Snapped: Women Who Murder - Karen Clowers
Episode Date: September 17, 2023When the loving wife of a Vietnam veteran is found dead in a highway commuter lot, Missouri detectives work to chase down the mastermind of a twisted murder-for-hire plot.Season 29 Episode 06...Originally aired: May 9, 2021Watch full episodes 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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I'm going deep into my wife's family history, digging up the cold case of her murdered great-grandmother.
And did I mention that I'm looking into whether the murderer was actually the beloved family patriarch?
Follow Go Story wherever you get your podcasts.
Listen everywhere on October 23rd, where you can binge early and add free on Wondery Plus the same day. Bosch Legacy returns in a two episode premiere event. Maddie's been taken.
Oh God.
Nothing can stop a father.
See a lie?
From doing what the law can't.
And we have to do this the very way.
You have to.
I don't.
Bosch Legacy streamed the new season October 20th exclusively on FreeVee.
He was a Vietnam veteran fighting for his life.
He came home with some demons to battle.
She was the loving partner who helped him find his way.
She stood by him and was able to take care of him.
For nearly three decades, they remained inseparable.
Until an unthinkable betrayal
destroyed their union.
She was laying on her back not too far from her vehicle.
There looked to be some sort of struggle.
Homicide investigators quickly uncover a web of suspicions
and salacious rumors.
Some of the allegations were quite disturbing.
She'd never made any bones about the fact
that they were having an affair.
They were hiding in closets and different things,
and it was starting to disrupt the workforce there.
When the case finally comes to a close,
it will expose an unlikely mastermind of a sinister plot.
The irony of dying at the hands of someone
that she was trying to help all the way up until her death,
it's kind of heartbreaking.
She wasn't going to let anything stop her.
We were in total disbelief and shock. It's a quiet Friday afternoon in this small, just north of St. Louis,
until a flood of 911 calls ring into the Sheriff's Office?
Some witnesses had called in to law enforcement and dispatch
and notified officers that there was someone who was lying on the ground
in the commuter lot positioned at the intersection of highway B in 61.
One of the witnesses passing by made the assumption
it was a suicide.
Within minutes, Sheriff's deputies
respond to the scene.
A vehicle was parked facing towards the highway,
kind of the middle of the parking lot,
and Cardora was open, and there was a large pool
of what appeared to be blood.
Witnesses observed as well as law enforcement
that there was someone with a massive head wound
what appeared to be a gunshot,
who was laying on the ground.
She was laying not too far from her vehicle
towards the front of her vehicle.
The vehicle was still running.
Authorities quickly determined that the victim is deceased,
but none of the 911 callers saw what happened to her.
They thought maybe it was a suicide at that point.
It was my understanding when they found her body,
she had a work uniform on from her employer,
and on that was her work identification.
The badge identifies the victim as 56-year-old Ruth Ann Madden,
a housekeeping supervisor at a nearby medical center.
Upon identifying the victim on the commuter lot based on her work ID, uniformed officers
in the Missouri State Highway Patrol responded to her husband's house to make death notification.
This is common and usually the first step is notifying next of kin.
Ruth Ann's husband is 52-year-old Andrew Madden. Andy was wheelchair-bound.
When they arrived, he was out front.
They said, unfortunately, we have to tell you
your wife is deceased.
He put out his cigarette kind of calmly
and then dropped his face down into his hands
and began crying.
Andy wanted to find out what happened to his wife,
how this could happen.
And he wanted to find out what happened to his wife,
how this could happen.
And he wanted to find out what happened to his wife,
how this could happen.
And he wanted to find out what happened to his wife,
how this could happen.
Born on December 17, 1945, Ruth Ann Scott
was always a caregiver.
She was just sweet and reserved.
You could tell she cared about people.
She was a warm individual.
She was the oldest of 11 children.
She would be that person that helped raise quite a few of the siblings.
She was so family-oriented,
it was just a very kind and nurturing person.
In her 20s, Ruth Ann fell in love with a young soldier named Andrew Madden.
Andy Madden was a former service member of the U.S. Army.
He was a veteran of the Vietnam War.
He was a tank mechanic.
He did see significant action doing his tour in Vietnam.
And it left an emotional toll on him.
He came home with some demons to battle.
But once he got to know you and once he got to know him,
he actually, really good friend.
Ruthanne married Andy in 1975 and settled down in Eolia, Missouri.
She worked in housekeeping at a hospital
while Andy operated heavy machinery at a quarry in Lincoln County.
They were always together.
She was always concerned about his well-being
and if everything was all right.
There was something particularly cute about the two of them.
And everybody enjoyed them being around.
But as the years passed, Andy's health deteriorated.
His health was not that good.
He was a sick man, very sick man.
And he was in a wheelchair.
He was able to walk.
So sometimes his balance gets in the issue,
and that's what the chair is for.
Cancer's, especially a treatment for cancer,
they robbed the body of a lot of strength.
His problems seem more with strength in his legs.
Unable to continue his job at the quarry,
Andy struggled with the physical and emotional fallout.
The military makes you a strong individual.
Your strengths are a major part of your life
when those things leave you.
It's hard to do with.
Despite Andy's failing health,
Ruth Anne stuck by his side.
And in 1997,
she accepted a full-time job
as a housekeeping manager at Lincoln County
Medical Center to support the both of them. She stood by him and was able to take care of him and
continued to take care of him, continued to work at the same time. Ruth Ann did what she could,
but more help was needed. The Veterans Administration went ahead and supplied him a home health care aid by the name
of Karen Klauer's to assist in everyday duties such as clothing, medicine, bathing,
and what not as needed.
For the Madden's, having health care worker Karen Klauer's in their home made a huge difference.
She was helping with house chores
and making sure he was taking his medicine
and making him something to eat and stuff
while Ruth was out working.
The relationship to my understanding
with Karen Klauer's and Ruth Ann Madden was a good one.
They would talk a lot, it would hang together,
even after she got off, she would stay. She would, uh, it was a friendship relationship with all three.
It seemed Ruth Ann and Andy had finally found a good balance.
But little did they know, their time together was running out.
Now, on August 9, 2002, state troopers have just informed Andy Madden that his wife Ruth Anne Madden has been found dead in a commuter parking lot.
He was upset.
A couple times he broke down.
I'm like, you know, sorry.
I'm sorry, Andy.
I'm so sorry.
I mean, I can't imagine what you're going through.
While Andy processes his grief, detectives arrive at the crime scene.
Initially, it was reported that it was possibly a suicide,
but really quickly, it was starting to unfold
that that was clearly not a suicide.
Right away, we started thinking, this doesn't smell right.
We don't have a weapon at the scene.
It was gone, clear headshot, left running by our car,
ID's on our shirt, something happened immediate and quick.
At that point, it was obvious that this was a homicide.
Coming up, investigators find evidence
of a desperate struggle for survival.
There was actually human hairs clenched in her hand
that looked to be that she either
tried to stop her salient or grab onto her salient.
And Ruth Ann's husband gives investigators their first read.
He mentioned that she had been receiving threatening
and harassing phone calls and death threats.
This whole thing was very bizarre.
On August 9, 2002, authorities in Lincoln County, Missouri
are processing the scene where 56-year-old Ruth
Ann Madden has been found murdered in a commuter parking lot
near her home.
A homicide in this particular community
is extremely rare.
You have thefts, maybe somebody steals a car, breaks into a house,
but to have someone brutally shot, point blank in the face,
in a commuter lot, it shocks the conscience.
Investigators talk to bystanders who have gathered
at the scene of the crime, including a young couple
that saw a suspicious vehicle leaving the parking lot
that afternoon.
It just so happens that this gentleman, Randy,
was driving westbound on highway E, and this car It just so happens that this gentleman, Randy,
was driving westbound on highway E,
and this car comes screaming out in front of him
to the point where I think he almost had to take some sort
of a vase of action and that drew his attention to the
commuter lot, where he saw the body on the commuter lot.
Suspecting the other driver might have been involved
in a crime, Randy decided to give chase.
This individual made a U-turn and actually attempted to chase this vehicle down northbound 4061,
but it was traveling in excess of 85-90 miles an hour.
I guess the witness realized that, hey, this is getting too dangerous.
You know, to them, it wasn't worth it.
So they shut back down, responded back to the commuter lot.
We're in, they met deputies and gave them their statement.
Unfortunately, at the time, they did not get the license plate.
The witness was more focused on identifying the driver of the car,
but he did give us a spectacular description of the vehicle.
spectacular description of the vehicle.
Investigators immediately issue a bolo for a white Chevy luminous sedan
with tinted windows.
But without a license plate number,
authorities are looking for a needle
in a haystack.
Initially, we really didn't have a lot
to go on when we formed up.
In an effort to act fast,
the Sheriff's Office seeks help
from the multi-agency major case squad
of greater St. Louis.
You have anywhere from 25 to 30 detectives
from all over, bringing all different kinds of experience.
And one of the benefits of that
is the kind of, for lack of better words, brain storming.
What do you think?
What does this look like to you?
One of the scenarios was, was this a car jacking
or a robbery that went bad?
But then you start looking at some of the other factors
and like, well, you know, her purse is left in the car.
Is that a robbery? It's probably not.
We noted a gunshot wound to the side of the head
and an exit wound.
We did not locate a projectile.
And that absolutely would leave us to either believe
that the person who ever was responsible for the crime
was aware enough to clean up after themselves
or that they had used to revolver,
and in that case, no shell casing would have been ejected.
The investigators collect several items from the area,
including a soft drink bottle and multiple cigarette butts.
You don't know, is this an important piece of evidence,
or is it just clutter?
So they were seizing those cigarette butts that they found.
It was a derail brand cigarette.
Upon closer examination of Ruth Ann's body, they were seizing those cigarette butts that they found. It was a derail brand cigarette.
Upon closer examination of Ruth Ann's body,
investigators find evidence that she might have tried
to fight off her killer.
There looked to be some sort of struggle
because there was actually human hairs found
and Ruth Ann's hand, clenched in her hand,
that looked to be that she either tried to stop her
salient or grab onto her salient.
Those hair follicles were seized as evidence
and forwarded for DNA analysis.
Detectives request Ruth Ann's phone records
hoping they will shed some light on what happened,
but getting the results will take time.
While they're waiting, they ask the local community for help.
We need the public to help us police.
Two minutes of someone's life could save
countless hours of investigators' time
and maybe possibly save somebody's life before it's too late.
I first heard that they found her body was on the news.
And then when I...
Then when they said their name, I was thinking,
I don't know, it couldn't be the same.
It just made no sense to me.
It was seemed like she had no business being there
unless she was meeting somebody there.
Because where they lived was at least another 10 or 15 minutes north
from where she was found.
While investigators wait for potential tips to roll in,
they drive out to the Madden home to speak further
with Ruth Ann's husband, Andy.
Traditional police work would lead you
to believe that you always have to look at the spouse first.
I said, would you have time to talk with me alone?
And he said, sure. I would very much like to help you. I want to find out who did this
to my wife. And I'm like, okay, this is a good start.
Investigators ask Andy where he was earlier in the afternoon. He says he had been with
his caretaker all day.
He had mentioned that Karen Klawers was with him the whole day until approximately 5pm.
Andy provides detectives with contact information for Karen Klauers so they can verify his alibi.
But before contacting Karen, detectives ask Andy if Ruth Ann had any enemies outside or inside the home. He described their marriage as the perfect marriage,
no problems whatsoever, never alluded to any type of problems
on the marriage front.
Obviously, a question is asked,
do you have any idea of who may want to have harmed your wife?
And immediately, he mentioned that she had been receiving
threatening and harassing phone calls and death threats.
Ruth had been receiving threatening phone calls at home
and at work, and she was kind of on,
I guess, what I would say, maybe high alert.
One of the calls was to Andy himself,
and it sounded somewhat like a female voice,
stating that his wife was having an affair.
Yeah, your wife is cheating on you.
We thought you need to know.
This whole thing was very bizarre.
Investigators want to know who was calling Ruth Ann
and why they were harassing her.
Initially, Ruth Ann suspected the calls
may have been coming from a coworker.
She would tell Andy that people at worker
are messing with me, and she was scared of it.
Andre believes the calls may have come
from a former coworker of Ruthan's named Betty.
Ruthan had a supervisory position at the hospital.
She was in charge of housekeeping.
And there was a female employee who
was a subordinate of hers.
According to Andrew, Ruth Ann had moved Betty
to the night shift.
This ended up upsetting Betty and prompted her to call,
but not to threaten murder, but just to stop
meddling with my life,
she subsequently resigned.
Andrew says he and Ruth Ann quickly reported the calls
to the Troy Police Department.
Miss Madden and Andrew Madden had taken steps
to try to track where these phone calls were coming from.
Law enforcement ended up following up
on some of those leads, but none of them really went anywhere.
Andrew provided us with four or five phone numbers
that he said he had captured from his caller ID.
Now investigators wonder,
could workplace tensions have led to murder?
We wanted to get to the bottom of it.
We're gonna find a person that is responsible.
Coming up, an illicit and brazen affair is revealed. They're alone all day, all day long.
And I know she set her sights on him.
And detectives find their biggest piece of evidence yet.
Where, like, does that look like the vehicle that you saw,
fleeing the crime scene?
And they were 100% sure that, like, yeah, that's the vehicle.
MUSIC
Just hours after Ruth Ann Madden was found murdered in a commuter parking lot,
her husband has implicated one of Ruth Ann's co-workers, who allegedly made some harassing phone calls in recent weeks.
Andy Madden holds firm that whoever it is
making these threatening phone calls must have been involved somehow.
Investigators contact Ruth Ann's supervisor
at the Lincoln County Medical Center
to learn more about Ruthanne's problems
with a former coworker named Betty.
He had said that Ruthanne had come to him
and mentioned that other employees
had mentioned that two of her subordinates
were having an extra marital affair.
They were hiding in closets and different things,
and it was starting to disrupt the workforce there.
They decided the best course of action would be
to separate them on the work schedule.
Once the participant that affair Betty was notified
that her shift would be changed because of her behavior,
she was very upset.
According to the supervisor, Betty quit her job on July 25th
around the same time Ruth and received the harassing phone calls.
Some of the allegations raised as to the comments on the phone calls were quite disturbing.
Some of those alluded to the fact that she was going to have her throat slit,
that she was going to have her throat slit,
that she was going to be beaten and thrown into the quiver river.
Her supervisors took those threats seriously enough that they assigned her security to
walk her back and forth from her car.
Investigators worked quickly to contact Betty at her home in Troy, Missouri, and ask her where she was on August 9.
She said her car had been in the shop for quite some time, specifically during that time
period and days before and after.
Betty gives detectives receipts from the car repair shop, as well as contact information
for friends who can verify her alibi.
When we investigated that, it turned out she had a really good alibi
and was not anywhere near the crime scene during that time.
Detectives use one more piece of evidence
to eliminate Betty as a suspect, a tape recording
provided by Andrew Madden.
Now, I believe it was upon the advice of law enforcement
that they were to record these phone calls,
which they had.
It was a law enforcement.
They had a sample of the voice of the person
who was making these phone calls.
Troy Police Department turned over some of the calls.
There was an analysis done between Betty's voice
and the calls, and it became pretty clear that that wasn't her.
As investigators strike Betty from the suspect list,
a lead comes in from one of Andrew Madden's neighbors.
Apparently, he is an avid scanner listener,
monitors police traffic, and he hears,
because it's broadcast after the murder,
that law enforcement is looking for a white Chevy Luminor.
He says, look, the Chevy Luminor that you're looking for
happens to be the type of vehicle driven by Karen Klauer's
who's the caretaker of Mr. Madden.
It's a law enforcement.
Once they had this information,
they need to know what's going on with Karen Klauer's.
Once they had this information, they need to know what's going on with Karen Klauars.
Born in 1957 in Louisiana, Missouri, Karen Dowell had a troubled youth, leading to a teenage pregnancy. What I heard was she got married because she was pregnant,
but then gave the baby up for adoption.
The marriage didn't last, and Karen moved on with her life.
By 1980, when another relationship failed to pan out,
Karen found herself a single mother of two.
They got a divorce at some point.
single mother of two. They got a divorce at some point.
While Karen had been unlucky in love,
that all changed when she met her next husband, John Klauerz.
She was extremely happy with their relationship, their marriage.
Karen thought she was like secure, financially home,
that type of stuff.
I don't think she was worried about finances or anything.
She worked on and off as a waitress,
and then she did the home health care stuff.
In early 2002, 45-year-old Karen Klauer started working
for Andrew and Ruth Ann Madden.
Then, in May of that year, after 17 years of marriage,
her husband John suddenly passed away.
To my knowledge, it was natural causes.
John provided for them all,
so that was a huge loss right there.
Now, three months after the death of her husband,
investigators wonder if Karen Klauer's
is connected to another tragic event,
the murder of Ruth Ann Madden.
Highway Patrol ends up going out,
go to her house, and taking the two witnesses
who viewed the Lomona to see if they could
identify the vehicle.
We're like, here's this vehicle.
We're here.
Does that look like the vehicle that you saw
fleeing the crime scene? And they were 100% sure that, like, yeah, that's the vehicle. We're like, here's this vehicle. We're here. Does that look like the vehicle that you saw fleeing the crime
scene?
And they were 100% sure that, like, yeah, that's the vehicle.
Investigators request a search warrant for Karen's house
and car.
But they will have to wait until morning
to conduct a legal search.
Detective Plum and I set up surveillance
on Karen's house and vehicle the entire night.
While we were waiting the neighbor of Karen's clowers
comes out to us and tells us that she's
aware of the white Chevy Lumina being
wanted in relationship to this homicide.
And then alerts us that Andy frequents Karen's house daily.
She had noted that Andy Madden did come and visit Karen
at her home and thought that it was suspicious
that he was parking his truck in her garage
and then taking his wheelchair to come around
to the front door to go in and visit.
We asked, what time was the vehicle there yesterday?
And she clearly noted that it had left about two
and did not return until around 7 p.m.
Investigators note that this time frame
fits the time of Ruth Ann's murder,
which was around 4 p.m.
The Chevy Luminum was driven by Karen Klawers
and it left at a certain time,
and then it returns at a certain time,
and it builds that window for her
to participate in the crime.
After speaking to Karen's neighbor,
detectives call Andrew Madden into the station
for an interview that night.
It was asked, hey, do you think Karen may have possibly
had something to do with this?
And he quickly jumped on a no-no way.
She's not involved.
When we got in the interview,
and we told him about that,
Karen owned a white Chevy Lumina.
He started coming up with a timeline.
She couldn't have done this,
because she was with me
to such and such time,
to such and such time.
His response is in the defense of Karen,
we're much more genuine and much more stern
and very, very direct,
similar to what you would do
defending a family member or a loved one.
So we knew something wasn't right there.
It wasn't, you don't defend a professional relationship
the way that he was defending Karen.
We asked him when he last spoke with his wife,
and he quickly said 338 PM, which the detectives actually
noted that and go, well, how do you know specifically
338? And he had mentioned he had looked at the time on his cell phone?
It seemed like he had manipulated his story
and whatever evidence he had to cover for caring powers.
Coming up, investigators put their prime suspect under pressure.
We parked right by where the crime scene was at.
We just wanted to see what way this would make her go emotionally.
There's things that your body reacts to that's almost better than a confession.
She's singing like a canary, but it's not about her.
On the morning of August 10, 2002, less than 24 hours since Ruth Ann Madden was found shot to death in a parking lot near her house, law enforcement executes a search warrant at
the home of Karen Klauer's.
We kind of got her out of the way of the investigators
and off into a bedroom and began to speak with her.
At that point, she acted as if she had no idea whatsoever
that she had died.
They said, you know, have you spoken to Andy?
And she's like, oh, yeah, he did mention that Ruth Ann
had been murdered.
No one forgets that you've been told someone has died.
No one forgets that.
That's when Karen makes a startling confession.
She'd never made any bones about the fact
that she wasn't loved with Andy
and that they were having an affair.
It wasn't like that was a big secret.
They were alone all day long.
And I guess Karen, like the way Andy was treating her,
I know she set her sights on Andy Madden.
While detectives continue the interview with Karen,
law enforcement search her house and car
and discover potentially incriminating evidence.
In the vehicle of note, they found packages and discover potentially incriminating evidence.
In the vehicle of note, they found packages of Derell cigarettes, and again, Derell cigarette butts were found on the commuter lot.
We suggested that she go back with us to the Sheriff's Department
for a more private interview uninterrupted and she agreed.
uninterrupted and she agreed.
On the way, investigators decide to take a strategic detour.
Marshall and I came to the agreement like let's take her back to the crime scene and let's see what happens. We fell out her out of the car and parked right by where the crime scene was at.
We just wanted to see what way this would make her go emotionally.
As we're walking up towards where the actual crime took place,
she just leans over and vomits all over the place.
The human body is amazing.
There's things that you just, when you're put under stress,
there's things that your body reacts to that's
almost better than a confession.
Marshall, I, we've got her calmed down,
put her back in the car and continued on
to the Sheriff's Department.
And remember her saying like,
hey, I'm right, I'm gonna tell you everything.
At the Lincoln County Sheriff's Office,
Karen Klauer's starts talking.
She's singing like a canary, but it's not about her.
You remember having a conversation with anyone,
concerned with a room fan?
John Lewis from Roseanne.
Who is John Lewis to you?
My son-in-law.
What did you talk about?
I was telling him that I was in love with Amy, babe.
I wish there was someone that I had in all the time.
But Amy and Ruth and Gervore were like separated.
Amy said he could think a way to get her out of the picture.
Karen tells investigators that on August 9, John Lewis showed up unexpectedly.
He picked my car at Amy's house.
Andy Madden's house?
Yes.
Said that they needed to use my car.
But what time was that?
Between two and three with a job.
What the house?
How long has it been gone? over in hell or more and what
did he say to you when you got on the clock and
take care of his son we keep on that shit.
But thank you for it later on.
So we're initially thinking like okay our guy is John Lewis.
Detectives respond immediately to John's home.
What was no worthy is how angry John Lewis became once the finger had been pointed at him.
He's like, heck no, that is not how this happened.
Investigators bring John to the station for a formal interview.
Since family running, it follows in the middle out there,
picked a tunnel, basically what she said.
She wanted the thing there.
How much money?
The $5,000 I just took to the point and paid some of my bills off.
So you let her leave the outfit, you're in it, and then face me.
According to John, he had no intentions of hurting
or doing anything to Ruth Ann.
He was just figuring it out.
If you're going to give me $5,000,
I'm just going to go out and spend it
and not really worry about it.
Because what are you going to do?
Go tell somebody that you gave me $5,000
to murder someone?
I was supposed to be in your home
and he was on a meeting break in the house.
His house and the old image are in there.
She was like, she just lost five days and we want to get them.
So she kept coming over and wanted them, wanted them, wanted them.
I kept telling her, no, no, no, I said when she got me with the no thousand.
She said, yeah, I'm telling you.
That's how we met up after your coup.
John says Karen's plan was to call Ruth Ann Madden,
claim she was stranded in the commuter lot,
and ask for help.
I understand that John drove a truck,
Karen drove the car out to the commuter parking lot,
popped the hood, John walked across,
and met Karen behind the truck.
There was an old family firearm from her ex-husband.
Karen had John show her exactly how to use this pistol
with her revolver.
He clocks the hammer back, which makes it extremely easy
to pull the trigger, doesn't require any real power
to have to pull the trigger.
It will go off really quickly.
Sets it down in the trunk of the vehicle at that time.
He chickens out, decides, I don't want any part of this.
He told her, you know, I'm not going to do it.
I can't do it. I'm not. And Karen's like her, you know, I'm not gonna do it. I can't do it.
I'm not.
And Karen's like, wait a minute, you're gonna do it.
Well, he didn't do it.
He gave the gun to Karen.
When he saw Ruth Ann pull onto the lot,
he ducked down between two parked cars.
It's panic time.
I'm sure I couldn't imagine how that felt
back there behind that open trunk lid.
And then what happened to her?
I know she's still in the realm of front lashes doing something.
She's got the guy I can't.
The man shows up.
She gets out of her car and she proceeds to walk for his parents.
So the time I was rolling, the man said, yeah, it was a tough,
but we're done.
I'm shocked.
It's a shocking story, but John isn't done talking.
He said, Andy was in on it and agreed to make the phone call to lure her in there.
Hey, they are broke down on this commuter lot. Can you come by? See if you can help them.
I don't believe at all that Ruth Ann knew that Karen and Andy were developing a romantic relationship.
And unfortunately, it was too late when she probably figured that out. I don't believe at all that Ruthan knew that Karen and Andy were developing a romantic relationship.
And unfortunately, it was too late
when she probably figured that out.
We have to wonder whether or not
when he called to tell Ruthan to drive out to Karen's vehicle
if he knew or should have known
that he was sending her to her death.
Certainly, he recognized that whatever he was calling
to send her into was not going to turn out well.
Coming up, investigators unravel the details
of a twisted conspiracy.
She was instructed to cover the mouthpiece up
and talk in a deep and threatening voice.
And the truth behind the tragedy of Ruth Ann Madden's murder
becomes even more horrific.
She wasn't going to let anything stop her.
Only one day after the murder of Ruth Ann Madden,
investigators have made their first arrest
in the case.
John Lewis, the son-in-law of Karen Klauerz.
They've gotten statements from John Lewis, and he gets charged with murder first, which
is the highest possible charge you can possibly give for a homicide.
Now, investigators have their sights set on John's co-conspirators, starting with Ruth Ann's own husband, Andrew Madden.
We interviewed Andy, and at that point, it was clear that Andy was involved, and he was
brought down, and I really think Andy is the one that kind of laid out the whole thing.
I called Bruce Hing and I felt her and I had sent Karen to get me a p-sang on,
but her car had broke down and she was parked in that car off. Sometimes after that caring thought, and told me that they had prepared it. So I
helped me. I was stupid. But I could have done something else. I could have got divorced.
I always thought myself as being a proud of, and to let myself be a little later.
And doing something like this,
I don't know what to run.
But I did love my life.
In another kind of way, I love hearing.
He talked about initially just how quickly he fell in love
with Karen and Karen fell in love with him.
And it was a type of situation you describe.
It was like, well, this is meant to be.
This was what you were meant to do.
He was willing to go have his wife come to that community
parking lot knowing that Karen was going to kill her.
And that's the sad truth.
Why didn't you stop it?
I don't know.
truth. Why didn't you stop it? I don't know. With statements in hand from her lover Andrew Madden and her son-in-law John Lewis, investigators
confront Karen Klauer's.
Karen eventually confesses to shooting Ruth Ann, although in her story she says that the
gun accidentally went off that she never
really meant to kill her.
One piece of evidence seems to contradict her story.
How do we account for the hair and Ruth Ann's hand?
I believe that Ruth Ann and Karen met.
Karen pulled the gun and Ruth Ann probably startled, was like, you know, hey, what's going on
and struggled a little bit with her,
and then the gun went off.
The only people that know exactly what happened
in that respect is John and Karen.
Authorities charge both 45-year-old Karen Klauer's
and 52-year-old Andrew Madden with first-degree murder.
He called me, and he just basically said
that I'm going to hear some things about him.
And he's embarrassing, and he's sorry for everything
that I'm about to hear.
Myself and those of us who spent a lot of time with Andrew
were in total disbelief and shock.
Next, law enforcement issues a search warrant
of John Lewis's home, where they run into an unlikely ally,
Karen's daughter.
We provided her a copy of the search warrant, which
had the affidavit for probable cause.
She is reading the probable cause
and notes that Karen said her husband's the one
that did this.
And at that point, she blurt out he had nothing to do with this
and then went on to explain her involvement.
Karen's daughter tells investigators
that she was the one who made the harassing phone calls
to Ruth Ann Madden.
But she claims she didn't know who she was calling
at the time.
She admits that her mother Karen directed her
to make these harassing phone calls
from various payphones, and she was instructed
to cover the mouthpiece up and talk
in a deep and threatening voice.
Karen Klaus was careful to not allow her daughter
to see what number she was dialing,
but gave her specific instructions
as to what to say, how to say it.
When she asked her mom, look, what is this all about?
Her mother says it was an argument that happened at a bar
after work and offers this weak explanation
for these threatening phone calls.
In November 2003, Andy Madden pleads guilty
to second degree murder.
I think the worst part about it was that her own husband
of all those years made the phone call
to lure her into her own death.
What he did made no sense is he a cold-blooded, heartless killer? No. So I just
think that he had a lapse of good sound judgment and clarity. It shocks the conscience that the people can be
that brutal to each other.
John Lewis also agrees to plead guilty to a charge
of conspiracy to commit murder.
I think from what we put together,
he was probably supposed to be the trigger man, so to speak,
and changed his mind.
On December 2nd, 2003, the case against Karen Klauer's
begins in a Lincoln County court realm.
Karen says he kept chickening out
and I just had to do it myself.
She had it set in her mind that she was gonna do it
and it was gonna happen no matter what.
All that she cared about, regardless of the ramifications,
regardless of the aftermath, all she cared about
was her one singular goal, which was to be with Andy.
Two days into her murder trial, Karen Klauers has a change of heart
and pleads guilty to class
a felony murder in the second degree.
I think the writing might have been on the wall.
She realized that there was nothing that she was going to be able to do to get out of being
found guilty.
The murder of Ruth Ann Madden still lingers in the hearts of everyone connected to the case.
It's been almost 20 years since this happened, and I assure you there are still ripple effects
that are causing problems in the lives of the people that are left behind.
Karen destroyed so many families and so many lives that I can't even count.
My kids are the most important thing to me in my life,
and Karen has hurt their life
and is still hurting their life today.
The stigma of like, hey, my grandmother or my mom
murdered this lady, she masterminded this client.
That follows you around.
Just because somebody is related or knows somebody that is convicted of a murder, that doesn't
make them a murderer.
If she would have come up to us and approached us for murder, it would have been straight
to the police department.
The irony of Ruth Ann dying at the hands of someone that she was trying to help all the
way up until her death, it's kind of heartbreaking and heart-wrenching.
John Lewis was sentenced to 15 years for his role in the crime.
Andrew Madden is currently serving a 30-year prison sentence in the Missouri Department
of Corrections.
Karen Klauers was sentenced to life in prison. In 2011, she died in prison at the age of 54.
Karen's daughter was never charged in connection to the crime.