Morbid - Episode 449: The Murder of Daniel Brophy
Episode Date: April 10, 2023On Saturday June 2, 2018, students at the Oregon Culinary Institute (OCI) arrived at class that morning to find their instructor, sixty-three-year-old Daniel Brophy, dead from gunshot wounds ...to the back and chest. With more than fifty years’ experience in the culinary field, Brophy was a popular chef and instructor and, while detectives couldn’t rule out a disgruntled student, no one could imagine his killer was a member of the OCI community.A massive thank you to Caleb for joining Ash on today's episode! Go check out Scream! and Horrorsoup anywhere you listen to podcasts. Thank you to the incredible David White for research assistance!ReferencesCourt TV. 2022. OR v. Crampton-Brophy: Romance Novelist Murder Trial. June 15. Accessed March 8, 2023. https://www.courttv.com/news/or-v-crampton-brophy-romance-novelist-murder-trial/.Flynn, Meagan. 2018. "Novelist who wrote about 'How to Murder Your Husband' charged with murdering her husband." Washington Post, September 12.Green, Aimee. 2019. Details of murder case against romance writer should become public in 2 weeks, judge rules. April 5. Accessed March 12, 2023. https://www.oregonlive.com/news/2019/04/details-of-murder-case-against-romance-writer-should-become-public-in-2-weeks-judge-rules.html.Karimi, Faith. 2022. "This romance novelist is on trial in her husband's killing. It's like a plot twist from one of her books." CNN Wire, April 7.Kavanaugh, Shane Dixon. 2019. Gun parts bought online at center of Oregon romance novelist’s suspected spouse slaying. April 4. Accessed March 12, 2023. https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2019/04/gun-parts-bought-online-at-center-of-oregon-romance-novelists-suspected-spouse-slaying.html.—. 2018. "Romance novelist suspected of slaying husband." Longview Daily News, September 7: B2.—. 2020. No coronavirus ‘guest house’ for Oregon romance writer charged with murdering husband, judge rules. April 10. Accessed March 12, 2023. https://www.oregonlive.com/coronavirus/2020/04/no-coronavirus-guest-house-for-oregon-romance-writer-charged-with-murdering-husband-judge-rules.html.NBC News. 2022. Dateline. Television, New York, NY: NBC News.O'Rourke, Ciara. 2019. A Beloved Culinary Instructor Was Murdered. What Happened Next Was Stranger Than Fiction. May 31. Accessed March 10, 2023. https://www.pdxmonthly.com/news-and-city-life/2019/05/a-beloved-culinary-instructor-was-murdered-what-happened-next-was-stranger-than-fiction.Paul, Maria Luisa. 2022. "'How to Murder Your Husband' writer sentenced to life for." Washington Post, June 14.Sparling, Zane. 2022. Love vs. money: Lawyers make final arguments in Oregon romance writer’s murder trial. May 22. Accessed March 12, 2023. https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2022/05/love-vs-money-lawyers-make-final-arguments-in-oregon-romance-writers-murder-trial.html.—. 2022. Oregon romance novelist grilled on amnesia claim, missing gun barrel on crucial day in her murder trial. May 18. Accessed 2023 12, 2022. https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2022/05/oregon-romance-novelist-grilled-on-amnesia-claim-missing-gun-barrel-on-crucial-day-in-her-murder-trial.html.—. 2022. Spotlight shines on Oregon romance novelist accused of killing chef husband. May 23. Accessed March 8, 2023. https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2022/05/spotlight-shines-on-oregon-romance-novelist-accused-of-killing-chef-husband-who-is-nancy-crampton-brophy.html.Voorhees, Carolyn. 2018. Former students, friends mourn loss of Oregon Culinary Institute chef killed in shooting. June 3. Accessed March 8, 2023. https://www.oregonlive.com/portland/2018/06/former_students_friends_mourn.html.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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rate is from FDIC website. Terms apply. Hey weirdo, I'm Ash.
And I'm Caleb. And this is Morbid.
It's a special edition of Morbid with Caleb.
I would also like to acknowledge the fact that Pepper is here.
You might hear him every so often.
If you're so lucky, he is a very, he's a very dapper dashhound.
And the most dapper.
He is. He's a beautiful man. He has a sweater. He has a diaper.
But that doesn't matter to the audio listeners. My bad.
I mean, it does matter. They need to know, like, set the scene.
Caleb has a Christmas sweater on. I just have a lavender sweatshirt. We're all pretty
pretty dashing today.
Almost wore a Santa hat. You should have. I can. I mean, I like the turkey 100 hat. I can't lie.
Shut up turkey 100. I'll go listen to screen.
But yeah, so Caleb's joining me today because Alina is busy at
Um, but yeah, so Caleb's joining me today because Alina is busy at some kind of award show, getting awards for her book and stuff.
I know things.
Um, but yeah, Caleb was nice enough to join me while Alina is in New York, being fancy
with John and actually getting some husband, wife time.
So happy for her.
What a, you know, a book writing gal, just a real gem.
Just writing books, kicking ass ass, take in names.
I love that girl.
Period.
Period.
All right, so I invited Caleb on to tell him
the story of Dan and Nancy Brophy.
And I actually picked this case
because I was watching, this is embarrassing,
but I was watching Mary not first sight on Lifetime.
Have you ever seen that?
I have, yeah. Yeah, and wildly addicted to it. But I was watching Married at First Site on Lifetime. Have you ever seen that? I have, yeah.
Yeah, and wildly addicted to it.
But I was watching that.
I don't watch a lot of Lifetime anymore.
That's the only thing that I will watch on there.
But when I was younger,
I used to watch Lifetime movies all the time.
So when I see the commercials now,
I'm like, damn, that should's wild.
And I saw a commercial for this Lifetime story,
which is the Nancy Brophy story.
And I was like, what?
The hell is happening there. And so yeah, the last name Brophy is crazy. This woman is also
completely delusional. Yeah. Yeah. The fact that she thought she was going to get away with this
as wild. Sorry to alert you up front. She did it. I mean, yeah, she definitely did it.
She definitely wrote about it. Um,
the fact that she wrote about it.
So she wrote about it before it even happened.
We're going to get into all of that.
But first I got to tell you about Nancy when she was born.
So, okay, tell me about when she was born.
I'll tell you Nancy, cramped and brofi.
She was born Nancy Lee cramped in on June 16th, 1950, which makes her not only a Gemini,
but the middle child of her parents. So it was off from the start.
Yeah, yeah, that's a little, there's a few problems there. Yeah, Gemini,
middle child, out here wild in. So both her parents were lawyers and they decided that they wanted
to raise their family in Wichita Falls, Texas, which is my favorite place to say.
It is a very fun name. Wichita is, uh, is there more Wichita's? Is it just the one in Texas?
No, I feel like there's other ones. There's more Wichita's, right?
I mean, I'm gonna, I'm gonna go out on a limb here and say there's like many Wichita's.
I feel like there is. I think I've heard of that name often. Like, when you said Texas,
it kind of threw me off because I feel like I've heard of a Wichita somewhere else.
I think there might be a Wichita Kansas.
Wichita was gonna stop being a word any second now.
This is Wichita with Caleb and Ash.
But anyway, after graduating from high school in 1968,
Nancy, she went on to study at the University of Houston.
And there she majored,
I don't know why I said it like that.
I was in Texas, I guess.
There she majored.
She majored in economics and she ended up graduating in 1972.
Now, not long after graduating from the University of Houston,
she got married to her first husband who was a police officer.
And according to her later testimony,
she was not allowed to keep
his gun in the house. She wouldn't let him. Okay. Which is interesting when we get to later.
Because she claims that she's obsessed with guns, but weird that she was like, no, he couldn't
leave his gun in the house. Like, I didn't like that. From what I saw about this, it seems like
she got a flip flops too. She'll be like, no, I'm not, I don't like guns at all.
It's not a thing. But she's like, well, everyone had a gun.
So like, you know, we just had to, and then she was like, oh, well, we shouldn't of.
Yep, that's exactly what she does. She's, she's a flip flop fish.
She's definitely a flip flopper.
She is. So it's unclear really how long their mass marriage lasted or when it ended.
But by the end of the 1980s, she was divorced
and she was ready to shake her life up in a real big way. And so she moved to Portland, Oregon
in 1990. She just really wanted to put like her old life behind her, start over completely.
So she decided to try something new. She said, on the enroll in culinary school.
Okay. Yeah, I feel like that's a fun thing to do.
I didn't know that was her thing too.
Interesting.
Yeah.
It was for like a minute.
So she enrolled in the Western culinary institute, which is now
le cordon blue, college of culinary arts.
It's another fun set of words.
Cordon blue.
Yeah.
Le cordon blue.
Le cordon blue.
But it was there that she ended up meeting Daniel Brophy.
So he was also born in June,
but he was born a little bit later in June, June 27th, 1954,
which makes him a cancer.
But he was born in Valley City, North Dakota.
And after he graduated high school in 1971,
he went to the University of Sioux Falls,
graduated from there in 1976,
and then he started his own culinary career shortly after that.
Now, I like to go him.
I know he's like, really big moves.
Right?
His passion for food and cooking
eventually led him to Portland, Oregon,
where he became, I feel like you're gonna love this.
He became a mushroom hunter and gardener.
Oh, no, I don't love that.
No?
No, I hate mushrooms.
Oh, well, yeah, but I just thought you would love that like lifestyle.
Like he was just like, you know what, I'm gonna go find out about mushrooms.
I'm against it.
I don't think they should be harvested.
I don't think they should be made.
I don't think they should be in existence.
I don't like smelling them.
You don't like smelling mushrooms.
I feel like they don't really have much of a smell.
They smell like fungus because they are fungus and they, you know, they're just dirt.
I don't like them. Okay. Well, you might not like them. And I might, I like, I go back and forth
with mushrooms, but Daniel, he loved mushrooms and he was good at mushrooms. Like, like picking
out which ones you could harvest and eat and which ones you shouldn mushrooms. And he was good at mushrooms, like picking out which ones you could
harvest and eat and which ones you shouldn't. And he goes.
It is a very interesting thing. There are a lot of mushrooms out there.
There are. Even in Elena's yard, there's several different kinds of mushrooms.
That is true. And I'm like, kids, don't eat those because I am not an expert on chimneys.
It's weird. I could never imagine just walking out and going like, all right,
I'm going to eat this weird looking,
phallic thing growing out of the ground.
Kids will eat like anything on the ground,
but I mean,
Alina's kids do not eat the mushrooms on the ground,
but I feel the need to be like, don't touch that.
You know,
mushrooms just seem like something I should need.
Yeah, but, but it's good to know which ones you can and cannot eat.
It's like if you're like stranded somewhere and you're hungry. I can see that. Yeah. So,
you know, Daniel, he knew all about that. And actually he got so good on it that he would
eventually start leading tours and giving lectures on the region's mushrooms, herbs, and other
local ingredients. And once he became a full blown chef, he honed his craft
at restaurants like Jake's famous crawfish, which is a Portland landmark that has been in
business for more than 125 years. Wow. Okay. It's a lot of crawfish over that time.
That's a lot of restaurant over that time. But outside of work, Daniel was really committed
to his community. He not only worked at a soup kitchen every week, but he would also bring his own ingredients
to the soup kitchen to make sure he could cook up something special.
This wasn't like regular soup kitchen food.
It was Daniel's soup kitchen food.
He put a lot of love into his food.
He did it.
It really seems like he did.
And he loved cooking.
He was super knowledgeable in his field.
He was also just like a really
easygoing man in general. And he just wanted to share his passion and his smarts with other people.
So because all those things were really working for him, he decided that he'd like to become a
culinary instructor. So he started at that Western culinary institute, the one that would later
become Lake Cordon Bleu. And he was in his first year as an instructor when he met Miss Nancy. Okay, not a good time. Not a good time. She, you know, I have, all the
Nancy's I've come across, I'm sorry, all the Nancy's out there, but they've been a problem in this
Nancy just kind of confirms it for me. I only have ever really dealt with one Nancy in my life
that I can think of. and she's the only person
that I ever requested not to work directly with. So I agree with you. So guys, I'm sure there's
a few of you good Nancy's out there and shout out to you, but these Nancy's, I don't know so far.
It's like Karen's, there's great Karen's, but then there's Karen Karen's. Yeah.
But then you feel bad for the great Karen's because they're like, Jesus Christ, I want to change
my name. Yeah, some of these Nancy's are just, you know, they're they're you feel bad for the great carons because they're like, Jesus Christ, I want to change my name.
Yeah, some of these Nancy's just, you know, they're, they're making it bad for other Nancy's.
Needle and Nancy's, you know, I don't know, that's the best I could come up with.
Yeah, no, I got it.
She's a metal and Nancy because she was immediately taken with Daniel.
She thought he was a fine instructor and a fine man.
And it started to become very clear to everybody else in the class,
just how much she liked him. But there was a big issue. Daniel was married.
So he couldn't be out here with Miss Nancy Nancy. Now Nancy's roommate at the time,
Tonya Medley, she warned Nancy about getting too close to Daniel because, you know, he was married and all. And she told her, don't be dip in your candle and somebody else's wax, which I love.
She did that.
That's a real quote.
That's a, that's a crazy way to put it.
Don't dip your candle and somebody else's wax.
I love it.
Let's break that down.
Let's not worry about that.
No, not not even the, that side of it it the candle side of it. Why would you?
Oh, would you dip your candle in somebody else's wax in the first place? It's already wax. It's already a
candle. That's the thing. You already it's already a marriage. It's already
them two together stopped dipping into it.
That's that's what my good girl Tania was trying to say
It's just saying in a half you know, but Nancy responded, well,
that's not going to last, which like don't ever be that girl.
Like, you don't know his wife or anything about her.
And even if you do, like, stop meddling in people's marriages.
But unfortunately, Nancy was correct.
The marriage would end just a few years later in 1994.
And once it did, Daniel Brophy began dating Nancy.
Now, he kept building his career at the same time as a chef instructor with the culinary
school, and Nancy actually opened up her own catering business, Chef DeGeor Catering.
It was a really successful catering company in Northwest Portland.
By the late 1990s, things actually were going really well for the both of them
as a couple because Nancy's catering business had grown really considerably. At the time,
they were employing 25 people and they were earning half a millie per year.
Dan, okay. Right. And then in 1999, eight years after they met, Dan and Nancy held what they
called a large marriage ceremony. And they started calling
each other husband as what husband and wife. But it actually took them until June of 2016 to file
the legal paperwork. Okay. And they were just on the paperwork because like that's really relatable
for me. But I was going to say, I mean, some people just, you know, I'm bad at paperwork. I'm bad at getting back to things like that.
Whatever my accountant is like, it's time to look through your taxes.
I'm like, I don't know what those are.
I don't have those.
Trust me.
I'm horrified about that.
I hate toxic and it freaks me out because I'm like, where did I put that little slip of
paper six months ago?
Literally.
So maybe that's what happened with Dan and Nancy here.
They were like, we had that marriage. You're to forget. We don't know where it is. And then they found it and they
filed it. But you get to when you get to it. Yeah. Now, just like a lot of people, Dan and Nancy hit
a little bit of financial trouble when the economy downturned after 9-11. Nancy had to lay off at
least 10 people from the catering business. So to help supplement their income Dan kept teaching,
but he also started moonlighting as a chef at a retirement home. Now they also on top of that
ended up refinancing their house so that they could get money from their equity. I don't really
know how any of that works, but things started improving financially over the next couple of years.
Daniel got a better job. He got hired actually as lead chef instructor at the
Oregon Culinary Institute in 2006. And immediately people freaking loved him there. Students,
especially really loved him. And they said he was, quote, the most active faculty member
leading field trips, organizing student projects, and speaking in the community. So he's like one of
the favorite teachers. Sounds like a stand up guy.
Shout out Brody.
He really does.
No, not long, Brofya.
Not long after he started working at OCI, the college there, he and Nancy moved to Beaverton,
which I love the name of that town.
It's a small city just outside of Portland.
And in 2013, Nancy decided to dedicate as much time as humanly possible to her passion for writing.
You guys had no idea, Nancy is a writer. No, in the past she had written some small pamphlets
in college. She made some money as a technical writer, but she always wanted to pursue her interest
in writing fiction and now she kind of had the chance. Since graduating from culinary school in the early 90s,
she joined a few writing groups and she said
that she had, quote, spent years
dabbling in literary crafts,
but she never really thought it would be something
or could be something that she would take very seriously.
But,
because I don't know enough about all this part,
is she a successful writer Like was she fairly big?
How?
In the grand scheme of things.
How did it go for her?
I don't really think she didn't make a lot of money doing it.
She may have been successful in the way that she did write
several books, which is more than I can say.
But I don't think they were like in the crazy amount of success.
Yeah, because I think we'll get into it later. But one of the books she wrote, it seems like, like, it has one of those names that
seems like it's pretty popular, but it also seems like it's just, she called it that
because something like that is already really popular.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I think that's exactly what it was.
And I think she was also writing in a genre that is probably, I'm just assuming here,
probably hard to get into because I think there's so many books
that in the genre that she writing already, exactly.
But we'll get there, don't jump ahead yet.
Okay, okay, okay.
So she really, when social media started like happening
and the internet started becoming more mainstream
throughout the 2000s and early 2010s,
it made it easier for writers to reach an audience through websites and blogs and self-publishing,
so Nancy decided to give writing an honest try for like the first time ever.
Now we're going to get into some of what she wrote.
Writing as Nancy Crampton-Rofy, she would eventually pen nine romance novels, including
a five book series, with titles like The Wrong Husband, The Wrong
Cop, and The Wrong Lover.
Oh my god, I've seen this time and time again, Standard Lifetime.
Standard Lifetime.
And these were self-published books and they were sold online.
They were pretty much all within, I've never heard of this, but it's called The Baudest
Ripper genre.
What is that?
I think it's like when you rip off your corset, probably, or something like that.
It's a whole genre for that. Isn't that just an action?
I don't really know, man. I'm not in that genre, but it featured quote, unquote,
rugged men, strong women and a good story.
And that was according to her website.
And then all of the novels had covers
that quote depicted handsome heroes and at least one heroine with chiseled bodies and
dark quaffed hair. Quaffed? Quaffed or quaffed actually it was quaffed my mad.
Quaffed their hairs quaffed. Quaffed. I don't even know what quaffed hair is. I think it
just means it's like in place. Just seems like a very, I don't know. what Kweifterra is. I think it just means it's like in place. It just seems like a very, I don't know.
Very much time explanation.
It's very like Nicholas Sparks kind of writing
and like kind of genre I feel.
And also it's taking me back to a place
of the America's Next Top Model shoot where Fabio joins.
I don't know if you ever watched that.
I'm not.
I've just been, honestly, my brain is getting fried lately because all I've
been watching is 90 day fiance. And since I got into this rabbit hole, I've realized that
there's like 36, like, offsets of 90 day fiance. So really, it's a hole you can dig yourself
into. I don't think it's, it's not a hole you can dig yourself. It's a hole you can't
dig yourself out of. That's really, actually, that's exactly what it is. That's what I should have said.
It doesn't end like there's so many.
My grandma, you should talk to Cath next time you're here
because that girl loves 90 days.
She's like, did you watch the other night?
I'm like, I don't watch it, ma.
She's so good.
I didn't know that Ma loves 90 days.
I mean, me and Ma are to get along well,
but once we start getting to the 90 day,
I mean, it's not gonna stop. It's about to go off getting in the 90 day, I mean, it's not going to stop.
It's about to go off.
Mazda, when I got me into Bravo in the first place, she doesn't really watch it anymore,
but 90 day, I don't think she'll ever give up on 90 day.
I feel her, dude, I get it.
Well, it's kind of like how Nancy wasn't going to give up on writing modest,
ripper novels.
So writing fulfilled her personally, but like you were kind of asking
earlier, it didn't really do it for the couple financially. She wasn't making a
lot of money doing this. And very soon they were struggling again. To the point
where in 2014 they started dipping into Daniels 401k, which like I don't
really know a lot about that, but I don't think that's something you want to
dip into if you can help it.
Yeah, that's basically the...
The standard practice, right?
Yeah, that's the take.
So they were dipping into it, I think, like, obviously, like good intentions.
They wanted to fix up their house and eventually subdivide the property and sell off the various
subdivisions.
And they actually even went as far as to have Nancy's name taken off the
deed, which reduced the amount of income reported by the homeowner, who now at that point was just
Daniel. Basically, I was trying to figure out like what that would save them. And I think it
just saves them taxes. If you're like, if your income is like less than what you were originally
reporting, I would think it was just
tax time like things, but I don't really know. I'm sure you guys listening will know if you're
into taxes and things like that. All you people that are into taxes out there, you just you do your
tax things. Oh, you CPA brothers and sisters. Shout out to CPAs. Shout out. Even though there was a steep decrease in income, Nancy, she kept focusing on her writing.
She was writing full time at this point, but now she was spending money quite frequently
on her writing and, quote unquote, research for her novels.
She would spend hundreds and hundreds of dollars on all kinds of things for this research.
Like one time, when she bought a Victorian era chastity belt for research.
To research what? Exactly.
Bought us for a genre, I don't know.
You can't just like Google that stuff?
Well, that's the thing. I think maybe she had like a shopping problem or something like that.
Or I don't know, maybe she just really
liked these things and wanted them,
but then like wrote it off as research.
So her husband wouldn't get mad at her.
I would just love to be a fly on the wall,
just to see what she was doing with this
chastity belt.
I would know.
I would not like to be a fly on the wall for that.
It's not for pleasure.
It's purely for science.
Just for writing it down and doing experiments later, of course.
But in addition to her spending on research, she and Daniel actually started
investing heavily in life insurance policies.
And that was starting in 2014.
That was a red flag, right?
When people are just like gambling on their life insurance.
Yeah, definitely.
Definitely. You don't need to have like multiple, multiple life insurance policies. I think like
one or two will kind of again, not something I really know a lot about.
Yeah, it to me it just seems like starting a life insurance policy seems fairly standard
to a certain extent. But then those, the used a few key words that made it sound like they're doing this many different times and just kind of throw
in life insurance policies around and that seems worrisome.
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H-E-L-P dot com slash morbid. That was a really good inference you made there because between 2014 and 2017, they had acquired
six life insurance policies for Daniel, like not for Nancy for Daniel.
I'm like, uh-oh.
And they're ready.
How said he? These life insurance preparers, how do they even allow that?
They should just be like, okay, wait.
I think that's why.
I think it's because they were going like different places.
So the other life insurance brokers, I guess, is what you call them.
They didn't realize that they already had five others taken out.
This is crazy.
It does.
So they had six life insurance policies
between 2014 and 2017 that they took out.
And they had a base payout of $400,000
and an additional $320,000 in the event
that Daniel's death was accidental.
Is this from each of them?
I think it was like a majority of them. Okay.
Like at least, but I think between all of them, that's what would have happened.
So can you just do that?
Like can you just have multiple life insurance policies and just like take them all out?
I don't know enough about life insurance is what I'm realizing right now.
I would think that that would be some kind of fraud if you had multiple, but
right? I don't know what a lot of people aren't going around with like, you know,
three different car insurances. You know what I mean?
Right. And I mean, you have to get approved for all of them. Also, fun fact,
getting life insurance is really fucking hard. And it's really fucking annoying because you have to answer a bunch of questions.
Like, if you've ever done drugs, are you overweight?
Do you smoke cigarettes?
You must have a physical.
Some lady has to come to your house and you have to pee in a cup and give it to her.
It's awful.
Wow.
And to do that six different times, I'm like, you couldn't pay me money.
And like you would be, but you couldn't.
By September of 2017, sadly,
they had blown through almost all of Daniel's 401k.
And as of that month, there was only about $35,000 remaining.
Now, obviously, $35,000 is a lot of money,
but I think when it comes to a 401k, not very much.
You can't really live off of that for the rest of your life.
No, and that's exactly it.
But Nancy had been pushing Daniel to sell the house and the land, thinking that that would
wipe away their debts and kind of give them a fresh start.
But the problem was, after consulting with a financial advisor, Nancy was informed that
even if they sold the house and the land, they would still come out of that deal with
negative cash flow. So basically her spending habits and I mean, really inability to generate income
had put her and her husband deeply in the red financially speaking and not even
selling the house would generate enough money to get them out of it.
So basically they're fucked.
Pretty much.
Basically Nancy should have just like reopened her catering business.
Yeah, I've done anything really aside from the wrong Mr. and the wrong Chastie belt.
At the end of the day, if that's not bringing you in enough money to support you and your husband
and in addition to his income, that's a hobby. like you got to get something to supplement this if you're in the red.
So the morning of June 2nd, 2018, we're flash forwarding here in fast forwarding.
It started out pretty much. Sorry, let me cut you off real quick. What timeline were we at before that?
Before that, we were between 2017 or 2014 and 2017. Oh, okay. Yeah.
between 2017 or 2014 and 2017. Oh, okay.
Yeah.
They started having money problems after 9-11
because like the economy went down and stuff like that.
But then they were able to kind of regain,
but then they kind of started flandering again
when Nancy stopped the culinary business
and started writing.
Okay, okay.
So 2017 is when things got like really, really bad financially.
That's when they were told like,
even if you sell the house, even if you sell the house,
even if you sell the land and subdivide all these properties,
you're still gonna end up with some debt.
And like a good amount of debt.
So now we're in 2018.
It's June 2nd, 2018.
And this morning started off pretty regular for Daniel Barofi,
like pretty much like every other morning had.
He woke up early, he went out back
to feed the chickens in the backyard.
He just seems like a very wholesome man, like working at a retirement home, working at
a soup kitchen, feed in his chickens.
He takes the dogs for a walk, comes back home, takes a quick shower, and then he heads off
to work.
So he got to the Oregon Culinary Institute, OCI, a little after 7 a.m. and since he was the
first one to come in the building, he disabled the alarm and headed to kitchen one, which
was his usual kitchen classroom.
One of the thing too, he was pretty much always there every morning.
He was the first one there every morning really early.
Yup.
He loved getting there early and just like being able to set up the kitchen before all
the people came.
Now, a coworker arrived about 10 or 15 minutes later. early and just like being able to set up the kitchen before all the people came.
Now a coworker arrived about 10 or 15 minutes later. They were going to be the one that was going to unlock the doors for the students and kind of greet them when they started filing in.
And then they would go to their classroom where Daniel had everything set up.
So in kitchen one, like I just said, he was setting everything up for the day,
starting the coffee maker, making other arrangements, he was at the sink, filling
up pictures with ice water, though, when somebody snuck into the classroom quietly and shot
him one time in the back. And when he got shot with that one shot, the force of the bullet
caused his body to spin around 180 degrees, at which point his killer fired again, quote, directly center mouse to his
chest. Jesus. Which sent a second bullet tearing through his torso, ultimately piercing his heart.
I damn it was brutal. It was brutal. Brutalist fuck and just like out of nowhere, this man is just
artwork setting up for the day. You would never expect this. And for his culinary class.
Yeah, right. Exactly. And here's the thing. Students are starting to come in and clearly,
like, nobody really heard this because there wasn't that many people around just, like,
right when it happened. So he's laying there on the ground as students are filing into the kitchen just after 730.
And they are completely shocked to find their instructor lying on his back in front of the
industrial sink, unconscious and bleeding profusely from two gunshot wounds.
And I did watch a little video about that. I think how it happened. And I'm not sure who I heard
speaking. They were in court and they were explaining like, you know, this is the building, this is the back door,
they were all lined up at ball of blah.
I'm not sure if it was one of the students,
or I think to my knowledge,
I might have been another one of the teachers,
like another one of the culinary teachers.
I think there's only like a few
because they were doing like weekend classes
and Sunday type thing.
But she said, she saw a bunch of students
like lined up out there and was like, that's weird.
They're usually all in there because he's early. He lets them in really early, but the door was locked.
None of them came in and then another worker or something like that came over to the side,
let all the kids in and then after they're in, I think they walked around for a bit and eventually,
one of them goes, hey, call 911. There's a body over here.
Like found him over there.
Can you imagine you're just like filing into your cluster and you're like, oh, I got to
take a Saturday class and that's what you stumble into.
Yeah.
The 911 call was pretty crazy too.
I can never listen to 911 calls.
It's not one of those like really, really, I mean, they're all horrific, you know, but it's
not one of those ones. It's like, you know, it like makes you want to like break down while you're listening to it
But it is still pretty fucked up and you know, you're listening to it
And they don't really realize that he's dead at first. They're like, hey, he's unconscious like he's down here
I don't think he's breathing. But then after a while they go, oh shit like he's bleeding from his chest, right?
And then you know, it goes on and then they realize yeah, he's bleeding from his chest. Right. And then, you know, it goes on and then they realize, yeah, he's gone.
So sad.
So yeah, like you said, one of the students just called 911, the police and the emergency
responders, they raced to the scene.
But again, like you just said, by the time they got there, it was too late.
He was dead, dead on arrival.
So Portland detectives Anthony Merrill and Darren Posey arrived at OSI, excuse me,
around 830 in the morning. And at that point, the school had been placed in lockdown. Crime
scene technicians had started processing the scene. So when the detectives entered the
kitchen, they found so sad, the metal ice scoop lying on the floor where he had dropped
it when he was shot. And then nearby, they discovered two nine millimeter shell
casings on the floor, which meant that whoever had killed Daniel most likely
wasn't a professional killer. Merrill told interviewers from date line,
they wanted to get in quick and get out quick. Yeah. So within two hours of
the murder, somebody a friend had called Nancy to let her know that the police
were converged on OCI. So she
immediately drives down to the school, detectives meet her, and they usher her into a room that
they started kind of using as a command center. And they kind of, you know, go through
their series of questions like, what was your husband doing this morning? What does he
usually do like blah, blah, blah, what were you doing? And after several minutes, they finally
gave her the news. They told her, we believe it's Dan that's been killed.
Now she barely skipped a beat and said to them, yeah, I got that when everybody gave
me the sad sack look.
Okay, weird response, weird energy.
Weird response.
Now, what followed was typical behavior, like what you would call it.
She was bewildered. She was you would call it. She was bill
wilderness. She was grief stricken. She was crying. That is the kind of reaction that you
would expect from somebody. But again, me and Alina say all the time, like you can't
chalk like somebody's guiltiness up to how they react to something right away because
not everybody's going to cry right away. Some people are going to, you know, freeze.
Yeah. That one has the reactions, man.
Yeah, Nancy just makes weird comments and then she cries.
But anyways, they were like, okay, like, you can go for now.
And we're going to talk to you later today.
Like, we'll be in contact because they were still working on the scene.
So by the next day, the news had made its way around the OSI community.
And there was a wave of stunned and shocked responses.
Current and former students were on the internet just sharing their surprise and grief.
They were posting comments to social media.
One said, Oregon Culinary Institute lost a top-notch chef instructor that touched so many
lives.
And another one said, Daniel was also one of the smartest, most thoughtful people
I've ever met and would take the time with whatever you needed. So sad. So that seemed
like a good dude. He really did. And the Nancy shared her thoughts online. And in my
opinion, this is a pretty strange Facebook post, what she wrote, for those of you who are
close to me and feel this deserved a phone call, you're right. But I'm struggling to make sense of everything now.
While I appreciate all of your loving responses, I'm overwhelmed.
Please save calls for a few days until I can function.
Just weird.
Like, I don't know.
A bizarre, a bizarre post in my opinion.
Yeah.
I mean, I guess, again, I guess I don't know what to chop it up to because,
I mean, I guess I already know the outcome of the story and she's just gone back. But yeah,
I guess in hindsight, looking at it, but I don't know. I guess if I didn't know what I knew,
it might not be that odd of a statement like, hey, you know, leave me alone kind of thing,
give me a little while. Like I can't talk about this. Like I get it. I appreciate it. But I don't
know, it is, it's a little odd. No, but that I appreciate it, but I don't know it is.
It's a little odd. No, but that's a solid point. I'm looking at it through the lens of like I already knew,
and again, we already said it. I'm not getting like clearly she did this. So when I read that,
I was like, well, that's weird. But if I had read that and she didn't,
if she wasn't the one that did it, maybe I would feel differently.
Yeah, you might just think like, hey, you know, she's tired of hearing about this and she's
trying to agree. Right. Right. And she doesn't want to like have her phone
blown up all day when she's going through it. Yeah, but to reiterate, that's not what's
happening. She's a piece of shit. Yeah, not the case. Fuck Nancy. So a candlelight vigil
was held in Daniel's honor a few days later in the parking lot at the school. In Nancy
reiterated her grief and her shock to the students
and the faculty saying, I just can't wrap my head around it.
Dan was one of the very few people I've known
that knew exactly what he wanted in life and loved doing it.
Which is really sad when again, we know that she's the one
that is doing this.
She's standing in front of all of these grieving people saying,
I can't wrap my head around it.
He was the nicest guy.
He knew what he wanted and he was doing it.
It's like, okay, so like, then why did you kill him?
He was happy.
He was doing what he wanted to do.
Like what?
That's just some people have no shame.
They truly don't.
So back to the investigation.
As they surveyed the scene, detectives Marilyn Posey,
where a rather perplexed.
There was no sign of a struggle, no sign of forced entry.
Daniel still had his wallet, phone, keys, his car was still parked in the parking lot.
So pretty much right away those factors ruled out the whole robbery on wrong scenario.
To them, it seemed like somebody had snuck into the culinary school to murder him,
and then snuck out without disrupting
or taking anything, but they were stumped
because they were like, who the hell would want to do that?
Daniel was super well liked,
so they were having a really hard time coming up
with anybody who just liked him,
especially enough to kill him or have him killed.
Yeah, I mean, you get a culinary chef
who's just there for his his weekend job at an institute.
Like someone walking in and killing someone like that is pretty wild.
Yeah, just like very sudden and out of the blue and then to have all of his things still with him,
you're like, what? Like crazy. So detective Posey told Dateline, there was people that were like,
he's tough, but nothing that, you know, somebody had it out for him because they like had their career
red-ded by him or anything like that.
So many people knew Daniel Brophy to be a very direct person who
quote, wasn't afraid to have conversations that many
instructors might try away from.
And also his dry sense of humor and he did have kind of like
a rigid personality that did tend to rub people like certain
people the wrong way.
But it was never to the extent,
like I was just saying that somebody would want him dead for something he said or anything he did.
It was just like, I'm trying to, I honestly, he kind of reminds me of my grandpa.
You know, like, he might fuck with you a little bit. Yeah, like, he might fuck with you a little bit.
He might like piss you off because he's not going to like beat around the bush,
Yeah, he might fuck with you a little bit. He might like piss you off because he's not gonna like
beat around the bush, but it's like,
hey, he's not like murder material, you know?
No, exactly.
Not that anybody is, but no.
Yeah.
And I think that's exactly like you put it so perfectly,
like he's not gonna beat around the bush.
Like he's just gonna tell you how he feels.
So with a case like this,
where somebody is killed seemingly for no reason,
as we all
know, the spouse is the one that they look into first.
So when Nancy was questioned shortly after the murder, she told investigators that she'd
woken up briefly when Daniel came in after walking the dogs that morning, but she said she
fell asleep soon after he had left. Otherwise, she'd just gone about her morning leisurely until she got the call about what happened.
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Now, detectives outwardly seem to accept her description of her movement's not warning,
but they also knew right away that she
was lying, even as she was telling them her version of that morning's events. Because by the time they
sat down to question her, they had already found surveillance footage that contradicted her story.
So she said she's sleeping and that she just woke up when Daniel came in with the dogs and then fell right back to sleep and just had a chill morning. Nope. At 7.08 a.m. when she was supposed to be at home
sleeping, a surveillance camera from a business across the street from the culinary school captured
Nancy driving by the school in her minivan. I mean, the dude's been an idiot every step of the way.
Seriously, this dude Nancy, we even shells at the scene just driving by running around
with cameras all over you.
You're like, oh, no, I'm sleeping.
I was in bed.
I don't understand.
2018, you don't realize that we are being videoed every fucking second of every fucking
day.
Like when you are driving around in your car, you were being caught on surveillance footage everywhere.
You can't just say that you're not home sleeping.
You should have said, oh, I got gas across the street
from the culinary school.
I can't believe that happened while I was there.
I mean, again, I'm not giving you like an alibi, but still.
No, but we're just saying she's a giant idiot
and she could have said anything else
if she was really, you know,
a giant idiot and was able to like,
you know, come up with some kind of alibi.
I mean, I'm glad that she's a bozo and got caught,
but come on, man.
Now again, that's she was not snoozing like she said she was
because that same camera where she was caught at 708
captured her again about 20 minutes later in front of the school.
And then about 10 minutes after Daniel had deactivated the alarm system at the school, and then
five minutes before his body was discovered in the classroom. So she was discovered left right
and center on this fucking surveillance system. So the other thing is her story about being home
and in bed at the time of the murder
was not her only suspicious behavior in the days and weeks following the murder. Just three
days after Dan was killed, Detective Posey got a call from Nancy asking if he would
produce a letter confirming that she was not a suspect in the murder so that she could assure the insurance company she wasn't
involved in the death.
Okay, buddy.
A.K.A.
Let me get my insurance payout.
Yeah.
Like hand me the check and then we'll figure out what else is going on.
Exactly.
Some posi clearly had never been asked for such a letter by anybody and he was like,
yeah, girl, like that's not going to have them.
His real direct quote was was he literally sent her.
He goes, the way you clear somebody is you arrest somebody else and take them to trial.
Like, you're not going to get a letter until I have tried somebody for this murder.
That's not you.
So she just like, wait, so her quote wasn't, yeah, buddy.
No, no, not the direct quote.
Okay. But it wasn't just
detectives who found her reaction to Dan's death to be unusual. There were
neighbors who were also pretty put off by her behavior. Don MacCodill, who
lived in the house that abutted Daniel and Nancy's property, told reporters
quote, she'd ever showed any signs of being upset or sad. I would say she had
an error of relief. Like it was almost a godsend.
McConnell asked whether the police had been keeping
in touch with her and Nancy told him,
no, I'm a suspect.
Damn girl.
Now other neighbors had also noticed her on behavior too.
She was moving furniture in and out of the house.
She had started telling people that she was seriously
thinking of putting the house on the market
because she was, quote,
halted by Dan's side of the bedroom.
She said, thinking about him upset her
and she wanted to get away from the house.
Okay.
Which, if my neighbor said that to me
after their husband was murdered,
I feel like I'd be like,
I don't think I would consider that strange.
Like, she's haunted by his side that the bedroom, that makes sense.
But putting the house on the market, that's abrupt.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know.
Again, I guess when I look at it through the lens of maybe she, you know, like something,
she's actually going through something, I could see that happening because I've had
friends who have lost spouses who have had very similar reactions.
So I mean, I don't know.
I guess it's just kind of out of character at this point
because she was so sporadic and terrible
about like, you know, leading shells at the scene,
like being caught on camera everywhere,
just saying like, oh, I'm in bed.
But then when it comes to this, I don't know.
I feel like, I almost feel like she did react kind of well
for someone who's trying to hide the fact
that they killed their husband.
I think there are times where she does. And then I think there are times where she slips up.
Oh, I think she slips up basically all over the place. She's more often than not. She's slipping up.
But as technicians began digging into Dan's personal life, they only found more evidence leading them back to Nancy.
personal life, they only found more evidence leading them back to Nancy. As they were searching through his cell phone for clues, they actually discovered an article bookmarked on their shared
iTunes account. So this iTunes account was shared by Dan and Nancy. And the article they found
was titled, 10 Ways to Cover Up a Murder. Okay. No, not long after they also discovered another suspicious article, this one written by Nancy
herself in 2011.
She had written this article for a blog called C. Jane Publish, and it was titled How to
Murder Your Husband.
Yeah, yeah, that's the one I was referring to earlier.
On real.
On real.
Like, I don't know. I don't know, Nancy.
Again, maybe, maybe don't, if that's your goal, but you know, maybe don't even if that
is or is not your goal.
Like, don't write about how to murder people.
It's, that's something else.
So this, this article was written kind of like in an essay format and it detailed the motives
and methods that somebody might use to kill their spouse at a romance novel.
Nancy wrote, divorce is expensive.
And do you really want to split all your possessions?
Or if you married for money, aren't you entitled to all of it?
The drawback is the police aren't stupid.
They're looking at you first.
If the murder is supposed to set me free,
I certainly don't want to spend any time in jail. I wish to say, the police aren't stupid,
but I am. Yeah, literally. Then she launched into the pros and cons of the five methods of murder.
The essay recommended against tiring a hitman to do the job because, quote, an amazing number of
hitmen hit men rat you out to the police.
How many hitmen do you know?
Thank you, Dave.
What statistic is this?
She beat it up.
She then cautions against using poison,
saying, who wants to hang out with a sick husband?
Yeah, that's the only downside to poisoning your mails.
I'm sorry, what?
And then she ends the essay by saying, I find it easier to wish people dead than to actually your bands. I'm sorry what? And then she ends the essay by saying, I find
it easier to wish people dead than to actually kill them. I don't worry, I don't want to
worry about the blood and brain splattered on my walls. And really, I'm not good at remembering
lies. I mean, I guess this is a fairly, it's not even a good script for a movie about a psychopath.
It's a very bland script.
It's a very, but wish them dead.
I'm sorry.
Yeah.
This is a weird list, even for someone who is a terrible person and does terrible things.
Yeah.
This is odd.
Like, I love that she's like, you know, I'd just rather wish people dead because I don't
really want to like clean up my walls and I'm really bad at remembering lies. Not like I have a conscious and I would never murder someone like
Oh, I go with this as now she wrote this so she could show it to the police later and go no, no, no, see
This is me saying I would never do I would only wish it
I acknowledge that you guys aren't stupid and I knew you'd be looking at me. Of course, it's not me
Maybe it was honestly, it's not me. Maybe it was.
Honestly, that's not a bad point.
That's crazy.
Nancy.
But I can see that being like her kind of logic, you know, in this.
Probably.
Yeah.
No, I mean, because we'll get into it.
We already have a little bit.
Her logic is wild logic.
But so they find all of that.
They're like, okay, well, this is plenty of evidence.
And then detectives learned that the couple owed a Glock nine millimeter handgun,
which was the very same caliber used in Daniel's murder.
That it was.
But it gets tricky.
According to Nancy, she had purchased the nine millimeter
as research for one of her novels.
And she claimed that neither her or Daniel
had ever fired it.
So. And I heard another side too, where she was like, oh or Daniel had ever fired it. So.
And I heard another side too, where she was like,
oh, all my friends had one.
And then we felt like it was stupid
because we didn't have one
because friends just kept showing up to our house
and they were like, oh, we have a gun.
And I was like, I don't think that ever happened actually,
but sure, interesting story.
I think that ever happened, Nancy.
I think you're just cray cray.
But so she said that they had never fired it, that it was research, bloody don't do it. It was because her all her
friends had one and she just had to get it. Like it's a new pair of Nike's.
But investigators took the gun into evidence and they had it tested, but forensic
technicians determined it probably was not the gun used in the shooting. Now later,
but that, but maybe it was,
because later detectives learned
that this wasn't the first gun Nancy had purchased.
In late 2017, she had purchased what's called
a ghost gun kit online,
which would have allowed her to make her own untraceable gun.
Now, apparently the kit was actually too difficult for her to complete, and that's
when she purchased the Glock. But through the course of their investigation, detectives
would also learn that while the Glock wasn't a match for the casings at the scene on the
day of the murder, it might have been used because Nancy had purchased additional parts
for a Glock 9mm on eBay, and she had swapped several components of the gun before handing it over to detectives.
So that's where she actually like is kind of a scary mastermind.
How did she manage to do all of that?
But she goes, no, I was asleep.
I don't know.
Also like, mama, they're gonna look
at your search history.
Yeah, I mean, you bought it on eBay, come on.
Like, that's very traceable.
I mean, like, the thing that she did,
like you said, that's kind of impressive.
That's kind of crazy.
Right?
I don't know how many people would think to do that,
but maybe people that are like more into guns,
but I don't know, like that's still just,
it's crazy, this chick riding murder mystery,
fucking lifetime novels about killing her husband.
I mean, I don't know, and she's saying
she's gonna wish people dead,
but then she thought to do this,
that's something else.
It's wild.
And I also love that she was like,
yeah, the ghost gun kit online was too hard for me,
but I was able to switch out several components
of another gun.
She's in the negma for sure.
She really is.
So after months of quietly following leads
and collecting evidence,
detectives had assembled what they believed
was a pretty strong case against Nancy Krumpton Brophy
for the murder of her husband.
She and Daniel were way behind on their mortgage.
They were living well beyond their means. And it was mostly especially when it came to Nancy's
spending habits. She was really the one pushing them above their means. Then there were the
multiple life insurance policies that would pay out nearly $400,000 in the event of Daniel's
death.
And also she's spending all this money. How much money are they spending on
six different life insurance policies?
It must have been like crazy.
And I have to wonder if he knew,
I don't think he knew about those.
I think she was probably buying those
and like keeping it secret from him.
And then the fact that should Daniel die,
the house and all of his assets
would be transferred directly to Nancy. So she had
the most to gain from his death. And then finally, the most damning evidence of all, and
the reason why they were actually able to get a probable cause affidavit in the first
place was the surveillance video footage proving that contrary to her statement, Nancy was
at the school during the very short window of time in which Daniel was killed.
So can I actually play you a clip that I think is very interesting kind of regarding that?
Yes, you may. This is like from one of her trials, I believe.
If not you, my husband. You were there in the area at the same time
you were there in the area at the same time,
that someone happens to be shooting your husband within a six minute window with the exact type
of gun that you own.
Your version of what happened, that is not my version.
I think your case is held together
with real frankly, band-aids.
Girl, that's the thing.
It's like you were there in a very small time frame.
You have all the means, all the motives to do this, but it wasn't you.
All the materials even too.
And then why are you lying about sleeping?
Like, you really put it out there like pretty straightforward.
Within a six minute time frame, she goes, nope, your defense terrible.
The option. What do you mean? Why? Why is the defense terrible?
Because it's more than her favor. That's the thing. So it's so crazy.
On the morning of September 5, 2018, just three months after the murder of her husband,
police arrested Nancy at her home. That previously the couple's home in Beaver
Tim. She was seemingly shocked and asked, you're arresting me? You must think I murdered
my husband. No, Nancy, we thought that you actually stole some Cheerios from the stop and
shop down the street. Yeah, you arrested for that. This has nothing to do with your husband's
murder. No, this is just from something that happened like two decades ago. You know,
you grab the skittles from the Kroger.
You just like had a couple unpaid parking tickets, Nancy.
We're just going to take you downtown.
Like yes, they think you murdered your husband.
Of course, that's why they're arresting you.
And don't they literally say like you're being arrested for the murder of bowl?
Yeah, for sure.
There's no way.
Exactly.
Remains, remains silent.
Anything you say can, yeah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So she's really quick on the uptake there.
But despite all the strong evidence against her,
like we just heard in that crazy house clip,
Nancy maintained that she was innocent,
but still offered zero explanation for her presence
outside the school on the morning of her husband's murder.
But strangely enough, her arrest actually shocked almost everybody who knew her in Daniel,
especially the people closest to them. Her old roommate, Tanya, she said,
I was absolutely shocked. I don't think she did it, and I would be embarrassed if I was them if
they can't prove this. Now, Daniel's son, Nathan Stillwater, was among those most stunned
by Nancy's arrest. He told Dateline, they were, you know, they had started making some plans for what was going to happen in their
retirement years. And while it hadn't been nailed down yet, it seems like they were onto some
exciting ideas. Honestly, we were coming to terms that this would be an unsolved murder. It doesn't
make any sense. What makes a person a murderer?
Are they born to kill?
Or are they made to kill?
I'm Candice DeLong, and on my podcast, Killer Psychie Daily, which you can find exclusively
on Amazon Music, I share a quick 10-minute rundown every weekday on the motivations and behaviors of the criminal
masterminds you read about in the news.
I have decades of experience as a psychiatric nurse, FBI agent, and a criminal profiler.
On Killer Psychi Daily, I'll give you my expert perspective on cases like the mysterious
New York City drugings, Raking Down Lori Vallow, a.k.a.
Mommy Doom stays motives, and what drove Caitlin Armstrong to murder?
I'll also bring on expert guests who add even more insight into these criminal
minds. I promise you won't regret adding these 10 minutes to your morning routine.
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Wow.
So at first, I think before they knew what the evidence was, people in their lives were
just like, no, there's no way to do it.
You could have done this, but then they're sitting there through the trial and they see the surveillance footage,
though multiple life insurance taken out the different gun parts.
Like, and they're like, holy shit, I knew this woman.
And like, this is what she's capable of.
So Nancy was arraigned in Multnomah, I believe it's how you say it,
Circuit Court on September 7th and a week later on September 13th,
a grand jury indicted her on one count of murder
with a firearm constituting domestic violence,
to which she pled, I'm sure you'll be amazed, not guilty.
I'm not amazed at all.
Not exactly, I was being sarcastic.
So whilst you was sitting in jail waiting for her trial,
the story was circulating online
and eventually made its way to the national news outlet and the late night cycle. And of course, they
were all chelping at the bit to get the story out about the woman who wrote the wrong
husband and how to murder your husband. But reporters were actually having a tough time
lining up any interviews with the Brofee's friends family or anybody at the school. Their
request to those people went almost entirely ignored.
And actually, Daniel's students and his friends had, quote,
made a pact to say silent out of respect for a man who had life valued his privacy.
Which I think is cool.
So, yeah, that was good stuff.
Yeah, good stuff.
Mind the bull.
So, in the months after Nancy's arrest, the county judge imposed a protective order,
actually, which barred the release of any information or evidence related to the case on the grounds
that it might jeopardize the investigation.
But by April 2019, the news had gone national.
And because of that, Nancy's attorney tried to have the protection order extended, essentially
arguing that if any more coverage or any more
information got released, Nancy wouldn't get a fair trial. But the prosecutor shone over street,
completely disagreed, and he argued all of the information being shared was fact. It was just
damning, and that's why the defense wanted it left out. So ultimately, the judge agreed with
the prosecution, and the order was lifted. That should be. Yeah, agreed. So with the prosecution and the order was lifted. That should be.
Yeah, agreed. So as the prosecution and the defense did their thing, detectives actually kept on investigating, gathering more and more evidence against our girl
dance, who is not our girl at all. It was during this time that they discovered several more
life insurance policies that Nancy had taken out in Daniel's name. And they discovered the
replacement block parts that would later be essential in prosecuting Nancy. policies that Nancy had taken out Daniel's name. And they discovered the replacement
block parts that would later be essential in prosecuting Nancy. According to the prosecutor,
the gun confiscated from Nancy was the exact make and model used in the killing of Daniel,
but the ballistics testing found out that the bullets taken from his body were not a match
for Nancy's gun. But the match of gun, but mismatch of the bullets,
seemed too much of a coincidence for the investigators. So they dug deeper into Nancy's activities,
and they found a possible explanation. And that's when they ended up finding out that she had bought
separate parts for a Glock 9 millimeter handgun on eBay, meaning the gun could be a match for
the murder weapon. It just had a different slide and barrel and that's my Nancy thought she was gonna get away with it.
I mean like...
She couldn't even have had someone else buy her own eBay. I don't know. I'm not trying to give you ideas of potential Nancy's out there, but...
No, come on.
No, you're right though. You have to sit there and you're like, oh my God, but then at the same time,
it's like, wow, she literally thought to replace different,
I don't even think I knew before this that you could replace
different parts and mix match gun parts.
I thought they all just had to line up together
like a Lego set or something.
But I mean, I knew that that was a thing.
I'm not like super into guns or anything,
but I knew that was a thing. I'm not like super into guns or anything, but like, I knew that was a thing,
but I wouldn't have thought to like, you know, be like,
oh, that could be a thing in a case
where you're switching it around for like, you know,
the investigation purposes, like, I wouldn't have thought of that.
And I don't know, maybe other people listening,
they're like, oh, of course you think of that,
but I don't know.
I wouldn't think that Nancy would think of that.
That's the thing. Like, and why is she so cocky thinking she's going to get away with this?
And she's like, yeah, I did this, but you didn't prep anything else.
That's the thing. I don't understand. I think like you were saying in the beginning,
I think she just had to have been delusional if she thought she was going to get away with this.
She is fully delusional. I mean, as is held that is held together by band-aids according to her.
It's like no, it's tied together by actual surveillance footage of you outside of a murder scene.
But the case ended up finally going to trial on April 4th, 2022. There were tons of delays
because of COVID. Her lawyers actually tried to get her released from prison because of COVID complications.
They were like, she's in danger.
And this is like a violation of her rights.
And they were like, she waived a bail hearing.
So unless you want to have a bail hearing,
like we can talk then.
But if not, you're sitting in prison.
And even if you do talk about a bail hearing,
you're most likely sitting in prison.
You're awaiting trial for murder.
Yeah. But they were off to the races with prosecutor Sean Overstreet arguing on behalf of the state
and Lisa Maxfield arguing for the defense. Now by the time the case was ready for trial,
the judge actually had decided to exclude the how to murder your husband blog post from the evidence
on the grounds that quote, any minimal probate of value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice
and a confusion of the issues.
So I think basically what he was saying is that like,
it might be confusing to the jury.
And that's kind of what I got out of that.
I don't agree, but I can see where like,
maybe it would have been an issue.
Mm, because it's like, it's like a fiction novel type thing or like a blog post or whatever
it happened to be.
Exactly.
And I think they were, well, in the prosecution, they were okay with that because they had
actually planned and their argument to minimize that post anyway because they had strong
governance.
So they were okay with it being omitted and better shit to work with.
So in his opening statement,
prosecutor Overstreet told the jury that
even though a good amount of their evidence
was circumstantial, they planned and believed
that they could show it, that it was greed,
that motivated Nancy to kill her husband back in 2018.
He told them and would later tell Dateline as well,
quote, Nancy wanted more.
Nancy wanted a lifestyle that Dan couldn't give to her.
I think she thought, if I could do this,
I'll get enough money that will allow me
to change that lifestyle.
We never thought that she didn't love him.
I think she probably hoped things had worked out differently.
But when they didn't, he was a problem for her.
Ultimately, Nancy's out for number one.
Right.
Exactly.
It's Taylor's oldest time.
She thinks she's entitled to a certain lifestyle.
She's gonna do whatever she needs to do to get there.
And I think she also got more and more desperate
as they were losing more and more money.
And she wanted to be able to spend money on things
that she wanted, but she couldn't
because he was the only person making money
and she was not.
And how fucking old was she at this point?
She's like, I want to say she's like in her late 50s, early 60s.
That's just, I don't know.
At that point, I don't know.
I feel like material things mean less and less the older you get.
You know?
I think that it depends on who you are.
I think if you've gotten what you,
if you've gotten what you wanted out of life so far
and you get to age 50, 60,
I would assume that material items would mean less to you.
But I guess if you're not getting what you want out of life,
then it's gonna mean more to you.
I think it just,
I think it really depends on the kind of person you are and how much material things mean to you. I think she was
a very materialistic person, it seems. Yeah, that's true. And like you were saying, I think
she was always out for number one. She's definitely over number one, and Nancy, you suck.
Right. Crazy. And as overstreet, I again, the prosecutor put it to the jury. Dan Brophy was worth almost
$1.5 million to Nancy if he was dead, but worth a life of financial hardship if he stayed alive.
Damn. So fucked up. Either like it's either way it's your husband.
No, and it sucks that, you know, they get to that point where they have to put it out there like that. It's like, hey, yeah, I don't want to say this,
but he was just a number to her.
Yeah, like I can't imagine like,
like putting a value on how much Drew is worth to me,
like a money, a monetary value.
Right.
That's crazy.
Way more than that.
Like I would, what?
It's like, hey, this is also a human, you know,
do you remember that part? All right. Not really for your monetary gain, but thank you.
So over the course of 11 days, the prosecution supported their argument by showing
the surveillance footage of Nancy at the school on the morning of the morning of the murders
and then search history and data from her computer which showed the purchase of the murder and then search history and data from her computer, which showed
the purchase of the additional parts for the clock, the multiple life insurance policies,
that would have provided a payout altogether once they found the other ones of nearly
$800,000.
Jesus.
And then the jury also heard from 47 witnesses, including everybody from the OCI, which
by the way, I think I said OSI earlier,
I'm sorry, I meant to say OCI,
the Oregon Culinary Institute.
I definitely did.
Yeah.
That's not what I was saying.
But they heard from the facilities manager
at the school, several of the students
who actually were the ones to find Daniel.
They heard from Daniel's father, Jack Brophy,
and several of the couple's friends.
Now, one of the witnesses that helped the prosecution significantly actually came from a
financial analyst named Steven Santos. He testified that Nancy and Dancer Tyraman plans were
financially unsustainable, and that the life insurance policies taken out in Daniel's name
would have been more appropriate for a couple with more discretionary
income. So basically saying, because again, when they met with that financial advisor earlier,
they said, even if you sell your house, even if you sell your land, you're still going to end up
in the red. I think she had gotten them so much in the red that even with the money that she would
have gotten from Daniel, she, like, she still potentially
could have been in the red.
I'm sure she would have been.
I mean, it sounded like it wasn't going well.
No.
And eventually, I think even if, even if she, like, did end up in the green of it, it was
only a matter of time before she ended up in the red again.
For sure.
I mean, she's obviously wanted to get rid of him to keep spending.
Exactly. So I don't think that was going to slow down.
I think if anything, it was going to ramp up.
Yeah. And I mean, it's crazy.
I'm sure like how fast that money could go.
Like you see it when people win the lottery and like stuff like that.
Like obviously a million dollars is a lot of money.
But when you are spending it with like absolutely no regard, I'm sure it's going to go
quickly. Yeah.
So Lisa Maxfield, the defense attorney, she tried to poke any hole that she could in the state's
court case about Nancy. She told the jury in her opening statement, the state will present a
circumstantial case that begs you to cast a blind die to the most important circumstance. Love.
Nancy Cremton, Brophy has always been thoroughly madly crazy in love with Daniel broofy
And she still is to this day for Nancy broofy. He was perfect
Wow, it's like yeah, why she murder him then yeah, it kind of it kind of shatters once you
Why was she outside of school when he got killed that that doesn't really make a lot of sense to me
Why she right a whole entire article on how to murder your husband while she was married to a
perfectly great husband? But she write a letter to the insurance and go, hey, can I get that money
post-haste? No, she literally, that wasn't even to the insurance, that was to the detective.
She said, can I get her clearing me as a saying'm not a suspect. And they were like, no,
because you're a suspect.
That's fucking crazy.
Insane.
I guess the woman is delusional.
Truly is the definition of the word.
And then she, she went on to try and explain every point that the prosecution had made a way.
She said, the ghost, this is the defense attorney.
The ghost gun kit and the clock were merely research for Nancy's writing. I'm like, I
host a true crime podcast and never have I ever bought into a clock on eBay.
Yeah. I mean, really anything that you need to research about it, you can look up or
if anything, I don't know, if you ask a friend who has one or something, be like, hey,
can I just look at this for like a little bit or something like anything else, I don't know. If you ask a friend who has one or something, be like, hey, can I just look at this for like a little bit or something?
Like anything else, I don't think you need to go out
and get a gun license if you just want to look at a gun
for a little while.
Exactly.
And you were saying all of her friends
had this specific kind of gun.
So use theirs for your fucking research.
And if she's saying, like, oh, it's research,
it's research, isn't that, but I've never fired it.
How much research are you doing?
You're not even gonna shoot the thing
that you're researching, like don't you want
to see how a thing functions if you're researching it?
I don't know.
There's a lot of levels to that,
which I think she's full of shit.
I agree.
Giant asshole.
I agree.
And then she also said that the internet searches
for how to cover up a murder were also just for research.
Yeah, fair. And then she offered the alternative theory that Brophy had actually been killed by a local unhoused man seen in the area
that morning. Yeah, you always know it's going well when they start offering up their own theories.
Yeah, exactly. Exactly. The theory was very quickly dismissed by Detective Anthony Merrill, who told the jury he and
his partner had located the man and determined he was never a threat.
And he pointed out Daniel had been shot, but nothing had been taken.
Yeah.
Like, hello.
And then he said, she was also being a little racist when she did this because the detective
ended up saying later, they're asking you to consider the black guy
in the neighborhood as the killer
without any evidence, you should be offended.
Like literally such a...
Yeah.
You should be offended.
It's true.
Now, the most dramatic moment came on day 21 of the trial
when Nancy took the stand to testify in her own defense.
And as we know, from the clip you showed us, this was a big yikes. Yeah. During questioning from the defense,
she tried to explain away the more damning aspects of the prosecution's
arguments. She told the jury she was a very thorough researcher,
hence all the guns. She and Daniel were very much in love and they were
working on solving their financial problems. And then she admitted, yes,
she had a purchase
that replacement, Glock barrel and slide from the seller on eBay. But it was because
she was quote, obsessed with gun parts and that the missing part were parts were surely
in storage somewhere. Okay. Well, what do you think her plan was in that moment to draw
them up? Like she was going to order them again. That's definitely what she was going to do, right? I don't even think she had a plan. I think she was just
talking out of her ass. I think if it went down to it, she was going to order them again.
And she's going to go look there right here. And then they were going to go, um, it says
right here that you just ordered a second set. So where's the first set? She'd be like,
I don't know what you're talking about. She'd stored somewhere, surely. She'd be like, my account was hacked.
She'd be like, oh no.
Ridiculous.
So some of her testimony seemed plausible in some way,
but other parts were downright ridiculous.
She said she had no memory of leaving the house
on the morning of the murder,
and she didn't know what she was doing
on the surveillance camera footage.
She said, you know, maybe I was struggling to write and I went out to clear my head.
And a psychiatrist for the defense testified it was possible that Nancy was suffering from
what's called retrograde amnesia, from the later trauma of learning that her husband
had been killed.
And that's why she didn't remember what she was doing that morning.
But the prosecutor challenged that claim and sent an answer.
If you can't remember anything, how could you be sure that you didn't kill your husband?
She goes, uh, she said, I see Dan every day.
I talk to him every day.
This is not a man I would have shot because I had a memory issue.
It seems to me if I shot him, I would know every detail. Okay. Okay, buddy. That's also just a straight
explanation. Yeah. I mean, like I said, she's the king of flip flopping.
So after 25 days of evidence and testimony, closing arguments were presented on May 23, 2022.
So not that long ago.
Overstreet focused on Nancy's convenient claim of amnesia, the physical evidence, the forensic
evidence that linked her to the crime, including the purchases of the guns, the surveillance
footage, and, in closing, he turned the defense's argument back onto them and reminded the jury
no one would want to hurt Dan, even Nancy herself told that to detectives.
So nobody else had a motive, but Nancy did. Now literally the only person in the world.
Literally. Now, in closing arguments for the defense, Nancy's attorneys focused on the purely
circumstantial nature of the case and reminded the jury that the prosecution's case couldn't be
proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Instead, they emphasized that throughout the and reminded the jury that the prosecution's case couldn't be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Instead they emphasized that throughout the trial the jury repeatedly heard how happy Nancy
and Daniel were together.
Maxfield even said at one point that the best proven fact during the trial was that Nancy
and Dan loved each other.
That doesn't.
No, I think think she murdered him.
And then because after she was like, they loved each other, she was like, there were
other possible assailants in the area.
Then she claimed the police had ignored them, which was not true.
And also, why are you saying there are multiple other assailants when the only person you brought
up in the first place was just an unhoused man minding his own business, you dingus.
You said a salient.
I did.
You're not wrong.
I thought I was going to move past that.
I thought I was going to say a salient.
So on May 25th, 2022, after eight hours of deliberation, I can't even believe it took
them that long.
The jury returned with a unanimous guilty verdict for the second degree murder
of Daniel Brophy. Sentencing was held on June 13th, and that's when they did victim impact
statements. Daniel's son Nathan did an impact statement and sent an answer. You opted to lie,
steal, cheat, fraud, ultimately killed the man that was, for some reason still unbeknownst
to me, your biggest fan. You executed my father
in an act of cold-blooded, premeditated murder, the man that did everything for you.
I was actually curious on if they had kids or not. I think that was his son from
his first marriage. Yeah. That's what it seemed like. Yeah, it's really sad. So before pronouncing
his sentence, the judge addressed the family saying,
I think the thing that you can take away,
which I hope gives you some small measure of solace,
is that he was a mentor and a teacher to many.
And hopefully they will turn and have an impact
on others themselves as they teach.
And with that said, he sent in Stancy
to life and prison with the possibility of parole
after 25 years.
And then lifetime went on to make the movie called,
How to Murder Your Husband, the Nancy Brophy Story,
which I have not watched.
Wow, they took the name.
Took the name.
That's crazy.
Just like a really sad story overall
because it just didn't need to happen.
No, I mean, what an idea, dude.
I mean, I'm glad she's in jail.
I'm kind of disappointed that she has the possibility of parole in 25 years,
but hopefully she'll be like withering and I know seriously.
That point seriously.
But Caleb, thank you so much for joining me, Doggie.
Of course, dude.
Thanks for having me.
I hope I did all right.
My it's been a while since I've done a true crime, anything.
I think it's been like three years.
It's a great job.
And for those of you who are listening, we hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird.
But not so weird that you murder your husband and write a blog post about it, because that's
really too weird
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