Betrayal - EP 23 - Dawn
Episode Date: January 9, 2025From swinger’s clubs to country clubs, Dawn and Wes are living large. But a call from the Dallas FBI upends Dawn’s life. Content Warning: This episode includes descriptions of suicid...e and suicidal ideation. If you are experiencing feelings of hopelessness or thinking about ending your own life, you are not alone. Help is available. Call or text ‘988’ from anywhere in America to reach the National Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
To have a murder as gruesome as Jade Beasley's doesn't happen very often down here.
In Marion, Illinois, an 11-year-old girl brutally stabbed to death.
Her father's longtime live-in girlfriend maintaining innocence but charged with her murder.
I am confident that Julie Begley is guilty.
They've never found a weapon. Never made sense. Still doesn't make sense.
She found out she was pregnant in jail. The person who did it is still out there.
Listen to Murder on Songbird Road
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together our mission
on the Really No Really podcast
is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like
why the bathroom door doesn't go all the way to the floor?
What's in the museum of failure?
And does your dog truly love you?
We have the answer.
Go to reallynoreally.com
and register to win $500, a guest spot on our podcast
or a limited edition signed Jason Bobblehead.
The Really Know Really podcast.
Follow us on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast
or wherever you get your podcasts.
It was big news.
I mean, white girl gets murdered,
found in a cemetery, big, big news.
A long investigation stalls
until someone changes their story.
I like saw, nothing happened.
An arrest, trial and conviction
soon follow.
He did not kill her, there's no way.
Is the real killer rightly behind bars
or still walking free?
Did you kill her?
Listen to The Real Killer, season three on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
One day I'm leaving a doctor appointment and I get a phone call from the FBI.
And they just say, hey, this is so andso with the Dallas FBI. Would you come in and talk to us about your husband?
And I said, why?
What about my husband?
I'm Andrea Gunning, and this is Betrayal, a show about the people we trust the most
and the deceptions that change everything.
As a listener note, this episode contains references to suicide and suicidal ideation.
Please take care while listening.
About a year ago, we heard from a fast-talking Southern woman
named Dawn.
I'm from East Texas, born and raised.
Dawn is a firecracker.
Speaking your mind just runs in Dawn's family.
She gets it from her mom.
My mother's just a good little 4'9", Pentecostal woman,
but she also doesn't mince words.
Dawn's story of betrayal is a little different. She's the first to say that her story starts
when she committed a betrayal of her own.
We did start as a betrayal.
There was a lot of people hurting this
and I was not always the innocent person.
I did a lot of hurting.
In the early 2000s, Dawn was married
with two young daughters.
She described her first husband as a nice guy,
maybe the first guy that had ever really been good to her.
But she wasn't in love.
One night, Dawn decided to go out with her sister.
I actually left church to meet my sister
out on a Wednesday night at a bar,
and there this man is.
I saw him, and there was an instant attraction.
His name was Wes.
Wes was an oil man, as they say in Texas,
and he had a smooth talking persona to match.
When he walked into a room, he commanded the room.
I'd never seen anything like it.
He was just one of those people.
And he was paying attention to me, and I was like, whoa.
And I had a little shirt that came right to the top
of my high-waisted jeans, you know,
and I moved and my belly showed,
and he reached and kind of, like, touched my belly.
And I was pulling my shirt down, and he's like,
oh, don't pull your shirt down and he's like,
oh, don't pull your shirt down, that's sexy.
That night, he focused intensely on her.
Wes laughed hard at her jokes.
And the way he looked at her made her feel beautiful.
We talked all night.
We just stood in the corner of the club,
like where people were dancing and drinking, just talking.
Dawn told him about her husband and two daughters, but he didn't bat an eye. Like, while people were dancing and drinking, just talking.
Dawn told him about her husband and two daughters, but he didn't bat an eye.
Honestly, she was surprised that he was single.
He told me he was not married and that he didn't have any children and I didn't believe
that.
I was like, that's bullshit.
There's just absolutely no way in hell that you're not married and don't have any kids.
Against her better judgment, she gave him her phone number.
And then they went their separate ways.
From then we just talked every day.
And we would meet out once a week.
That went on for about eight months.
In the beginning, it was an emotional affair.
There was nothing physical going on.
And he stuck to his story about being single with no kids.
I just kept telling him, like, I don't believe you. Like, you might as well just tell me,
like, I'm married. I have a ring on. After a few months, Wes finally came clean.
He did have a wife and a daughter too. I was like, I knew it. Like, I knew it. Like,
I don't know why you're lying to me. Thank you for being honest.
I was like, I knew it, like I knew it. Like, I don't know why you're lying to me.
Thank you for being honest.
He confessed that he'd had a few affairs before,
but this time with Dawn, it was different.
They'd been talking every day for months,
seeing each other once a week.
And even though nothing physical had happened between them,
Wes was in deep.
This is what he told her.
I fell in love with you,
and I just didn't know what to do with this situation.
I didn't want to lose you, but I didn't want to disappoint my family.
Wes was a preacher's son. No one in his family had ever been divorced and Dawn understood that pressure.
But after eight months their emotional affair turned physical and there was no going back after that.
I knew what I was doing was wrong. I knew then that I had to start working towards dissolving my marriage.
She was the first to take the leap, to leave her marriage. She wanted to start over, with Wes at her side.
Not long after, Wes said he and his wife were also separating in order for him to be with Dawn.
And a few months after that, we got engaged.
They made their relationship public, spent time with each other's kids,
and started building a new life together.
Dawn started bringing Wes around her family and spending time with his young daughter.
His larger family wasn't ready to accept Wes's recent separation.
Regardless, he and Don began envisioning a life together.
Don had stayed home with her kids in the past and loved it.
Wes said he could give that life to her again.
He could afford it.
He told me, I have enough money to take care of you, so
I want you to stay home. And he bought me a brand new 2004 Expedition. It was a $45,000
vehicle. So I quit my job. Don agreed to move to a small town outside of Dallas where Wes
lived. His whole family was there too. He wanted to stay close to his daughter.
Because he and Dawn weren't married yet, he decided to live separately.
Wes lived with his mom, while Dawn and her daughters rented a small house in town.
He moved me to this tiny little town of only a few hundred people with one grocery store.
There Wes got a new job in the steel business, and Dawn settled into her new life as a stay-at-home mom.
The couple started making plans to get married.
I wanted a Vegas wedding
because it wasn't my first rodeo.
I wanted Elvis to give me away.
He wanted a minister.
But in the middle of wedding planning,
Dawn's cell phone got turned off.
She assumed that Wes, as busy as he was,
had forgotten to pay their bill.
It was 2004, so she used her landline to call his office.
He had been working at a place called Chaparral Steel.
So I call Chaparral Steel.
I gotta get hold of him.
And I'm like, yeah, I need to speak to Wes.
And they're like, we don't have anyone who works
here by that name.
And I'm like, what?
Are you sure?
And so Wes was his middle name.
So I, I tell them like, sure.
You don't have a, you know, like George Wesley Harris Jr.
It's like, no.
And I said, let me talk to HR.
They put me on the phone.
Like they're like, we don't have anyone that works here by that name.
And then everything in me just gets this hit, right?
I'm like, oh my God.
He lied about where he worked.
What was going on?
Her gut instinct told her to call his ex-wife.
I looked at the phone and you know,
when you're about to do something,
you know your whole life is about to go in a different direction.
Like it's gonna change,
but the course of your life is, you know it,
it's kind of that moment.
I called her and she's like, who is this?
And I said, this is Dawn, this is Wes's fiance.
There was a long pause on the other end of the phone. Something wasn't right.
Before she could get an answer about the job, the conversation took a different turn.
And she said, don't ever call this house again. And I said, wait, are y'all still married?
And she goes, yes, we are. And we have been very much married for the last 10 years.
Don't call this house again.
She hangs up the phone and I'm just standing there in shock because we're supposed to be
getting married that month.
And he's still married living with her telling me he's living with his mom.
So then she calls me right back and says, well, I know where his heart is because he
just left the house and I'm quite certain he's probably on his way to your house.
And she hangs up.
Well, about five minutes later, he shows up at my door.
She looked like 10 minutes from me.
Dawn had moved her whole life and her kids to this small town.
She thought it was for her and Wes
to start a new life together.
Turns out it was so he could be closer to his wife,
who he was still living with.
He was never separated.
He moves me to this tiny town with one grocery store.
At any point in time,
I could have run into his wife and daughter
at the grocery store,
and the daughter would have run up to me
and been like, Dawn, she's a toddler.
Within 10 minutes,
both Wes and his wife were at Dawn's house, she's a toddler. Within 10 minutes, both Wes and his wife
were at Dawn's house and they were fighting.
I'm like, there's a copy episode
up in my house right now.
With hindsight, Dawn can joke about it now,
but in the moment, her relationship with Wes was over.
He told me he was really living with his mom now.
So that came to fruition.
He kept telling me like,
no one's ever been divorced in my family. I didn't know how to end the marriage. I want to be with you.
Like, we can be together. We can fix this. But I was done with him. We separated.
And then he had a nervous breakdown. Then he went into his first 72-hour hold
in a mental institution for a breakdown.
She had sympathy for him,
especially as he was going through a mental health crisis.
I just thought, he's just conflicted.
He doesn't want to hurt his family.
I can love him through that,
and it's gonna be great once we get through this crap.
And I just went to bat for him because I had given up so much.
A few weeks after everything came to light, she took him back.
Wes kept saying he was in the process of divorcing his wife.
And finally, it was his wife that called me one day and he was in my living room and she said,
"'Is he with you?'
And I said, yes.
And she said, he told me he hasn't seen you
and hasn't been seeing you.
I said, well, you know, we're still seeing each other.
And she said, you can have him, I'm done."
The whole situation was messy, destructive,
but Don and Wes could finally be together for real this time.
But of course, there was still that issue of his job
or the job he said he had.
When she asked about it,
Wes confessed that he'd been fired from a string of jobs
and he was too ashamed to tell her.
She pitied him.
He put so much pressure on himself to appear perfect
and it was taking a massive toll on him.
So Don's strategy was to love him
through this tumultuous time,
to assure him that they would figure it out together.
And pretty soon, he came to her with a new job prospect.
He said, I have the opportunity to go back
in the oil and gas business.
He was working in the oil business when they met.
She didn't want him to slide back into the toxic culture he'd left behind,
but she knew she couldn't control him. Plus, it was a good job offer. So he took the job.
And it was that job that't happen very often down here.
In Marion, Illinois, an 11-year-old girl brutally stabbed to death, her father's longtime
live-in girlfriend maintaining innocence but charged with her murder.
I am confident that Julie Beth Lee is guilty.
This case, the more I learned about it,
the more I'm scratching my head something's not right.
I'm Lauren Bright-Pacheco.
Murder on Songbird Road dives into the conviction
of a mother of four who remains behind bars
and the investigation that put her there.
I have not seen this level of corruption anywhere.
It's sickening.
If you stab somebody that many times you have blood splatter.
Where's the change of clothes?
She found out she was pregnant in jail.
She wasn't treated like she was an innocent being at all. Which is just horrific.
Nobody has gotten justice yet and that's what I wish people would understand.
Listen to Murder on Songbird Road on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your
podcasts. I'm Jason Alexander and I'm Peter Tilden and together on the Really No Lily podcast our
mission is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like why they refuse
To make the bathroom door go all the way to the floor
We got the answer. Will space junk block your cell signal? The astronaut who almost drowned during a spacewalk gives us the answer
We talked with the scientist who figured out if your dog truly loves you and the one bringing back the wooly mammoth
Plus does Tom Cruise really do his own stunts his stunt man reveals the answer and you never know who's gonna drop by
Mr. Bryan Cranston is how are you?
Wayne Knight about Jurassic Park Wayne Knight. Welcome to really really sir. Bless you all
Hello, Newman and you never know when how I'm in down might just stop by to talk about judging. Really? That's the opening? Really? No, really?
Yeah, no, really.
Go to really no really dot com and register to win five hundred dollars.
A guest spot on our podcast or a limited edition sign.
Jason Bobblehead.
It's called Really No Really.
And you can find it on the I Heart Radio app on Apple podcast
or wherever you get your podcast.
There was big news.
I mean, white girl gets murdered, found in a cemetery, big, big news.
When a young woman is murdered, a desperate search for answers takes investigators to
some unexpected places. He believed it could be part of a satanic cult.
I think there were many individuals present. I don't know who pulled the trigger.
A long investigation stalls until someone changes their story.
I like saw what could happen.
An arrest, trial and conviction soon follow.
He just saw his body just kind of collapsing.
Two decades later, a new team of lawyers says their client is innocent.
He did not kill her. There's no way. Is the
real killer rightly behind bars or still walking free? Are you capable of murder? I definitely
am not. Did you kill her? Listen to The Real Killer, Season 3 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple
podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Dawn had forgiven her fiance, Wes, for a number of things.
He told her he was separated from his wife, when in reality, he was still very much with her.
He told Dawn he worked as a salesman at a steel company, which she found out was also a lie.
Finally, with Wes coming clean, the couple could enter a new era, a sort of golden era, and
it started with a wedding.
We went to Little Chapel of the West, which is the historical, beautiful chapel there
in Vegas.
And Elvis gave me away.
He said, this is your Priscilla.
And he kissed me and then he gave me away to West.
And then we went and did tequila shots
in my wedding dress at Caesar's Palace.
It was awesome.
The new job Wes scored, which this time was a real job,
proved to be a natural fit for him.
He was managing investor money at an oil and gas company,
and he was great at it.
He quickly became their top producer, selling million dollars in investments a month, and
their number one salesman.
They moved out of the small town where his ex-wife and family lived, and settled in a
Fort Worth suburb to be near his job.
He's like, let's look at houses, and we were looking at houses, and I'm like, well, what's
our budget?
And he's like, well, no, we can put $100,000 down a house.
And I'm like, oh, OK.
That's nice.
So we looked at this house on the golf course.
It was beautiful.
And we bought that.
The cherry on top, they joined the country club.
It was like, if you were anyone, you were at Walnut Creek Country Club.
They were officially somebodies.
And it was around this time when she entered
this life of luxury that Dawn made a new friend.
We'll call her Sandy.
Her and I became fast friends,
and then we got our husbands together,
and they became very good friends,
and they would golf together, we'd all travel together.
As their personal life blossomed, so did Wes's career.
The oil company was growing a lot,
and Wes had made friends with the right people there,
people who wanted to take him
all the way to the top of the company.
In fact, they gave him the opportunity to buy the company.
He did. And he took over as CEO.
All of a sudden, you know, Wes was the president and owner, and then all of a sudden I'm the
wife of a man who owns the company. And I just was like, okay, here we go. This is awesome.
The sale of the company happened fast and under kind of weird circumstances.
But Wes didn't seem concerned about it, and the money was good.
I never really had to want for anything.
Like, if I wanted something, I would just say, hey, do you care if I get this?
Or, hey, I want to go to lunch today with some ladies.
And the couple got to spend a lot of time doing something they both loved.
Partying. We were drinking a lot of time doing something they both loved. Partying.
We were drinking a lot, partying.
You know, my kids were with their dad every other weekend, and we're at the country club
five nights a week.
It was a whirlwind, great Gatsby style, but set in the 2006 Texas suburbs.
Dawn and Wes were still in their 30s, and they made it big.
She knew her husband was the charmer, but there were two sides to that coin.
On one side, he was a natural leader and salesman, but on the other side, Wes was still the same
old ladies' man.
Early on, Dawn found evidence that Wes might be cheating on her.
Instead of confronting him,
she decided to take a different approach.
I decided that if he could do it in front of my face,
at least I'd have control over it.
So we started going to Swinger's Clubs.
I had to know a little more about the Dallas Swinger scene.
They're actual bars in Dallas
and they have their own little language so you can know
if other people go to these places.
You just slip in some little language that only other people know and then you know who
you're talking to.
The couple would agree on their boundaries beforehand.
We can at least just be free.
We can dance with each other and make out and do whatever we want to do.
We don't have to talk to other people.
And I would go and be like, okay, I trust you.
Dawn says she was quote in the lifestyle for about a year and a half until the
party started feeling off to her. It stopped being fun,
but Wes pressured her to keep going with him.
Those nights would always end in drunken blackouts, fights. I got to where I would wake up in the morning and be like, I can't do this.
I'd be on my knees in prayer, you know, because we're like part of a church community too.
We had this double life.
And so I would be like, I can't do this.
They stopped going to swingers clubs together
and for a while, everything seemed normal.
That was until years later,
when Wes began spending more and more time at work.
Dawn was becoming suspicious about his work travel
and the long hours he was putting in.
Plus he became guarded with his phone.
Whenever Dawn tried to confront him, they got into an argument.
After one particularly bad fight,
I lied to Wes and told him that I went and got coffee and was just trying to cool off.
In reality, she drove to a friend's house to vent about Wes.
And the coffee place I did not know was not open at that hour.
Sub West was like, you're lying to me.
And everything just blew up.
It was a lie that gave him a reason to leave her.
And he took it.
Immediately.
When he came back home to pack a bag, he said, this is over.
I want a divorce.
And I remember begging him, like, please don't do this. We can figure this out.
Like, don't do this.
Dawn couldn't understand why he was so eager
to walk out on her.
So she turned to her friend, Sandy,
and Sandy had recently seen Wes.
And she's like, he took his ring off.
I just want you to know he was not
wearing his ring. Dawn was devastated and Sandy was there to comfort her. And I
remember my head was in her lap and I'm crying and she's like Dawn this
relationship it's just too much. It's like a bomb fuse and it was bound to burn out. Soon after, Wes went on a work trip.
Dawn got a weird feeling about it.
Call it intuition.
So she decided to do a little investigating.
I found out where he was staying.
She called the hotel front desk,
and she found out that there were two people staying in Wes's room.
The other person was Sandy, Dawn's friend.
She suddenly understood why Wes had been so quick
to walk out of their marriage
and why Sandy was feeding her information
about Wes's infidelity,
even advising her that the relationship was too much.
She was supposed to be my brand,
but she's screwing my husband.
When Wes came back from that business trip,
his affair with Sandy was outed.
It was a big scandal.
You know, we were all members of the country club.
Her and I were on the committee at the country club together.
So now that's outed.
They're up there holding hands at the country club,
and everybody's talking, talking, talking.
It was humiliating, infuriating, They're up there holding hands at the country club, and everybody's talking, talking, talking.
It was humiliating, infuriating,
but it was nothing compared to what came next.
He comes and tells me that he filed for divorce,
and he put a restraining order on me
to keep me out of his company.
A restraining order?
She didn't have anything to do with his company.
I think I walked in the doors of his company maybe three, four times, like I could count
it on one hand.
I didn't have anything to do with it.
So telling me to stay out of the company, like that pissed me off.
So Wes offered to make her a deal, to buy her off.
He said, I will give you enough money that you can buy a house cash.
I'll give you enough money for that.
And I said, you were nothing when I met you.
You were borrowing money from your mother living in my rent house.
If you think you're going to replace me and my two girls with her and her two boys, and
you're going to give me money for a house and you're operating a multimillion dollar
company, you can go fuck yourself.
I go, that's not happening.
When she didn't take the first seal he offered,
Wes tried another one.
He tried to start calming me down.
He's like, we can work this out together.
We'll use my attorney.
He's like, I will sit down with my accountant.
I will let you look at all the books.
He goes, if you just calm down,
he goes, you don't even have to come to the hearing.
I'll take care of it.
The restraining order will go away.
She took that deal and she believed him.
She didn't even know what day the divorce hearing
was set for until I was at my second grader's field day
and one of the country club members,
a man came up to me and said,
I need you to know Wes is going around telling everybody that he got everything
and that you're going to be out on your ass.
In a couple weeks, he's just going to put you out, and he has everything.
Like, you didn't show up to a trial.
What he did was he walked in there and told the judge,
my wife is a raging alcoholic, she's violent and abusive,
she did not even care to be here today.
And the judge gave him everything, everything.
And I didn't know it.
Now she was ready to burn it all down.
I called him and I say,
I'm getting an attorney.
I don't trust you anymore.
She didn't just hire any attorney.
She hired the mayor of their town.
I remember Wes going, you hired the mayor of Mansfield?
I'm like, you're fucking right I did.
And that's when Wes let something slip.
He starts freaking out.
And in his panic, he did say to me,
Dawn, don't get an attorney.
He goes, right now things are in the gray at work.
I'm trying to pull it up out of the gray area because I could go to prison.
I should have stopped on that and double tapped into that statement. To have a murder as gruesome as Jade Beasley's doesn't happen very often down here.
In Marion, Illinois, an 11-year-old girl brutally stabbed to death.
Her father's longtime live-in girlfriend maintaining innocence, but charged with her murder.
I am confident that Julie Beth Lee is guilty.
This case, the more I learned about it, the more I'm scratching my head, something's not right.
I'm Lauren Bright-Pacheco.
Murder on Songbird Road dives into the conviction of a mother of four
who remains behind bars and the investigation that put her there.
I have not seen this level of corruption anywhere.
It's sickening.
A few steps and we found many times you have blood splatter, where's the change clothes?
She found out she was pregnant in jail.
She wasn't treated like she was an innocent being at all, which is just horrific.
Nobody has gotten justice yet.
And that's what I wish people would understand.
Listen to Murder on Songbird Road on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together on the Really No Lily podcast,
our mission is to get the true answers to life's baffling
questions, like why they refuse to make the bathroom door go all the way to the floor.
We got the answer.
Will space junk block your cell signal?
The astronaut who almost drowned during a spacewalk gives us the answer.
We talk with the scientist who figured out if your dog truly loves you and the one bringing
back the wooly mammoth.
Plus, does Tom Cruise really do his own stunts?
His stuntman reveals the answer.
And you never know who's going to drop by.
Mr. Brian Cranston is with us today.
How are you two?
Hello, my friend.
Wayne Knight about Jurassic Park.
Wayne Knight, welcome to Really No Really, sir.
Bless you all.
Hello, Newman.
And you never know when Howie Mandel might just stop by to talk about judging.
Really? That's the opening?
Really No Really, yeah.
No Really.
Go to ReallyNoReally.com
And register to win $500, a guest spot on our podcast, or a limited edition signed Jason Bobblehead.
It's called Really No Really and you can find it on the iHeartRadio app, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It was big news. I mean, white girl gets murdered, found in a cemetery. Big, big news.
When a young woman is murdered, a desperate search for answers takes investigators to
some unexpected places. He believed it could be part of a satanic cult.
I think there were many individuals present. I don't know who pulled the trigger.
A long investigation stalls until someone changes their story.
I like saw.
Well, then what happened?
An arrest, trial and conviction soon follow.
He just saw his body just kind of collapsing.
Two decades later, a new team of lawyers says their client is innocent.
He did not kill her.
There's no way.
Is the real killer rightly behind bars or still walking free?
Are you capable of murder?
I definitely am not.
Did you kill her?
Listen to The Real Killer, Season 3, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Dawn discovered her husband Wes had been cheating on her with her close friend.
And in the divorce that followed, he filed a restraining order to keep Dawn out of his
multi-million dollar business.
He crossed her one too many times.
And now, she needed to know the extent of his wrongdoing.
And then I'm starting to go on the internet, looking up stuff about his company.
The things that people are saying about his company, I'm like, I cannot get over this.
Like, this is crazy.
They're saying it's a scam and there's no return.
She saw posts from people who'd invested in Wes's oil company saying they'd been promised
returns, but those returns never came.
Dawn was also finding records of properties in her husband's name, properties she didn't
know anything about.
That all led back to Wes.
I have a friend who works for the SEC.
And so I called her one day and I said, I just need to vent about the stuff I'm finding
out about his company. And she said, you're on to vent about the stuff I'm finding out about his company.
And she said, you're on my government issued phone, so anything you say.
And I said, well, if your government oath trumps our friendship, so be it, but I think
I need to tell you the stuff I'm finding out.
What I didn't know is he was already under investigation.
So when she said that to me,
that was her little under the table warning
because there was really something going on.
Her friend couldn't tell her about the investigation,
but someone else was about to.
I'd gone to your doctor appointment
and I was leaving the doctor's office
and I get a phone call and it was,
is this Dawn Harris?
And I said, yes it is.
And they said, this is so and so
with the Dallas FBI office.
We'd like for you to come in.
And I was like, excuse me?
And they said, we have some questions for you.
And I said, what kind of questions?
What's this about?
And they said, it's about your husband
Wes Harris and I said what about my husband and they said well it's about his company and I said
what about his company like I don't know what I can tell you about his company I don't have anything
to do with this company. She might not be involved with the company, but she did know Wes was always up to something.
And if she could help expose more of his lies, she was in.
I called my attorney's office.
The paralegal there answered the phone and I told her the FBI just called me and she said,
you're probably being tapped. Don't talk to anyone. Come straight here.
But almost immediately, Wes started calling.
My phone's blowing up. Where are you? Where are you?
So he tells me he's going to come by the house.
And later that evening, he came by the house,
and he kept doing this really weird thing
where he would talk to me
and tell me he wanted to get back together.
And then he'd drop his eyes, and he'd get real close to me.
And then he'd snap out of it and start talking again.
And it was making me very nervous.
And so we went from the kitchen into the living room
and we both sat down.
And that's when he looked at me and goes,
why did the FBI call you today?
And I went, I don't know.
And he said, what did they want?
I said, I don't know. And he said, what do they want? I said, I don't know. They said they
wanted to talk about you. And he said, well, you're not going to talk to them. I said, no,
I'm going in to talk to them. And he wanted to send me with one of his attorneys. And I declined
that. I said, absolutely not. I said, I'm not going with an attorney. I have nothing to hide.
I don't need an attorney. I'm going to go in there and answer their questions." And he was trying to get me not to talk to them. But Dawn did talk with the
feds. And she learned he had misappropriated $2 million. That $2 million was just the beginning.
In total, West's company illegally raised $13 million through what's known as a boiler room scheme.
Salespeople like West duped hundreds of everyday people to invest their savings in the company's oil drilling projects. But they were doing it using fake data,
falsified information about the company's profits, and empty promises
about their expected returns. And a lot of those investor funds weren't being
used to expand the company's profits.
He was ballsy.
He had a stripper on the payroll.
He paid monthly.
Which, I mean, you don't steal millions of dollars at like 35 years old without being
super ballsy.
And where did all that money go?
Well, Wes used it to fund their family's lavish lifestyle.
I would look at things and be like, that was bought with stolen money.
You know, like that's kind of hard to stomach and your whole life is bought with stolen money.
Money stolen from regular people who'd invested in Wes's oil and gas company,
who were told they'd see massive returns.
Investors were calling me saying, I know your daughter's names, where they go to school,
I know where you live. I gave him three quarters of a million dollars and he ruined my life
and I'm going to ruin his. And then I was so panicked. I'm like, he doesn't even live
here. Like we're separated. So now they know I'm alone.
She was scared for her own safety. But more so, she was devastated when she heard from
the victims of Wes' fraud.
I had one woman who was really sweet.
She called me and she goes, we're a mom and pop place in New Mexico.
She goes, we gave him all of our life savings.
Even though Dawn was responsible for Wes' crimes, she was still financially entangled
with him.
His LLC that he was laundering money through,
he had put me as the president.
So I was the president of that until we split up.
I had written checks out of that account,
but just because he would tell me, like write a check,
and then he took me off of it, thank God.
But of course, everything he'd bought for the couple,
from their house to Dawn's shoes,
could now be seized by the feds.
I was told that federal marshals were going to show up at my house and I would be able
to pack a bag for me and my children.
Dawn's life was on pause as she waited for the financial and legal reckoning.
We could not have our divorce trial until the SEC was done,
because what was left over was community property.
What they left me, basically.
So I had to fight for that.
He made me fight for that.
That's when Dawn got another unexpected call.
From of all people, a new woman Wes had started dating.
She wanted to meet Dawn in person.
She ended up finding me, reaching out to me, because she had suspicions about him.
She told me he had taken her to this seedy little place,
then there was other couples that were rubbing her back.
And she goes, and then I blacked out,
and I don't remember the rest of the night.
And she said, and Dawn, I don't drink, not that much. She goes, I maybe had two drinks.
And she goes, I think he probably drugged me.
And I burst in the tears.
And I said, you just described the last year and a half of my life.
Because that's what I would do.
I wouldn't have that much to drink.
But all of a sudden I'm coming in and out of consciousness
and I'm seeing all this stuff around me,
but you can't move.
It wasn't until that moment when someone else
described her same experiences
that Dawn realized what was really happening.
The last few times she went to the Swingers Club with Wes.
Those nights, she'd blacked out.
When I was saying that I couldn't do it anymore,
that's when he started drugging me.
This was more than a betrayal.
It was a crime.
He drugged and sexually assaulted her.
She was still processing this while in the middle of an SEC investigation,
where the government could be justified in seizing everything she had.
It left her feeling overwhelmingly empty and alone.
There were times I pulled in my garage and shut the garage door and leaned the seat back,
because I knew that the government was about to come in and take my home and take all of my things,
and I was going to have to tell everyone, and I was gonna have to uproot my daughters
and scare the shit out of them, right?
And so I just wanted to die.
I'm like, if I could just go to sleep right now,
I wouldn't have to deal with this.
I can remember shutting the garage door
and leaning that seat back and sitting there.
But I would see my daughter's little faces.
They were like eight and ten.
And I would turn the car off.
I'd wipe my face.
I'd go in the house and get it together.
Every day felt excruciatingly long.
Dawn says she got through it for her daughters.
And Wes, well, he'd already moved on, to say the least.
He had met a girl in Sunday school,
and he had convinced all of his family that he was innocent.
If I was guilty, I'd be in prison by now.
I'm gonna sue the government and the SEC
and all of them for falsely accusing me.
I was told his mom had like second mortgaged her house.
I was told that he had gone through
this poor woman's savings or whatever.
These are things of course I was told,
but what I do know is that was starting to unravel.
He might've been telling his family that he was innocent,
but that's not what Wes told the government.
He agreed to a plea deal with the FBI.
Now he was
awaiting sentencing. Finally, they could move forward with their divorce.
Our divorce was a trial because he was trying to fight me for everything the government
left me with, so I had to get up on stand and testify. And of course, he pleaded the
fifth to everything.
Dawn was relieved to keep the modest half of what the government left her, but Wes still wasn't done with her.
Despite it all, he still kept reaching out to Dawn. She didn't reply until finally...
He called me one day. He was really confused and sounded just really out of it.
I'm like, just go serve your sentence. Go do your time. And in one
breath he said, I'm not going to prison. What do you mean? I'm innocent. And in the next
breath he said, you know what happens to men like me in prison, Dawn? What am I going to
do when I come out? He couldn't wrap his mind around the reality that he was going to prison.
Considering what he'd done, Dawn was losing patience for him. She knew he was reaching out for sympathy, maybe for help processing, or maybe because
he just didn't have anyone else left.
And then he texted me one more thing, which is what we used to say to each other that
men will love you.
We would always say one more thing.
And he texted me one more thing. And he texted me one more thing. And I reached out to his first wife again, and she said, Dawn, he keeps doing this.
Go to bed, turn your phone off.
The next morning, he killed himself.
He was supposed to turn himself in that next day.
He had come to an agreement with the FBI and he was only gonna serve, like, I don't know,
five to seven years.
I mean, this was 2012.
He'd have been way out of prison by now.
I went to the funeral.
His grandmother, who I loved, and she loved me,
she came up to me and she asked me about the house
and about me selling the house. I said,
you know, you don't understand. The government took everything. The government
took that house. Like, I didn't sell any, like, I have, I don't have anything. And she
kind of looked at me confused.
He'd been lying to everyone, including his family. He'd also been stealing from his grandmother.
He stole the money out of her account to buy the gun to kill himself.
It's been over a decade since the end of their relationship and since Wes passed away.
I try to say I don't have any regrets. I got a couple.
I got a couple.
Hard lessons for sure.
Dawn endured so much in this relationship.
We asked what the hardest part was for her.
What gets me the most is the betrayal to myself.
Like, I don't know that woman.
And thank God I don't know her anymore.
I look back and how in the world,
for 10 years of my life,
this man was able to lie and manipulate,
and I would lie and manipulate, you know,
because again, we started out as an affair.
But the biggest thing is just how I let myself get so wrapped up in that
and the things that my children had to go through.
They were 18 months and four when I met him.
That's probably the hardest thing.
Part of Dawn's healing process is being honest,
taking accountability for her actions.
Being able to talk to other people and just being honest
has been very healing.
Like, I don't hold back the fact we were in a fair.
I don't hold back the people that I've hurt.
You know, there was a lot of people hurting this
and I was not always the innocent person.
I did a lot of hurting.
Dawn found happiness in starting a new career.
I always wanted to be an esthetician, so now I own my own spa.
It looks what I'm sitting in, my little spa.
She also found love again, this time with a man who was honest with her
and treats her well.
In fact, while we were on our call,
Hi honey, my husband's brought me flowers.
So sweet.
Thank you, babe.
We end all of our episodes with the same question.
Why did you want to tell your story?
To reach other people and let them know that, you know,
there's a whole network of people out here
that have been hurt,
but that you can go through these horrible things
and it's not over,
and you can rebuild as many times as it takes.
Just be honest with yourself.
Like, I like who I am today,
and I think it's because I didn't try to hide all of those mistakes.
On the next episode of Betrayal.
I just remember it was a profound moment.
Who is this cruel?
Who could pull this off?
Whose family pulls it off? Who can pull this off? Whose family pulls it off?
Whose friends pull it off?
What in the world?
How do you fabricate the details like that?
If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team
or want to tell us your betrayal story,
email us at betrayalpod at gmail.com. That's betrayal email us at BetrayalPod at gmail.com.
That's Betrayal, P-O-D, at gmail.com.
We're grateful for your support.
One way to show support is by subscribing
to our show on Apple Podcasts.
And don't forget to rate and review Betrayal.
Five star reviews go a long way.
A big thank you to all of our listeners.
Betrayal is a production of Glass Podcasts,
a division of Glass Entertainment Group
in partnership with iHeart Podcasts.
The show is executive produced by Nancy Glass
and Jennifer Faison.
Hosted and produced by me, Andrea Gunning.
Written and produced by Monique Laborde.
Also produced by Ben Federman.
Associate producers are Kristen Malkuri and Caitlin Golden.
Our iHeart team is Ali Perry and Jessica Kreincheck.
Audio editing and mixing by Matt Dalvecchio.
Additional editing support from Nico Arruca and Tanner Robbins.
Betrayal's theme composed by Oliver Baines.
Music Library provided by MIBE Music.
And for more podcasts from iHeart, visit the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
To have a murder as gruesome as Jade Beasley's doesn't happen very often down here.
In Marion, Illinois, an 11-year-old girl brutally stabbed to death.
Her father's longtime live-in girlfriend maintaining innocence, but charged with her murder.
I am confident that Julie Beckley is guilty.
They've never found a weapon, never made sense.
Still doesn't make sense.
She found out she was pregnant in jail.
The person who did it is still out there.
Listen to Murder on Songbird Road
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Jason Alexander. And I'm Peter Tilden and together our mission on the really no really podcast is to get the true answers to life's
Baffling questions like why the bathroom door doesn't go all the way to the floor
What's in the museum of failure and does your dog truly love you?
We have the answer go to really no really calm and register to win
$500 a guest spot on our podcast or a limited edition sign Jason Bobblet.
The really no really podcast.
Follow us on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
It was big news.
I mean, white girl gets murdered, found in a cemetery.
Big, big news.
A long investigation stalls until someone changes their story.
I like saw what What thing happened?
An arrest, trial, and conviction soon follow.
He did not kill her.
There's no way.
Is the real killer rightly behind bars or still walking free?
Did you kill her?
Listen to The Real Killer, Season 3 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.