Snapped: Women Who Murder - BONUS: Fatal Fast Food (An Unexpected Killer)
Episode Date: September 22, 2022We are bringing you a special bonus episode featuring a case from Oxygen's hit series, “An Unexpected Killer,” returning to Oxygen on Friday, September 16th at 8/7c. Watch full episo...des of An Unexpected Killer live or OnDemand for FREE on the Oxygen app: https://oxygentv.app.link/hCZygmrckqb A restaurant is robbed and the night manager murdered, leading police to investigate suspicious co-workers, a disgruntled ex-employee and a violent serial attacker. Season 3, Episode 3 Originally aired: March 18, 2022See 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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Hi, I'm Lindsey Graham, the host of Wondries Podcast American Scandal.
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An ambitious, popular, young, restaurant manager. She was a tremendous young person who had unlimited potential.
We always thought, just like the world on fire.
Is found beaten, stabbed, and suffocated.
The person who did this absolutely
wanted to guarantee that she was dead.
Whoever did it ransacked is safe.
Something that brutal had to be more than just a robbery.
Detectives uncover a history of workplace conflict. to say something that brutal had to be more than just a robbery.
Detectives uncover a history of workplace conflict.
He didn't like to be told what to do.
He scared me.
I was uncomfortable around him.
For me, that was a red flag.
With the community on edge,
another attack leaves them living in fear.
It was such a similar homicide,
a lone female employee, and the use of a knife.
You don't know if somebody's lurking out there,
and they're gonna do it again.
And new evidence confirms disturbing suspicions.
The lab informed me that there was a match.
I just couldn't believe what was happening.
Like, what am I gonna wake up?
Terry's murder wasn't what it appeared to be.
MUSIC
Falls Township, Pennsylvania, is a family-friendly suburb
with blue-collar roots.
Falls Township is a community in lower-bucks County,
Pennsylvania, was built up around the. steel mill in the 1950s.
Still workers moved out here from different parts of the country,
and it was a nice community.
Although we're a suburb of Philadelphia,
and we're right across the river from Trenton,
violent crime is relatively unusual in falls.
That all changes when Saturday morning
with a gruesome discovery at a fast food restaurant.
On the morning of February 4, 1984,
the manager arrived to open the restaurant
and upon entering the discover that someone was laying
outside the kitchen area and obviously deceased.
The manager recognizes the woman
as the restaurant's night-chiff manager, 25-year-old Terry Brooks.
He observed Terry Brooks laying on the floor in a pool of blood
with a knife stuck in her neck.
And he phoned the dispatcher and stayed on the phone
until officers got there.
I was told that they had a homicide at the Rory Rogers
restaurant on Route 1, so I was there
pretty quickly.
Her body was positioned near the kitchen.
There was a butcher knife sticking out of her neck.
She had black and blue marks and bruises everywhere, and it looked like hand marks around
her neck like she had been strangled.
It was thought that she was still alive
until the bag was put over her head
because of the moisture in it from her breath.
She looked like she had blood under her fingernails
and blood on her hand,
and that was wrapped in an evidence bag and secured.
There was a rectangular kitchen prep area.
That's where you can see both her shoes
that were against the wall.
To my mind, that was probably the first act of violence
that took place.
That she was literally pushed right out of her shoes
and that a struggle that took place right there.
Moving around the corner is where the body was found.
It looked like her body had been dragged on the floor to where she laid.
Terry had her winter coat on, and her bag was also on the floor, like she was getting ready
to leave.
Further examination of the scene reveals evidence of another crime.
In the office, the safe was open.
There was a register drawer on the desk.
The coins were scattered all over the floor.
It just appeared that whoever did it ransacked is safe.
There was money taken.
They had all the ear markings of a robbery homicide.
It was fairly easy for the restaurant to get
account of what was missing, and it was around $2,500.
Looking for more clues, detective
speak to the manager who discovered Terry's body.
When the manager of the restaurant arrived around 6
in the morning, he found the intervestible door locked.
The door to the interior of the building was locked.
But the drive-thru window was partially open.
It appeared that the killer had left
through the drive-thru window, because the metal pipe
that was laid in the track is the kind of security measure to lock it up
and been removed and laid to the side.
But there was no sign of forced entry in the restaurant.
Police believe Terry was killed sometime after midnight
when the restaurant had closed.
As detectives continued to process the crime scene,
Terry's family discovers that she never returned home
from work.
The morning of the murder, Scott, the victim's fiancé,
knocks on the door to the Brooks family home.
At the time, Terry lived with her parents.
We hear a banging at the door, and it was Scott standing there.
And he's like, Terry's car is not in the driveway.
He tells them that he was driving by their house on his way to work,
and that he noticed Terry's car wasn't there.
They then looked in her room and saw that, in fact, she wasn't home.
And then Scott picked up the phone and dialed the rear Rogers.
And he goes, this is George Brooks, Terry Brooks's father.
You know, she didn't come home last night. She okay.
And they said, no, she's not.
She, you know, has been murdered.
I was kind of shocked.
They told him over the phone, but I just couldn't believe
what was happening.
Like, when am I going to wake up?
It's a horrible thing.
I was getting ready to go to work when my phone rang.
I was getting a call from her stepmother to tell me
so that I wouldn't see it on the news and my heart just sunk.
Terry Brooks grew up in Warminster, Pennsylvania,
the oldest of four children.
My mom and dad divorced. Screw up in Warminster, Pennsylvania, the oldest of four children.
My mom and dad divorced.
Terry was in eighth grade, and she kind of took over the mother role after that happened
out of all of us.
She was probably the most ambitious.
We always thought, you know, Terry would have her own business one day, and she'd just
light the world on fire.
Terry took jobs in the restaurant industry and earned her reputation as a hard worker.
I worked with Terry at an Italian restaurant.
In the beginning, she was a server, I attended bar.
She became management after working there for a while.
She really, really took pride in her hard work
and how she dealt with people.
Soon after her promotion, she began a year-long romance
with her coworker, Scott Keith.
She met Scott at the restaurant.
He was the head chef.
They had a good time together.
Terry just came home one day with a ring on her finger.
And we were all like, oh my God.
While Terry planned her dream wedding
for the upcoming summer, her career also started to take off.
It was her dream to move forward to bigger things
in the hotel business.
And she had looked into getting a job
with the Marriott Corporation.
The positions she accepted with the Marriott Corporation. The positions she accepted with the Marriott
was to be a manager of Roy Rogers Restaurant.
I first met Terry.
When I started working for Roy Rogers, she was my boss.
She was always happy.
She was very excited about her wedding
and she was excited to go dress shopping.
I know she put the down payment on the honeymoon to Hawaii
and she was talking about the Pride's made dresses.
Terry and Scott were apartment hunting.
There was a lot to do.
It was at a time when all new things were happening in her life.
Now detectives must determine who could have killed this ambitious young woman. in her life.
Now detectives must determine who could have killed this ambitious young woman just a few months before her wedding.
They asked the family about Terry's movements
and the hours leading up to her murder.
Mr. and Mrs. Brooks last saw Terry the day before Friday,
February 3, 1984, when she left work.
Usually her fiancee Scott, would make sure that he went
and closed with her every night, and her father was glad
that Scott would go and close with her and be there to keep her safe.
Scott was worried about Terry's security at the restaurant.
He would go and sit with her, why she finished everything up.
Scott tells police he was in with Terry the night before. he would go and sit with her why she finished everything up.
Scott tells police he wasn't with Terry the night before.
He had stayed home because he was working the early shift
the following morning.
Neither Scott nor Terry's parents are able to provide police
with any leads.
The family was really cooperative with the investigation.
And it was just nothing that they could volunteer or give us
that would indicate that they knew anything about the case.
It was completely out of the blue.
There was no reason for them to feel
that she was in any danger or in any jeopardy.
I couldn't think of anybody who really disliked Terry
and I can't imagine anybody would dislike her that much to kill her.
Investigators turn their attention to Terry's co-workers.
It looked like it could possibly be a robbery, but the deeper we looked in to see how brutally
she was murdered, it had to be more than just a robbery. Detectives want to know how Terry was thought of by her
colleagues.
Terry was a young woman who was very staunch about the
procedures, and she enforced them strictly.
She was a bi-the-book person, and as long as you did
your work the way you were supposed to, there were no
problems.
When police asked if Terry's management style
made her any enemies, one name keeps coming up.
Steve Daly was an employee that didn't adhere to the procedures.
He was a little hot headed.
Steve scared me to be honest.
He was very rough, quick to anger.
I was uncomfortable around him.
Detectives learned that just weeks before the murder,
the tension between Terry and Steve hit a breaking point.
He ended up getting fired, and it wasn't too happy about it.
You've got this former employee who had a clear,
animus towards the victim, and is fired by the victim
and add to that that here's an employee who knows how the restaurant operates, who knows
the security procedures.
He's got the kind of knowledge to be able to commit this crime.
So this is somebody who now rises to the top of the list.
Coming up, police zero in on a suspect.
Fingerprints were found on one of the murder weapons.
At that point, he admitted he took the money from the office.
But conflicting statements, frustrate detectives.
It was completely a misdirection, a diversion.
How could somebody do this and get away with it?
Until the investigation takes a jaw-dropping turn.
He probably got a operator city was lying.
It caught me by surprise.
I remember him all of a sudden blowing up.
It was the turning point in the investigation.
Police investigating the fatal stabbing
of 25-year-old restaurant manager, Terry Brooks,
have learned that a disgruntled coworker
lashed out at Terry before he was fired.
If you threaten somebody and they end up dead,
you'd have to look at him and look at him seriously.
Steve Daly was a former Marine and had a difficult personality.
He didn't like to be told what to do.
Just weeks before the murder, Terry and Steve
had a major blow-up.
There was an occasion at work where Steve Daly was told
to make a hamburger for a customer.
And he had just closed out that workspace.
So he didn't want to reopen the workspace.
And I remember him all of a sudden blowing up.
Steve lost his temper with screaming and yelling.
He became explosive at one point, even,
calling Terry Bitch.
Terry was alarmed by Daly's behavior.
Terry in a situation, like what happened with Steve,
she would intolerate it.
She didn't waver.
So I think that was the frustrating thing for Steve
is he couldn't break her.
And she was like, you need to go home.
You were done for the night.
And you will talk to the boss the next morning.
Daily storms out of the restaurant.
And the next day, Terry talks to her manager,
tells him what had happened, which, of course,
led to daily being fired.
That did little to stop Steve's aggressive behavior.
Even after he was fired, Daily would return to the restaurant and buy food and have meals
there.
He went back just to the lawyer.
Just, here I am.
You can't throw me out now.
It was very upsetting to her.
So given his personality and his conduct,
that certainly seems to provide a motive.
Did Steve Daly's harassment escalate into a fatal act
of revenge?
Police bring him in for an interview.
When we tracked Daly down, one of the first things he tells us
that he knew at some point the police would be coming to talk
to him.
Daly said that he didn't get along with Terry, that they clashed often.
In fact, he said that if she'd been a man,
he would have punched her.
Daly's excuse for why he was going back to the restaurant
was that he was dating somebody who worked there.
I don't know that I buy that, but that's the reason he gave.
Investigators ask where Steve was the night of the murder.
He says that he was trying to get into a club
and that he was not permitted access to the club.
So then he just drove around for several hours.
Investigators go to the club, they look at the security footage.
They can't find any footage of daily being denied entry.
So this is not a hard alibi.
That can allow you to say, okay, this person's eliminated, just the opposite.
With no way to prove his okay, this person's eliminated, just the opposite.
With no way to prove his whereabouts when Terry was killed, police asked Steve
to take a polygraph.
So a polygraph is a useful investigative tool.
It can help us rule people in or out.
So, Daly agrees to take the polygraph,
and without question, he passed.
This guy looks like a good suspect.
So when you have momentum built like that,
and then it crashes to a halt, it's hard to swallow.
Police can't verify Steve's alibi,
but with no evidence against him, he's free to go.
Stephen Daly was pushed down lower on the list of suspects,
but you never eliminate somebody
until you make sure that they are completely
not involved.
Investigators turn their focus on the Roy Rogers staff who worked with Terry the night of
the murder.
During the investigation we knew that we had to interview the employees to see what the
atmosphere was when they left, if there was any arguments.
Everybody consented to have airfrying
or pretty staked.
The evening that Terry was murdered,
the reformed police that she was working with Patricia,
Ron, Barb, and Dan.
And each of those employees was identified
and interviewed separately.
Patricia tells investigators that just before closing, Terry
discovered that money had gone missing
from Barb's cash register.
The employee's got an argument,
and there was $40 that was supposedly missing.
Terry was going to get to the bottom of this.
It wasn't a minor event.
She took it very seriously.
She began questioning different employees,
you know, where did it go?
Why is it missing?
Terry plagued everything by the book.
If there's any money missing, and you are caught being
the person that's been hitting the till.
There's no tolerance for stealing.
Tari cared about her employees.
By some people, then like her, because she could be tough
when she needed to be tough.
Patricia indicated that this wasn't the first time something
like this had happened.
If you're stealing money from Rory Rogers and you're an employee
there, that's a fireable offense, so did this provide a motive
for murder.
As Terry attempted to unmask the thief,
the employees began to point fingers.
Barb told Terry that she thought,
he'd run to it. So he's now being confronted with the idea that he took this money
and he actually turned his pockets inside out to prove
that he didn't have any cash on him.
Could Ron have killed Terry in a rage after being accused of stealing?
As detectives look closer at Ron,
fingerprint analysis provides crucial new evidence.
The employees who worked that night clean up before they close.
Working to later shift, you had to clean up everything,
watch all the equipment, sweep them out the floors,
wipe down all the tables, stuff like that.
So I thought that whoever was in there after closing
could have possibly left fingerprints.
We began matching up fingerprints
that they'd lifted from different services to elimination prints
to take taken from different employees.
And it was discovered that Ron's fingerprints
were found on the drive-through window
and on the trash bag that was wrapped around Terry's face.
Here we go.
This is somebody that we need to look at.
Investigators working to solve the Terry Brooks homicide have just got a match for fingerprints left to the crime scene. The evening that Terry was murdered, the reform employees that she was working with, including employee named Ron,
and Ron's fingerprints were found on the drive-through window,
and on the trash bag that was wrapped around Terry's face.
Detectives ask Ron how his fingerprints ended up on the
room, and how his fingerprints were found.
And then, the police found that was wrapped around Terry's face.
Detectives ask Ron how his fingerprints ended up on the bag
used to suffocate Terry and on the drive-through window
the killers likely escape route.
Ron said that one of his responsibilities at the restaurant
was to take care of the trash.
So his fingerprints would have been on that bag
because that was part of his job there.
Ron also said that he'd covered for some other employees
for their break time at the drive-through.
So that's why his print was there in the window.
Police aren't able to determine if the window had been
properly cleaned at closing.
So Ron's excuse is plausible.
Still, detectives want to know his whereabouts
after he left work.
Ron said that he left the restaurant shortly after one in the morning with co-workers,
and that he got home about 1.15 and talked to his mom before he went to bed.
We checked out Ron's alibi, discovered that he had indeed gotten home and stayed home all night.
With Ron all but cleared, police get new details from another employee about the money that had gone missing
from Barb's cash register.
We learned the $40 that was supposedly missing.
It was found at a later time.
Though missing money had mysteriously reappeared
in the drop safe.
I think it's fair to say that Terry might have thought
that it was Barb who had taken this money.
My impression was that Terry was suspicious of Barb.
Police also learned that it was Barb's duty
to close down the drive-through.
Those two things combined the missing $40
and the fact that it was Barb's responsibility
to lock that drive-through window
and that ultimately it's found unlocked
and it's believed to be where the killer left
puts her at the top of the suspect list.
According to the work schedule,
Barb and Terry were the last two employees at the restaurant.
The policy of Roy Rogers for employees
that were going to work past the end of their shift
was that they would lock the doors
and that there would be a minimum of two employees there.
Could an argument between Terry and Barb
over the missing money have turned deadly? Barb said that she was sent home early by Terry,
and she was insistent that she closed the window
and placed the pipe in the track to lock.
And in looking into Barb's whereabouts,
we discovered that she was picked up by her boyfriend, so she had an alibi.
So it's conceivable that Terry was alone in the restaurant,
working into the early hours of February 4th doing inventory.
Police later confirmed the alibis of every employee
who worked the night of the murder.
When the autopsy report arrives,
investigators hope it will give them a new lead.
The pathologist found that Terry had been strangled
and the bone in the back of her neck was severed
from the stab wound.
There was a serious brain hemorrhage
that was the result of her head being repeatedly
banged against that hard concrete floor.
And looking at that stab wound to her spine,
it was likely she was conscious,
but paralyzed when the plastic trash bag
was wrapped around her head.
The autopsy report lists each of Terry's severe injuries as potentially fatal,
but indicates asphyxiation as the likely cause of death.
There was no indication that Terry had been sexually assaulted.
You can't hope that look at the way that Terry was killed and not think that the person who did
this had such a high level of rage that they absolutely wanted to guarantee that she was dead.
Material was collected from the knife that was left lodged
and terries through it, and under Terries' right ring finger,
where the pathologist had identified a defensive wound.
At the time of this murder in 1984, there was no DNA technology.
Analysis of blood was really relegated to blood typing.
By today's standards, the evidence was limited.
As the investigation continues,
Terry's loved one struggled to make sense of her violent death.
The funeral home called the morning of the viewing
and they said, you know, could somebody come down
and take a look at Terry?
And they had her laid out in the casket.
And she just, she didn't look good.
You could see the cut marks in her neck and you could see the bruises on the, you know,
the back of her hand and they had makeup on her too.
And you could still see the, she didn't, it didn't look like Terry.
You know, I said when I got home to my dad,
I think we should keep the casket closed.
We didn't want people to remember her.
Looking like that.
As the Brooks family prepares to bury their eldest daughter,
Falls Township lives in fear of a brutal killer still at large.
It was a young person that was killed at her job.
So I think the community as a whole regarded this as a frightening homicide.
It caused quite a bit of fear due to the fact that it was so violent.
And most people in this area would think this shouldn't happen in our town.
I just really just thought it, yeah, it probably was, you know,
a robbery.
Fortunately, they killed her instead of just robbing the place.
But you don't know if somebody's lurking out there, you know,
and they're going to do it again.
Less than two weeks after Terry's murder,
the town's worst fear appears to become a horrifying reality.
At another Rory Rogers, an assistant manager
was attacked coming out of the bathroom.
She was hit in the head.
She fell to the floor, and the actor
ran away before she can identify them.
The restaurant manager survives.
But just a week later, in nearby Scranton,
there's another brutal attack. A male attacker waited in the parking lot
until there was a lone female employee
that made entry into the restaurant.
But the money from the restaurant had already been dropped
into the safe, so he took the female employee's money
and then stabbed her to death.
Detectives fear they have a serial killer on the loose.
When you take a community that was already stressed,
it made it even worse.
And if you've got an individual who's going from restaurant
to restaurant and just robbing people
and they have no personal connection to the victim,
it's terrifying.
It took it up a notch.
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Visit Wondery.com or download the Wondery app to get started. Three weeks after the murder of Terry Brooks, police have learned another restaurant employee
has been stabbed to death in nearby Scranton.
Scranton's just up to turnpike,
and it's not really that far from us.
So anything that would indicate a violent armed robbery,
we would have to look into.
It was such a similar homicide, a lone female employee
inside a restaurant, a male attacker, and the use of a knife.
Investigators learned that a suspect has already been arrested.
Could he also be Terry Brooks' killer?
The person that committed this homicide in Scranton
was a man named Steve Duffy.
We sent investigators to go to Scranton
to attempt to interview Duffy,
and by the time we arrive, he has layered up.
But we got it warrant to obtain his fingerprints and compare them to the fingerprints from the scene.
But in the end, the fingerprint comparison indicated no connection to the homicide at our Roy Rogers.
Police are also unable to identify a suspect in the assault of the manager at the
other Roy Rogers location.
You go through this cycle of building momentum and then you hit a wall.
It's disheartening.
It's been a month since Terry Brooks was found dead and the killer is still at
large.
Something that brutal and that terrifying you have to try to solve it, no matter how long it takes.
But when the leads start running out,
you get awful upset.
As weeks turn to months, and you identify suspects
and then eliminate them over and over again.
The case went cold.
An investigator by necessity has to move on to other cases.
But for a family that loses a loved one to a homicide, they don't move on.
When it first happened, you just assume that it was going to be solved.
You think, well, how could somebody do this and get away with it?
My dad's hair turned white within a year. He lost weight. he just destroyed him.
It was hard for Terry's family.
Having to process a heartache of losing their daughter
and not having closure over it, I couldn't imagine not having answers.
There are no significant developments in the investigation for nearly 14 years.
Then, in 1998, Falls Township's new police chief orders
a fresh look at the Terry Brooks murder,
and a local prosecutor is assigned to the case.
One of the primary reasons that the police chief put this renewed
focus on this case was that there had been developments in DNA technology during the 1990s.
And part of the point of my assignment to have someone come in with a fresh point of view, it was just a matter of reviewing all of those reports and reviewing all the physical evidence.
It caught me by surprise a bit
when I opened up the bag that contained Terry's wallet.
I found that you could still clearly smell Terry's perfume.
And because I wasn't expecting it,
it's one of those things that sort of triggers your emotions
and brings you closer to the victim.
A team is assembled for the renewed investigation.
Lori said, take a look at the homicide and she asked me what I thought and apparently
my answers were well enough to get me assigned to work on it.
At the time that the homicide occurred, other robberies at fast food restaurants in the area caused law enforcement
to form the initial theory that it was likely
to have been a robbery.
We had the advantage of knowing
that the robbery homicide track didn't work out,
so we could start with a different theory.
There were two things that really jumped out.
One, that we could conduct victimology interviews
and talk to some people who weren't interviewed
back at the time and two, develop some kind of forensic
signature for the killer.
As the lab works to extract the killer's DNA
from crime scene evidence, investigators learn more
about the victim, Terry Brooks.
Victimology essentially means learning everything
you possibly can about the victim.
Everybody who we spoke to described Terry Brooks as intelligent, ambitious, friendly, well-loved by her, family and friends.
Detective Whitney spent a lot of time with the family to gain their trust and to reassure them that we were working
on the case diligently. Nelson and Lori did seem like the power couple, both of them are
extremely intelligent and they were driven to get this solved.
Detectives' hope new interviews will bring to like crucial details that could help the
case.
You just never know when you're going to get some new piece of information
that's going to put us on a track to identify who did this.
Some of the people who we spoke to, they were quite young
when this homicide occurred.
In their late teens or early 20s, and having more life experience
were a bit more open than they might have felt they could be in the 1980s.
Detectives reach out to people who weren't interviewed
in the 1984 investigation,
including those who worked with Terry
before her employment at Roy Rogers.
I got a call from Falls Township Police.
They wanted to speak to me about the Terry Brooks murder,
and they just said to me,
we'd like to hear your thoughts on it.
Cindy and you Terry well.
They worked together, and Cindy kind of laid out
what was going on in the victim's life.
During her interview with investigators,
Cindy drops a bombshell.
What Cindy told us presented a completely different image
of this homicide.
It turned out Terry's murder wasn't what it appeared to be.
And now you couldn't help but conclude.
Everything's pointing to one person.
What's the most important thing to do?
What's the most important thing to do?
What's the most important thing to do?
14 years after the murder of Terry Brooks, cold case investigators have just received shocking
new information from a friend and former coworker of Terry's.
We asked what things did Terry share with, you know,
Cindy as a friend.
And I said to them, Terry and her fiancee's got
their upcoming wedding.
At first was exciting for Tari.
But I proceeded to tell them that the week before Tari
had been murdered, she wanted to call off the wedding.
She just realized that's not what she wanted.
We knew Tari and Scott had just put down a deposit
on their honeymoon, and their wedding was upcoming.
And in the initial investigation, the officers that conducted it came away
with the impression that they were a happy couple.
There hadn't really been anything in the report
that indicated there were any problems
in Terry Brooks' relationship with Scott Keve,
but we did learn that Terry confided
to some of her friends,
that she wasn't entirely sure she was going to go through
with getting married.
Mr. and Mrs. Brooks felt close to Scott.
He was the young man that was going to marry their daughter.
To her parents, Scott was this loving, caring fiance
who would check on Terry and drive by to make sure she was safe and give her rides.
Some of Terry's friends had a very different impression
of Scott.
Cindy Braden, they've told us,
Snet, there had been some problems in the relationship.
For me, that was a red flag.
I think three time in her changing jobs
and the fact that she was moving on and going for her dream
and he was stuck where he was.
His jealousy became an issue and he was very possessive.
Scott would not let Tari stay alone.
She was afraid to tell him she didn't want to be married.
She was afraid to call it off.
She didn't know what she was going to do to the point where she was in tears.
Police get further insight into Terry and Scott's relationship from Terry siblings.
When she started dating Scott, we just were all scratching our heads like what is she doing with him?
He was just not the kind of guy she always dated. He wasn't fun love in. All he wanted to do was sit there and drink.
And that was just unlike her.
Just seemed like he wanted to keep us away from her and him.
It just makes you think back.
Like, maybe he didn't have signs of an abusive person.
But at the time, I just really thought it was a robbery,
and she was killed during the robbery.
Detectives have a new perspective on Scott,
and how the supposedly grieving fiance
might have avoided suspicion at the time of Terry's death.
My dad thought Scott really loved Terry.
He thought if she loved him, you know, I'll love him too.
Mr. Brooks was a very kind man, and in fact George bought Scott the suit that he wore to Terry's funeral.
Her father just had such a big heart that I don't think he believed that someone that his daughter fell in love with could harm her.
And I believe Scott played on that.
Scott becomes someone that we think may have done this.
Examining the crime scene through the lens of what
have Scott did this.
OK, that's how he got in.
She let him in.
We were told that he had a practice of going to the restaurant
and sitting with her while
she worked after hours.
And it's personal, it's rage, and then the action of placing that bag over her face
to kind of depersonalize her is a telltale mark of what someone does when they've killed
somebody that they're close to.
And now it becomes a priority for us
to see if the forensic track, if the evidence points that way.
Investigators hope that killers DNA
can be extracted from the crime scene evidence collected
back in 1984.
It was a potential concern that they might not be able to find
any usable DNA due to the amount of time that had gone by.
Luckily, the knife that was left lodged in Terry's throat and the material collected from under Terry's right ring finger,
where the pathologist had identified a defensive wound to that area.
He also did an unknown male DNA profile.
It was highly unlikely under the circumstances
that that DNA material would have come from anyone
other than the perpetrator.
The next thing we had to do was obtain a DNA sample
from our suspect.
Scott Kef did not have a criminal record at that time.
He didn't have any DNA samples on file with an agency such as the FBI.
One of the things that we learned from the laboratory expert was that cigarette butts are
an excellent potential source of DNA because they have saliva on them.
And at that point, we actually knew what kind of cigarettes he've smoked, and we knew where he lived.
Police hatch a plan to secretly obtain a sample of Scott Keves DNA.
We didn't at that point want to obtain a subpoena to obtain DNA from him directly, because we wanted to interview him first.
We wanted to set that up in the most advantageous possible way,
and we were concerned that he was a flight risk.
It was very important to us to be very careful
about who knew he was a suspect
and who we shared that information with.
And it was also very important to us
to not be caught doing surveillance.
In 1998, Scott's life had kind of come full circle
from where it was in 1984.
In 1984, he was living in home with his parents.
He had gone on to live with a girlfriend and then marry.
They'd had a child together.
But then they split up and got divorced.
And in 1998, he was back home living with this mob.
Under Pennsylvania law, trash was considered
to be abandoned property once it was put out
in front of the house for collection.
So detective Whitney immediately took custody of it,
took it directly to the laboratory that
was doing the DNA analysis.
I knew I was going to get a definitive answer
one way or the other.
Could be him, could be somebody else.
It was that anticipation of I'm going
to get a final result here that's
going to matter a great deal in this investigation.
Police investigating the 1984 murder of Terry Brooks
have secretly collected a DNA sample from her fiance, Scott Keith.
We had to obtain a DNA sample from our suspect.
So we collected cigarette buds that were in the trash.
The sample is compared to DNA found on Terry's body.
I'll never forget the phone call I got that were in the trash. The sample is compared to DNA found on Terry's body.
I'll never forget the phone call I got
and where the doctor at the lab informed me
that there was a match from Scott's cigarettes
to the crime scene evidence.
It was the turning point in the investigation.
That was the point at which we knew
we would be able to prove that Scott Keif was the point at which we knew we would be able to prove that Scott Keefe was the killer.
Although we had very solid physical evidence against Keefe,
it's always better if you have an incriminating statement from the defendant. We asked Mr. Keefe to come to the police station as one of the friends and family members
that we were interviewing as part of our investigation.
We believed that he would cooperate with us.
We believed that he would come across his wanting to help.
That he would try to sell us the same story
that he was the grieving fiance, you know,
that he'd been telling people for 15 years.
As predicted, Scott agrees to cooperate with police.
We had a strategy to conduct that interview
on the anniversary date of the murder.
People pay attention to dates.
It could raise a person's anxiety level
and make them more apt to make mistakes.
The interview begins and Scott tells a familiar tale. He told us the same
story that he had told others over the years that they were happy. This was the love of his
life and that somebody ought to take in her away from him. If we came on too hard, we were
too aggressive in our questioning. We felt he would lawyer up and stop the interview. So slowly
we built towards the question of whether Scott
had anything to do with this or any knowledge of it.
And once we got to that point, we asked Scott if he would take a polygraph.
You can never force anyone to undergo a polygraph examination,
but he agreed to that.
The polygraph operator said he was lying.
So now Scott started to say things like,
I didn't mean for this to happen.
But then he called himself and said,
but I didn't do it.
But over time, that culminated at one point in him saying,
she came at me first.
And that was the first time you put himself at the scene.
Investigators keep the pressure on,
and finally, Scott breaks.
He admitted that she essentially told him
that she wanted to break up with him,
and he was enraged because of that.
At one point, he punched her in the face.
They struggled for a while in that kitchen prep area.
A knife had fallen onto the floor, and he knocked her down and straddled her,
choking her, and banging her head repeatedly against the floor.
But then he grabbed the knife and stabbed her with it,
and it stuck in her throat.
Then in his words, he bent over to make sure she was dead,
saw that she was still breathing.
So he grabbed the trash can liner to wrap around her face
to make sure that she would in fact die,
and he said he didn't want to look at her face.
At that point, he admitted he took the money from the office.
He said he'd exited to the drive-thru window to make it look like a robbery.
Scott told us that the reason he went to the Brooks family home
the morning of the murder was to make him look innocent.
So he's surrounded by her family when the crime is supposedly discovered.
It was completely a misdirection, a diversion that worked for 15 years for him.
Scott is charged with first-degree murder.
I was elated.
I was like, thank God, they finally nailed him.
He was waiting at a long time.
Get in the answers of who killed my sister,
really gave my dad some comfort.
But I think he was still in this belief that Scott did it.
We were just so happy we could tell her family
that the person who had killed their daughter
was in prison, and we were confident
he was going to be convicted.
At trial, Scott Keef is found guilty
and sentenced to life in prison.
Cherry was a tremendous young person
who had unlimited potential.
She had good relationships with their family.
It's really a terrible tragedy that her life ended this way.
It's just so sad that somebody so young,
because of standing up for themselves
and wanting to move forward in their lives,
gets their life cut short.
Terry would have had a very bright future, and I'm sure she would have had a ton of kids,
and we'd be hanging out right now.
Terry would love to be remembered with those big eyes, that smile,
their kindness in her heart, and the person with a goal.
She was truly a lovely, lovely person.