance at all …

    Natalie Morales: Ray Wright’s body has never been found.

    Robert Manor: No.

    Natalie Morales: Where did you bury him?

    Robert Manor: I — I never buried Ray Wright. I never chopped Ray Wright up. I never had anything to do with Ray Wright’s disappearance or murder. Nothing.

    Natalie Morales: He has a family that deserves answers. … They wanna know why? Why did you do this?

    Robert Manor: I didn’t. I did not do this.

    And there was something else Manor wanted to say. He claimed it was Gray and Barnard who had plotted to set him up by kidnapping and killing Ray Wright.

    Robert Manor: They came up with this and tried to come and ask me for money.

    Gray and Barnard tried to extort Manor for $20,000, he says — a claim that was never raised in court. Manor was making it for the first time during our interview.

    Natalie Morales: What do you make of that argument?

    Matt Chisholm: Wow. It — it — that’s a whopper, right?

    Matt Chisholm: There’s no proof of — of anything like that.

    Chisholm argues it makes much more sense that Manor was the mastermind.

    Matt Chisholm: You also have this monster motive. … Revenge.

    Robert Manor:  Let the evidence speak for itself. … Not the three people that … said the same exact phrase. You know, “I got him.”  I didn’t get nobody.

    Ray Wright's broken glasses
    Ray Wright’s broken glasses were among the evidence found in Victor Gray’s van.

    Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office/ PRA Request


    The remnants of Ray Wright’s life that were found in the van — these silent witnesses —  did speak loud and clear.

    Kennedy Wright: His famous yellow raincoat that he had had for like 15 years, like soaked in blood.

    Haley Kendall: Yeah, I think seeing his broken glasses is what sealed the deal for me.

    Kennedy Wright: That killed us.

    Haley says even her young daughter Ashtyn was overwhelmed by losing Grandpa Ray.

    Haley Kendall (crying): She always thought people were gonna go missing. … I caught her singing in the dark – songs that she would make up about where her grandpa went.

    Sgt. Zack Lewis: I hope we did enough for the family. … Until we find the body, it’s still an open missing person’s case with the Rocklin Police Department.

    Natalie Morales: At the end of the day, do you believe justice was served?

    Matt Chisholm: Yes. … justice was served. … It gives this family somewhere to start over.

    Consumed by Ray’s disappearance and death for years, friends and family decided it was time to celebrate his life.

    Dean Wright: Ray was, to me, my first best and forever friend.

    On this day, June 17 – day 1,983 since he went missing, Ray Wright’s presence filled the room and the hearts of those who loved him.

    Ray Wright and family
    Pictured from left, granddaughter Ashtyn, daughter Haley Kendall, Ray Wright, and daughter Kennedy Wright.

    Peggy Wright


    Natalie Morales: How do you want your dad to be remembered, Haley?

    Haley Kendall: Exactly how he is remembered, lovable, accountable, creative, thoughtful …

    Kennedy Wright: Like, I definitely used this whole event as motivation to do better. … It’s all like a testament to my dad.

    Peggy Wright: I hope he’s at peace … free as a bird.

    If you have any information about Ray Wright’s whereabouts please call Rocklin Police at (916) 625-5400.


    Produced by Mead Stone. Greg Fisher is the development producer. Kat Teurfs is the field producer. Doreen Schechter, Gary Winter and Mead Stone are the producer/editors. Anthony Venditti is the content research manager. Patti Aronofsky is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

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  • How was fugitive Kaitlin Armstrong caught? She answered U.S. Marshals’ ad for a yoga instructor

    How was fugitive Kaitlin Armstrong caught? She answered U.S. Marshals’ ad for a yoga instructor

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    Kaitlin Armstrong is serving 90 years in prison for murdering professional up-and-coming gravel cyclist Anna Moriah “Mo” Wilson. It’s a story that drew international headlines because after being suspected of killing Wilson in Texas, Armstrong vanished — seemingly into thin air. The search for the suspected killer sparked what would become an international manhunt — first leading authorities across the United States, and then eventually to the beaches of Costa Rica.

    In June 2022, one month after Armstrong disappeared, Deputy U.S. Marshals Damien Fernandez and Emir Perez traveled to Costa Rica. A source told them Armstrong could be hiding out in Santa Teresa. They knew finding Armstrong in the small, tourist-filled village was going to be a challenge — along the way, Armstrong used multiple identities and changed her appearance — even getting plastic surgery.

    They hit dead end after dead end. After many intense days of searching for Armstrong with no luck, the U.S. Marshals decided to try one last tactic, hoping that her love of yoga would pay off for them.

    “We decided we were gonna put an ad out … or multiple ads for a yoga instructor and see — what would happen,” Perez told “48 Hours” contributor Jonathan Vigliotti.

    But after almost a week of hunting, even that didn’t seem to be working. Perez and Fernandez were about to head back to the States, when suddenly they got a break.

    CYCLIST MO WILSON WAS FORGING HER OWN PATH 

    In March 2022, up-and-coming pro gravel bike racer –25-year-old Anna Moriah Wilson, known as “Mo” to some, appeared on the “Pre Ride Show,” an online program about cycling.

    MORIAH WILSON (“Pre Ride Show interview): So excited to be here. It feels like the first big race of the year so yeah …  I’m ready to kick it off.”

    Just two months later, Wilson was found murdered — the news shocking the cycling community.

    Lisa Gosselin Lynn: I don’t think anybody could really believe it at first. You know, why would anybody wanna hurt or harm or kill this lovely, talented young woman?

    Lisa Gosselin Lynn is the editor of Vermont Sports Magazine and Vermont Ski and Ride Magazine. She is also a CBS News consultant.

    Mo Wilson
    Anna Moriah “Mo” Wilson, a rising star in the pro cycling world, was described as funny and friendly and smart and driven.

    Ansel Dickey


    Lynn had been following Wilson’s career for many months before her tragic death.

    Lisa Gosselin Lynn: Moriah was pretty much winning every race that she entered, winning or finishing in the top two. And the races that she entered were top tier.

    Lisa Gosselin Lynn: Moriah had the potential to be one of the top bike racers, definitely in the country, and probably in the world.

    Remarkably, Lynn says that Wilson was new to the pro cycling world. Her first passion had been downhill ski racing,  a love shared by her close-knit family.

    Lisa Gosselin Lynn: She was born into a family of really great athletes. Her father Eric had been on the U.S. Ski Team. … and Moriah’s aunt … actually was a two-time Olympic Nordic ski racer.

    And it’s no surprise that Wilson was drawn to outdoor endurance sports. She was raised in northern Vermont next to Kingdom Trails, a mecca for skiers and mountain bikers.

    Lisa Gosselin Lynn: And that was her playground.

    Wilson attended Burke Mountain Academy, an elite ski school that produced Olympic greats like two-time Gold medalist Mikaela Shiffrin. Wilson had hoped to make the U.S. Ski Team, but knee injuries eventually ended her skiing career. That’s when she switched sports.

    Lisa Gosselin Lynn: She had used cycling as a way for rehabbing and kind of building back her strength. What was fascinating to me was she then went on to Dartmouth. She got an engineering degree. And after doing that, she went to her mother and said, “Hey Mom, I think I want to be a professional cyclist.”

    And Wilson told the “We Got to Hangout” podcast that she wanted to do much more than just win races.

    MORIAH WILSON (We Got to Hangout” interview): How can I inspire people? How can I give back to the cycling community? How can I bring more people into the sport? How can I make it more inclusive? … I wanna find meaning and purpose in cycling that goes like far beyond the result.

    Wilson eventually moved to San Francisco where she focused on cycling, and quickly rose to the top of the sport.

    Lisa Gosselin Lynn: Moriah was forging her own path. … She knew what she wanted to do. And she was working hard to pursue it.

    On May 10, 2022,  just one week before her 26th birthday, Wilson arrived in Austin, Texas, to prepare for the Gravel Locos bike race — a race she was favored to win. Wilson stayed with a close friend in her Austin apartment. But the next evening, just before 10 p.m., the friend returned home and discovered Wilson, who had been shot multiple times. She called 911.

    CAITLIN CASH | 911 call:  … she’s laying on the bathroom floor and there’s blood everywhere.

    Wilson’s friend tried CPR, but it was too late.

    Det. Marc McLeod: It sounded like it started off near the door … and went backwards. Like she was trying to get away or there was some sort of struggle.

    Austin Police Officers Marc McLeod and Jonathan Riley worked the case from the beginning.

    Det. Marc McLeod: Whoever shot her at that point stood over top of her and shot her at least once.

    Investigators wondered who could have murdered this promising young athlete. As they canvassed the immediate area, police discovered a possible clue. Wilson’s expensive racing bicycle had been discarded in the bushes.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: So, at that point … OK. Is this a burglary, a robbery gone wrong?

    But that theory was quickly dismissed because there was no sign of a break-in. Then, police learned that just hours before Wilson was found murdered, at around 8:30 p.m., she had been dropped off by another professional bike racer named Colin Strickland.

    Det. Marc McCloud: So, obviously the focus would be … who’s this Colin Strickland?

    Lisa Gosselin Lynn: Colin Strickland was a very good gravel racer. … He was at the top echelon.

    Colin Strickland, who was 35, was considered a pioneer in the sport. He had won some of the most prestigious races and was sponsored by the industry’s top brands, like Red Bull.

    In 2020, he appeared in an online video called Wahoo Frontiers about his long and successful career.

    COLIN STRICKLAND (Wahoo Frontiers video): My name is Colin Strickland and I’m a bicycle racer and a general entertainer.

    Chris Tolley: Pretty early on I looked up to Colin when I was coming up on the scene.

    Chris Tolley is friends with Strickland. They met on the racetrack.

    Chris Tolley: He was the one to beat. … He loved to kind of create a show around bike racing — kind of selling bike racing. He was really passionate about it.

    Colin Strickland
    Colin Strickland

    Nicole Fara Silver


    And Tolley said although his friend had been popular with women, he eventually became serious with a woman named Kaitlin Armstrong. However, in a social media post after the crime, Strickland wrote that about six months before Wilson’s murder, during a short breakup with Armstrong, he did have a “brief romantic relationship” with Wilson that “spanned a week or so.” He said that it ended, and their relationship had turned into a “platonic and professional one.”

    Chris Tolley: He just wanted to be friends with, like, someone who was going to do great things in cycling.

    The day after Wilson’s murder, police visited and spoke to Strickland at his home.

    Det. Marc McLeod: My … my personal take was he was being very cooperative, being very forthcoming. Um, obviously he was in shock.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Being very transparent.

    Det. Marc McLeod: Very transparent. Yeah.

    And investigators say, when he agreed to go down to the police station to be interviewed, he didn’t seem to hold back when telling them about the day he spent with Wilson — a day that would end up being her last.

    That day in May was hot, in the 80s. And this story started with a swim at a local outdoor pool. Strickland told detectives he took Wilson there on the back of his motorcycle to cool off.

    Det. Marc McLeod: They went swimming, then they got food.

    Wilson and Strickland are seen on the restaurant’s security camera.

    Colin Strickland and Mo Wilson
    Colin Strickland and Mo Wilson seen on a restaurant’s security camera.

    Travis County District Attorney’s Office


    Jonathan Vigliotti: I know he’s being transparent at this point during this questioning, but what he’s saying is starting to sound a lot like a date.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: Yes.

    Det. Marc McLeod: Oh yeah. A hundred percent.

    Investigators had a lot of questions and their prior visit to Strickland’s home had raised even more. On the night of Wilson’s murder, police discovered an important clue on video from a neighbor’s security camera. The video was taken just one minute after Wilson was dropped off.

    Det. Marc McLeod: There’s a video from a Ring doorbell camera that clearly shows like a black SUV with a bike rack. … You can’t see the license plate because of the bike rack on it.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: So, it was obviously … we need to focus on this.

    And a vehicle that fit that description was outside Strickland’s house. Who was driving the black Jeep SUV with the bike rack? The answer would lead directly to another woman.

    WHO IS KAITLYN ARMSTRONG?

    The day after Wilson’s murder, investigators quickly had an answer to who could have been driving that black Jeep that was seen on security cameras shortly before her death.

    Investigators had spotted a similar looking Jeep in Strickland’s driveway when they spoke to him.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: They see a black Jeep with the bike rack on the back of it. so at that point we run the license plate, and it comes back that it’s registered to Kaitlin Armstrong.

    Kaitlin Armstrong, Colin Strickland’s girlfriend. Tolley says he knew her very well.

    Chris Tolley: We connected pretty early on. … Kaitlin and I became friends.

    They were both from the Midwest.

    Chris Tolley: We kinda had a similar — like, upbringing, and so I think that kind of — you know, help us become, like, even better friends. … She’d come over to parties I would have.

    Armstrong had a background in finance and loved yoga.

    Chris Tolley: She had a really strong, you know, kind of — you  know, love for travel, love — you know, she had spent time pretty much, you know, globe-hopping around the world … really, you know, a kind of interesting person.

    Armstrong got certified as a yoga instructor in Bali. After she met Strickland in 2019, she also started getting into cycling.

    Chris Tolley: He was very willing to kind of show her, you know, what his passions were and how passionate he was for cycling and, you know, get her involved with it and she also became … kind of addicted to cycling, along with Colin.

    Armstrong even started racing on an amateur level.

    Chris Tolley: At the end of the day, like, I feel like they had a pretty, like, normal relationship. They both ride bikes together. They would, you know, do fun stuff. And, you know, then 2020 happened and the pandemic started. So everyone was kind of, you know, forced with – you know, close quarters with their significant others.

    The couple eventually moved in together.

    Chris Tolley: The moment I — I saw the relationship become more serious is  you know, they talked about — that they’d purchased a house recently — together, which I  thought, you know, was a pretty big indication that it’s — you know, a serious relationship.

    They also started a business together, restoring classic trailers.

    Chris Tolley: I think she was helping with the finance side of things. Colin was doing a lot of the operations. … their relationship went from, you know, just a — normal couple to also owning a business together.

    Kaitlin Armstrong and Colin Strickland
    Kaitlin Armstrong and Colin Strickland

    Chris Tolley


    But things got bumpy in late 2021.

    Chris Tolley: The breakup, I personally didn’t know, like, they were split up at the time. … neither of them mentioned anything to me.

    It was during this time that Strickland and Wilson had briefly dated. Although Strickland had said that they had broken it off, Wilson seemed confused in the aftermath. Pilar Melendez covered the case for the Daily Beast. 

    Pilar Melendez | Daily Beast senior reporter: Around this time, I think Mo was pretty confused about the status of her relationship with Colin. … and she literally wrote:

    …This weekend was strange for me…

    …If you just want to be friends…that’s cool,

    …Honestly…my mind has been going in circles…

     Pilar Melendez: it sounds like someone who’s in their early 20s who just wants to know the status of her relationship with someone that’s confusing her. And it seems totally reasonable that she might be confused.

    Strickland had a lot to say about his relationship with Armstrong.

    Det. Marc McLeod: He starts to portray her as being the jealous type, even saying things like,” I can’t keep people in my phone.” Like “Mo’s not in my phone as Mo.”

    Strickland told investigators he kept Wilson’s phone number under an alias in his contacts, and on that evening after he’d been out with Wilson at the pool, he texted Armstrong that he’d been out running an errand and that his phone had died. That was not true.

    Investigators say, there were other clues pointing toward Armstrong.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: … on the night of the murder, Kaitlin Armstrong’s phone was not connected to a cell network.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Not connected?

    Det. Jonathan Riley: Correct. So, whether she powered it off, whether she put in an airplane mode, uh, there’s some something happened that her phone was not communicating with any cellphone towers.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Do you think this was on purpose?

    Det. Jonathan Riley: Absolutely … in this day and age, if your phone is off and not connected to a network, you’re either the victim of a crime or you’re probably committing one.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: A silent phone speaks louder in some cases than actions.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: Oh, absolutely.

    Strickland also shared that he had bought handguns for Armstrong and himself for personal security

    Det. Marc McLeod: He talks about how they purchase guns.

    Det. Marc McLeod: And that there are these two guns and that she has a gun, um, they’ve taken lessons and that those — these guns are back at the house. And so few things like that start to paint a picture of like, this could — it could definitely be her

    Police worked quickly. That same day, investigators picked Armstrong up on an old warrant for failing to pay for a Botox treatment.

    Kaitlin Armstrong, left, during questioning.
    Kaitlin Armstrong, left, during questioning.

    Travis County District Attorney’s Office


    DETECTIVE CONNER: … what were you doing yesterday?

    KAITLIN ARMSTRONG: I would like to leave.

    Det. Marc McLeod: And she’s just kind of sitting there and she’s not showing very much emotion at all. … typically when we see some interviews going on and if you didn’t do it, this is your, like, you’re going to be like, you know, not me, not it. I want out of this room. What do you want to know? … So that you don’t come back looking for me. And there was none of that.

    DETECTIVE CONNER: Is there any explanation as far as why the vehicle would be over there?

    KAITLIN ARMSTRONG: I would like to leave …

    Det. Jonathan Riley: She was almost completely disinterested in — in hearing what the detectives had to say.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: So, it sounds like this is a big red flag immediately?

    Marc McLeod: Oh —

    Jonathan Riley: Oh, absolutely.

    But investigators had to let Armstrong go. There was a problem — Armstrong’s birthdate didn’t match the date on the warrant, so the warrant wasn’t valid, and police didn’t have enough to charge her with anything else.

    Two days after that interview, police got an unexpected call. It was from a friend of Armstrong. Police say the caller told them that Armstrong was so angry about Strickland’s relationship with Wilson, that she wanted to kill her. It was yet another indication that they were on the right track. A few days later, an arrest warrant was issued, but when police went looking for Armstrong, she was gone.

    ON THE HUNT FOR KAITLIN ARMSTRONG

    After Kaitlin Armstrong vanished, U.S. Marshals got the job of tracking her down.

    Chris Godsick: Plain and simply the Marshals are man hunters.

    Chris Godsick hosts and produces a podcast with the U.S. Marshals Service. His “Chasing Evil” podcast tells stories of some of the Marshals Service’s biggest cases, including the hunt for Armstrong.

    Chris Godsick: Nobody thought Kaitlin Armstrong was going to run and she surprised them all. She disappeared.

    “CHASING EVIL” PODCAST: Kaitlin Armstrong ran from a murder charge. … But the U.S. Marshals Lone Star Fugitive task force had a different plan …

    Jonathan Vigliotti: So take me through this. … Where do you begin when you’re looking for somebody that does not want to be found?

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: You know, it depends on the case, honestly. … we look for friends, sometimes we look for … family.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: One of the things that I did was collect as many photos as I could.

    Lone Star Fugitive Task Force
    “48 Hours” contributor Jonathan Vigliotti, center, with members of the Lone Star Fugitive Task Force. From left, Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez, Deputy U.S.Marshal Damien Fernandez, Vigliotti, Austin Police Officer Jonathan Riley and Austin Police Officer Marc McLeod.

    CBS News


    Damien Fernandez and Emir Perez are Deputy U.S. Marshals. They joined Austin Police Officers Jonathan Riley and Marc McLeod on the case. The team, based in Texas, is known as the Lone Star Fugitive Task Force.

    With no sign of Armstrong, the task force suspected she may have left town headed for her sister Christie’s place in upstate New York.

    Det. Marc McLeod: We were thinking maybe she’s driving cross country. We didn’t know.

    Their instincts were right. In upstate New York, another Deputy U.S. Marshal managed to track down Armstrong’s sister.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: What did the sister say?

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: The sister ultimately said … that her sister had come to visit her … and stayed with her a couple of days, but that she had dropped her off at the airport in Newark. And last she heard, she was gonna board a flight back to Austin, but then called her back later and said that she decided that she was gonna drive back.

    Det. Marc McLeod: … which made absolute — no sense to any of us that you would just drive back.

    When the task force checked outbound flights at Newark Airport, no reservations had been made in Kaitlin Armstrong’s name.

    Det. Marc McLeod: We never got a hit on Kaitlin Armstrong’s passport.

    But the team had a hunch because Christie Armstrong told the Deputy U.S. Marshal in New York that she didn’t know where her passport was. So they checked with their contact at Homeland Security.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: And within minutes of reaching out to him, he got back to me and he’s like, yeah, we’re showing Christie Armstrong traveled out of Newark, New Jersey, International Airport on a one-way flight to Costa Rica

    Jonathan Vigliotti: You knew it.

    Emir Perez: I said, there’s no way that the sister left. And we’re looking for her and we can’t find Kaitlin. No, that’s Kaitlin.

    The U.S. Marshals suspected that Kaitlin Armstrong has used her sister’s passport to flee. Christie Armstrong later emphasized to authorities that she did not give her sister the passport. She has never been charged with any crime related to the case.

    Kaitlin Armstrong landed in Costa Rica, the gem of central America and home to mountains, tropical rain forests and white sand beaches as far as the eye can see.

    But she didn’t spend much time in San José. Shortly after arriving, Armstrong disappeared again — and she had a huge lead on the U.S. Marshals. Perez and Fernandez arrived in Costa Rica a month after Armstrong.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: This is you guys now on the hunt. How intense is it once you touch down in Costa Rica? What happens?

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: You’re on a timeline.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: I hear timeline and I hear the pressure is on —

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: Pressure’s on. I know we were sitting in the plane and we’re talking, what’s the game plan?

    Although they would have help from the Costa Rican authorities and U.S. State Department officers on the ground, they knew finding Armstrong was going to be a big challenge.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: We had other intelligence indicating that … she was staying in hostels in Costa Rica. And I don’t know if you know anything about Costa Rica, but Costa Rica has a lot of hostels, a lot, an unbelievable amount of hostels.

    The U.S. Marshals wouldn’t tell “48 Hours” exactly how their intelligence gathering worked, but their team back in the States had managed to track down the phone number for an American businessman they believed had connected with Armstrong at some point.

    Det. Marc McLeod: We didn’t know what city he was in. So we decided, hey, let’s just cold call him. … So we call him. And we’re on the conference room and he answers. And we’re like, “Hey, it’s the U.S. Marshals. My name is Marc.” And he goes, “I don’t want any,” click just hangs up. Like it’s a — like a —

    Jonathan Vigliotti: A telemarketer.

    Det. Marc McLeod: Yeah. A telemarketer.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: Right. Or a scam call.

    After three or four call attempts, the businessman finally stayed on the line to answer the U.S. Marshals’ questions.

    Det. Marc McLeod: And we actually ended up sending a picture of Kaitlin … while we’re on the phone with him. He looks at it and he goes, yes, but she doesn’t look like that and she’s not using that name.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: And did he tell you her new name?

    Det. Marc McLeod: He did.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: It was Beth.

    Det. Marc McLeod: Beth.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: She was going by Beth.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Going by Beth.

    Kaitlin Armstrong
    Kaitlin Armstrong

    U.S. Marshals


    And the businessman said Armstrong no longer looked like her photo. She had cut her hair and changed its color.

    Det. Jonathan Riley: It was brown hair instead of red.

    Emir Perez: Yeah, she dyed her hair.

    The businessman told the U.S. Marshals he had no idea that the woman who called herself Beth was actually Kaitlin Armstrong, but he did tell them where they might find her.

    Det. Marc McLeod: He’s like, “Well, I met her at a yoga studio in Jacó.”

    Jacó is a popular tourist destination known for its nightlife and its beaches and the perfect place to hide. It was the U.S. Marshals’ first real tip, so they rushed  there.

    They canvassed the area, combed through hours of surveillance video, but could not find a single sign of Kaitlin Armstrong anywhere. It was a bust.

    Chris Godsick: … but the Marshals have one more solid lead and that takes them to a beautiful touristy beach town— a one-street town called Santa Teresa.

    WAS KAITLIN ARMSTRONG HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT?

    One month after Kaitlin Armstrong disappeared, the U.S. Marshals were in hot pursuit of her in another area of Costa Rica. A source had suggested she might have gone to a small village on the Pacific coast.

    The U.S. Marshals took a ferry to reach a remote peninsula. Once there, they drove by car through mountains to the tiny town of Santa Teresa. But when they finally arrived, they ran into an unexpected problem.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: … you get to Santa Teresa. … Was it easy to identify her there from the other people that were there?

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: I think from the get-go we were told … you’re gonna be in for a surprise ’cause a lot of the women in Santa Teresa look just like Kaitlin — a lot of them.

    And it turns out, that advice was right. The town was full of foreign tourists. Deputy U.S. Marshals Fernandez and Perez arrived in Santa Teresa after dark.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: So, we get there, and he starts walking down a main strip that’s there, uh, like down the street.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: There’s only one road on — on that town.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: And he sees —

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: Main road.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: He sees a girl and he says, you know, that looks just like her. Well, a couple minutes later, we see another one. And it’s late at night and we’re like, whoa, oh, man, that’s two. … And then there’s another one.

    As the U.S. Marshals tried to find Armstrong, they even had one of their female operatives start going to yoga classes to see if they could spot her.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: She actually did three different classes for us.

    And they tapped into local contacts.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: Oh, yeah. We made friends with people there that would send us pictures. Oh look, I — I think I saw her at this restaurant yesterday and she’s in the back in the background of a photo that I took, stuff like that.

    Kaitlin Armstrong wanted poster
    The search for Kaitlin Armstrong sparked what would become an international manhunt — first leading authorities across the U.S. and then eventually to the beaches of Costa Rica. While on the run, she used different names and changed her appearance.

    U.S. Marshals


    In fact, people had seen Armstrong at local spots in Santa Teresa, but they didn’t realize who she was. Armstrong was hiding in plain sight using different names.

    Jonathan Vigliotti:  She had like multiple names.

    Greg Haber: Yeah. Um, she came in —

    Man in restaurant: Beth?

    Greg Haber: Um —

    Jonathan Vigliotti Beth?

    Greg Haber: It wasn’t Beth.

    Woman in restaurant: Ari?

    Greg Haber: Ari.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Ari.

    Greg Haber: Ari, right. So she came in as Ari.

    Greg Haber is an American from the New York area who owns a restaurant called Kooks Smokehouse and Bar in Santa Teresa.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Ari. What did Ari look like? Did she stand out to you?

    Greg Haber: Pretty, came in, um, you know, introduced herself as a yoga teacher, which is basically anybody else down here … “hey, I moved here, teaching yoga down the street” … and that was it.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: What was her general vibe like?

    Greg Haber: She definitely seemed like she was trying to establish roots here. Like this was gonna be her new home.

    And Haber says one day he noticed something different about her.

    Greg Haber: I saw her on the beach. … I walk my dog on the beach every night for sunset. … And you’re walking through, and you see the bandage on her face. It’s like, “Oh, what happened?” She’s like, “Oh, surfboard hit me in the face.”

    Greg Haber: It’s like, well, happens to everybody, right, at least once. So, you wouldn’t even question that story here. Like, you see people all the time.

    Turns out that bandage would later prove to be an important part of this story — and one of the reasons the U.S. Marshals say Armstrong was so hard to find.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: So, you’re this close to giving up.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: Yes.

    Finally, they decided on one last tactic: they turned to a local Facebook page.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: We decided we were gonna put an ad out, for a yoga instructor and see what would happen.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: So this is the equivalent of Craigslist.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez  Yes, correct. Right. Pretty much.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: A little bit more lively, but yes. … And just saying, hey, we’re at this hostel, we’re looking for a yoga instructor as soon as possible. Please contact us at this number.

    But after almost a week of hunting, even that didn’t seem to be working.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: Sunday, we decided we haven’t gotten any response back from anything.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: Nothing. We’re burned.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: So, Sunday we’re like, OK, we’re done. … None of ’em have panned out. So —

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: We’re going back to San José 

    Now back in San José,  the U.S. Marshals were getting ready to head home when suddenly —

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: We got a bite, somebody that, um, identified herself … as a yoga instructor and said they wanted to meet with us at a particular hostel … and we said … “this is, this is our chance!”

    Perez and Fernandez rushed back to Santa Teresa just ahead of a tropical storm.

    Tourism Police Lieutenant Juan Carlos Solanos’ team helped the U.S. Marshals in their search for Armstrong. They did surveillance on a hostel called “Don Jon’s” where the yoga instructor — the one who answered that online ad — was believed to be.

    Jonathan Vigliotti (to Solano in Costa Rica): So, there is this massive international manhunt, and of all places in the world, it ends in this very discreet hostel.

    Lt. Juan Carlos Solano: Sí, aquí se ubicó, ella estaba hospedada acá. (Translation: Yes, this is where she was staying, she was staying here.)

    It was now time for the U.S. Marshals to make their move.

    They decided that Deputy U.S. Marshal Perez would approach the woman alone. They didn’t want to scare her off. He would pretend to be a tourist and try to get a really good look at her face.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: So I walked up … and I got in. And I saw two individuals sitting there at a table, off to the left, as soon as I walked in.

    He says one was a woman.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: She looked like Kaitlin, but not 100 percent. … So I thought, well, how can I approach her or get close enough where I start asking questions where she doesn’t suspect something, So, I decided that I was gonna speak to her in Spanish. So I spoke to her in nothing but Spanish.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: So, you’re communicating, she goes to use her phone for Google Translate and then –

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez: So, I got a little closer ’cause I saw that she was trying to get to Google Translate on her phone and she’d raised it up to me and I got even closer. And I noticed that she had a bandage on her nose and possibly her lips were swollen. and I saw her eyes … The eyes are the exact same ones that I saw in the picture. And this is her 100 percent.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: He gets in the car, and he is like, “That’s her. She’s in there.”

    Kaitlin Armstrong arrest
    Kaitlin Armstrong was caught and arrested at a hostel on Santa Teresa, Costa Rica, on June 29, 2022.

    U.S. Marshals


    Local police moved in to make the actual arrest. And soon the U.S. Marshals discovered why Armstrong had been so hard to find: she had been getting plastic surgery when they first arrived in Santa Teresa.

    At the hostel, they found a receipt.

    Damien Fernandez: The receipt for, surgery.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Plastic surgery?

    Damien Fernandez: Plastic surgery.

    Kaitlin Armstrong before,and after plastic surgery.
    Kaitlin Armstrong before,left, and after her plastic surgery.

    U.S. Marshals/Harris County Sheriff’s Office


    In side-by-side photos, you can see that Armstrong changed the shape of her nose. The Deputy Marshals said their female operative — the woman they sent to yoga classes to try and find Armstrong — told them Armstrong’s new look would have tricked her.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: She told me, I think if I would’ve run into her at the yoga studio doing yoga classes, I don’t think I would’ve recognized her.

    Jonathan Vigliotti: Wow. It almost worked.

    Deputy U.S. Marshal Damien Fernandez: It almost worked.

    THE CASE AGAINST KAITLIN ARMSTRONG

    The U.S. Marshals took Armstrong back to Texas, where she was charged and held in jail. But just weeks before she was due to stand trial for the murder of Moriah Wilson, Armstrong escaped from custody again.

    Pilar Melendez: She was at a doctor’s appointment and tried to escape as they were walking out.

    Pilar Melendez from the Daily Beast says Armstrong didn’t get far before deputies caught her.

    Pilar Melendez: It was pretty astonishing that she did that given the fact that she had tried to escape prosecution prior.

    D.A. José Garza: This was just more evidence of her guilt.

    José Garza is Travis County’s district attorney. He says his team of prosecutors — Rickey Jones and Guillermo Gonzalez — were more than ready to try the case.

    D.A. José Garza: When we learned that she had tried to escape, it just added to our confidence level in the facts of this case … that we would be able to secure justice for Moriah and her family.

    On Nov. 1, 2023, Armstrong’s trial began.

    RICKEY JONES | Prosecutor (opening statement): The last thing Mo did on this earth was scream in terror.

    In opening statements, Jones told the jury about chilling audio from a security camera that

    captured the last moments of Moriah Wilson’s life.

    RICKEY JONES (opening statement): Those screams are followed by “pow! pow!” Two gunshots. … Kaitlin Armstrong stood over Mo Wilson and put a third shot. Right into Mo’s heart.

    Prosecutors said Armstrong had been tracking Wilson by using a sports app.

    Pilar Melendez: Kaitlin, prior to the murder, had been following Mo on the Strava app, which is basically an app that athletes use to track their miles, running, biking … And she knew exactly where she was.

    And they said that Armstrong, on the night of the murder, was most likely tracking Colin Strickland, as well.

    Guillermo Gonzalez | Prosecutor: She did have the ability to monitor his communications. She had access to all of his passwords. She had access to his Instagram account. 

    Rickey Jones: I believe that when Mo sent Colin a text letting him know the address where she was. I believe that Kaitlin Armstrong was at home on Colin Strickland’s laptop. … She saw that message.

    After murdering Wilson and before leaving the scene, Jones told the jury that Armstrong took Wilson’s bike and discarded it in the bushes just yards away from where her Jeep was parked.

    Mo Wilson's bike
    As investigators canvassed the immediate area after Moriah Wilson’s shooting, police discovered her expensive racing bicycle had been discarded in the bushes. Kaitlin Armstrong’s DNA would later be found on the handlebars and seat of Wilson’s bike.

    Travis County District Attorney’s Office


    Rickey Jones: Our belief is that she maybe staged it to look like a robbery or something. Or, another theory is, Mo Wilson’s bike is a tool of her trade. It might have been like the bullet shot in the heart. I’m going to shoot you in the heart. I’m going to throw away your bike.

    But they said Armstrong made one big mistake: she left her DNA behind on the handlebars and seat of Wilson’s bike. And that’s not all the evidence prosecutors had against Armstrong. There was that receipt that showed Armstrong had received plastic surgery while hiding out in Costa Rica.

    Rickey Jones: Everything she does … it’s all consistent with trying to evade the authorities.

    But when it was the defense’s turn, attorney Geoffrey Puryear told the jury there was no direct evidence — including security footage — that actually showed Armstrong was at the scene of the crime.

    GEOFFREY PURYEAR (in court): Not one witness saw Kaitlin Armstrong allegedly commit this murder.

    Then why would Armstrong flee and hide from authorities? Defense attorney Rick Cofer pointed the finger at Colin Strickland.

    RICK COFER (in court): Was she scared? What do you think? Do you think that she may have been concerned a little bit that her boyfriend had killed someone? … Fear results in fight or flight and it was flight.

    But Jones said, there was a big problem with this theory because Strickland had nothing to do with the murder of Wilson.

    Rickey Jones: In fact, at the time of the murder, he was actually on the phone speaking with someone. … it wasn’t Colin Strickland.

    Armstrong’s defense team did not respond to “48 Hours”‘ request for an interview.

    After a two-week trial, it took the jury around two hours to decide Armstrong’s fate.

    JUDGE (reading verdict): We the jury find the defendant Kaitlin Armstrong guilty of the offense of murder

    wilson-parents-court.jpg
    “As a prosecutor, the first row right behind you is the family … you began to feel their pain and their desire for a just outcome for their loved ones,” said Rickey Jones.

    AP


    Rickey Jones: As a prosecutor, the first row right behind you is the family … you began to feel their pain and their desire for a just outcome for their loved ones.

    One day after her conviction, Armstrong was sentenced to 90 years behind bars. 

    But before the case came to an end, Judge Brenda Kennedy allowed Caitlin Cash — Wilson’s close friend whose apartment she had been staying at and who had found Moriah’s body – to take the stand and speak directly to Armstrong.

    CAITLIN CASH (in court): So many people in this room have lost so much. … I’m angry at you, at the utter tragic nature, at the senselessness at not being able to hear Mo’s voice again. … I feel deep sadness for the road ahead.

    Then it was Moriah Wilson’s mother’s turn.

    KAREN WILSON (in court): I hate what you did to my beautiful daughter. It was very selfish and cowardly that violent act on May 11th. It was cowardly because you never chose to face her woman-to-woman in a civil conversation. She would’ve listened. She was an amazing listener. She would have cared about your feelings.

    Mo Wilson
    Anna Moriah “Mo” Wilson

    Elliot Wilkinson Ray


    But despite the pain, Karen Wilson closed with words of love and optimism, because she said that’s how Moriah would have wanted it.

    KAREN WILSON (in court): You killed her earthly body, but her spirit is so very much alive, and you can never change that.

    Today in Kingdom Trails in northern Vermont, a place that was sacred to Wilson, a trail was built in her honor. It’s called “Moriah’s Ascent.”

    Lisa Gosselin Lynn: Moriah was a Vermonter. She was giving. She was hardworking. She was honest. She was caring. And she came from a wonderful family. And that family really wants that legacy and all of her good qualities to inspire others …

    To honor Moriah, the Wilson family created the Moriah Wilson Foundation that promotes healthy living and community building.


    Produced by Chuck Stevenson and Chris Ritzen. Hannah Vair is the field producer. Alicia Tejada is the coordinating producer. Ryan Smith, Jenna Jackson and Cindy Cesare are the development producers. Matthew Mosk is the senior investigative editorial director. Wini Dini, Mike Baluzy, Grayce Arlotta-Berner and Joan Adelman are the editors. Lourdes Aguiar is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

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  • Plastic surgery helped murder suspect Kaitlin Armstrong stay on the run

    Plastic surgery helped murder suspect Kaitlin Armstrong stay on the run

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    Before Kaitlin Armstrong was found guilty of killing professional gravel cyclist Anna Moriah “Mo” Wilson, she was on the run in Costa Rica from the murder charge.

    A few days after Wilson was murdered on May 11, 2022, a warrant was issued for Armstrong. She had become a suspect because her Jeep was seen on security cameras shortly before Wilson was murdered. She had also been described as being angry over a past relationship her boyfriend Colin Strickland had with Wilson. But when investigators went to look for her, she was nowhere to be found. The Lone Star Fugitive Task Force got the job of tracking her down. They suspected Armstrong had flown to Costa Rica on May 18, 2022. There, she tried to hide her identity by using other names —  Beth and Ari — and she cut and dyed her hair.

    Two Deputy U.S. Marshals, part of the task force, headed to Costa Rica to find her. “48 Hours” contributor Jonathan Vigliotti has the first interview with members of the task force in “Capturing Moriah Wilson’s Killer,” airing Saturday, Jan. 27 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount +.

    Lone Star Fugitive Task Force
    “48 Hours” contributor Jonathan Vigliotti, center, with members of the Lone Star Fugitive Task Force. From left, Deputy U.S. Marshal Emir Perez, Deputy U.S.Marshal Damien Fernandez, Vigliotti, Austin Police Officer Jonathan Riley and Austin Police Officer Marc McLeod.

    CBS News


    Deputy Marshals Emir Perez and Damien Fernandez landed in San José, Costa Rica, on June 20, 2022. They quickly moved to the beach town of Jacó, looking for Armstrong, but they did not find her. From there, a tip led them to Santa Teresa, another beach town popular among surfers and yoga enthusiasts.

    The Marshals made it to Santa Teresa at night on June 22, 2022, and they quickly found that Armstrong was likely blending in. “I think from the get-go we were told … you’re gonna be in for a surprise ’cause a lot of the women in Santa Teresa look just like Kaitlin — a lot of them,” said Fernandez.

    Perez and Fernandez knew that Armstrong was into yoga, so they sent a female operative to a few classes to see if they could spot her. “She actually did, three different classes for us,” said Perez. And they tapped into local contacts who reported various possible sightings of Armstrong. But nothing panned out.

    The Marshals later discovered why they initially failed to find her in Santa Teresa. Those first few days they were searching for Armstrong, she was not there. Armstrong had gone to San José where she got plastic surgery. The Marshals and Armstrong had just missed each other.

    “I mean, talk about odds. …the whole time that we’re in Santa Teresa, she’s not there,” said  Perez.

    Kaitlin Armstrong before and after plastic surgery.
    Kaitlin Armstrong before,left, and after her plastic surgery.

    U.S. Marshals/Harris County Sheriff’s Office


    The Deputy Marshals did not give up and came up with another plan to track her down that finally worked. Armstrong was caught and arrested on June 29. A receipt for cosmetic surgery was discovered at the hostel where she was found. Perez said she had a bandage on her nose when he found her, but it was her eyes that gave her away.

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  • Why did someone want Texas couple Ted and Corey Shaughnessy dead?

    Why did someone want Texas couple Ted and Corey Shaughnessy dead?

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    When wealthy Austin jewelers Corey and Ted Shaughnessy are attacked by intruders in their own home, investigators initially wondered if it was a robbery gone wrong. The answer was more sinister than anyone could have expected.    

    March 2, 2018: A shootout in the dead of night

    Shaughnessy crime scene evidence

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    In a sprawling suburban home in Austin, Texas, 55-year-old Ted Shaughnessy, and his wife Corey were asleep, when in the middle of the night, they were awoken by home invaders. When Ted went to check out the scene, he was faced with a barrage of gunfire.

    Corey Shaughnessy fights back 

    Shaughnessy crime scene evidence

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    As shooters continued to fire in the Shaughnessy home, Corey used her own handgun to shoot back. When Corey ran out of ammunition, she hid in a closet and called the police, frantically pleading for help. Ted, her husband of 30 years, lay dead near their kitchen table.

    Bart, one of the family’s beloved Rottweilers also shot dead

    Bart Shaughnessy
    Bart, one of Ted and Corey’s two Rottweilers, was killed in the shootout.

    Corey Shaughnessy


    Investigators arrive on the scene

    Shaughnessy crime scene evidence

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    Paul Salo and James Moore of the Travis County Sheriff’s Office arrived to investigate the shooting. Moore described the crime scene as, “a hail of gunfire.”

    The Shaughnessy home was in a state of chaos with broken glass everywhere and bullets lodged in the walls. Investigators found different types of bullet casings on the floor. This led them to believe that there was more than one shooter responsible for the attack.

    An open window raises suspicion

    Shaughnessy crime scene evidence

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    While inspecting the scene, investigators noticed an open window on the side of the house, and they wondered if the intruders had used it to get into the Shaughnessy residence. The window led to an unoccupied bedroom that had once belonged to their son, Nick Shaughnessy. 

    Inside a drawer in that room, police discovered an empty gun box and wondered if the missing gun, a .40 caliber gun, could have been used in the shooting. 

    Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison arrive

    Shaughnessy crime scene

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    Corey broke the news of her husband’s death to Nick, then 19, who lived two hours away with his girlfriend Jackie Edison in College Station, Texas. They immediately drove to Austin. At the scene, Nick did something investigators thought was odd. The open side window was not visible from the street. Without being told it was open or that investigators thought it might have been the entry point, Nick walked right over to it.  

    Why was the couple targeted? 

    Ted and Corey Shaughnessy owned a jewelry store in Austin, Texas. Corey thought that being jewelers might have made them targets.  But Amy Meredith, the former assistant district attorney, noted that nothing from the home was stolen, and began to believe it was an inside job.     

    Police question Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison 

    Detectives question Nick Shaughnessy
    Nick Shaughnessy being questioned by Travis County detectives.

    Travis County DA’s Office


    Nick and Edison were taken to the station for questioning later that day. They told detectives they had been at their apartment in College Station at the time of the attack. Nick also told detectives that he had not been in Austin for a month.

    A search warrant reveals more clues

    shaughnessy-09.jpg
    Ammunition found during a search of Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison’s College Station, Texas, home.

    Travis County DA’s Office


    A few days later, investigators executed a search warrant for Nick and Edison’s apartment. In their search, investigators found ammunition. Though common among gun owners, they discovered that the ammunition was the same brand and caliber that was found at the crime scene.

    Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison are married and move in with Corey 

    Marriage certificate
    Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison’s marriage certificate.

    Travis County DA’s Office


    Through their search, investigators also learned that Nick and Jackie were secretly married. This was news to Corey, as well. Despite feeling they were too young, she offered to help them plan a proper wedding. And she had ample opportunity because in the days after Ted’s death, the young couple moved in with Corey.

    At this point, investigators suspected Nick and Edison may have planned the attack on the Ted and Corey. Since it was still just a working theory, they could not tell Corey.

    Corey Shaughnessy stands by her son as investigators close in

    Nicolas Shaughnessy
    Nicolas Shaughnessy

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    Regardless of the suspicions surrounding her son, Corey stood by him, hiring him a defense attorney and maintaining his innocence.  

    Nick Shaughnessy’s whereabouts are questioned    

    shaughnessy-12.jpg
    A map of Nick Shaughnessy’s cellphone usage on Feb. 28, 2018.

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    As authorities continued to investigate, incriminating information arose. Although phone records showed Nick had been more than 100 miles away at the time of his father’s murder, they also showed evidence of a lie. Nick told authorities he hadn’t been to Austin for a month, but phone records proved otherwise. Phone usage showed Nick in Austin on Feb. 28,  just two days before Ted’s death.

    Jackie Edison withdraws money from the bank

    Investigators also say they found text messages between Nick and Edison that show suspicious correspondence. In one text, Nick asks Edison to make a cash withdrawal. Detectives say that Jackie did in fact make this withdrawal, taking out $1,000 from the bank, just days before the murder.      

    A key witness

    In May of 2018, investigators talked to a high school friend of Nick’s named Spencer Patterson. Patterson proved to be an important witness. He told investigators that Nick had approached him, letting him know that he expected to come into $8 million once his parents died.

    A double arrest

    shaughnessy-mugs.jpg
    Nick Shaughnessy and Jaclyn Edison

    On May 29, 2018, Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison were arrested for criminal solicitation.     

    Revealing surveillance footage

    shaughnessy-surveillance.jpg
    Surveillance video shows Nick Shaughnessy, left, greeting two men at his front door.

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    Security footage from Nick and Jackie’s front porch proved to be a major turn in the case. Recorded just two days before the attack, it shows Nick greeting two men at the front door.

    One of the men in the video is wearing a T-shirt with a logo, which led detectives to a nearby window company.  An employee’s daughter told detectives she had met the man in the surveillance footage. His name was Cameron Vosmek.

    Cameron Vosmek’s wife tells all 

    Detectives went to Vosmek’s home, and he wasn’t there. But his wife seemed to know exactly why they had shown up.

    She told them a man named Johnny Leon had asked her husband to commit murder for money. Vosmek declined to help Leon and was ruled out as a suspect. But detectives now knew who the other man in the surveillance video was.

    A third arrest

    Johnny Leon booking photo
    Johnny Leon

    Travis County DA’s Office


    Johnny Leon was questioned by police and arrested for capital murder. And police were able to find evidence that Leon did not act alone. On Leon’s phone investigators found a flurry of contacts around the time of the murder with a man named Arieon Smith.

    A confession

    Arieon Smith booking photo
    Arieon Smith

    Travis County DA’s Office


    Police brought Smith in for questioning and later arrested him for capital murder. Smith opened up about the events of that night. He not only confessed to being there for the murder, he also admitted to killing Ted. And he led investigators to the missing murder weapon. It was the .40 caliber pistol, missing from the gun box in Nick’s childhood bedroom.

    Jackie Edison cooperates and turns on Nick

    Jaclyn Edison questioning
    Detectives question Jackie Edison.

    Travis County DA’s Office


    After Edison’s arrest, she decided to cooperate with police. She confirmed that Nick had hired somebody to kill his parents.  

    Capital murder charges

    Johnny Leon, Nicolas Shaughnessy and Arieon Smith
    From left, Johnny Leon, Nicolas Shaughnessy and Arieon Smith

    Travis County DA’s Office


    Nick Shaughnessy and the two alleged hit men were charged with capital murder. All three men took a plea: plead guilty to a reduced charge of murder in return for a sentence of 35 years, with the possibility of parole

    Jackie Edison’s plea deal

    Nick Shaughnessy and Jaclyn Edison
    Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison with the family’s Rottweilers.

    Corey Shaughnessy


    For her cooperation, Jackie Edison was offered a different deal. She agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy to commit capital murder by terror threat or other felony, and serve 120 days and 10 years probation. Additionally, for the next 10 years, on the anniversary of Ted Shaughnessy’s murder, Edison must spend the night in jail.

    Oct. 17, 2023: Jackie Edison is free


    Jaclyn Edison tells “48 Hours” 120 days in jail was appropriate for her role in Austin murder plot by
    48 Hours on
    YouTube

    In October 2023, on the day Edison was released from jail after serving her four-month sentence, “48 Hours” producer Jenna Jackson was there with questions and a camera. When asked, Edison denied being in on the murder plot and claimed she tried to stop Nick. Investigators say there is no evidence that Jackie ever tried to stop the murder.

    Remembering Ted Shaughnessy

    Corey and Ted Shaughnessy
    Corey and Ted Shaughnessy in happier times.

    Corey Shaughnessy


    Corey says her husband Ted treasured making people feel special through his passion for gems. His absence is felt deeply by those who knew and loved him. Talking about her survival from the deadly attack, Corey says she knows she’s “been given life” and intends to make the most of it.

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  • Texas jeweler and dog killed in targeted hit involving son, daughter-in-law

    Texas jeweler and dog killed in targeted hit involving son, daughter-in-law

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    When Travis County Sheriff’s detectives Paul Salo and James Moore arrived to investigate a shooting at Ted and Corey Shaughnessy‘s Austin, Texas, home early on March 2, 2018, they first thought it might be a robbery gone wrong.

    Det. Paul Salo: It looked as though there was a home invasion … and a homeowner was … killed. 

    Inside the sprawling, suburban home it looked like a battlefield. Ted Shaughnessy, 55, lay dead in a pool of blood near the kitchen table. 

    Det. James Moore: He was shot in the head, the back, the thigh, and the buttocks… 

    One of the family’s two pet Rottweilers, Bart, had been shot to death, as well. There was broken window glass everywhere, bullets lodged in the walls and casings all over the floor. Authorities noticed they were not all the same type.

    Det. Paul Salo: We had .40 caliber and .380 … so that told us that we had two shooters …

    Shaughnessy crime scene evidence
    “Ted sits up in bed … and he grabbed his gun … to go see what it was,” said Corey Shaughnessy. “I hadn’t even gotten my head back on the pillow … before I heard the first gunshot …  And then there was a barrage of gunfire.”

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    Corey would tell police she and Ted kept about 20 guns in the home, and said she’d used her .357 revolver to shoot back at the attackers.

    Det. James Moore: It was a hail of gunfire.

    Investigators had noticed a single, wide-open ground floor window around the side of the house and wondered if the intruders had used it to get in.

    Det. Paul Salo: Somebody took the screen off and set it next to the window outside.

    That open window led into an unoccupied bedroom where, inside a drawer, police found what seemed like an unlikely coincidence.

    Det. Paul Salo: There’s a .40 caliber gun box in that drawer. 

    Det. James Moore: It’s missing out of the box.

    Jim Axelrod: Well, hang on, .40 caliber is one of the calibers that you were just describing.

    Det. Paul Salo: Yes. 

    It meant the Shaughnessy’s empty gun box could have held a pistol that one of the intruders used and had ejected bullet casings near the victim.

    Det. James Moore: That information gets passed to me while I’m outside.

    Outside, near Moore, first responders were looking after Corey Shaughnessy.

    Det. James Moore: Corey’s hysterical.

    Ted and Corey Shaughnessy
    Ted and Corey Shaughnessy

    Corey Shaughnessy


    Corey would tell police she had not seen the attackers’ faces. But she did have a hunch about why they’d come. 

    Corey Shaughnessy: Being a jeweler … you might someday be a target.

    Jim Axelrod: When you hear they own a jewelry store, what does that prompt in your minds?

    Det. James Moore: Automatically a motive.

    Jim Axelrod: Someone … figuring there was some safe with a bunch of jewelry.

    Det. James Moore: Absolutely. That’s right. 

    Corey broke the news by phone to the Shaughnessys’ son Nick, then 19, who lived two hours away with his girlfriend Jackie in College Station, Texas. They immediately drove to Austin, arriving about 8 a.m.

    Det. Paul Salo: Nick comes over and he’s — he’s emotional … he asks me what happened.

    Nick, Jackie and Corey all agreed to help the investigation in any way possible. Corey allowed police to search her phone and, though Nick said he hadn’t been in Austin for about a month, he and Jackie did the same. All three also agreed to answer questions at the station.

    NICK SHAUGHNESSY (police interview): I’m trying to think of anything that could be helpful.

    Det. Paul Salo: Our goal was to just try to get as much information as possible.

    COREY SHAUGHNESSY (police interview): I — I didn’t hear anything until the dog started barking.

    But Corey says the more police questioned her in the coming days … the more a traumatic situation went from bad to worse.

    COREY SHAUGHNESSY (police interview): I’m trying to do anything I can to — to help.

    She says they were not treating her like a victim.

    Corey Shaughnessy: I was extremely angry at the sheriff’s department.

    Investigators still weren’t sure if the murder was part of a random attack, a jewel heist gone bad, or whether it was a targeted assassination. They weren’t finding any relevant unidentified prints at the scene, so they had to wonder if their sole surviving victim, Corey Shaughnessy, was actually a suspect.

    Det. James Moore: She’s the only person in the house. And we have her husband who has been shot to death … we know that she owns firearms. … So it’s obviously an option for us. 

    They called her in for a series of interviews. For the last one, she brought a lawyer.

    DET. SALO (police interview): You know, I didn’t know Ted. It’s not right that somebody killed him.

    COREY SHAUGHNESSY: No it’s not.

    DET. SALO: And I want to find him.

    COREY SHAUGHNESSY: Me too. 

    Jim Axelrod: You got a distraught wife. You got a dead husband. You have to ask about the marriage, don’t you?

    Det. James Moore: Yes.

    COREY SHAUGHNESSY (police interview): Ted was the people person. He was the front part of the store.

    Investigators learned Corey and Ted had met in the early 80s at a video arcade in Phoenix. They’d quickly discovered they had a lot in common, including a love of jewelry and, eventually, of each other. They married and opened Gallerie Jewelers.

    Corey Shaughnessy: Everything seemed to be just about perfect.

    As the jewelry business grew, Ted and Corey had decided to grow their family too. In 2000, they adopted Nick at 16 months old from an orphanage in Ukraine.

    Corey Shaughnessy: It was just instant love.

    Jim Axelrod: It was?

    Corey Shaughnessy: Yeah. Instant.

    Corey says they all bonded even before bringing him home.

    Corey Shaughnessy: There were animal crackers involved.

    Jim Axelrod: Skillful distribution of animal crackers?

    Corey Shaughnessy (laughs) Yes, yes … and by the time we left, we were a family.

    She says Ted had a knack for helping people express their love with a sparkle.

    Det. James Moore: Everybody loved Ted. Didn’t have any enemies.

    By the time of the murder, the Shaughnessy’s were worth millions. But maybe even more valuable to them, they counted some of their customers as close friends.

    Corey Shaughnessy: We were very happy. 

    Nick and Corey Shaughnessy
    Nick and Corey Shaughnessy

    Corey Shaughnessy


    For Corey, being a parent was worth its weight in gold.

    Jim Axelrod: Nicholas had … everything a kid could want.

    Corey Shaughnessy: Yes.

    Jim Axelrod: What was he into? 

    Corey Shaughnessy: He liked animals, and he loved cars.

    Especially, fast ones. His father drove race cars for fun and often took him to the track. 

    Corey Shaughnessy: He loved putting on Ted’s helmet and his racing gloves and — and all of those things.

    In high school, she says her son found another love — her name was Jackie Edison. After her parents divorced, she had moved from New Jersey to Austin to live with her father. Nick brought her to meet his parents in 2016.

    Corey Shaughnessy: It was an awkward dinner.

    But Corey says Jackie eventually won them over, and before long, she was spending so much time in the Shaughnessys’ house, they actually let her move in.

    Jim Axelrod: Did you … settle into a — OK, a serious girlfriend seems to be part of Nick’s life and she’s OK?

    Corey Shaughnessy: I did. She was alright.

    Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison.
    Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison.

    Corey Shaughnessy


    In August 2017, Nick and Jackie moved out to start a new life in College Station — she in school, he as a day trader, with his parents’ financial backing. Ted and Corey would have less than a year to enjoy their empty nest before that horrible night in March. Police stayed on the scene for hours trying to process all the evidence.

    Amy Meredith: I was actually on call … when the murder occurred. 

    Amy Meredith was an assistant district attorney and says police asked her to come help them process and preserve the scene…an unusual request. She arrived around 11 am…and after looking around, began to believe as they did… that Ted Shaughnessy probably knew whoever had attacked him.

    Amy Meredith: This was not a stranger. This was not a stranger killing. 

    Meredith was sure the home was just too big and too dark for a pair of random robbers or jewel thief wannabees to find their way around. Maybe even more importantly.

    Amy Meredith: There was nothing stolen.

    Nothing from that safe — and no valuables missing from the rest of the house.

    Jim Axelrod: So everything for you pointed to inside job?

    Amy Meredith: Yes. Without a doubt.

    RAISING SUSPICIONS

    Corey Shaughnessy’s frustration with investigators was growing.

    She says she’d known from the start that she was a suspect in her husband’s murder. She says she needed money for the business in the following weeks, and it didn’t help when she tried to cash in his million-dollar life insurance policy.

    Corey Shaughnessy: I was the only beneficiary. That could only mean that they suspected me. 

    Jim Axelrod: Let me just ask, did you have anything to do with this?

    Corey Shaughnessy: Absolutely not.

    But Meredith says Corey had started raising red flags immediately after leaving the scene. Within hours of the murder, she reportedly stated there would be no funeral and inquired about having the house cleaned.

    Amy Meredith: We had to make sure that she did not have any involvement.

    But Corey wasn’t the only member of Ted’s family who was raising suspicion. The Shaughnessy’s son Nick had been more than 100 miles away at the time of the murder. At the scene that morning, he’d been emotional. But what struck detective Salo was one of Nick’s first questions.

    Det. Paul Salo: I tell him, it looks like somebody came into the home, and shot your dad to death.

    Jim Axelrod: And how did he absorb that news?

    Det. Paul Salo: He asked me, did he suffer?

    Jim Axelrod: Was that an odd question?

    Det. Paul Salo: It definitely struck me as odd, yes.

    Even more so, police say, because, as the morning wore on, Nick became much less interested in speaking with police than with the reporters who had started showing up.

    Det. James Moore: Nick and Jackie continuously tried to talk to the media … we asked him to — to stop and to stay in the scene.

    Shaughnessy crime scene evidence
    At the scene, Nick Shaughnessy did something investigators thought was odd. The open side window was not visible from the street. Without being told it was open or that investigators thought it might have been the entry point, Nick walked right over to it.

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    And then Nick did something really odd, says Moore. He walked directly over to examine that ground floor, wide open side window. The room it led to had once been his.

    Det. James Moore: Him going to that side of the house to look specifically at that window which you can’t see from just the front of the house, so for him to know that that was even involved, he did not have that information.

    Jim Axelrod: How does he know the entry point unless he was involved in creating the entry point?

    Det. James Moore: Sometimes people will get information from crosstalk with detectives or law enforcement and … so I — I didn’t automatically get super suspicious, but it was catching my attention. 

    Something on Nick’s phone had caught their attention as well: an app that gave him access over his parents’ alarm. Corey told them the family often chose not to arm the system, and that it had been switched off that night. But authorities noticed something in the account history.

    Det. James Moore: There was an activation for an open window…

    Det. Paul Salo: The time of the window being opened … was 4:27 that morning.

    Det. James Moore: Following that was glass break activations. We believe that’s when the bullets started breaking the glass in the house.

    Amy Meredith: That’s when Ted died, that’s when the shots were being fired.

    Jim Axelrod: Was this important to have?

    Det. James Moore: Extremely.

    Police also saw something that seemed important in Jackie Edison’s behavior.

    Det. James Moore: We were gonna do a gunshot residue test on their hands … we then separated them and at that time Jackie broke down, hysterically.

    Jim Axelrod: And what’d you make of it?

    Det. James Moore: That was a major red flag for me. … we knew there was something more to this at that point.

    Detectives question Nick Shaughnessy
    Nick Shaughnessy being questioned by Travis County detectives.

    Travis County DA’s Office


    DETECTIVE: A woman officer put your mom on the phone and then your mom told you what happened?

    NICK SHAUGHNESSY: Yeah. … she is like, “someone came in the house. There was an exchange of gunfire.” I believe she fired a shot and then she ran to the closet.

    In questioning later that day, Nick and Jackie reminded police they’d been at their home in College Station when the shooting happened.

    JACKIE EDISON (police interview): We both moved to College Station, and he just works from home.

    A few days later, investigators got a search warrant.

    Det. James Moore: Once we get into the apartment we’re going through it, we’re finding ammunition…

    Though common among gun owners, the ammunition was the same brand and caliber that was found at the crime scene. And investigators were about to find proof the couple was keeping secrets.

    Det. James Moore:  We find a marriage certificate for Nick and Jaclyn.

    Jim Axelrod: You discovered that Nick and Jackie were married by searching Nick’s apartment?

    Det. James Moore: Yep.

    Jim Axelrod: In all of the conversation you were having … they never said that they were married?

    Det. James Moore: No.

    A teenage friend of Nick’s named Spencer Patterson, who’d been certified as a minister online, had married them eight months earlier. Police weren’t the only ones surprised. 

    Jim Axelrod: You and Ted never knew? 

    Corey Shaughnessy: No.

    Corey Shaughnessy says Nick and Jackie didn’t tell her about their clandestine marriage until after the murder.

    Corey Shaughnessy: And I told them, I said … “this is not — you shouldn’t have done this. You’re too young.

    Trying to be a good mom, she says she promised to help them plan a proper wedding.

    Corey Shaughnessy: I said … “you need to do it the right way.”

    Corey had ample opportunity to make sure it happened, because, over the next few days, Nick and Jackie moved back into her house.

    Corey Shaughnessy: We were planning the engagement party. We had the guest list. Jackie was picking out invitations.

    That’s especially chilling, because while police initially had looked at all three for the murder, they now suspected just two — and that Nick and Jackie had also targeted Corey. But it was still only a working theory.

    Jim Axelrod: You can’t say anything to Corey?

    Det. Paul Salo: No.

    Det. James Moore: That — that’s a hard line to walk.

    Jim Axelrod:  If you have two people who planned her killing now living with her, are you worried about Corey’s safety?

    Det. James Moore: Of course, of course.

    Corey Shaughnessy
    Corey Shaughnessy

    CBS News


    But Corey Shaughnessy says what worried her was the possibility authorities were trying to frame her son, who by now was working in his father’s place at the jewelry store.

    Corey Shaughnessy: There’s a set of circumstances that the police are trying to — to — to make work in … the easiest way that they can.

    On March 10, 2018, she hired her son the best defense attorney she could find.

    Corey Shaughnessy: You could have told me aliens landed on the front yard, and … I would have believed that before I would’ve believed that Nicholas and Jackie planned to have us killed. 

    STARTLING CLUES CONFIRM AND EXPAND INVESTIGATORS’ SUSPICIONS

    Corey Shaughnessy knew police were suspicious of Nick and Jackie, but she says she had no reason to think they were right. After all, she says they’d been wrong about her.

    Corey Shaughnessy: The last thing that I would ever do would be kill my husband … and … I thought, well, if they think I did it … it’s not a stretch for them to think Nicolas did it. 

    But the closer police looked, the more incriminating evidence they seemed to find that Nick and Jackie had planned to have both Shaughnessys killed. While phone records showed Nick had been more than 100 miles away at the time of the murder, they also showed he was lying when he said he hadn’t been to Austin for a month.

    Det. Paul Salo: We ultimately see … cellphone usage in Austin on February 28th, which is just two days before Ted ends up getting killed.

    Investigators wondered if he had been in town making final preparations. There were text messages on Nick and Jackie’s phones that police say showed a suspicious conversation.

    Jim Axelrod: How important was the text message that he had sent out February 23, 24? … Nick is saying he’s “working on it.”

    Det. Paul Salo: And Jackie’s response to the text message was, “do they want 50K or not?” And she says, “we can’t afford to pay half before.”

    In another exchange, Nick asks her to withdraw money from her account: “so if it happens … cash in hand.”  

    Det. Paul Salo: They do make this withdrawal.

    Jackie withdrew $1,000 from the bank just days before the murder. Authorities suspected it was no coincidence. Then, in May 2018 , they talked to the man who had officiated Nick and Jackie’s wedding – that high school friend, Spencer Patterson.

    Det. James Moore: Trying to get ahold of Spencer was kind of difficult.

    At first, investigators believed Patterson might be a suspect. But when they finally reached him, he proved to be a critical witness instead. He told them just before the murder, Nick had talked about coming into $8 million with Ted and Corey gone.

    Jim Axelrod: Nick had put a dollar sign on the lives of his parents.

    Det. Paul Salo: Yes.

    Det. James Moore: Yep.

    Jim Axelrod: That’s chilling.

    Det. Paul Salo: It is.

    Patterson showed them text messages that were even more chilling.

    Det. James Moore: There’s also communication between Spencer and Nicolas, where Nicolas was trying to hire him to kill a family. 

    “Just walk in and shoot a family,” writes Nick. “Steal all their s—-, no mask needed cuz they’ll all be dead.” 

    Det. James Moore: Spencer didn’t want to go along with it. But Nick still pitched the idea.

    shaughnessy-mugs.jpg
    Police would come to believe Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison had masterminded the attack and on May 29, 2018, authorities arrested them for criminal solicitation in the murder of Ted Shaughnessy.

    Police cleared Patterson, and on May 29, 2018, they arrested Nick Shaughnessy and Jackie Edison for criminal solicitation. Corey couldn’t believe it.

    Corey Shaughnessy: I’m still under the assumption that … he’s being wrongly accused.

    For months, Corey had stood by Nick. But she told us that when she read the arrest affidavits and saw the evidence, her rock-solid belief in his innocence began to crumble. 

    Corey Shaughnessy: I got to where I understood that yes, they were involved in some way.

    But as a mother, she says she still couldn’t convince herself they’d deliberately tried to kill anyone.

    Corey Shaughnessy: I was then hoping that they had maybe gotten caught up in something in College Station where maybe Nicolas owed someone money or maybe there was some sort of a strange drug thing or maybe he told the wrong person that we were jewelers.

    Confident Nick and Jackie were behind the attack, police hoped some time in jail might make them come clean about who had actually pulled the trigger. For the moment though, neither one was talking.

    Amy Meredith: The next step was … who were the actual shooters and how do we figure this out?

    The evidence trail had essentially run cold.

    Det. James Moore: So we kinda hit a stall point.

    In early July, four months after the murder, Moore decided to review some security video from Nick and Jackie’s porch, recorded just two days before the attack.

    Det. James Moore: I see two individuals show up to his front door.

    shaughnessy-surveillance.jpg
    Security footage from Nick and Jackie’s front porch proved to be a major turn in the case. Recorded just two days before the attack, it shows Nick Shaughnessy, left, greeting two men at the front door.

    Travis County Sheriff’s Office


    Moore says he noticed something about one of the men that made him freeze the video — something he was wearing.

    Det. James Moore: A green … Andersen T-shirt.

    Jim Axelrod: Window company.

    Det. James Moore: A window company.

    Jim Axelrod: This feels like a break, and it only happens because you isolated a frame of the video from the security camera?

    Det. James Moore: Yeah.

    Moore and Salo drove to the window company where their hard work ran into more good luck. By sheer coincidence, an employee’s daughter said she’d actually met the man in the freeze frame. Apparently, he’d only worked there for a few days — four years earlier.

    Det. Paul Salo: And this woman still remembered his name.

    Jim Axelrod: Sergeant, what are the odds of a hit like this on the identity?

    Det. James Moore: It was … crazy that we got that break.

    His name was Cameron Vosmek and he wasn’t home that day. But his wife answered the door — and quickly got their attention.

    Det. Paul Salo: “I know why you’re here.”

    Det. Paul Salo: “That, kid who … hired somebody to — to kill his jewelry store parents.”

    Jim Axelrod: Hang on. She doesn’t know who you guys are. You identify yourselves as detectives and she says, “I know why you’re here?”

    Det. Paul Salo: Yes.

    She said a few months earlier, a man named Johnny Leon had asked her husband to commit murder for money. But he turned him down. Police ruled out Vosmek as a suspect. But Leon turned out to be the other person in the security video from Nick and Jackie’s porch. When they brought him in for questioning, he told them he was no murderer. But he admitted Nick had tried to hire him.

    JOHNNY LEON: (police interview) I’m not gonna lie to you, when someone offers you 100K, you’re gonna think about it

    DET. MOORE: He’s luring you into this to commit murder.

    JOHNNY LEON Yeah

    But police were convinced that Leon had taken the bait.

    DET. MOORE (police interview): I’m just telling you; we know you’re involved in this. We know what happened …

    JOHNNY LEON: You know I’m involved?

    DET. MOORE: Absolutely. There is no doubt.

    Leon was arrested for capital murder, and on his phone, police found evidence he may not have acted alone. There was a flurry of contacts around the time of the killing with a Fort Worth man named Arieon Smith. They also discovered both men had arrest records. In fact, the two had been arrested together for drugs a year earlier.

    Det. Paul Salo: Detective Moore and I interviewed him. …he did admit that he had met Nick.

    Det. Paul Salo: He gave us a lot of good information.

    Smith opened up about the details of that night and broke down in the process.

    DET. MOORE (police interview): You’re the only person that’s showing regret.

    ARIEON SMITH: I don’t understand how, how could you kill somebody and not have any emotion about it? And you actually killed them. I was just in the situation. … I’m — I’m — I’m devastated. I cannot sleep at night.

    Prosecutors were closer than ever to having everything they needed to make their case.

    Amy Meredith:  We’ve got enough. … Now, let’s go to trial.

    That’s something Nick Shaughnessy told “48 Hours” he’d wanted to avoid.

    A BELOVED SON’S BETRAYAL  

    After police arrested the last of their four suspects, Arieon Smith, Det. Salo says Smith told them he wasn’t just there for Ted’s murder.

    ARIEON SMITH (police interview): Yes, I was there.

    Smith acknowledged firing the fatal shot, and then made a stunning request —

    ARIEON SMITH (police interview): I request the death penalty. 

    — the death penalty.

    ARIEON SMITH (police interview): I killed somebody, I deserve to die. Simple as that. 

    He also told police where to find the murder weapon. It was the .40 caliber pistol missing from that box they’d found in Nick’s old bedroom.

    Jim Axelrod: The .40 caliber gun that killed Ted was Ted’s.

    Corey Shaughnessy: Yes.

    For a mother who’d struggled for months to keep faith in her son, it felt like the last straw.

    Corey Shaughnessy: Too much had happened … that pointed to Nicolas and Jackie having involvement.

    And Corey was horrified to realize she’d spent months sheltering the very people who’d planned to have Ted and her murdered that night.

    Jim Axelrod: What a chilling thought — two people who tried to have you killed and they’re living in your home.

    Corey Shaughnessy: Very. It’s … very chilling.

    Corey Shaughnessy: I bought all the groceries. I paid all the bills. I bought her clothing.

    Jim Axelrod: This is diabolical.

    Corey Shaughnessy: Absolutely … they thought they had gotten away with it.

    Jaclyn Edison questioning
    Jaclyn Edison bring questioned by detectives.

    Travis County DA’s Office


    DETECTIVE (police interview): Do you prefer Jackie or Jaclyn?

    JACKIE EDISON: Jackie.

    After their arrest, it took just a couple of weeks for Jackie to blame Nick.

    DETECTIVE: Did Nicolas hire somebody… to kill his parents?

    JACKIE EDISON: Yeah.

    And Jackie seemed to know why he’d done it. She says Nick was in desperate financial straits, with a failing day trading business and thousands in overdue loans including at least one from Corey.

    JACKIE EDISON (police interview): I think his mom gave him $30,000 … and she expected money in return, but he wasn’t paying her.

    After her cooperation, authorities released Jackie on a reduced bond. And prosecutor Amy Meredith resolved to go after Nick for the maximum.

    Amy Meredith: We’re going to try Nick Shaughnessy for capital murder.

    Jim Axelrod: At this point, were you prepared to testify against Nick?

    Corey Shaughnessy: Yes.

    Johnny Leon, Nicolas Shaughnessy and Aerion Smith
    From left, Johnny Leon, Nicolas Shaughnessy and Aerion Smith were charged with capital murder.

    Travis County DA’s Office


    Nick Shaughnessy and the two alleged hit men were charged with capital murder. But by the spring of 2021, Amy Meredith had left her job as assistant district attorney. And there was a new DA, José Garza, whose office made the men an offer: avoid a possible death sentence by pleading guilty to a reduced charge of murder and serve 35 years with the possibility of parole. Leon and Smith agreed, and Corey wrote to Nick to suggest he do the same.

    Corey Shaughnessy: If I could speak to Ted, I think that would have been his choice.

    Nick Shaughnessy accepted the deal. He could be released when he is 36. In the summer of 2023, “48 Hours” visited him in prison near Houston.

    Jim Axelrod: Did you hire people to go kill your parents?

    Nick Shaughnessy: Yes, Jackie and I participated in multiple aspects to kill my …

    Jim Axelrod: Never mind participated in multiple aspects. Did you pay these two men to go kill your parents?

    Nick Shaughnessy: Yes.


    Texas man says he’s sorry for paying hit men to kill his parents by
    48 Hours on
    YouTube

    Nick told us he’s sorry for all of it.

    Nick Shaughnessy: I know … that I’m here because of those actions.

    Jim Axelrod: Nick at the end of the day, are you sorry for what you did or are you sorry that you got caught?

    Nick Shaughnessy: I’m most truly, passionately sorry, for what I did.

    And Nick told us he never would have done it – if not for Jackie.

    Jim Axelrod: It was a very toxic relationship.

    Although he stood to inherit his parents’ money eventually, he told us he wasn’t prepared to wait.

    Jim Axelrod: Were you at all thinking … “what am I doing?:

    Nick Shaughnessy: Of course. … it was always in the back of my head. like red flags — like stop, don’t go.

    Jim Axelrod: The back of your head. Why not the front of your head?

    Nick Shaughnessy: I guess the validation or approval from Jackie.

    It is hard to know how much Jackie Edison should be blamed or what punishment she deserves. And jurors won’t get to decide. She too got a deal from the office of the new DA. For pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit capital murder by terror threat or other felony — a jail sentence of 120 days and 10 years’ probation.

    Corey Shaughnessy: It’s astounding. It’s absolutely astounding.

    She began serving her time in June 2023.

    Corey Shaughnessy: It is an outright dismissal of everything that I went through as a victim. And it’s a dismissal of Ted’s life.

    Jim Axelrod: Three are doing 35 years, one is doing 120 days. Corey says that’s outrageous. … What are your thoughts?

    Amy Meredith: I … had no involvement once I left the district attorney’s office on Jackie’s case.

    Amy Meredith was working elsewhere before prosecutors offered the plea deals. Corey’s feelings aren’t lost on her.

    Jim Axelrod: Do you understand her rage?

    Amy Meredith: I … absolutely understand that she is upset.

    Corey is so upset that when the new prosecutors asked her to appear at Jackie’s 2023 plea hearing, she refused – instead, recording a video at home to be played in court:

    COREY SHAUGHNESSY (video court statement:  I’m alive because your plan to have me murdered … didn’t succeed.

    COREY SHAUGHNESSY (video court statement): You are a monster. You are evil and everyone needs to know it.

    COREY SHAUGHNESSY (video court statement): You knew what was about to happen, and yet you sat home and did nothing because you wanted it to happen …

    We wanted to ask Jackie Edison about that and other things, but she declined our request for an interview. On the day she was released from jail, our producer Jenna Jackson approached her.

    JACKIE EDISON SPEAKS TO 48 HOURS

    Corey and Nick Shaughnessy haven’t spoken directly since his 2018 arrest.

    Jim Axelrod: When you look in the mirror, do you see evil?

    Nick Shaughnessy: My mom stated that. Me being evil. … I don’t see evil in me.

    These days, it’s safe to say they don’t see eye to eye. In fact, there may be only one thing they do agree on.

    Corey Shaughnessy: Jackie is not a victim.

    Jim Axelrod: This is a fifty-fifty thing?

    Nick Shaughnessy: Most definitely

    Jim Axelrod: Did Jaclyn Edison get away with murder?

    Corey Shaughnessy: Absolutely.

    On Oct. 17, 2023, Jackie Edison walked out of an Austin-area jail after serving her four-month sentence.

    Jenna Jackson: Hey, Jaclyn.

    We’d been asking for an interview for months.

    Jackie Edison: I don’t wanna do any interviews.

    But “48 Hours” producer Jenna Jackson had some questions for her anyway.


    Jaclyn Edison tells “48 Hours” 120 days in jail was appropriate for her role in Austin murder plot by
    48 Hours on
    YouTube

    Jenna Jackson: Nick got 35 years, the hit men got the same. You got 120 days. … Are you getting away with murder?

    Jackie Edison: No. I think that — I think that it’s fair. I think it accurately reflects the level of involvement.

    Jenna Jackson: Corey and Nick have both told us is that … you are a partner in this murder plot.

    Jackie Edison Yeah … I think Nick is — is saying whatever he has to say to kind of clear his name. Um, and Corey is very much in denial about what really happened.

    Jenna Jackson: You weren’t in on this plot?

    Jackie Edison: I was not in on it. No.

    Jenna Jackson :Didn’t get money out to pay the hit men?

    Jackie Edison: No. No ma’am.

    Det. James Moore: Is she innocent? Absolutely not.

    Amy Meredith: No … She knew. She knew what he was trying to do.

    Det. James Moore: She could have stopped this at any time.

    JACKIE EDISON (police interview: I tried to stop him.

    But investigators say there is no evidence Jackie ever tried to stop the murder.

    Det. James Moore: She’s no princess in this.

    And according to what Nick told authorities, Jackie had been making plans for spending the Shaughnessys’ money.

    Corey Shaughnessy: I found out that Jackie … already picked out the car she was going to buy her mother with the money that they made.

    Jim Axelrod: Off of the murder of you and Ted?

    Corey Shaughnessy: Yes.

    Det. James Moore: I’m not defending her by any degree.

    Though she did eventually help them make their case against the person they identified as the key culprit.

    Det. James Moore: They’re both to blame. Who took more action? … it’s Nick.

    Det. Paul Salo: You take Nick out of this you don’t have the incident.

    Jim Axelrod: You take Jackie out?

    Det. James Moore: It still happens.

    Jim Axelrod: Do you understand Corey’s frustration?

    Det. James Moore: I do.

    Det. Paul Salo: Absolutely.

    Det. James Moore: We empathize with her.

    But Moore and Salo say Jackie’s plea deal wasn’t their call.

    Det. James Moore: Our job ended at the arrest and there’s not a single step further that we can take it.

    We wanted to ask DA Jose Garza exactly why Edison got 120 days, after the other three got 35 years, but he wouldn’t agree to an interview. A spokesperson for the district attorney sent “48 Hours” a statement saying, “Our office takes acts of violence seriously and is committed to holding people who commit violent crimes accountable.” The statement also said Edison is on 10 years’ probation and if she violates the terms, she could face 20 years in prison.  

    Corey Shaughnessy says a full explanation from authorities would have helped her make sense of something that has always struck her as impossibly wrong.

    Jim Axelrod: So no one’s ever explained to you why this enormous disparity … in sentence?

    Corey Shaughnessy: No, absolutely not.

    Nick Shaughnessy: It’s a … slap in the face to my mother.

    Jim Axelrod: Now you’re concerned about your mother?

    Nick Shaughnessy: Most definitely.

    True or not, Nick Shaughnessy told us he hopes someday Corey will agree to speak with him.

    Jim Axelrod: What would you say to her?

    Nick Shaughnessy:  I wish I could tell my mom how truly sorry I am, that this is not something I’m proud of and I failed her as a son.

    Corey Shaughnessy (watching video of Nick’s apology): It means nothing to me.

    Jim Axelrod: Do you think he believes it? What he’s saying?

    Corey Shaughnessy: I don’t know that person. I have no idea who Nicolas Shaughnessy is.

    And Corey says there is no point responding to an apology she was never meant to hear.

    Corey Shaughnessy: In my mind, I am supposed to be dead. And so, I’m a ghost and ghosts can’t speak.

    But even after a betrayal no mother should ever have to see…Corey still can’t bring herself to condemn her son altogether.

    Nick, Corey and Terd Shaughnessy
    Nick, Corey and Terd Shaughnessy

    Corey Shaughnessy


    Jim Axelrod: Do you still love your son?

    Corey Shaughnessy: I love the person I knew to be my son before this happened.

    Jim Axelrod: You love that 8-year-old boy racing cars with his dad.

    Corey Shaughnessy: Yes.

    She knows that boy is gone forever and so is the life she and Ted tried to build around him.

    Corey Shaughnessy: Nicolas and Jackie destroyed my entire world. … They took my husband … They took memories, they took my business … they took everything I had that I cared about.

    But, now living out of state under a different name, Corey is determined to make the most of every day.

    Corey Shaughnessy: It’ll always be there. It’ll always be a part of who I am. But I’ve been given life. And I need to do something with it.

    As a parole requirement, for the next 10 years, on the anniversary of Ted Shaughnessy’s murder, Jaclyn Edison must spend the night in jail.    


    Produced by Josh Yager. Jenna Jackson and Ryan N. Smith are the development producers. Shaheen Tokhi is the associate producer.  Anthony Venditti is the content research manager. Atticus Brady and Diana Modica are the editors. Patti Aronofsky is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

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  • Kassanndra’s Secret

    Kassanndra’s Secret

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    Kassanndra’s Secret – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



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

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


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  • Inside the Maria Munoz murder case: A look at the evidence

    Inside the Maria Munoz murder case: A look at the evidence

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    Maria Muñoz, a young and healthy Texas mother, died unexpectedly. A toxicology report later revealed seven different surgical drugs were found in her system. Was it murder or a terrible accident? The evidence presented at Joel Pellot’s trial for the murder of his wife tells a different story from what he told police happened the day Muñoz died.

    Sept. 22, 2020

    Maria Muñoz
    Maria Muñoz

    Facebook


    Muñoz, 31,  a stay-at-home mother, lived in Laredo, Texas, with her two young sons and her husband, Pellot. On Sept. 22, 2020, Pellot called 911 saying Muñoz may have taken some prescription pills and was not breathing. First responders tried to save her but after failed attempts, Muñoz was declared dead at 3:58 a.m. that day. The first officer on the scene, Gregorio De La Cruz, told “48 Hours” that Pellot’s behavior seemed suspicious and certain aspects about the scene didn’t quite make sense. 

    Police bodycam video 

    Joel Pellot bodycam video
    Joel Pellot as seen on Laredo, Texas, police bodycam video on Sept. 22, 2020 after calling 911.

    Webb County District Attorney’s Office


    When Officer De La Cruz from the Laredo Police Department responded to the 911 call, his bodycam was recording. Pellot, a nurse anesthetist, is seen dressed in teal surgical scrubs. The video captured some key moments that made De La Cruz suspect that Pellot may have had something to do with his wife’s death.   

    The pill container

    Maria Muñoz evidence
    Joel Pellot had told police Maria Muñoz may have overdosed on the drug clonazepam, but when the autopsy was conducted — eight hours after she was declared dead — the medical examiner found no pill residue in her stomach.

    Webb County District Attorney’s Office


    One of those key moments was when De La Cruz asked for the pills Pellot said Muñoz had taken. Pellot went to the bathroom and De La Cruz says he heard him pull a container from the medicine cabinet. De La Cruz thought it was odd because in his experience when someone overdoses on drugs, they are usually found near the person. In this case, the clonazepam pills prescribed to Pellot, were in another room. 

    Later, Pellot is seen on camera grabbing the pill container from the floor and putting it in his pocket. De La Cruz wondered, why would he take the pills back? Was he hiding something? 

    Suspicious behavior

    Joel Pellot
    Joel Pellot talks to police in his Laredo, Texas, kitchen.

    Webb County District Attorney’s Office


    In addition to Pellot putting the pills in his pocket, there was something about his appearance that De La Cruz said seemed suspicious. De La Cruz observed Pellot sweating profusely through his scrubs, and De La Cruz said he seemed like he may have been under the influence of drugs.  

    Evidence at the scene

    Maria Munoz evidence
    A needle catheter, the kind used for IVs, was discovered on the carpeted staircase.

    Webb County District Attorney’s Office


    De La Cruz also found a needle catheter on the stairs at the couple’s home. This didn’t make much sense to him.  Pellot and Muñoz had two young children — why would there be a needle on the stairs? 

    A medical bag

    Maria Muñoz evidence
    Syringes and IV equipment were found in a medical bag  inside the home.

    Webb County District Attorney’s Office


    In addition to the needle, first responders also found syringes and IV equipment in a medical bag at the home. Although Pellot was a nurse anesthetist who worked in operating rooms, these types of supplies are normally found in a medical setting. 

    Police interview Joel Pellot

    Joel Pellot
    Cameras recorded Joel Pellot in the police interview room. While he was alone, “he’s hitting walls, he’s moving furniture … It was scaring some of the people down the hall in the dispatch room,” said Sgt. Luis Mata.

    Laredo Police Department


    Authorities put Pellot in the back of a cruiser and drove him to the police station for an interview. The cameras captured him crying, screaming, and pushing furniture around in the interview room.

    During this interview, Pellot told lead investigator Sgt. Luis Mata that he had moved out of the house and was living with his girlfriend and that he went to see Muñoz to talk about their marriage. Pellot told Mata that his wife took the clonazepam pills at some point after they talked, and the medical supplies found at the home were his. Pellot said he was taking steroids. 

    An unexplained pinprick mark

    Maria Munoz evidence
    What investigators found particularly suspicious was a pinprick mark on Maria Muñoz’s right elbow crease, the type someone would get after getting an IV. 

    Webb County District Attorney’s Office


    What Pellot couldn’t explain was a red mark on Muñoz’s right elbow crease. This mark, along with phone calls from concerned friends, family, and colleagues of Pellot telling Mata that Pellot may have killed Maria, is what led him to request a toxicology screening. 

    Maria Muñoz’s own words

    Maria Muñoz’s journal

    Webb County District Attorney’s Office


    Investigators found a series of journals Muñoz used to write about what was happening in her life. Through her writings, they discovered Muñoz loved her husband and wanted to keep her family together, but accepted that he wanted to be with someone else.

    The medical examiner also looked at the journals and determined Muñoz’s death was not a suicide. 

    Maria Muñoz’s cellphone recordings

    Maria Muñoz evidence
    Cellphone video secretly recorded by Maria Muñoz shows her and her husband Joel Pellot arguing in the car.

    Webb County District Attorney’s Office


    Muñoz secretly recorded a conversation on her cellphone that provided a glimpse on how Pellot was treating her. In the cellphone video, Muñoz is heard asking her husband what he wanted out of their marriage. She was trying to keep her family together, but Pellot didn’t seem interested in having that conversation.  

    “Pray for me”

    Maria Muñoz evidence
    The day before Maria Muñoz died, she planned to meet with Joel Pellot to discuss their future. She texted a friend: “I just ask if you can pray for me … Tonight we are going to talk …” 

    Webb County District Attorney’s Office


    The day before she died, Muñoz told her friend, Yazmin Martinez, that she and Pellot were going to have a “heart to heart” conversation that night. Muñoz asked Martinez to pray for her, but not because she suspected her husband was capable of killing her. Martinez said all Muñoz was hoping for was an honest conversation with him. 

    A bombshell toxicology report

    Muñoz toxicology report
    The toxicology report showed no clonazepam — the drug Joel Pellot claimed Maria Muñoz had taken — in her system. It revealed seven other drugs in her system, most of them typically used during surgery and one of them can only be administered with an IV.

    Webb County District Attorney’s Office


    In January 2021, Mata and De La Cruz finally got the toxicology test results they had been waiting for. There was no clonazepam, the drug Pellot claimed Muñoz had taken. But there were seven other drugs in Muñoz’s system: morphine, Demerol, Versed, Propofol, ketamine, lidocaine, and Narcan. Most of them are typically used during surgery. 

    “Maria’s Team”

    From left, Karina Rios, Ana Karen Garza, Marisela Jacaman and Cristal Calderon
    From left, Karina Rios, Ana Karen Garza, Marisela Jacaman and Cristal Calderon.

    CBS News


    District Attorney Isidro Alaniz selected a team of attorneys to represent Muñoz: Karina Rios, Ana Karen Garza Gutierrez, Marisela Jacaman, and Cristal Calderon. Based on the evidence collected at the scene, the extensive writings in Muñoz’s journals, interviews with friends, and expert accounts, they were convinced Pellot killed his wife. 

    A guilty verdict

    Joel Pellot
    Joel Pellot at his trial for the murder of Maria Muñoz.

    KYLX, Laredo, Texas


    The all-women prosecution team built a strong case against Joel Pellot, and showed the jury the type of wife and mother Maria Muñoz was. The prosecutors told “48 Hours” that Muñoz’s journals helped them understand what she was going through and motivated them to fight for justice in her case.

    On March 30, 2023, after nine days of trial, a jury found Joel Pellot guilty of murdering his wife Maria

    Maria’s journals were her testimony

    Maria Muñoz
    Maria Muñoz

    Rosalinda Villarreal Photography


    “Maria’s team” says the most important witness at trial ended up being Muñoz herself. Prosecutors shared with “48 Hours” that they could feel Maria’s energy through her journals. They describe her as a great mother, loving and bright.

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  • Air Force major convicted of manslaughter blames wife for fight that led to her death

    Air Force major convicted of manslaughter blames wife for fight that led to her death

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    They were the picture of the American dream. Andreen McDonald, described as a “rising star,” and Andre McDonald, a major in the U.S. Air Force, were a San Antonio power couple who ran a successful business that funded a lavish lifestyle. Their seemingly perfect world came crashing down in the winter of 2019 when Andreen suddenly disappeared.

    “I remember … like a panic set in,” says friend Mandy Hall. “Andreen is not the person to go take off somewhere and no one knows where she is.”

    Andreen McDonald
    Andreen McDonald

    Instagram


    Investigator Frank Stubbs tells “48 Hours” correspondent Peter Van Sant, “Her purse was still there, her keys were on the counter and her vehicles were still there.” Stubbs saw something startling while searching the home. “I found there was blood on the wall in an area that was kind of odd, there was blood and hair on a light switch,” he says.

    AN AMERICAN DREAM TURNED NIGHTMARE

    In the afternoon of March 1, 2019, after 29-year-old Andreen McDonald was reported missing by her mother Maureen, a Bexar County sheriff’s deputy arrived at the McDonald home in an upscale gated community in San Antonio.

    Within minutes, the deputy saw that blood and hair on the light switch.  And in the backyard, normally beautifully landscaped, another troubling clue: a random burn pile.

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    A zipper from Andreen McDonald’s blouse was discovered in a burn pile in the backyard of her home.

    Bexar County District Courts


    Maureen Smith: We found a … zipper from uh, Andreen’s blouse.

    Peter Van Sant: It was Andreen’s blouse?

    Maureen Smith: Mm hmm (affirms).

    Andreen’s husband, Andre “Andy” McDonald, told the deputy that when he woke up, he got their daughter Alayna to school before reporting to Lackland Air Force Base, where he served as a cyber warfare analyst.

    Once he learned Andreen was missing, Andre rushed back home. But he quickly headed out the door again to act on a hunch that Andreen, who suffered from migraines, might have gone to a nearby hospital for treatment.

    Andre’s arrival to the hospital was captured by surveillance cameras, says lead investigator Frank Stubbs.

    Frank Stubbs: On that tape … he comes in, you can see him … asking for McDonald … and they tell him … there’s somebody in Room 3 named McDonald.

    Peter Van Sant: He arrives back to the house. What does he tell them?

    Frank Stubbs: He tells them that she’s in the hospital.

    But when the deputy called the hospital, he discovered that the McDonald who had checked in was not Andreen McDonald.

    Andre told deputies that he rushed back home before seeing his wife because he had left his cellphone at home and wanted to let Maureen know he had found Andreen.

    Sheriff Javier Salazar of the Bexar County Sheriff’s Office:

    Sheriff Javier Salazar: There was some indication to him that she was there and injured to some extent.

    Unfortunately, the major’s hunch turned out to be wrong.

    Maureen Smith: When I heard, I was — oh, God, I was so upset … I was just thinking that she’s someplace that we can find her.

    And for Andreen’s mother-in-law, Jackie Horne, who lived in Florida, there was uncertainty.

    Jackie Horne: I had called Andreen’s phone about a thousand times already, saying, “Andreen, whatever it is, please, please, just call me back.”

    What concerned everyone was the fact Andreen would never just disappear. She was known for her sense of responsibility and dedication to her family and business.

    Peter Van Sant: How would you describe Andreen?

    Maureen Smith: She knows what she wants. And she would never stop until she get it.

    ANDREEN (video): I did come in before he did. Way —

    ANDRE: Right, Andreen did defeat me, and she is so excited.

    Andreen created an assisted living business in San Antonio called Starlight Homes when she was just 22. And, according to Andre’s close friend Andrew Russell, Andre bankrolled her dreams.

    Andrew Russell: In order to start the business, Andre, he liquidated his 401K. … And .. he sold the BMW that he owned.

    Jackie Horne: They were doing so well. They were doing everything that would make any mother proud.

    Starlight Homes thrived, and under Andreen’s watch the tiny home-based business transformed into a multimillion-dollar enterprise in just seven years.

    ANDREEN MCDONALD SPEECH: When I started my assisted living, I only started with three residents … Today, Starlight Homes Assisted Living, we have two locations in the San Antonio area.

    Childhood friend, Mandy Hall, says Andreen’s success was born out of humble beginnings.

    Mandy Hall: Growing up in Portland, Jamaica … we didn’t have a lot. … And, so, we figured if we wanted to get somewhere in life … it would be in America. … That’s where the dream was.

    Andreen’s dream of coming to America came true at 19, when she met Andre. He was also a native of Jamaica, who at the time was a captain in the U.S. Air Force. Andre had returned home to Port Antonio, Jamaica, in May 2009 to attend a funeral where he met Andreen, who was 10 years younger.

    Andreen and Andre McDonald
    Andreen and Andre McDonald

    Jacqueline Horne


    Peter Van Sant: Was there an attraction right from the beginning?

    Maureen Smith: She was excited when she met him. … excited about the captain in the Air Force. … they both decide for her to come to America.

    They married that July.

    Jackie Horne: I was happy to know he had met somebody that he could have a life with.

    That life would soon include a baby girl, Alayna. Alayna was at the center of Andreen’s world, which made her disappearance so perplexing, says Horne.

    Jackie Horne: I don’t think Andreen would just get up and walk away and leave Alayna, and nobody would hear from her.

    That evening, a forensic crime unit examined those stains in the bathroom and confirmed the initial belief that they were blood.

    Peter Van Sant: While you were going through the house, was Andre there?

    Frank Stubbs: Yes, he was.

    Peter Van Sant: Did you see any signs of bruising on his body, any signs of — of any injuries that perhaps he’d been in a struggle?

    Frank Stubbs: Nothing that we could — that we could determine.

    Investigators were hoping Andre had some answers. But he said the last time he had seen his wife was the night before, and they said what Andre described raised more questions than answers.

    Frank Stubbs: He had told them they had come home from the tax preparers office, and that they had argued over the business and … he went up the road … got some gas and just cooled off.

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    After a heated argument that evening, Andre McDonald says he left the house to cool off at that gas station. 

    Bexar County District Courts


    Frank Stubbs: We were able to obtain video evidence of him going to the Shell station.

    Andre said when he returned home, he and Andreen went to separate bedrooms.

    But according to investigators, what Andre didn’t mention was the text exchange that happened at the gas station.

    TATTOOS, TEXTS, AND A MARRAGE IN TURMOIL

    For investigators, the text messages found on Andre’s phone revealed a marriage in turmoil, including allegations of betrayal.

    Peter Van Sant: Accusations of unfaithfulness in these text messages, correct?

    Frank Stubbs: That’s correct.

    Peter Van Sant: We have a printed copy. Would you mind reading these from his phone?

    Frank Stubbs (reading the text): Andreen responds … “If you bring up Aubyn again, I will divorce you myself.” 

    Aubyn Hall, a businessman living in Port Antonio, Jamaica, who according to investigators, was Andreen’s ex-boyfriend and, potentially, her current lover.

    In response to Andreen’s threat of divorce, Andre texts: “I don’t care if you get a divorce. You brought Aubyn into our life.”

    Aubyn dated Andreen when she was a teenager, say investigators. Andreen’s close friend Mandy Hall says the two rekindled their romance in 2017 during one of her philanthropic trips to the island.

    Mandy Hall: Aubyn has always been that first love … It wasn’t something Andreen got over, emotionally.

    Hall says they carried on their affair in secret until the summer of 2018 when Andreen got two new tattoos: an initial “A” tattooed on her hand and a date tattooed on her wrist.

    Mandy Hall: Andy was definitely suspicious of what it meant.

    With a suspicious mind, Hall says Andre went to work to solve this tattoo mystery.

    Mandy Hall: He went, and he did his own digging.

    It was on social media where Andre discovered an interesting photograph of Aubyn branded with the same exact tattoo that was also on Andreen’s hand.

    And those numbers 14-3-76? They’re Aubyn’s birthday — day, month and year.

    Mandy Hall: She told me that she impulsively got the tattoo … she knew it was something stupid to do.

    Enraged, Hall says Andre threatened divorce unless Andreen cut off contact with Aubyn, covered up her tattoos, and promised to never travel to Jamaica without him.

    Mandy Hall: She did cover up the tattoos. … She didn’t want to lose half of everything she worked hard for.

    At Andre’s 40th birthday party, Hall says by all outward appearances, the McDonalds seemed to be getting along. But just 13 days later, on March 1, 2019, that’s when Andreen disappeared.

    mcdonald-missingposter.jpg

    Bexar County Sheriff’s Office


    The once festive home had transformed into a crime scene as investigators worked the McDonald residence until 2 a.m. the next morning. When they couldn’t locate Andreen’s cellphone, investigators checked to see if her credit cards or passport had been used — all dead ends.

    Frank Stubbs: We came up dry on — on all of these inquiries. … At this point, all we had was a missing person.

    Within hours of his wife’s disappearance, Andre McDonald was a person of interest. He stopped answering questions and lawyered up.

    At 2 p.m. the next day, an undercover investigator assigned to watch the McDonalds’ house noticed that the garage had been damaged and Andre was backing out of the driveway.

    mcdonald-08.png
    Surveillance of Andre McDonald purchasing a 9mm handgun and ammunition.

    Bexar County District Courts


    The investigator followed him to a nearby gun shop where additional investigators, who were called to the scene, observed Andre purchasing a 9mm handgun and ammunition.

    Frank Stubbs: We were under the assumption that he was purchasing a gun to probably harm himself.

    When Andre walked back to his car, investigators confronted him in a violent takedown.

    Investigators moved to detain the Air Force major and turned him over to military authorities for a mental evaluation.

    Meanwhile, investigators returned to the house with a search warrant and checked Andreen’s car. While there, some objects caught their eye.

    Peter Van Sant: There was a shovel. There was an ax.

    Frank Stubbs: An ax. There was a — like a hatchet kind of maul. There was … trash bags, there were gloves … And a couple of gas cans.

    And there was more.

    Frank Stubbs: Inside … the garbage can in the house was … a receipt from Lowe’s that had been torn up.

    Detectives were able to obtain surveillance footage from the hardware store —items that were purchased the day after Andreen went missing.

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    Andre McDonald is seen at the checkout of a Lowes store. Two red gas cans can be seen on the counter.

    Bexar County District Courts


    Frank Stubbs (watching surveillance video): This is Andre McDonald coming into the Lowe’s …he’s going to purchase several items. … You can see him with a basket here. You can see there’s a shovel in the basket … And now, he comes up here … there’s two gas cans. … There’s a maul —

    Peter Van Sant: There’s the hatchet.

    Frank Stubbs: — or a hatchet … Here’s that ax.

    Peter Van Sant: What’s at play here?

    Frank Stubbs: It appeared to us that … now that his wife was missing. It pointed to the disposal of her body.

    Peter Van Sant: Look at that cart full of ill will, right?

    Frank Stubbs: Yes.

    And in the corner of the garage, investigators would uncover what they say was the most damning evidence of all.

    Frank Stubbs: We found a hammer and clothing … in the garbage. …  The clothing that we found … appeared to be Andre’s clothing.

    Investigators say they found traces of blood on the pocket of a pair of jeans.

    Andreen McDonald evidence

    Bexar County District Courts


    Peter Van Sant: What’s on the claw hammer that’s of interest?

    Frank Stubbs: The lab determined that there was the presence of … blood on … the hammer. … And the DNA that they … obtained from that — that blood sample was from Andreen.

    Frank Stubbs: We concluded that that hammer was probably used as the murder weapon.

    Peter Van Sant: This is significant.

    Frank Stubbs: Very significant.

    ALL EYES ON MAJOR ANDRE MCDONALD

    On March 2, 2019, 48 hours into the investigation, Stubbs believed he had discovered key evidence that implicated Major Andre McDonald in his wife’s disappearance. Investigators located those items stained with Andreen’s blood inside the family’s trash can. This missing person’s case had become much more sinister.

    Peter Van Sant: And it’s pointing toward what?

    Frank Stubbs: The evidence … was pointing towards a murder.

    But there was a problem. None of the evidence collected proved that a murder had actually occurred.

    Frank Stubbs: Turning a missing person’s case into a homicide case is very difficult.

    On March 3, 2019, the Air Force concluded its evaluation of Andre and released him. Civil authorities quickly moved in and placed him under arrest.

    But it wasn’t for murder. Major Andre McDonald was arrested for tampering with evidence based upon that torn receipt found at the house listing the items he had purchased from the hardware store.

    Andre’s arrest left his mother in a state of shock and disbelief.

    Jackie Horne: I saw that Andre was taken into custody. … And I just collapsed. … I know he loved Andreen. Why would he harm her?

    And for Andreen’s mother, Andre’s arrest left her head spinning.

    Maureen Smith: Oh, God. Andre could not hurt Andreen. That’s what I was saying. But who else?

    Adding to everyone’s sense of shock, confusion and suspicion was Andre’s decision to stop cooperating with detectives.

    Sheriff Javier Salazar: Andre’s face told us … there was no way in hell we were going to break him and make him tell us what had happened.

    Sheriff Salazar went on local TV asking for help.

    SHERIFF SALAZAR (news conference): We are asking anybody with any information on her whereabouts to give us a call …”

    Soon after, the community of San Antonio, along with family and friends came out in droves to look for Andreen, including a volunteer search party formed by former Air Force Airman Bobby Green.

    Green took “48 Hours” out to one of the areas where he searched for Andreen.

    Bobby Green (walking with Peter Van Sant): Right now, we’re behind a … hospital we thought … he might have taken her here to a wooded area.

    Peter Van Sant: As you walk through here … what are you looking for?

    Bobby Green: You would look at … tree branches that have been pushed away, something that was cut … fresh, uh, tire tracks.

    Peter Van Sant: How many miles did you cover?

    Bobby Green: It was hundreds of miles.

    As search efforts continued, Andre McDonald was released from jail on bond.

    With his wife absent, Andre took over the management of Starlight Homes. Search efforts continued, although investigators say Andre didn’t take part. Days would eventually turn into months of dead ends.

    As the search for Andreen went on, investigators dug further into the couple’s relationship, learning that they had business problems as well as romantic ones.

    In WhatsApp messages shared with friends, there are arguments over who really was the brains behind their successful business. In one, Andreen tells Andre: “Starlight Homes is my idea, my dream, and would not have happened without my drive.” 

    Back then, friends like Andrew Russell became worried about the potential for violence.

    Andrew Russell: And I have text messages from Andreen that’s saying …  “someone is going to snap.”

    Russell told investigators that the couple’s war of words turned physical the night before a Christmas party at their home in 2018, where the McDonalds got into a physical altercation.

    Andrew Russell: So, when I went into the kitchen, Andy and Andreen were grappling on the floor. … The next morning they were laughing about it. … I did feel uncomfortable after that. I thought the situation had become toxic.

    Just over two months later, Andreen’s blood was spilled in her home, and she vanished. Finally, on the evening of July 11, 2019, 133 days after Andreen had gone missing, there was a break in the case.

    SHERIFF SALAZAR (news conference): About 7:30 this evening, Bexar County Sheriff’s Office patrol deputies were dispatched to this location for a report of some human — human remains that were found …

    Skeletal remains were located in a farmer’s field just six miles from the McDonald home. Clifton Klabunde made the discovery. Klabunde had taken out his tractor to retrieve a cow skull that had been spotted right along the tree line of the property.

    Clifton Klabunde: I saw the — what appeared to be a human skull in front of the cow skull.

    Peter Van Sant: That must have been a shock.

    Clifton Klabunde: A shock. Yes.

    Andreen McDonald
    Andreen McDonald

    Instagram


    Officials determined that the human skeletal remains belong to Andreen McDonald.

    Cindy Johnson | Andreen’s sister: I was at a church praying for Andreen. …  I couldn’t do anything. I broke down.

    Maureen Smith: It hit us like a storm because we still wasn’t thinking like that.

    Jackie Horne (crying, shaking her head) Never. … I never saw this coming.

    mcdonald-arrest.jpg
    Andre McDonald

    Bexar County Sheriff’s Office


    Less than 48 hours later, Andre McDonald would be arrested and charged with his wife’s murder.

    MAJOR ANDRE MCDONALD TAKES THE STAND

    Andreen’s family had waited for justice for four years.

    Cindy Johnson: It hurts … every night before I go to my bed, I think about her.

    Bexar County Assistant District Attorneys Steve Speir, Lauren Scott and Ryan Groomer would prosecute Andre McDonald for the murder of his wife, Andreen.

    But the prosecution would face an uphill battle. Despite the evidence found at the McDonald home — the hammer and the blood — the prosecution could not say for sure how Andreen died.

    Lauren Scott: Because … Andreen’s body … was out in the elements in that field for all of those days … medical examiner’s office was unable to specify what exactly caused Andreen’s death.

    Peter Van Sant: And does that, Steven, complicate your preparation?

    Steven Speir: No, it absolutely does. … we say he caused her death; however, we don’t know how.

    Peter Van Sant: If Andre murdered his wife, what do you believe was his motive?

    Steven Speir: I believe it was largely because he felt emasculated … she was such a rising star, had control of these businesses … And I think he was jealous of that.

    Andre McDonald, who pleaded not guilty, was represented by some of the top defense lawyers in San Antonio: John Convery, Zoe Russell and John Hunter.

    Peter Van Sant: How would you respond to the notion that … what caused all this was his … envy of his wife’s success?

    John Hunter: I — I don’t see any evidence of that.

    Zoe Russell: Andre is a major in the Air Force. I mean, he’s incredibly successful on his own right.

    Major Andre McDonald had been under house arrest since April 2021. But days before his trial was set to begin on Jan. 17, 2023, Andre, who had remained silent about his wife’s death began telling an extraordinary story, beginning with his own mother.

    Jackie Horne says her son told her Andreen’s death was an accident.

    Jackie Horne: He looked at me and … he said, “Mom, I’m going to tell you the truth” … and he started to cry.

    McDonald then called Andreen’s mother and sister, Cindy, who put the call on speaker phone.

    Peter Van Sant: [He] … gave the family, for the first time, details of what happened according to him.

    Cindy Johnson: Yes, according to him. Yes.

    It was a phone call that stunned his defense team.

    Peter Van Sant: Was it shocking to you that he had done this?

    John Hunter: Shocking’s a good word for it, yeah. … The entire context of the case changed.

    Zoe Russell: His best thought would be to tell his story in court.

    Andre would get to tell his story, but not before the prosecution laid out its case in opening statements.

    STEVEN SPEIR (in court): Inside the trash bin in the garage … a hammer. That hammer has blood on it. It is the victim’s blood.

    The defense contended that Andreen’s death was an accident.

    JOHN CONVERY (in court): This is not a murder case. … it is a case about the degree and level of responsibility … With evidence of accident. A mutual fight. All of which happens in the blink of an eye.

    The prosecution also called forensic pathologist Dr. James Feig who testified that Andreen’s skeletal remains had severe injuries consistent with being struck by a blunt object. She had a fractured spinal cord, a broken rib and a split jaw.

    mcdonald-andreen-injuries.jpg
    Dr. James Feig who testified that Andreen’s skeletal remains had severe injuries consistent with being struck by a blunt object. She had a fractured spinal cord, a broken rib and a split jaw.

    But the pathologist could not determine what exactly had caused Andreen’s death.

    DR, JAMES FEIG (in court):  So, the way that I have phrased her cause of death is homicidal violence, including blunt force trauma.

    After six days of testimony and 33 witnesses, the prosecution rested. The defense had only one witness.

    JOHN CONVERY (in court): Defense calls Major Andre McDonald.

    Andre McDonald described the evening of Feb. 28, 2019. While at the tax preparer’s office with his wife, he discovered that Andreen had started a new business a year earlier without his knowledge.

    JOHN CONVERY (in court): What did that signify to you?

    ANDRE MCDONALD: Basically that meant to me pretty much that she was robbing me.

    After a heated argument that evening, McDonald says he left the house to cool off at that gas station.  McDonald says they continued their argument over text. And when he returned home, he raised the possibility of divorce and splitting their business in half.

    ANDRE MCDONALD (in court): She became extremely irate at the thought of … splitting the business. … and charges into the room to confront me.

    ANDRE MCDONALD: So, when she comes into the room, you know, I turned around and she comes like right up in my face. … So at that moment … she spits in my face … So at that point … I grabbed her, because she’s like right in front of me, so I like grabbed her head … I think we had like a clash of heads, and I think it opened up like a cut somewhere on her face.

    Andre said Andreen ran into the bathroom and turned on the lights. When Andreen saw her bloody face in the mirror, Andre claims she attacked him.


    Accused murderer Andre McDonald claims his wife could overpower him by
    48 Hours on
    YouTube

    His testimony may be disturbing to some.

    ANDRE MCDONALD (in court): When she comes, she’s like throwing like some punches, so I’m trying to like duck down to and like keep my head, my face … from getting hit with the blows. I remember like grabbing her and like tripping her … And then she like falls … and that’s when I kicked her like twice … The — the second kick, I think I heard like some type of wheezing … and then also like in the background I could hear like some footsteps.

    The footsteps of their young daughter, Alayna. Andre said he left to put Alayna back to bed, and when he returned about 30 minutes later, his wife was dead.

    ANDRE MCDONALD (in court): I became like pretty frantic at that point because … you know, she’s dead on the floor.

    STEVEN SPEIR: You never thought I need to call …

    In cross-examination, Prosecutor Speir asked if Andre had thought about calling 911.

    ANDRE MCDONALD: I never thought about calling anybody to revive a dead person. … My purpose at that point was simply to get her out of the house so that my 7-year-old daughter wouldn’t see her mother laying on the floor dead.

    After putting Alayna back to bed, Andre said he dumped Andreen’s body in the field, stripped her naked and returned home to burn her clothing which left that burn patch in the backyard.

    But what about Andreen’s blood on the yellow hammer? On the face of it, the evidence doesn’t square with Andre’s account of an accident.

    Andre had an explanation for that. He testified that when investigators finished searching his home, he went back to the field before dawn, angry and armed with the yellow hammer, a can of gasoline and a plan.

    ANDRE MCDONALD (in court): My plan was to hit the person that … caused this whole circumstance.

    STEVEN SPEIR: You felt it was her fault, right?

    ANDRE MCDONALD: It’s absolutely her fault.

    STEVEN SPEIR: What did you do with gasoline?

    ANDRE MCDONALD: I poured it on her and then I used the — the lighter and set it on fire.

    Andre said when the flames subsided, that’s when he attacked his wife’s corpse with the yellow hammer.

    ANDRE MCDONALD (in court): I hit her in the face, the neck. … and I just like hit her again as I was walking away. 

    STEVEN SPEIR: Why that last blow?

    ANDRE MCDONALD: As I was walking away?

    STEVEN SPEIR: Yes.

    ANDRE MCDONALD: I guess I was still angry when I was walking away.

    After that gruesome testimony, the defense shifted gears and tried to refocus the jury on their theory of the crime. And for the first time, the defense brought up why Andre acted the way he did that night.

    JOHN CONVERY (in court): Have you always believed you acted in self-defense?

    ANDRE MCDONALD: Yes, I have always believed that from the very beginning.

    The defense played videos showing Andreen giving her husband a piggyback ride and working out.

    JOHN CONVERY (in court):  Would you describe Andreen as a very strong, powerful woman?

    ANDRE MCDONALD: Yes. I would.

    According to Andre, his wife could lift up to 300 pounds.

    JOHN CONVERY: When she attacked you, were you in fear?

    ANDRE MCDONALD: Yes, I was in fear of, you know, being harmed during that whole situation.

    STEVEN SPEIR: They want you to forget and disregard about all his actions.

    Then came closing arguments.

    STEVEN SPEIR (in court): Defense counsel said that this is self-defense, Folks, this is not self-defense. … It’s time to hold this man responsible for what he did. And it’s time to find him guilty of murder.

    JOHN CONVERY: Andre McDonald did not intentionally or knowingly murder Andreen McDonald. … He acted in self-defense. … and your duty and your obligation is to say not guilty. Thank you.

    After six days of testimony, the jury got the case. Approximately 11 hours into their deliberation, the jury sent a note to the judge.

    John Convery: That says, “we’re hopelessly deadlocked.”

    A SHOCKING VERDICT

    After almost 11 hours of deliberating, the jury was deadlocked— unable to decide if Andre McDonald was guilty of murder, manslaughter or not guilty by self-defense. Andreen’s sister, Cindy Johnson, was perplexed. 

    Cindy Johnson: Everything was said in the courtroom. All the evidence were — were there. … He confessed on the stand what he did … They saw his demeanor. … I don’t know what was the problem.

    Brandon Medellin: I voted for murder. And I saw that we were six and six.

    Rudy Ruiz: At no point did any juror think that he was innocent or that it was self-defense.

    For jurors Brandon Medellin and Rudy Ruiz, the problem was wording.

    Brandon Medellin: Cause people really picked apart the definitions of murder and recklessness.

    The jury of six women and six men spent hours discussing whether Andre had intentionally murdered Andreen or if he had recklessly killed her— making it manslaughter. Murder carries a life sentence; manslaughter up to 20 years.

    Brandon Medellin: I think most of us could agree that whatever happened it was reckless. He left her on the ground, and he did not render aid. … Now, the trick was to try and convince the other jurors that it was murder.

    But as the deliberations continued, some of the jurors had been swayed, with nine now for manslaughter. Medellin says the biggest factor in swaying the vote was Andre McDonald’s testimony.

    Brandon Medellin: There was so little evidence … And so, a lot of people believe, because we don’t know anything else other than what he has told us, that we have to take what he told us.

    And he was actually able to convince a lot of the jurors.

    Randy Ruiz: And we had that one juror that he said, “Well, I’ve kicked someone, and I never intended to kill them.”

    Medellin, Ruiz, and a third juror were the staunch holdouts for murder.

    Rudy Ruiz: No one was going to change anyone’s mind.

    The judge then invoked what’s called an Allen Charge— urging the holdout jurors to reconsider the evidence and reach a unanimous decision. After another hour of deliberations: a verdict.

    JUDGE FRANK CASTRO: Mr. McDonald, please stand with your counsel. … To the count of murder, charged in the indictment, the jury finds the defendant, not guilty of the offense of murder. As charged in the indictment: guilty — guilty of the offense of manslaughter. 

    Andre McDonald was found not guilty of murder, but guilty of the lesser charge: Manslaughter. Andreen’s sister was in disbelief.

    Cindy Johnson: Manslaughter. After he spoke with no remorse, no love, nothing at all, and used hammer, stripped her clothes, throw gasoline on her, burned her, and they gave him manslaughter … That’s crazy. I am going to struggle with this thought until the day I die.

    The prosecution had a mixed reaction to the verdict.

    Steven Speir: I was disappointed. … However … the jury … rejected his self-defense argument and held him accountable for at least something.

    For the defense, Andre McDonald may not have walked out a free man, but —

    John Hunter: This is a win. … Despite how I believe that this is a self-defense case. I do respect the outcome.

    Andreen’s best friend, Mandy Hall.

    Mandy Hall (crying): He’s there to tell his story. He’s there to make up whatever he wants to make up. …  She — she doesn’t — she can’t do that because he took that away from her.

    Cindy Johnson now sees that phone call from Andre before the trial in a whole new light: as a calculated ploy to deflect blame.

    Cindy Johnson: It’s four years. It took him four years for him to recognize that he did what he did. … And then all of a sudden … he’s reaching out to us. … To let us think that he’s being responsible. … He didn’t mean anything, he is lying. … All a lie. It’s all a lie.

    After the verdict, Sheriff Salazar reached out to Andreen’s father, a retired member of the Jamaican Army, with an unusual offering.

    SHERIFF SALAZAR (post-verdict news conference): I did present Mr. Anderson with a gift. I asked my deputy to remove the handcuffs from— from Andre as they put him back into the cell. And I gave— I presented those cuffs to— to Mr. Anderson.

    PAUL ANDERSON: I want to tell you that we really appreciate it. … Thank you very much. God bless you (shakes the sheriff’s hand).

    Sheriff Salazar: I wanted them to feel some sort of connection to at least sending him away to — to prison.

    For Andreen’s mother, nothing about this tragedy makes sense — her daughter and the beautiful life she had created are gone. Andreen McDonald, who came to America, became a successful entrepreneur and found her purpose in serving others. Sadly, the business she created is now closed.

    Maureen Smith: I miss her very much. Most times when I think about her, I just, it’s like I feel like giving up.

    And in those times, Maureen and Cindy lean on one another.

    Cindy Johnson: We’re blessed to have each other to take us through this sad journey. Um, when I’m weak, my mom is strong. When my mom is weak, I am strong.

    Maureen Smith: We have to be strong for Alayna.

    Alayna— now 12-years-old— is the glue that binds this fractured family. A family that still includes Andre’s mother, Jackie— though she is mainly left with the memories and the pain of what once was.

    Jackie Horne (crying as she looks at a photo of Andre, Andreen and Alayna): I think I hurt for Alayna more than I hurt for everyone. No child should ever have to go through what she went through.

    Andreen’s mother and sister are now raising Alayna.

    Cindy Johnson: It’s bittersweet because we have Alayna.

    Maureen Smith: Alayna reminds us so much of Andreen.

    Andre McDonald was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

    He is appealing his manslaughter conviction.

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  • Key evidence in the disappearance and death of millionaire Andreen McDonald

    Key evidence in the disappearance and death of millionaire Andreen McDonald

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    Millionaire business owner Andreen McDonald was known for her strict workout regimen. On the morning of March 1, 2019, when she didn’t show up for work, her employees called the gym, which was her usual first stop in her morning routine. They found out she never showed up there either, which raised red flags. What happened to the San Antonio businesswoman, wife and mother?  

    The McDonalds

    Andreen and Andre McDonald
    Andreen McDonald, pictured with Andre McDonald, in front of a sign for Starlight Homes, their assisted living business in San Antonio.

    Instagram


    Married couple Andreen and Andre McDonald were the picture of success. Andre McDonald was a major in the Air Force, and together, he and Andreen McDonald built an assisted living business from the ground up and became millionaires.

    Feb. 16, 2019: Andre’s 40th birthday party

    Andre McDonald
    Andre McDonald at his 40th birthday party.

    Instagram


    For Andre McDonald’s 40th birthday, Andreen McDonald threw him a party at their San Antonio home. According to friends, the couple seemed to be getting along.

    Feb. 28, 2019

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    After a heated argument that evening, Andre McDonald says he left the house to cool off at that gas station. 

    Bexar County District Courts


    According to Andre McDonald, during a meeting at a tax preparer’s office, he discovered Andreen McDonald had opened a separate business without his knowledge. He later told police, when they got home a heated argument ensued. Andre McDonald said he left the house and went to a gas station to cool down. While there, the argument continued via text.

    Revealing text messages

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    A text between the McDonalds.

    Bexar County District Courts


    The couple argued about the business as well as alleged infidelity in the marriage, and even discussed the possibility of divorce. In one message, Andre McDonald texts, “Andreen I don’t care if you file for divorce.”

    Andre McDonald said when he returned home, he thought his wife was sleeping in a separate bedroom.

    March 1, 2019

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    A Bexar County sheriff’s deputy discovered what he believed was blood on the wall and possibly a hair.

    Bexar County District Courts


    When Andreen McDonald didn’t show up to work the next morning, her friends and colleagues became concerned. They picked up Andreen McDonald’s mother, Maureen Smith, from work and drove to the house. Smith called police and reported Andreen missing. 

    When a Bexar County sheriff’s deputy responded to the McDonald home, the group walked him through the house. The deputy noticed something disturbing: there was blood and hair on a light switch in the bathroom.

    The burn pile

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    A zipper from Andreen McDonald’s blouse was discovered in a  burn pile in the backyard.

    Bexar County District Courts


    In the backyard, they discovered a burn pile. In it, a zipper was visible. The deputy also found that Andreen McDonald’s purse, ID and keys were still at the house, but her phone was missing.

    When Andre McDonald returned to his home to find law enforcement there, he claimed he did not know where his wife was but revealed they had an argument the night before. After an investigator arrived on the scene, Andre McDonald refused to speak further and requested an attorney.

    March 2, 2019

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    Andre McDonald is seen at the checkout of a Lowes store. Two red gas cans can be seen on the counter.

    Bexar County District Courts


    The next morning, surveillance video captured Andre McDonald in a Lowe’s purchasing a cart full of items including a shovel and an ax.

    March 2, 2019 – 2:00 p.m.

    mcdonald-08.png
    Surveillance video of Andre McDonald purchasing a 9mm handgun and ammunition.

    Bexar County District Courts


    Later that day, an undercover investigator assigned to watch the McDonald house noticed that the garage had been damaged and saw Andre McDonald backing out of the driveway. The investigator followed him to a nearby gun shop where additional investigators, who were called to the scene, observed Andre McDonald purchasing a 9mm handgun and ammunition.

    “We were under the assumption that he was purchasing a gun to probably harm himself,” lead investigator Frank Stubbs told “48 Hours.” 

    Andre McDonald was detained as he walked from the store to his car. The investigators turned him over to military authorities for a mental evaluation.

    Suspicious items

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    The items purchased  included a shovel and ax, as well as a hatchet, heavy-duty large trash bags, gloves and two 5-gallon gas cans.

    Bexar County District Courts


    Meanwhile, investigators returned to the McDonald’s house with a search warrant. They found the items Andre McDonald had purchased from Lowe’s that morning which included that shovel and ax, as well as a hatchet, heavy-duty large trash bags, gloves and two 5-gallon gas cans. In a nearby trash can, they found a torn receipt for the items.

    The shopping list

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    The handwritten shopping list Andre McDonald had on him when he was detained. It was not admitted as evidence at trial.

    Bexar County District Courts


    Investigators would later obtain a handwritten shopping list Andre McDonald had on him when he was arrested. The list includes many of the items McDonald purchased from Lowe’s. Stubbs told “48 Hours” it appeared Andre McDonald entered Lowe’s with a sinister plan.

    “It doesn’t appear that he’s going to do yard work … at least not with his wife missing,” Stubbs told correspondent Peter Van Sant. “It appears to us that he’s going to use these things to dismember her body …”

    March 3, 2019

    Andreen McDonald evidence
    The torn receipt found at the McDonald house listing the items Andre McDonald had purchased from the hardware store.

    Bexar County District Courts


    The following day, the Air Force concluded its evaluation of Andre McDonald and released himCivil authorities quickly moved in and placed him under arrest, but not for murder. He was arrested for tampering with evidence because of that torn up Lowe’s receipt investigators found in the trash. In April 2019, Andre McDonald posted bond and was released.

    July 11, 2019: Andreen McDonald’s remains are found

    Andreen McDonald
    Andreen McDonald

    Facebook


    After months of searches for Andreen McDonald, her remains were found in July 2019. Her skeletal remains were located in a field six miles from the McDonald home. Andre McDonald was arrested and charged with Andreen McDonald’s murder. He pleaded not guilty to the charge.

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  • Who killed Heidi Firkus? Her husband Nick says he didn’t do it.

    Who killed Heidi Firkus? Her husband Nick says he didn’t do it.

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    For over a decade, investigators worked to piece together the 2010 murder of Heidi Firkus who, according to her husband Nick Firkus, was shot and killed in a burglary at the couple’s Saint Paul, Minnesota, home. Investigators, however, believe the real killer was someone who knew Heidi.

    A shooting at the front door

    Nick and Heidi Firkus
    Nick and Heidi Firkus

    WCCO


    On the morning of April 25, 2010, 25-year-old Heidi frantically called 911 to tell them that someone was breaking into the home she shared with her husband Nick. During Heidi’s call, she was heard screaming out after a loud noise prosecutors believe was the shotgun blast that killed her. 65 seconds later, Nick dialed 911 from Heidi’s phone, and told the dispatcher he and his wife were shot by an intruder.

    Dead at the scene

    Firkus crime scene
    The entryway of the Firkus home.

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    When first responders arrived on the scene, Heidi was pronounced dead. Nick Firkus was rushed to the hospital where he was treated for a gunshot wound to his leg.

    An earwitness

    Firkus earwitness' house
    “Some noise got my attention, so I stuck my head out the window,” Brendan O’ Connor said, pointing to the window.

    CBS News


    Investigators cordoned off the scene and spoke to neighbors. No one saw an intruder fleeing from the Firkus house that morning. Brendan O’Connor, who was house sitting kittens next door, told police he heard a muffled argument, then gunshots and a voice yell out, “you shot her, you shot me, please, please, no.”  

    Nick Firkus’ account

    firkus-questioning.jpg
    Nick Firkus, seated left, is questioned by Saint Paul Police Sgt. Jim Gray.

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    A few hours after Nick was treated at the hospital, he met with investigators at the police station to give his account of what happened. He described hearing someone fiddling with the front doorknob, grabbing his gun, waking Heidi up, rushing her down the stairs, and then having a confrontation with the intruder who gained access into the home.

    The struggle

    The murder weapon

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    According to Nick, he and the intruder struggled with the gun. “So my finger slipped onto the trigger … she was running away, so I definitely hit her in the back,” Nick told investigators. Shortly after that, he said he was shot and the intruder escaped.

    Financial troubles revealed

    The Firkus home
    The Firkus home

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    Nick also revealed to investigators that he and Heidi were behind on their bills and lost their home. They were expected to vacate their house in 24 hours. 

    A suspect sketch

    Nick Firkus provided this sketch  to investigators.

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    As the weeks went by, Nick provided a sketch of the suspect to investigators. They released it to the public but it did not generate any leads. 

    A new life

    firkus-rachel-wedding.jpg
    Rachel Sanchez and Nick Firkus were wed two years after Heidi’s death. Rachel says the two bonded over their faith.

    Rachel Firkus


    Investigators continued to work the case and Nick eventually started a new relationship. Two years after Heidi’s death, he married Rachel Sanchez.

    A tip comes in

    Five years after Heidi’s death, police got a break in the case. A tipster called in saying they recognized the person in the sketch. But, according to investigators, there was a problem. “He was already in prison on the date of Heidi’s death,” Sgt. Nichole Sipes told “48 Hours.”

    A new set of eyes

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes
    Sgt. Nichole Sipes of the Saint Paul Police Department

    CBS News


    In 2019, Sgt. Nichole Sipes was leading Heidi’s case. She, along with the help of the FBI, examined the case file. Sipes says she discovered something odd about Nick and Heidi’s financial situation.

    “There was no communication between the two of them to indicate that she had any idea of the depth of their financial issues,” Sipes said. The investigator believes Heidi was not aware of the foreclosure.

    Nick Firkus’ second wife speaks out

    Nick and Rachel Firkus
    Nick and Rachel Firkus

    Rachel Firkus


    Investigator Sipes contacted Rachel Firkus, who was now divorced from Nick. Rachel told her she left Nick because she discovered he was not paying the bills. A similarity, she says, that occurred in his relationship with Heidi. “He was definitely repeating the same things he did with Heidi with me,” Rachel told “48 Hours.”

    Rachel Firkus’ audio recordings

    Rachel Firkus
    Rachel Firkus says Nick’s dishonesty started to make her question whether he had also lied about Heidi’s death.

    CBS News


    Rachel told Sipes that she confronted Nick about their financial problems and recorded it. She gave the recorded conversation to police.

    Nick Firkus’ arrest

    Nick Firkus
    Eleven years after Heidi’s death, Nick Firkus was arrested and charged with second-degree murder. A grand jury ultimately indicted Nick on first- and second-degree murder charges.

    Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office


    On May 19, 2021, Nick was arrested for second-degree murder. A grand jury eventually indicted him on first- and second-degree murder charges.

    The trial of Nick Firkus

    Saint Paul, Minnesota, courthouse

    CBS News


    Almost two years later, Nick went to trial. Prosecutors argued that Nick staged the burglary because he was desperate and ashamed about their financial issues. “… his lies are about to crumble. He would have been exposed as a complete failure … and instead, he is a victim,” prosecutor Elizabeth Lamin told “48 Hours.”

    A 3-D model

    firkus-3d-model.jpg
    The 3-D model of the Firkus home that was created to scale by the FBI.

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    During the trial, prosecutors presented a 3-D model of the Firkus home, which was produced by the FBI, to demonstrate the size of entryway where the struggle occurred, and to prove how Nick’s story was not reasonable. They also developed an animation of the crime to show how Heidi was shot.

    Tool marks

    Took marks on Firkus front door
    Nick Firkus’ defense team says marks on the door show there was an intruder. 

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    Nick’s defense lawyers, Joe Friedberg and Robert Richman, say Nick had no reason to kill Heidi. They say Heidi was fully aware of the foreclosure, and there was proof of the intruder.

    “In fact, there were tool marks in the door, which would be consistent with someone wedging a screwdriver between the frame and the door,” Richman said. 

    The verdict is in

    On Feb. 10, 2023, after being on trial for 11 days, Nick was found guilty on two counts of murder.

    Life in prison

    Nick Firkus sentencing
    Nick Firkus reads a statement at his sentencing in which he refused to admit guilt. 

    WCCO


    On April 13, 2023, at Nick’s sentencing hearing, he refused to accept guilt for Heidi’s murder. “I do maintain and will maintain to my dying breath my innocence of this crime.” The judge gave Nick a life sentence without parole. Nick is appealing his conviction.

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  • Heidi Firkus’ fatal shooting captured on her 911 call to report an intruder

    Heidi Firkus’ fatal shooting captured on her 911 call to report an intruder

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    At 6:30 a.m. on April 25, 2010, Heidi Firkus called 911 after her husband, Nick Firkus, said an intruder was breaking into their Saint Paul, Minnesota, home. She was shot and killed. Nick Firkus told investigators that his gun discharged when he struggled with the intruder – but something in his story struck police as odd.

    “It never felt right,” Sgt. Nichole Sipes of the Saint Paul Police Department tells “48 Hours” contributor Jamie Yuccas. “The story never made sense to me.”

    A SHOOTING AT THE FRONT DOOR

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Well, this area of Saint Paul, where Heidi and Nick Firkus lived, I would characterize as generally a quiet neighborhood.

    Back in 2010, nine years before she took charge of the Firkus case, Investigator Nichole Sipes of the St. Paul Police Department was a patrol cop who worked this neighborhood.

    Jamie Yuccas: Do you remember first hearing about the Firkus case?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: I do.

    NICK FIRKUS (to 911): Ahh, please, please, somebody just broke in our house and shot me and my wife.

    911 OPERATOR: OK …

    It was early on a Sunday morning.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: The 911 call was at 6:30.

    PIC OF HOUSE W/POLICE TAPE

    Nick Firkus’ story of a burglar didn’t make sense to Sipes.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Most people are home at 6:30 on a Sunday morning, especially in a family neighborhood like that. … the last thing that most burglars want to encounter are people.

    Jamie Yuccas: Did police ever have any luck tracking down the intruder that Nick described?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: No.

    Branden O’Connor: You know, I’m looking, I didn’t see anybody come out of that house.

    Branden O’Connor was house sitting next door to the Firkus’ and taking care of kittens.

    Branden O’Connor: I was woken up by the kittens kinda walking around. … Some noise got my attention, so I stuck my head out the window (points to the window). Kinda listen.

    In his first TV interview, O’Connor says he recalls hearing a muffled argument coming from the Firkus’ house, listening through an open window.

    Branden O’Connor: That’s when I ended up hearing what sounded like gunshots.

    Around this time, O’Connor said he also heard that voice crying out.

    Branden O’Connor: Kind of this agonizing yell of, “you shot her, you shot me. Uh, please, please, no,” something along those lines and then — then it was done.

    Nick and Heidi Firkus
    Nick and Heidi Firkus

    WCCO


    First responders rushed to the scene. There was nothing they could do for Heidi; she was pronounced dead. Nick was rushed to a hospital and treated for a graze gunshot wound to his leg. He seemed not to be sure whether or not Heidi had been killed.

    SGT. KANE (at the hospital): Like I said, we’ll do our best to find out how, how Heidi is doing, OK?

    NICK FIRKUS: Please.

    Hours later, Nick  was transported to the St. Paul Police Department.

    Sgt. Jim Gray:  Then Nick and I started to have our conversation in the conference room.

    Nick entered the conference room using  crutches. Sergeant Jim Gray took Nick’s statement.

    SGT. GRAY (police interview) You know, I know this is a very traumatic situation, OK? And, I’m just going to try and ease into it, OK?

    NICK FIRKUS: OK.

    Nick said the couple ordered in food the night before and watched the movie “Avatar.” They went upstairs to their bedroom around 11 p.m. The next morning, Nick got up around 6 a.m. to get a drink of water from the bathroom.

    NICK FIRKUS (police interview): I go back to sleep. I just kinda fitfully sleep for 10 or 15 minutes, and then I heard the screen door open. … kinda let it go for a little while, but then I started hearing fiddling with our doorknob.

    SGT. GRAY: And is Heidi still sleeping then?

    NICK FIRKUS: Yeah.

    SGT GRAY: OK.

    NICK FIRKUS: Like a rock.


    Husband suspected of killing wife, lying about intruder

    06:33

    Nick said he retrieved his shotgun from the closet.

    NICK FIRKUS: I keep two shells for just in case things go weird … So when I heard things, this morning, I did load it. … and then I wake up Heidi.

    SGT. GRAY: OK.

    According to Nick, he told Heidi someone was trying to break in and to call 911. As she spoke with the dispatcher —

    HEIDI FIRKUS (911 CALL): Someone’s trying to break into my home.

    They headed downstairs so they could get out of the house.

    SGT GRAY: Alright. So, you are going first down the stairs, or is she, is she behind you, or she in front of you, or what?

    NICK FIRKUS:  Umm, she is front because I’m kinda trying to move her along quickly.

    Nick said as they passed by the front door, it burst open.

    NICK FIRKUS (police interview) The guy was there … I think he — he grabbed the barrel. … I don’t remember exactly but the gun went off. So, my finger slipped onto the trigger.

    Nick told Sergeant Gray during the struggle over the weapon, the gun fired, striking Heidi who he said was in the kitchen.

    HEIDI FIRKUS (to 911): [Heidi screams]


    SGT. GRAY:  OK, so the gun’s —

    NICK FIRKUS: Gun’s here, chest high.

    SGT. GRAY: Yep.

    SGT. GRAY (stands to demonsrate):  You and I are like this?

    NICK FIRKUS: Yeah.

    SGT. GRAY: And then the gun goes off?

    NICK FIRKUS: Mm hmm. I mean, you know, I know it hit Heidi. I just know I did. … She was running away, so I definitely hit her in the back.

    SGT. GRAY: It hit her in the back?

    NICK FIRKUS: Yeah.

    Marcus Sarazin: I couldn’t believe it. I — I don’t want to believe it.

    Katina Sarazin: it can’t be true, that’s — there’s no way.

    Katina and Marcus Sarazin mentored Heidi at Calvary Church.

    Katina Sarazin: I think she’s one of those people that you can’t not like. Everyone liked Heidi. … She genuinely loved people … she was the life of the party … always finding fun ways to engage people. … and she was very loyal.

    Nick and Heidi Firkus
    Nick and Heidi Firkus

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    The couple met at the church, and in 2005, Heidi, 20, and Nick, 22, got married.

    Marcus Sarazin: Nick Firkus … had a very warm and engaging personality, always smiling … he carried himself with confidence. … and he … had high character, high integrity in the church. That was the reputation he built for himself.

    But just few hours after Heidi’s death, Sergeant Gray found himself questioning Nick Firkus’ account. He couldn’t figure out why the couple would leave the safety of their bedroom.

    SGT. GRAY (police interview): You come upstairs, you know, I hate to tell you this but my house, you know … I’m justified in killing you if you come breaking into my house.

    NICK FIRKUS: Yeah, I guess the …

    Nick explained that the couple had a plan in place. If they were ever in a precarious situation, they would avoid a confrontation and escape to their car in the garage and get away.

    NICK FIRKUS: If we can save ourselves, let’s, let’s do that instead of getting in a situation where —

    Sgt. Jim Gray: His story, didn’t make a lot of sense to me.

    Gray started probing into their marriage.

    SGT. GRAY: You guys, uh, have any problems or anything like that?

    NICK FIRKUS: Just the normal stuff like, ah, you know, stresses about finances and quality time and vacations and all that stuff. 

    SGT. GRAY: Yeah.

    NICK FIRKUS: But —

    SGT. GRAY: You guys aren’t behind on the bills or anything like that?

    NICK FIRKUS: We are behind on the bills which is a little stressful. … In fact we were planning on moving tomorrow. Um —

    SGT. GRAY: Moving where?

    NICK FIRKUS: Well, we hadn’t figured that out yet. … We were and this is, ah, a hard, it’s a hard place for us, but we, we’re foreclosing, we foreclosed on our house.

    Nick revealed they were behind on their mortgage payments and just 24 hours away from being evicted from their home.

    SGT. GRAY: Well, that’s kind of, I mean, kinda close notice.

    NICK FIRKUS: It is. And I think the reason is cause we’re both kinda dealing with the shame of the whole thing …

    Gray says his suspicions were raised. And, minutes later, he was struck by the way Nick asked about Heidi.

    NICK FIRKUS: Well, I just wanna know the final answer on, ah, the final answer on Heidi.

    SGT. GRAY: She didn’t make it.

    NICK FIRKUS: I figured that. I mean —

    Jamie Yuccas: Is that typically how someone asks if their loved one or spouse has been killed?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Not only is that not typical, that that’s how they’d ask it, but they wouldn’t wait an hour and 40 minutes into this conversation to ask that question.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: I’ve watched the interview obviously numerous times. And I understand … people react to trauma differently. … But this was different than what I’d seen. … anybody that’s watched that interview cannot help but be struck by Nick’s demeanor during it.

    Jamie Yuccas: And that demeanor was?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: This was just another day. This was something he had to get through …

    Skeptical of Nick’s story, Gray confronted Nick about what happened that day.

    SGT. GRAY (police interview):, I, you know, part of me wants to ask you this question … Did you have anything to do with this?

    NICK FIRKUS: No, absolutely not.

    SGT. GRAY: OK.

    NICK FIRKUS Absolutely not.

    SGT. GRAY: Alright.

    NICK FIRKUS: Why is there a part of you that wants to ask that?

    SGT. GRAY: Well, Nick. I’m, I’m a police officer, OK? I got to ask, I got to ask the tough questions, alright?

    After the interview, Nick left the police station. That day, investigators returned to the Firkus home with a search warrant. Gray says it did not look like anyone was planning to move out the next day.

    Sgt. Jim Gray: Nothing was packaged up at all. … the closet was still full of clothes. … We noticed that there was still food in the refrigerator.

    And there was something else that investigators questioned.

    Sgt. Jim Gray: We didn’t see any signs of … forced entry into the house. … based off of the physical evidence at the scene … his version of the incident couldn’t be plausible.

    A LOOK AT THE EVIDENCE

    48 hours after Nick Firkus said an intruder shot and killed his wife Heidi, police went back to the crime scene to check out his story.

    Sgt. Jim Gray (at the Firkus house): He told us that there was a … life and death struggle inside the house.

    But Gray says the evidence at the scene didn’t match Nick’s account.

    Firkus crime scene
    The Firkus’ entryway did not appear to show signs of a struggle.

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    Sgt. Jim Gray (at the Firkus house): There was a vase, some receipts, a beer bottle … and none of that was knocked over. So that kind of raised suspicion to us that if there was such a struggle, why wasn’t any of this stuff knocked over?

    Gray says he examined the front door for signs of a break-in and did notice some markings.

    Sgt. Jim Gray (at the Firkus house): … but it wasn’t anything new … that would lead us to believe that the, the door had been forced open … the day of the murder.

    In his interview with police, Nick said he heard someone fiddling with the front door from upstairs.

    SGT. GRAY: Now what they were doing? I mean, were they just going like this? (jiggles door knob in the interview room)

    NICK FIRKUS: Yeah.

    SGT. GRAY: Kinda like that?

    NICK FIRKUS: Yeah. Just shaking the knob —

    SGT. GRAY: OK.

    NICK FIRKUS: — and shoving the door.

    That day, Gray and his colleagues did a reenactment to determine if they could hear the front door shaking from the bedroom.

    SGT. GRAY (police video): April 27th, 2010.

    OFFICER: I’m in the bedroom …

    Sgt. Jim Gray: Sergeant Shackle and Sergeant Wright were upstairs in the bedroom.

    SGT. GRAY: I’m at the front door, so let me know when you guys are ready, I’ll try to knock for 15 seconds then….

    OFFICER: We are ready.

    Sgt. Jim Gray: They could not hear me fiddling with the door.

    SGT. GRAY: Alright.

    Gray says he also doubted Nick’s story about the couple’s eviction, and a scheduled move the day after Heidi was shot.

    Sgt. Jim Gray: There didn’t appear to be anything boxed up or packaged up to go. … There were a few empty boxes in the dining room area … there was not a grand stack of boxes … or anything for that matter that would lead us to believe that they were going to pack up all in one day.

    Meanwhile Heidi’s mentors from Calvary Church, Marcus and Katina Sarazin, were learning the details about her death and the eviction.

    Marcus Sarazin: it just didn’t add up. It’s just — something wasn’t right with that story.

    Katina Sarazin: It seemed so out of the ordinary that she would be moving and not have notified anyone, not have anything prepared for that. … because she planned things out and she liked things to be orderly.

    Heidi Firkus
    Heidi Firkus

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    On April 30, 2010 – five days after her passing — the Sarazins attended Heidi’s funeral.

    Marcus Sarazin:Yeah, the atmosphere at the funeral was … there was a lot of emotion.

    At the funeral, Marcus and Katina say they were struck by Nick’s demeanor.

    Katina Sarazin: I remember going through the receiving line and shaking his hand … there was no grief showing.

    Marcus Sarazin: … it just felt like he lacked emotion.

    Marcus says he went as far as asking some of the couple’s friends if Nick could have shot his wife.

    Marcus Sarazin: And the answer I got was, no, there’s no way that Nick killed Heidi. … He loved her, there, there’s just no way he could have done that. And I just wasn’t so sure about that.

    Sgt. Jim Gray: From what we gathered during our investigation, Nick and Heidi were in a loving relationship. There was no problems or issues that anybody saw.

    Joe Friedberg: Your first impression upon meeting Nick Firkus is … no way in the world could he have committed a violent act.

    The day after the shooting, Nick’s family hired attorney Joe Friedberg who advised Nick to stop talking to the police.

    Joe Friedberg: It didn’t take long to realize that he was being looked at as a suspect.

    When investigators asked Nick to sit down with their artist to draw a sketch of the intruder, Friedberg advised him not to.

    Joe Friedberg: They were going to use it as an opportunity to further interview him.

    Instead, Nick and his attorney hired their own sketch artist.

    Sgt. Jim Gray: It was quite odd that Nick would work with a private … sketch artist.

    And brought that drawing to police.

    Sgt. Jim Gray: And at that point, we were basically told that Nick … would not be answering any more questions with regards to our investigation.

    Firkus suspect sketch
    As the weeks went by, Nick Firkus provided a sketch of the suspect to investigators. It was released it to the public but did not generate any leads. 

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    Investigators released Nick’s sketch to the public, but it didn’t generate any leads, they kept working the case…Nick moved out of their home a few weeks after Heidi’s death.

    Two months later, he began a friendship with the sister of one of Heidi’s best friends, Rachel Sanchez, who was going through a divorce.

    Rachel Firkus: At the time I thought … because we shared something traumatic, there was a deep connection there. … Because I had come out of something traumatic myself in a relationship …

    Rachel Firkus: I think Nick seemed to be handling things well … it felt like he was very grounded … he was, with his friends a lot, and they were processing together. So I think just his — his steadiness … was an attractive quality …

    Rachel says the two bonded over their faith. They began dating in the spring of 2011.

    Rachel Firkus: At the time, God played a big part in my life … And I think that’s another quality that I saw in him, that he, he loved God like I did.

    One year into their relationship, Nick proposed.

    Rachel Firkus: I knew it was coming. We had looked at rings before, and so it wasn’t really a huge surprise.

    firkus-rachel-wedding.jpg
    Rachel Sanchez and Nick Firkus on their wedding day. Rachel says the two bonded over their faith.

    Rachel Firkus


    And a few months later, the couple married. They started a family.

    Rachel Firkus: We did have kids pretty quickly.

    And soon were the parents of three children.

    Andrew Erickson: He absolutely loves his kids so much.

    Andrew and Emily Erickson are friends of Nick. They say for a long time, Nick didn’t talk much about Heidi’s murder.

    Emily Erickson: Yeah, it just didn’t seem like there was a lot of room for his grief during that time.

    But they say when he did talk about it, his story was always the same.

    Jamie Yuccas: What did he tell you?

    Emily Erickson: Same thing he’s always told everyone from the first day, same thing he’d tell you today. … That someone was breaking into the house, and they were gonna try to get out. And there was an altercation and tragically, Heidi was killed

    Investigators still did not believe that story, but five years after Heidi’s death, with little movement in the case, they finally got a break when someone called in a tip —

    Rachel Firkus: There was somebody that looked exactly like the sketch.

    — and put a name to Nick’s sketch.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Somebody called … and said, “I have an experience with this guy. I think I know who it is.”

    A NEW LOOK AT THE CASE

    After five years without a break in Heidi Firkus’ murder case, out of the blue, a tipster called police with a name after seeing the sketch of the suspect. But there was a problem, says investigator Sipes.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: He was already in prison on the date of Heidi’s death. 

    Nick’s second wife Rachel says her husband rarely talked about the case being solved. 

    Rachel Firkus: I had asked him … “are you gonna put effort into seeing if you can find the person that did this?”

    Rachel Firkus: He didn’t reach out to anyone as far as I know. … I know that from his lawyers he was told to “just stay silent.”  

    Police found it odd Nick never checked in. 

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Through four investigators in this case … he never contacted one of us to ask the status.

    Prosecutors Rachel Kraker and Elizabeth Lamin joined the investigation in 2015. 

    Jamie Yuccas: Was this case ever considered a cold case?

    Rachel Kraker: It wasn’t ever considered a cold case … because …

    Rachel Kraker: There just was not a lot of new information coming in. 

    Elizabeth Lamin: Heidi’s family … would check in on her birthday …. Is there anything, new development? 

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes
    Sgt. Nichole Sipes of the Saint Paul Police Department

    CBS News


    And there would be new developments when Sipes took over Heidi’s case in 2019.

    Jamie Yuccas: It seems her fresh set of eyes really made a huge difference.

    Rachel Kraker: It was absolutely critical 

    Elizabeth Lamin: I think Sipes definitely restarted something.

    Sipes dug deep — reviewing the entire case file, including an examination of a financial timeline she compiled with the help of the FBI.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: I had the luxury of looking back on all of these things several years later. 

    Sipes learned Nick worked at his family’s carpet installation business; they were contractors for Home Depot. Heidi was a clerk at a financial services company in St. Paul. Their combined income was about $70,000 a year.

    Elizabeth Lamin: They seem like they were on top of all the bills before they bought the house. 

    But Lamin says the home purchase in 2007 strained the couple’s finances. 

    Elizabeth Lamin: And that home was just too much for them. 

    By the time Heidi died in April 2010, the couple was deeply in debt.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: He had not paid the mortgage in 22 months.

    In fact, the couple had lost their home to foreclosure and would be forced to move out. But Sipes discovered Heidi apparently had no idea. After reviewing the couple’s texts and emails, Sipes saw no evidence Nick ever told Heidi they were in financial trouble.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: There was no communication between the two of them to indicate that she had any idea of the depth of their financial issues.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: I was able to determine through the foreclosure and eviction attorneys that there was no paperwork Heidi had signed, that nobody had ever talked to Heidi, nobody met Heidi. … Heidi didn’t go to the eviction hearing on March 8th, 2010.

    Sipes says Nick and Heidi’s family and friends didn’t know the couple had to relocate. 

    Elizabeth Lamin: And if she was serious about moving … she would’ve gotten the day off.

    Jamie Yuccas: So she was planning to go to work?

    Elizabeth Lamin: Yes.

    Jamie Yuccas: Why do you think he kept her in the dark so long?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Shame. … I believe he was concerned about the shame of what he had done, how it would look … that he couldn’t come clean with her. … You know, it had gotten too big at that point.

    And when Sipes talked to the couple’s friends, she learned why Nick wanted to hide their financial situation.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: He was described by his friends as being wise and being the person that they would go to for advice.

    Rachel Kraker: Nick Firkus really presented as somebody who had some of those bigger, tougher life questions figured out. … What kind of person do you want to be? … What kind of relationship do you want to have with God? 

    Jamie Yuccas: What does that tell you as you’re investigating the case and you see someone in that type of personality?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: It just became easier to see that this was someone who did not want … his friends, his family … to know the extent to which he had failed.

    Sipes says she discovered more of Nick’s lies when she learned about a conversation Heidi had with a friend just the day before she died.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Heidi had talked to us about how Nick had told her that they were victims of identity theft. … it was somewhere around $180,000 to $200,000 worth of identity theft. 

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Wasn’t true. They weren’t the victims. … This was all untrue.

    But as Sipes tried to figure out if there was a connection between Nick’s lies and Heidi’s death, she learned Nick and Rachel had divorced.

    Rachel Firkus: I remember very well when Nikki Sipes came to my door.

    And that Nick had also kept secrets from her.

    Jamie Yuccas: Did Rachel ever say anything about why their marriage dissolved?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: She did. … There were financial issues between the two of them … Nick was lying about a lot of things.

    Rachel Firkus: This is a story that’s happened before, and it didn’t end well. … that terrified me. 

    WHAT DID RACHEL FIRKUS KNOW?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Could there actually have been an intruder? 

    After spending 19 months digging deep into the Firkus case file, reviewing crime scene photos, 911 calls and Nick’s video interview, Sipes had come to one conclusion. 

    NICK FIRKUS (police interview): She was running away so it definitely hit her in the back …

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: What really matters is what happened in that foyer. … and there was no third person.

    Jamie Yuccas: You never found anyone else’s DNA?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: No. … No DNA evidence, no physical evidence, no sign of a struggle. To me, there were only two people in that house when Heidi was killed.

    Jamie Yuccas: And they were?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Nick and Heidi. 

    As part of the new investigation, Sipes reached out to Nick’s second wife Rachel. What did she know? 

    Rachel Firkus: In 2020 she came to my door … And I was like,  “Why are you here?” And she was like, “To talk about Heidi Firkus.” 

    At first, Rachel, then divorced from Nick, says she was reluctant to talk.

    Rachel Firkus: You’re asking for a lot when you get involved in something like this. And I didn’t want to. … But … I also knew that it was the right thing to do, and it was for truth. 

    Rachel told Sipes Nick had lied about their finances during their marriage.

    Rachel Firkus: I found a letter saying that we hadn’t paid our property taxes. And that we were gonna get evicted in 2020 if we didn’t pay them. And when I saw that, I was like, Oh, no. … Like he was definitely repeating the same things he did with Heidi with me.

    Rachel Firkus
    Rachel Firkus says Nick’s dishonesty started to make her question whether he had also lied about Heidi’s death.

    CBS News


    During that time, Rachel says Nick’s dishonesty started to make her question whether he had also lied about Heidi’s death.

    Rachel Firkus: And I said, “We gotta sit down and talk.”

    Rachel secretly recorded the conversation on her phone.

    RACHEL FIRKUS (on audio recording): Your actions have caused me to just distrust you completely. 

    Rachel Firkus: If there was gonna be a confession, I was gonna make sure that … I could prove that he said it. 

    RACHEL FIRKUS (on audio recording): And the fact that your lying was so easy for you to do in front of me over and over and over. Makes me think —

    NICK FIRKUS (on audio recording): That I could murder my wife?

    RACHEL FIRKUS (on audio recording): — that you could lie about something.

    NICK FIRKUS (on audio recording):  That I could murder my wife.

    RACHEL FIRKUS (on audio recording): Yes.

    NICK FIRKUS (on audio recording):  Oh— 

    RACHEL FIRKUS: When I listen, I think “this silence kills me.”

    Rachel Firkus: He’s angry at me … How dare I think those things. … Why aren’t you saying you didn’t? … Tell me I’m not right. 

    Rachel later shared the recordings with Sipes.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: The behavior that he exhibited in his marriage with Rachel was almost duplicative of … how he hid things from Heidi.

    Elizabeth Lamin: We cannot let this man be out on the street any longer. 

    For prosecutor Elizabeth Lamin, the time had come to act. 

    Elizabeth Lamin: I told Sergeant Sipes …  “we’re charging him. Let’s do it.”

    Nick Firkus booking photo
    Eleven years after Heidi’s death, Nick Firkus was arrested and charged with second-degree murder. A grand jury ultimately indicted Nick on first- and second-degree murder charges.

    Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office


    On May 19, 2021, 11 years after Heidi was shot to death, a Saint Paul Police SWAT team arrested Nick Firkus at his house and charged him with second-degree murder. A grand jury ultimately indicted Nick on first- and second-degree murder charges. 

    Marcus Sarazin: Our minds were absolutely blown. 

    Heidi’s friends Marcus and Katina Sarazin were relieved. 

    Marcus Sarazin: It’s hard to, to say, I don’t know what emotion you even put to it, it’s hard to say excited.

    Katina Sarazin: I felt grateful. 

    Emily Erickson: We don’t understand.

    Nick’s friends Emily and Andrew Erickson.

    Emily Erickson: You have to believe that a good man with no history of violence … killed the woman that he loved more than anything in life for no reason. … That’s what you have to believe. We can’t get there.

    After remaining free on bail for almost two years, on Jan. 27, 2023, Nick Firkus went on trial. Prosecutors would not be allowed to call Nick’s second wife Rachel to testify or use her taped conversation with Nick. The judge ruled her testimony, and the recording had no bearing on the case. 

    Natalie Micheal: I went into it with an open mind. 

    Natalie Micheal served on the jury. 

    Jamie Yuccas: Did he appear like a man who would kill his wife?

    Natalie Micheal: No, he did not. .. A lot through the trial … he was putting his head down … when they showed the photos of the two of them together, you know he seemed like he really was in love with her. 

    Elizabeth Lamin: I think Nick was … someone who … lived two lives.

    Prosecutors presented an unusual motive. They told the jurors Nick Firkus staged a burglary because he was desperate and ashamed his secrets were about to be revealed to Heidi and everyone else.

    Elizabeth Lamin: All of his kind of cards of lies are about to crumble. … He would have been exposed as a complete failure, a liar … to his friends and community. And instead, he’s a victim. … He walks away from this … supported by his friends, supported by his family. 

    Joe Friedberg: Nick had no reason. 

    Heidi and Nick Firkus
    Heidi and Nick Firkus

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    Nick’s lawyers Joe Friedberg and Robert Richman say that simply makes no sense as a motive. 

    Robert Richman: There was nothing about murdering the woman who everyone agreed he loved that would help his situation.

    And they say the state’s contention that Heidi didn’t know about the couple’s finances simply was not true. 

    Joe Friedberg: Nick … said she was in on all of the major decisions. … He would say to us that … they’re making Heidi out to be an imbecile.

    Natalie Michael: At first, I was wondering how she couldn’t know … about the finances or some of the foreclosures or some of the things happening. 

    But Natalie Micheal says the prosecution’s case did not hinge on motive. 

    Natalie Micheal: The prosecution said … it really is — was there an intruder in the house or was there not an intruder?

    Robert Richman: It was our position … that there had been an intruder exactly the way Nick described to the police, on the 911 call.

    NICK FIRKUS (911 CALL): Somebody just broke into our house and shot me and my wife … 

    Robert Richman: At the scene —

    Sgt. Jim Gray: The information that Nick have at the scene is that this intruder came into the house.

    Robert Richman: At the hospital —

    NICK FIRKUS (police interview): He just came in

    Robert Richman: — and to Sergeant Gray.

    NICK FIRKUS (police interview): The guy that was there, I think he, he grabbed the barrel … 

    Nick’s lawyers say police didn’t find the intruder’s fingerprints or DNA at the scene because, as Nick told investigators in his interview at the hospital, the intruder was wearing gloves.

    OFFICER (hospital interview): And what else can you describe from him …

    NICK FIRKUS: Gloves.

    OFFICER: He’s wearing gloves. 

    Joe Friedberg: You don’t always leave DNA and especially when your hands are covered.

    But prosecutors say there was something else missing from the scene besides fingerprints.

    Jamie Yuccas: So what am I looking at here?


    What did investigators find at the Firkus’ Minnesota home?

    02:23

    Elizabeth Lamin: This is a physical model to scale that was created by the FBI. 

    They used a model to show the jurors there was no evidence of a struggle. 

    Elizabeth Lamin: I felt that it was very important for us to be able to recreate how small that entryway is.

    Jamie Yuccas (show and tell): Let’s say the intruder gets in … they have the struggle….

    Elizabeth Lamin: And they have this life and death struggle right in this area with nothing disturbed.

    Jamie Yuccas: On the table?

    Elizabeth Lamin: Exactly. … And then Heidi gets shot square in the back in a very clear shot.

    Firkus FBI aimation
    Animation created by the FBI shows that the bullet that killed Heidi was most likely shot from shoulder level.

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    Animation created by the FBI shows that the bullet that killed Heidi was most likely shot from shoulder level.

    Elizabeth Lamin: The height at which Heidi is shot fits exactly on Nick’s shoulder to aim and to fire.

    Nick’s attorneys say there was direct evidence that showed there was an intruder. 

    Robert Richman: In fact, there were tool marks in the door, which would be consistent with someone wedging a screwdriver between the frame and the door. 

    Attorney Joe Friedberg says Firkus’ next door neighbor Branden O’Connor testified he heard a voice. 

    Branden O’Connor: ” … you shot her, you shot me. Uh, please, please, no,” something along those lines… 

    Joe Friedberg: That means there must have been another person in that house. … Nick was talking to a third person when he said that.

    But prosecutors say O’Connor may have misheard Nick while he was on the phone with the 911 dispatcher.

    Elizabeth Lamin: He is screaming about being shot … And he did that over almost seven minutes.   

    NICK FIRKUS (TO 911): Somebody just broke into my house and shot me and my wife.

    NICK FIRKUS (TO 911): Please!

    911 OPERATOR: Please stay on the phone with me, OK?

    Nick Firkus did not take the stand. After an 11 day trial, the case went to the jury. 

    Emily Erickson: If there’s anything in this case, there’s reasonable doubt.

    Andrew Erikson: Yeah.

    JUSTICE FOR HEIDI

    As the state and Nick Firkus’ defense team presented their closing arguments on Feb. 10, 2023, attorneys on both sides were hopeful the jury would make the right decision.

    Elizabeth Lamin: It was a hard-fought litigated trial. 

    Elizabeth Lamin: We had great, we thought, circumstantial evidence that what Nick said happened did not happen. 

    Joseph Friedberg: It’s not enough if you have a hunch.

    Joseph Friedberg: There was no direct evidence that Nick murdered his wife. 

    In her closing argument, Prosecutor Kraker said Nick shot Heidi while she was on the phone with the 911 operator. 

    911 OPERATOR: Someone’s trying, west … 

    [Gunshots heard] 

    HEIDI FIRKUS: [Screams]

    RACHEL KRAKER: So, that call does end with a very, very loud noise, and the call goes dead. … And we believe … that that’s the gunshot. 

    According to phone records, 65 seconds passed from that moment until Nick made his 911 call.

    NICK FIRKUS (TO 911): Hello, please, please … somebody just broke in our house and shot me …

    Kraker reenacted for jurors what she believed Nick did before he made that call.

    Rachel Kraker: I walked over in the courtroom … to roughly as far as Heidi would have been on the ground, crouched down, turned her over to check for her pulse to be sure that she was, in fact, deceased … Walked back over. Picked up the firearm … and demonstrated how he could … shoot himself … and … call 911.

    911 OPERATOR: Where’s the guy that shot you? 

    Rachel Kraker: At 65 seconds … there was more than enough time for all of that to happen.

    To prove their theory Nick shot himself in the thigh, they point to marks left by shotgun pellets at the bottom of the front door.  

    firkus-model-door.jpg
    To prove their theory Nick shot himself in the thigh, they point to marks left by shotgun pellets at the bottom of the front door.

    Ramsey County Attorney’s Office


    Elizabeth Lamin: When he shot himself, we believe that Nick was about here (puts model facing the front door)

    Elizabeth Lamin: Which is how you would brace yourself, probably against the door … if you’re doing it to yourself. 

    But Firkus’ attorneys challenged the 65-second timeframe. Attorney Robert Richman says phone records also show Nick misdialed two numbers before getting through to 911, making it impossible to shoot himself.

    Robert Richman: What they reenacted was … 65 seconds, which was … ignoring the two misdials, which happened at 38 seconds.

    Robert Richman: The fact that we cannot find the intruder … is not evidence that there was no intruder. … And if anything, because of the next door neighbor, because of the tool marks … because of the 38 seconds, we feel that the evidence supports that there was an intruder.

    Emily Erickson: This isn’t blind belief.

    Nick’s friends Emily and Andrew Erickson were convinced the prosecution failed to prove Nick was the shooter. 

    Andrew Erickson: We were open to hearing … an inconsistency of what Nick said … but that didn’t happen.

    On Feb. 10, 2023, the jurors got the case and in five hours returned with a verdict.

    Emily Erickson: My last text to Nick was … it has to be innocent. There’s no way that they got to guilty this quickly. … We rushed to the courthouse, and we were so wrong.

    Nick Firkus was found guilty on two counts of murder — premeditated and intentional. 

    Katina Sarazin:  I believe justice was served.

    The Sarazins were in the courtroom when the verdict was read. 

    Marcus Sarazin: Justice may have been slow … but fortunately, the jury got it right. … it feels like this is the beginning of healing … it’s the beginning of a — of a new chapter. 

    Elizabeth Lamin: Heidi’s mom actually said … That for so many years they had to live with Nick Firkus’ narrative. … And they knew it was wrong, but they just didn’t have another narrative. And to finally be able to … have him finally held accountable it meant a lot to us …

    For Sergeant Sipes, there is still the mystery of what led to the couple’s financial problems.

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: We weren’t able to definitively say what the money was spent on.

    Jamie Yuccas: Does that frustrate you?

    Sgt. Nichole Sipes: Greatly. I think it would help complete the picture for some people. 

    On April 13, 2023, Nick Firkus was back in court for his sentencing hearing and to hear victim impact statements.

    Peter Erickson (in court): Growing up, Heidi was the quintessential little sister to me.

    Peter Erickson Is Heidi’s brother.

    Peter Erickson: Because of the lies we were told as early as the day after her murder … it’s been virtually impossible to find closure to our grief.

    Nick refused to admit guilt. 

    Nick Firkus sentencing
    Nick Firkus reads a statement at his sentencing. He refused to admit guilt.

    WCCO


    NICK FIRKUS (in court): I do maintain and will maintain to my dying breath my innocence of this crime … my body stands condemned to serve another man’s sentence. But my soul, my soul remains free.

    Judge Leonardo Castro imposed the maximum sentence.

    JUDGE CASTRO: It is the sense of law and judgment of this court that you be committed to the commission of corrections for the remainder of your life without the possibility of release … Good luck to you sir, Godspeed.

    Rachel Firkus: My kids are always what I think of first. … They lost in this too, because one day they had a dad that they thought was somebody, and the next day he’s not that person anymore.

    firkus-full.jpg
    “She definitely lived a life of love,” Katina Sarazin said of Heidi. “That was the mark that she left. And that’s hard to let go.”

    Heidi Firkus


    Nick’s second wife Rachel often thinks about Heidi, too.

    Rachel Firkus: I like to think I have a connection with Heidi. … she didn’t get to have the voice that I have now. And so I can only hope that my voice — is something she would be proud of. 

    Katina Sarazin: Heidi was a genuine, loving, sincere young woman who wanted to live life to the fullest.

    Katina Sarazin: She … wouldn’t want people to become bitter or angry because of what she had to experience. … I think that Heidi would want people to choose to love regardless of circumstances. 

    Nick Firkus is appealing his conviction.

    Produced by Asena Basak and Paul LaRosa;  Jordan Kinsey is the field producer; Ryan Smith and Michelle Fanucci are the development producers; Richard Barber 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.

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  • Timeline: The mysterious death of Stephen Smith in Murdaugh country

    Timeline: The mysterious death of Stephen Smith in Murdaugh country

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    While investigating the murders of Alex Murdaugh‘s wife Maggie and son Paul in June 2021, the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) stumbled across a clue in another mysterious death — that of Stephen Smith, a 19-year-old who’d been found dead on July 8, 2015. His death was ruled a hit and run even though investigators at the scene found no evidence of one, and the case had gone cold until SLED’s discovery after the Murdaugh murders brought it back to life. SLED announced it would be renewing the investigation into Smith’s death, sparking new theories and reviving old rumors.  

    SLED has never said what it found that led them back to Stephen Smith, but through reports and interviews found in the 2015 case file 48 Hours pieced together what happened in the original investigation by the South Carolina Highway Patrol. 

    The story of Stephen Smith’s death begins with his final conversation with his mother, just a week before his death.

    July 1, 2015: An unusual conversation

    Sandy and Stephen Smith
    Sandy and Stephen Smith

    Sandy Smith


    Sandy Smith says the last time she saw her son Stephen was July 1, 2015, when he visited her house. Stephen was a nursing student at the time and was shuttling between the homes of his parents, who lived apart. Sandy says Stephen told her something that day that now gives her pause. 

    “He told me that he was goin’ on a fishin’ trip, deep sea fishin’,” Sandy told “48 Hours.” What seemed odd, according to Sandy, was that Stephen said he was taking the trip with “a prominent person.” To this day, Sandy doesn’t know who that prominent person could have been, and Stephen never said. 

    Despite the mysterious exchange, Sandy says her last day with her son was joyful. As he left her house, she warned him of an oncoming storm and told him to text her when he arrived at his destination. “So, when he made it, he texts me and says, ‘I made it safe, Mom. Mama, I love you.’” Sandy says those were Stephen’s last words to her.

    July 8, 2015 | 3:59 a.m.: A body in the roadway

    Road where Stephen Smith's body was found
    A red square marks the spot on Sandy Run Road where Stephen Smith’s body was found on July 8, 2015.

    South Carolina Highway Patrol


    On July 8, 2015, a local man was on his way to work in the early morning hours when he noticed someone lying in the road — in the location indicated by the red square in the image above. Concerned, the man called 911 at 3:59 a.m. Officers were dispatched to the scene and found Stephen deceased in the roadway, blood pooling around his head. 

    What exactly had happened to Stephen? Highway Patrol agents noted that there was none of the evidence you might typically find at the scene of a vehicle accident. Officers saw no debris in the roadway, skid marks or injuries consistent with someone being struck head-on by a car. What they did see was a large wound to Stephen’s head. It was so significant that the incident report notes, “After checking the body, it appears that the victim had been shot.”  

    Thomas Moore, a retired lieutenant with the South Carolina Highway Patrol and an on-scene supervisor for the Smith case, told “48 Hours,” “The consensus when I got there, speakin’ with the coroner, the first words out of his mouth was, ‘This is not a hit and run. This is a murder.’”

    July 8, 2015 | Early morning hours: Stephen Smith’s car found

    Stephen Smith's car
    Stephen Smith’s car

    South Carolina Highway Patrol


    Not long after Stephen’s body was found officers discovered his car, as well. It was pulled over on the side of the road nearly three miles away, with the gas cap hanging off.  “In all the years I’ve worked, a car sittin’ on the side of the road with the gas cap off is — is not normal,” former Lieutenant Thomas Moore says. “I thought it was staged.”  

    So, had Stephen run out of gas and decided to walk down the road in search of help? Or was this truly a staged crime scene? It seems from the case file that there were more questions than answers that July morning.

    July 8, 2015 | Later that morning: “The biggest shock”

    Stephen Smith
    Stephen Smith

    Sandy Smith


    While officers were still at the scene on the morning of July 8, 2015, Sandy tuned in to a local radio show on her way to work. The host said a body had been found on a rural road, and Sandy recognized the location. It was close to Stephen’s father’s house.  

    “So, I called [Stephen’s sister] and asked her if everything was OK,” she told “48 Hours.” “And she said, “‘Mama, did Stephen stay with you last night? Because he didn’t come home last night.’” And then my stomach dropped, and I knew it was him.” Sandy eventually received confirmation: the body found in the road was her son.  “I lost it then,” Sandy says. “It was just the biggest shock of our life.”  

    July 8, 2015 | 12:30 p.m.: The autopsy: not a gunshot wound

    At 12:30 p.m., as Sandy mourned, Stephen was taken for an autopsy. Though officers initially believed Stephen had been shot due to the way his wound looked at the scene, the medical examiner performing the autopsy found no evidence of a bullet and came to a different conclusion. 

    “It is the opinion of the pathologist that the decedent died of blunt head trauma sustained in a motor vehicle crash in which the decedent was a pedestrian struck by a vehicle,” the doctor wrote. In simple terms: Stephen wasn’t shot, he was struck by a vehicle while walking in the road.  

    To Sandy, that conclusion didn’t sound right. She says Stephen was cautious and would never have been walking in the middle of the road so late at night. Something seemed fishy, and she was determined to find out what had really happened to her son.

    July 17, 2015: Unsubstantiated rumors

    Soon after Stephen’s body was found, Hampton County Guardian managing editor Michael DeWitt says rumors started spreading in the Lowcountry. “Everybody knows everybody,” he told “48 Hours” of Hampton’s small-town atmosphere.  

    It was especially true that everyone knew the Murdaugh family. Alex Murdaugh was a prominent attorney, and three generations of Murdaugh men had held the top prosecutor job in the circuit for nearly a century. It was natural, Sandy says, for all roads in Hampton to lead to the Murdaughs. “Anything happens,” she says, “the Murdaugh name comes up.” 

    Soon the name appeared in the Stephen Smith case file. On July 17, 2015, a recorded interview indicates that the Highway Patrol was informed of a rumor circulating about Buster Murdaugh, Alex Murdaugh’s oldest son. The story officers heard in follow-up interviews was that Buster had supposedly been in a car with some other boys that night, when they saw Stephen in the road and struck him with an object.  

    Various versions of the rumor circulated in the community, many pointing to Buster Murdaugh’s purported involvement. But there is no public evidence that Buster or any Murdaugh had anything to do with Stephen’s death, and Buster himself has since contested the claims. 

    “These baseless rumors of my involvement with Stephen and his death are false,” he said in a statement released through his father’s attorney in 2023. “I unequivocally deny any involvement in his death, and my heart goes out to the Smith family.” 

    The case file indicates that investigators made a call to Buster in 2015, but there is no record of any investigator having spoken to him.  

    Dec. 18, 2015: A possible lead

    The Buster Murdaugh rumor wasn’t the only story the South Carolina Highway Patrol heard. According to the case file, on Dec. 18, 2015, a Highway Patrol officer was made aware of another tip called in by a man named Darrell Williams.  

    Williams told police that his stepson, a young man named Patrick Wilson, had come over to his house and told him a story involving his friend Shawn Connelly. Wilson said Connelly told him he’d been driving  drunk and had hit something he thought might’ve been a deer, then returned to the area the next day and saw law enforcement on the scene. 

    Though the case file indicates attempts were made to find Wilson and Connelly, there is no record of officers ever speaking to either of them. Wilson had no comment to 48 Hours.  Messages to the Hampton’s County Sheriff’s Office, Williams, and Connelly have not been answered. Sandy Smith says she asked Shawn Connelly point blank if he killed Stephen, and he told her he did not. 

    2016: The case goes cold

    screen-shot-2023-03-17-at-3-47-54-pm.png
    Stephen Smith

    Sandy Smith


    For reasons that are unclear, in 2016 Stephen’s case went cold. Despite the medical examiner’s opinion that Stephen had been hit by a vehicle, former Highway Patrol Lieutenant Thomas Moore still believes the case was not an accidental hit and run, but a murder. He feels the case went cold because the Highway Patrol was not equipped to handle that type of investigation alone. 

    “The case certainly went cold on our part. Lotta frustration,” Moore tells “48 Hours.” “From the beginning I felt like we were investigating a case that … we don’t handle. We’re not homicide investigators.” 

    Moore also says, “I don’t think it ever went cold for Sandy Smith.”  

    Sept. 28, 2016 | A plea for outside help  

    On Sept. 28, 2016, fed up with the lack of progress in Stephen’s case, Sandy Smith wrote to the FBI.  

    “I was just lettin’ ’em know that, you know, my son was murdered and there’s no progress,” Sandy says. “And just, “Please help. Just please help me.””  

    Her letter was answered. Sandy says agents came to her home, and they were later able to unlock Stephen’s phone. “[The agent] said there was a lot of interesting information in the phone that needed to be looked at,” Sandy says. “There’s somethin’ in that phone that nobody wants out there.” 

    But Sandy says local and state agencies didn’t pursue the information. And despite her best efforts, the case would remain cold. 

    June 7, 2021 | The Murdaugh murders

    Maggie and Paul Murdaugh
    Maggie and Paul Murdaugh

    Maggie Murdaugh/Facebook


    On June 7, 2021, Maggie and Paul Murdaugh were found dead at the kennels at Moselle, the family’s country estate. It was another Hampton County tragedy – though this time, there was no doubt that it was murder. It was investigated from the start by the SLED.

    June 22, 2021 | SLED steps up to the plate

    SLED headquarters.
    SLED headquarters

    CBS News


    On June 22, 2021, less than a month after the Murdaugh deaths, SLED made an announcement no one was expecting. “SLED has opened an investigation into the death of Stephen Smith,” a spokesperson told the media, “based upon information gathered during the course of the double murder investigation of Paul and Maggie Murdaugh.” 

    No one but SLED knows exactly what information it discovered during the Murdaugh case that pointed them back toward Stephen Smith. But the announcement gave Sandy hope that there might finally be progress in her son’s case. 

    “I hate that something bad had to happen for him to be brought back up, you know, brought to the light,” Sandy says, adding: “He deserves justice just like Paul and Maggie and everybody else. He deserves justice.” 

    March 19, 2023: A powerful team in Sandy Smith’s corner

    Eric Bland and Ronnie Richter
    Attorneys Eric Bland and Ronnie Richter 

    CBS News


    Two years passed. Even with SLED’s involvement, there didn’t seem to be any progress in Stephen’s case as SLED focused its resources on investigating Alex Murdaugh. But on March 19, 2023, high-powered South Carolina attorneys Eric Bland and Ronnie Richter announced their firm would be representing Sandy in the Stephen Smith death investigation.  

    “Ronnie and I are like arsonists. We started the fire,” Eric Bland says. He and Richter worked with Sandy to get Stephen’s case back in the public eye, in the hopes of raising awareness to achieve what had been one of Sandy’s goals for years: getting a new autopsy for Stephen, whose manner of death was still unclear. 

    “Our sole goal was to start the fire,” says Bland, “To rekindle the interest in Stephen’s death. And what that entailed was us being able to get permission to exhume his body and have a second autopsy performed.”

    March 31, 2023: Stephen Smith’s body exhumed

    smith-body-exhumed.png
    Stephen Smith’s exhumation on March 31, 2023.

    LunaShark Media


    On March 31, 2023, Eric Bland and Ronnie Richter helped Sandy Smith achieve her goal of exhuming Stephen’s body so another autopsy could be performed. It was an emotional day for Sandy, who says it was joyful for her to see a longtime goal realized.

    April 1, 2023: A new, independent autopsy


    How did SC teen Stephen Smith die? “48 Hours” obtains findings of independent investigation

    01:48

    Dr. Michelle DuPre, a former investigator and forensic pathologist who’s performed more than 3,000 autopsies, was hired by Bland and Richter to oversee Stephen’s new autopsy on April 1, 2023. Though results of the autopsy were not publicly shared, in an exclusive interview. DuPre tells “48 Hours” what she observed about Stephen’s injuries.  

    “There was blunt trauma,” she says, pointing to a spot on a model as pictured in the image above. “He had about a seven-and-a-half inch laceration on the right side of his forehead that went from his eyebrow to about the middle of his head.” 

    She was able to dispel some of the confusion surrounding Stephen’s death that occurred in the original investigation. “At one point, there was thought to be a gunshot wound,” she says, “We can definitively say that there was not.” She also doesn’t believe Stephen’s body was staged, saying, “We don’t believe that he was placed there. We believe that … whatever happened, happened right there.”

    May 16, 2023: Dr. Kenny Kinsey shares his findings

    Nikki Battiste and Dr. Kenny Kinsey
    CBS News national correspondent and “48 Hours” contributor Nikki Battiste and Dr. Kenny Kinsey.

    CBS News


    Bland and Richter also hired Dr. Kenny Kinsey, a crime scene expert and star prosecution witness in the Murdaugh murder trial, to conduct an independent investigation into Stephen’s death. On May 16, 2023, he told CBS News’ Nikki Battiste about his findings. 

    “How confident are you that you know what happened to Stephen Smith that night?” Battiste asks. 

    “I’m as close to a degree of scientific certainty as I’ve ever felt,” says Kinsey. 

    All of the information gathered by Kinsey and DuPre has been turned over to SLED for their ongoing investigation.

    Sept. 28, 2023: Stephen Smith’s dreams live on

    Sandy Smith
    Sandy Smith announces the Stephen N. Smith Memorial Scholarship.

    LunaShark Media


    In September 2023, Sandy Smith announced the creation of the Stephen Nicholas Smith Memorial Scholarship. As stated on the website for the Community Foundation of the Lowcountry, “the mission of the Stephen Nicholas Smith Memorial Scholarship Fund is to provide annual scholarship support for qualified students with financial need.” 

    Stephen’s dreams of becoming a doctor were tragically cut short. He was buried in his scrubs with his stethoscope, Sandy says, “everything he needed.”  

    Now Sandy hopes this scholarship in his name will provide opportunities for kids like Stephen looking to pursue their goals through higher education. 

    2023: Hope for justice  

    Sandy Smith
    Sandy Smith holds a photo of her son.

    AP


    SLED’s investigation into Stephen Smith’s death has so far yielded no new public information, and it’s unclear how much progress has been made. Sandy’s attorneys confirm a grand jury was empaneled and has issued subpoenas.  

    Sandy hasn’t given up hope. She has offered a $30,000 reward for any information leading to an arrest in Stephen’s case and urges anyone who knows anything about his death to come forward. If you have any information on the death of Stephen Smith, email SLED at tips@sled.sc.gov today.  

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  • How investigators tracked down Sarah Yarborough’s killer

    How investigators tracked down Sarah Yarborough’s killer

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    See how DNA helped solve the murder of 16-year-old Sarah Yarborough almost 30 years after the crime.

    Where’s Sarah Yarborough?

    Sarah Yarborough
    Sarah Yarborough

    Federal Way High School yearbook via Laura Yarborough


    It was the morning of Saturday, Dec. 14, 1991, when 16-year-old Sarah Yarborough arrived early to drill team practice at Federal Way High School near Seattle, Washington.  Later, when members of her team showed up, they saw that Sarah’s car was in the parking lot. But Sarah was not there.

    A 13-year-old witness

    Drew Miller
    Drew Miller

    Drew Miller


    Drew Miller, who was just 13 years old at the time, lived down the street from the high school. He and a friend were going skateboarding that morning, and took a shortcut through the school grounds. That’s when Miller says they noticed a mysterious man.

    A man in the bushes

    Sarah Yarborough crime scene
    Miller says the mysterious man kept to himself and walked ahead of the boys. Miller says they didn’t think much of it until they came across a horrendous scene. There in the bushes, where the man had just been, was the body of a young woman.

    King County Superior Court


    Miller says the man walked out of the bushes ahead of the boys. Miller says they didn’t think much of it at first. But then they came across a horrendous scene. There in the bushes, where the man had just been, was the body of a young woman. It was Sarah Yarborough.

    The crime scene

    Sarah Yarborough crime scene
    Sarah Yarborough’s clothing was found in the grass near where her body was discovered.

    King County Superior Court


    Sarah’s body was found about 300 feet away from her car. She was partially dressed, and a pile of her clothing lay in the grass nearby.

    Sketches of the suspect

    Sarah Yarborough murder suspect sketches
    Witnesses Drew Miller and his friend who was with him the morning they found Sarah Yarborough’s body, worked with police and a sketch of the man they saw in the bushes was released to the public. Police would later release a more elaborate sketch.

    King County Sheriff’s Office


    Miller and his friend worked with police to create sketches of the man they saw at Sarah’s crime scene. The sketches were then released to the public and posted all around the Federal Way area.

    A case gone cold

    Sarah Yarborough

    Mary Beth Thome


    Investigators found the killer’s DNA on several items of Sarah’s clothing that were at the crime scene. As a result, they had a full male DNA profile of the suspect. Family and friends thought they would find Sarah’s killer quickly. But as weeks stretched into months, then years, there was no match.

    The beginnings of DNA technology

    yarborough-codis-logo.jpg

    FBI/Wikicommons


    By the early 2000s, investigators had received and looked into over 3,000 leads. They entered the DNA from the crime scene into the recently established CODIS system – a national DNA database that includes profiles of convicted offenders. But as the years went by, there was still no match. 

    Taking a chance on forensic genetic genealogy

    Colleen Fitzpatrick
    In 2011, King County investigators reached out to Colleen Fitzpatrick, one of the pioneers of  forensic genetic genealogy, to inquire about using the new investigative tool.

    CBS News


    In 2011, investigators reached out to Colleen Fitzpatrick to inquire about using forensic genetic genealogy to help come up with a possible suspect. Forensic genetic genealogy is the practice of using software to compare unknown DNA profiles to information from public DNA databases and searching family trees to identify suspects.

    A break in the case

    yarborough-09.jpg

    CBS News graphics


    In 2011, 20 years after Sarah’s murder, Fitzpatrick traced Sarah’s killer’s family tree back to a man named Robert Fuller, whose family had come to America on the Mayflower. Fitzpatrick says it felt hopeful, as it was the first break in the case in 20 years.

    After eight years of DNA searching …

    yarbouough-nicholas-brothers.jpg
    Edward, left, and Patrick Nicholas.

    King County Sheriff’s Office/King County Superior Court


    In September 2019, Fitzpatrick’s team made a breakthrough. They came up with two new possible suspects: brothers Edward and Patrick Nicholas, who as the DNA showed, were descendants of Robert Fuller. Edward’s DNA profile was already in the CODIS database, and wasn’t a match.

    A suspect

    Patrick Nicholas
    Patrick Nicholas

    King County Superior Court


    Investigators then zeroed in on Patrick Nicholas. Detectives discovered that around the time of Sarah Yarborough’s murder, Nicholas had often taken a bus route that went past Federal Way High School. Back then, Nicholas was 27 years old and is seen here in a booking photo from a few years after.

    A plan to capture Patrick Nicholas’ DNA

    Patrick Nicholas at landromat
    Undercover detectives came up with a plan to follow Patrick Nicholas in the hopes of obtaining a surreptitious DNA sample.

    King County Sheriff’s Office


    Undercover detectives followed Patrick Nicholas to a laundromat. They watched him go outside and smoke two cigarettes. Nicholas dropped the two cigarette butts and a napkin. Undercover detectives collected them for DNA testing.

    A DNA match

    Patrick Nicholas DNA
    The DNA on Patrick Nicholas’ cigarette butts matched the DNA found at Sarah Yarborough’s crime scene.

    King County Superior Court


    All three items were rushed to a crime lab and within days, detectives received the call they had been waiting for. The DNA from the cigarette butts matched the DNA found at the Yarborough crime scene.

    Unraveling Patrick Nicholas’ criminal history

    Patrick Yarborough
    Patrick Nicholas in a 2019 booking photo.

    King County Sheriff’s Office


    Patrick Nicholas was arrested and charged with Sarah Yarborough’s murder. His previous criminal record included five sexual assaults that investigators knew of, none of which had required him to submit his DNA. Therefore, there was no record of him in the CODIS database.

    Evidence revealed at trial

    Patrick Nicholas evidence
    Some of the evidence found during a 2019 search of Patrick Nicholas’ house.

    King County Sheriff’s Office


    In the spring of 2023, Patrick Nicholas went on trial for the murder of Sarah Yarborough. Prosecutors revealed evidence found during a search of Nicholas’ home around the time of his arrest. This included a torn photograph from a magazine of a woman in a cheerleading outfit.

    Another piece of evidence


    Evidence from accused killer Patrick Nicholas’ house shown at trial

    02:14

    In searching Nicholas’ home, detectives also found a newspaper from 1994 that had on its front page an article about the Sarah Yarborough case.

    The verdict

    Patrick Nicholas verdict
    After nine days of testimony, it took jurors just over a day to reach a verdict. 

    Pool


    On May 10, 2023, Patrick Nicholas was found guilty of first-degree murder and second-degree murder. The jury decided both had been committed with a sexual motivation.

    Patrick Nicholas sentenced

    Laura Yarborough
    Laura Yarborough, Sarah’s mother, reacts to hearing the guilty verdicts.

    Pool


    At Nicholas’ sentencing hearing two weeks after his conviction, Sarah’s Yarborough’s family and friends took to the podium to say all that Patrick Nicholas had taken from them. Nicholas received a sentence of almost 46 years.

    Sarah Yarborough, never forgotten

    Sarah Yarborough
    Sarah Yarborough

    Katie Roy


    The trial brought Sarah Yarborough’s friends and family together. They say Sarah left a legacy of love and she will never be forgotten. 

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  • Who pulled the trigger? Questions raised after Georgia police officer says his wife fatally shot herself

    Who pulled the trigger? Questions raised after Georgia police officer says his wife fatally shot herself

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    This story originally aired on Jan, 28. It was updated on Nov. 18.

    Just an hour-and-a-half after Seth Perrault said his 44-year-old wife, Amanda, shot herself right in front of him, he was struggling to tell his story.

    SETH PERRAULT (to Sheriff Howard Sills): I’m in shock. My wife of eight years, that I love more than anything in this world…

    SETH PERRAULT (to Sheriff Sills): I don’t know even where to start, sir. … I’ve lost everything in my life.

    Perrault, 44, then a police officer for the City of Eatonton, Georgia, told Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills that his wife Amanda had shot herself in the head.

    Anne-Marie Green| “48 Hours” contributor: What did he say happened?

    Sheriff Howard Sills: He said that they were in bed and … they were arguin’ … And then all of a sudden, she just produced the gun outta thin air and executed herself.

    SETH PERRAULT (to Sheriff Sills): I just sat there and watched my wife execute herself.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: In all my years of questioning anybody for … suicide … I have never heard anybody use the term “executed.”

    Angie Johnson: I knew she hadn’t. I knew that he was lying.

    Amanda Perrault
    “We all called … Sheriff Sills that night and said …  “We know our sister didn’t do this. We know she didn’t take her own life, that he had something to do with this,” Alesha Johnson said of her sister Amanda Perrault’s death.

    Angie Johnson


    From the very beginning, Angie and Alesha Johnson say they had questions about what happened to their sister Amanda.

    Alesha Johnson: We knew better. We knew our sister. … Amanda loved life.

    Angie Johnson: She wouldn’t put us through this.

    About eight years earlier, in the fall of 2011, a recently divorced Amanda met Seth Perrault online.

    Alesha Johnson: I remember her being kind of excited about it. … he treated her differently from some of the past relationships she had been in where, you know, she wasn’t respected.

    Seth, battling cancer and unemployed at the time, seemed to fall for Amanda fast and hard.

    Angie Johnson: And they moved in fairly quick. Like, he had her move in within six months of them meeting.

    Seth was living an hour away, with his mother, who was caring for him. But Angie says Amanda would quickly take over the role of Seth’s caretaker.

    Angie Johnson: When she moved out there … he didn’t want her to work.

    They say Seth’s parents were paying all of the couple’s bills – and helping with expenses for Seth’s daughter from a previous relationship.

    Anne Marie Green: So, Seth was basically dependent on his family?

    Alesha and Angie Johnson: Very much.

    And Amanda was dependent on Seth.

    Angie Johnson: For the longest time, like, he wouldn’t let her have any kind of … phone, cell phone or anything like that … It would be his phone or a landline.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: She didn’t even have a car to drive. He monitored her constantly.

    As time went on, Alesha and Angie say they saw less and less of their sister.

    Angie Johnson: He kept us from bein’ able to see her.

    Alesha Johnson: She didn’t come to, like, any of our Christmas events, or like, any of our events because she had to host for his family and cook for all of them.

    Amanda and Seth Perrault
    Amanda and Seth Perrault on their wedding day.

    Alesha Johnson


    Amanda lived with Seth for five years. Then, on June 23, 2017, the couple surprised everyone when they quietly went to the local courthouse and got married. Angie and Alesha believe the only reason Seth married their sister was to help him get custody of his daughter.

    Alesha Johnson: That’s why I feel like he asked her to marry him.

    Seth’s custody battle had been going on for almost exactly a year at that point.

    Anne-Marie Green: Do you think Seth marrying Amanda helped him gain custody?

    Justin Kenney: Absolutely.

    Seth’s attorney, Justin Kenney is Seth’s attorney.

    Justin Kenney: If Amanda was going to be present in his daughter’s life they had to get married … I think that was one of the paramount issues for him to gain custody.

    Kenney says Seth did love Amanda—and his daughter—and was just trying to do what he thought was best for everyone.

    Justin Kenney: This was a guy that doted on his daughter. He was a family man. … he would dote on his wife. … I just thought he was a — a stand-up individual.

    A few months after Amanda and Seth were married, he was granted custody of his daughter. A little over year later he was hired by the Eatonton Police Department, and his father bought him a house near Lake Oconee.

    Alesha Johnson: She loved their new home.

    Anne-Marie Green: This should have been everything she hoped for.

    Alesha Johnson: Yeah, it was. You know, except for the relationship.

    Alesha and Angie say they didn’t know just how bad things had gotten, but were hearing more and more stories of fighting, fueled by alcohol.

    Justin Kenney: I’ve heard stories and interviews that, you know, when they were sober, they were loving toward one another. But it’s when alcohol came into the mix … that’s when it became toxic.

    A little over a year after joining the police force, Seth fell down some stairs at the couple’s home and had to go on medical leave. Now, along with the alcohol, there were pain pills, and the sisters say the fighting seemed to be escalating.

    Angie Johnson: You could hear it, like, on phone calls.

    Alesha Johnson: His tone and demeanor around her.

    Angie Johnson: I would ask. … “do you want me to call 911? Can I call 911?”

    Alesha Johnson: She would tell you, “No, no, don’t call.” You know, “We’ve just been drinkin’. We’ll be — everything’ll be OK later on.” … Maybe she knew her situation would become even worse, you know.

    Then, things did get worse. On Jan. 28, 2020, just days before her death, Amanda called 911.

    911 DISPATCHER: Putnam County Sheriff’s Office will you hold please?

    AMANDA PERRAULT: Yes, thank you.

    Angie Johnson: She had barricaded herself in … a back bedroom.

    AMANDA PERRAULT (911 call): It’s my husband, and he’s putting his hands on me.

    Angie Johnson: She ended up havin’ to run next door.

    AMANDA PERRAULT (911 call): He locked me out of the house and I’m just trying to get my things out of the house, please.

    911 DISPATCHER: She’s at the neighbor’s house right now.

    Another sheriff’s dispatcher was alerted.

    SECOND 911 DISPATCHER: And she said her husband is … an officer with the Eatonton Police Department.

    That second dispatcher said he knew Seth Perrault and said he had a reputation.

    SECOND 911 DISPATCHER: I ain’t supposed to know this … but he’s been out of work with his back and apparently, he’s over their whoopin’ up on her ass.

    Seth made local headlines when he was arrested on charges of simple battery and family violence.

    Angie Johnson: She … told me … would I come get her the next mornin’? And I told her yes, to make sure to pack everything, have it ready.

    Instead, Amanda decided to attend Seth’s bond hearing. When the judge agreed to release Seth on bail, he asked Amanda if she wanted a “stay away” order added. Amanda said no, and then let Seth come home.

    Alesha Johnson: ‘Cause she was scared. … She knew he was mad, she knew that it was … public that he had been arrested. “He’s a police officer … You know, I have to bring him home and make this right.”

    Alesha Johnson: I talked to her the day he got out. And … I said, “How are things?” And she said, “He’s bein’ unusually nice.”

    Alesha says she doubted Seth’s new attitude and felt that underneath he must be seething —knowing that if he was convicted on abuse charges, he was in danger of losing custody of his daughter and his job.

    Alesha Johnson: He knew it was gonna embarrass his family … And he had already put himself up here on this pedestal like he was king. And then to be humiliated in front of people … I think it made him very angry.

    Alesha says Amanda was terrified and looking for a way out.

    Alesha Johnson: We were all on — a chain message … and we were tellin’ her, “Just get out … divorce him, tell his father that you don’t want anything but a vehicle.” … And … she said, “I’m not trying to get killed.”

    Just five days later, Amanda was dead.

    QUESTIONS RAISED

    Sheriff Howard Sills says that from the very start of his investigation into the death of Amanda Perrault, he wasn’t buying her husband’s story.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: I knew somethin’ was wrong the day I walked in the house.

    For starters, the position of Amanda’s body — depicted below in a “48 Hours” animation based on the crime scene photos — left Sills certain that Amanda could not have shot herself.

    Also of concern to Sills was the way the Smith and Wesson .380, which belonged to Seth, was found lying next to Amanda’s body with its magazine ejected

    The position of Amanda Perrault’s body — depicted in a “48 Hours” animation based on the crime scene photos — left Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills certain that Amanda could not have shot herself.

    CBS News


    Sheriff Howard Sills: The magazine … It was … near her right side, and the pistol itself, was way down here below her left foot.

    What made the ejected magazine even more curious says Sills, is the fact that there was a bullet found inside the gun’s chamber.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: It’s a semiautomatic gun. So, when it fires … the slide comes back. The spent cartridge casin’ is ejected, and it picks up the next round.

    Because of that bullet in the chamber, the magazine had to be ejected after the gun was fired, says Sills. And, unless the gun is defective, the only way to eject the magazine is to push the button.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: Now, don’t do this at home. But when you do this (puts gun to his right temple) how you gonna get your hand — your second hand around there to do it (reaches around with his left hand to try and reach the button)?

    There was also no blood on Amanda’s hands or the long sleeves of her shirt. And something else caught the sheriff’s eye.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: In the middle of the closet on the floor was a damp green towel … Somebody had dried off with it, no doubt about that.

    One of the first deputies on the scene said Seth smelled like shampoo. Also alarming, the bedroom was littered with 20 miniature bottles of Fireball Whiskey — all of them empty. Sills says he didn’t have the manpower to process the scene, so he called in agents from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. While they collected physical evidence and Amanda’s body was transported to the state medical examiner, Sills focused on Seth.

    Sheriff Howard Sills (in his office): He came in and sat right in this blue, leather chair.

    Seth spoke to Sills in his office for over an hour without an attorney present.

    SETH PERRAULT: I’m not gonna lie to you. I’m — I have no reason to lie to you.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: I wanted to know what had happened that day. … how did the magazine get outta the gun? … How did the gun get where it was?

    SHERIFF SILLS: Did you touch that gun today?

    SETH PERRAULT: The .380?

    SHERIFF SILLS: Yeah.

    SETH PERRAULT: I mean, it’s been, like — no.

    SHERIFF SILLS: Today?

    SETH PERRAULT: No, sir.

    Anne-Marie Green: How does her body get into that position —

    Sheriff Howard Sills: He … No answer.

    Anne-Marie Green: — because he never touched her?

    Sheriff Howard Sills: No, never touched her.

    But Sills says that didn’t make any sense, so he kept pressing. And then, Seth changed his story.

    SHERIFF SILLS: Did you touch her?

    SETH PERRAULT: Maybe I d — I don’t know … I probably did touch her. I was probably huggin’ the s*** out of her. And I was probably like, I’m so — like, “honey. What the hell’s going on?”

    Sheriff Sills says Seth tried several times to deflect questions with his badge.

    SETH PERRAULT: I take pride in being a good law enforcement agent.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: I can’t remember how many times he looked me in the eye and said, “I’m a good police officer.”

    Amanda and Seth Perrault
    Amanda and Officer Seth Perrault

    Amanda Perrault/Facebook


    Amanda, he said, also knew what a good cop he was, and how assault charges would ruin both their lives.

    SETH PERRAULT: She h — hated to see my reputation destroyed on the news ’cause she knows what a good police officer I am. … And she was so worried I’d lose my daughter. … She wanted to come down here and tell you that it was a lie.

    Seth insisted that Amanda had lied the day she called 911 and felt so bad about it that she wanted to confess to perjury.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: He said that she had written something that she intended to bring to me, recanting what she had told the deputies. And he told me where it was.

    Amanda Perrault's retraction letter
    Amanda Perrault’s handwritten letter. “She wrote it, but she was coached. … I think what he was telling her — “I need you to write this to get me out of trouble,” said Angie Johnson.

    Putnam County Sheriff’s Office


    A handwritten letter was found in Amanda’s nightstand. It reads in part:

    “I Amanda Perrault would like to retract my statement … My husband never put his hands on me ever. I feel horrible for the humiliation I have put my husband and my family through. I am willing to take any punishment I may deserve for what I have done.”

    Sheriff Howard Sills (shows Green the letter): I don’t deny she wrote it. But look at the penmanship. There’s not the slightest error of any kind.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: What we’ve got here is an inexperienced police officer dictating what’s to be written.

    Like Sills, Amanda’s sisters are certain Seth was behind the letter.

    Angie Johnson: She wrote it, but she was coached. … I think what he was telling her — “I need you to write this to get me out of trouble.”

    But Seth told Sills he was not about to let Amanda confess to lying to authorities.

    SETH PERRAULT (to Sheriff Sills): I knew if she came down here, it was a false statement and a felony. I knew it.

    But according to Seth, Amanda couldn’t take the guilt anymore, so she put his gun to her head and pulled the trigger.

    SETH PERRAULT (to Sheriff Sills): She looked at me and said, “I’m sorry. I’m sorry I put you through this.” Boom. … I couldn’t even say a word, Sheriff. It was done.

    Seth tried to convince Sills that Amanda killed herself, because her call to 911 had potentially ruined their lives. But the sheriff didn’t see that as a reason for suicide; instead, he saw a motive for murder. Believing that Amanda would never take her own life, this made sense to her sisters as well.

    Alesha Johnson: He had to make it look like she took her life so that he could be cleared of all this wrongdoing.

    Sheriff Sills says he was convinced that Seth Perrault was somehow involved in his wife’s death, but that day, he felt he didn’t have enough to arrest him.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: I wanted to see if I could get some more evidence. And I did.

    TROUBLING CLUES

    One of the clues that convinced Sheriff Sills that Seth Perrault wasn’t telling the truth were his actions just 20 minutes before he reported his wife Amanda was dead. That’s when Sills’ deputy, Terrell Abernathy, arrived at Seth’s front door, trying to deliver paperwork on an upcoming case.

    Deputy Terrell Abernathy: They had one of those video doorbell things, and I rang that.

    The scene was captured on video.

    Deputy Terrell Abernathy: I expected him to answer the door, and I expected him to hand him his copy of the subpoena … I mean, you’re a policeman. You know how this works.

    Abernathy says he could tell someone was home.

    Putnam County Deputy Terrell Abernathy
    A doorbell camera shows Putnam County Deputy Terrell Abernathy attempting to deliver a subpoena for an upcoming case to Eatonton, Georgia police Officer Seth Perrault.

    Putnam County Sheriff’s Office


    Anne-Marie Green: What’d you hear?

    Deputy Terrell Abernathy: I heard footsteps or footfalls, heavy ones. … I’m announcing myself, who I am, what it is. I even turned my back to the door. … I don’t care if you’re in your underwear. Just answer the door and take the paper.

    He waited seven minutes and then left — subpoena still in hand.

    DA Wright Barksdale: In my heart, I believe that Amanda Perrault had already been shot when Abernathy rang the doorbell. … I think he was concerned that somebody heard the gunshot, and that’s why he didn’t go to the door.

    District Attorney Wright Barksdale believes Seth was trying to figure out what to do next.

    DA Wright Barksdale: Think about this: he’s in the process of staging this scene, and he hears the doorbell ring. Can you imagine what was goin’ through his mind?

    But attorney Justin Kenney says that is not what happened.

    Anne-Marie Green: Why didn’t they come to the door when Deputy Abernathy rang that bell?

    Justin Kenney: Fear of what he’s bringing. … Seth is afraid that … his ex is about to serve him with custody modification paperwork.

    Anne-Marie Green: What does Seth say happened after that?

    Justin Kenney: So, I believe that there is a heated discussion that takes place. … He lays down … (to) diffuse the situation, he lays down to take a nap. … He awoke to Amanda mumbling something, whispering something … and— her pulling the trigger and shooting herself.

    Kenney points out that Amanda was impaired by alcohol — three times the legal limit, when tested by the medical examiner. That and the escalating tension in her marriage, became a deadly combination.

    Justin Kenney: The nice house … the daughter … the financial security, all of this was crumbling around Amanda. And then you tack on a .23 blood alcohol content … She thought that that was the only way to — to fix it, to — to end it.

    Anne-Marie Green: She was really drunk.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: Absolutely.

    Anne-Marie Green: Maybe she accidentally shot the gun.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: How’d she accidentally get the magazine out of it? … How’d she accidentally get posed as she was?

    Sills was also very troubled because Seth didn’t call 911 when his wife allegedly shot herself. Instead, Perrault called his boss, the Eatonton chief of police, on his cell phone. “48 Hours” made several unsuccessful attempts to reach the former chief of police for comment.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: Obviously, we’re not gonna have a recording of that. And they have at least a 20-minute conversation before I’m called. 

    Hoping the Perrault’s neighbors had heard something the day Amanda died, Sills had Deputy Abernathy go back to the Perrault house to question them. What he learned made Sills even more suspicious about Seth’s involvement in Amanda’s death.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: We found out that there had been a true pattern of domestic violence for years and years.

    Amanda and Seth Perrault
    Amanda and Seth Perrault

    Amanda Perrault/Facebook


    Neighbors said the couple could be heard fighting nearly every day. And in their eyes, Seth was almost always the aggressor.

    DA Wright Barksdale: They told stories about a physical altercation between Seth and Amanda where he actually grabbed her by the back of the hair and pulled her down and pushed her into the driveway.

    One neighbor told Abernathy that he would often stand by in case things got really violent.

    Deputy Terrell Abernathy: He talked about how that at times he would just stand in the yard and just wait to see if he needed to call 911, because it was so violent over there.

    Another neighbor said that Amanda had twice made this chilling comment:

    Deputy Terrell Abernathy: That if she were to wind up dead … that Perrault is the one that did it, and … she made this neighbor promise … that she would insist that her death be investigated as a homicide.

    Anne-Marie Green: Did anyone call the police?

    Sheriff Howard Sills: No.

    Anne-Marie Green: Why not?

    Sheriff Howard Sills: Well, one of the answers was that “Well, we were scared to call because he was the police.”

    Alesha Johnson: It’s hurtful — it’s hurtful. … and this is why I wanted to do this show, is to make sure that people know to speak up.

    The day Amanda died, the neighbors said they didn’t hear a thing. The only witness to what happened was Seth Perrault — and Sills was sure he couldn’t trust him after the interview in his office.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: According to Seth … they take the child to school, they come back home, and they go nowhere at all other than down the street to the convenience store. Well, that didn’t happen. He lied.

    Sills says the proof was on surveillance camera footage of the couple found 12 miles away—at a drive-through liquor store, where Amanda bought those 20 miniature bottles of Fireball whiskey.

    Sheriff Howard Sills (outside the liquor store): She drives up to this drive-in window. Right there’s the camera that catches the truck [points to the camera].

    Seth Perrault store surveillance
    Surveillance video of Seth Perrault in a convenience store from the day of Amanda’s death  would become a crucial piece of evidence because of what he was wearing.

    Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office


    Simultaneously, Seth was captured on a camera next door, in a convenience store.

    Da Wright Barksdale (in the convenience store with Green): You see him walk and he actually comes down, I believe this aisle and he walks, and he gets something to drink.

    The video, says Barksdale, would become a crucial piece of evidence not because of what was purchased, but because of what Seth was wearing: a Pink Floyd T-shirt and black athletic pants. Nearly four hours later, when sheriff’s deputies arrived at the Perrault home to investigate Amanda’s death, Seth was wearing something else.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: When we get there he is dressed in shorts and a dark T-shirt.

    And the clothing Seth was wearing in the video?

    DA Wright Barksdale: We found those … in the washing machine.

    Seth Perrault's T-shirt
    Investigators found the The T-shirt Seth Perrault was seen wearing in the surveillance video earlier in the day in the washing machine.

    Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office


    The clothing was dry and had clearly not been laundered, but there was that deputy who had reported that Seth smelled freshly washed, and there was that damp towel that was found on the closet floor.

    Justin Kenney: Seth says … he took a bath.

    Seth’s attorney Justin Kenney says Seth did wash up at some point.

    Justin Kenney: If you take a bath — you’re gonna change clothes.  …. there was no evidence that the washing machine had actually been turned on. … it looked like the washing machine …  was being used as a — a laundry basket.

    Only a tiny speck of blood was found on the backside of Perrault’s pants, and a trace amount of gun powder residue was found on his left hand when tested.

    Justin Kenney: They did it three hours later after … potential contamination from being … at the police station.

    Amanda’s hands were never tested—and the gun was never dusted for fingerprints. But Sills felt he now had enough evidence to make an arrest. Just two days after Amanda’s shooting, now former Eatonton Police officer Seth Perrault, was taken into custody.

    Alesha Johnson: Sheriff Sills called me and let me know that they were going to arrest him for her murder. And I … My whole family w — just was so relieved and — and happy that – that –

    Angie Johnson: She was gettin’ justice.

    Alesha Johnson: Yes.

    But before a grand jury could hear the evidence and decide if there was enough to go to trial, COVID shut down the courts. Seth would sit in jail for nearly nine months until that autopsy report was released by the medical examiner, declaring Amanda’s death a suicide. Her decision was based primarily on the lack of gunpowder around the wound, which meant the gun would had to have been right up against Amanda’s head when it went off — and there were no signs of a struggle.

    Justin Kenney: Nobody is just going to allow somebody — to put a gun to their head and pull the trigger without putting up some sort of fight.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: I was astounded. … First thing, I just called the DA. I said, “You’re not — (laughs) you’re not gonna believe this.”

    Anne-Marie Green: Did you think maybe you made a mistake?

    DA Wright Barksdale: Absolutely not. … We’re gonna take every bit of the evidence and try to piece this thing together.

    But Justin Kenney did think the prosecution was making a mistake, and that the autopsy report was all the evidence needed to defend Seth Perrault.

    Justin Kenney: I mean, it was — it seemed pretty open-and-shut to me.

    THE TRIAL OF SETH PERRAULT

    It was Nov. 3, 2020, and Seth Perrault, still unindicted, had been in jail for nearly nine months. When COVID restrictions finally eased, a grand jury was set to decide if there was enough evidence against him, to go to trial.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: And you know the first thing I put up for that grand jury to see?

    Anne-Marie Green: The crime scene pictures.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: No, ma’am. … The autopsy report that said, “Suicide.” … “Ladies and gentlemen … The state crime lab medical examiner says this was a suicide. Now, I’m gonna show you the evidence I found.”

    Seth Perrault
    Seth Perrault was charged with malice murder, felony murder and aggravated assault in the death of his wife Amanda.

    Putnam County Sheriff’s Office


    Members of the grand jury did see the crime scene photos and heard evidence of domestic abuse and quickly decided that, despite the medical examiner’s report, Seth Perrault should face a jury of his peers.

    Anne Marie Green: What were the charges?

    DA Wright Barksdale: Malice murder … felony murder … and aggravated assault.

    Perrault pleaded not guilty to all charges. At his trial in February 2022, he decided not to testify, leaving defense attorney Justin Kenney to tell his story.

    Justin Kenney: I think there was a complete absence of sufficient evidence that Seth killed his wife. 

    The prosecution showed a jury of eight women and four men the crime scene photos, including the way Amanda’s body and the gun were found. They also heard testimony from that sheriff’s deputy who thought Seth smelled freshly showered. They watched the footage of Deputy Abernathy at the Perrault’s front door and listened to all 60 minutes of Perrault’s interview with Sheriff Sills.

    SETH PERRAULT (to Sheriff Sills): I don’t know how this happened.

    District Attorney Barksdale says that some of the most compelling evidence was found on Amanda’s cell phone. Like this video she recorded seven months prior to her death.

    SETH PERRAULT: It’s sad. It’s sad because you know what, I married you and I’m — I’m not gonna — I’m — dude, you’re done.

    AMANDA PERRAULT: I’m done?

    Amanda’s sisters were seeing the video for the first time.

    Alesha Johnson: It made me angry.

    Seth Perrault cellphone video
    District Attorney Wright Barksdale says that some of the most compelling evidence was found on Amanda’s cell phone. Like this video she recorded seven months prior to her death.  “It’s sad because you know what, I married you and I’m — I’m not gonna — I’m — dude, you’re done,” Seth said in the video to Amanda.

    Putnam County DA’s Office


    AMANDA PERRAULT: I wanna have a good weekend.

    SETH PERRAULT: You burned that up when you tried to put that phone in my face.

    AMANDA PERRAULT: What phone in your face?

    SETH PERRAULT: Oh, right there. Oh, you’re videotaping.

    AMANDA: Yeah, because you’re being a d*** and I’m gonna show you tomorrow.

    SETH PERRAULT (yelling): Oh, so you didn’t videotape all the s*** when you hit me and smacked me –

    AMANDA PERRAULT (yelling): Hit you? You f****** choked me eight f****** times!

    Justin Kenney: The video … was problematic. … But it — it doesn’t show everything that took place … Seth also states that she had acted violently toward him as well.

    There was no evidence of Seth having been abused introduced at trial. But Amanda’s phone also contained photos of her with bruises, a black eye and a split lip along with texts like this one to her sisters: “Seth just choked me till I nearly passed out, busted my lip wide open.”

    Seth’s then-8-year-old-daughter was interviewed by a forensic child psychologist. Remember, she was a witness to what happened the day Amanda called 911.

    Seth Perrault's daughter
    Seth Perrault’s daughter being questioned by a forensic child psychologist about what the 8-year-old witnessed the day Amanda Perrault called 911.

    Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office


    PERRAULT’S DAUGHTER: I was scared that, um, one of them might get hurt.

    PERRAULT’S DAUGHTER: They were cussing at each other. … Miss Amanda was cussing too, but she didn’t touch daddy at all. … Daddy was, like, touching her nose like this (demonstrates by pointing to her nose). Like, “Get out of my house right now.”

    The jury was shown most of the videotaped interview.

    PERRAULT’S DAUGHTER: She was on the floor like this (gets on her knees) … tryin’ to get her stuff. … then, all of a sudden, Daddy just started grabbing her arms. … and Daddy just pushed her over the laundry table. And then, um — opened the door … and pushed her out the door.

    While her father spent the night in jail, she said Amanda begged her not to tell anyone what happened, or there could be deadly consequences.

    DA Wright Barksdale: Amanda tells her that night, “If your daddy loses custody of you, he’s going to shoot me dead.”

    PERRAULT’S DAUGHTER: “Your daddy would come shoot me dead.”

    But when Barksdale called the now-10-year-old to the witness stand, she said she couldn’t recall what happened that day, or what she said in the interview.

    Alesha Johnson: She, I think, felt really torn. I seen her look at her dad a couple times … And I felt like … she was more careful about what she was saying — like somebody had been coaching her.

    In cross examination, the defense asked if anyone had coached her on what to say. She said no. But Justin Kenney says he believes another prosecution witness may have been coached: a jailhouse informant named Jack Faulk, who had shared a dorm block with Seth Perrault.

    Justin Kenney: Jack Faulk has a criminal history, I believe 28 pages long. … numerous contacts with the police, and he had every incentive to lie, make up a story.

    Faulk had come forward three weeks before the medical examiner’s report was released, claiming he had valuable information about Amanda’s death.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: He knew things that only Seth Perrault could have told him.

    In two hand-written letters, Faulk claimed that Seth told him, “The camera catching him with the clothes on was his biggest concern.” He also claimed that Seth said, “He had been giving (Amanda) pain killers all day” and that “she was passed out” at the time of her death.

    Sheriff Howard Sills: I think he was in the bed with her after she was passed out … and held the gun against her head.

    Anne-Marie Green: He was behind her?

    Sheriff Howard Sills: Behind her or slightly to the side.

    The defense argued that Amanda shot herself because her lies about Seth assaulting her had potentially ruined their lives. Furthermore, only that tiny trace of gunshot residue was found on Perrault’s left hand and there was just that one speck of blood found on his clothing.

    Justin Kenney says the hardest thing for the defense to explain, was the way Amanda’s body was found.

    Justin Kenney: We knew that it was gonna be a problem. … the body had to be moved in some way. Had to be touched in some way.

    Kenney says there is one explanation that makes sense to him; something Seth Perrault said in his interview with Sheriff Sills.

    SETH PERRAULT (to Sheriff Sills): I probably did touch her. I was probably huggin’ the s*** out of her.

    Justin Kenney: And that would potentially account for her arms being, ah, by her sides.

    As for the way Seth’s gun was found beside Amanda’s body with the ejected magazine by her side, the defense hired an expert who testified that he fired the gun six times and after one of those firings, the magazine spontaneously ejected.

    Justin Kenney: It shows that that firearm can drop the magazine when it’s fired.

    DA Wright Barksdale: Howard Sills took that very gun out and shot it several times. The GBI examined that gun, didn’t notate in their report any malfunctions whatsoever.

    Then there was the medical examiner, Dr. Lora Darrisaw. Barksdale called her to the stand and asked her to explain how she came to her conclusion of suicide as the manner of death.

    DA Wright Barksdale: What I wanted the jury and for her to see … she did not consider all the evidence. … She had not considered Seth’s daughter’s interview. She had not considered the cell phone data, the prior domestic abuse.

    SETH PERRAULT (cell phone video): Oh, so you didn’t — you didn’t video tape all the s*** …

    But Dr. Darrisaw defended her conclusion. And in this statement to “48 Hours,” the Georgia Bureau of Investigation backed her up: “Our agency stands behind the original expert opinion of Perrault’s death.”

    Anne-Marie Green: Were you worried at all about the verdict?

    DA Wright Barksdale: What I try … and remind myself, it is my job to pursue justice and to present a case for the jury to consider. … And if they were to walk him out the door, I would be able to look to Amanda Perrault’s family and say, “We did everything we could.”

    THE VERDICT

    It had been just under two-and-a-half-hours, when the jury in the murder trial of Seth Perrault announced that they had reached a verdict.

    Alesha Johnson: When they called us all back in, we all just held hands … And … dropped our head. I just remember praying, sayin’, “God, you know, just please — you know, please do this for our family. … Let us have justice for our sister.”

    Seth Perrault verdict
    Seth Perrault stands to hear the verdict in his murder trial on Feb. 25, 2022.

    Eatonton Messenger


    And justice is what they feel they got. The verdict: guilty of murder.

    Alesha Johnson (emotional): It was bittersweet, because we got justice, but it didn’t bring her back. It didn’t bring our best friend back.

    That same day, Perrault was sentenced to life, without the possibility of parole.

    Alesha Johnson: I want many years of him prayin’ to God, and bein’ on his knees that he woulda took his own life instead of my sister’s.

    Justin Kenney says he believes an innocent man is now behind bars, for life.

    Justin Kenney: My heart sank. … I’ve known Seth for almost a decade now, and … I don’t think he did it.

    Every August, on her birthday, Amanda’s sisters honor her memory by releasing love letters tied to purple balloons.

    Angie Johnson: “I love you Amanda, and I hope you are having a beautiful birthday in heaven.”

    Amanda Perrault tribute
    Every August, on her birthday, Amanda’s sisters honor her memory by releasing love letters tied to purple balloons. n 2022, the notes also included the National Domestic Abuse Hotline number.

    CBS News


    In 2022, the notes also included the National Domestic Abuse Hotline number.

    Angie Johnson: And hopefully this will find somebody that really needs it.

    Alesha Johnson: We just wanna create … awareness around domestic abuse. And for people to — don’t sit back and just let it happen, no matter what the — the victim is telling you. Fight for them, you know? Help them. Help them any way you can. There’s so many things I wish I could go back now and do different (cries). I wish I could go back and save her.

    Anne-Marie Green: You’re gonna save somebody with this.

    Alesha Johnson: I hope so.

    If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic abuse, call 1-800-799-SAFE or visit thehotline.org.

    Seth Perrault’s daughter is living with her mother, who has custody; his sister is petitioning to take custody. 

    “48 Hours” Post Mortem podcast

    What happens when a toxic relationship turns deadly, especially at the hands of someone who is supposed to serve and protect? “48 Hours” contributor Anne-Marie Green and producer Judy Rybak discuss crossing the thin blue line, a questionable note left behind at the crime scene, the shocking report from the medical examiner ruling Amanda’s death a suicide and if this would be enough to find Seth innocent at trial.  


    Produced by Judy Rybak. Michelle Sigona and Anthony Venditti are the development producers. Shaheen Tokhi is the field producer. Lauren Turner Dunn is the associate producer. Jud Johnston, Marcus Balsam, Marlon Disla and Wini Dini are the editors. Anthony Batson is the senior broadcast producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer. 

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  • Matthew Trussler murder: Inside the case

    Matthew Trussler murder: Inside the case

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    Melissa Turner


    On Oct. 18, 2019, Melissa Turner frantically called 911 saying she found her fiancé, Matthew Trussler, laying in a pool of blood on the patio of their suburban Tampa, Florida, home. “We had a lot of drinks last night and we went to bed drunk,” Turner told the 911 operator. “… woke up this morning and he was bloody and outside this morning.”

    Meeting on an app

    Matthew Trussler and Melissa Turner

    Melissa Turner


    Turner told “48 Hours,” they had met on Tinder in April 2017. From that moment their relationship blossomed into an engagement. But, in October 2019, authorities escorted Melissa to the sheriff’s office for additional questioning. 

    Melissa’s police interrogation

    Melissa Turner interrogation

    Defense Attorney John Trevena


    A couple of hours after that frantic 911 call, investigators interviewed Turner about their drunken night. Melissa says she and Trussler had been drinking and she eventually fell asleep. She says she woke up and found Matthew dead. However, she didn’t know that investigators had been tipped off about a surveillance camera that captured more than what she revealed.

    An important clue

    Neighbor's security camera

    CBS News


    While Turner was at the sheriff’s office, Det. Ryan LaGasse canvassed the neighborhood for clues. He says he noticed a neighbor’s surveillance camera that was pointing directly at the couple’s home and decided to see if it had critical information. When the owner shared the footage, he heard sounds of a yelling from two voices. One of the voices, which sounded female, said “so f***ing die!” Detective LaGasse immediately shared this with other investigators.

    The couple’s injuries

    Matthew Trussler autopsy sketch

    Hillsborough County Medical Examiner


    When Trussler’s body was examined, the medical examiner said he had a defensive wound on his right forearm, a large laceration to his chest, a small cut to the right shoulder, and a large wound on his back that is consistent with a stab wound. The medical examiner noted the cause of death as “incised wound to arm with perforation of cephalic vein.” Turner had a cut on her hand.

    Seeking the truth

    Trussler crime scene

    CBS News


    Back at the sheriff’s office, investigators asked Turner about the video displaying sounds of an argument from her house. At first she said, “I have no memory of any argument…” However, a few hours into the investigation Melissa’s story changed completely. She could now remember what unfolded between them.

    Melissa’s perspective

    Murder weapon

    Defense Attorney John Trevena


    Turner told investigators Trussler woke her up and he was still intoxicated. She was angry from being woken up and they began to argue. Melissa says Matthew was holding a knife and she tried to grab it and things escalated. “If it was an accident, then I would have called 911, and not just let him die,” Turner told investigators. 

    Arrest for murder

    Melissa Turner arrest photo

    Defense Attorney John Trevena


    Within the same day of that frantic 911 call Turner  placed, authorities arrested her for second degree murder with weapon. She was taken to the local jail.

    Matthew’s family

    Trussler family

    Sean Trussler/Jennifer Jiles


    When Matthew Trussler’s family heard the news, they were in shock. Matthew’s older brother Sean and his fiancé, who also lived near Matthew and Melissa, immediately had their suspicions. “She took Mattie long before she took him forever,” Sean Trussler told “48 Hours.”

    Pictured from left: Matthew’s mother Margaret, brother Sean, Sean’s fiancé Jennifer and Matthew Trussler.

    Melissa’s past

    Cameron Walega and Melissa Turner

    Cameron Walega


    Cameron Walega, a man who says he dated Turner, recalled her interest in fitness since she lost 100 pounds. He also remembers when she created a second blog with sexually explicit content. 

    Cosplaying performance

    Melissa Turner in costume

    Melissa Turner’s Tumblr website


    Turner’s second blog featured her cosplaying as various characters, such as Daphne from “Scooby Doo” and Misty from “Pokemon,” while engaging in sexual acts according to her ex-boyfriend Cameron Walega. He says he noticed a change in her personality shortly after starting that blog. “And the more and more success that she found, the more and more unstable she became,” he told “48 Hours”. Eventually the couple parted ways.

    The trial begins

    Courthouse

    CBS News


    On Feb. 14, 2022, two years after Matthew Trussler’s death, Melissa Turner went on trial for murder. Turner’s attorney, John Trevena, said this is a case of self-defense. “She did have a history of abuse and that there was abuse in this relationship, and that she acted in self-defense.”

    However, prosecutors didn’t believe that narrative. “I think she was intoxicated and I do think she went far beyond anything she thought she would do,” Assistant District Attorney Chinwe Fossett told “48 Hours.” “Maybe she was just so frustrated with his drinking … that she harms him so badly that he ends up dying.”  

    Melissa takes the stand

    Melissa Turner testifies

    CBS News


    Turner decided to testify at the trial. She described Trussler’s issues with alcohol. That night his alcohol level was nearly five times the legal limit in Florida. She also described his strange behavior in the past. “He would stare off at some corner … and he would tell me that ‘there’s a demon standing right there.’”

    Despite not remembering how Trussler ended up with wounds in various parts of his body, Turner said she could only remember stabbing him once in the back. “I stabbed him once to get him off of me from strangling me.” 

    An expert’s testimony

    Audio expert Bruce Koenig

    CBS News


    A key piece of evidence was the neighbor’s surveillance footage that capture sounds of an argument from Melissa and Matthew’s home. Audio expert Bruce Koenig testified that sections of the audio had been volume enhanced. Defense attorney John Trevena believed the audio had been tampered with. “I find it highly suspicious that…Ms. Turner’s voice is screeching loud. But when it came to, you know, Matthew Trussler … you could barely hear mumbling.”

    The verdict

    Melissa Turner in court

    CBS News


    On Feb. 18, 2022, jurors deliberated for seven hours before reaching a decision. Melissa Turner was found guilty of murder in the second degree. 

    Donald Goodwin, who was one of the jurors, said he thought Melissa had snapped. “… she knew he was gonna die, she knew it, and yet, she called nobody,” he told “48 Hours.”

    Melissa’s sentencing

    Melissa Turner sentencing

    CBS News


    A month after the verdict, on March 18, 2022, Turner returned to court to receive her sentencing.

    “Based on the jury’s verdict, you are adjudicated guilty, sentenced to 20.5 years in the Florida State Prison,” Judge Samantha Ward told Melissa in court.

    Family reaction

    Jennifer Jiles and Sean Trussler

    CBS News


    Trussler’s sister-in-law, Jennifer Giles, believes justice was served. “I will say that is justice to a degree,” she told “48 Hours.” 

    Sean Trussler says he misses his brother. “He was a good kid. He was just starting to be a man.” 

    Juror Donald Goodwin says both lives were ruined that night. “Matthew Trussler didn’t have to die,” he told “48 Hours.” “They could’ve walked away from each other and started a different life.”

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  • After three decades, Florida

    After three decades, Florida

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    The 1990 murder of Marlene Warren, shot by someone dressed as a clown, haunted not just the public, but the Palm Beach County State Attorney ‘s Office. Despite identifying two suspects, the case, went unsolved for decades.

    Dave Aronberg is the current state attorney.

    Dave Aronberg: It’s easy to see why this case has so much interest … who isn’t afraid of a killer clown?

    Dave Aronberg: This was an assassination. This was not a random act of violence. This was not a robbery.

    Joe Ahrens: The unknowingness of this heinous crime. The fear … it was hell.

    marlene-warren.jpg
    Marlene Warren

    Family photo


    Joe Ahrens was 21 and living at home with his stepfather Mike and his mother Marlene when she was murdered.

     Joe Ahrens: She was a good mother. … Everything she did, she took pride in.

    A DEADLY DELIVERY

    The morning of May 26, 1990 had started as a cheerful one. Ahrens, recuperating from a broken leg, was having breakfast at home with his mom and three friends when they saw a clown approaching carrying balloons and flowers.  

    Joe Ahrens: And we kind of … figured … I had a cast on, somebody was sending, to heal and — for gesture …

    Peter Van Sant: This is like, “Oh, what a delightful gift,” to cheer you up with your broken leg, right?

    Joe Ahrens: Right.

    Joe Ahrens: My mother opened the door … And then we heard “bang” and she fell. At that point, we knew something was wrong. … My mother was struggling to breathe … And then I jumped to the phone, you know, called 911 right away.

    As the clown slowly and silently walked to a car, Ahrens and some of his friends tried to get a closer look at anything that might help describe the disguised attacker.

    Joe Ahrens: The only thing it didn’t have any color on it was the shoes that were solid black and the white gloves.

    Peter Van Sant: And did you notice anything about the clown’s eyes?

    Joe Ahrens:  I did. That’s the most thing I — I saw was the big brown eyes.

    Peter Van Sant: And the clown gets in the car. What kind of car was it?

    Joe Ahrens: It was a white LeBaron.

    Peter Van Sant: And does the car peel off? 

    Joe Ahrens: No. It goes into gear and drives off like nothing happened.

    While some of Ahren’s friends remained at his house waiting for EMS, he got into Marlene’s car and tried to chase down the clown. But he couldn’t catch up.

    Meanwhile, with the clown’s balloons and flowers left behind, Marlene was rushed to the hospital, barely alive, where she was put on life support.

    Joe Ahrens: I kept telling her I love her, and I don’t want her to go, and please don’t leave me.

    Two days later, with no hope of a recovery, life support was removed, and Marlene died.

    Joe Ahrens: I knew my life was going to change and I knew it was going to become hell, because she wasn’t here to help me.

    Warren murder evidence
    The flowers and balloons left by the clown were recovered from the scene, and investigators tried to track down where they were purchased.

    Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office


    A top clue the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office had was Joe’s description of the clown: about 6-foot-one, tall, skinny, with orange hair, a red nose and a big orange smile and male. And those balloons left behind? They now seemed cruelly mocking: “You’re the greatest” one said. The other had a picture of “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.”

    Authorities had also spoken with Joe’s stepfather Mike Warren, who they learned had an alibi: he was in a car with friends heading to a racetrack when the shooting took place.

    Peter Van Sant: Growing up with Mike Warren, what was that like? Was he a good dad?

    Joe Ahrens: I thought so. … That’s the only father I knew. I mean I was really young when my real father and mother separated.

    Marlene and Mike Warren were married when Ahrens was 3 years old. They had built a comfortable life in Wellington, Florida, an affluent suburb. Marlene owned several businesses, including apartment complexes, and the couple ran Bargain Motors, specializing in used cars and rentals.  

    While business was good, the marriage, says Ahrens, was troubled. He says his mother became convinced Mike was having an affair, making her fearful.

    Joe Ahrens:  She said, “if anything does happen to me, your father did it.”

    Peter Van Sant: She said that to you?

    Joe Ahrens: I told her no way — he would never do anything like that. She said don’t put it past him.

    Marlene shared that same fear with her mother, Shirley Twing.

    Shirley Twing: She says, “If anything happens to me, Mike did it.”  

    We interviewed Twing in 2017, when “48 Hours” started investigating Marlene’s murder.

    Peter Van Sant: That’s an ominous thing to say. … Did you sense fear in her voice?

    Shirley Twing:  Sure. Yes, I did.

    So, when Twing learned her daughter had been murdered, her mind went to Mike Warren.

    Shirley Twing: Right away. I figured Mike had something to with it, that’s for damn sure.

    Mike and Marlene Warren.
    Mike and Marlene Warren.

    Family photo


    But Mike Warren had that alibi, so authorities were looking for someone else. And when they visited Bargain Motors, Mike’s place of business, one name kept popping up:  that woman with whom Mike was supposedly having an affair.

    Aleathea McRoberts: Everybody at the Bargain Motors were reporting that you should look first at Sheila Keen.

    Aleathea McRoberts, an assistant state attorney in Palm Beach County, has worked on the case from the beginning.

    Aleathea McRoberts: And within the next day or so, tips were being called in that you really should investigate Sheila Keen and Michael Warren.

    Della Ward (2018): They were definitely seeing one another.

    Della Ward worked at Bargain Motors with Mike Warren.

    Della Ward (2018): He had a lot of compassion, lot of empathy. And people just were drawn to him … especially women.

    One of those women, Ward believed, was Sheila Keen.

    Della Ward (2018):  I found her very nice, very bubbly. … you knew the way she looked at Michael — you just … she loved him, you could see it.

    Keen, who also had a reputation for toughness, was a repo woman—repossessing cars at Bargain Motors.

    Della Ward (2018): To do repos, you have to have some kind of guts. … She told me, “I keep a gun for my protection because people are crazy, what they do.”

    Keen told investigators she was out working at the time of Marlene’s murder.

    Aleathea McRoberts: She claimed that she was looking for repossession vehicles, but she was unable to provide any address that she went to … so that they could follow up and confirm it.

    As for the affair, both Keen and Mike Warren told investigators they were just friends. But that’s not what authorities learned when they talked to Keen’s neighbors.

    Aleathea McRoberts: The neighbors at that apartment complex believed that Michael Warren and Sheila Keen were husband and wife.

    Peter Van Sant: Is there any doubt in your mind that there was a — romantic relationship?

    Aleathea McRoberts: There’s no doubt and … they didn’t hide it.

    An affair, though, isn’t necessarily a motive for murder.

    Peter Van Sant: Did anyone profit financially from Marlene’s death?

    Aleathea McRoberts: Yes. So, Michael Warren … profited … largely, the properties and assets that they owned together were in her name. So, by her predeceasing him, he was able to obtain 100 percent of the assets.

    Investigators were also trying to locate local stores that had recently sold clown outfits. Deborah Offord had been working at a costume shop when, two nights before Marlene’s murder, a customer knocked at the door at closing time.

    Deborah Offord (2018): She wanted to see the clown costumes. I said, “Can you come back tomorrow?” And she said, “No, I need something right now.”

    Offord told investigators the customer paid cash, buying a clown suit, an orange wig, makeup and a red clown nose.

    Deborah Offord (2018): She was, I would say, about 5’10, um, long, thick, straight, like, chocolate-colored hair. Big brown eyes.

    Sheila Keen
    The photo of Sheila Keen used for the police lineup.

    15th Judicial Circuit Court


    Detectives later presented Offord with a photo lineup that included a picture of Sheila Keen. Offord identified Keen, and one other woman, as possibly being the person who bought the clown costume.

    The sheriff’s office also believed they located where the shooter bought those flowers and balloons — a Publix supermarket.

    NEWS REPORT: The buyer described as a white female with dark brown hair. 

    The description of the customer given by the worker at the supermarket, “brown hair,” and at the costume store, “brown hair, brown eyes.” was consistent with Sheila Keen. And there was Sheila’s reported affair with Mike Warren. It was intriguing, circumstantial evidence—but would it be enough to make an arrest?

    SEARCHING FOR A KILLER WHO WAS DRESSED AS A CLOWN

    Joseph Ahrens: Before they turned the machine off on my mother … I told her that I loved her very much and that we were going to get justice. 

    As Ahrens mourned the loss of his mother Marlene, investigators continued looking for additional evidence tying Sheila Keen to Marlene Warren’s murder.

    Dave Aronberg: You talk about this case to anyone, and the first place people go is, yeah, it’s the mistress … So, investigators focused on Sheila Keen.

    warren15.jpg
    Four days after Marlene Warren was shot, police  found this white Chrysler LeBaron in a parking lot eight miles from the crime scene. Marlene’s son Joe Ahrens remembered seeing the clown drive away in a car fitting this description. Inside the car police found orange fibers that resembled hair from a clown wig and several strands of brown human hair.

    Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Dept.


    And soon a big break when detectives located an abandoned white Chrysler LeBaron—matching the description witnesses gave of the getaway car.

    Peter Van Sant: What was found inside that Chrysler LeBaron?

    Aleathea McRoberts: There was synthetic fibers … similar type fibers to … a clown wig.

    They were orange, the same color as the wig Ahrens says the assailant was wearing. Also inside the car, they found a human hair. It was brown like Sheila Keen’s.

    LOCAL NEWS REPORT: Sheriff’s detectives executed a search warrant at the home of Sheila Keen.

    Inside Keen’s closet, detectives say they recovered orange fibers that a forensic examination later concluded were similar to the ones found in the Chrysler LeBaron. And another breakthrough was made when Keen’s hair from her apartment was compared to the one recovered from the getaway car.

    Aleathea McRoberts: That was scientifically microscopically examined and found to be consistent.

    Consistent with Keen’s hair, but DNA technology was still in its infancy in 1990, and scientists were unable to make a definitive connection.

    There were other challenges for investigators. The gun used to kill Marlene and the actual costume the killer clown wore were never found. And remember, Ahrens thought the attacker was a 6-foot-tall man. Keen didn’t fit either of those descriptions.

    Aleathea McRoberts: We’re talking about an event that took seconds and their glances of this clown was a second or two.

    Also, McRoberts says any eyewitness would have a hard time describing someone in a baggy clown costume, makeup and a wig.

    Aleathea McRoberts: It’s basically, a clown is a clown.

    And there was Keen’s alleged affair with Mike Warren, those fiber and hair results, and those salesclerks at the costume and grocery stores whose description of the customer purchasing the clown outfit, balloons and flowers was consistent with Keen.

    Peter Van Sant: This sounds like it’s — the evidence is really building up … it’s like you’ve got enough there to make an arrest. What happens?

    Aleathea McRoberts: Well, there was certainly argument about that … and opinions that differed at the time. … and then there’s … an indecision about, do I do it now or should we keep trying and get a little bit more?

    As investigators looked for more evidence, they discovered that Mike Warren’s business, Bargain Motors, was connected to the suspected getaway car. They learned an employee stole the car from a competitor several weeks before the murder.

    Dave Aronberg: And that’s how they got the Chrysler LeBaron.

    NEWS REPORT: Sheriff’s detectives spent about five hours Thursday night searching the offices of Bargain Motors …

    And as they had investigated Mike Warren’s business, they discovered widespread fraud—charging him with racketeering, insurance fraud and odometer tampering.  He ultimately was convicted on 43 counts of fraud and sent to prison.

    Dave Aronberg: This was for fraud. … And so, you know, you just can’t extrapolate one to the next. I mean, there’s no evidence that he’s a murderer. … We do have our suspicions, though.

    He was not charged with any crime in connection with Marlene’s murder. And Mike Warren felt he was a victim in this case — sentiments he shared in a radio interview before he went to prison.

    MIKE WARREN (radio interview): They wanted to put me out of business.

    Mike Warren speculated that Marlene might actually have been the victim of an angry tenant or car buyer.

    MIKE WARREN (radio interview): I really can’t think of a reason why, uh, other than the fact of the type of businesses that we’re in, as far as being landlords and … crossing a few people by repossessing their car.

    But law enforcement did not think Marlene Warren’s murder was the work of a disgruntled tenant or customer, and as the years passed the case grew cold. And as for Keen, she seemed to disappear.

    Della Ward: Nobody ever brought her name up again.

    Joe Ahrens: You know, for many years … I was suffering in, in despair.

    Mike Warren and Joe Ahrens
    Joe Ahrens was 3 years when his mother married Mike Warren. “That was the only father I knew,” said Ahrens.

    Family photo


    After Mike Warren went to prison, Ahrens says he and his stepfather became estranged. And as he continued to grieve the loss of his mother, he was consumed by her case going unsolved. 

    Peter Van Sant: Give me a sense of what problems you fell into after your mother’s murder.

    Joe Ahrens: Oh, wow. Where do we start? … Alcoholism, drugs, I mean you name it.

    It was especially painful, says Ahrens, on each passing anniversary of the shooting.

    Joe Ahrens: I would blow up that day and go get drunk, you know, and just … I’d go to her gravesite … It was sad.

    Peter Van Sant: Would you go out to her grave to talk to her?

    Joe Ahrens: I did a lot to try to find answers, you know, but I was so confused. I was getting nothing. I was just lost.

    Joe eventually emerged from the fog of drugs and despair. With that behind him, he became increasingly certain of who murdered his mother.

    Joe Ahrens: I concluded that … Sheila Keen was the one that did it.

    Dave Aronberg: She probably never thought, in a million years, she’d be held accountable for her crimes. She thought she got away with it.

    COLD CASE UNIT MAKES BREAKTHROUGH

    Shirley Twing and her daughter, Marlene, shared a fascination with clowns. In Twing’s home, she even kept a room full of clown art and figurines.

    shirley-twing.jpg
    “These are paintings that Marlene had painted when she was about 14 years old,” says Shirley Twing. ” I walk by, I look at them everyday … I kind of grin ’cause I can almost see her doing this. …it gives me a good feeling.”

    CBS News


    The sad, sometimes unsettling images brought comfort to Twing, despite the fact that a clown had so brutally ended her daughter’s life.

    Shirley Twing: I don’t hate clowns. I just hate one.

    Although the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office hadn’t given up on solving Marlene’s murder, 27 long years had passed without an arrest. Then, by 2017, a cold case unit made a breakthrough. State Attorney Dave Aronberg finally had new, important evidence.  

    Dave Aronberg: The hairs that were found in the LeBaron were able to be traced to Sheila Keen … through DNA technology.

    With that new DNA match, detectives believed they could now definitively connect Keen to the alleged getaway car— and to Marlene Warren’s murder. And when sheriffs found suspect Keen, they were blown away to learn whom she had married.

    Dave Aronberg: After Michael Warren got out of prison, he reconnected with … Sheila Keen. … here’s someone whose wife had been murdered and he just married the chief suspect.

    Peter Van Sant: What did that tell you?

    Dave Aronberg:: When you combine the fact that the two of them were in an affair … at the time of the murder … and then later, they got married … it did seem like mission accomplished.

    Mike and Sheila Keen-Warren
    Mike and Sheila Keen-Warren

    Facebook


    That marriage was in 2002. The Warrens, now middle-aged, settled into a new life in Tennessee, running a burger joint called Purple Cow.  Keen took Mike Warren’s last name. But in an interesting twist, Assistant State Attorney Aleathea McRoberts says she changed her first name.

    Aleathea McRoberts: Sheila Keen-Warren introduced herself to … their friends in that life that her name was Debbie. … She had died her hair blonde, changed her name, and was living a full life.

    Brook Blevins: We would have … dinners. They were wonderful cooks.

    The Warrens befriended Brook Blevins, a neighbor at a weekend property the couple purchased in the Virginia mountains. When “48 Hours” spoke to Blevins in 2018, she said she also knew Mike’s wife as “Debbie” and was told it was a childhood nickname.

    Brook Blevins: Her dad nicknamed her that when she was small.

    Ashley Sexton (2018): I never called her Sheila (laughs).  I always called her Debbie.

    Former Purple Cow employees, Ashley Sexton and Cynthia Swafford say they knew Debbie as a tough boss.

    Cynthia Swafford (2018):  I mean, she was awful aggressive, mean.

    And they even heard an alarming rumor about her past.

    Ashley Sexton (2018): The rumor around Purple Cow when we worked there was Debbie killed Mike’s ex-wife. … I thought they was blowin’ off steam, and I was like, OK, whatever.

    Cynthia Swafford (2018): Mm-hmm (affirms).

    Ashley Sexton (2018):  But the rumors said it more than once … even to where we knew she dressed up like a clown.

    Sheila Keen-Warren
    Sheila Keen-Warren had dressed as a clown at The Purple Cow restaurant one year during Halloween according to an employee, who provided detectives with this picture of Keen-warren appearing in clown makeup. 

    15th Judicial Court


    According to an employee, Sheila had appeared in clown makeup at the restaurant one year during Halloween. 

    By the fall of 2017, the Warrens had sold the business and retired full time to the house in Virginia. Meanwhile State Attorney Aronberg felt the case against Sheila had only gotten stronger.

    Dave Aronberg: When you combine the fact that they got married and seemingly lived happily ever after with the new DNA breakthrough, we’re able to get enough evidence to make an arrest.

    Sheila Keen-Warren arrest
    On Sept. 26, 2017, 27 years after Marlene Warren’s murder, Sheila Keen-Warren was arrested and charged with first-degree murder.

    Washington County Sheriff’s Dept.


    On Sept. 26, 2017 — 27 years after Marlene Warren’s murder, authorities arrested Sheila Keen-Warren driving on a road near their home. She was charged with first-degree murder.

    Greg Rosenfeld: Sheila did not murder Marlene Warren.

    Greg Rosenfeld, Sheila Keen-Warren’s defense attorney, says Sheila was not the shooter.

    Greg Rosenfeld: Everything was so methodical … this person walking up to the house … committing this shooting and then slowly walking away … We’re dealing with someone who … had experience in committing a hit or a murder.

    Peter Van Sant: That’s not Sheila?

    Greg Rosenfeld: That is not, Sheila.

    Shortly after Sheila’s arrest, Dave Aronberg addressed reporters.

    DAVE ARONBERG: Today we filed a notice of intent to seek the death penalty in this case.

    REPORTER:  Can you say whether Michael Warren is a suspect?

    DAVE ARONBERG: I can’t say that.

    Aleathea McRoberts says there was something Keen-Warren asked as she was being taken into custody that caught prosecutors’ attention.

    Aleathea McRoberts: One of the first things she said is, well, “are you gonna arrest him too?” Pointing to her husband.

    Peter Van Sant: Which suggests what to you?

    Aleathea McRoberts: That she knew exactly what she was being arrested for and they had done it together.

    Ahrens had come to the same conclusion: that his stepfather and Keen-Warren were both involved in his mother’s murder.

    Peter Van Sant: Would you like to see Mike Warren charged in the murder of your mother?

    Joe Ahrens: Yes, I would.

    With Keen-Warren in custody, “48 Hours” wanted to speak with Mike Warren.

    Peter Van Sant: We’re going to go to his front door, give it a knock, and see if he’ll answer a couple of questions.  

    QUESTIONING THE EVIDENCE

    After the arrest of Sheila Keen-Warren in 2017, “48 Hours” wanted to talk to Mike Warren about what he knew about his wife’s murder.

    Peter Van Sant: [knocking on front door]: Hey, Mike. I’m Peter Van Sant with CBS News.

    He wouldn’t open the door, but we spoke through it for several minutes.

    Peter Van Sant and Mike Warren
    Peter Van Sant talks with Mike Warren through Warren’s front door.

    CBS News


    Peter Van Sant: Did you have anything to do with planning the murder of your wife, Marlene?

    Mike Warren:  Most definitely not.

    Peter Van Sant: You did not?

    Mike Warren: That’s correct.

    He was adamant that neither he nor Keen-Warren had anything to do with Marlene’s murder.

    Peter Van Sant: Did you suggest to Sheila that she dress in a clown outfit?

    Mike Warren: You’re saying, “Sheila, Sheila.” Who says she even did that? …I don’t think she had anything to do with this. If I thought she had something to do with this, I wouldn’t have been with her.

    Peter Van Sant: Do you believe, based on the evidence over the years, that Mike Warren knew what was going to happen that day?

    Aleathea McRoberts: I don’t believe there’s any direct evidence of that.

    Dave Aronberg: There just wasn’t enough evidence to prosecute Michael Warren. … but if evidence emerges, we’ll pursue it.

    As they prepared for trial, despite never recovering the clown disguise or the gun, prosecutors were confident they could prove that Keen-Warren committed the murder so that she could marry Mike Warren. 

    Dave Aronberg: Sheila Keen-Warren had the means, the motive and the opportunity to do this.

    Greg Rosenfeld: We will never know who killed Marlene Warren because the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office and the State Attorney’s Office did such a poor job investigating this case. I can tell you without question that it was not Sheila Keen.

    Keen-Warren’s defense attorney, Greg Rosenfeld says she’s innocent—a victim of the state attorney’s reckless desire to close a notorious cold case.

    Greg Rosenfeld: And they said you know what? This is our suspect. We’re going to stick with it. … even though the pieces of the puzzle didn’t fit the puzzle.

    Rosenfeld says there were other potential suspects authorities ignored—including an inmate who supposedly bragged in prison about murdering Marlene.  But prosecutors say he was investigated and cleared.

    Dave Aronberg: It’s not surprising that … they would try to point the finger at law enforcement for not looking at every potential suspect. … But if you look at the evidence, it pointed to one person all along, Sheila Keen-Warren.

    The state was confident Keen-Warren was responsible for Marlene’s murder—but Rosenfeld plans to poke holes in its case at trial.

    Peter Van Sant: How do you overcome DNA evidence?

    Greg Rosenfeld: The State Attorney’s Office should be embarrassed about the DNA evidence in this case.

    Rosenfeld agrees the hair prosecutors say was found in the LeBaron getaway car could be from Keen-Warren, but he says, it could also be from about four percent of the U.S. Caucasian population.

    Greg Rosenfeld: They couldn’t exclude Marlene Warren from that hair sample. … So that was their groundbreaking DNA evidence.

    And even if you concede that the hair is from Keen-Warren, says Rosenfeld, there’s an innocent explanation as to how it got there: the LeBaron was on the lot at Bargain Motors where she worked.

    Greg Rosenfeld: Sheila may have been in the car used in this murder. That’s it.

    Peter Van Sant: The defense attorney says, well, of course her hair might be in there … It doesn’t suggest that she was driving at the time of the murder. What do you say to that?

    Aleathea McRoberts: It’s just one more link. … Once you put that one thing with the totality of all the circumstances, then it starts to become overwhelming.

    Rosenfeld says the orange fibers found in the car, which prosecutors say could be from the clown costume, should also be excluded.

    Greg Rosenfeld: So, the fibers found in the car were synthetic fibers. … That same type of fiber can be used in thousands of different products. … So, the state likes to present it as … clown wig fibers, but that’s factually incorrect.

    Marlene Warren murder evidence
    Sheila  Keen-Warren’s defense attorney Greg Rosenfeld says tears in evidence storage bags could have led  to contamination, making the evidence unreliable. When asked about the way evidence was stored, Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg said, “Some of the evidence was kept in an evidence storage area that wasn’t ideal … Any mistake, any small opening will be exploited by defense lawyers.”

    Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office


    Even more troubling than the evidence gathered, says Rosenfeld, is how it was handled over the decades.

    Peter Van Sant: What are we looking at here?

    Greg Rosenfeld: These are … evidence bags at the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office Evidence Unit torn open. Just gaping holes in these evidence bags.

    Peter Van Sant: If there’s gaping holes, what can that do to the evidence inside?

    Greg Rosenfeld: That’s precisely how you have cross-contamination.

    The bag contains a clown wig that investigators purchased, similar to the one they believed was worn by the assailant. They used it to compare to the fibers found in the LeBaron and in Keen-Warren’s home.

    Greg Rosenfeld: This is an open evidence bag with the wig sticking out. … this is horrifying.

    Peter Van Sant: And, so, your bottom line is, is that this evidence is unreliable now?

    Greg Rosenfeld: Without question.

    Peter Van Sant: Can it not be argued that … some of the evidence in this case was indeed bungled?

    Dave Aronberg: You know, it’s — you’re asking a lot of law enforcement to be perfect from 1990 to today. … some of the evidence was kept in an evidence storage area that wasn’t ideal. … Any mistake, any small opening will be exploited by defense lawyers.

    Prosecutors were still certain they had the right person for Marlene’s murder. But in February 2020, after a reevaluation of Keen-Warren’s case, they announced they would no longer seek the death penalty.

    Peter Van Sant: Were you told by the prosecutor’s office that there was always a chance in a jury trial that she might even be acquitted?

    Joe Ahrens: Yes.

    FROM DEATH PENALTY TO LIFE IN PRISON TO A PLEA DEAL

    It is said the wheels of justice turn slowly, and when it came to the murder of Marlene Warren,

    that grind often seemed to come to a halt. After the 27-year wait for an arrest, Sheila Keen-Warren’s trial kept getting delayed. By 2022, she had spent five years in jail; her trial was postponed six times.

    Aleathea McRoberts: And then we had COVID … So, it just was one thing after another. … decades of accumulation, of files and photographs and … mountains of evidence and documents.

    Sheila Keen-Warren

    Florida Department of Corrections


    Defense attorney Greg Rosenfeld was also trying to work his way through all that evidence. And he says, adding to the delays, was a lack of cooperation from the state.

    Greg Rosenfeld: Evidence kept — I’d say, disappearing.

    Rosenfeld says one crucial piece of evidence for the defense that disappeared for years was what investigators called the “clown sighting file.”

    Greg Rosenfeld: These were all the tips … about people who alleged to have seen clowns in the area.

    Peter Van Sant: That opens up, for you, new avenues as to possible suspects, right?

    Greg Rosenfeld: Absolutely. Absolutely. … I think the sheriff’s office and the State Attorney’s Office just decided they didn’t want to look for this evidence

    But then suddenly, in October 2022, as another trial date neared, the file was found. 

    Aleathea McRoberts: It was located, not with the Sheila Keen clown murder … boxes, it was actually a file out of place.

    Greg Rosenfeld: They find this clown sighting file and it’s 35 tips. We begin to investigate them. … now we’re 32 years after the murder. … you know, we couldn’t track down these witnesses.

    Aleathea McRoberts: I’ve seen it and … it’s silly things … Clearly clown sightings that had nothing to do with Marlene Warren.

    Peter Van Sant: And it wasn’t being intentionally hidden from the defense, you’re saying.

    Aleathea McRoberts: Absolutely not. We were meticulous about making sure they had everything.

    Though, as the trial neared, the decades of delays were causing problems for the prosecution as well.

    Dave Aronberg: Every day that went by, it was a tougher case. … witnesses die, memories fade, evidence spoils …  One of our key witnesses passed away. … He was the one who compiled the evidence. And without him, we lost a chain of custody for some crucial evidence relating to the fibers.

    Evidence the defense already claimed had been poorly stored and mishandled.

    Greg Rosenfeld: Contaminated, inadmissible, unreliable. … it just goes to show you how poor of an investigation that was done.

    Dave Aronberg: They were going to be able to argue that because of the opening of the bags, that the evidence was spoiled, and because of the break in the chain of custody, because of the death of our witnesses, that … it shouldn’t even be admitted. … So, you had some real potential for reasonable doubt.

    Greg Rosenfeld: There was beyond a reasonable doubt.

    On April 25, 2023, two weeks before Keen-Warren’s trial for the murder of Marlene Warren was to begin, there was yet another surprise in a case that had been filled with the unexpected: a plea deal was reached.

    warren-25.png
    After spending five years in jail awaiting trial, Sheila Keen-Warren accepted a deal. She pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to 12 years in prison for the murder of Marlene Warren.

    .15th Judicial Circuit Court


    PROSECUTOR REID SCOTT (plea hearing): Ms. Keen-Warren, the defendant herein, will agree to withdraw her previously entered plea of not guilty enter a plea of guilty.

    Keen-Warren — whose case at one time included the death penalty, then life in prison — would now plead guilty to second-degree murder and be sentenced to 12 years in prison. Under sentencing guidelines for time served, she is expected to be released in 2025 — perhaps sooner.

    Dave Aronberg: We had to make a judgment based on what we had.

    Peter Van Sant: Because the fear is what, if you take this to trial?

    Dave Aronberg: The worst thing that could happen would be that Sheila Keen-Warren would be found not guilty, not because she was innocent, but because after 33 years, we could not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that she was the one who did it.

    But Keen-Warren did have to publicly pay a price for this plea deal — admitting in open court that she, in fact, did murder Marlene Warren.

    PROSECUTOR REID SCOTT (plea hearing): If this case were to proceed to jury trial, the state would present evidence … that on or about May the 26th of 1990, the defendant was responsible for the death of Marlene Warren.

    JUDGE: Ms. Keen-Warren, Did you hear all that?

    SHEILA KEEN-WARREN: Yes.

    JUDGE: And do you agree with that factual basis?”

    SHEILA KEEN-WARREN: Yes.

    Despite admitting her crime, Keen-Warren, through her attorney, still maintains she is innocent.

    Greg Rosenfeld: Sheila did not commit this murder. … It was very difficult for her to, uh, admit to committing a crime that she did not commit.

    Peter Van Sant: But as a matter of law, she has admitted to committing the murder by saying yes.

    Greg Rosenfeld: Correct. For the purpose of —

    Peter Van Sant: So, she is a convicted murderer?

    Greg Rosenfeld: In so far as the law goes, sure. … But when … you’re told you could be home … or, you know, you can play Russian roulette and risk spending the rest of your life in prison. It’s kind of a no- brainer.

    Dave Aronberg: The defense cannot have it both ways. … So, she will be a murderer for every day for the rest of her life. Even when she gets out of prison one day, she’ll still be a convicted murderer.

    When she does get out of prison, she will reunite with her husband Michael Warren.

    Greg Rosenfeld: Sheila is going home to … Tennessee. … She’s going back to her life.

    Michael Warren, in a statement provided to “48 Hours” regarding the plea, said, “My wife did not commit this crime…  It was difficult to see her plea to a crime she did not commit, but it wasn’t worth the gamble when she was offered a deal that’ll have her home in 16 to 18 months …”

    Peter Van Sant: With this deal, there is a chance that Sheila might get out of prison within the next year or two. Are you all right with that?

    Joe Ahrens: Well, I’m not all right with it, but I have to be.

    Still, Joe Aherns approved the plea deal, feeling it wasn’t worth the gamble of going to trial.

    Joe Ahrens: That was very emotional because that was the end of something so huge that grew for 33 years of my life.

    Peter Van Sant: Finally. It’s over.

    Joe Ahrens: Finally, you know. It was phew.

    Marlene Warren and Joe Ahrens.
    “My mother, Marlene Warren, was a beautiful person. She was loving, caring, kind,” said Joe Ahrens.

    Family photo


    The demons that once occupied Ahrens’ mind are gone, replaced with loving memories of how his mother Marlene lived, rather than how that life was so violently taken.

    Peter Van Sant: What would you say to your mother, if you could speak to her today?

    Joe Ahrens: Wow, what could I say to my mother? … “Thank you for showing me how to love and be peaceful and … Thank you for being in my life.”

    Marlene Warren’s mother Shirley Twing died in March 2023, before Sheila Keen-Warren pleaded guilty to Marlene’s murder.

    Produced by Ruth Chenetz, Richard Fetzer and Sarah Prior. Ryan Smith is the development producer. Marlon Disla, Mike Baluzy, Marcus Balsam and Philip Tangel are the editors. Anthony Batson is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.

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  • The Daughters Who Disappeared

    The Daughters Who Disappeared

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    The Daughters Who Disappeared – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    In 1997 four families are shattered when their daughters go missing. As they grieve, one man claims to have answers. Can he be trusted? “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty reports on the final chapter of a case she started covering more than two decades ago.

    Be the first to know

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  • Convicted killer known as the Zombie Hunter says life on death row is cold, food is

    Convicted killer known as the Zombie Hunter says life on death row is cold, food is

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    Bryan Patrick Miller did not testify at his recent murder trial for killing two young women in the early 1990’s but, when a “48 Hours” producer contacted him by email, he was ready to talk about the case.

    Miller continued to deny he murdered Angela Brosso and Melanie Bernas even though he was found guilty by Judge Suzanne Cohen in a trial without a jury. Cohen sentenced Miller to death in June 2023. Under Arizona law, the case will be automatically appealed.

    Bryan Patrick Miller
    Bryan Patrick Miller was sentenced to death in June 2023.

    Arizona Department of Corrections


    Asked to explain how his DNA was found on the bodies of both women, Miller wrote, “That’s the million-dollar question.”

    “If I had a provable answer for that I wouldn’t be in this situation now, would I?” he countered. “It is a question that I would like answered and everyone is so convinced that I did so it will go unanswered.”

    Miller is sitting in death row at what he calls SMU, which is shorthand for a Special Management Unit at the Eyman Prison Complex in Florence, Arizona. It may surprise those not familiar with prison, but even inmates on death row have access to email.

    When asked about life on death row, Miller wrote: “It is better than county jail, but it is obvious that isolation has taken its toll on many people here. From what I saw of people in county jail compared to here, the majority of the people here are by far not what I would consider the worst of the worst. It is by far safer than anywhere else in prison even though they have nothing really to lose anymore.”

    He continued: “…it is far from great, as I am even more isolated from those I care about and also my legal team, the food is still not great and the cells are getting very cold now that temps are falling,” he wrote.

    Miller expressed bitterness about his trial which took place almost eight years after his arrest and nearly 30 years after the first murder in the case. “How is a person supposed to defend themselves and prove anything for a crime that happened decades ago?” he asks.

    He said he disagrees with psychological experts called by his defense lawyers who said he had dissociative amnesia and could not remember anything about the Brosso and Bernas murders. He repeated his position: “I maintain I did not do the murders.”

    The Brosso and Bernas murders, which became known as the canal killings, are featured in “Unmasking the Zombie Hunter,” now streaming on Paramount+.

    The
    Bryan Patrick Miller in costume as the “Zombie Hunter.”

    Ben Garcia


    After Miller was identified as a person of interest in 2014, cold case detective Clark Schwartzkopf examined Miller’s social media accounts and discovered Miller had adopted a new persona around 2014. Miller began taking part in zombie walks in Phoenix and fashioned a homemade costume with a menacing mask and a fake Gatling gun, said Schwartzkopf. He also drove a tricked out old police car with the words Zombie Hunter on the back.

    His lawyers presented a defense that essentially blamed Miller’s mother Ellen for the person he became. Miller’s lawyers said Ellen, who died in 2010, had abused him as a child, creating mental health problems. Cohen agreed Miller had been abused as a child after hearing psychological evidence throughout the eight-month trial.

    “My mother was not a very good person in so many ways, but what helped was that when I was an adult, she acknowledged that she did horrible things to me and apologized,” Miller wrote.

    By the time detectives arrested Miller in 2015, he was a divorced father raising a teenage daughter. Friends and even a detective working the case said Miller seemed to treat his daughter well. Not seeing her, says Miller, is his biggest regret about being imprisoned.

    “What I miss most is spending time with my daughter and friends,” he wrote. 

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  • The case against the Zombie Hunter

    The case against the Zombie Hunter

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    Bryan Patrick Miller violently murdered two young women in Phoenix in the early 1990s and went decades without being caught. By the time police caught up to him, he had a new persona and was hiding in plain sight. Genetic genealogy and DNA would be the keys to identifying him as the killer. 

    See how investigators tracked down a killer more than 20 years after the Phoenix canal murders.

    The Zombie Hunter

    Zombie Hunter
    Bryan Patrick Miller, center, who called himself the Zombie Hunter, poses for a photo with police officers.

    Facebook


    In 2014, Miller was known to many in the Phoenix area as the Zombie Hunter – a comic-book-inspired character who wore a mask and a long trench coat and carried a fake Gatling gun. He drove around in a tricked-out old police car and attended events taking photos with fans and even police officers. Investigators would later learn the man behind this costumed character had an extremely violent past.

    1989: Celeste Bentley stabbing

    In May 1989, Celeste Bentley was stabbed in the back by a 16-year-old Bryan Patrick Miller.

    Celeste Bentley


    In May 1989, a Phoenix woman named Celeste Bentley got off a bus at the same stop as a 16-year-old Miller. “Well, when he had ran by me, I thought he had just hit me,” Bentley said. “But then, I reached back to my back and I pulled my hand up and I saw the blood.” 

    Miller had stabbed Bentley in her upper back. He was caught and charged with aggravated assault and sent to juvenile detention where he stayed until he turned 18.

    1990: An ominous note

    Bryan Patrick Miller note
    A disturbing note written by a teenage Bryan Patrick Miller that his mother found while he was in juvenile detention. It spelled out how he wanted to find, abduct, rape, murder and dismember a young woman. 

    Phoenix Police Department


    While Miller was in juvenile detention, his mother Ellen made a strange discovery. She told police she found a disturbing note while cleaning his room. The note, with the heading “Plan” on the second page detailed a sadistic scheme to torture and kill a young woman. Ellen gave the note to police and refused to let Miller return home, so he moved into a halfway house.

    Nov. 8. 1992: Angela Brosso disappears

    Angela Brosso
    Angela Brosso

    Cedar Cliff High School


    On the eve of her 22nd birthday, a Phoenix woman named Angela Brosso went out for a solo evening bike ride. Her boyfriend Joe stayed home to bake her a birthday cake and expected her to be home within the hour. When Brosso didn’t return, Joe took his bike out and rode around looking for her. He told investigators he went out three times that night looking for Brosso but couldn’t find her.

    Nov. 9, 1992: Brosso’s body is found

    Angela Brosso crime scene
    Detectives at the Angela Brosso crime scene.

    KPHO


    The next morning, police searching for the missing woman came upon Brosso’s body in the field next to her apartment. She had been fatally stabbed in the back, sexually assaulted and decapitated. Her head was nowhere to be found. Investigators discovered she had been attacked on the nearby bike path, and her bike was also missing.

    Eleven days later, Brosso’s head was spotted in the Arizona Canal, about two miles from where her body had been found. Due to a lack of decomposition, investigators believed the killer may have kept her head in a refrigerator before dumping it in the canal.

    Sept. 21, 1993: Melanie Bernas goes missing

    Melanie Bernas
    Melanie Bernas

    Maricopa County Court


    Ten months later, high school junior Melanie Bernas took an evening bike ride while her mother Marlene was out to dinner. Marlene told police that when she came home that night, Melanie and her bike were gone.

    The next morning, Phoenix local Charlotte Pottle was riding her bike with her daughter in the back seat when she rode through a strange-looking puddle. She circled back to get another look.

    “I could tell that it was a puddle of red, that it was a puddle of blood,” said Pottle. She also noticed drag marks. She rode home and called police. When police came to the scene, they found Melanie’s body floating in the canal dressed in a blue bodysuit. She had been fatally stabbed in the back and sexually assaulted. A matching DNA profile was found on both victims. Melanie and Angela’s murders became known as the “canal murders.”

    1994: A tip

    Melanie Bernas evidence
    A teal bodysuit like the one police say Melanie Bernas was found wearing.

    KPHO


    In 1994, investigators received a tip suggesting Miller may have had a distinctive teal body suit that was similar to the one Melanie was found in. Investigators at the time seemingly never pursued Miller.

    The case goes cold

    With a volume of tips coming in and hundreds of persons of interest, investigators were unable to find the person responsible for the murders. Decades passed with no arrest.

    2011: The cold case unit

    Clark Schwartzkopf
    Clark Schwartzkopf was a cold case detective with the Phoenix Police Department.

    CBS News


    In 2011, Phoenix police detective Clark Schwartzkopf was working with the cold case unit investigating the canal murders. He says there were over 600 persons of interest in the case files. “I said, ‘OK, give me the list,’” said Schwartzkopf. “Let’s start at A and I’m going to go through all the backgrounds on all these people and see if I can find anybody in there that would be possible of … committing this type of potential violence.”

    2014: Genetic genealogy provides a new lead

    Colleen Fitzpatrick
    Colleen Fitzpatrick, founder of Identifinders International.

    CBS News


    In late 2014, forensic genealogist Colleen Fitzpatrick spoke to investigators at a conference. Fitzpatrick’s company, Identifinders International, had developed software that could mine public genealogy databases, searching for matches to crime scene DNA. Phoenix police sent her the DNA information from the canal murders. Fitzpatrick’s company crunched the data and came up with the surname Miller. Schwartzkopf found six people with the last name Miller on his list. One of those names was Bryan Patrick Miller: a 42-year-old man with a juvenile record for the stabbing of Celeste Bentley.

    December 2014: Surveilling a potential suspect

    Bryan Patrick Miller
    Bryan Patrick Miller

    Maricopa County Court


    Schwartzkopf began to conduct surveillance on Miller and observed him on his breaks from work at an Amazon warehouse. To determine if he was the killer behind the decades-old canal murders, Schwartzkopf would have to obtain Miller’s DNA. He came up with a ruse. During one of Miller’s work breaks, Schwartzkopf approached Miller’s car, introduced himself and offered a job proposal. 

    “I introduced myself as a security consultant. I said, ‘listen, I’ve got a team of people here in this parking lot and we’re watching this building that’s north of you.’” He told Miller the owner suspected thieves were stealing merchandise and had hired him to watch the building.

    “You’re always … out here for your breaks,” Schwartzkopf said he told Miller. “… would you be interested in working for me as a security officer watching the building while you’re outside?” Miller agreed and Schwartzkopf later scheduled a meeting to fill out a job application, with the hope of getting Miller’s DNA.

    Jan. 2, 2015: The sting at Chili’s

    Mug from Zombie Hunter DNA sting
    The mug Bryan Patrick Miller drank from during the sting.

    Maricopa County Court


    Schwartzkopf arranged for Miller to meet him at a Chili’s restaurant in Phoenix. Schwartzkopf says investigators from the cold case unit were on the scene, working with staff to ensure Miller’s silverware and dishes were free from contamination. 

    “So, they watched them pull them outta the dishwasher,” Schwartzkopf told “48 Hours.” “The detectives take the plates and the glasses and the silverware, and they move them directly to a booth that this manager has set up for us, away from everybody else.”

    To Schwartzkopf’s surprise, Miller arrived with his 15-year-old daughter. Miller ordered a hamburger and a water and when he finally took a drink, Schwartzkopf knew he had his DNA. But after observing Miller’s mild temperament and his rapport with his daughter, Schwartzkopf doubted Miller could be the person responsible for the brutal canal murders in the early 1990s.

    After the meal, they left the restaurant and detectives seized Miller’s glass and sent it to the Phoenix Police Department crime lab for DNA analysis.

    Jan. 13, 2015: DNA match

    Brian Patrick Miller booking photo
    On Jan. 13, 2015, Bryan Patrick Miller was arrested and charged with the murders of Angela Brosso and Melanie Bernas.

    Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office


    Eleven days later, the head of the crime lab told investigators they had a match to the DNA from the crime scenes where both Angela Brosso and Melanie Bernas were found.

    “She leans down to me, she goes, ‘It’s him … Bryan Miller, it’s him,’” said Schwartzkopf.

    Miller was arrested later that day. He was charged with first degree murder in both Angela Brosso and Melanie Bernas’ deaths. When a detective told him they had DNA linking him to the canal murder victims, Miller replied, “I don’t see how that’s possible.” He also denied killing anyone.

    “It’s full of crap”

    Brian Patrick Miller's kitchen
    Bryan Patrick Miller’s kitchen. “There was a little pass where you could get to a bathroom and the kitchen and where the TV was, and that’s it. Everything else is just stacked to the roof with garbage,” said Clark Schwartzkopf.

    Phoenix Police Department


    Investigators got a search warrant for Miller’s house where he and his teenage daughter had been living. Schwartzkopf was shocked by the state it was in.

    “I can remember like it was yesterday walking up to the front door and everybody going, ‘you can’t get in that way.’ … ‘It’s full of crap,’” said Schwartzkopf.

    Schwartzkopf and his team went through the entire house collecting items of evidence, but the women’s long lost bicycles were not found, and neither was the murder weapon. 

    Trial for the canal murders

    Bryan Patrick Miller trial
    Bryan Patrick Miller during his murder trial.

    Pool


    Miller’s trial began in October 2022. His attorney’s admitted Miller was the canal killer but said that due to abuse he endured as a child, he developed severe mental health problems. His lawyers argued he was not guilty by reason of insanity. 

    A psychologist testified that Miller developed a condition known as dissociative amnesia – an inability to remember some traumatic events. Miller’s attorneys claimed he had no memory of the canal murders. Miller claims he did not commit the murders.

    Judge Suzanne Cohen found Miller guilty of both murders. In June 2023, Cohen sentenced him to death. Under Arizona law, he will have an automatic appeal.

    Messages from death row

    Bryan Patrick Miller
    Bryan Patrick Miller was sentenced to death in June 2023.

    Arizona Department of Corrections


    Miller, now in his 50s, sits on death row at the Eyman Prison Complex in Florence, Arizona. A “48 Hours” producer contacted him via email to discuss the case. Miller maintains he did not commit the canal murders. When asked to explain how his DNA was found at both crime scenes, Miller said that is a question that will go unanswered.

    “If I had a provable answer for that I wouldn’t be in this situation now, would I,” Miller replied. He says he doesn’t believe he had a fair trial. 

    Regarding the prison conditions, Miller wrote, ” … it is far from great, as I am even more isolated from those I care about and also my legal team, the food is still not great and the cells are getting very cold now that temps are falling.”

    He also expressed his personal views on the death penalty and its effect on the people he sees around him: “I see wasted lives and potential that would have been beneficial to society … I have always been against the death penalty and the more I see what death row is and who is here and how they got here, I am even more against it.”

    Miller says what he misses most is spending time with his daughter and friends and going to car shows and events.

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  • Unmasking the

    Unmasking the

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    Unmasking the “Zombie Hunter” – CBS News


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    How police connected the murders of two young women to a man known as a zombie-fighting comic book hero. “48 Hours” correspondent Peter Van Sant reports.

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