Murder With My Husband - 229. The Man Who Turned Into A Monster
Episode Date: August 12, 2024In this episode, Payton and Garrett explore the case of Susan Woods. When police dive into a murder investigation, they checked all the obvious suspects allowing the killer to almost get away with it.... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/murderwithmyhusband/ Discount Codes: https://mailchi.mp/c6f48670aeac/oh-no-media-discount-codes Watch on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@murderwithmyhusband Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/murder-with-my-husband/id1508098400 Listen on spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6GaodpBsSpBuUMhmEXhjK2 Case Sources - ABC’s 20/20 - 20/20 https://www.hulu.com/watch/81c2d0ac-422e-48c4-aa34-05ab206f7abb TexasMonthly.com - https://www.texasmonthly.com/true-crime/susan-woods-stephenville-murder-hidden-killer/ The Stephenville Empire Tribune - https://web.archive.org/web/20210919174510/https://www.yourstephenvilletx.com/news/20180823/in-hiding-woman-says-she-was-victimized-by-confessed-murderer Deseret.com - https://www.deseret.com/entertainment/2024/1/19/24044235/20-20-susan-woods/ ABCNews.com - https://abcnews.go.com/US/become-monster-convicted-killers-thoughts-grave/story?id=106291548 Heavy.com - https://heavy.com/news/joseph-scott-hatley-today/ BeneathTheSurfaceNews.com - https://www.beneaththesurfacenews.com/post/the-man-who-killed-stephenville-resident-susan-woods-in-1987-found-dead-inside-his-trailer TheSun.com - https://www.the-sun.com/news/10137332/susan-woods-murder-stephenville-texas/ MyPlainView.com - https://www.myplainview.com/news/article/Man-sentenced-to-30-years-in-woman-s-1987-death-8640961.php Distractify.com - https://www.distractify.com/p/joseph-scott-hatley-now Newser.com - https://www.newser.com/story/336835/the-real-killer-signed-the-guest-book-at-her-funeral.html HappyScribe.com - https://www.happyscribe.com/public/20-20/there-is-a-monster-in-me Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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You're listening to an Ono Media podcast.
Hey everybody, welcome back to the podcast.
This is Murder With My Husband.
I'm Peyton Morland. And I'm Garret Morland. And he to the podcast. This is murder with my husband. I'm Peyton Morland and I'm Garrett and he's the husband.
I'm the husband.
Wow.
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The fake laugh from Peyton there.
Okay.
Oh my gosh.
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Like a lot a lot, huh, babe? Yep. I've been going to the gym a lot.
Like a lot a lot, huh babe?
Yep.
I've been living there practically.
I've been coming to a gym bro, I guess I could say.
Except I don't like talking to anybody.
I go in there, I do my thing and then I leave.
I stare at a bunch of people while I'm there,
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Other than the gym, I still have my mustache.
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Where is your school spirit?
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Yeah, Olympics are crazy.
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This is a true crime podcast.
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that I guess we can get back into some true crime stuff let's hop into today's case yes if you hear
me eating now and then I have some sour high chews in his shirt in my shirt pocket.
Okay.
Our sources for this episode are ABC's 2020 Texas Monthly.com, the Stephenville Empire Tribune, Deseret.com, ABC News.com, Heavy.com,
Beneath the Surface News.com, the Sun.com, My Plain View.com,
Distractify.com, Newser.com and HappyScribe.com.
Okay.
So when someone is murdered, it is the natural inclination of the police and
always Garrett to suspect someone close to the victim. I
mean, how many times have we seen a husband kill a wife or
the other way around? In other instances outside of those
famed serial killer cases, the attacker is usually a family
member, a boyfriend, a girlfriend, maybe even a close friend from time to time. So it's understandable
that the first suspects called into the interrogation room are someone who knows
the victim pretty intimately. It might not be fair, but it is understandable. But
there's a problem with being so quick to suspect.
Because while we're so set on getting justice for the victim's family, we often don't
think about the effect that false accusations have on those wrongly accused or suspected.
Which is why the police and we as storytellers need to keep in mind that when it comes to murder things
aren't always as they seem. Sometimes the most obvious places to look are
actually the wrong places which then allows the real killer to hide in plain
sight. So it's 1987 we are in the sleepy little town of Stephenville, Texas.
This is the kind of place that you could drive for miles without seeing another car.
You would pass dairy farms, window...
I thought you were going to say Dairy Queen.
You would pass dairy farms. You would have your windows down in the summer.
There would be a faint smell of fresh cut grass and a hint
of manure blowing in the breeze.
With a population of about 14,000 at this time, the biggest social events were Friday
night football games at the high school and maybe the occasional hangout in the Dairy
Queen parking lot.
Whoa, no way. Then everyone would go to church on Sunday
because humble, innocent little Stephenville.
OK, in fact, it was a dry town.
You couldn't even buy beer in Stephenville at the time.
Yes.
Which is why no one ever suspected something as dark and sinister
as what would happen to Susan Woods would actually happen in
Stephenville. Kind of reminds me of that movie with Julianne, what's that movie?
Okay, that's not the original but... Footloose. The original is obviously...
Kevin Bacon! There we go. Yeah. Okay, so 30 year old Susan, she's quiet, she's shy,
she's easygoing, she had grown up in the Stephenville area.
She'd been working part-time at a nursing home
and a sandpaper factory ever since she graduated
high school over a decade earlier.
In fact, she was working six days a week to support herself
ever since things had ended between her
and her husband Michael.
See, let's back up a little bit. Michael and Susan met around the late 70s. Susan was so reserved
in high school. She had never really dated anyone. She didn't even go to prom. But one day,
Michael Woods caught her eye. He kind of was a rock and roll bad boy type that Susan just couldn't resist.
He was not the traditional cowboy like the other 20-something year old men in
Stephenville. So Michael charmed Susan who fell fast and hard. Susan's parents
however did not see the appeal. When Michael showed up to meet her family for
the first time he arrived shirtless in a pair of cutoff jeans and sandals.
That's kind of cool, am I gonna lie?
Susan's parents didn't exactly approve.
Still, we know these small town girls love a bad boy.
And Susan did not seem to care that her parents were not on board with her relationship, at least not at first.
Because in 1980, she moved to El Paso with Michael
after his uncle offered him a job there.
But soon after they settled down,
Susan went to Michael with an important question.
So she goes to Michael and she's like,
listen, my parents are gonna kill me
that we're living together.
Even though she's in her 20s,
she's like, they are legit gonna disown me.
She says, can you just marry me right now to make it
slightly better that we moved away and are living together? And he's like, yes I
can. He told her I can take the day off tomorrow, we can go down to the
courthouse, and that's exactly what they did. So Michael's job does not pan out in
El Paso, so the couple returns to Stephenville. In 1985 they moved into a
little bungalow near downtown and Susan became the sole breadwinner for the
family. But Michael's ego really could not handle this. He began acting out in
ways that Susan did not approve of. He was frequently getting pulled over by
local police. He would get into fights with neighbors and at one point he even poured sugar
into a woman's gas tank.
What?
Meanwhile, Susan did her best to be that Betty Crocker wife
she thought she needed to be.
Coming home from work to then spend all her time
in the kitchen, making beautiful dinners,
honestly hoping that one day her husband Michael
would turn himself around.
But the final straw was when Michael went to her
with a new business idea.
He told her he wanted to start buying and flipping houses,
which would have been great,
but he doesn't have any of his own money.
So he's like, hey, Susan, I know you're the breadwinner
and I haven't had a job.
I now need you to give me money
to start this new business venture.
And when Susan shot down the idea, it caused a massive blowout that ended with Michael
saying that he felt emasculated.
And then after this, things only got worse between the couple.
Michael built up this rage and resentment towards Susan.
He even began leaving her threatening notes in odd places for her to find, like the microwave, kitchen drawers, under the toilet lid.
Now I'm not sure what these notes said exactly,
but I do know that by the summer of 1987,
things had really come to a head.
Ego, man, it's crazy how that happens.
Also, have you seen those TikToks
where a guy will make a TikTok and he'll say,
when I find out my wife's making, for example,
like $250,000 and then it pans and he's like cleaning
the house, like music and stuff like that.
Yeah, cause he's like the housewife or whatever.
He's like, I don't care.
He's like, go for it.
If my wife's making that much money,
I'll do whatever needs to be done.
Yeah, he's like, I will, I will.
Yeah, there's a lot of guys who,
there's a lot of guys who feel emasculated,
their egos are hurt.
I think the worst for me is when, is exactly Michael, when they feel emasculated, but not
enough to go get a job and actually help provide.
They act out.
Yes.
And that's like where it's like, okay, well.
So things have come to a head and Michael moves out for good. And as a little goodbye gift, he takes the car
and Susan's prized fur coat.
What?
And he leaves behind a cassette recording of himself
telling her how she was responsible
for ruining their marriage, which is so funny
because it's like, you know how people have been posting
the voicemails where you dance to your ex's voicemail?
He basically did that just back then.
So Susan told her friend Cindy that at this point
she was afraid of what Michael would do
now that they were separated.
She knew he had a jealous and angry side
and while Michael had left town,
she worried she would never really be able to live her life
without him finding out.
So she stays with Cindy for a little while until
things calm down. And when the dust settled, she asked Michael for a divorce that July.
She even started seeing someone new. A bartender she met over in the town of Granbury, Texas.
Friends of Susan say for the first time in years she finally seemed truly genuinely happy
like she had turned a new leaf and then all of a sudden Susan goes radio silent.
So on July 28 1987 Susan's father Joe Atkins was worried. That night he received
a call from Susan's boss at the sandpaper factory saying that she hadn't
shown up for work in two days.
People had been trying to call her, she was not answering, and Joe knows that this is not like his daughter.
She takes her job very seriously, so it leaves a pit in his stomach.
The only thing he can think to do is to go to Susan's house, and when he pulls up, the house looks dark.
And when he reaches the front door,
he notices that it's unlocked.
So he walks in, he goes into the living room,
and on the coffee table is a bag of chips,
a diet Coke, and an ashtray full of cigarette butts.
Only Susan doesn't smoke, and she also avoids caffeine.
So he's like, okay, obviously someone else was here
or is here.
He makes his way into the bedroom calling out Susan's name
but he sees that the room is a mess.
The bed has been moved closer to the bathroom door
like it had gotten caught up in some kind of struggle.
And when he continued towards the bathroom,
that is where he finds
Susan and not only does he find Susan he finds the naked dead body
of his daughter
Susan something
No one obviously should ever have to find but a family member should never ever have to see her find
but a family member should never, ever have to see her find.
She was draped halfway over the tub. Her head and her chest were submerged into the water that was in the tub.
And her hands were tied behind her back, bound with a tank top,
which this is just like...
Horrible.
Horrible.
When the police arrived, Joe was standing out front
of his daughter's house in complete shock.
And all he could say to detectives was,
they killed my daughter.
Now it's unclear who the they was
that Joe was referring to in this moment.
Keep in mind, he just walked in on his daughter like this.
And so.
Give him some time.
Yes.
But the scene inside would honestly be enough
to confuse even some of the best detectives
because Susan's body had already started decomposing,
which told the medical examiner
that she had been dead for at least two days already.
She had been sexually assaulted and strangled.
This was indicated by the red marks across her throat. The attacker also appeared to try and smother her with a pillowcase since one was found
with mascara stains and a haunting impression of Susan's face on it. Detectives were able to gather
several pieces of crucial evidence though, like two really solid sets of finger and palm prints
on the bathroom tub,
which they strongly believed belonged to the killer.
Plus there were those cigarette butts and the Coke can,
which they knew were not used by Susan herself.
It looked as if she had invited someone into the house,
hosted them for a bit and then was attacked.
Either that or they stayed in her house after she died,
right, they came in and then attacked her
and then stayed there.
Now a sergeant named Donnie Hensley
was the one to spearhead the investigation
and he felt pretty confident that Susan knew her attacker.
But when he started talking to Susan's friends and family,
they said, there were not a lot of people
she would have willingly opened up her home to.
Ever since her separation from Michael,
Susan had kept her social circle pretty small.
She had a hard time trusting people.
But one friend named Deborah Hardy
tells Detective Hensley something of note.
Just a few weeks before Susan's death, Susan had come to Deborah really upset.
She had a bunch of hickeys all over her neck
and she told Deborah that she was afraid
of other people seeing them and talking about it.
So, Hensley's like, okay, I'm gonna track down
the source of these hickeys
and it's Susan's new bartender boyfriend, JC BowC. Bowman. Now, J.C. willingly comes in for an interview. He says he and Susan both
talked about keeping it casual. They were dating. It was nothing serious. That he would
go over to her house, cuddle on the couch while she drank and he had a few Coca Colas
that sometimes they would just take baths together, but she had
actually ended it with him after the hickey incident.
So she was upset that he had left this many hickeys on her.
And this was just a few days before she died.
Now obviously none of this is looking good for JC.
And when Hensley asks him to take a polygraph, it comes back in conclusive.
There's definitely some strange coincidences between JC and clues found at the crime scene,
like the Coca-Cola,
but Hensley had this feeling that JC
seems like a pretty genuine guy.
So he stays on the suspect list,
but he doesn't remain at the top of it for very long,
because soon there's another tip
that points them in a different direction.
Before Susan died,
a neighbor reported a man lurking around Susan's bungalow.
It was a big guy with a red pickup truck who fits the description of Susan's friend,
Cindy's, remember Cindy is who Susan went to to complain about her hickey?
Her hickeys, Cindy's boyfriend.
So a neighbor comes and says,
Cindy's boyfriend, who is Susan's friend,
the boyfriend is lurking around Susan's home
in the days before she died.
Which, why?
That doesn't make sense.
What's the connection?
I mean, I know we're gonna get to it,
but right now there's no connection there.
Right, so it was a man named Roy Hayes,
and a lot of people described
Roy as this gentle giant. In fact, Susan had turned to him for protection in the days after
Michael left. He came over to the house, he nailed some of her windows shut, he even offered to lend
her a gun, which she inevitably declined. He also helped Susan with some odds and ends whenever she
needed it that summer. But this meant that his fingerprints were all over the home and it also meant he was
someone that Susan probably would have willingly invited in.
Now, Hensley and his team, they kind of zoom in on Roy, but not for any reasons that really
make sense. Mostly they do it because Roy was involved with something seen as sinister,
even demonic back in the small town of Texas in 1987.
What do you think Roy was doing in 1987
that the police were like, bad, bad boy?
Oh, he was drinking, wasn't he?
Oh, well, I thought you said they couldn't buy alcohol.
I mean, they can drink, they just can't buy alcohol.
Sing hard hard 1987.
1987 drugs.
Wait, that is bad. Am I that my I don't know. You got me
confused.
He was known around town for running a little game called
Dungeons and Dragons.
What's wrong with that?
Babe, in the 80s, they people thought it was like a devil game
They like parents were freaking out being like no
Yes, oh my gosh, how do you not know? I play a good amount. I mean I play video games
Yeah, how do I not know this when Dungeons and Dragons came around? Is this real guys?
Is she lying right now? There was an upar, an uproar about this game being
demonic and devil worshipping, and that people who played it
were not the type of people you wanted to be around.
I had no idea.
OK, well, Roy is the little headmaster
of the local Dungeons and Dragons game. Now this of course sounds ridiculous to us, especially with how many violent video games
are out there. But back then, police felt it was cause for concern, particularly after a
news station did a whole story on the game, how it was only played by devil worshipers.
So the police were like, Roy. So Roy is sent to the Texas Rangers office for a polygraph as well and while he's waiting for
the results the police badger him. They're trying to get him to confess. They tell him you had to
have killed this girl Roy and the poor guy is white as a ghost thinking that he's going to go
to jail for something he didn't do. But then the polygraph comes back and it shows that Roy is
telling the truth. So he's removed from the suspect list, but after that he is scarred for life.
And he's left wondering, how could I be under suspicion when it's clear as day?
The person they should really be looking into is Susan's estranged husband, Michael Woods.
Which I mean, yeah, so fear not because the police were
definitely keeping a close eye on Michael too. However, it was a bit more
difficult considering Michael was no longer living in Stephenville and had
actually moved out of the state since separating from Susan. He was now
supposedly living in Indianapolis, Indiana, which that is weird if you go
to the state. It's kind of a good alibi. Which that is weird. If you go to the state.
It's kind of a good alibi.
A really good alibi, yeah.
So he was residing in a tent in some dilapidated house
he and his brother were remodeling.
So the guy probably wasn't kind of easy to find
in the first place, but when police do track him down,
they're the ones to break the news to Michael
because he still doesn't know. They tell him his estranged wife has been murdered and Michael knows this
isn't looking good for him. When they ask Michael to sign a confession statement,
he refuses. He says he knows he's innocent and there's nothing they can do
to coerce a confession out of him. And over the course of the next few days, he
says the Indianapolis police start harassing him for his role in this case.
They begin pulling him over for no reason. They're arresting him for public intoxication when he
hadn't even been drinking and at one point Michael claimed they tried to force him onto a plane
to return to Texas. But here's the thing the police aren't the only ones to think Michael played a part in Susan's death.
It's pretty easy to say that Susan's friends and family all suspect him as well.
Susan's dad, Joe, is at the police station almost every single day in the first few weeks of this investigation
badgering the police about why they haven't arrested his son-in-law yet.
They had those finger and palm prints all over the bathtub. If they
could just match them to Michael's, it would be the smoking gun they needed. So
Detective Hensley and his team went to Indianapolis with a full-fledged plan to
get Michael's prints and confirm once and for all that he was responsible for
Susan's murder. It would be crazy if the prints don't match Michael. So after hearing that
Michael had stolen Susan's car, her fur coat, some crystal figurines
after their separation, Hensley secured a search warrant
and went to Michael's Indianapolis home
to get the stolen items back.
They tore the place apart, and while I don't think
they found the stolen items, they did find some marijuana,
which was enough for them to arrest Michael
and finally get those fingerprints.
But once Hensley gets back to Stephenville
and compares Michael's prints to the ones found
at the crime scene, he is taken by complete surprise.
No match.
They are not a match, which means
Michael's basically eliminated from the suspect list.
Which that would be.
Because he's like the perfect suspect.
I know, but it's like you said earlier,
that one guy was stalking outside.
Roy.
Roy.
Dungeons and Dragons.
But I don't know, man.
But Roy was also looking out for her.
Yeah, Roy was also looking at her.
So now I'm really confused.
It really should be Michael.
It should be Michael.
But he's moved out of the state.
It 100% should be Michael.
And his fingerprints on the palm prints don't match. I mean, the fingerprints don't match.
And it's like the fingerprints are on the tub in a position that they were like.
The killer would have probably grabbed right here to do this.
What else are you supposed to do if they don't match?
Nothing. So everything in Hensley's veins, though, tell him the only logical person
to do this was Michael. Yeah.
In fact, the same went for most everyone in Stephenville.
If you knew Susan, then you knew Michael
and you knew that things were not good between them,
which was why Michael remained under suspicion
even as Susan's case stalled out.
It was kind of like the case in town
where everyone was like, oh, Michael killed Susan,
but he's still out because they don't have
enough evidence to get him.
That was like the theory.
Yeah.
The thing was no one ever told Michael or the public that his prints didn't match.
So police ran them, knew they weren't a match and didn't announce it.
Can you do that?
Yeah.
But it's shady because he's now going to be persecuted.
Could you lie and say they did match in an interrogation
You could that's nuts. I
Mean, I agree with it, but I don't cuz I think there's times where it's useful
But there's also times where it leads to false confessions exactly someone might just be like, okay
I did it because they're so pressured
I know a lot of people don't understand false confessions and don't understand how you can get there
I know a lot of people don't understand false confessions and don't understand how you can get there. It's
Psychology it happens. It is so real. I've done some crazy shiz in my life
psychology, man, it happens
so Michael basically
Continues living with this perceived target on his back for years thinking at any moment that police were gonna come for him
for years thinking at any moment that police were gonna come for him. He stayed the heck out of Stephenville for that exact reason. Rather he stayed out of
Texas for that reason. The dirty looks that he got, the scowling faces. Even when
Susan's family sued Michael in a civil suit in 1989, Michael actually refused
to show up for the trial in Texas. And as a result, the judge awarded the family the $11,000
they were looking for and slapped on another $700,000.
So, yes.
Wait, what's up?
Yeah, so Michael's lawyers told him
as long as he steered clear of Texas,
it would never be collected.
But that was beside the point.
Because Michael went on living this way for another 19 years.
He had paranoia, depression, his own grief
because his ex-wife was murdered.
I'm gonna be pretty pissed if it's not Michael.
And he's like, I didn't kill her,
but everyone just says I did.
Like everyone thinks I did.
Eventually news of the case even spread to Indianapolis
as like time went on and news became easier to spread.
And that's where Michael was living.
And now the neighbors and the locals there were coming up to him and asking if
he was the one mentioned in the article, if he was the Michael that is,
everyone is saying killed Susan Woods. So in 2000,
Michael hit his breaking point and he attempted to die by suicide. Oh no.
He survived and he turned to music to try and cope.
And then in the summer of 2005, everything changed for Michael during one chance encounter.
He was playing a show at a house party for a friend's birthday.
And afterwards, Michael was overcome with emotion and went around the side of the house
to try and calm himself down.
I think it's pretty safe to say that Michael
is struggling mentally at this point in his life.
The host was a woman named Barbara Gary,
and she went to check on Michael to ask him
why he was so upset.
And Michael broke down, telling her the entire story
about Susan's murder, saying,
I used to live in Stephenville
and my wife was murdered. Everyone thinks it's me and it's been so bad that it led to me
attempting suicide and I survived. But it's just so much like it's so much to know that everyone
thinks this of you. At that point, Barbara sees something in Michael in that moment that no one had really seen up to this point.
And it was a man who she presumed to be innocent, desperate to have his name cleared publicly.
Like that is all he wanted in life was for the public to know and confirm that he did
not kill his wife.
So afterwards, Barbara writes a letter to the Stephenville Police Department to see if there's been any updates on this case.
And at this point, a new detective named Don Miller was the one to open that email.
And with Susan's case still unsolved, he figures, okay, someone's reaching out, bringing attention.
Why not look into it once more?
Especially because crime-solving technology has drastically improved in the years since Susan's case ran cold.
And there were new digital databases, DNA testing, a lot more could be done.
So Miller went back to the evidence locker, he dug out those cigarette butts from Susan's home, and he sends them off to the lab.
And they come back with one note. Unidentified mail.
Now without a match in the system, Miller knew there was only
one way to clear Michael's name for good. I mean and this is hard right because
they've already cleared him of the prints. So my question is and maybe you
don't know the answer to this and that's okay. I hope whenever listeners will. I
wonder how many people don't match on fingerprints but they match on DNA.
It definitely happens.
Like I wonder the statistics behind how often
or percentage wise like how-
I wonder how they find those.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know.
I just, I think it's kind of interesting
or is it even possible?
I mean, it has to be, I'm sure it's happening, right?
Oh, there's definitely cases where it's happening.
So like how often, what are the chances it happens?
Is it pretty common?
Is that why now the gold standard is DNA instead of finger instead of fingerprints?
Yeah, I think what's even scarier that's more common is that someone doesn't match
DNA or fingerprints and is still arrested and convicted.
Yeah, that's like insane that that happens.
It is pretty crazy because if you don't match DNA
and you don't match fingerprints.
And the prosecution still decides to move forward?
There just shouldn't even be circumstantial evidence.
That shouldn't even be a thing.
You should just be cleared.
Because you're just messing with so many variables.
Yes.
So many variables.
So the new detective is like, listen, if this guy just wants his name cleared, we've cleared
him of the fingerprints, let's clear him of the cigarette butts, and let's publicly say
this guy did not kill his wife.
So they reach out to Michael and they're like, you good to give us your DNA?
Give us your DNA.
And Michael agrees.
Oh, no, dude.
This is crazy man. So standing on his front stoop in the cold, Indiana winter months of 2005
Miller and his partner took Michaels cheek swab right there
They sent it back to the lab to compare with the DNA on the cigarettes and found it was not a match
Okay, good. So between that and the fingerprints, it's obvious.
It was a Michael.
Michael is not their guy.
Like, Michael was not the person in the house that day.
And so publicly, his name, after all these years,
is finally cleared.
But Miller knew the fingerprints were still
a very important and unsolved piece of this puzzle. by 2006 there was a whole new system which was still in its infancy
when the case was being investigated back in 1987. This was one that the Texas
Department of Public Safety had just gained access to thanks to the FBI and
it was the Automatic Fingerprint Identification System or APHIS as a lot
of us know it by. APHIS? Automatic Fingerprint Identification System or APHIS as a lot of us know it by. APHIS
Automatic Fingerprint Identification? Some of the names are just funny. So since
the crime was committed the digital database had built up a massive catalog
with criminals from all over the country. As you guys know this is like gonna
change the true crime industry. So in May 2006 Miller ran those bathtub prints through the system
and crossed his fingers for a match and he gets one.
He gets one.
They belonged to a man named Joseph Scott Hatley.
Freaking Joseph, man.
Who is this?
So Joseph had also grown up in Stephenville.
Of course he did.
And like many of the families in the area
He was raised in a middle-class church going family. Now Joseph found himself curious about sex at a very young age
But whenever he tried to ask questions about it his parents pointed him in the direction of God
So Joseph got more and more angry at the prospect of religion and by 12 years old he began refusing to go to church.
Now over time his anger at his religious upbringing turned to rage. He started fantasizing
about violence and at one point he even considered bringing a gun to school. Instead Joseph turned
that anger inward and resorted to drugs and drinking to numb his confusion and pain.
Now in his late teens, he finally met someone
he thought would solve his problems.
It was a young woman that he fell in love with
and he married, but a year or so later,
their relationship crumbled,
leaving Joseph bitter and angry again.
While in the midst of his divorce,
Joseph sought comfort in one of his only friends, his cousin Cindy.
Now if you remember, Cindy is Susan Wood's best friend. This was the one who
was helping her through her divorce with Michael. Well one evening in early July
of 1987, Cindy invited both the 30 year old Susan and her 21 year old cousin Joseph over for dinner and after a few
drinks Joseph believed that Susan was flirting with him and he mistook this as her being interested
in him. Not only did Susan meet Joseph a few weeks before she died and now Joseph's fingerprints
match the prints found on the bathtub. I think it's
important to note that Joseph also went to Susan's funeral with Cindy. Oh my gosh
man. I mean that happens a lot though. Yes. I mean I know it's horrible but
it's I don't want to say intriguing. It's mind blowing, interesting how much it actually happens.
Well, he even signed the guest book.
Oh, jeez.
But is this enough to say that Joseph Hatley was
the one who killed Susan?
Police are like, maybe let's keep looking into him.
And this is when they learned that Joseph
had committed a similar crime about a year
after Susan's death. so he did not stop.
So this summer, Susan died. Joseph met a 15-year-old girl named Shannon Myers at a friend's house.
Keep in mind, he is 21.
Shannon had recently moved to Stephenville from Arkansas and didn't have many friends in the area,
so when the 21-year-old Joseph took an interest in her, Shannon returned the sentiment. The two
began casually dating, then they exchanged I love yous, but later that summer, Joseph sexually
assaulted Shannon. She went to her mother, who encouraged her to report it to the police, and
while they spoke with Joseph, they inevitably let it go. He didn't, though. He grew angry, cut off all contact with Shannon. Now fast forward to a year later in July 1988,
Shannon runs into Joseph at a party again, Stephenville, small
town like it's gonna happen. Joseph pulls her aside says he
wants to clear the air between the two of them says he misses
her. He wants to see her later that night. She meets him in a
laundromat parking lot. He tells her to get into his truck.
They should go for a ride and chat.
He takes her to a park just south of town,
right off the highway, and he sexually assaults her again.
He first starts by saying, let's just have sex.
She says, no.
He holds a knife up to her and sexually assaults her.
This goes on for six hours.
He doesn't stop. He doesn't do it just once. This goes on for six hours. He doesn't stop.
He doesn't do it just once.
So Shannon fights for her life.
She doesn't even think she's going to make it out of this
alive, but she does.
He actually takes her back to where he picked her up.
And she runs home and obviously tells her parents
immediately they take her to a hospital for a sexual assault
kit and they press charges against Joseph Hattley.
And he's not in jail?
Now, Joseph is told to stay in the Stephenville area
while police investigate the charges, but he doesn't.
He runs away to Las Vegas, where he commits armed robbery.
Holy.
He is sentenced to 120 days in a youth offender program.
Sorry, I'm sorry, everybody.
This is insane.
It's insane how stuff like this happens so often
where people commit crimes over and over and over again
and somehow don't end up in any punishment.
And then there's somebody who will commit
the smallest crime, not saying it's okay or not okay,
but all of a sudden it's like, hey, 10 years in prison.
Yeah.
Also, it's like, I know that they don't know
that he's killed someone at this point.
OK, but like, take the fact that he's killed a woman
at this point.
He sexually assaulted a young girl
again for six hours, multiple times, and then runs away
and commits armed robbery.
And you're going to absolutely lose your mind,
because when he finally does come back to Stephenville,
a grand jury declines to indict him on the sexual assault charges stating that
there was insufficient evidence. So he gets away with it.
Like holding a knife to someone and sexually assaulting them for six hours is
not that far off from violently hurting someone like murdering someone like it's
really not that far off.
Insane, insane the amount of people that get off
for sexually assaulting people.
Just absolutely no excuse, pisses me off.
It's not okay.
So Shannon Myers is left to live her life
in crippling fear of this man,
especially because during that attack,
he tells her something terrifying.
So when she goes to the police, she is like,
yes, he sexually assaulted me for six hours.
And during this, he told me that I
should be scared because he has killed someone before he
had killed a woman named Susan.
So she tells Stephenville police this.
And they're like, oh, no, no, no, no.
And just a year earlier, Susan had been murdered.
OK, I digress.
So while police were focusing so hard on busting Michael Woods
for something he didn't do, Joseph Hatley
was out there living his life.
He ends up moving to Nashville.
He gets married again.
He has two kids.
He becomes a truck driver.
What is happening right now?
Who knows how many other victims he targets on his routes.
And when police reopened the files on Joseph,
they find even outside of this supposed confession,
there were a lot of things that pointed to him
being the killer.
As I mentioned earlier, Susan wouldn't have let
a stranger into her home.
She knew Joseph.
They'd met just recently.
He was also a heavy smoker.
And when police tracked down Joseph, they learned he's actually moved back to Texas.
Round Rock, to be exact, less than a three hours drive from Stephenville.
He's been hiding in plain sight all of these years.
I don't know how you murder somebody and then live three hours from it and just like yeah, I
Killed someone years ago over there. So on June 6th
2006 detective Miller and his partner bring Joseph in for questioning and there he admits
He did visit Susan on her home right before she was murdered
They got drunk and high they fooled around a bit bit. And he says, but then I left.
I didn't kill her.
He was so adamant, in fact, that he's like, here,
take some of my DNA.
What he didn't know was at the time, Joseph's wife
was also talking to police.
So they brought his wife in.
She's like, why is he in here?
And they're like, well, you know, he's a suspect in murder.
And she's like, well, he has been physically assaulting me
for years.
Oh my gosh, dude, what?
So Joseph goes home that night.
He meets up with his kids.
He takes them to dinner at IHOP.
And his wife is during this time pressing charges.
Good, good.
That evening as Joseph dined on pancakes,
Round Rock police moved in and arrested him there
for domestic abuse. The lab came back with those DNA results and it's a match.
A perfect match. They were his cigarettes in her living room, which how do you? Okay.
Anyways, police now had enough to arrest him for Susan Woods murder. Susan's father, Joe
Atkins was blown away by the news.
All these years, he was certain that Michael Woods had murdered his daughter
and gotten away with it.
Suddenly, his world was turned upside down, but that also finally meant
getting justice for his daughter.
Michael Woods was actually attending a college course when he received word
that Susan's killer had been caught, and it literally literally the news brought him to tears right then and there. Oh it gives me chills because
awful. Obviously no one's perfect but what he had to go through is not okay
not okay. Shannon Myers was also relieved to hear that Joseph was finally paying
the price obviously I mean she's been attacked.
She said for years after the sexual assaults,
she suffered from panic attacks, migraines, PTSD.
She could now rest a little bit easier
knowing that Joseph was finally behind bars.
But he didn't remain there for very long.
In 2007, Joseph confessed to the murder
a week before his trial as part of a plea deal,
and the 43-year-old was sentenced to 30 years in prison.
But after serving only 11 of those years...
No, do not tell me he got out after 11 years.
He was released on good behavior.
Is he out right there right now?
He moved to a halfway house.
He got a job as an auto mechanic, and he got a second chance at life.
Shannon Myers felt the justice system had felt her for a third time.
You know what?
Hold on.
That's not okay.
It's just not okay.
I don't care.
I don't care what he thinks.
I don't care what his family thinks.
I don't care what any of his friends think.
They can all screw themselves.
He was abusing his wife.
That is not okay.
He attacked Shannon Myers twice and killed.
If you murder somebody, if you murder somebody, you do.
I'm talking about murder.
I know there's manslaughter.
I know there's DUI, junk driving.
I'm just first degree murder.
I'm just talking about if you first degree murder somebody,
if you murder somebody, you should never be out of prison.
You don't get a second chance at life.
That person didn't get a second chance at life.
Screw you.
So once again, Shannon has to go back
to living her life in fear because Joseph Hatley
is now back out on the streets
and could show up on her doorstep at any time.
Oh my gosh, dude, this case is nuts.
But in 2021, fate finally did catch up with him.
He was 56 years old when his bladder cancer returned.
And on December 9th, he was found dead in his RV
where he had been living alone in the city of Abilene, Texas.
Okay, so he's dead.
But Joseph's story didn't end there.
Sucks for him.
Shortly after his death,
Detective Miller received a phone call from the man who purchased Joseph's trailer. Okay. Inside was a bunch of
letters. There was nearly 200 pages worth of notes from Joseph explaining why he
had become the man he had become. why he did the things he did.
In those writings, he claimed on the night Susan died, he went over to her house.
He wasn't set out to hurt her.
He said while he and Susan were hanging, he quote, overstepped his bounds.
She slapped him and he snapped.
So she said no.
Oh, I just still don't believe him because I think he's still trying to justify what he did and make himself look better. I mean, she said no. Oh, I just still don't believe him because I think he's still trying to justify what he did
and make himself look better.
I mean, she said no.
Like no matter what he writes in those,
I just can't believe.
He claims in his writings
that after he came out of a drunken fog,
he realized he had brutalized her.
He said Susan was still alive.
She begged for her life repeatedly
and he still decided to kill her.
He sexually assaulted another girl for six hours. He was beating his wife.
Like everything he's writing is just invalid.
Right. So all of this makes me realize that when considering suspects,
we really should not just like do it lightly. Like, well, it could be this.
And it still happens today. Like in the true crime community,
people still are like, well, what if it was this person? What if it was this person?
I mean, Cindy's boyfriend, Roy Hayes, remember Roy?
He said the suspicion actually cost him two jobs.
He got fired from two jobs because he was a suspect
in this murder.
And it actually prevented him from following his dreams
of becoming a police officer.
And Michael Woods, well, we heard how things ended up for him
because of the suspicion that fell on him.
Luckily he was able to turn a new leaf, but I think his strength in all of that is
actually an anomaly.
I just can't help but wonder what would have happened if the police looked outside of
those obvious suspects, if they didn't approach this case with it had to be someone
in her immediate life.
I can tell you one thing,
Shannon Myers wouldn't have had to live her life in fear.
And who knows how many other lives might have been affected
simply because Joseph Hatley was ignored
and inevitably ended up walking free.
And that is the case of Susan Woods and Shannon Myers. All right, you guys, well, that was our case for this week.
And we will see you next time with another episode.
I love it.
And I hate it.
Goodbye.