Crime Junkie - MURDERED: The Watts Family
Episode Date: December 24, 2018The most recent family annihilator case in the U.S. was incredibly heartbreaking and had every American checking their TVs and smartphones regularly for updates. In this week's episode, we give you ou...r take on the case of Chris Watts who murdered his wife Shanann and their two young daughters, 4-year-old Bella and 3-year old Celeste. 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-the-watts-family/  Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, Crime Junkies, I'm Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Britt, you good girl?
No, I hate this week so much,
researching the case that we're doing this week
absolutely sucked for me.
Okay, but we did do it for a reason.
Yeah, okay, so we're doing the Watts family
and you freaking Crime Junkies
have been sending me links to this case
since it exploded onto the headlines in August.
Yeah, did I tell you I counted how many times
it got suggested just in our form?
You didn't.
Over 35 times, people would submit it to our website
and that's not even counting the Facebook messages,
the Twitter messages, the Instagram messages.
I was just gonna say, the amount that people
actually go through the proper channels
to request a case is very slim.
Most of them are like DMs on Facebook and Instagram,
but it has been nonstop for four months
and no lie, as much as people sent it to me,
I didn't look into this case at all.
Like I knew the very bare minimum about it
because I knew it was an awful case.
And all I-
Well, and to be fair, we were also researching
other cases so we could cover them here.
Well, yeah, and that's what I'm saying.
All I do is talk about awful cases every week
so I wasn't ready to dive in.
But I thought, hey, since everyone is requesting this,
maybe the Crime Junkies will actually wanna hear about it.
Maybe they know what will make for a good episode,
but the more I researched,
the less I wanted to tell this story.
It just, it sucked and it's so sad and I'm bummed out.
So get ready, everybody, to have your week ruined.
And Merry Christmas, I guess.
Yeah, Merry Christmas, Crime Junkies, you asked for it.
Well, it's a cover commentary.
This story is super recent, probably the most recent story we've ever covered because
it took place over the summer and just came to a conclusion in November of 2018.
This all took place here in the US in the state of Colorado where the Watts family resided
in their $400,000 home.
I feel like we begin so many stories this way, but from the outside, they looked like
they had it all.
And I think this goes back to our rule that you never really know anyone ever.
But I think we also need a new rule, social media lies.
So there's Chris Watts, his wife, Shanann Watts, and their two young daughters, Bella
who's four and CeCe who's three.
If you were to look at Shanann's Facebook, you would think that they had everything.
A happy marriage, a beautiful home, beautiful kids, successful careers, Chris in the oil
industry and Shanann in a multi-level marketing company.
And her Instagram and Facebook showed them traveling all over together, taking trips
to San Diego and Vegas and Puerto Vallarta.
It seemed idyllic.
Here is Shanann back in 2018 talking about her husband.
And I got a friend request from Chris.
I was in a really, really, really bad place.
And I got a friend request from Chris on Facebook and I was like, oh, what the heck, I'm never
going to meet him, except one thing led to another and eight years later, we have two
kids.
We live in Colorado and he's the best thing that has ever happened to me.
You know, I think it's Shanann's social media that made this case so tragic for me.
Their deaths aren't any worse than that of the Coleman family or the Longo family.
But because there is so much of a social media presence for Shanann, I felt like as I researched
this case, I got to know her.
I got to know her kids.
I knew their voices, their mannerisms, like the little things that made them smile.
So it became so much more incomprehensible for me that someone would want to hurt them.
So again, from the outside, everything is great.
In 2018, Shanann finds out some great news.
She is pregnant with their third child.
And again, because she has such a big social media presence, she records her telling Chris
the news.
She actually turns to the camera and shows that she's wearing a shirt that says, oops,
we did it again.
And in this video, Chris walks into the room and then you can hear his reaction.
I like that shirt.
Really?
Really.
That's awesome.
So pink means?
That's just the test.
I know.
The pink is going to be girls.
I don't know.
Just the test.
That's awesome.
Guess when you want to see what happens?
Wow.
Interesting.
Yeah.
I feel like there's something in her that's a little bit nervous to tell him and maybe
his reaction.
Yeah.
Like, she definitely didn't like, which like, neither of us have had this moment, but like,
you think she'd say something instead of just stand there, but I mean, maybe they've been
talking about it for a long time and we're like really trying.
I don't know.
It just seems.
Well, and that's, that's, you know, how Chris ends it.
He says, I guess when you want it to happen, it does.
And then he just says, wow.
So maybe they had been trying, maybe not, but did he really want it to happen?
Because what the outside world didn't know is that their relationship was very strained.
Three years earlier, the couple had filed for bankruptcy because they were over $480,000
in debt.
Whoa.
Yeah.
A lot of money and the couple was drifting further and further apart.
After that pregnancy announcement, Shannon and Chris's marital troubles were worsened.
He wasn't abusive or violent, but he became very cold and distant toward her.
She actually texted a friend saying that she was angry and sad and scared at the idea of
having a third baby with somebody who seemed like he had no interest in having another
kid.
He wouldn't even go with her to her ultrasound appointments.
At the end of June, the same summer, Shanann took her girls on a trip back to North Carolina
to visit family.
She would spend the next six weeks there with her parents.
While she was there, she confided a little in her mom about what was going on.
She was buying self-help books for herself and for Chris.
She would mail them to Chris and Chris would just throw them away.
But even more telling were her text messages back to Chris who was still in Colorado living
what Shanann called the bachelor life.
And here's one of her text messages, quote, I try to give you space, but while you're
working and living the bachelor life, I'm carrying our third and fighting with our two
kids daily, trying to work and make money.
It's not hard texting love you and miss you.
If you don't mean it, then I get it, but we need to talk.
I keep looking at my phone all night and no response from you.
Like seriously, we didn't just start dating yesterday, we've been together eight years
and have two and a half kids together.
As the summer drew on though, things did not get better for Shanann and Chris.
After Shanann had gotten back from North Carolina, but just before she left for a work trip in
Arizona, this would have been like August 7th or 8th, Shanann had texted a friend of hers
and she said, quote, Chris told me last night he's scared to death about this third baby
and he's happy with just Bella and Celeste and he doesn't want another baby.
And her friend responds, you know, trying to be comforting.
He's just scared.
Everything will be fine.
Once the baby comes.
Right.
Like maybe it's just like jitters to become a parent of three.
Yeah.
I mean, you're, it's no longer a man-to-man.
This is his own coverage.
It can be scary, but Shanann replies back, no, he's changed.
And I don't know who he is in one of those texts.
The friend kind of suggested that maybe Chris was having an affair, but Shanann Watts told
the friend that she actually confronted Chris about this and he absolutely denied it.
And I don't think Shanann even truly grasped the gravity of her own words.
If she would have, I don't think she would have ever gone on that trip.
I think she would have taken her kids, left their home and never looked back.
But there was no way she could have seen what was coming.
Shanann went to Arizona from August 10th to August 12th.
And while she was gone, Chris was watching over the girls on his own.
Shanann obviously had suspicions about her husband cheating on her.
She admitted to a friend in a text message that she actually confronted Chris about it.
We know that.
So she was keeping an eye on her bank records and she was surprised to see that while she
was gone, there was a $62 dinner charge at a place called the lazy dog bar and grill
on Saturday night.
When she asked Chris about this, he said that he had left the girls with a sitter and went
to a Colorado Rockies game with some friends and then they all went out for dinner after
dinner and he got a salmon and beer, which is why it was expensive.
But she even called him out and was like, this doesn't make sense.
The next day, this was Sunday, August 12th, Shanann was due to arrive home very late in
the evening.
After Chris put the girls to bed that night, he said Bella came out of her bed twice looking
for her mom, but she hadn't gotten back yet.
So Chris tucked Bella back into bed and he told her that she could see her mom when she
woke up.
Bella all the while never knowing that that time wouldn't come for her.
Shanann ended up returning to Colorado in the very early morning hours of the 13th.
A friend of Shanann's named Nicole Atkinson dropped her off at her home around 1.40 in
the morning and that would be the last time that anyone ever saw Shanann alive.
The next morning was like any other to those around Chris.
Chris went to work, he acted totally normal at work, no alarm bells were raised, but maybe
if he had been more invested in Shanann's pregnancy, maybe if he would have gone with
her to any of those ultrasound appointments, he would have known that she had an appointment
that morning of the 13th and when she didn't show up to it, it would set off alerts in
the minds of her friends and it would ring a bell that Chris could never unring.
That morning, the same friend Nicole who had dropped Shanann off just hours before was
really concerned when Shanann wasn't answering her text messages, more concerned when Shanann
didn't show up for her ultrasound appointment, and even more when Shanann missed a business
meeting.
So by 12.10 in the afternoon, Nicole went to Shanann's home.
Nicole knocks, she rings the doorbell, but there's no answer, no commotion in the house
even if Shanann slept in and missed her appointments and missed her meetings, she would be up and
moving about with two young daughters, but the house was totally silent.
Nicole knew something was wrong.
She immediately called Chris and the Frederick Police Department, who dispatched an officer
to do a welfare check by 1.40 in the afternoon.
After the police arrived, Chris was not far behind them, and he gave permission to the
police to search his home, which was void of Shanann and her two little girls.
What was left behind though, Shanann's purse, Shanann's phone, her keys, and her car with
the children's car seats still inside.
All of this was strange since Chris said that Shanann's plan was to take the girls on a
play date that day.
Had they left and maybe come back and all their stuff was in the house, or was it possible
that they never left the house at all?
When police searched the home, it wasn't what was left behind that was most disturbing.
It's what was missing, the bed sheets on Chris and Shanann's bed.
It had been completely stripped and some of the sheets were found in their trash.
Now this is odd, but it's not criminal.
The next day on August 14, the CBI Colorado Bureau of Investigation joins the case.
This is the same day that Chris got in front of local news cameras and pled for his family's
safe return.
I want, I want them wherever they're at, like I have no inclination of where they're at
right now.
Like I've exhausted like every friend that I know of and every friend that I have has
called friends that Shanann has that maybe I didn't know about.
And it's just like, there's, it's like, it's vanished.
Like she's not like when I got home yesterday, it was like a ghost town.
Like she wasn't here.
Kids weren't here.
I have no idea like where they went.
And it doesn't, if just earth shattering, I don't feel like this is even real right
now.
It's like a nightmare that I just can't wake up from.
It's a little hard to hear the reporter, but the news reporter asks, when did you learn
that they weren't here?
I guess, well, I had texted her a few times and called her, I didn't get a response, which
that was a little off.
And then her friend Nicole showed up about a little afternoon I could see on the doorbell
camera and I was like, Hey, what's going on?
I can't get a hold of Shanann.
And that's when I was just like, all right, something's not right.
If she's not answering the door and said the car was here, it's like, I gotta go home.
And we got here, got inside and nobody was here, not nothing.
Here the reporter asks, I read that Shanann hadn't taken the girls to school.
Was that unusual?
Yeah, because like Bella was going to start kindergarten next, next Monday.
And they, they were just getting ready to start, start back again.
At this point, the reporter interjects, you have a beautiful family.
What is going through your mind when you think something could be wrong?
Like, I, I was trying to get home as fast as I can.
And I was blowing through stoplights.
I was pulling through everything, just trying to get home as fast as I can because none
of this made sense.
Like if she wasn't here, like where did she go?
Like once I got here, it was like, all right, who can I call?
Who do I know that she could be with right now?
If she went to a friend's house, where could she be staying?
And we went through everybody.
I mean, just everything in my, in my contact list and her, her friend's contact list and
nothing has come up.
Everybody has said like they haven't heard from her either.
I'm just hoping right now that she's somewhere safe and maybe she's just, she's there.
But right now it's just like, if she's vanished, like I want her back so bad.
I want those kids back so bad.
Now here the reporter makes a comment.
He said, you know, your first thought has to be where are they?
You want them back, but your second thought is people think that you have something to
do with this.
Yeah, I mean, nothing, nothing, everybody's going to have their own opinion on, on anything
like this.
I just want them people to know that I want my family back.
Like I want them safe and I want them here.
Like this house is not the same.
I mean, I, last night was traumatic.
Last night was, I can't really stay in this house again, like with nobody here.
And last night I wanted, I wanted that knock on the door.
I wanted to see that.
I wanted to see this kids running, running, just, just barrel rush me and just give me
a hug and knock me on the ground.
But that didn't happen.
The reporter asks specifically Chris about the cameras and the locks in the house because
everything seemed to have been locked and they don't have any idea what's on the cameras
in the home.
They have like a ring doorbell.
We have camera there, neighbor has a camera.
We, I mean, everything was, everything's checked out.
Do you have a camera inside?
Doorbell.
Only, only right there.
The neighbor has one over there.
All the doors around the house locked?
Front door was locked.
The garage door was unlocked, but that, that's normal for, like when she comes in the house,
she leaves it unlocked.
So she can come in and out just in case, you know, did you get in the garage door, but
the back sliding door was locked as well.
And finally they asked, did you see your kids?
Did you see your wife?
I had the kids over the weekend.
Did you see your wife when she got home?
She got home really late about 2am from the airport when she got back from Arizona.
Did you wake up and say, you know, I saw her when she got in, but it was really quick just
because it was 2am in the morning, but I saw the kids in the monitor before I left and
that was it.
Britt, from this whole interview, I know you had a chance to watch it, right?
Yes, I did.
Do you know what I find most interesting and I don't know if it stuck out to you as well?
You haven't told me and there's a couple things that stuck out, but I'd love to hear
your take on it.
Something that he said, it's the fact that this is literally day one for his, like one
full day when his family's missing and he isn't wearing a wedding ring.
I didn't notice that.
Yeah.
I first thought like maybe he was one of the guys that just, it didn't, like it wasn't
part of his daily routine, but if you go back and watch old videos on Shanann's Facebook
and Instagram and pictures, he's always wearing a ring.
He's also always wearing this like bracelet, Shanann had lupus and he would wear this bracelet
in support of that.
Was it like a Livestrong type bracelet?
I don't know exactly what it looked like, but it was like purple, I believe.
Okay.
So probably like a Livestrong type bracelet.
Yeah.
But day one, they're missing.
The bracelet's not there and his wedding ring is not there.
You said he worked in the oil fields though, right?
He did.
So he wasn't worked the day before.
It's possible that he had taken it off.
Yeah.
Cause like my dad was a construction worker and like basically never wore his ring unless
my mom asked him to because they were going somewhere or doing something basically because
it was like a safety precaution.
No.
I totally get that.
And again, not saying that it's, he was like, Oh, I killed my family by ring.
It's just a weird thing that I was really surprised by and it just like stuck out to
me.
Also, how loud was he gulping?
It was kind of loud.
It was, it was like a good cartoon kind of tip from a lot.
It was very strange to me.
It's how I feel like I sound when I drink on the podcast.
Yes.
So Brett, I am sure you saw that your favorite statement analysis blog did a little blurb
on Chris Watts.
So do you want to dive into that a little?
So one of the first things that statement analysis.com points out is Chris's statements
saying, I want my family back.
I want that knock on the door.
I want to see the kids.
I just want them home so bad.
And something that statement analysis.com mentions is that those are probably pretty
truthful statements.
Okay.
When Chris says these things, he is realizing what he's done truly and the extent of it
to some point and probably regrets that he killed his family and would like to have them
back to not take back the action, but stop the regret.
I find it really interesting that the whole time he's saying things like the house is
empty.
The house isn't the same.
I don't like sleeping here.
It's all very self-centered.
Yeah.
It's not like I miss them.
He's talking about how, yeah, how it's, he's lonely, like that's the emotion he's experiencing
is loneliness.
Later on, he also says, I have no inclination of where they are right now.
I have no idea where they went.
And something that stuck out to me and to statement analysis was that no one really
says they don't have an idea and they're still being truthful.
I can say I have no idea what I'm making for dinner, but in the back of my mind, I'm
like, well, I have chicken in the fridge.
I have asparagus in the fridge.
I have some idea of what I'm making for dinner.
Right?
Sure.
That's basically the tactic that Chris is unwittingly exposing right now.
I have no idea is very drastic.
He probably has some idea and in this case, he knows the actual truth.
He also uses the past tense.
Did you notice that?
At some point, I recall when they're talking about his girls and he's like asked to explain
them.
He talks about how they were supposed to start school.
They were going to start school, which kind of presupposes that they aren't going to,
right?
Right.
Right.
And then the last thing that statement analysis touches on, which was like echoing for me
is when Watts said, I'm not sure if they're safe somewhere, just huddled up somewhere
or if they're in trouble.
Why does that stick out?
He decides to lie.
He has the opportunity to say, I'm not sure and create some sort of almost plausible deniability,
but he flat out lies and says, I don't know when he knows because he's the one who put
them there.
Well, I mean, that's like picking it apart.
Obviously, this entire thing is a lie.
This analysis was written partially after his confession.
Yeah.
In body language the whole time, he's got his arms wrapped around himself.
He's very uncomfortable, very defensive.
Never good.
And during this interview, police are still inside searching his home, cadaver dogs and
all, but they're not just searching his home.
They noticed that in the early morning hours after Shanann had arrived home, Chris could
be seen on their video doorbell system backing his truck into the garage and it sat there
for a while while he was out of it before he got back in and drove away.
So police decide they need to know where Chris went that night.
By using the GPS on his truck, they recreated the path that Chris took on August 13th.
And it took them to Chris's work site, a large site owned by Anadarko Petroleum where
Chris was a field coordinator.
It's not so strange that Chris drove to work, but this is an investigator's first rodeo.
They searched the site by foot, by air, with drones, and it's with those drones that they
spot something very familiar.
And do you want to guess what it was?
Just tell me.
It was the bed sheet that matched the set found at the Watts home in the trash, the same set
that had once been on their bed and investigators knew that they were on the right track.
Just as they were finding this, thinking that they got their first real break, they bring
Chris in for questioning and that's when they would get another huge break in the case.
A woman who came forward to police saying she was Chris Watts' girlfriend.
A woman named Nicole Kessinger came forward to police and told them that she had been
a co-worker of Chris and they had been dating all summer.
She said that Chris told her about his family, but he said that he and Shanann were separated
and he was living in the basement until they got a divorce.
As Chris is being interrogated by police, they're slowly uncovering the details of this affair
with Nicole.
Though she would later tell the media that she barely knew Chris and the two had just
started dating and taking things slow, her internet search history and her text messages,
which by the way she deleted before coming forward to police, would tell a totally different
story.
On July 24th, Nicole was doing Google searches for the phrase, quote, man I'm having an
affair with says he will leave his wife, so search number one.
On August 4th, she is searching the internet for over two hours for wedding dresses and
on August 8th, she's searching Google for topics related to marrying your mistress.
After the murders, which we think happened on August 13th, there were hours worth of
searches on her computer for Shanann's name and quote, Ken Copp's trace text messages.
I never found out exactly what those text messages on her phone were that she deleted.
Clearly they probably were able to recover them, but I don't think this was any kind
of like conspiracy.
I don't think she was a co-conspirator, but I think she was trying to hide how obsessive
and involved she actually was with Chris Watts because I mean, I assume the public would
then kind of hold you slightly responsible even though she's not.
Yeah, let's look at Amber Fry from the Lacey Peterson case.
She was kind of crucified.
Okay, so here's kind of a strange thing that I wasn't going to ever really talk about,
but since you brought it up, I will.
Later on on her search history, they found out that she was like googling Amber Fry.
She was googling what kind of book deal Amber Fry got.
Oh my God.
Yeah, like first it was like the searches were like, did people hate Amber Fry?
Which like, okay, fine, check it out.
But then to like see how or if Amber Fry profited off of a family being murdered just
felt really gross.
Yeah.
So even if police, like they never got the text messages, I assume they did.
We don't know what they say.
They didn't need the text messages.
They had Chris's own handwriting.
And in a July 3rd card for her birthday, Chris wrote to her, quote, big things will happen
this year.
Dreams will come true.
That smile, that stare, that laugh, that giggle gets me every time.
You are truly an amazing, inspirational and electric woman that takes my breath away every
time I see you.
You are wonderful.
Don't ever stop being you.
And in another note that same month, but on the 30th, Chris hand writes to her, Nikki.
Wow.
Where do I even start?
The first day I saw you, you took my breath away.
The first day I had the guts to talk to you, I got lost in those stunning eyes.
The first day we hung out in the park together, I knew I was addicted.
The first time we kissed, I knew I had met the most amazing, unique and electric woman
ever.
We have a lot of firsts together, Nikki.
And I want to keep having them with you.
And then he puts in quotes all night till the sun comes back.
I want to love, want to love, want to love you like that.
Love, Chris.
And as he's being interviewed by police, he can't deny the strain in his marriage.
And he didn't deny it.
Back at Chris's work site, though, the search was concentrated around that bed sheet.
And it didn't take long before searchers found what they were looking for.
Shanann, Bella and CeCe.
Bella and CeCe had been dumped in oil tanks.
And this is where the story just gets so rough for me is talking about his little girls.
Their bodies were placed through this hatch that was only eight inches in diameter.
So Bella, who was the older of the two, had scratches all over her body from being shoved
through that hatch.
And she even had this tuft of hair that had been ripped from her head as he shoved her
in there.
And Shanann was found further away from the oil tank buried in a shallow grave.
And I assume it's because like to get to an oil tank, you have to like carry somebody
to put them in this hatch.
And he probably couldn't carry Shanann, who was like 130 pounds.
Shanann had been strangled with almost no signs of a struggle.
Just finger shaped bruises around her neck.
And I have to believe that she was either sleeping or unconscious somehow when she was
attacked because it takes two to four minutes for manual strangulation to kill a person.
And I cannot believe that she wouldn't have fought back.
And for the little girls, the girls had been smothered by their killer's bare hands.
And Cici, like her mom, looked as though she put up no fight at all, but Bella, on the
other hand, apparently had signs that she had tried to fight for her life.
And at this point, there's no question in police's mind, no question about who wrapped
their hands around Shanann's neck for four minutes.
No question about who used their bare hands to hold down two little girls, just four and
three, to smother them.
It was their own father, their father who was supposed to protect them, their father who
was supposed to love them, and the father that Bella sang.
My daddy is a hero, he helps me grow up strong, he helps me snuggle too, he reads me books,
he ties my shoes, if you're a hero, flu and flu, my daddy, daddy, it love you.
I can't, like, I'm, like, especially as someone who sings something like that to her dad.
I can't, I can't imagine.
And this is where I, like, I posted on our Facebook, like, I am getting very emotional
now.
This is the first time I've ever written a script and was, like, crying while I was
writing it, and it's, this is what absolutely just, like, rips my guts out and makes this
case so hard to talk about.
And again, no worse than any other, like, family killer that we've ever talked about,
that there, there is something gut-wrenching about feeling like you've seen these kids
and you know these kids, and, you know, we always assume that, that these girls think
of their dads as their hero, but, like, hearing her say it, and thinking about these two little
girls, Bella especially, fighting for her life, probably so confused and so scared that
her hero was smothering her.
Oh my god.
So at 11.02 that night, approximately 69 hours after his wife returned home, and shortly
thereafter was strangled, Chris was arrested on suspicion of murdering his entire family.
After his arrest, Chris asked to speak with his dad, and he said, only after I speak with
him will I tell you the truth.
So police allowed this, obviously recording the entire thing, and what they heard, what
he said, was shocking and disgusting.
I don't want a protector.
What?
I don't want a protector.
You don't want a protector.
I don't know what else to say.
Can you hold her?
She hurt him.
Huh?
She hurt him.
Yeah.
And now, who on earth asked to stop murder her and earn?
What did they believe after that for all of that?
It's a little hard to hear, but the story Chris tells his dad, and then later tells
police, is that when Shanann got home that night, he told her he wanted to separate,
and she was very upset.
He said that he went down to the basement for a moment, just a moment, however long
a moment is to him.
And when he came back up to the room, he saw on the baby monitor that in one of the rooms,
his daughter was laying on the bed and had already started turning blue, and when he
toggled to the next room, he saw Shanann smothering their other daughter.
He said by the time he got to the room, his daughter was dead, and he quote, freaked out
and killed Shanann.
Uh, isn't this exactly the same story Chris Longo had?
I know it is right out of the same playbook.
Please tell me no one in the world believed him, right?
His parents actually believed him, but police didn't.
And to me, this is like even more of a sick act.
It's like not enough that you kill all three of them, but then you have to take one more
jab and disparage the wife that you already murdered by saying she was the one who killed
your children.
Chris stuck to his story for a long time until early November, when to avoid the death penalty,
Chris pled guilty to killing his two daughters and his wife and their unborn son, who Shanann
planned to name Nico.
Now Chris is living out his days in a Wisconsin prison where he is now getting love letters
from women.
And this is what I can't believe, but women are writing him saying, I want to get to know
you.
One of them said, literally, you're on my mind almost every single day since you were
in the news and people are like sending him pictures of themselves.
It's absolutely disgusting.
I don't know.
Clearly these women aren't right in the head either, but he's living in Wisconsin.
He's in prison.
He will be in prison for the rest of his life without parole.
And I hate Chris and I now hate all these women writing to him, but you know what I
kept dwelling on a little bit in this case is the psychology of a family annihilator.
I know we've said this in every one of the cases like this, like we just don't understand,
but I don't get it.
How does Chris, a guy with no history of violence, a guy who from all outward appearances was
a good dad?
How does this guy just wake up one day and kill his wife and kids and then go to work
like nothing freaking happened?
So I didn't want to just think about it.
I started to dig to see if I could find any kind of studies that have been done on these
kinds of people on family annihilators.
These aren't serial killers.
They're not spree killers.
And really we say, you know, they just snapped one day, but snapping isn't even really the
right term for them because no one really knows these people or their motivations or
what happens in their mind because they don't snap and then they're snapped forever.
It's almost as if they just do this thing and they can act like it never happened.
So I scoured so many sites and journals and articles and across the entire web.
I found one, one scholarly article done in the UK back in 2013 and that was it.
That's it.
But what they found was actually really interesting.
They used newspaper archives from 1980 to 2012 to try and identify characteristics of
these killers.
And here's what they found.
Family annihilators are dominantly male.
Of the 71 cases that they found, 59 were male.
Most of them tend to be in their 30s.
Most of them are employed with good jobs.
And the cause of the act is most commonly attributed to a family breakup or some kind
of financial strain.
And the strangest tidbit of all is that August is found to be the most common month in which
the killers kill their families.
Whoa.
So all of this fits the Watts case.
Even the month that it happened?
I know.
I was shocked at how accurate the study was.
The only thing that didn't fall into the norm for Chris is that they said that 81% of family
annihilators attempt suicide and he did not.
Much like Chris Longo, Chris Watts wanted to get rid of his family so he could just start
a new life.
So this study basically was able to break down family annihilators into four types of
categories.
The first is the self-righteous killer.
And according to this article, they said, quote, the killer seeks to locate blame for
his crimes upon the mother, who he holds responsible for the breakdown of their family.
This may involve the killer phoning his partner before the murder to explain what he's about
to do.
For these men, their breadwinner status is central to their idea of an ideal family.
So I don't think he falls into that category.
The second one is disappointed and quote, this killer believes his family has let him
down or has acted in a way to undermine or destroy his vision of ideal family.
An example may be a disappointment that children are not following the traditional religious
or cultural customs of the father.
End quote.
Again, this doesn't 100% fit for me.
No.
The third type of family annihilators is anomic.
In these cases, the family has become firmly linked in the mind of the killer to the economy.
The father sees family as the result of his economic success, allowing him to display
his achievements.
However, if the father becomes an economic failure, he sees the family as no longer serving
this function.
And to me, this feels like kind of the closest option because the fourth is paranoid.
And this article says quote, those who perceive an external threat to the family.
This is often social services or the legal system, which their father fears will side
against him and take away his children.
Here the murder is motivated by a twisted desire to protect his family.
So really, I think he falls mostly in that third one.
But this also, the study didn't really account for those who were starting over because of
a mistress or with a mistress in mind, which I think we've seen at least one of, maybe
two or three of in our family annihilator cases.
And again, this study was done in the UK.
So I don't know if there's like cultural differences or, I mean, at the end of the day,
people are people.
Clearly, it had a lot of relevant information because a lot of that applied to Chris Watts.
So calling all crime junkies who are criminal justice and psychology majors, I think this
is an area of research that needs so much more attention.
It would be amazing if we could look at new ways to kind of pick out these people again,
what makes you the kind of person who can raise your daughters to be three and four
and love them and care for them and have them love you so much that they sing songs about
you being their hero.
And then one day, wake up and smother them and not even think twice about it.
Maybe with more research, there could be signs that we can actually look for.
And maybe if we would have known more, if Shanann would have known what to look for,
maybe she would still be here.
And with that, I want to leave you with some wise words from Shanann herself.
We're not promised tomorrow, you know?
We're not promised anything.
But to be able to enjoy our children and every crazy moment, it can be super crazy.
I'm not going to lie.
My kids are crazy, but I love them.
Thank you guys again for tuning in.
I hope you all, despite this episode, have a wonderful Christmas.
But I hope you'll take the story and spend time with your family and love on your family.
And we are actually going to be taking next week off to spend time with our family.
It's been an entire year, you know, 52 weeks, I think we've put out 58 episodes.
So we're going to take one week off.
But for you junkies who need an extra fix, if you are on our Patreon, we are going to
have a midweek episode next week coming out where Britt and I discuss the one case we
cannot agree on.
It's so good, you guys.
So good.
Britt's on her tinfoil hat.
She gets a little conspiratorial.
I think she's crazy.
Do you want to tell them what we're talking about?
We are talking about OJ Simpson and the murder of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman.
It's over an hour long episode.
I think you guys are really going to like it.
And if you really miss us next week, don't forget we're taking the week off.
Not only spend time with families, but to spend time with you.
I am going to be hosting our Crime Junkie New Year's Eve party at Too Deep Brewing in
downtown Indianapolis.
I think last time I looked, there were literally like 15 tickets left.
You can find tickets on our Facebook page or in our Instagram bio.
Our handle is at Crime Junkie Podcast.
I hope to see you all there.
But if not, we will be back in 2019 with a brand new episode.
And if you need a little pick me up after probably the worst case of the year, stay tuned for
a puppet of the month.
This episode of Crime Junkie was researched, written and hosted by me with co-hosting
by Brit Preywat.
All of our editing and sound production was done by David Flowers, and all of our music,
including our theme, comes from Justin Daniel.
Crime Junkie is an audio Chuck production.
So what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?
Okay, Brett, I need like the best puppet story you have.
That episode is so rough for me.
No, it was very, very rough.
And I actually picked this puppet with you in mind.
Is his name Charlie?
So I scroll through all of our submissions and look at all the cute names and all the
cute stories.
And I settled on this puppet, whose name is PIPPO.
Can you tell me what that is?
Pippo?
Pippo?
Oh, stop it.
Would you like to tell the people who Pippo is?
Yeah, I don't even...
Yeah, so I think I had this like book maybe where Pippo was a hippo, I think.
But I had this when I was like one years old, I have this purple hippo, who I named Pippo.
And he's made out of like parachute material.
Let's be clear.
Okay.
And I'm glad that...
Thank you for keep calling him a he because in my mind, Pippo was always a he, but he
is clearly...
He's wearing a skirt.
He is clearly wearing a skirt with a flower in his hair.
But I...
Pippo's always been a boy to me too, I don't know.
Yeah, right?
Okay.
It wasn't just me.
That is crazy to me because I don't know why I never named Charlie Pippo.
I love that name, best name ever, and I'm like already have like all the good childhood,
like full body chills.
Okay.
So, I emailed Pippo's mom, Stephanie, and was kind of disappointed because they pronounce
it Pippo.
I'm gonna call him Pippo still.
Okay.
But there's a really great story behind it, and that's what I'm gonna tell you, okay?
Okay.
So, in 2009, Stephanie's family had two members of their family pass away, as well as their
family puppet.
Oh my God.
All of this in like three months.
I can't breath.
So obviously, this absolutely turned their family on its head.
You know, nothing's making sense.
It was her grandfather, it was her aunt, and then the family puppet.
It was a really traumatic experience for their family to go through.
And the following year, Stephanie made the executive decision that they needed a dog.
My computer just started playing law and order.
I don't know what's going on.
I mean, same.
It's not even like, I'm not even like opposed to like keeping this in.
It's kind of funny.
It's nowhere.
It's literally, I don't know what's going on.
Wait, hang on.
I'm sorry.
Okay, go.
I'm so sorry, Pippo.
I'm so sorry, everyone.
I just started playing law and order, which is like, you know, a great show, but not for
proper of the month.
Okay.
Okay.
So like I said, Stephanie was going to go down to the local shelter and she was going
to adopt a dog because they needed cheering up and that's what a dog would do.
I mean, it's, that's accurate.
That's not wrong.
Oh no, totally.
And so she says that they need a dog and they specifically wanted one that they're that
Stephanie's grandmother liked because she had just lost not only her husband, but her
daughter as well and they meet this dog and they like him, but there wasn't this like
connection, you know?
I mean, not really because any dog I lock eyes with, I feel like we've made a connection.
Okay.
But like Niles with me versus Niles with you.
Okay.
Fair, fair, fair.
Okay.
Or Charles, or Charlie with me and Charles with you.
Charlie with me and Charlie with anyone else who isn't me.
Exactly.
That's what I like to believe.
I'm not really feeling like that like moment with this dog and Stephanie is like, can you
bring out another one?
And she specifically wanted a black and white dog.
So they bring out this little black and white pointer puppy and everyone instantly bonded
with him.
And she said that when they brought him home, it felt like they finally had some fresh air
in their home.
Like, it was just this huge weight off of everybody's shoulders.
It just alleviated so much of the pain and the grief that they had been feeling for so
long.
And obviously, Stephanie points out that this didn't make all the hurt go away.
This didn't fix everything, but it did bring them something that they had been missing.
And that was a sense of joy and hopefulness.
And because they specifically got the dog for Stephanie's grandmother, they gave her
the honor of naming it.
And Stephanie's grandmother is probably like the most amazing, sweet, little old Italian
woman.
And she decides she's going to name him Pippo.
And Pippo it is.
Love it.
Again, still calling it Pippo, but love the name.
And something that Stephanie says is very unique to Pippo and probably what makes him
the best fit for their family, specifically for what they were going through when they
adopted him, is Pippo is really dumb, but not like in a bad way.
In like a goofy, silly, doesn't really care way.
He's a pointer.
So he's not a small dog, but he'll like kind of lumber up on you and sit on you.
And he just loves without condition.
And I love, I like, I just love this story because Pippo just seems like such a happy
go lucky pup and he's just oozing love.
And of course, like my favorite is like the ending statements that profit owners give
me when I ask them about their profit.
And this is a quote from Stephanie.
Pippo is a reminder that joy is simple and love at its core is the easiest thing in the
world we can do.
He was exactly what our family needed, acting as a guiding light that led us out of a really
dark time, even though he had no clue which way he was going.
That's fair.
So I'm going to put Pippo and his story up on the blog.
I absolutely love him.
I love this story.
Can we also put a picture of Pippo on the blog, our male hippo wearing a skirt and a
send me a picture of Pippo and I will put Pippo and Pippo up on the blog in December's
profit of the month.
You guys, we don't deserve dogs.
They make life so much better because I'm already feeling better after that horrible
episode.
I feel better, not a hundred percent, but I'm going to go kiss Charlie's nose.
I'm going to boop his little nose and I think it's going to help.
And you guys have a great holiday.
Yeah, you guys have.
I hope you have a wonderful Christmas.
Happy New Year.
See you in 2019.
See you next year, you guys.