Snapped: Women Who Murder - Helen Moore
Episode Date: September 26, 2021Helen's boyfriend goes missing just as authorities find a dismembered torso, but the case may not be closed; 20 years later, Helen's new story could be a game changer.Season 21, Episode 14Ori...ginally aired: November 5, 2017Watch full episodes of Snapped for FREE on the Oxygen app: https://oxygentv.app.link/WsLCJWqmIebSee 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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After losing her husband to cancer, Helen Moore was suddenly the soul support for her four kids.
Helen felt totally alone. She wondered how she can raise these children by herself.
But then the widow, Meta local cowboy, named Casey Elliott.
We just ended up dating. We went to rodeos, road horses, and work cattle.
I think it was more of a rebound.
But after almost five years together,
their relationship came to a sudden and dramatic end.
I just told him to get out.
I just don't want you in this house anymore.
She indicated to us that Casey left in a huff.
And he'd never be seen again.
At least, not alive.
We got a call that a body had been found out
on Possum Kingdom Lake.
To have someone murdered and their body dismembered,
it was beyond comprehension.
It was missing the head.
It was something like out of a horror movie.
But where was the rest of casing?
The other pieces had to be out there somewhere.
How had he died?
When they did the toxicology, they found it more faint.
23 times what would be considered a lethal dose.
And why is Helen changing her story after more than 20 years?
I'm not gonna live in here anymore.
-♪
January 21, 1996, Possum Kingdom Lake.
A man-made reservoir more than an hour west of Fort Worth, Texas, for the most part, Possum Kingdom Lake lives up to its name.
It's the center of a scrubby wilderness full of prickly cactus, white-tailed deer, and of course possums. It is very rugged.
It's always been a favorite place for people to build cabins
and go fishing, swimming and hunting.
Whether they have permission to be there or not.
Landowners had a lot of trouble with poachers
and trespassers.
So when a local landowner saw tire tracks leading
into his woods that Sunday morning, he assumed that poachers had been added again
They had had problems with deer hunters in that area
So he walked up in there to investigate and his suspicions appeared to be confirmed as he neared the lake shore
From a distance he thought he saw a butcher deer carcass
But once he got closer, the landowner
realized that the bloody object half-hidden in the tall grass
wasn't a dead deer.
It was part of a human body.
The body of a male with the head missing, the hands missing,
and the legs missing.
Horrified, the landowner rushed back home
and called 911.
And when deputies from the Palo Pinto County Sheriff's Office
arrived at the scene, they faced what appeared to be
an almost insurmountable task, establishing the Deadman's identity.
Normally you can check for fingerprints, dental records.
When you dismember a body, you removed the normal sources of identification.
However, there was one thing about the dead man
that the dismemberment couldn't disguise.
It was a large man, obviously very heavy.
And when the Palo Pinto deputies looked into it,
they discovered that a missing persons report
had been filed barely 24 hours earlier
in neighboring Young County,
concerning a man named Casey Elliott.
Casey Elliott was described as a Caucasian male
with a very large frame approaching 300 pounds.
If the two cases were connected,
investigators would have a mystery on their hands.
How did the cowboy who had disappeared five days earlier
end up dismembered?
And could his live-in girlfriend, 41-year-old Helen Moore,
help them solve his murder?
Born in 1954, Helen Harden grew up outside of Graham, Texas, an hour and a half west
of Fort Worth in the heart of cattle country.
I was raised on a farm ranch.
We did a little bit of everything.
Taking care of cattle, we raised horses, we trained horses, we did everything.
She's been around horses animals all of her life.
And by the time Helen finished high school,
she had a collection of barrel racing trophies
and had even been crowned rodeo queen.
She was just a country girl typical of the small town Texas.
Her relationships were pretty typical for small town
Texas too.
Her and her first husband was married very young right out of high school.
The marriage didn't last though and a second short marriage also ended in divorce.
They had a long real good in the beginning and then he got to running around on her. How was very unlucky and loved?
She couldn't find a man to love her and to stick around.
So by the late 70s, Helen was a single mother of two
working to support her family.
I worked at the livestock place for the auctioneers.
And then I helped do the sale barn.
I helped run tickets.
But then, in 1979,
the struggling 24-year-olds life
took a very different turn
when she met a hardworking landscaper named Terry Moore.
He was a very good Christian man, godly man.
And he'd do it on Helen's 4-year-old daughter and infant son.
He treated Helen's kids like his own.
After the couple married in 1988, Helen and Terry had two more boys. She started
working in his landscaping business and she joined Terry's church.
We were youth directors, we were very involved in our church. Was a family church,
it was family oriented, a very nice church. Was a family church, it was family oriented, a very nice church.
But in 1990, after 11 years together, the devoted couple received devastating news.
Terry had melanoma.
And it was terminal. There was nothing the doctors to do.
Her husband was sent home in a hospice situation with morphine and instructions to the family
on how to administer dosages.
For the next few months, Helen stayed by Terry's side, doing everything she could to make
him comfortable.
Helen was essentially his round-the-clock nurse.
And in November of 1990, Terry passed away in her arms. After Terry's death, Helen
felt totally alone. She wondered how she can raise these children by herself. Only 36
years old, with her future uncertain, and her husband gone, Helen fell into a deep depression.
We quit going to church, I quit going to church. They didn't know what to do with the way to end four children.
And since she and Terry had given up their landscaping business
when he got sick, she was soon struggling to get by.
She did odd jobs, yard work, work cattle for herself
and for other people.
But less than a year after Terry's death,
Helen would have the chance to make a fresh start.
It was 1991 when Casey Elliott came knocking on Helen's door
and asked if he could use her bathroom.
Cassie Elliott was the local cowboy.
The whale went out at the ranch where he was working at.
And Helen, with typical small town friendliness, said yes. Local cowboy. The whale went out at the ranch where he was working at.
And Helen, with typical small town friendliness, said yes.
After that, Casey stopped by regularly for the next few weeks, even after his well was
repaired.
It was always around my boys and always doing what to do stuff with them.
Helen was more than happy to have a father figure in her son's lives.
It was a good, really lot of work.
More than one person referred to him
as being a general job.
And the more Casey came around, the more Helen realized
that she and the gentle giant had a lot in common.
He had at least more than a casual interest in rodeoing
and involving children in rodeo activities.
And before long, Helen and Casey had become an item.
I don't know, we just ended up dating.
I think it was more of a rebound than anything from Terry.
It may have started that way, just a fling to take Helen's mind off the loss of her husband,
but it quickly turned into something more.
One thing led to another and he just started staying more and more at her house.
He ended up just staying.
Although Helen was almost 13 years older than Casey,
he filled the hole that Terry's death had left in her life.
We went to rodeos with the children, road horses, and work cattle.
We rode, we hit my kids' show, goats, show goats, stairs.
They showed horses.
Kasey, Helen, and her two older kids competed in local rodeos, too.
They even built a place in their backyard so they could train for competitions.
It was their life.
And much like Terry before him, Kasey all but adopted Helen's children, especially her
two young sons.
Over the next several years, he taught the boys to ride, shoot, and raise animals.
He seemed to be like a good old hard work in cowboy type. He exemplified some of those typical traits.
It's a salt of the earth folk living here in Youngcanny.
He didn't always work as a cowboy though.
To help support Helen's kids, Casey took a job with a steadier paycheck.
He was an 18-wheeler truck driver. He drove cross-pantry.
The company that he worked for, principally it was a cattle-holling business.
And while Casey was often on the road for days at a time,
Helen stayed home and looked after the kids
the couple's small ranch and they're heard.
When you had animals, we had horses.
But just like her first two marriages that ended in divorce,
Helen's new boyfriend was about to go astray.
Coming up was Helen the last person to see Casey a lie.
She indicated to us that Casey left in a huff.
And investigators soon realized that true challenge
may be confirming whether they found him.
No, no hands, no teeth, nothing. soon realized the true challenge may be confirming whether they found him.
There were no hands, no tears, nothing.
On January 20, 1996, the Young County Sheriff's Office received a call from the father of
a local cowboy and trucker named Casey Elliott.
He told the deputies that he hadn't seen or heard from his son in about five days.
He was a long haul trucker, didn't come back home for a few days, you know, that's
not that uncommon.
However, Casey's father told the deputies that his son's rig was currently parked on the
trucking company's lawn.
He wasn't on a long haul truck ride because his truck wasn't missing.
And according to his father, Casey didn't appear to be anywhere else either.
Nobody had seen him for a while.
His father knew for sure that he was missing
because the truck was sitting there.
So the next day, January 21st, investigators
with the Young County Sheriff's Office
contacted Casey's girlfriend, 41-year-old Helen Moore.
Helen Moore was living with Casey Elliott at the time.
The investigators and law enforcement authorities
first made contact with Helen after the missing persons
report was filed.
The deputies knocked on Helen's door,
hoping to get some information on Kaci's whereabouts.
Helen was very cooperative the first time
and went out there.
Not that she could tell them much about where Kaci was.
I didn't have a clue.
And I was wondering why I'd never heard from him.
And according to Helen, the reason he left
explained why she hadn't reported him missing.
According to Helen, the beginning of her relationship
with Casey had been good,
but things had quickly deteriorated.
I can look back now and see there wasn't anything
positive in it.
Helen said that between what she made off
their small ranch and what Casey brought in
driving a cattle truck, money had gotten tight.
They were having trouble making the rent
and keeping the lights on.
And according to Helen, that led to trouble between her and Casey.
She indicated that they fussed about finances.
They had some money problems.
Problems that had apparently reached a breaking point
on January 15th.
Helen said that when Casey came home that Monday,
she'd confronted him about their growing stack
of unpaid bills, and he'd blown up in response, shouting that he worked hard
while she stayed home and did nothing.
He had had some unkind remarks to make about my house.
According to Helen, he said he'd never seen the place so filthy.
Cases insults had made Helen furious.
I just told him to get out, but I told him,
don't care what happens where you go.
I just don't want you in this house anymore.
And when Helen returned home from work the next day,
Casey was gone.
She said that he had just walked off and left.
And despite the fact that no one had seen or heard from him
in more than five days, Helen wasn't all that worried.
She indicated to us that, when Casey left, he was in a huff.
She was telling us that he had walked off, but that he would be back.
Or would he? Five days was a fairly long huff, but the deputies had no real reason to doubt what Helen told them.
Her reputation was okay in the community. She seemed to be a lot of a person, a normal person,
and not have a lot of problems. And she didn't appear to have anything to hide.
She told us to come on in. I and a couple other deputies looked around and we
really didn't say anything. But even as the deputies were getting ready to leave,
they got some unexpected news over the radio
in their patrol car.
We got a call that a body had been found out
on Possible Kingdom Lake.
Possible Kingdom Lake was a remote reservoir,
a half hour away in neighboring Palo Pinto County.
It's a very popular recreational lake.
There are places down there where you can kind of
get lost if you wanted to.
But earlier that day, a rancher on the reservoir's western shore
had found a dismembered corpse on his property.
The torso itself had nothing to identify.
There were no hands, no teeth, nothing that would do anything from it.
However, what the authorities did find was enough to suggest that the headless and limeless torso
could be Casey.
Casey was over 300 pounds, and it was very obvious
that this body was of over a 300 pound man.
Had the missing man been found, the investigators
drove out to the lake to see for themselves.
It was quite a shock when we pulled up and that bastard
had on Potomcino and the torso was there.
Whoever the dead man was, it appeared
that he had been killed elsewhere.
There wasn't a lot of blood on the ground.
It didn't look like he had been killed at the scene.
However, there was a set of fairly fresh tire tracks
leading from the road to where the
body lay half hidden in a grassy clearing.
The tracks might have circled back in came out and then during that circle it was when
they dropped in and loaded the body.
Although there were bits of manure and hay scattered around and clinging to the dismembered
torso, suggesting it hadn't
been lifted out of the trunk of a car or from the bed of a trunk.
I saw dried animal manure, you know, from livestock, that cow manure.
As far as I know, there wasn't any cattle in the area.
We suspected that the body had been hauled there in the horse trailer.
Of course, in West Texas, practically everyone
had a horse or cattle trailer.
However, there was at least one clue
that could narrow things down a bit.
The cow manure horse manure surrounding
had red flanks playing in it.
But while the red paint might help identify the trailer,
positively identifying the body as Casey
still presented a challenge.
Not having dental records or fingerprints
to possibly or potentially identify this individual,
DNA was the next viable option.
Although in 1996, the technique was still in its infancy.
I remember Sheriff Pat is saying that they were going to send off some skin samples or something
going to this DNA testing.
And I was going like, what?
What?
What is DNA?
The test results could take weeks.
Testing in the early 90s, it was very laborious.
It took quite a bit of time to develop profiles.
So while technicians from the coroner's office loaded up the torso for autopsy,
the young and palo-pinto county deputies began searching the lake shore.
You have this dismembered torso, so naturally you want to look for other body parts.
We had a cadaver dog coming in,
and we had people harsh back, searching.
They even brought in a dive team.
Their thinking was, well, let's see if we can find
more body parts in the water.
And while the search continued,
news of the gruesome discovery spread.
How do you conceive of something like that happen?
Especially here in a high-placeful little town.
It was just shocking.
Murders are relatively uncommon in this part of the world.
But while the public struggled to process the horrific crime,
the investigators had a few theories about what might have caused it.
Our son is probably some kind of dope deal where they were trying to hide the body.
However, cross-border drug cartels weren't the only ones who might butcher a body and dump it in the wilderness.
Another theory had the investigators wondering if the murder could be the work of a serial killer.
There were oddly enough in a small rural jurisdiction, a couple of missing persons reports.
Were there more victims hidden away in the wilderness
around possum kingdom length?
We just started searching and looking in certain pastures,
looking in creeks.
Or would new evidence lead the search for Casey's killer
closer to home?
Coming up, the autopsy leads to a surprising discovery.
It was enough to kill a man, even a man the size of Casey.
And the investigators connect the dots.
Mrs. Moore's previous husband died at home.
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By the end of January 1996, it had been more than a week since Casey Elliott's father had called the Young County Texas Sheriff's Office to report the 28-year-old cowboy and trucker missing.
And it had been two weeks since he'd apparently walked out on his live-in girlfriend, 41-year-old
Helen Moore.
Helen told us when we first started investigation that the reason he got mad and left, walked
off, was that they were fighting about money.
The investigators suspected he was never coming back.
A day after the 300 pound cowboy was reported missing,
the dismembered torso of a large white male
was found near Possum Kingdom Lake in neighboring
Palo Pinto County.
It didn't take much of a leap, even missing the head,
the hands, the legs, to assume that that torso probably matched
KCL it.
Although official confirmation would require DNA testing and time.
In 1996, we were using a high molecular weight DNA process.
It was much more time consuming.
It also required a larger sample of a biological fluid or a sample
to produce a DNA profile.
An effort was made and was successful in obtaining DNA for comparison from family members.
And while the DNA testing had yet to confirm that the remains were casies, the autopsy of the torso did have some interesting things
to reveal.
First off, whoever had dismembered the body
had done an expert job,
severing the head and limbs cleanly at the joints.
Whoever killed casie knew how to butcher an animal.
However, that wasn't the most interesting thing
the autopsy revealed.
When they did the toxicology, they found morphing.
And they found a lot of it too.
The toxicology report indicated as much as 23 times as much
as what would be considered a lethal dose.
It was enough morphing to kill a man, even a man the size of Casey.
Although while the torso showed no injuries beyond the dismemberment,
the medical examiner couldn't determine an exact cause of death.
It's possible due to the missing body parts that
his throat could have been cut.
Due to the dismemberment, the investigators couldn't really confirm if that was how he died,
but they had identified a suspect.
They were focused on Helen Moore.
And the reason had to do with the morphine found in the dead man's system.
Mrs. Moore's previous husband was a victim of cancer.
He died at home and the doctors treating him prescribed morphine to control his pain in the final days.
The doctor had prescribed the morphine,
but it was Helen who administered it.
She knew how to inject morphine.
The doctor's showed her how to use it.
And the investigators didn't think it was a coincidence
that a body fitting Casey's description
had turned up with a lethal dose of the drug
in his system.
We were pretty sure at that time that she had probably
given him morphine, and that's probably what it killed him.
The question was, could they prove it?
While they waited for the results of the DNA analysis,
the investigators paid another visit to Helen's ranch.
She gave us access to her property.
I and a couple other nephews went out there several times
and looked around.
And searching the barns behind the house,
they noticed something interesting about Helen
and Casey's horse trailer.
It just so happens that the floor of the trailer was red.
That was just one more piece of evidence
to put together with everything else
that we got that was pointing toward her.
One of the law enforcement officers
discovered red paint flanks in the manure droppings
at the dump site.
The paint wasn't the only thing connecting Helen's trailer
to the past year at Possum Kingdom Lake where the killer thing connecting Helen's trailer to the pastura possum kingdom lake,
where the killer had left Casey's body.
The body was dumped in a prickly pear patch.
We found prickly pears in the tires
that indicated that the trailer had been out there
where the body was found.
While the paint and the prickly pear spines
put the trailer at the dump site,
proving it had been used to haul the body
might be difficult.
Everybody was washed and trying to clean.
But had the person who had hosed out the trailer been thorough enough,
because when the investigators took a closer look, they made an important discovery.
Deputy Morton went in and cut planks out of the bottom of the trailer,
and turned them over and they found blood.
That blood was sent to the lab DNA purposes.
And while they didn't yet know if it was Casey's blood,
what the investigators found was enough to bring Helen in for questioning.
I interviewed her in my office at the Sheriff's Department here.
During the questioning, Helen told the investigators
that she had used her horse trailer recently,
and she admitted that she had hosed blood
off of the floorboards.
But Helen calmly explained that it wasn't human blood
that the investigators had found on the underside of the trailer.
She said her pet pig had been attacked by a dog
when it was such a bad shape that they had to kill it.
They said they found blood in the trailer and a dog when it was such bad shape that they had to kill it.
They said they found blood in the trailer
and that's how it was in there.
And since, for the moment, the investigators
had no way of proving otherwise, they let Helen go.
We didn't really believe it all, all that much,
but it was feasible.
However, on February 9, the investigators
would confirm one of their suspicions.
Once they got the DNA results for the dismembered torso
found near possum kingdom late.
From the torso, we were able to develop a DNA profile
and compare it to the biological mother
and biological father of Casey.
And the DNA actually was able to identify him.
It was, in fact, Casey Elliott.
Three weeks after he disappeared, the missing cowboy had finally been found.
It was hard on the community, coming from a small community like this where everybody
kind of appreciates everybody else.
In addition to the DNA, the lab also tested the floorboards taken from Helen's trailer.
The boards of the trailer tested present a positive for blood, for pink blood.
But pig's blood wasn't all that the tests revealed.
One of the samples did test positive for human blood.
And not just any humans, according to the DNA analysis.
The blood that was owned the board,
the underside of the boards of the trailer
was pretty much the DNA analysis to be KCLS blood.
It wasn't quite a smoking gun, but it
was close enough for the authorities.
A very strong circumstantial fence just gradually closed around Helen.
And on March 19, 10 days after Casey's closed casket funeral, the investigators placed her under
arrest. She wasn't answering any more questions either. They started questioning me. They were saying, well, you did this, you did that.
I just, I didn't do it.
So I never thought I would go to prison.
If you didn't do something, you innocent
until proven guilty.
That's not the way it is anymore.
But was her decision to stop talking too little, too late?
Because the day after her arrest,
the investigators descended on the ranch one last time
with a warrant to search inside the house.
When we searched the house, we found the morphine.
The morphine helped to tighten the ring of evidence
closing in on Helen Moore.
Coming up is the evidence as airtight as the prosecutor's
believe?
There was a pretty wide description between her size and his size.
Or will the case take an unexpected turn?
I expected it to be a war in the courtroom. The End of March 1996, it had been almost two and a half months since Casey Elliott's dismembered torso had been found dumped at a rural reservoir outside the small town of Graham, Texas.
And it had been almost two weeks
since the authorities arrested Casey's girlfriend,
41-year-old Helen Moore, and charged her with murder.
There was forensic evidence,
there was circumstantial evidence,
and all of it pointed to Helen Moore.
Still, Helen swore she was innocent.
She was telling us that she didn't know it,
that he had walked off.
Something else had to be behind the whole thing,
because it's not something that Helen would do.
It just, it wasn't in her to do something like that.
Not that her claims of innocence had any impact
on the investigators.
I was convinced that she committed the crime.
There was a lot of evidence collected in your statements
given that just continuously pointed toward her.
And they hadn't given up on finding
the rest of cases
remains either.
They'd found a torso, but they knew the other pieces had to be out
there somewhere.
We sent deputies and teams out to look at all the bridges and all
those places that she could throw things off.
And on March 31st, while checking a bridge just a few miles from
Helen's ranch, the investigators may have finally called a break.
In the sheriff's night, we saw a black bag down
in the bottom of the creek.
Police man's intuition, I suppose.
And he said, let's go down there and check that out.
He reached out into the creek and the bag ripped slightly,
and it revealed a human ear.
And of course we knew then that we had found his head.
He was, you know, taking a bag,
even though they were basically looking for body parts.
I don't think you really expected to find
a human head inside that bag.
And digging into the couple's troubled finances had revealed another surprise.
Helen had never hidden the fact that money was a problem
for her and Casey.
Helen told us that she and Casey had fought over money.
But despite what appeared to be a very tight budget,
the couple had made one purchase
that caught the investigators' attention.
She had taken $150,000 insurance policy out
even within the last few months before he passed away.
She was listed as a so-beneficiary
of the life insurance policy.
So if her aunt had been to collect on that,
that would be pretty strong motivation.
We had a financial motive, direct evidence,
circumstantial evidence, and of course forensics.
I was convinced that it was an extremely strong case.
One that just might cost Helen her life.
Texas law, at that time, only offered two possible punishments,
and death penalty was one of them.
But would a jury hesitate to send a mother of four
to death row?
Not if the mood around town was any indication.
People in Graham wanted Helen to get
the same lethal injection that she had given Casey.
We're not that far removed from the days of public hanging.
Or was there still room for the defense
to make a case for reasonable doubt?
There was a pretty wide discrepancy
between her size and his size.
How are jurors?
How are lay people going to deal with this notion
that she was too small to pull this off with such a large man?
As spring turned to summer with Helen's trial date rapidly approaching, the prosecutors fully expected a fight.
Her lawyer had been very aggressive, very thorough, very confrontational, and I expected it to be a war in the courtroom.
But then, in August of 1996,
the prosecutors received an unexpected call
from Helen's defense attorney.
In the days immediately before the trial was scheduled
to start, discussions developed about,
perhaps Helen was willing to plead guilty.
Helen's sudden reversal caught the prosecutors
and investigators entirely by surprise.
Up until that point, you denied that she had done the thing.
That realization of the death penalty was still an option.
That's what, if anything, led her to confess.
That and her belief that the prosecutors
would get it according to Helen.
I knew I couldn't get justice from where the trial was held,
because of all the publicity on it.
However, while Helen was convinced that a conviction
was all that guaranteed,
the authorities weren't so sure.
You never know what a jury's gonna do. So after conferring with Casey's family,
the prosecutor agreed to make a deal on one condition.
I took the capital count off the table
and recommended that if she would plead guilty and electrocute,
tell us how it happened and what she did with the rest of the body parts, that I would recommend to the court
a conviction for murder with a life sentence.
At the end of August, Helen sat down
with the investigators and prosecutors
and proceeded to tell them exactly what they wanted to hear.
She not only confessed to the killing,
but she provided certain details
of how she gradually administered morphine to hear. She not only confessed to the killing, but she provided certain details of how she
gradually administered morphine to him.
He had been sick with a cold or flu-like symptoms,
and she was the one taking care of him,
and then she had administered dosages of morphine.
Slowly, over several days, she had poisoned him.
And on the morning of January 16th,
Kasey lay unconscious in their bed.
She indicated that she administered the final dose to him,
then took the young children who resided in the home to school.
According to Helen's confession, Kasey was dead
by the time she returned home.
And while the children were in school,
she tackled the most difficult part of the job,
moving his 300-pound body.
She secured a tarp and laid it next to the bed,
and rolled Casey's large body off of the bed onto the tarp.
And then she took a lariat rope and ran the lariat rope out of the bedroom around the corner
through the little kitchen and out to the back porch stoop.
She backed the horse trailer up to the back door, unhitched it, ran the rope through the
horse trailer, and tied the end of the lariat rope to the trailer hitch.
And then gradually drove away from the horse trailer,
thereby dragging Casey's body out of the bedroom
around the corner and out the back door,
ultimately into the horse trailer.
And then once Casey's body was securely in the trailer,
the truely grues some part, began.
She indicated that she used a bow saw,
if you can imagine, and proceeded to cut Casey's body
into eight separate pieces.
Helen cut up his body at his joints
just the way you would slaughter a cow.
The body dismembered. Helen said she'd driven the trailer out to the lake to dump the torso,
stopping on the way there and back to dispose of the other body parts.
Those body parts were scattered in different locations. She couldn't really specify where the other
five body parts were. And according to Helen, she couldn't remember specify where the other five body parts were.
And according to Helen, she couldn't remember exactly where she dumped the rest of Casey's
remains, because of what she'd done to get through the grizzly business of butchering him.
She had been taking pills, percudans, her description description and drinking vodka straight.
And the next day, once she'd sobered up, Helen said she'd slaughtered a pig in the trailer
to help cover her tracks.
If she slaughtered a pig there, then theoretically most of that blood would be pig blood.
Helen said she'd also poured bleach in the bloody trailer and then hose it out.
She did a pretty good job of trying to hide everything.
Just not quite good enough to outsmart the investigators.
They tied this case together just as well as big city detectives can do.
Once they had Helen's story, the prosecutors held up their end of the bargain.
On August 30, 1996, Helen formally pled guilty to the murder and dismemberment of Kasey
Elliott.
She got a life sentence, so she'll be there probably until she passes away.
Even if the 41-year-old was technically eligible for parole.
She couldn't even ask to be considered for parole
until after serving 40 years.
For Casey's family, it was the end to a seven-month-long nightmare.
They were happy with the outcome and felt
like the person that killed their son was brought to justice, so I feel good about it.
And around Helen's hometown,
most people were pleased that the brutal killer
would probably be spending the rest of her life
behind bars.
You could almost feel a big sigh of relief
in the community knowing that
this has brought it to closure.
That closure has lasted more than 20 years,
but now will a shocking new claim reopen the case?
Coming up, Helen changes her story.
I'm not going to live in fear anymore.
Could it explain everything?
She was trying to cover up for someone she loved.
MUSIC
By 2016, Helen Moore had spent two decades behind bars for the murder of her boyfriend,
Casey Elliott.
In 1996, she pleaded guilty to killing Casey, dismembering his body, and scattering his
remains across young county, Texas, and neighboring areas.
We were pretty pleased that she planned out and took the deal.
But was Helen now serving a life
sentence, the 61-year-old says that
a guilty plea was her only option.
I decided at the night before I
played guilty because they were my
attorney told me that they was going
to go for the death penalty if I
didn't.
But now Helen says it's time to tell her story.
According to Helen's new story,
her boyfriend wasn't the gentle giant people believed him to be.
He was abusive, verbal at first,
and then it became physical.
And she claims that for almost five years,
she'd essentially been a prisoner in her own home.
You did a lot of mental abuse, like, nobody wants you.
You couldn't find anybody else.
If you try to leave me, I'll either hurt you
or one of your children.
There's no way Helen could have fought back on KC
because he was just so much bigger than her.
Despite the abuse, Helen said she had nothing to do
with killing KC or dismembering him.
I couldn't do that.
I couldn't do that to a human being.
But if she didn't do it, who did?
According to Helen, one of her teenage children
killed KC. He was sexually abusive to him. According to Helen, one of her teenage children killed Casey.
He was sexually abusive to him.
And according to Helen, rather than see one of her children suffer in prison,
she'd sacrificed herself instead.
She was trying to cover up for someone she loved.
I didn't want to put their lives in jeopardy or. Fear at that time.
But now, after two decades in prison, Helen says that she's tired of suffering for someone
else's crime.
I'm not going to live in fear anymore.
It's an incredible story, but is it the truth?
Her friend, Keta Kansler, has always believed in Helen's innocence. I would hope that Helen could get out and get a new,
get a trial and be able to tell her side of the story.
But the prosecutor who put Helen in prison
remains convinced that her original 1996 confession
was genuine.
To my knowledge, she was not coerced by anything
other than the tightening
news, as the day of reckoning, beginning of her trial, crept closer and
closer. And the fact that Helen had turned on her own children and accused one
of them of murder. To some, it's not much of a surprise, especially considering
what she had already done to Kasey.
How could one human being do that to another human being?
It was almost like the definition of evil.
Helen Moore will be eligible for parole in 2026 when she's 71 years old.
The rest of Kasey, its remains were never found. I love this.