Snapped: Women Who Murder - Jaclyn Martin
Episode Date: July 3, 2022Idle hands turn deadly when a life of comfort is jeopardized and leaves a beloved neighborhood bar owner dead in their wake.Season 27, Episode 1Originally aired: March 08, 2020Watch full epis...odes of Snapped for FREE on the Oxygen app: https://oxygentv.app.link/WatchSnappedPodSee 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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A struggling single mother settles into a life of ease
when she lands in the arms of a popular Baltimore bar owner.
She just wanted a better life.
He liked her personality. She made him feel young.
She felt protected when she was with him.
But when shots ring out after last call,
it's closing time for the life he built for her.
There were several phone calls to 911.
We find him laying in the front yard.
He's obviously been shot.
Investigators must determine was this a random crime
or an arranged hit?
You shot eight times.
That's a lot for a robbery gone bad.
As the investigation deepens, self-preservation takes over.
You start to think, what do I have to do to keep this lifestyle?
The quest for answers will bring detectives face to face
with one of the seven deadly cells.
Sloth, it sneaks up on you, but sloth actually in the long term, it can be very damaging.
She loved her lifestyle, the more he gave her, the more she wanted.
And a twisted plot will prove that idle hands, like the Good Book says, are indeed the devil's workshop.
They took advantage of people,
didn't really work that hard,
we'd take the easy way out.
Some people are takers, born,
wanting to receive and never to give anything in return.
You chip away slowly but surely at the little things.
And, uh, old story story just kind of crumbles. May 22nd, 2010.
It's 2 a.m. on a quiet Saturday in Dundalk, Maryland.
It was on patrol. It was a weekend night in Dundalk.
So it gets a little busy, you know.
It's bar closing time.
And at bar closing time, people tend to get a little rowdy.
At 2.24 a.m., this typical weekend patrol route takes an unexpected turn when a 911 call comes in.
I need to enable it here at
hop in the gentleman to
go shot at this right yard.
There were two patrons walking
in the area that saw some
of what had happened.
They called 911.
We don't usually get calls at the hops in.
It's quiet neighborhood.
So we knew something serious was going on.
Sergeant Ray Patterson is one of the first to respond.
When I pull up to the scene, it's pretty chaotic.
We find him laying in the front yard.
He's obviously been shot.
There wasn't a whole lot of blood.
It wasn't until the medics got there
and started assessing the wounds
that you could see that there were multiple holes.
Onlookers tell police the victim is Lee Martin,
the owner of the bar he's lying in front of.
As Metix worked to save Lee's life,
the situation looks grand.
He was obviously not in very good shape.
He did have a pulse.
After he was shot, they had asked us if we had any idea.
He would have done something like that.
He had no idea.
No idea.
No idea, no idea.
For Maryland native Lee Martin, working hard was second nature. Lee was a hard worker.
I mean, he was a good man in the community.
He would do A for anyone.
It's just a big old teddy bear.
That's why I used to call him.
From a young age, Lee's life revolved around the family business.
A neighborhood bar called Hopps Inn.
Lee hired me as a barmate.
The bar? That was like my home away from home.
You knew basically everybody that came in there.
The house that they lived in and the bar
were next to each other with a small two- small two and a half foot stone wall in between.
He didn't even walk out to the sidewalk, he just stepped over the wall.
His parents were getting older and the bar was a large commitment.
Lee would go there every night to close the bar, so around 130, he would leave his home,
go to the bar to help close up.
Lee was so dedicated to his bar that his personal life often suffered.
He had been married into worse with two sons.
Still, Lee continued to pour his energy into his two greatest loves, his bar and his boys.
He was excellent to his kids, and his boys. He was excellent at two skids, through his boys.
Everything changed for Lee when he put out a help wanted ad for a bartender in 2001,
and Jacqueline Lindgren answered the call.
She was hired on the spot because she went behind the bar and did her thing,
making drinks and really liked what she did and did her thing, making drinks, and me like what she did, and hire her.
She's very happy.
The job was a huge win for Jacqueline,
who had struggled much of her life.
I was a single mom with Jacqueline for a couple years.
Then I got married, and knew it was mistake.
And so I walked out with the kids.
Jacqueline was sociable.
She had a protective side about her,
like protective of her brother, protective of Melissa.
She had very bad experience of high school.
She was going through a gothic stage,
so my parents decided it was best to bring her out.
By age 21, Jacqueline found herself alone
and raising a young daughter named Trinity.
You know, she had to worry about things for Trinity,
the diapers, the formula.
She just wanted a better life for her in Trinity.
She worked two to three jobs at a time just to make ends meet.
Two to three jobs. At a time, Dressiv makes ends meet.
Jacqueline desperately wanted love
and a break from working so hard to provide for her daughter.
When she met her new boss, Lee Martin,
it seemed he could provide both.
I think that she saw somebody that was going to support
and take care of her.
They just started dating, they hid it off.
She always liked the older guys.
I think she felt protected when she was with him.
She felt safe.
And she felt like it was going to be a good family
dynamic for her and Trinity.
She moved in with him.
It was like gradual.
They didn't rush nothing.
They took their time.
And for the first time in her life,
Jacqueline could finally relax.
She did not have to work.
They were well off enough to be able to do that.
We got her anything and everything she needed.
She was able to attain a level of comfort
that she hadn't had before.
She finally had a man that was gonna provide everything for her.
All she had to do was sit back, relax, and enjoy it.
She loved her lifestyle.
She was type of person, and she would be like,
I'm the queen of the castle.
Life got even better for Jacqueline in 2006
when Leigh decided to pop the question.
I told her congratulations.
I was like, how happy are you?
She goes, I'm ecstatic.
Later that year, the couple tied the knot
and Lee accomplished his lifelong dream,
taking full ownership of Hopson.
Her staff was getting sick
and he was just getting tired of it,
so he sorted it out.
It looked completely different.
Cleaning it was so nice.
He wasn't a hands-off kind of owner.
He's very hands-on guy.
He loved Dundalk.
He loved his bar.
He loved his family.
He made everybody feel at home.
He did anything for anybody.
He would give his shirt off of his back, and he was one of a kind.
Lee made sure his family had everything.
Everything their heart desired.
Lee provided for them.
They didn't want for anything.
But on May 22, 2010, the family's happiness is threatened
when Lee is critically injured steps from his home and bar.
He was shot in the chest three or four times and also shot in the head.
As Lee is rushed to Bayview Hospital, police knock on his front door.
We had to notify Jacqueline that, you know,
her husband had been shot right here in the front yard.
When she was notified, she seems kind of oblivious
to the situation.
She slept through it.
She was scared.
She didn't know what was going on.
She was kind of in a situation where we're throwing this
on her right then and there.
It's a shock.
And one of the first things we needed to do
was to get her away from the scene.
While Jacqueline is transported to the hospital
to be with her husband, officers begin
to investigate who could have harmed
such a beloved pillar in this community.
I think the police were still grasping
at what was going on.
The whole street was out because he was
at the part of the community
that everybody was blown away by what had happened.
In the early morning hours of May 22, 2010,
43-year-old bar owner, Lee Martin,
is transported to Johns Hopkins
Bayview Medical Center with severe gunshot wounds.
His wife Jacqueline holds vigil by his side.
He was shot in the abdomen, a heart and a head.
He may have been alive, but I don't think
that it was really much longer.
At 2.58 AM, everyone's worst fears come to pass.
I heard Melissa Lynn get up here and my dad looked at me
and said, got a phone call from Baltimore County.
Police Department.
Lee has been deceased.
For Lee's 29-year-old wife, Jacqueline Martin,
the news is too much to bear.
She was like in shock, like she couldn't believe it,
like, um, it wasn't real.
Officers are eager to speak with Jacqueline,
but for now, they give her some time
to process the tragic news.
Outside Lee Martin's bar and home,
the investigation into his homicide is underway.
The first thing we had to do was start thinking about securing the scene,
find any witnesses, preserve the evidence,
and get this place calm down a little bit
so we can actually find out what's going on.
He had a cell phone, his wallet.
There was a pack of cigarettes, flip flops.
That had been, I guess, when he felt back,
the flip flops came off of his feet.
And the area was a well-traveled area.
But because police don't know what they have and what
is a value and what isn't, they collect everything.
What investigators don't find at the scene
is just as important as what they do find.
There's no bullet casings.
Obviously, we're looking at some type of revolver,
something that keeps the bullet casings in the gun
after the shot's been fired.
Most shootings are done with semi-automatics.
There's probably less revolvers floating around than there are semi-automatics. There's probably less revolvers floating around
than there are semi-automatic weapons.
If the gun used in Lee's murder is rare,
it could help detectives find his killer.
If someone has a revolver,
chances are there's several people that know about it.
It's like an antique or it's something
that's been passed down through the family.
It's rare that younger people are going and buying revolvers in a guns shop.
As they continue to process the scene, detectives begin to note contradictions
in the evidence left behind.
It appeared from all purposes at that point in time that it was a robbery gone bad.
Except he still had a cell phone on him. He still has his wallet on him.
It's wearing his watch.
Since Lee's personal belongings were left untouched,
investigators wonder if the assailants
snatched a larger prize.
Because he would close the bar at night,
police certainly didn't know whether or not
he carried that money home, or if it was left at the bar at night. Police certainly didn't know whether or not he carried that money home,
or if it was left at the bar in a safe.
Hours into the search, police get their first lead
when they speak with a couple
who claim to have witnessed a portion of the attack.
They were walking home when they saw
what appeared to be two black males with the victim
and one of them shooting with the victim. one of them shooting the victim.
The victim falling to the ground. They were able to tell the direction that the
two men ran, but they didn't run after the two men. They instead tended to the
victim. After hearing the couple's account, police spring into action. We
called for our K-9. They're excellent trackers and our K-9 was there
relatively quickly so we knew we were gonna have a good track. The K-9. They're excellent trackers. And our K-9 was there relatively quickly, so we knew we were gonna have a good track.
The K-9 dogs picked up a trail, and they followed that trail
until they lost a trail at the end of a dead end street.
That happens a lot.
The dog will take us to a location,
but they can't tell you if he got into a car and drove away.
Police communicate this information
to their eyes in the sky.
Our Baltimore County helicopter was up.
They're spotlighting the neighborhood,
the dark areas where did someone run down this alley
or did someone run down that alley,
or are there cars speeding away from the neighborhood
that we can't see from where we are,
but they can see from above.
from the neighborhood that we can't see from where we are, but they can see from above.
Back on the ground, investigators receive word
of other crimes reported in the area that same night.
We started getting these other halls,
previous to the shooting here at Hobbs.
There was a robbery reported a block or two away.
The description was two black males with a gun,
robbing someone, and then after the incident here at Hops
at 4 a.m. or so, there's another robbery of sorts
where the description is two black males with a gun
in a van that robbed someone.
We started thinking that we have a little crime spree going on
right here in this neighborhood.
But as police learn more details about the other incidents, something about Lee's attack stands out.
Two guys, you know, sticking up somebody in the two in the morning and that shooting air isn't that rare.
But this seemed to be particularly brutal.
You shot eight times. That's a lot for a robbery gone bad.
When you find a victim that is shot at close range,
nine, eight, nine times,
you tend to believe that it's pretty personal.
If the attack was personal,
who could be behind it?
A few regulars offer up some insight to police.
There was some talk from the bar patrons and people
who worked at the bar that there was this person
by the name of Kyle, who was selling drugs or attempting
to sell drugs at the hops in at the bar.
And that Lee had had a conversation with him
and told him he couldn't be there and he couldn't do that. And there was some sort of confrontation that took place.
Potentially, that's a motive for someone.
You're taking away their livelihood,
although it's an illegal livelihood.
It's their livelihood.
The witnesses had thought it was maybe retaliation
for him, his drug policy, that someone got angry
and killed him for being kicked out.
According to witnesses, Kyle hadn't been running his drug operation alone.
He was often seen working alongside his sister, Ashley.
We start digging into the histories of these people
and find that the information that we're given
from witnesses is accurate.
They are drug dealers.
They have been charged with selling drugs.
Investigators work quickly to track the siblings down.
When we looked into Ashley and Kyle,
the alibis were pretty good.
Ashley was in jail, so that's pretty much confirmed
that she couldn't have been there.
And Kyle was at the railway in,
the other bar right up the street,
with multiple people there with him.
So it was pretty easy to confirm
that neither one of them could be responsible for this shooting.
As day breaks, detectives return to the station
and add a new wrinkle to the case when they run
Lee's names through their database.
Lee've reported to the police that his ATM credit card
at a local bank had been compromised and that there were four transactions
that he had not made.
He was missing about $1,000.
In the aftermath of Lee Martin's violent murder,
Baltimore County investigators
have uncovered a report, Lee filed 24 hours prior to the shooting.
His ATM card was used with his pin number
to withdraw money from a bank machine
and authorized withdrawal that wasn't his,
who is using his credit card
and how did they get a hold of it?
How did they get his pin number?
Police believed the unauthorized withdrawals
were completed by someone with intimate knowledge
of Lee's personal information.
A possibility Lee himself had addressed
when he made his initial report.
He believed his wife knew the pin number,
but he didn't think that she would have done this.
In his statement to police, Lee said Jacqueline was with him
when each withdrawal occurred.
To investigators, the timing of the thefts
and Lee's murder is no coincidence.
It was kind of a red flag that it was just prior
to the actual murder.
Someone was taking his money out of the bank account.
We needed to find out who that someone was.
His chances are that someone is going to link us
to what's going on and why he was shot.
However, according to the original report,
the ATM surveillance footage will not
be available to review for two more days.
Not content to sit idly by, police
circle back to Lee Martin's wife, Jacqueline, who's had
a few more hours to process her loss.
So, she's initially interviewed the 22nd, and I remember her just hysterically crying.
Detectives ask Jacqueline to describe the hours leading up to the shooting. What time did you get there, do you remember?
We need to go to the close bar.
What time did you go?
We must sleep on the couch.
What time did he wake up to go close the bar?
Because alarm is set for 120.
He would leave his home, go to the bar,
to help close up to make sure that everything was correct,
get the bartender's home,
and then he would lock up the bar and walk home.
That was every night that the bar was open.
Jacqueline says the only thing different this time
is that Lee didn't come home.
She goes back to sleep, the next thing she knows,
he's not back.
The first thing we want to know from her is who would Lee
have a beef with, or who would have a beef with Lee,
that may be responsible for this.
He always had problems with people.
Kids who don't have ID, because they're not old enough for somebody who's plastered and wants to try to buy beer at 2.30 in the morning.
But Jacqueline is adamant, none of it seemed serious.
She could not think of anybody who would want to hurt him.
With no new solid leads from Jacqueline,
investigators head back to Hopson, where
they're met by Bill Tolbert, a close friend of Lee's.
Bill was the eyes when Lee wasn't there.
He definitely had Lee's back.
Still in search of a motive, detectives ask
if the bar's previous night's profits are accounted for.
We knew that Lee had just closed up the bar,
and we knew that the nightly cash till had been closed out.
We thought there was a possibility he was,
he had that in an envelope or cash bag,
and maybe that was taken.
He would always come over before we ended our shift.
We would count out our registers.
Then he would take the money, and as far as I knew,
he always put it upstairs in the safe.
Mr. Tolbert was able to open the safe.
There was about $2,000 in the safe from the night before.
And everything was exactly as it should have been.
The discovery that nothing was stolen from Lee
on the night of the murder sends the investigation
in a new direction.
Police figured this had to be an inside job.
This was someone that leaned new, personally.
Before detectives leave the bar,
they note the outside security cameras
located near an area of interest.
On the side of Hopsten, there's a stairwell
that goes up to the second floor.
And if you're hiding back behind this stairwell,
you're in darkness, and no one's gonna be able to know
that you're there.
That would definitely be a place to hide
until the victim showed up.
But where the incident actually took place,
they were inoperable at the time.
The security cameras are out due to construction.
This is extremely disappointing.
Then on May 24, two days after the shooting,
investigators finally gained access to surveillance footage
from the ATM where Lee's debit card was fraudulently used.
I got a pretty clear picture of who was responsible
for the ATM fraud.
The footage reveals a man wearing a hooded jacket
and a baseball cap.
They see him using the credit card.
And when the credit card's used, the pin number is used.
He was wearing a hat.
You can only see his partial face.
He was tried to hide his face from the camera because he knew the camera was rolling.
While investigators work to identify the man,
they receive a phone call from Lee's friend, Bill Tolbert.
We got this tip that this employee has information
that he needs to talk to the police about.
He was a little afraid to contact us,
but he really had some information
that needed to be told.
A detective sits down with the employee
who recounts the strange events of May 22nd.
The night Lee Martin was murdered.
He says that on that particular night, he's home.
And his roommate, Robert Garner, is all jacked up.
He is hyped up, and he has two friends over
by the name of Storm Davis and Brandon Roth.
And they are kind of getting dressed in black.
They're putting black on their face.
They're putting hoodies on.
They're all excited.
He started running around the house.
You know, getting black jacked and you put stuff on his eyes
and I figured something was going on there.
And he showed me a gun.
Though he's unsure of the caliber,
the employee believes the gun was a small revolver.
He describes the gun and had never seen him with a gun before.
The employee says the three men then left in a hurry around 1 a.m.
Did he come home?
Yeah, full time was at it.
About three.
OK.
We're in the same stuff?
Yeah.
How did you put that when Rob left the house with a gun and leave being shot that those
two things become one. Oh, because I know that Rob does not like Lee.
He hates Lee.
He hates Lee with passion.
But why would Rob Garner have such hatred for this beloved bar owner?
He tells us that Rob was Lee's brother-in-law, Jacqueline's brother.
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A hops-in employee has just revealed his roommate, 26-year-old
Rob Garner and his two friends, 19-year-old Storm Davis and Brandon Roth,
were acting suspicious on the night of Lee Martin's murder.
He tells us that his roommate might be involved
in something that wasn't good.
He thought that Rob was involved in some criminal activity.
The mystery unravels further when detectives learn that Robert Garner
is the brother of Lee's wife, Jacqueline Martin.
We have someone that we know is linked to the victim.
We know that they have access to credit cards
and information.
Authorities secure arrest warrants
for all three men mentioned in the employees account.
Storm Davis and Brandon Roth are the first to arrest them.
They are actually brought in at the same time.
They're placed in two separate rooms.
Detective Stark with Storm Davis.
Can you tell me what you did last Friday night? Where you were?
He talks about how he and Brandon Roth are watching a movie with a couple of other friends when they
receive a phone call from Rob Garner saying, hey, we need to do something tonight.
They think they're going to beat somebody up.
The plan is that Brandon will drive them to the location.
He parks a block away.
Where'd you guys go from there?
Under the back steps on the side of the building
where the stairs go to the second level.
And they were waiting there for Lee to come out.
While they were waiting, Rob was making a phone call
or two
to an unknown person at the time to let them know where they were
and what they were doing.
I could hear him talking to a phone and I kept hearing it
and say, I love you.
He's figuring that it's someone that's very close to him.
Rob hangs up the phone and it's shortly there after that
Lee comes out of the bar.
And then when he hopped out, when the guy came out, he was walking down,
he looked back and grabbed up the door and said,
you need money.
And I think I was really scared.
And he said, um, don't have any money.
I'm gonna have to let some rap pull the gun out.
And bang, bang.
This one wrapped with a gun out. And bang bang.
The
The
The The The The
The
The
In the next room, Brandon Ross' story lines up exactly with storms.
I think they were scared.
They were young.
Rob was a little bit older.
He seemed a little bit more street wise.
Storm and Brandon, to me, did not appear to be masterminds of anything.
They were very immature.
They would have done anything Rob told them to do.
And they did.
When detectives show Brandon the ATM surveillance images,
he recognizes the subject.
He identifies Rob as being the person who took the money
from the ATM.
That's the first time they get an identification
through that.
As police set out to find Rob Garner, investigators Sapina, his phone records,
and they are stunned by what they discover.
Before the murder, during the murder, after the murder,
Rob was calling Jackalor.
The story that it's telling us is that Jacqueline was not
sound asleep at the time.
She either knows and wants this to happen, or she knows
what's going on and doesn't want it to happen, but she
didn't do anything to stop.
As investigators work to uncover Jacqueline's involvement, her brother Rob Garner is arrested
at his apartment and brought in for questioning.
So, somebody explained something.
I knew you were there because you're self-dumbed, was there?
I was there.
I was just sitting in the car.
She's going to get some money.
She's going to leave.
Okay.
Well, I want to be able to all attention
to just put fear into them.
I ain't taking it up.
I just want to scare the s*** out,
fight with them, storm them.
Storm jump down,
and that's when the eye hurts pal.
He blames Storm Davis for pulling the trigger.
Police don't buy that.
We had to sell phone records,
Brandon's interview,
Storm's interview,
and Rob didn't have a whole lot to say.
Rob didn't really have a good answer.
He is charged with first degree pre-meditated murder.
Despite having three assailants behind bars,
detectives believe the true mastermind
has yet to be arrested.
Jacqueline's the closest person to our victim
that we know of, and we feel we can prove
that she was behind this murder.
When detectives reach out to Lee's closest friends, they express concerns that Jacqueline had begun
to take advantage of the carefree lifestyle her husband
provided.
She stopped working when they got married,
when he bought the bar.
She would come in the bar all the time.
I knew that that was the owner's wife.
She'd come in and tell me to give her $50 out of my drawer,
and I would give it to her.
But according to Lee's friends, his patients with his increasingly freeloading wife had
begun to wear a sin.
She was very rude and obnoxious, she would start fight, she would get drunk, and cause
a real big scene.
It was causing patrons to not want to come to the bar, so there was a conversation that Lee had with Jay
that she was not allowed at the hops in anymore.
Had Lee wanted Jacqueline out of his life, too.
When you really kind of scratch the surface,
you realize our marriage was not wonderful.
It was all starting to slip away.
Who wouldn't want to give that up?
How far would you go to what lengths to keep the life you have?
Detectives are eager to confront Jacqueline Martin
and they know exactly where to find her.
Please feel more.
Had bad feelings of what was going to happen.
I noticed undercover cops.
They were there.
I was the outside, I was saying, good night to somebody who was leaving.
And all of a sudden, all these vehicles, all these cop vehicles.
My heart stopped.
They arrest Jacqueline.
Start reading her rights.
And she says, Mommy, I didn't do this, Mommy, help me.
Jacqueline is transported to Baltimore County Police Headquarters,
where detectives immediately turn up the heat.
Why would your brother kill your husband?
He went, he went and do that.
He did do it.
Your brother robbed her.
But he killed my brother.
He went and turned.
You sent this whole thing up.
No.
Yes, you did, because you thought you were going to get everything.
Deeper into the interview, she started to talk about how this was all Rob's doing,
and she had nothing to do with it.
Why would your brother kill it?
Did he care of me?
Robert's always the one that was protecting us, protecting the girls and the family.
When did you give your brother to Card in the pen number?
Couple weeks ago.
Couple weeks ago.
You gave him the card in the pen number?
They're baby needed diapers.
Okay, and I want you to just give him the card.
It's just a yes or no you do just give them the card.
It's just a yes or no.
Did you give them the card?
Yeah.
Next, detectives confront Jacqueline
about her recent banishment from Hoppsin.
Why would a man borrow his wife from his bar?
It wasn't barred
According to everybody else you weren't I just didn't go in you don't get it. You just don't get it
It's a corny everybody else to try to sneak you
I can't stop you from going in my own bar. It wasn't your bar. I just didn't you're only married to him
That's not your bar. It was ours. No, it wasn't. You had a pre-marchal agreeing to correct.
And I just didn't go in.
He didn't want to be over there, and I was fine with that.
It's all someone else's fault.
She really took no responsibility whatsoever for any of this.
There was obviously more to that story.
Why did you lie to Detective Kobe and say you were asleep all the time? Why did you lie to detect your COVID and say you were asleep the whole time?
Why did you lie?
Because I was sleeping.
You weren't sleeping.
You were awake because you were back and forth
talking to your brother from 207 in the morning
until 220 in the morning.
You chip away slowly but surely at the little things.
Her whole story just kind of problems.
Coming up, a desperate motive exposes how far someone will go
just to take it easy.
If Lee divorced her, she knew she'd go back to the struggle.
She knew she couldn't let that happen.
I think she saw her life kind of spiraling out of control.
She couldn't let that happen.
I think she saw her life kind of spiraling out of control.
Detectives in Baltimore, Maryland have discovered that just before Lee Martin was murdered,
his 29-year-old wife, Jacqueline,
was on the verge of losing the easy life she'd always wanted.
Her marriage was going downhill,
and she was gonna lose her place,
that that was Lee's house.
If he was gonna divorce her,
she was gonna get what it was due,
and killing him seemed to get her a lot more than divorce
would have gotten her.
She knew she'd go back to the struggle.
She knew she couldn't let that happen.
She had lived that life before,
and she was not willing to go back.
When investigators confront her with this motive,
Jacqueline scrambles.
She eventually admits that, yes, she wanted him hurt,
didn't know that he was gonna be killed.
She didn't want her.
I just...
How bad did you want him hurt?
I just want him to know what it was like
to walk around the doors on his face.
She does paint this story off, he beat me,
and had black eyes, and everybody knew it.
According to Jacqueline, the abuse had been going on
for about a year.
She said, the abuse started somewhere in 2009, 2009.
I was upset for my sister.
I was met.
She's claimed that he had put his hands on her.
Despite Jacqueline's alleged intentions,
detectives place her under arrest.
I do think that she was reporting that to her family,
that he was abusing her, but there were no police reports
to say that.
In Maryland, even if she just asked them to hurt him,
she's still on the hook for the murder.
Jacqueline, her brother Rob Garner and his two 19-year-old accomplices, Storm Davis and
Brandon Roth, are all charged with first-degree murder.
They each kind of make a little bit of statements towards one another so we were going to try them separately.
But before their days in court arrive, the two youngest defendants are quick to strike deals with the state.
Both Storm Davis' and Brandon Roth's attorneys had approached us early on that they wanted to cooperate.
They certainly were not the masterminds of this. They got sucked in, and so we did offer them a plea deals where they would testify against the two of them,
and in exchange for that, they got lesser time.
As the two remaining trials approach,
another defendant decides to fold.
Year and a half goes by, and Rob wants
to tell the whole story.
Rob completely won a percent implicated Jack Londonness.
Ribergarner had said that.
Jake had asked him to take care of Lee,
and she would pay him $10,000.
She wanted him to make it look like an accident.
The robbery gone bad.
Jack Link gave Rob the ATM card in the pin
with the instructions to withdraw the money out of the ATM
to purchase a firearm, but only do so if he was serious
about completing the act.
While Jacqueline stayed in bed,
Robbert says the plan was for him to do her dirty work.
And the plan is to kill him, and he did.
He sticks with the story that his sister was abused
and he did it for his sister.
In the back of my head, a kind of new.
That he was enrolled somehow, somewhere.
As prosecutors prepare their case against Jacqueline, kind of knew that he was in a somehow, somewhere.
As prosecutors prepare their case against Jacqueline,
they build a theory for her motive for the crime.
They were still living in the house together,
but they were essentially preparing to split up.
You start to think, what do I have to do
to keep this lifestyle?
I can't let this slip away.
She was desperate. She had him killed before she could lose out on his assets,
her easy life.
Before he could divorce her,
she would lose everything.
But in order to keep living in the house
and not work,
Jacqueline would need money.
There was a life insurance policy on him for $300,000,
so she would have gotten that.
Though they're confident in their case,
the state still offers Jacqueline the chance to avoid trial.
We ended up making her the same plea offer we made him,
which is the first degree murder.
I've suspend all but 60 years. What we offered they took.
On January 13th, 2012,
Jacqueline enters an Alfred plea.
An Alfred plea is when defendant acknowledges the fact
that you have an overwhelming amount of evidence
against them, and they're not admitting guilt,
what they know
that they would be convicted.
Though Jacqueline's conviction offers some sense of closure,
Lee's death is still keenly felt by those who knew him.
Her daughter lost a good dad, and the boys,
they lost a good dad.
He was a good man, and he would do anything for anybody.
And he'd deserve that.
I love my sister, I love my brother,
regardless of this incident.
But I don't condone it, not one else.
There is no perfect person.
We all live a life of sin.
However, we have choice.
And it is our choice to do right.
I think she wanted the easy way out.
She felt like his death was going to free her.
And I think instead it did the complete opposite. [♪ Music playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing For more information on snapped, go to oxygen.com.