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Could Georgia teacher's murder have been solved years ago?

Could Georgia teacher's murder have been solved years ago?

Yahoo06-03-2025

[This story previously aired on September 4, 2021. It was updated on August 20, 2022.]
"48 Hours" correspondent Peter Van Sant first reported on this story in 2008 – almost three years after Tara Grinstead went missing. Back then, hardly anyone thought this case would ever be solved. Then, in 2017, a woman came forward with a remarkable story about her boyfriend … but could it be trusted?
The 2005 disappearance of Tara Grinstead — beloved teacher and local beauty queen — mystified the people of Ocilla, Georgia, like Jannis Paulk, who lived just around the corner from Tara.
Jannis Paulk: Ocilla is a big family. … we all wanted to do something that we could do to help … There were flyers. There were billboards. … We had search efforts like nothing you've ever seen.
Jannis, who ran a local web design company, became an expert on the case — keeping a close watch since Tara was reported missing.
Peter Van Sant: What were some of the theories as to what had happened to Tara?
Jannis Paulk: There were people who believed she ran away. … Somebody has abducted her and holding her somewhere hostage. And … the one we didn't want to think about was somebody killed her.
But who would want to harm this vibrant 30-year-old woman? Maria Woods Harber grew up with Tara.
Maria Woods Harber: My best friend, Tara Grinstead, was a beautiful person on the inside and the outside. … She was radiant. I mean, she had the biggest smile. She could tell you anything to make you feel better.
Maria Woods Harber: This is where Tara Grinstead lived in 2005.
Peter Van Sant: What emotional impact does this have for you when you see this house?
Maria Woods Harber: Well, it's very emotional. I don't like to come very often … she loved this place. … I can still see her standing at the door.
Maria says Tara was determined to live her dreams from a young age, competing in beauty pageants to help earn scholarship money for college.
Maria Woods Harber: She was absolutely elegant onstage. … her main goal was to win Miss Georgia or at least to get to Miss Georgia, and she did.
Tara didn't bring home the Miss Georgia crown, but just competing was a huge achievement says Dana Wilder, who grew up in Ocilla.
Dana Wilder: As little girls, we looked up to her … she was famous.
After college, Tara got a job at Ocilla's Irwin County high school, teaching 11th grade history.
Maria Woods Harber: She was an excellent teacher. … was dedicated to making her students feel wonderful.
And even when she no longer competed, Tara helped other women, like Dana, break into that world.
Dana Wilder: She just took me underneath her wing … She taught me the ins and outs of interviews, hair and makeup, wardrobe.
At night, Tara studied for a specialist degree in school administration, but other parts of her life hadn't come together as she'd hoped.
Maria Woods Harber: Tara had a boyfriend for a long time … And during the summer of 2005, they broke up.
That boyfriend was Marcus Harper, a former cop from Ocilla.
Marcus Harper: She obviously wanted to get married. … It just wasn't what I wanted. … I definitely didn't wanna settle down in small town America.
Marcus enlisted with the Army Rangers and spent time overseas.
Marcus Harper: It was like a calling. It was somethin' I felt like, you know, I had to do.
The couple broke things off but stayed in touch.
Maria Woods Harber: Tara really did want to get back with Marcus. She did not want to end it. And she was very distraught.
Peter Van Sant: This was the man she thought she'd build a life with.
Maria Woods Harber: Yeah, she did. … she was seeing other people. And I think she was just trying to move on … in a small town of Ocilla, everyone knew their situation.
It was part of town gossip that they had gotten into an argument after Marcus had come back to town earlier than expected that October. But no one in Ocilla knew what had happened when Tara seemingly vanished after leaving that barbecue on Saturday night, October 22.
Peter Van Sant: What time did she go home?
Maria Woods Harber: About 11 o'clock.
On Sunday, Tara's mom called her several times, but Tara didn't answer.
Maria Woods Harber: And the next morning … I got a call saying that I need to get to Ocilla.
Tara had failed to show up at school.
Maria Woods Harber: She would never do that. She would never leave her kids.
Tara's car was parked in the driveway. Neighbors knocked on her door but got no response. The Ocilla police were called and entered Tara's home, and right behind them was Maria.
Peter Van Sant: What did you see when you walked into her house?
Maria Woods Harber [outside Tara's house]: I wasn't quite sure what I was going to walk in and see … her den was exactly the way it always was ...
But some things stuck out to Maria. Tara's alarm clock was under her bed, and a bedside lamp was broken.
Maria Woods Harber: ... and then her bed was unmade, like she had been in the bed.
Tara's cell phone was charging inside the house. But police noted that her purse and keys were missing. By her front door, they found a business card from a police officer in a nearby town. And then, an important discovery.
Maria Woods Harber: So, when I came back out of the house, I saw … right out from the front door, there was a latex glove.
Peter Van Sant: On the ground?
Maria Woods Harber: On the ground.
Authorities couldn't explain either, and collected them as evidence… the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, known as the GBI, was called in. Back in 2008 Van Sant spoke with Special Agent Gary Rothwell.
Gary Rothwell [2008]: It is one of the most extensive investigations undertaken by the GBI.
Gary Rothwell [2008]: It appeared that Tara may have left on her own. However, we had a glove, a latex glove that we couldn't explain. So that gave us a stronger indication that something bad had happened.
The GBI tested that glove and found not only Tara's DNA on it, but the DNA profile of an unknown male. The case generated hundreds of tips over the years. Jannis Paulk even created a website to help authorities collect information.
Jannis Paulk: FindTara.com. … I built a message board because I thought that there was a good chance that whoever … knew what had happened to her would potentially come and say something.
As Jannis recalls, early on, suspicion focused on the men in Tara's life.
Jannis Paulk: She was dating, I think, more than people realized that she was dating. … and that's nobody's business, but in this case, it made it tough.
Rumors swirled about that cop whose card was found at Tara's house. He was a family friend — married, with kids —who would later testify that he and Tara were having an affair. He said they had talked about getting together that Sunday, but Tara never answered her phone. Worried, he went to her house Sunday night and left the card after Tara didn't answer the doorbell. He had an alibi, but the whispers continued.
Jannis Paulk: … there were several people, several men, who got a lot of scrutiny for a long time …
Another was a former student who claimed he and Tara been secretly seeing each other. But when questioned about her disappearance, he had an alibi and was never charged. Then, there was Tara's ex-boyfriend, Marcus Harper.
Marcus Harper: Somebody pulled me to the side, and they were like, "Listen, you know, there's been some things said … bringin' up your military past, bringin' up how you're … Trained to kill" …
Marcus always maintained his innocence but remained under suspicion.
Investigators chased down dozens of leads across the country, but tips emerged that led right back to the high school where Tara was a teacher and perhaps someone who had sat in her classroom.
Dana Wilder: I never thought it was somebody … from our community. But in the same sense, I always thought, "Well, it has to be."
A DISTURBING STORY EMERGES
For years, Marcus Harper lived under a cloud — some might say a thunderstorm — of suspicion. He was the talk of Ocilla, Georgia, and none of it was good.
Marcus Harper: What they're sayin' at the local … grocery store, and at the local restaurants— They don't think that it's gettin' to someone who's my family or my friend? … I'm not gonna shy away to the fact that I was— I was bitter.
Police never called him a suspect, but Marcus was more closely investigated than anyone in the disappearance of his former girlfriend, Tara Grinstead.
Marcus Harper: I was swabbed for DNA. My truck was Luminoled … photographs were taken. … Had to tell my alibi, you know, or where was I at, who I was around. And that was corroborated.
Year after year passed with no arrests. But back in 2005, authorities either missed or ignored a tip that may have solved the case. Just weeks after Tara vanished at a party in a pecan orchard, one of Jannis Paulk's employees told her that he had overheard two young men tell a disturbing story.
Jannis Paulk: That they had been at a party bragging about their involvement in Tara's disappearance and that ultimately, they had taken her body out to a pecan orchard and burn it in a firepit.
It was a shocking statement.
Peter Van Sant: Did he have names of who these two men were who claimed they had killed Tara?
Jannis Paulk: It was Bo Dukes and Ryan Duke.
The two — who were friends— had similar sounding names but weren't related. At the time, Ryan Duke and Bo Dukes were 21 years old. Ryan worked at a plastics manufacturing plant, while Bo would occasionally work at his family's pecan farm. Both had been students at Tara's high school.
Jannis Paulk: We shared that tip with the local sheriff's department.
That tip went nowhere. And it wasn't the only one overlooked.
Jannis Paulk [emotional]: It just brings up a lot. So, it's kind of crappy right now.
Peter Van Sant: I'm sorry.
John McCullough says he is still haunted by painful memories of being ignored by investigators.
Peter Van Sant: This really affects you, though, talking about this.
John McCullough: Yes.
McCullough, now a manager at a water company in Texas, had met Bo Dukes at Army boot camp in 2006.
Peter Van Sant: So, two Southern boys meet in Oklahoma in the Army.
John McCullough: Yes.
Peter Van Sant: And you guys hit it off?
John McCullough: Yeah … and we were pretty close.
Dukes invited McCullough to Ocilla to spend Christmas with his family. It was a year after Tara's disappearance. And as they were driving around town, a billboard caught his eye.
John McCullough: And it had this very, you know, attractive woman on it.
Peter Van Sant: Tara Grinstead.
John McCullough: Yeah, Tara Grinstead, and said, you know, "missing."
The two then went to a party. After a few drinks, McCullough says Bo began talking about Tara.
John McCullough: He was like, "yeah, do you remember that bulletin that you had asked me about with that girl on it?" And I was like, "yeah." And he was like, 'I know what happened."
McCullough wasn't ready for what Bo would say next.
John McCullough: He had told me that his friend … accidentally strangled her and he needed help getting rid of the body so that way there was —nothing to find.
Stunned as he was, McCullough was in a dilemma. Could he betray his friend? His fellow soldier?
Peter Van Sant: The kind of guy you want to share a foxhole with, right? Who you can trust with your life?
John McCullough: Yes. Right.
The weight of what McCullough says Bo told him became unbearable. Two months later, in February 2007, McCullough says he called three police departments in Georgia— including Ocilla, where he left a voice message saying:
John McCullough: "This is John McCullough. I know who killed Tara Grinstead or had a part of it. It was told to me when I was in Georgia. … Here's my number … I'll do whatever has to happen for y'all to take me serious. I just got off the phone with another department that had — didn't do sh—."
Incredibly, McCullough says, no one returned his calls.
Peter Van Sant: This is the murder of Tara Grinstead … and there seemed to be little interest, is that right?
John McCullough: Very little interest.
But McCullough was determined to get the truth out. He called the state's top law enforcement agency heading the investigation, the GBI.
John McCullough: I mean, nobody ever called me back, ever, even whenever I reached out to the GBI, which is the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.
Peter Van Sant: How many times did you call the GBI over what period of time and you still didn't get any …
John McCullough: I would say from the year of 2007 until 2016 … I would probably say I reached out nine or 10 times to the GBI.
Peter Van Sant: Why do you think investigators ignored you?
John McCullough: I have no idea. Maybe because I'm a nobody. I don't know.
Jannis Paulk also spoke to the GBI in 2008 as the agency was reviewing the case. And she told them about her employee's tip three years earlier regarding Bo Dukes and Ryan Duke.
Jannis Paulk: So, I sat down with an agent and we just went through everything.
But again, as far as she knew, it went nowhere. Tara's family could do little but pray for a breakthrough.
Maria Woods Harper: They've had a really hard time. I can't imagine the loss of a child. But I think it's taken a lot of toll on them mentally and physically.
Then, more than 11 years after Tara disappeared, Brooke Sheridan came out of nowhere with her account about not only Bo Dukes – but his friend Ryan Duke.
Brooke Sheridan: Ryan … Woke him up and said, "I killed Tara Grinstead."
FINALLY, A CONFESSION
Maria Woods Harber: She was charismatic, determined, a beautiful personality.
Peter Van Sant: What would anyone's motive be to kill Tara Grinstead?
Maria Woods Harber: I don't know.
In 2017, more than 11 years after Tara vanished, Brooke Sheridan came forward with a potential answer.
Brooke Sheridan: I had to tell some— I had to tell. There was no other option.
And what she had to say implicated a man whose name had repeatedly been given to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.
Peter Van Sant: How did you and Bo Dukes meet?
Brooke Sheridan: We actually met on Tinder.
Brooke says she was studying in Savannah to become a pharmacist when, in 2015, she came face-to-face with her online date.
Brooke Sheridan: It was love at first sight.
Bo Dukes comes from a prominent family that owned a huge pecan orchard in the Ocilla area.
Peter Van Sant: And what is it about him that you love?
Brooke Sheridan: He has a beautiful mind. He is extremely intelligent.
Jannis Paulk, who knows the family, paints a different picture of Bo.
Jannis Paulk: So, Bo was known in the community for being a little over the top, unfiltered. … One of those always showing off and talking big and running his mouth.
Bo got in big trouble while in the Army. In 2012 he was charged and convicted of stealing more than $150,000 worth of military supplies. And Bo spent more than two years in federal prison. Bo confessed all of this to Brooke, who stuck with him.
Brooke Sheridan: I had never connected with somebody and had fun with somebody like I have with him.
But she says Bo was often moody.
Brooke Sheridan: I said, "You have to talk to me. …he's very shut— shut off emotions, feelings he doesn't talk about.
As their relationship evolved, Brooke sensed that something seemed to be eating away at Bo.
Brooke Sheridan: It was something very dark and I— I chalked it up to, you know, serving his time in the military.
Brooke says she kept encouraging Bo to open up —to talk about this dark subject that was destroying him. Finally, he cracked.
Brooke Sheridan: He said, "You've heard of the Tara Grinstead case?" And I was like, "Yeah." He said, "My roommate killed her."
His former roommate and close friend was Ryan Duke.
Peter Van Sant: Why would Ryan Duke have murdered Tara Grinstead?
Brooke Sheridan: He said, "That's something that only God and Ryan know." He said, "I don't know why he did it."
But there was more— Brooke says Bo then admitted his own involvement in the crime, saying:
Brooke Sheridan: "And I helped him burn her body."
Brooke Sheridan: I was— felt like I was gonna be sick. I didn't know who I was staring at. I didn't know who he was.
Bo told Brooke that Ryan stole his pickup truck that night and used it to transport Tara's body to a remote part of a pecan orchard farmed by Bo's family.
Brooke Sheridan: Ryan looked at Bo and said, "It's your truck. Your family's land." And he said he threw his arms up just like this [shrugs her shoulders], "What are you gonna do?"
Peter Van Sant: And by Ryan saying to him, "Hey, buddy. This is your truck, and this is your family's land," basically that was interpreted by Bo as a threat that – we're partners now in this?
Brooke Sheridan: Yes.
Bo told her they moved Tara's body to a pit, where it took two days to burn, destroying all evidence.
Brooke Sheridan [emotional]: I kept thinking about her family and — I couldn't sleep at night.
Now, it was Brooke's turn to be tormented by a terrible secret.
Brooke Sheridan: I had to tell some— I had to tell. There was no other option.
Weeks later she called the GBI to turn in the boyfriend she loved.
Brooke Sheridan: That family's peace to me was more important than his freedom.
But if you're ready for this — Bo had already been interviewed by the GBI a year earlier in 2016. That was after investigators finally reached out to John McCullough.
John McCullough: I'm glad somebody's finally listening. … so, I talk to him, tell him everything I know.
But back then, Bo denied everything. With no hard evidence, authorities couldn't make an arrest. But after he broke down to Brooke, she told Bo it was time to tell the truth.
Brooke Sheridan: I said, "You need to confess. You need to own to what you've done and confess."
Peter Van Sant: And what does Bo say?
Brooke Sheridan: He says, "I just want her family to know."
GBI AGENT to BO DUKES: I'm gonna just kinda leave it – open the floor to you, and just tell me about you knowing about Tara …
In an interview with the GBI, Bo Dukes said he was ready to end the secret he had kept for years, and went into detail.
GBI AGENT: You could still see the body?
BO DUKES: Yeah. Yeah.
GBI AGENT: Just kinda like charred?
BO DUKES: Yeah.
The day after Bo's confession, his one-time friend Ryan Duke was arrested. Nearly 12 years after Tara's disappearance, on February 23, 2017, Ryan Duke appeared in court, charged with Tara's murder. He pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial.
Marcus Harper: I received a phone call … And the voice on the other end of the phone said, you know, "Brother, your 12 years of hell is over. … we have made an arrest."
Investigators say Ryan confessed to killing Grinstead.
Investigators say Ryan confessed to killing Grinstead in a voluntary interview shortly before his arrest: "I used to break into people's houses, just to steal money. I was a drug addict … I'd been drinking. I was high. I don't remember everything clearly … I was stealing from her purse. And she snuck up on me and – I hit her. I didn't mean to."
And remember that latex glove found at the crime scene? A DNA sample from Ryan Duke was a perfect match.
Peter Van Sant: Was it an emotional moment for you to realize someone had been arrested after all that time?
Maria Woods Harber: Yes. I cried for days, couldn't sleep for days. It was very hard to grasp.
And the next month, Bo Dukes, who years earlier had sat in Tara's class — was arrested and charged — not with murder, but with concealing a death, hindering the apprehension of a criminal, and lying to investigators in is original GBI interview. Two years later, in March 2019, Bo was the first to go on trial.
PROSECUTOR OPENING: This case is about Bo's lies … it's about Bo's concealment that his best friend, Ryan, had killed Tara Grinstead and then they both burn the body.
And for the first time, everyone heard Bo's own account when his GBI interview was played in court:
BO DUKES [GBI video interview]: He told me he had killed Tara Grinstead. … And he asked me to help him get rid of her body.
But could Bo's story be trusted?
JUSTICE SERVED?
In March 2019, in a county courthouse about 30 miles from where beloved teacher and beauty pageant mentor Tara Grinstead was murdered, Bo Dukes went on trial on charges relating to covering up her death.
BRAD RIGBY | PROSECUTOR: This case is about Bo's lies, lies that lasted from 2005 to 2016.
Bo was facing a maximum 25-year sentence. So, he went to trial hoping jurors might show mercy for a man who had already confessed to his role in the crime.
Prosecutors played that videotape of Bo's interview with the GBI. Bo began with what he says Ryan told him the day after Tara disappeared.
BO DUKES [GBI interview]: He told me that he had killed Tara Grinstead. I didn't believe him. I thought he was out of his mind. I told him, you know, leave me alone …
Bo says Ryan then repeated that a couple of days later.
BO DUKES [GBI interview]: Again, I didn't believe him … he asked me to come with him out to —to the pecan orchard.
According to Bo Dukes, the two men took Bo's pickup truck and drove out of town onto a highway and pulled off onto a dirt road leading to the pecan orchard that's owned by Bo Dukes' family. The two men drove about 200 yards up the road to where Tara Grinstead's body had been placed.
BO DUKES [GBI interview]: We drove back into the back, and he showed me where her body was.
GBI AGENT: Of all the people, why Tara, what's the connection?
BO DUKES: No connection.
BO DUKES: As far as I know, he didn't know her.
The agent asks Bo his first reaction when he went to the orchard with Ryan.
GBI AGENT: So, you immediately see this and you're like "what in the hell did you do?"
BO DUKES: Yeah. And why the f-— would you do it here on my family's pecan orchard? I mean…
GBI AGENT: What did he say?
BO DUKES: "Help me."
Bo then gave his account of moving and then burning her body, which began on a Wednesday and took two days.
GBI AGENT: So, by Friday, there's nothing left?
BO DUKES: No.
It was now time at the trial for Bo's one-time Army buddy, John McCullough, to finally tell his story of Bo's confession. And this time, the whole world seemed to be listening.
JOHN MCCULLOUGH: The exact location, he didn't tell me, but had made the comment of, you know, we took her to the middle of the pecan orchard and burned her body.
He testified calmly, but inside was still seething at Bo.
John McCullough: If there wasn't multiple police officers that were inside the courtroom on the day that I testified on the stand, I probably would have ripped him apart with my hands.
But McCullough wasn't the only witness who gave details about Tara's death. Jannis Paulk's former employee, Garlan Lott, told the court he had overheard that 2005 conversation between Ryan and Bo at a party in the same pecan orchard where Tara's body had been burned. He wasn't sure who said what.
GARLAN LOTT: The statement that I recall was, 'We killed and burned her body."
LAWYER: Any doubt in your mind, however, that you heard these two people laughing about killing and burning Tara Grinstead's body?
GARLAN LOTT: No.
Garlan says after he reported this to Jannis Paulk, he was never formally interviewed by anyone from law enforcement.
LAWYER: It sounds like you're saying you assumed it was handled properly?
GARLAN LOTT: I assumed it was handled by law enforcement, yes.
And in this trial, Agent Gary Rothwell finally explained what happened with those tips.
AGENT GARY ROTHWELL: We thought that that lead had been addressed by local law enforcement as unfounded and did not follow up.
In cross-examination, Rothwell added that he takes responsibility for the GBI lapse.
AGENT GARY ROTHWELL: It is something we should've followed up, but we —we didn't.
It took a jury less than an hour to convict Bo Dukes on all charges. His hope for mercy was dashed. At his sentencing, Tara Grinstead's stepmother Connie addressed the court:
CONNIE GRINSTEAD: He knew she wasn't ever coming back. He could have at least told us that, but he didn't. And the reason he knew she wasn't coming back, is because he had put load after load of wood on her body and burned her.
And Bo Dukes himself spoke directly to Tara's family:
BO DUKES: To the Tara Grinstead family, I'm truly sorry. Your long suffering has been unimaginable.
Bo was sentenced to 25 years in prison. But questions remained about discrepancies between Ryan's version of events and Bo's. In Ryan's interview with the GBI, he said he had hit Tara, but Bo said Ryan told him otherwise:
BO DUKES [GBI interview]: He jumped on her, while he was —she was in bed and strangled her right there in her bed.
And there were other inconsistencies.
Peter Van Sant: One said she had clothes on, the other said she did not. It's kind of odd, isn't it?
Maria Woods Harber: Yeah, very.
And it was about to get even more unsettled when at Ryan's murder trial he took the stand and recanted his confession, saying it was really Bo Dukes who killed Tara.
WHO REALLY KILLED TARA GRINSTEAD?
Maria Woods Harber: She was such a good person … She just didn't deserve it. … I don't understand that, just a disregard of human life.
For those who loved Tara Grinstead, Bo Dukes' 25-year sentence for covering up her death was only partial justice
Maria Woods Harber: They've gotten away with it for this many years anyway. They've lived so many years without being punished.
Now the man accused of murdering Tara – Ryan Duke – would go on trial for murder almost 17 years after she went missing.
In May 2022, at the Ocilla courthouse just up the road from Tara's home, Ryan Duke's attorneys argued that the state had the wrong man.
DEFENSE [closing arguments]: Bo Dukes should be on trial for the murder of Tara Grinstead, not Ryan.
But the prosecution said they hard evidence: audio and video of Ryan confessing to killing Tara, when he spoke to the GBI back in 2017.
RYAN DUKE [GBI interview played at trial]: I can't lie. I can't live with myself. I'm so sick of this… stealing from her purse. … she snuck up on me and — I hit her. … I don't remember everything clearly.
The defense said Ryan was under the influence of painkillers at the time, and only took the blame because he was afraid of Bo. Ryan Duke, now clean-shaven and looking very different from his 2017 arrest, took the stand.
DEFENSE: Mr. Duke, did you murder Tara Grinstead?
RYAN DUKE: I did not.
He testified that Bo Dukes told him he had killed Tara Grinstead – but Ryan did not know how she died.
Q: Did you see Miss Grinstead's body after she died?
RYAN DUKE: I did
Q: Where did you see it?
RYAN DUKE: In the pecan orchard.
Q: Did somebody take you to the body?
RYAN DUKE: They did.
Q: Who took you to the body?
RYAN DUKE: Bo Dukes.
Ryan admitted he was asked by Bo to help dispose of Tara's body in the orchard and moved her to the burn pile. He recalled that moment.
RYAN DUKE: … dry heaving, I'm crying ...
DEFENSE: Does Bo say anything?
RYAN DUKE: He starts laughing at me. … He lit her on fire.
DEFENSE: What was his expression, his demeanor when that happened?
RYAN DUKE: Was like he wasn't there.
Ryan said he was afraid Bo would hurt him or his family.
But what about that latex glove with Ryan's DNA on it found in Tara's front yard? Ryan testified he had never even gone to Tara's house, and the glove was only discovered there on Monday by Tara's neighbors — over a day after she went missing.
Ryan's lawyers argued that gave Bo plenty of time to plant it.
DEFENSE: We know the State hasn't brought a single witness to tell you it was on the ground before Monday morning. Not a one.
In closing, as Tara's family looked on, the prosecution held to their argument that Ryan had told the truth back in 2017.
PROSECUTION: The man in THAT chair, confessed to the murder of Tara Grinstead. … They burned her body. A full skeleton. Down to about 20 fragments of bone.
Bones that were so degraded, no official cause of death could be determined. The jury was left to decide if they believed what Ryan said in 2017, or his new version of events. Ryan steeled himself before the verdict was read.
Not guilty of malice murder and he was acquitted of all charges relating to Tara's murder —convicted only of concealing her death. At his sentencing hearing, Tara's stepmother, Connie, expressed how Tara's family felt about Ryan Duke.
CONNIE GRINSTEAD [Reading family impact statement]: His confession in 2017 seemed genuine and sincere, and he looked remorseful. … He looked like a person who was ready to do the right thing, but his testimony on the witness stand only seemed coached, well-rehearsed and sought self-serving benefits. … We pray that people will remember that the defendant was not the victim. Tara was.
For all that has transpired, there's one question that troubles Maria Woods Harber: what really happened to Tara on the night she disappeared?
Maria Woods Harber: I've had to come to a conclusion that I'm just gonna have to live the rest of my life not knowing.
But there is no question that in her short and impactful life, Tara Grinstead touched people in rare ways — even those who never met her, like John McCullough.
John McCullough: I can't explain it [emotional]. … And wish I could have been there whenever it happened so that way, I could do something [emotional].
Maria Woods Harber: She's been an inspiration. She had a lot of life ahead of her. … She brought great things to Irwin County High School … And I would hope that eventually the word Tara Grinstead will be a bright spot because she did bring a lot of good things to Ocilla.
Dana Wilder: Ocilla was Tara's life. … that's where she set her roots. And that's where she wanted to stay and where she wanted to be.
Ryan Duke was sentenced to 10 years in prison for concealing the death of Tara Grinstead.
Bo Dukes is serving 25 years for concealing her death, hindering the apprehension of a criminal, and lying to investigators.
Produced by Alec Sirken and Lauren Clark. Michelle Feuer is the development producer. Shaheen Tokhi and David Dow are the associate producers. Greg Kaplan, Phillip J. Tangel and Marcus Balsam are the editors. Anthony Batson is the senior broadcast producer.
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Woman fatally shoots ex-husband as he sits on toilet

Produced by Paul LaRosa [This story first aired on December 7, 2019. It was updated on July 25, 2020.] The murder of Exeter Police Officer Daniel Green rocked his California community, leaving behind the family of the beloved policeman struggling with life without him. Green was found dead after he didn't show up for work. "On the day of the incident Daniel was supposed to to work right before me," says former Exeter Police Officer Alex Geiger. "So, when I got to the police station, I asked the lieutenant where Daniel was? … You get this gut feeling that something's wrong — that something bad was happening." Initially, investigators wondered whether his death was related to his police work. Soon after, they would learn it was a bad relationship that exploded into violence. "It was … a very toxic relationship," Daniel Green's sister Misty Gray tells "48 Hours" correspondent Erin Moriarty. Gray and her brother Matt Green – Daniel's identical twin – speak out in their first network TV interview. "When everything was going the way they should be in her eyes, she was pleasant to be around. She was social, and she was nice," says Matt Green. "She was kind … it's only when things went bad or things didn't go her way that she became nasty and things got ugly between the two of them … And from what I saw, the bad was really bad." Sandoval was arrested and charged with her ex-husband's murder. Officer Green was killed just one week after he posted an image on Instagram with his new, younger girlfriend. What led to Daniel Green's death? Did the picture posted on social media lead Sandoval to crack? Or did Sandoval shoot Green after what she claimed were years of physical abuse? Or was it the stunning tale Sandoval told when she took the witness stand at her murder trial? AMBUSHED D.A. Tim Ward | Tulare County, Calif: On February 6, 2015 in mid-afternoon, time stood still in Tulare County … when we in the law enforcement community … came to find out that Daniel Green was executed that afternoon in the sanctity and privacy of his own home. District Attorney Tim Ward says Police Officer Daniel Green was ambushed at a moment when he was most vulnerable. DA Tim Ward: He was executed, you know? … Here's a man who was literally, figuratively, on the toilet when he was shot. Green was 31 years old and an 11-year veteran of the Exeter Police Department. He was murdered at his home in Goshen, part of Tulare County, a bucolic area of central California lined with farmland and orchards. DA Tim Ward: This crime, when this happened, really ripped apart not only this small town that he was from and a police officer in, but kind of the law enforcement community as well. The killer fired four bullets at Green — the fatal shot hitting him in the forehead. He was found lying on his back in the bathtub where he had stumbled. Later that afternoon, when Daniel did not report to work, an Exeter Police supervisor became concerned. DA Tim Ward: … one of his fellow officers is the one that discovered him that day. No neighbors heard the shots or called 911. No eyewitnesses saw the killer enter or leave the house and the killer fled with the murder weapon. So, with one bullet fired directly into Daniel's forehead, investigators had to consider the possibility that this was a professional hit. Hours into the investigation, detectives were just piecing together the facts. They knew Daniel Green was at that point divorced and living alone and that he had had a tumultuous relationship with his ex-wife Erika Sandoval. But she had rushed to the scene after a friend texted her and was teary-eyed when she spoke with police. She denied seeing Daniel that day. Matt Green: If it had been years earlier, I think I would have automatically assumed it was her but … we just seen them together you know a month before … And it didn't seem like there was any tension … I just didn't know. I didn't know what had happened … Matt Green, Daniel's identical twin brother, and their younger sister Misty Gray were overcome and terrified. Misty Gray: I was confused … I didn't know what to think … I actually slept next to a gun because I didn't know if it was work related … I just didn't know. Ever since that initial shock, Misty says she's struggled to cope with her new reality. Misty Gray [emotional]: We will never be the same. Never. My life will forever be changed by this. That's just how it is now. Daniel, Misty, and Matt had grown up in nearby Porterville, California. Matt Green: We were kind of like a team. Misty Gray: It was the three of us against the world type of thing. As teens, the Green boys found their calling when Daniel became friendly with a local cop. Misty Gray: Daniel took a shine to him. Matt Green: … it was probably about the age of 14 that he did decide that he wanted to be a police officer. Matt is now a lawyer, but, like Daniel, he also started out as a police officer. Misty Gray: I always thought it was neat that my big brothers who were twins were both police officers at the same time. And I actually have the same photo of the two of them. And I cherish it. Daniel Green settled into his job where he became known as a hard-nosed, by the book cop. But off the job, Daniel was more of a free spirit. He even joined a local motorcycle club that calls itself Team Flatline. Erin Moriarty: That's a little odd name for a motorcycle club isn't it? James Bonds: Yeah. it's just showing that Team Flatline — you're gonna ride until you go until you flatline. It's the love of riding. Club member James Bonds [yes, you heard it right] grew close to Daniel. Erin Moriarty: So, you and Daniel bonded over motorcycles. Right. What is it that you love about? James Bonds: It's a freedom. It's an escape. Some people go hunting. Some people go fishing. Some people drink. But it's when you're on a bike you're just free. Those who knew Daniel Green say he enjoyed the fast lane on a bike and also when he was dating. Erin Moriarty: How would you describe the women that Daniel would date? Did he date a lot growing up? Matt Green: I'll let you take that one. Misty Gray: Thanks for that. Daniel liked to date. I don't know if he liked the attention, but he definitely liked to date. That's for sure. … There was a period of probably two years where every family function there was someone new. Matt Green: And we were getting together pretty regularly. Misty Gray: We were getting together a lot. At the end of 2009, Daniel met Erika Sandoval and his revolving door of girlfriends stopped. Misty Gray: I think he loved her. In his way, he wanted the family. He wanted so desperately to have a family. Matt was married. By then, I was married, and he was the only one that was not. Erika became part of Daniel's family, but she was about to turn his world upside down. DANIEL AND ERIKA Matt Green says he doesn't remember much about how Daniel Green met Erika Sandoval, but he does recall his brother being "excited" about what was then a new relationship. Matt Green: He was infatuated with her. Angelica Ramirez: It's like a little girl, like, you know, when they candy. They get super excited. Erika's friend Angelica Ramirez says there's no doubt Erika — at least initially — felt the same way about Daniel. Angelica Ramirez: She was so into Daniel. Erin Moriarty: Was she? Angelica Ramirez: She was! Erika was from a close-knit middle-class family from Southern California who had moved to Visalia during her high school years. Erika's brother, David Sandoval, says that, as the only daughter in the family, Erika was made to feel special. David Sandoval: … we spoiled her in any kind of way … she was the only girl, so she was the princess. When she turned 15 years old, her family threw her a party — a traditional quinceanera. Erika's whole life was in front of her. David Sandoval:She wanted to find the right guy and then, obviously, start having a family. Less than a year after Daniel and Erika met, they surprised their friends and family by getting married in Las Vegas. Daniel was 26 years old, Erika was 23. Misty Gray: I remember getting a text message at 10 o'clock at night with a picture … of a marriage license in Vegas … A few weeks later, Erika's family threw her a wedding reception and Erika did it up big —complete with a wedding gown. Herb Adame: It was a happy time. I think that's what she wanted and that's what he wanted at the time. Daniel's motorcycle buddy Herb Adame attended even though he was no fan of Erika's. Herb Adame: A few things happened before they even actually got married. And I pulled Daniel aside and I said, "Dude, don't marry this chick." Erin Moriarty: Tell me why? What happened that made you say that? Herb Adame: It was all the incidents at the house. Adame says Daniel had told him the story about Erika cutting up the furniture with a razor blade. Matt Green had seen that damage firsthand, and both he and Misty, on separate occasions, said they had heard Daniel crying after Erika laced into him. Matt Green: It devastated me to hear my brother crying … And to hear the way that she was talking to him, it broke my heart … Misty Gray: Erika was trying to create a rift in the family between us. To Misty and Matt, it all felt far too familiar. The reason the Green siblings were so close, they say, is because they grew up in a troubled home with an abusive stepfather. Erin Moriarty: Alcohol? Matt Green: Drugs, alcohol abuse, stuff like that. Erin Moriarty: Were any of you abused? Matt Green: Physical abuse and neglect and stuff. Erin Moriarty: Would your stepfather hit you with his hand or with – Matt Green: Hands, belts, boards, I guess whatever was laying around. Matt and Misty's stepfather had a long criminal record that included arrests for assault, domestic violence and driving under the influence. The Green boys often took the brunt for Misty who was three years younger. Misty Gray: Matthew and Daniel always protected me. They would get in between my stepdad trying to physically harm us … when I would get scared, I would go crawl in bed with my brothers. Their mother at one point did get a restraining order against their stepfather who is now dead. The domestic abuse that Matt and Misty saw as children seemed to be repeating itself with Daniel and Erika. Matt Green: In the case of my brother … He was the one constantly being controlled and isolated and verbally and emotionally abused. Erin Moriarty: As an officer he would run into women who are being abused. Would he not recognize himself in that same situation? Matt Green: I think he did … he just probably felt like he had nothing he could do about it. You know, that he was maybe trapped in a cycle. Caity Meader: I think men don't come forward for many of the same reasons that women don't come forward when they are experiencing domestic violence. Caity Meader is chief executive of Tulare Family Services and she says she recently expanded the Visalia women's shelter to include rooms for the men who were fleeing the abuse of their female partners. Erin Moriarty: Erika would … cut up mattresses and couches … is that domestic abuse? Caity Meader: Absolutely … property damage is very common … female victims … will often describe, "well while my partner never hit me. But he did punch a hole in the wall." And, so, there's this threat of physical violence … "If I can do this to your property, if I can do this to the things that you love, what can I do to you?" But Angelica Ramirez says Erika told her that Daniel was the abuser. Angelica Ramirez: She would tell me constantly that he would grab her and choke her … she told me that he choked her and that she felt she was going to pass out. The problems in Daniel and Erika's marriage came to a head in February 2011. Neighbor Josh Miller witnessed the confrontation. Josh Miller: She was cussing at him and this and that … it sounded like she was like trying to get him to put hands on her. But he knew … as an officer, you're not going to do that because he's not going to risk his career. Josh Miller: …at that point, he's like, "just call the cops, Josh. Call the cops" … And I dialed 911. The police came and both Daniel and Erika were arrested for domestic abuse. No charges were filed against either of them. That was the last straw for both — divorce papers were filed, and the marriage was officially over in January 2012, a little more than a year after it began. Matt Green: I remember thinking he escaped this without, you know, anything terrible happening. And that maybe he could get peace. And be happy. But then came news that Erika was pregnant with Daniel's child. Misty Gray: I was like, "Geez, he's stuck with her for 18 years." A TOXIC RELATIONSHIP The marriage of Daniel Green and his wife Erika Sandoval was over, but not the relationship. Just months after the divorce, Erika began telling close friends, like Angelica Ramirez, that she was pregnant with Daniel's baby. It was the spring of 2012. Angelica Ramirez: And I was mad. Erin Moriarty: You were? Angelica Ramirez: It was the one thing I told her not to do. Erin Moriarty: And how did she feel about having a baby? Angelica Ramirez: I think she had mixed emotions. But those "mixed emotions" did not stop Erika from moving back in with Daniel. His siblings Matt and Misty were apprehensive but hoped for the best. Misty Gray: When she got pregnant with Aiden, Matt and I tried again. We're going to put all of the past behind us, we're going to try and bring her into our family. And see what happens … But a big part of Daniel's life was riding his motorcycle, and that did not sit well with Erika. Matt Green: She hated that motorcycle. Misty Gray: Yep, despised it. Matt Green: He'd get on his bike and take off and she couldn't sit next to him in the passenger seat, yelling at him. Arguments about the motorcycle came to a head one day when Daniel was out riding with his friend Mark Cortes. They reached a busy intersection and Cortes says he was shocked when he watched Daniel blow right through a red light. Mark Cortes: So, we stopped there and I'm like, "Hey what's going on man?" Daniel told Cortes that his brakes had failed. Mark Cortes: He grabbed both hands and he just grabbed all … the wires and he just pulled them out. It was — all the wires were all cut up. And I'm like, "Oh my goodness, this is crazy." Daniel told Cortes that he had no doubt who had cut them. Erin Moriarty: He had no question it was Erika. Mark Cortes: Yeah. Erika denied she had cut the brake lines, telling a friend she "just snipped wires." It was a harrowing incident, but Daniel never reported it to the police and initially didn't even tell his siblings. Matt Green: And he hid a lot of the stuff that was going on. I think he knew that it would upset us. No one quite knows why, but Daniel continued to live with Erika and on January 5, 2013, their son Aiden was born. Matt Green: I don't have any doubt that the day his son was born was the happiest day of his life. Daniel, Erika and the baby all lived in his house in Goshen, and outwardly, it seemed a happy time. Misty Gray: There were times where everything was good. They were happy. Herb Adame: He was just a proud father. It changed him. Daniel even sold his beloved motorcycle. James Bonds: … him having a kid was the best thing for him … On his Facebook every day it was a picture of his kid. … That was his life. That was his pride and joy. But Facebook is not real life, and behind closed doors the tension was mounting. In June of 2013, about six months after Aiden was born, Daniel asked Erika to move out. She did, but she took Aiden with her. Aiden's absence shook Daniel but made him determined to fight for custody. The couple began to engage in a war of words: nasty and contentious texts between Daniel and Erika became part of the court record. Dan Chambers is Erika's lawyer. Dan Chambers: There's a lot of bitterness and anger throughout these text messages, no question about it … Daniel does call Erika some very bad names in here and Erika does the same. And yet, inexplicably, no matter how bad it got — the draw was still there — and the couple continued to spend an occasional night together. Caity Meader: We know that children who are raised in homes where there's been domestic violence or other abuse are much more likely to end up in these types of relationships going forward … you will model relationships that have been modeled for you. One night in the fall of 2014, when the couple was once again sleeping together, Daniel told friends he got the shock of his life when he awoke to find Erika pointing a gun at his head. Erin Moriarty: He told you that she woke up, dreamed that he had been with another woman and held a gun to his head. What did she say to him at that point? Herb Adame: She said that she was going to kill him. Erin Moriarty: If he left her. Herb Adame: Yeah. Or if he cheated on her. Daniel and Erika went their separate ways yet again but came together in January 2015 to celebrate Aiden's second birthday with a family party. Matt and Misty were watching them closely. It was one month before Daniel's murder. Misty Gray: We thought that Daniel and Erika were getting back together … Before we all left, Daniel actually kissed her on the cheek. And I was like, "Yep it's going to happen … maybe it's the right time now. Maybe they're finally growing up and it's OK. And as long as everybody is happy that's all that matters." But then weeks later, Daniel told friends he was dating a new woman. Matt Green: I think he probably expressed that this was somebody that was gonna be around — maybe forever. Erin Moriarty: You think that really is what set everything off. Matt Green I do. Misty Gray: I really thought one day she would kill him. A SURPRISE AT TRIAL The morning of February 6, 2015, Daniel Green dropped off his son Aiden with Erika Sandoval's mother and then went to the gym. But shortly after he returned home, Tulare District Attorney Tim Ward says Daniel was shot dead with bullet wounds to his hand, his chest, neck and forehead. DA Tim Ward: This was not anything other than a cold-blooded, calculated execution. The next day, sheriff deputies — aware of the toxic relationship Daniel had with his ex-wife, Erika — brought her in for questioning and her stories started to shift. Dan Chambers: There are recorded interviews where different statements are given. Erika had said she hadn't been inside Daniel's house in "weeks," but investigators told her that a neighbor's surveillance camera told a different story. DA Tim Ward: The video that is out there shows a female enter into that home. Investigators were not able to ID the woman in the video, but they tricked Erika — telling her they knew it was her. Detectives placed Erika under arrest, and they say she confessed and led them to an empty lot where they recovered the murder weapon: a Kahr 9mm gun belonging to her former husband. The evidence against Erika seemed overwhelming, but nearly five years pass before her first-degree murder trial finally begins on October 1, 2019. Assistant District Attorney David Alavezos tells jurors Erika killed Daniel one week after he posted an Instagram photo featuring his new 20-year-old girlfriend Brenda Vela. Erin Moriarty: Is it possible that Daniel Green would still be alive if he had never posted that picture on social media? DA Tim Ward: That's an impossible question. But you wonder. It's such a tragedy that we'll never know. We'll never know. But it does point to motive and Alavezos shows jurors what was found in Erika's purse when she was booked: a yellow sticky note with Brenda Vela's name and birth year. Erika also bombarded Daniel with 167 phone calls in the days leading up to the murder. Misty Gray | Daniel Green's sister: I think when Erika found out that the girl was hanging out with her son and that kind of made her snap. Yet, when it's his turn, defense attorney Dan Chambers shifts the spotlight away from Erika to Daniel Green himself, and, in essence, puts the dead police officer on trial for the way he treated his ex-wife. DAN CHAMBERS [in court]: And at the end of the day he was abusive… Chambers says Daniel Green would obsessively record their verbal battles, like a recording when the couple is fighting over Aiden who was a baby at that point: [Audio recording] ERIKA SANDOVAL: Give him back to me Daniel. DANIEL GREEN: Don't touch me. You're gonna f---ing regret this. … Don't hit me. OK, alright. You're going to jail you [expletive]. But only one person can really talk about what happened the day Daniel was murdered, and so Chambers takes an extraordinary and risky step and puts Erika on the stand. Dan Chambers | Defense attorney: It was a collective decision-- and it wasn't an easy decision. In direct testimony, Erika begins with a litany of stories about the abuse she claims she suffered from Daniel over the years: ERIKA SANDOVAL: At that point we were arguing a lot. ERIKA SANDOVAL: He grabbed me by the shirt, my shirt, and he started shaking me back and forth and as he was yelling in my face, "Shut the f--- up." … And he's like, you know, "I could f---ing kill you and make it look like an accident." … That's when he grabbed me from my ponytail and he slammed my head in the dashboard while I was holding Aiden. There was a witness to that incident, but Erika did not call police then and says she rarely reported abuse because Daniel was a cop. DA Tim Ward: … it appears now the that objective of some of this is to murder his memory. And as horrible as the relationship was, Erika admits that she and Daniel continued to have sex. Again, she blames Daniel: ERIKA SANDOVAL: He would allow me extra time with Aiden in order — to go over and do a sexual act with him. DAN CHAMBERS | DEFENSE ATTORNEY: So, why did you feel you had to do those things? ERIKA SANDOVAL: I preferred a happy Daniel as opposed to an angry Daniel. She testifies the two even had phone sex on February 5, 2015. Just one day later, she tells jurors, she showed up at Daniel's house to just snoop around: ERIKA SANDOVAL: I saw the kitchen window, and I figured I'd try to see if it was open. So, I took off the screen and I wedged it and it was open. Moving through the house, Erika says she grabbed two of Daniel's guns. Erika spotted Daniel's open safe and found what she says were two photos depicting child pornography: ERIKA SANDOVAL: The first picture I saw, um, it was like a girl. She looked to be maybe, like, 12, 13, next to a bed. Her story takes the prosecution by surprise; Erika had never mentioned the photos in any of her previous statements. DA Tim Ward: That was the very first time that we ever had even heard that or anything close to that. Ward says no such photos were found. But Erika insists she saw them and left them in the safe: ERIKA SANDOVAL: It just made me think, like, fantasies that he, like, had with me … the school girl outfits he'd want me to wear … I thought, you know, like, is he watching this kind of stuff around my son? DAN CHAMBERS: What's the next thing you remember doing? ERIKA SANDOVAL: I heard his truck. That's when Erika says she ducked into Aiden's closet — where she had her ex-husband's two loaded guns. DEADLOCKED One month into her trial, Erika Sandoval explains for the first time publicly how and why she killed her ex-husband Daniel Green. She tells jurors she was obsessed with fears that Daniel may have been abusing their son. ERIKA SANDOVAL: I was thinking about Aiden … I didn't know if he was doing stuff to Aiden. Erika explains how she hurried into her son's bedroom closet when Daniel came home that afternoon. ERIKA SANDOVAL: And I heard him coming down the hallway, passing by the room … I was scared. I didn't know where he was going. When Daniel was in the bathroom, Erika says she "snapped" and did the unthinkable. ERIKA SANDOVAL: I stepped out of the closet … I stepped out of Aiden's room. I stood right there in front of Daniel when he was on the toilet. ERIKA SANDOVAL As soon as he saw me, he said, "I'm going to f-----g kill you." And he started getting up as soon as I started raising my arm, and I shot. DAN CHAMBERS | DEFENSE ATTORNEY: How many times? ERIKA SANDOVAL: I don't know how many times I shot, but I know I shot. It's such a shocking admission that her attorney Dan Chambers tries his best to take some of the edge off: DAN CHAMBERS: Do you regret what you did? ERIKA SANDOVAL [crying]: I regret a lot. Of course, I regret it. Every day. I regret it every day. DAN CHAMBERS: What has it cost you? ERIKA SANDOVAL: My son. My family. Erika sticks to her story even when cross-examined by Assistant District Attorney David Alavezos, who clearly doubts her claim about finding photos of child porn: PROSECUTOR DAVID ALAVEZOS: You know they're not in the report, so you just expected them to magically show up? ERIKA SANDOVAL: No. I advised my attorney as to what I saw. DAVID ALAVEZOS: And nobody else? ERIKA SANDOVAL: No, just my attorney. Erika says she deliberately didn't tell investigators: ERIKA SANDOVAL: I didn't trust them … They've never given me a reason to trust them. Daniel always told me how they always had each other's backs. Matt Green: She's gonna come up with whatever narrative she thinks will work in getting her off. The question hangs over the trial: did those child porn photos actually exist or is Erika lying to make her actions more understandable to the jury? Alavezos has an answer. PROSECUTOR DAVID ALAVEZOS: That's a disgusting lie to make you feel Daniel's not worth a murder charge, to devalue him as a human being, that is the sole purpose of it. But Chambers counters that Daniel had hundreds of pornographic videos and photos of adults on his phone and computers. Chambers also says there were thousands of unknown images that were somehow deleted from Daniel's cell phone in the years before he was killed. DAN CHAMBERS | DEFENSE ATTORNEY: … images deleted … Why? What were they? Why would someone need to delete that many photographs or images? But the more important images, according to the prosecutor, are the ones Erika would rather forget — he forces her to look at photos of Daniel after she shot him: PROSECUTOR DAVID ALAVEZOS: One of your shots, People's 7, went right through Daniel's neck. ERIKA SANDOVAL [crying]: Yes. DAVID ALAVEZOS: It's right up there. Look at it. ERIKA SANDOVAL: Yes. After nearly two months, the attorneys make their final arguments. Alavezos tells the jury that Erika was the real abuser and plays more audio and, sometimes, video recordings that Daniel made: [VIDEO RECORDING] DANIEL GREEN: Erika leave me alone. I need to get ready for work. ERIKA SANDOVAL: [standing in doorway] You need to chill. I didn't do anything. DANIEL GREEN: Leave me alone. Go do your thing. ERIKA SANDOVAL: I want to talk about what happened. DANIEL GREEN: I have to get ready for work. What part of that is too difficult for you to understand? ERIKA SANDOVAL: You don't have to yell at me. I'm right here. DANIEL GREEN: leave me alone. Go. Go away. I'm serious. Go. And in his closing, Dan Chambers puts the blame on both Erika and Daniel — tied together, he says, by a "traumatic bond" that is difficult to understand. DAN CHAMBERS | DEFENSE ATTORNEY: Both are victims and both are aggressors. Erin Moriarty: Do you either one of you worry … that there might be one juror – Misty Gray: My biggest fear is that she won't pay for what she's done. Jurors deliberate for nearly four days before telling Judge Joseph Kalashian they can deliberate no more. JUDGE JOSEPH KALASHIAN: I am going to declare a mistrial at this point. A mistrial – the jury deadlocked at 11-1 with one single juror refusing to convict Erika of murder in the first degree. Three jurors agreed to discuss that holdout juror. Bill Walker | Juror: it became evident day after day, hour after hour that she wasn't going to waiver and the reality of a hung jury started to sink in. John Whetstone | Juror: he never gave much reasoning behind why she felt the way she did They said the holdout's position led to a screaming match between two jurors. John Whetstone: Tensions started getting high and they started yelling at each other. They were getting emotionally involved. As for Erika's allegations that Daniel Green possessed child pornography photos -- Jeremy Yarbro | Juror: There were never any pictures that we saw … Jeremy Yarbro: You could tell that she obviously lied on the stand … I think a lot of the trial was spent by the defense not defending her but rather attacking Daniel. Bill Walker: I think every juror had empathy for her, but they also had empathy for him. We saw just how vindictive or forceful she was toward him. Why is she still staying there? Why is he still staying there? As for the defense, Dan Chambers says he feels good about the mistrial. Dan Chambers: In the defense world, a hung jury is always considered a win because it means you live to fight again another day. But Chambers says Erika is adjusting to the reality that she'll need to sit through another murder trial. Dan Chambers: Right now she's gotta process a lot of emotions … she's kind of a whipsaw of emotions. Daniel's sister Misty and his identical twin Matt declined to talk about the mistrial. They are still grappling with the loss of their brother. Misty Gray: It's devastating. There's a hole that'll never be filled … It'll never heal. Ever. The siblings do, however, have at least one reminder of Daniel that brings them joy — his son Aiden. Erika's parental rights have been terminated and Matt and his wife decided to adopt the child. Erin Moriarty: You're raising Daniel's son… Was that a tough decision? Matt Green: No, not at all. …the least I could do is … make sure that he knew how much his father loved him. Erika Sandoval was assigned a public defender for her retrial. In May 2025, she was found guilty of first-degree murder in the death of Daniel Green. She was sentenced to 50 years to life. Australian reporter covering Los Angeles protests shot with rubber bullet by police officer LAPD chief speaks out about deployment of military forces to anti-ICE protests Can Trump deploy National Guard without governor's approval?

: Dana Chandler sentenced to life after third murder trial
: Dana Chandler sentenced to life after third murder trial

Yahoo

time04-06-2025

  • Yahoo

: Dana Chandler sentenced to life after third murder trial

A Kansas woman was sentenced Tuesday to life in prison for the 2002 murders of her ex-husband and his girlfriend. Judge Cheryl Rios handed down two consecutive life terms to Dana Chandler, 65, who was sentenced in the deaths of Mike Sisco and Karen Harkness. She will not be eligible for parole for 50 years, with credit for about 13 years of time she has already served. Hailey Seel, Chandler and Sisco's daughter, gave a victim impact statement at sentencing. According to The Kansas Reflector, Seel said about her mother in court, "I truly see her now as the evil killer. I hate it. I don't want to call you evil killer, but I can't live in a fairy tale." Seel reportedly recommended the judge to show mercy on Chandler if she confessed to the crime and expressed remorse. But if Chandler continued to deny her involvement, Seel recommended the judge should impose the maximum sentence. The Kansas Reflector reported Chandler continued to deny involvement in the crimes, stating, "I have always maintained my innocence. I continue to maintain my innocence. I was not in Topeka, Kansas, on July 7. I never owned or possessed a 9-millimeter firearm. What is happening in this courtroom is a grave injustice. I was not the one who killed them." Sisco, 47, and Harkness, 53, were each shot multiple times with a 9mm gun on July 7, 2002, in Harkness' Topeka, Kansas, home. Police quickly suspected Chandler after members of the Harkness and Sisco families said she harassed Sisco with bizarre visits and frequent phone calls following their bitter divorce and custody battle. She was questioned by police but was not charged. Chandler has always maintained her innocence. "48 Hours" has been covering the case since 2008, and most recently in "My Mother's Murder Trials" reported by contributor Jim Axelrod. For years, the couple's families met with law enforcement and even conducted their own investigation looking for additional evidence, such as the murder weapon, which was never found. At that time, Shawnee County District Attorney Robert Hecht reportedly said there was not enough evidence to charge Chandler. In 2011, a new DA, Chad Taylor, was in office and made the decision to move the case forward. Dana Chandler was arrested in 2011 and entered not guilty pleas to two counts of first-degree murder. A jury convicted Chandler in 2012, and she was sentenced to life in prison. Six years later, Chandler's convictions were overturned due to prosecutorial misconduct. The Kansas Supreme Court ruled that statements made at Chandler's trial by prosecutor Jacqie Spradling was, in at least one instance, "made-up" and "misleading." Spradling was later disbarred for what the court called "intolerable acts of deception" aimed at the jury and the courts. "48 Hours" reached out to Spradling, but did not receive a response. But the Kansas Supreme Court did not dismiss Chandler's case. It ruled that there was still sufficient evidence for a jury to find Chandler guilty. The decision whether to retry Chandler was up to the new Shawnee County DA Mike Kagay, and he chose to proceed with another trial. Chandler's second trial began in July 2022. Defense attorney Tom Bath argued there was no DNA, fingerprint or hair evidence that placed Chandler inside the Harkness residence, or even in the state of Kansas. Shawnee County Deputy DA Charles Kitt acknowledged the lack of physical evidence and told the jury the case was instead based on jealousy, rage and obsession. The jury in this trial was unable to reach a unanimous decision. After six days of deliberation, the judge announced a hung jury, reportedly with seven votes to convict and five to acquit. Following the hung jury, the judge reduced Chandler's bond, and after being incarcerated for more than a decade, she was released from jail with GPS monitoring. The defense also requested a change of venue for the upcoming trial, which the judge granted. Chandler's third trial got underway in February 2025, in Pottawatomie County, 60 miles from Topeka. On the morning of opening statements, Chandler dismissed her attorneys and announced she would represent herself. At trial, Chandler's children, Hailey Seel and Dustin Sisco — who were teenagers at the time of the murders — testified for the prosecution, as they had done previously. They both believe their mother, Dana Chandler, is responsible for murdering their father, Mike Sisco, and Karen Harkness. They were also questioned by their mother. When it was time to present her case, Chandler testified for approximately 20 hours, spread over seven days. She argued that no one could place her at the scene of the murders, or even in the state of Kansas at the time of the killings, and that she had never owned or possessed a .9mm firearm. Deputy DA Kitt focused on Chandler's obsessive behavior and told the jury she killed Sisco and Harkness because she had lost control of her ex-husband. The jury deliberated nearly four hours before finding Chandler guilty. Hailey Seel says she was relieved by the verdict but hopes that the lives lost are not forgotten. "I do feel like the focus of this case has gone almost completely to Dana Chandler and that the — the victims and the families of the victims has really been lost in this case, which is really sad. And I hope that from here out the — the victims and the families can be remembered more," Seel told "48 Hours." Chandler is filing motions to appeal the conviction. "48 Hours" reached out to Chandler for comment, but did not receive a response. Sneak peek: Where is Jermain Charlo? Baldwin grills McMahon on unallocated funds for students, schools, approved by Congress Hegseth orders Navy to rename USNS Harvey Milk, Jeffries calls it "a complete and total disgrace"

Where Is Jonelle Matthews' Killer Now? Revisiting the 12-Year-Old's Murder — and How Steven Pankey Evaded Police for Decades
Where Is Jonelle Matthews' Killer Now? Revisiting the 12-Year-Old's Murder — and How Steven Pankey Evaded Police for Decades

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time24-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Where Is Jonelle Matthews' Killer Now? Revisiting the 12-Year-Old's Murder — and How Steven Pankey Evaded Police for Decades

On Dec. 20, 1984, Jonelle Matthews disappeared from her home in Greeley, Colo. Her body was discovered in an unincorporated area by oil workers in 2019 Steven Pankey, a former youth pastor at Jonelle's church, was charged with her murder the following yearFor over 30 years, Jonelle Matthews' disappearance remained a mystery. The 12-year-old vanished from her Greeley, Colo., home in 1984, with no trace until her remains were discovered during a pipe installation in 2019. Though suspicions had long surrounded Steven Pankey — a local man with ties to her church who later ran twice for the governor of Idaho — he wasn't arrested until 2020. After two trials, he was convicted of felony murder and kidnapping and sentenced to life in prison. "During those decades, generations of Greeley police officers have never forgotten Jonelle, many living in torment over the possibilities of what may have occurred that grim evening in 1984, and what could be done to solve this mystery," the Greeley Police Department said in a statement following Pankey's arrest. The statement also shared that detectives began a 'renewed investigation' into the girl's case in 2015. For years, Pankey had continuously inserted himself in the investigation and displayed odd behavior regarding Jonelle's disappearance. Even his ex-wife, Angela Hicks, said in Oxygen's 2024 docuseries The Girl on the Milk Carton that she started collecting evidence against him years before his arrest. So, where is Jonelle Matthew's killer now? Here's everything to know about what happened to Steven Pankey and how he evaded police for over 30 years. Jonelle was a 12-year-old middle school student living in Greeley with her parents, Jim Matthews and Gloria Matthews, and her older sister, Jennifer Mogensen. Her family told NBC's Dateline in 2023 that she was athletic and loved to sing and cross-stitch gifts for her friends. According to The Denver Post, she had been adopted from Los Angeles when she was 1 month old. Her birth mother was only 13 when she had Jonelle. On Dec. 20, 1984, Jonelle vanished from her home shortly after a friend's father dropped her off following a school Christmas concert. The middle school student was alone for just over an hour before her father returned from Jennifer's basketball game to find her missing. Her mother was out of state, caring for a sick relative. 'You could tell Jonelle had been there,' Jim said in a November 2024 episode of 48 Hours. 'I yelled out 'Hi Jonelle,' 'Jonelle, are you there?' No answer.' After Jim called the police, investigators found footprints in the snow near the windows of the Matthews' home. He told 48 Hours that it looked like someone had tried to mess the prints up with a garden rake. The young girl was never seen again. Jonelle's case caught national attention after she became one of the first kids featured in the Missing Children Milk Carton Program. President Ronald Reagan even discussed her disappearance during a 1985 meeting with the National Newspaper Association. On the tenth anniversary of her disappearance in 1994, her family had Jonelle declared legally dead, The Denver Post reported. Her case went cold until July 2019, when a group of oil and gas workers discovered her remains while digging a pipeline in an unincorporated area less than 20 miles from the Matthews' home in Greeley. Jonelle's death was ruled a homicide, and her autopsy report revealed that she had been shot in the head. Pankey was a fellow Greeley resident, living just two miles away from the Matthews' home. Though he was a stranger to Jonelle and her family, they attended the same church, where he served as a youth minister. In 1977, Pankey allegedly left the church after being accused of sexual assault by a woman he was seeing. Prosecutors later dropped the charge, and he told the Idaho Statesman in 2019 that the police have been suspicious of him ever since. Prosecutors said during the trial that Pankey had been excommunicated after the incident, which also cost him his job there as a janitor. He also worked as a used car salesman and a security guard, according to The Girl on the Milk Carton. His ex-wife later claimed during trial testimony that Pankey held a grudge against the church and his former boss, a parishioner named Russel Ross, who also happened to be the father of Jonelle's best friend and the same father who dropped her off at home the night she disappeared. After Jonelle went missing, Hicks said that her ex-husband began acting 'suspiciously.' He made them leave town, spent hours digging a hole in their yard and became fixated on news coverage around her case. She started collecting evidence against Pankey in 1999. Pankey also inserted himself into the police's search for Jonelle and repeatedly hinted to investigators that he had knowledge of what happened. When his son was shot and killed by his girlfriend in 2008, Hicks claimed that she heard him say, 'I hope God didn't allow this to happen because of Jonelle Matthews.' In his interview with the Idaho Statesman, he denied having any involvement in Jonelle's case and told the outlet that he was preparing for a trip with his wife the night the girl disappeared. 'I never met Jonelle, I never met her family, I didn't know she existed or disappeared until Wednesday, Dec. 26 (1984),' Pankey said, noting that he didn't learn of the case until he returned from his trip. The former janitor and government candidate later relocated to Twin Falls, Idaho, where he unsuccessfully ran for governor twice in 2014 and 2018. Two months after Jonelle's body was found, police served a search warrant for his home. Pankey was indicted by a grand jury in October 2020 on charges of murder, kidnapping and crimes of violence. According to 48 Hours, the indictment alleged that he took Jonelle from her family home and shot her sometime 'during the course of the kidnapping.' The document also claimed that Pankey was aware of the rake used to blur the footprints. He was first tried in October 2021, but it ended in a mistrial after the jury failed to reach a verdict on the murder and kidnapping charges. However, he was found guilty of false reporting. Two years later, he was tried again and found guilty of felony murder and second-degree kidnapping. Pankey was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole, per the Greeley Tribune. Following the sentencing, Gloria told reporters she just wanted 'to cry.' 'I cannot forgive him for how he killed Jonelle,' she said while clutching a picture of her late daughter. "God is the only one who can forgive evil, and I feel that this is evil.' Pankey only made a brief statement in court, maintaining his innocence and claiming that his conviction was 'not justice for Jonelle.' Pankey is currently serving his sentence at the Arkansas Valley Correctional Facility in Ordway, Colo. According to the Colorado Department of Corrections, he will be eligible for parole in 2040, when he is 89 years old. 'He's an evil person,' Jonelle's sister told The Independent. 'I think he can't let go of things and holds grudges and doesn't like people in authority over him ... I don't have a complete understanding of what he did that night, but if you are so driven by anger towards another sector, like a church or people in the church, that you are willing to commit a crime ... that says something about you.' But she added, 'I'm not fixated by him. I am not going to harbor just anger towards him, because I will not give him another victim.' Read the original article on People

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