Crime Junkie - MURDERED: The Coleman Family
Episode Date: September 3, 2018When the head of security for a cutting edge televangelists starts getting threatening emails, no one seems too concerned. But as those threats escalate and eventually come to fruition, law enforcemen...t isn't convinced that everything is as it appears. For current Fan Club membership options and policies, please visit https://crimejunkieapp.com/library/. Sources for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/murdered-coleman-family/  Â
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Hi, crime junkies. Right here. It is Labor Day here in the US, and Ashley and I have been
spending the weekend watching opening day of college football, eating way too much,
and hanging out with our families. But we knew we couldn't keep our junkies hanging, so we have
a new story for you today. And this one, Ashley has been super interested in since it happened.
So I think you're really going to enjoy it.
I'm going to tell you the story of the Coleman family today. And the Coleman family is Chris,
his wife, Sherry, and their young sons, Garrett, who's 11, and Gavin, who is nine. Chris and Sherry
met both while in the military. Chris was actually in the Marines, and Sherry was in the Air Force.
And this is like a fun fact about me. My grandfather was in the Marines. So I can sing the Marine Corps
for him. And it's like how I used to pick up guys in bars. No, no, I can't hear, I can't hear.
But I like mad respect for people in the Air Force. Like, thank you to everyone who's served.
So they actually, something I love even more about the both of them, is they met in a canine
training camp. Like while they were both in the military, they quickly fell in love. I mean,
who can't fall in love over a puppet. And Chris brought Sherry home to meet his family. And while
they were in town, they actually call Chris's family up to let them know that they had gotten
married over the weekend. Like courthouse, middle of the weekend, didn't tell anyone, just did it.
Well, that progressed quickly. Right, it did. Because you see, Chris was from a very religious
family. Both of his parents were pastors and like evangelical pastors at that. So when Chris ended
up getting Sherry pregnant, they decided to get married right away. Right, right. So after Garrett
was born, Gavin wasn't far behind. The family of four settled in Columbia, Illinois, which is just
over the river from St. Louis, Missouri. And when Chris left the military, he ended up getting a
job with the Joyce Myers Ministry, who Brit, I know you know who she is, because we both grew up in
this super evangelical, churchy, sometimes I call it a cult thing. But no one holds it against us.
But Brit, like for everyone who might not know who Joyce Myers is, like, do you want to just give
them a little bit of a rundown of who she is and what her ministry is? Sure. So Joyce Myers is one of
the, if not the biggest, like, televangelists that's out there in like the evangelical world. If you
didn't know this, evangelicals don't really enjoy women from the pulpit. So she was kind of controversial
when she leapt onto the market in the probably late 80s, early 90s, and really like grew to fame.
She focuses on predominantly women's ministries, which makes sense. And a lot of strength and
opportunity and maybe a little bit of health and wealth. But she's just a pillar in the
televangelist community for evangelical Christians, definitely. And it makes sense that you pointed
out that at the time, she wasn't really, not, I don't know if accepted is the word, but it was
unusual to have a woman in this like place of power. And she's also not like your typical
like pastor's wife, if that makes sense. I have this picture in my mind, I guess, but she's kind
of brash and she kind of has a low gravelly voice and she tells it like it is, which was really
appealing because it seemed really authentic. So Chris ended up working for Joyce Myers. I guess
his family were like family friends of hers. I don't know if it was through church or what it was
through, but he ends up getting a job as like the head of her security, making a pretty good living
for his family with a salary of over $100,000 a year. And this is back in like 2007, 2008, 2009.
So it was a nice life until November of 2008. Chris started getting threatening emails in his
inbox. And I'll read a couple of them to you because they're very unusual. And they come from
an email called destroychris at gmail.com. And they started on Friday, November 14th of 2008.
So the first email is titled Houston death. And it says tell Chris his family is dead.
I know his schedule and they will die. Next time that mother will let me talk to Joyce.
On the same day, he continued to get more emails. And it was like this person
knew that they were being ignored. They started copying more people. And one of the ones that
they sent out to everyone in the company said, I'm sure this will make it to somebody in the
company. If you jack or like any other company, this will be someone's account. Pass this on to
Chris. Tell Joyce to stop preaching that bull or Chris's family will die. If I cannot get to Joyce,
then I will get to someone close to her. And if I can't get to him, then I will kill his wife
and kids. I know Joyce's schedule. So then I know Chris's schedule. If Joyce doesn't quit preaching
the bull, then they will die during the Houston conference. I will kill them as they sleep.
If I don't hit there, then I will kill during the book tour or the trip to India. I know where he
lives. I know when they are alone, them and they all will die soon. Tell that mother next time to
let me talk to Joyce. She needs to hear what I have to say. And now she will when no one
replied to that one, they sent even another one that said tell Chris his family is dead.
They don't deserve to live with someone that protects the SOB Joyce. So the notes would go on
to say that they basically knew when he was going to be gone. They knew when the family was alone,
and they were going to come after his family. And it wasn't new for someone to come after Joyce
Myers. Like you said, she was kind of provocative in that she was one of the first female televangelists.
And a lot of people had a problem with that. But what's weird is that the death threats usually
were to her. And that's what wasn't new. But this was bizarre because none of these threats were
aimed at Joyce at all. A couple of them mentioned wanting to talk to her. But even the email itself
says it's it's called destroy Chris at Gmail. And none of them talk about wanting to do something
to Joyce. All the violence is directed at Chris's family. In the past, Joyce's team had never had
somebody targeted so specifically without making any threats to Joyce herself. So this was strange.
But most of all, it was scary. And it got even scarier when in January of 2009, the emails stopped
coming and notes started appearing in their mailbox and not stamped addressed notes, but
notes that had been placed there meaning that someone had to have come by their home in the
dead of night and know where they live and put this in their mailbox. The first one that they
got in their mailbox read, fuck you, deny your God publicly or else. No more opportunities.
Time is running out for you and your family. Have a good time in India, mother. So they get
this note in January and they don't get another one until April 27. When Chris comes home from
a trip and there is another threatening letter in his mailbox. And this one tells Chris to
basically stop traveling, stop carrying on with this fake religious life and stealing people's
money. And it tells him that quote, your worst nightmare is about to happen. Now Chris is the
head of security for like a big company. So he had put up like a surveillance system and he had
surveillance footage of the man dropping off the letter and he watched it with his wife.
But he said that he had just recently gotten the camera and there wasn't any way for him to actually
download the footage and keep it anywhere. And he said when they watched it together,
they didn't recognize the person that dropped it off. Now luckily for the Coleman, they actually
lived on the same street as a detective sergeant. So he had been, they were kind of acquaintances
and he had been keeping an eye out for everything that was going on, but he wasn't able to find the
letter writer. So he decides to put up a camera. He actually borrows equipment from the state police.
So he can not only capture the video, but actually store it for future reference
in case this guy were to come back. So the camera was put up the very next day, which is April 28th.
So was Chris aware that the sergeant was putting up a camera? Oh yeah, they were actually trying
to get this guy together. So he knew that the cameras were going up. So they go up on the 28th
and not a lot happens right away. The normal comings and goings of the Coleman's of the neighbors,
no sign of any strangers, no sign of any crazy like cars, no one making loops around.
It even captures Chris playing catch with his boys on May 4th. It's just the three of them
seeming to be carefree in the front lawn, sharing a nice like picture perfect family moment.
Little did the family know this would be the last moment that the boys would get to share with their father.
After playing baseball that evening, the youngest boy Garrett was invited to spend the night at his
friend's house because it was his friend's birthday. And normally this wouldn't have been a problem,
but on that night, Chris and Sherry didn't allow him to, but they promised him that the following
Saturday they could have their sleepover. So the family all goes to bed, Garrett goes to his room,
Gavin goes to his room, and Chris and Sherry go to their room together. And Chris wakes up that
next morning on May 5th to go to the gym, which was a normal routine for him. And he leaves his
house around 5.45 in the morning. After being at the gym for a while, he calls Sherry to try and
wake her up. And this too, he said was really normal because he would get her up and going,
and then she would get the kids up, but he calls, and he calls, and there's no answer.
By 6.40, he was growing really concerned because Sherry should have been up by now. And those emails
and those letters start to creep into the back of his mind, and he becomes increasingly paranoid.
Yeah, I'm sure. Right. So at 6.43, he decides to call that detective neighbor of his to see
if he wouldn't mind going over and just checking on Sherry and the boys. Chris was only about five
minutes away, but he just could not wait. Something in his gut told him that the situation wasn't
right. Now this detective, whose name is Detective Barlow, gets up out of bed, he gets dressed, and
he radios for backup. I mean, he was not messing around. He knew about the threats. And after all,
he was the one that put the camera up. So even he was going over there to that home thinking
he might find something awful. He was at the Coleman's front door by 6.51 with another officer.
This is just minutes after Chris's call. And when they entered the home, Detective Barlow said that
the one thing he will never forget in his life is the overwhelming smell of spray paint. As they
walked farther into the house, they saw that the walls were covered in this like Manson family type
scroll across the walls in red paint. It just read, fuck you, bitch. Punished. Fuck you. I'm
always watching you. And as Detective Barlow climbs the stairs to the second floor, the wall
leading up the stairs is lined with a message that makes his heart sink more than any other.
It says, you have paid. And he first goes to Garrett's room. And that's where he sees the
little boy dead in his own bed. And his bed and him have been covered in more spray paint. By the
time Chris had arrived back at the home, Detective Barlow could hear him downstairs asking what was
going on. And so he went down to meet him and take him outside. And he had to be the one to tell him
his friend, his neighbor, that his family didn't make it. And Chris curled up in the fetal position
and cried in the front lawn. And he stayed there for about 20 minutes until the detectives could
get him to leave with them and go back to the station for a formal interview. Meanwhile, there
was a full army that descended on the crime scene. There were 25 season cops, CSI with
warrants to search everything in the home, computers, phones, like every single inch of the
place. But even before the CSI people got there, Detective Barlow noticed some things that really
stood out to him. Oh God, like what? Well, like the fact that the basement window was open. And
it was, it was weird. It was two things. It looked like maybe somebody had come in that way.
But that window and a couple of others were unlocked, which if you have somebody leaving you
threatening notes at your home, you think you would lock up your home before you go to bed and
especially before you're going to leave your wife and kids at home, right? Yeah, definitely. Well,
also when Chris had come home, Detective Barlow told him his family didn't make it. And Chris
didn't ask any questions. The cops in the scene thought they would have to try and like physically
restrain him from going upstairs and trying to get to his family. But he didn't even try. He
didn't want to know what happened or how they died. Or if the guy was still in the house when
Detective Barlow came over, nothing, like he just got there and cried. Yeah, that's definitely
strange. But we've said it before, you never know how you're going to react in the face of tragedy
like this. Oh, totally. And these are just small little red flags that are starting to pop up.
But as the detectives dig deeper and deeper into the Coleman's life, these red flags start to mean
a lot more. Now, once they get to looking at the actual crime scene and the bodies themselves,
all members of the family had been strangled to death. It was very personal. And Sherry's death
was particularly violent. You could tell that she had put up a fight because she had two black eyes.
So this is what brings up another red flag. In Chris's interview, when they bring him
into the station shortly after he gets there, he asks for a blanket because he's cold. And the
detectives in the room, there were two of them, swear that it was warm in the room, but they get
him a blanket anyways. And when they get him this blanket, the only place he wraps up are his forearms,
where later we see that he has bruises and scratches that it seemed like he would have
gotten in a struggle and seemed like he was trying to hide when they were in that very small room
together. Now, Chris says he got the scratches from being on his roof and taking down a satellite
dish just the day before. So let's say for argument's sake that this is just really bad luck. We've
heard plenty of stories of people who have had really bad luck on a really bad day and
nothing goes in their favor. It wasn't Sherry's fighting back in her black eyes that were the
most damning things about how their bodies were found. It was the fact that their bodies were
cold and rigor mortis was already starting to set in by the time police arrived, which means,
according to the medical examiner, that they likely were murdered between three o'clock
and four o'clock in the morning, which is well before Chris even left the house for the gym.
When detectives are in the interrogation room with Chris, now they have him in there for six
hours and they actually start to kind of put their speculation out there to see how he'll react,
and this is what he says.
But I am, I am doubting that she was alive when he left this moment. Physically,
what we have are different ways to tell how long a person's been deceased,
that was done, and what do you think that showed? I don't know. I guess the time frame when I was
gone. Listen, man, she wasn't alive when you left. She was alive. She was. She was laying right beside me.
We can go back and forth with this all day long, but the physical evidence doesn't lie.
She was, she was not alive when you left this morning. The children weren't alive when we left
this morning. Yes, they were. No, come on, Chris. They weren't. We got to get over this. Now, there's
reasons. There's reasons. And that's what we're, that's the point we're at. I want to hear the reasons.
Yeah, I'm stuck on that too. What on earth would be the reason for killing his whole family?
Well, that's what they really start to probe on. The detectives ask him if he's had any trouble in
his marriage. And Chris says, nothing that unusual. Most of their problems stemmed around
communication. And yes, the D word had come up before and they'd thrown it around,
but they were going to counseling and they were working through it and their marriage was awesome
and better. We kind of talked about the divorce a little bit. This last December. Yeah. And I went
to Joyce with it, told her about it, or Damian can't remember which one. And they knew about it.
They suggested that we meet with somebody and see if we could work out whatever it was. And really,
all it was was just communication, not communicating very well. Did you meet with somebody? Yeah,
Mike Shepard, the guy that's here downstairs in the lobby. And we've been meeting with him pretty
regularly and things have been pretty awesome. So according to Chris, like from his own mouth,
their marriage was awesome. And they were on the upswing doing really well. But this was not the
detective's first rodeo. And they asked, so to be clear, like no one was having an affair, did you
have any inappropriate relationships with anyone? And Chris is like, nah, we were great. But I
do have this female friend that I talked to a lot named Tara that you might want to talk to.
What? Yeah, what is right? So Chris basically says, I have this great friend. And we talk all
the time. And the cops are like, well, was it inappropriate? And he's like, maybe some of
them I wouldn't have wanted my wife to see, but I wouldn't call it an affair. We were just very,
very close. Well, as they're continuing to talk to Chris throughout the day, the police call
the police in Florida. Now remember, they're in Illinois, and they asked them to do a quick
interview of Tara because that's where she lived. And just make sure like everything's on the up
and up, there's nothing fishy happening there. Well, the investigator who went to her house was
expecting to like get their 20 minute interview head on her way. But she says as soon as Tara
opened her mouth, she knew there was so much more to this story. When Tara started talking,
it was quickly evident that they were so much more than friends. Tara tells the investigators
that she and Chris had become romantically involved. And they had been in a relationship
since like November, December. And anytime he would travel with Joyce Myers, he would fly her
out to whatever city they were in so that they could be together. She said Chris told her that
he had an unhappy marriage. And he would even send her pictures every night to prove that he
wasn't sleeping with his wife and he was going to bed alone in another room or on the couch.
And according to Tara, they had exchanged promise rings and even had a date set for their own
wedding. That's bold, very bold. Especially when you have another wife and kids that you're
not even divorced from. So yeah, Tara turns over her Blackberry and her computer to police. And it
was filled with files and emails and pictures of her and Chris and like racy pictures of just Chris
or her and Chris that they had like sent to each other. And in total, there were several
hundred images that were explicit and depict some form of nudity with one or both of them.
Now remember, they had a warrant for Chris's laptop and cell phone as well,
and they find a ton of these same images and even more. He even had videos of them together in
one of the trips he took like in Hawaii in very compromising conditions. Now, even though it's
clear Chris is lying about the affair, lying about when his family was killed, they still
don't have enough to arrest him. So after six hours of interviewing and of him giving a DNA
sample and him giving a writing sample, Chris is released. But that was just the beginning
of the investigation. As they begin to dig deeper into Chris's computer, recovering deleted files,
they find the most incriminating thing wasn't the racy pictures. It was the fact that every one
of those threatening emails from November had come from Chris's own computer. And this explains
why after the note started showing up in his mailbox and the neighbor put up the camera,
no one was ever seen lurking around the neighborhood. There was never anyone else,
and it was Chris all along. Again, the deeper they looked, the more answers they found as to why
this all started in the first place. On November 4th of 2008, there were some writings from Chris
on his computer. He talks about how that day was the day that changed his life forever,
how he had exchanged promise rings on this day with Tara, and he had even wrote down the name
of their future child if they were to have a girl, they were going to name her Zoe. And this is on
November 4th, just nine days later is when those threatening emails start to begin. And this is the
definition of premeditation. For months, he knew he was going to kill his family. He set up an elaborate
lie about this crazed stalker to try and frame a fictional person. But there were too many
holes in his story, and he was easily found out. There were other pieces of evidence that they
used to build a circumstantial trial against Chris as well. There were text messages from
Sherry that she had sent to a friend saying that Chris wanted a divorce, and he had told her
that her and the boys were standing in the way of his happiness and his job. But Sherry refused
to leave, and she was fighting for her marriage, and this would end up costing her her life.
It only takes one person to file for divorce. You don't have to kill your family just to get
out to be with someone else. Oh, by the way, not just someone else, something I didn't mention
earlier is that Tara was actually Sherry's best friend from high school. Oh, that changes things.
Yeah, but I mean to your point, you still, even if you're going to like betray your wife and be
with somebody else who was her friend, you don't, I don't understand how your sons play into that.
But to go, the next logical step is killing everybody. Exactly. So it doesn't make sense.
To go back to your original question, divorce wasn't an option for Chris because of his job.
Basically, what the investigators thought and what the prosecution would later put forward
is that he knew when working for Joyce Meyer's ministry that in that evangelical Christian
world, he would lose his job if he got divorced, and especially if he left his wife for another woman.
Now, he might be able to keep his job if she had left him, but that was clearly not an option,
because Sherry did not want to leave. She was not willing to file for divorce, and she wanted to
keep working on it. So if he wanted to keep his job, and he wanted to get rid of Sherry in a way
that would get him sympathy and not make him look like the bad guy, then the only way would be for
her to like die in a tragic way. So this is probably when he starts plotting this whole
scenario in his head. Now, the investigators got one more piece of evidence in their back pocket
before they were ready to charge Chris with his family's murder. They were able to match the
handwriting samples from the messages left on the walls in spray paint, and they found a receipt
for that red spray paint that Chris had bought just a couple of months earlier. When they first
brought him in for that first interrogation, he said he didn't have any spray paint in the house,
and that if he did, it would be very, very old. So this is just another lie.
So they were able to match the handwriting in the spray paint and his handwriting sample?
Yes, that's what the prosecution, the detectives say. We did a Patreon episode on the Rebecca
Sahau case, and they were trying to determine if quote, writing on the wall was hers or not.
And there was like this big long argument and ended up getting thrown out, I think, because
writing on a vertical surface versus a horizontal surface isn't a fair comparison.
Right. And even like the size of the writing, writing on a piece of paper is so different. At
least they said in the Rebecca Sahau case, so different than if you were to actually like
spray paint a wall. And that was such an interesting case because I mean, she was found hanging from
a balcony with like her hands tied behind her legs, and they thought maybe she wrote this note,
maybe they didn't. And they got an expert to say basically that you can't make the comparison,
and it's inconclusive. And I think that kind of plays into this because we've said this before,
when it comes to expert testimony at a trial, you want to believe these experts are impartial,
but a lot of the times people will go shopping for experts and they will look for somebody who
wants to tell them exactly what they want to hear. So while they use this in trial, I wouldn't 100%
hang my hat on it. So with all of this, they finally have enough to charge him and put him on trial
for the premeditated murder of his wife and his two young boys. They make the jury watch blurred
videos of him and Tara naked in Hawaii, him joking around about how they were being so bad. And they
make them listen to a video of them in the shower with Chris saying that he's doing something that
he's never done with any other woman, but they wouldn't actually show the video because it was
so provocative. And they show pictures, they bring up the handwriting sample, they talk about the
bodies and how they were likely dead hours before he even left the house. They bring up the computer
and how everything was written from that computer, all of those threatening emails, the email address
had originated on that computer. And they kept hammering at the motive that he couldn't leave
his wife for another woman without losing his job. So he had to get rid of his wife and his kids.
The threats start after Tara, quote, changed his life. And they also showed that Chris had told
Tara he was giving his wife divorce papers on May 5th, the same morning that they were murdered.
But he'd never visited a lawyer. He'd never had any papers drawn up. And his plan was likely
to kill them all alone, which this is very reminiscent for me of the Scott Peterson trial,
where if you remember, he Scott Peterson told Amber, like, this is the first Christmas I'm
going to spend without my wife. And then she ends up going missing. And now this guy, Chris,
is telling Tara, I'm delivering her divorce papers that he knew he'd never drawn up and he wasn't
going to deliver on May 5th. And she ends up dead on May 5th. Now Chris's defense wasn't super strong.
I couldn't find any actual trial transcripts. But you'll learn later that he believes his defense
didn't do a great job. Apparently, there were some other medical examiners who said, listen,
time of death isn't an exact science. You kind of have to use this range. And that person said
that it's possible that his family died at 547. I'm sorry. And he left at 543. That seems a little
bit outlandish. Yeah, that's like four minutes. Like, so I agree. But again, I don't think they
actually ever brought this up in trial. I think most of the stuff that they were hammering on was
him saying that, oh, I was planning on leaving Tara. My marriage wasn't so bad. I wouldn't have gotten
fired if I got a divorce. Like, they really hammered it on the motive and not so much on refuting
all of the science. During the trial, he also said that someone else could have used his computer.
But there was a video testimony from Joyce Myers who even testified that in all the time that she
spent with him, she had never seen anyone else use his computer. There was really nothing working
in his favor for this trial. But here's the crazy part. When the jurors all went to deliberate,
they said they all felt in their gut that he had done it. But they don't feel like they proved it
beyond a reasonable doubt. So when they took their initial vote, it was five to seven in favor of
acquittal. Whoa, I know. But they did another look through all of the evidence. And there was one
picture that actually changed their mind. And it wasn't a particularly vulgar one. Just a picture
of Tara and Chris together, like smiling or kissing or something. But on the back was the date.
There was like this thumbnail time stamp of when it was taken. And it was taken on October 21st
of 2008. Now, all through the trial, Chris insisted that the affair started in November
or December. So to the jurors, this was concrete proof that he was lying. And they said, you know,
we all felt like if he could lie about this, then he can lie about everything else. So after they
saw that time stamp, they all voted again and found him guilty on May 5th, 2011, two years to the day.
To the day after his family was murdered. Oh, full body chills. Justice. Thank you. Well,
maybe justice. So Chris is now appealing his conviction. And his appeal just got released
in April of 2018. And I got the opportunity to read through it all the way. And there's
really four points that he's appealing on. And the first one is that picture. So he said that the
thumbnail time stamps were actually not submitted as a part of evidence, just the pictures were.
So there was no opportunity to bring up the time stamp or the date stamp and refute it.
So he said the jury should not have considered that. Well, right, because you can only bring up stuff
that was brought up in trial. But what else was there? The second point he brings up is he said
he had ineffective assistance of counsel. And he brings up a couple of points for this. He said,
the first thing that shows he had ineffective assistance of counsel was their failure for them
to object to not letting those thumbnails with the time stamp and the date stamp in them. The
second point he says is his lawyer failed to introduce any evidence which would contradict the
theory of motive. And he said that there were a couple of points that the CEO of Joyce Myers
Ministry was a divorced person. So why on earth would he not be able to get divorced if that was
the motive that he would lose his job when the CEO of the company is divorced? The second point
he makes is he said at the end of the day, when he found out his family had been murdered, he actually
resigned from Joyce Myers Ministry. And so again, if the motive is that he didn't want to lose his
job, he gave up his job because he lost his family. The third reason he says that he deserves an
appeal in a new trial was the failure to introduce fingerprints and shoe prints into evidence. So
apparently there were some unknown footprints, unknown fingerprints, maybe some unknown DNA at
the scene that was never brought up. And his lawyer didn't bring it up in trial. And he said he knew
about it all the time. And it was like a strategic move on his lawyer's part. But looking back,
he said it doesn't make any sense. Now, during the initial trial, part of the state's theory is
there was this window in his basement that was open. And they say that Chris tried to stage this
break in by opening the window. But according to Chris and this appeal, there were fingerprints
and a palm print found on that window on the outside that didn't match Chris. There were also
shoe prints underneath the window that didn't match any of the shoes that Chris had turned over.
Now, the appeal doesn't say anything about it being the wrong size. So what I'm very interested in
is, okay, but it could also be you just didn't give them the shoes that you wore or is it actually
somebody who doesn't match you. The final point that he makes in this appeal is the failure to
confront or offer a rebuttal to the expert concerning DNA. Now, Sheri had some DNA under her
fingernails. And the experts who testified said that Chris and the sons could not be ruled out as
a match because there was like a partial sample. And he said all the stuff that they've learned
about this in the last nine or so years, a partial sample isn't a full sample. And he said if it
would have been explained to the jury initially, they would have understood that it was much more
likely or at least as likely that it could have been someone else and not necessarily Chris.
So he has this appeal out. Lord knows how long it's going to take to go through an appeal. The
court system takes super long. I think he brings up some interesting points. I don't know that it
changes my mind. I mean, he makes some good points in the appeal, but stepping back and looking at
the spray paint purchases, the shady mistress, like it's just staging all those emails.
It just seems like all signs point to him. I totally agree. Like in my gut, I have way more
of a gut feeling he did it than even I had about Scott Peterson. But I don't know if that's because
there's so much more out about Scott Peterson. But I don't know. Everything he did was so fishy.
The emails being on your computer is something that I cannot get over at all ever. And the fact
that like the notes started showing up at your house, but no one was ever caught on camera.
I just, what I would love is so in my gut, I think he did it. But I don't know if you knew
undisclosed just started a Patreon. So go them. Everyone should go support them. I obviously
signed up. What they're doing for Patreon is they're actually taking other podcasts that they
listened to and other episodes of people who are going through some kind of court process.
And they look at it from like a lawyer's point of view. And I know Robbie listens to our show.
So I would love if undisclosed actually covered this case. Not so much did he do it,
but does he actually have a shot at an appeal from what he's going at? Because I am like
a little terrified that maybe he makes some good points. And Chris isn't alone in his fight.
His parents believe him blindly. And their interviews actually that I watched were painful
because it was almost like they were blaming Sherry for everything that happened.
And there was like one part of this little snippet where his mom remembers the first
time that he brought her home. And she's like, meh, she wasn't anything special.
Like you don't say that about like the mother of your grandchildren who's been murdered.
And then are you ready to flip out? I don't know. Okay, so his parents are asked, well,
if you think he didn't do it because it's just not his character, which is just their argument
the whole time. It's not in his character. What do you think about the affair? It was really deceitful.
And as pastors, do you agree with him cheating on his wife? Like if he can be so deceitful and lie,
and like that's in his character, couldn't this other thing be? And his dad basically,
not even basically, he comes out and he says, Tara was meeting needs that Sherry wasn't taking care
of. And he says, as a man, as a man, you have desires and you have the need to be respected.
And if your wife isn't respecting you, you're going to find that respect somewhere else.
And Sherry wasn't doing her job as a wife. Wow. I am actually speechless.
I like my face got hot when he started talking. And of course, they like don't show his wife
while he's like saying all this, but he's basically saying that his wife wasn't meeting
his sexual needs and wasn't obeying him or whatever he believes a wife should do. So
in his mind, like, yeah, it's totally fine that he was running around this other woman.
So deep breaths. They're totally behind him. They have, there's a Facebook group. There's
like 300 people in it. There's a website where he actually, he still blogs. It's like a whole thing.
Wild. Oh, and there was something else that I found interesting, but I really don't even know
where to fit it in because it probably means nothing. But there was a naked picture of Tara
found on Chris's dad's computer. Oh, which I don't love. That's weird. Right. So along with his
blind parents, I will say there's one other like crazy out of left field theory. A person who
thinks he's innocent is an old Montana cop that's retired. He's also an author who thinks that a
serial killer has murdered Chris's family. And listen, I love far out theories, but this one is
just a little bit too much. This guy wrote a book called, it's me, Edward Edwards, the serial killer
you've never heard of. Oh, I've heard of that book. I have too. And so it is like the kooky est.
So this guy believes that Edward Edwards is a killer, a serial killer that has been killing
since the 40s through the 90s. And he thinks he's responsible. He's like the answer to everything.
So he thinks he killed Jon Benet. He thinks he killed the Black Dahlia. He thinks he's the Atlanta
child murderer, the abduction of Adam Walsh. He thinks he's the Zodiac killer. I say he'll
probably have to update it because I'm sure he thought he was the Golden State killer too.
Yeah. So I mean, he thinks this guy is everybody, which is like, that's like a nice easy fix. It
would be nice to say like, Oh, these, all these unsolved murderers are the responsibility of
this one crazy guy. But I think it's a little unlikely. Yeah. Yeah. That book is from what
I've heard, not very reputable. Right. So he is like on team Chris's Innocent. Like I said,
Chris runs a blog, which is kind of interesting to read. Most of it is him like trying to have
some kind of ministry through prison, him reaching out to people. What I found interesting is I read
through the blog post and it's not super old. It just started in 2017. But there's barely any talk
of his wife and his sons or even really his case. To me, I would talk about how I miss them and I
love them. And there's like rising up to tragedy. Yeah. Garrett is mentioned one time and Gavin
is mentioned twice out of all of the posts. It's just very, very bizarre. So this is one that I
will kind of keep an eye on and see what happens with his appeal. That process takes a long time,
but I encourage everyone else to set up a Google alert as well. And we actually have like, there's
mad amount of evidence in this case. So if you want to go to our blog, crimejunkiepodcast.com,
or check us out on Instagram, crimejunkiepod. We have pictures of like the writing on the wall.
We have pictures of the text messages Shari was sending her friend and the emails that he was
sending as this fake person. So tons and tons of evidence to check out in this case, which is a
little bit more like it's kind of unusual, but way more than we get in other cases. So definitely
go check that out. And Britt, if people want to tweet at us their theories, did he, didn't he?
How can they get us on Twitter? You can follow us on Twitter at crimejunkiepod and on Instagram
at crimejunkiepodcast. And if you want more content, you can always get at us at Patreon.
We mentioned one of our bonus episodes in this show. We did a mini on the murder
or suicide, depending on how you look at it, of Rebecca Zahao. That's at the $20 level,
but we have extra episodes at five at 10. Just crazy amounts of content now. Patreon.com
slash crimejunkie. And we will see you next week for a brand new episode.
Crimejunkie is written and hosted by me. All of our sound production and editing comes from
Britt Preywatt. And all of our music, including our theme comes from Justin Daniel. Crimejunkie
is an audio check production. So what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?