Snapped: Women Who Murder - Kathleen Dorsett
Episode Date: January 31, 2021The case of a missing man uncovers a family willing to go to any lengths to get what they want.Season 15, Episode 10Originally aired: August 2, 2015See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/pri...vacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Kathleen Dorset and her parents were about as respectable as a middle class family could get.
Kathleen was an elementary school teacher.
Kathleen's mother had been a member of the Board of Education.
Town Dorset was the guy who would want to be your neighbor next door.
And the family was especially close to.
They had this interesting bond.
They did lots of things together.
But then a sudden disappearance.
This is not like them.
And a mysterious fire would lead to a gruesome discovery.
There was a body in the trunk.
And leave the authorities wondering,
just how far would one family go to protect their own?
She and her father had hatched this idea.
The hairs on the back of my neck just went up.
That was the furthest thing that I would ever expect.
Long Branch, New Jersey, August 18, 2010.
It was a little before dawn in this fading beach town
and ourself of Newark.
Long Branch's blue collar middle class workers
with their modest homes, nice homes, but not affluent.
Although that Wednesday morning, at around 415,
a local resident dialed 911 and reported something burning
for blocks off the beach.
It may be a car.
Moments later, another nearby resident also called in the fire,
confirming that it was a car.
Is anybody in the car?
No, I don't think so.
You don't think it's going to look something.
Police and firefighters were on the scene within minutes. The initial incident was a fully involved car fire.
And when the firefighters extinguished the flames that gutted the car,
what they found was startling.
There was a body in the trunk of the car.
It was a very badly burned.
So badly burned, in fact, that any further identification
would require either dental records
or DNA analysis.
We weren't sure if it was a male, female or who it was.
A mystery victim, a burned out car, and a lonely beach road.
Considering this was New Jersey, the cops at the scene couldn't help but wonder were
they dealing with a mob hit?
They'd look like the fireman lit on top of the body. couldn't help but wonder were they dealing with a mob hit?
They'd look like the fireman lit on top of the body.
But who was the mysterious victim?
Whose identity the killer had taken such pains to conceal?
And why had they done?
As it turned out, the answers would involve
a crime family of sorts.
But the kid who unraveling the mystery
wasn't Amatia Kingpin.
It was a 36-year-old elementary school teacher named Kathleen Dorsett.
Born in 1974, Kathleen had a comfortable childhood growing up in ocean township New Jersey.
It's in a pretty suburban area. Ocean Township is really a kind of a nice place to live.
It's close to the shore.
Kathleen's father, Thomas Storset, was a modestly successful local business man.
Townter Set started a refrigeration business in the mid-80s.
It was involved in community affairs, involved with church.
Everybody's best friend.
The guy you would want to be your neighbor next door.
The model for the American middle class, man.
And if anything, Kathleen's mother Leslie
was even more of a role model than her father.
Kathleen's mother had been a member
of the Board of Education.
She also had been a teacher.
Leslie also took a very active role
in raising Kathleen and her brother.
Leslie was very involved in her kids' lives
and the same thing with Thomas.
They was close in it family, her brother, and her parents.
Kathleen did eventually move out on her own,
but she didn't go far.
After college, she followed her mother's career path
and took a job with the Ocean Township School System.
Kathleen was an elementary school teacher.
And by her early 30s, she had settled into a middle-class life
that appeared to be as successful as her parents.
But there was still something missing.
She wanted to be married.
She looked forward to being married and having a family.
It was just that she hadn't found what she felt was the right person.
That is, until she met Stephen Moore.
Six years older than Kathleen, Stephen wasn't a new Jersey native.
Stephen's family lived in California.
And growing up just south of LA and Huntington Beach,
Stephen had a typical Southern California childhood.
He liked to ride bike, skateboard, listen to music.
But his real passion was in line skating.
He did competitive skating and he won bronze medal in the national championships.
Although when he wasn't competing, the skater took a very laid-back approach to life.
Steven was pretty easygoing.
He never had a set job. He always found work, he did construction.
He worked at a sound studio. He did what it really could to make money.
Stephen took an equally laid back approach to relationships too.
We teased him a lot about, you know, hey, when you can get married and, hey, you know,
when you're going to find somebody. But his friends' good natured teasing stopped once he met Kathleen.
When he met Kathleen, he called me up and I was very happy for him. He finally met somebody.
In fact, the 39-year-old hadn't just met someone.
He was engaged.
I was very, very happy that while he's going to get married.
Kathleen and Stephen married in 2007, and naturally,
they settled close to her mom and dad.
When she and Stephen married, they moved into a house across the street from her parents.
Her parents, they owned that house.
Not only did that mean a great deal on the rent,
it was also quite convenient for Kathleen, who remained as close to her parents as ever.
Kathleen was always around her family. Her family was always there.
She was always at their house.
And they did lots of things together.
Even if there were times when Steven
wished for a little more privacy.
They would just stop by.
They would just come in unannounced
and would walk in the house.
And that felt really odd to him.
He felt really uncomfortable with them just coming over
unannounced.
Still, despite Stephen's occasional annoyance
with his in-laws, the marriage of peer-to-be, a success.
They're very happy, very touchy-feely, kissing.
They're in love.
And it was great to see.
And in the spring of 2008,
Steven suddenly had reason to appreciate
having Kathleen's parents so close.
She was pregnant.
For Kathleen, it was the fulfillment of all her dreams.
She wanted to have a baby.
And Steven couldn't have been happier.
It seems so excited that he was going to have a baby
and get that all going in his life.
But then, once their little girl was born in December of 2008,
things changed.
About a month or two, three months into it,
we talk on the phone, and he's kind of would say that,
you know, things were just a little different.
For one thing, the baby had produced a profound shift in Kathleen's relationship with Stephen.
She didn't want anything really to do with them.
They intimacy, the hanging out, the stuff I saw, them kissing and holding the hands and all that.
That was all gone.
At first, his friend's advised Stephen to be patient.
I thought, okay, your new mom, done.
But by the fall of 2009, almost a year after the birth of their baby girl,
Stephen decided he'd been patient enough.
He could not live in this environment anymore.
That October, he moved out of the home he'd shared with Kathleen
and in with his mother who
lived nearby.
He was saying they were having problems and that they were probably going to get a divorce
and I go, well, you know, if you're not happy, you're not happy.
Why be married if you're not happy anymore?
Their two-year marriage was over, but Stephen did want to be a part of his daughter's life.
Stephen wanted to be a father and he didn't want to be just
a two-day, a weekend dad.
You know, he wanted to be a part of his child's life.
And it appeared that everyone was amenable to that.
In fact, the terms of the divorce
were extremely generous to Stephen.
The impetus behind the divorce settlement
appeared to be Kathleen's parents' retirement plan.
They were building a house in Florida.
They wanted Kathleen and the baby to come with them.
And since Stephen wanted to remain a part of his daughter's life,
Kathleen's parents had promised to help him move to Florida too.
The dorsets agreed to pay him for his room and board for a period of time until he got
himself on the ground and got settled.
As long as he kept the civil and kept the peace as much as he could on his side, that he
still be able to see his child.
Stephen agreed to the terms.
The divorce was finalized in June, and Kathleen's parents put their house up for sale,
while the contractors put the finishing touches
on their new home in Florida.
In September, they were supposed to move there.
But their plans would be delayed,
because on August 16th,
shortly after he kissed his little girl goodbye,
and placed her in Kathleen's arms,
Stephen Moore would vanish.
Coming up, a co-worker reports Stephen missing.
The last outgoing call that he had made was the Kathleen Dorset.
And the investigators discover the shocking secret behind his divorce.
He wasn't allowed to hold his daughter for the first six months. When 42-year-old Stephen Moore was late for work at the Honda dealership in Eaton Town, New
Jersey on the morning of August 16, 2010, it didn't take long for his co-workers to notice
He always showed up early. It was a very good employee
In fact one of Stephen's co-workers became concerned enough to check up on him
So he looked up Stephen's emergency contact in the company files a number that hadn't been updated since his divorce from Kathleen Dorse set two months earlier
Kathleen told him that the last time she had seen Stephen
was approximately 7.38 a.m. when he was dropping off their daughter.
Which meant he should have been at work by then.
So after waiting a little while longer,
with still no sign of Stephen,
his co-workers decided to call the police.
They were the ones who reported him missing.
Stephen, more reliable guy that always shows up to work
every day.
This is not like them.
There's something wrong.
It was a fairly routine report,
but the missing person's investigators
did follow up with a phone call to Kathleen.
Kathleen confirmed the fact that he had dropped off
their child.
Kathleen explained that he had left four work right after had dropped off their child. Kathleen explained that he had left four work
right after the dropping off their child.
The investigators also did a quick search
of Stevens' financial and phone records,
not that they revealed much.
The last outgoing call that he had made was at 6.54 am.
That morning, August 16th, two
a cell phone number that came back to Kathleen Dorsett.
But did that simply confirm what Kathleen told the investigators
that Steven had dropped off their daughter before he disappeared?
Or did the timing suggest that she had something to do with his disappearance?
Hoping for a little insight, the investigators contacted several of Stephen's family and friends,
asking for details about the couple's recent divorce, and what they heard was disturbing.
According to Stephen's friends and family, the marriage had started out fine.
He was very happy that he had met somebody. And that was it.
You know, he found somebody to love of his life.
But once the baby was born, it had become clear
that the little girl was the love of Kathleen's life,
not Stephen.
She was just more focused on the baby, and that was it.
That much was normal for a new mother,
but Stephen's friends and family claim
that Kathleen had taken it to the extreme.
She didn't trust him by himself with the babe.
You know, she just, she took control of the whole thing.
Literally.
He wasn't allowed to hold his daughter after her birth
for the first six months.
And according to his friends, the couple's marriage fell apart because Stephen refused to
be shut out of his daughter's life.
Stephen decided that if he was going to have a relationship with his daughter, he was going
to have to leave Kathleen.
Although when he filed for divorce, Stephen's friends said the initial result was a bitter
struggle for custody.
She wanted that baby to herself.
However, the courts had temporarily
awarded Stephen partial custody
and visitation rights pending final resolution of the divorce.
Stephen was not willing to give up the visitation
or the custody of his daughter.
Faced with the court's decision,
Kathleen had little choice but to allow Stephen
to spend time with his daughter.
But according to friends, that didn't mean she was willing to relinquish control.
She was always making phone calls to him when he had custody of her.
What are you doing? What are you feeding her?
Wanted that control and would never leave him alone about that.
It would write out a list of you have to do X, Y, and Z
and at different times.
But then, in the spring of 2010,
friends said that Kathleen's attitude
had appeared to soften.
In fact, planning to move to Florida with her parents,
they'd made Stephen a generous offer,
so that he could remain close to his daughter.
Part of the agreement was that the doorsets would help him
find a place to live and would help him financially
for six months.
Friends told the investigators that they
had warned Stephen not to agree.
My fear of them going down there would be that they
wouldn't live up to their promises.
But while Stephen's friends worried that Kathleen and her parents might back out on their promises,
they never considered the other possibility that he might not live to collect on them.
It was early on the morning of August 18, less than 48 hours after Stephen disappeared,
when the Long Branch, New Jersey police
received a 911 call about a car on fire.
Is anybody in the car, can you tell?
No, I don't think so.
But when firefighters extinguish the flames,
Human remains were located in the trunk of a vehicle.
But while the body was too badly burned
to allow easy identification, the car wasn't.
The front of the vehicle, as far as fire damage, was pretty much untouched, so that the front
license plate was visible.
And when the police ran the plates?
The hit returned on it, indicating that that vehicle was involved in a missing person
investigation.
Specifically, the car was registered to Stephen Moore's mother.
He was reported to be operating that vehicle at the time that he went missing.
The investigators immediately contacted Kathleen.
We notified her that we found her ex-mother-on-law's car and that there was remains of a body
in the back bed.
And how did Kathleen take the news?
It didn't seem to phase her.
Kathleen's nonchalant response immediately made the investigators suspicious.
A rational person who would probably be suffering two and two together, this is going to be my ex husband and the trunk.
But there was no reaction to that.
Does he answer our questions pretty
matter, faculty?
And she more or less repeated what she'd already
told the missing person's investigators
that she'd last seen Stephen when he dropped off their daughter
two days earlier.
She pretty much said that it was the normal drop off.
She wasn't the only one who said so either.
While the investigators were questioning Kathleen,
her father walked over from his house across the street
and told the investigators that he'd witness the drop off, too.
He told us that he was in the kitchen of his residence
and he observed Stephen Moore operating
his mother, Evelyn Moore's vehicle.
Where Stephen went and how his mother's car
had ended up on fire in Long Branch,
neither Kathleen nor her father could say.
But Kathleen did have one helpful piece of information
for the investigators.
I did ask her about dental records,
knowing that we needed to identify the human remains
and she identified Stephen's dentist.
The investigators obtained Stephen's records
from his dentist, and the next day, August 19,
the medical examiner's office confirmed
what they had already suspected.
The body in the back of the car that was burned
was the remains of Stephen's work.
The other thing the autopsy revealed
wasn't entirely a surprise either.
There was trauma to his head and there was some damage to his throat arrow.
He was killed previous to the fire.
And the investigators figured they had a pretty good idea just who had
bludgeoned and strangled Stephen before setting his body on fire.
On Friday, August 20th, when the investigators spoke to Kathleen at her parents' ocean township
home and told her that it was definitely Stephen's charred corpse that had been pulled from
his mother's car four days earlier.
The news didn't seem to phase her.
It was like I just had placed a launch order.
Even if you have a relationship and that marriage goes south and you guys end up in the
force, you'd still think you had some sort of care concern for that other person and you'd
have some reaction emotionally.
And she didn't.
However, Kathleen was just as willing to cooperate as ever.
When the investigators asked permission to search the house and property, she and Stephen
rented from her parents.
She not only agreed, she accompanied them across the street and played the perfect hostess.
She offered us a drink, she offered us food, said that we could use a restroom, she was
accommodating.
Meanwhile in the backyard, the investigators noticed something that aroused their curiosity. A freshly mulched flowerbed near Kathleen's driveway.
Typically, if you were going to mulch, you would remove the weeds.
But this flowerbed area just had the mulch thrown on top and you can see weeds just popped
out here and there.
That caused some great concern for the detectives because they thought that maybe there was
something there. And when one of the investigators slipped on gloves and began rooting
around under the mulch his hands came out red. There was enough blood in there
to lead blood on the glove. And the investigators were pretty sure it was
Stevens especially after they tested the area with lumenol and cadaver dogs.
Once the cadaver dog came on scene, there was a positive indication for human blood.
Once the cadaver dog confirmed that it was human blood in the flower bed,
the investigators brought Kathleen in for a formal interview.
We do attempt to speak to her in regard to the scene that we find,
but she was not willing to.
This is when she begins to not cooperate with us. She decides that she's now going to have an attorney
present. The investigators stop the interview and let Kathleen go home, but she would still need
that attorney. Because on Monday afternoon, August 23rd, the detectives returned to Kathleen's house with an arrest warrant.
When we went to arrest her, both Thomas Dorset and Leslie Dorset were at the residence
along with Kathleen's child.
Once again, Kathleen had little reaction to the news.
But as the investigators placed his daughter in handcuffs, Thomas Dorset did do something.
He removed his wallet from the rear of his pants pocket,
and he handed him over to his wife.
From a police standpoint, people do that when they're about
to be placed on arrest.
Thomas' reaction puzzled the investigators.
We were not there for Thomas Dorset.
We were only there for Kathleen.
But even as they placed Kathleen in the back of the patrol car,
the investigators couldn't help but wonder,
why would Kathleen's father expect to be arrested?
Coming up, the investigators find stunning evidence
against Kathleen's father.
This surveillance video depicts Thomas Dorset driving
Evelin Moore's car. But will they be able to make an arrest?
He was unconscious with a white hose coming out of his mouth.
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Plus in the Wundry app or on Apple Podcasts. On Monday, August 23, 2010, it had been five days since Kathleen Dorset's ex-husband,
Stephen Moore, had been found dead in the back of a burned out car
in Long Branch, New Jersey.
The last time he was seen was by Kathleen Dorset.
And the authorities were convinced
that Kathleen really was the last person who'd seen Stephen
alive.
They had just arrested her for his murder.
Stephen was battling child custody issues with Kathleen.
The custody fight wasn't the only reason Kathleen was under arrest, either.
A search of Kathleen's backyard had revealed a possible crime scene.
Human blood was located in this mulch area towards the back of the house.
And when the investigators questioned Kathleen's next-door neighbor, they uncovered further evidence suggesting Steven had been killed
in Kathleen's backyard.
According to the neighbor, she'd just gotten up on Monday morning, August 16,
when she was startled by a strange noise from next door.
She described as an animal-like screaming.
The neighbor told the investigators that she'd run to the window
to see what was wrong and called Kathleen,
who was standing in the driveway.
She asked her if she was OK.
And Kathleen's response.
Kathleen door set screams at her telling
a shuttered window in a mind-of-the-rown business.
What was going on in Kathleen's backyard?
Between the screaming and the blood in the flower bed,
the investigators figured they had a pretty good idea.
And the neighbor's story put Kathleen
at the scene of the crime, too.
But had she been alone?
Earlier, when they slipped the handcuffs on his daughter,
the authorities couldn't help but notice
that her father, Thomas Dorse,
had a curious reaction to Kathleen's arrest.
Thomas begins to empty out his pockets
as well as his phone, and is handing them to his wife Leslie.
Assuming that he was going to be arrested next.
At the time, the investigators didn't have
probable cause to arrest Thomas Dorsett,
but they did start looking more closely
at the 64-year-old refrigeration technician
as a possible suspect.
To see what his movements were and who he was communicating
with and things of that nature.
Naturally, considering the fact that his daughter had just been arrested, one of the first
people Thomas Dorset contacted was an attorney.
Tom called me late that evening, told me that Kathleen had been arrested, so I made arrangements
to meet with him the following morning at my office day at a clock to discuss Kathleen's
situation.
And when the attorney drove to his office on Tuesday morning,
it appeared that Kathleen's father was already waiting for him.
I could see a truck parked in my lot. I figured that was his.
In fact, it looked as if Kathleen's father had been waiting a while.
He's appeared to be sleeping because his head was leaning, his body's leaning against the window. Only when he got closer, the attorney realized that Kathleen's father
wasn't exactly asleep. Thomas Dressett had attempted to commit suicide. He was unconscious
with a white tube coming out of his mouth. The other end of the hose was attached to a canister
of refrigerant gas.
He was trying to commit suicide to the use of like a, like a free-on inhaling.
I started knocking out the window, tried to awaken him. He was unresponsive.
And when that failed, the attorney dialed 911.
A marked police unit from Neptune Township arrived, and he broke the window.
They called the EMT Houston. They took him away. He was in very serious condition.
In fact, Kathleen's father was still unconscious
when he arrived at the emergency room.
And at that point, it was uncertain
whether or not he was going to survive.
But why would he try and commit suicide?
For the investigators, it was all too clear.
My assumption of it was all too clear.
My assumption of it was that he was trying to take the blame of the death of Stephen Moore
and exonerate the rest of his family.
However, did that mean he was actually involved, or was he merely trying to sacrifice himself
for his daughter's safe?
The answer would hinge on a phone call, the investigators received later that same day.
The caller owned a popular seafood restaurant
in Long Branch, not far from where Steven's body
had been found.
He is also friends with Thomas Thorset.
The restaurant owner told the investigators
he had become concerned after seeing news
reports about Kathleen's arrest.
The local news media, radio, print media had released information about Kathleen's arrest
the night before.
However, the restaurant owner wasn't just concerned because Thomas Dorset was a friend.
He told the investigators that he had been prompted to contact them because Kathleen's
father had called him a few days earlier, with an odd request concerning the security cameras
outside his restaurant.
He and Thomas had a conversation about Thomas buying some of his video surveillance equipment
to get rid of it or destroy it to replace it
with new equipment.
Specifically, according to the restaurant owner, Kathleen's dad wanted to get his hands
on the camera that covered the dumpster behind the restaurant.
Why would he do this?
Unless there was something on there that he didn't want authorities to say.
According to the restaurant owner,
Thomas Dorsett had admitted as much, although he claimed it had to do with his
business servicing refrigeration systems.
He said he was illegally dumping something, and he didn't want to get caught.
Or had he really been dumping evidence connected to Steven's murder?
Either way, the investigators would get a chance to find out, because the restaurant owner
told them he'd turned down Thomas' strange request.
He was able to provide us with the actual video surveillance.
And when the investigators reviewed the surveillance footage, they could hardly believe their
luck, because the tape from August 16th showed that just a few hours after Stephen Moore
had been reported missing.
Kathleen's father had driven up to the dumpster
behind his friend's restaurant,
and guess whose car he was driving.
The surveillance video depicts
Thomas R.C. driving Evo Morse car,
which was a car that Stephen Moore was obsession
of that day to drop his daughter off.
And he wasn't alone, either.
Directly behind him, following him is Kathleen Dorset.
Maybe not even a minute, and then they leave.
I know whether they thought it was too busy over there or whatever the reason it was.
That wasn't the end of the video, though, because less than an hour later,
Thomas Dorset was back this time in his work van.
He's throwing stuff into the dumpster.
And contrary to what he had told his friend the restaurant owner,
there was nothing specifically illegal about them.
He's taking items out of that van
that appear to be clean up supplies.
So there's rubber-made containers, there's garbage cans,
a rope, looks like a four by four.
There's a bottle of bleach.
Stuff that certainly could have been used
cleaning up this scene.
Along with the fact that he'd been captured on tape
driving Steven's car, the same car his badly burned body
had been found in two days later.
It was more than enough to convince the authorities that Kathleen's father was an accomplice in the murder.
Obviously this information really helped us and now Thomas is going to get arrested as well.
In fact, they arrested Thomas' door set at the afternoon of his suicide attempt.
Not long after the doctors determined that his life
was no longer in danger.
For your resident wife, it was an hospital.
Coming up, the investigators uncover another murder plot.
Kathleen Dorse at one of this murder for hire carried out.
And once again, it turns out to be a family affair.
I was shocked. That was the furthest thing
that I would ever expect from her. by December of 2010. Kathleen Dorsett sat in the Monmouth County, New Jersey jail held on $1.5 million bail.
The 36-year-old was charged with murdering her ex-husband Steven Moore over custody of
the couple's two-year-old daughter.
She wanted Steven out of her life and he wasn't going.
He wasn't going to leave because he loved his daughter
desperately.
Stephen apparently wasn't the only father who
would do anything for his daughter though.
Kathleen's father, 64-year-old Thomas Dorset,
was also in jail, charged with Stephen's murder.
When Stephen and Kathleen started having their problems,
Tom's parental instinct was to protect his daughter.
The news that Kathleen, an elementary school teacher,
and her father, a respected heating and air contractor,
had allegedly conspired to kill someone, stunned ocean township,
the quiet middle class community that the door sets
called home.
People have had divorce cases and custody issues
and grandparents have had issues over that.
But to actually have it go that far of a step to murder,
I think most people were shocked about that.
But that December, just days before Christmas,
the citizens of Ocean Township were in for another surprise.
On December 20th, the Monmouth County Prosecutor's Office received a phone call from an investigator
in neighboring Ocean County. That law enforcement officer had received a phone call from an
inmate at the Monmouth County Correctional Institute. The inmate claimed that she knew Kathleen too.
They had become friends in the jail.
And according to the inmate, she and Kathleen had become so close that her new friend had
more or less confessed that she and her father had killed Stephen.
Kathleen talked about the things that they did wrong, that they should have cleaned up
the driveway a little bit better.
However, the inmates said that Kathleen's alleged confession
wasn't what prompted her to contact the authorities.
Instead, she claimed that it was because her new friend
had approached her a few days earlier.
Live it that the courts had just awarded Stephen's mother
temporary custody of their daughter.
When Stephen was killed and was removed by the door said family, his family stepped up.
And if what the inmate told the authorities was true, Kathleen was determined to keep
that from happening.
Kathleen was soliciting to get someone to kill Stephen Moore's mother.
Because she had custody of Stephen and Kathleen's baby.
But were the inmates incredible accusations
too good to be true?
She was, as it turns out, it's kind of a professional
snitch.
However, since Kathleen was in jail,
the investigators were able to at least check on some of her
fellow inmates' claims.
The investigative team were able to recover telephone conversations between Kathleen
Dorset and her mother.
Also, we were able to recover letters that were to be mailed out of the correctional
institute and addressed to Leslie Dorset. And the contents of those letters and phone calls were explosive.
This one letter in particular talked about the specifics
as to how Kathleen Dorset wanted this murder for hire carried out.
Kathleen tells Leslie's Dorset to write down certain information,
one, to make it a natural death,
set the right down certain information, one, to make it a natural death,
two, the right down the address,
where Evelyn Moore was located.
Even Moore alarming, the letters revealed
that Kathleen somehow learned of Evelyn Moore's new address.
The safe house she had secretly relocated to
after taking custody of her granddaughter.
The hairs on the back of my neck just went up.
This was a location that we believed was a safe
and secure location that she could care for
Steven's child and we went into full action
to try to make sure that we could stop this.
Luckily, the letters revealed that there was still a chance.
As best the authorities could tell, Kathleen's mother had yet to find a hitman.
So the investigators decided to provide her with one.
We have an undercover officer act as this quote unquote hitman.
Kathleen's fellow inmate, the one who initially contacted the authorities about the murder
for higher plot, arranged a meeting between Kathleen's mother and the bogus Hitman.
This meeting was at the Seabew Square Mall in Ocean Township and was all at the direction
of Kathleen Dorset.
And on January 10, 2011, Kathleen's mother Leslie did exactly as she had been told.
The undercover officer met with Leslie Dorset
in a food court inside the mall.
At the meeting, she passed along her daughter's detailed
instructions and a down payment.
Leslie Dorset provided the undercover with $1,000.
However, there was one thing that Leslie didn't give the hitman.
Leslie Dorset, we're supposed to give the hitman a photograph.
She forgot it.
So, the investigative team decided to continue surveillance on her
and see what she was going to do.
And while the investigators tailed her,
Kathleen's mother left them mall, drove home briefly
and was on her way back when she was finally pulled over by police.
There was an envelope that was located inside her vehicle
with a picture of Evelyn Moore,
with Evelyn's name written on the back of it.
Leslie Dorset was placed under a rest for attempted murder.
I was shocked because I had obviously dealt with Leslie
now over the past few months, and that was the further
thing that I would ever expect from her.
She was a housewife or mother and Tom's wife of 40-some
art years.
In fact, the Dorset's family attorney was so shocked
by Leslie's arrest that he was
prepared to fight it.
The court conducted a hearing on this anticipation of possible entrapment defense.
And that's when he saw the evidence against both mother and daughter.
They had them run in and they had Leslie pretty much dead the right in that case with
a conviction for attempted murder, almost a certainty.
But Leslie wasn't the one the authorities really wanted.
They were looking for Kathleen and for Tom.
Kathleen Dorset just manipulated this whole thing.
She was the director.
She was the dictator.
And now that Kathleen's mother was in jail, facing a possible 30 years without her role, the
prosecutors approached Kathleen's father, Thomas Dorsett,
and told him they would be willing to agree
to a much lighter sentence if he and Kathleen
would agree to plead guilty to Steven's murder.
They had some leverage now, because they were well aware
that Tom wasn't going to let his wife spend the rest
in her life in jail.
However, Leslie shot at freedom would come at a stiff price.
The prosecutor was very firm on the position
that he didn't want Tom or Kathleen ever to get out of jail.
["The
Prosecutor's
Court of Justice
The Prosecutor's Court of Justice
The Prosecutor's Court of Justice
Coming up, Kathleen's father finally makes a confession.
He hit him across the head when Steve went down.
But will he sacrifice himself to try and save her?
And her father had hatched this idea. on August 8, 2013.
39-year-old Kathleen Dorsett and her parents,
Thomas and Leslie Dorsett,
appeared in the Monmouth County, New Jersey Superior Court.
Kathleen and her 66-year-old father were both charged
with the August 2010 murder of Kathleen's ex-husband,
Stephen Moore.
They had this interesting bond between the two of them that is ultimately the reason why that Kathleen
was able to solicit Thomas to commit this murder.
68-year-old Leslie Dorsett faced attempted murder charges,
stemming from a separate plot to kill Steven's mother.
I was very shocked when I found out that they were involved in this.
They seemed normal just a normal found out that they were involved in this. They seem normal to the normal family.
And they were involved.
All three of the door sets were in court that morning to plead guilty.
Kathleen admitted that she and her father had hatched this idea.
In a tearful statement to the court,
Kathleen admitted that rather than share custody with
Stephen, she decided that he had to die.
Stephen was nothing more than a guy that wanted to be with his daughter.
And for whatever reason, that was grounds for his wife to kill him.
And the family's generous offer to set Stephen up in Florida.
Kathleen said it was all a hoax to put her ex-husband off guard.
The door sets never even made any effort
to find a place for Stephen to live down there.
And then, Kathleen explained
how on the morning of August 16, 2010,
she'd lured Stephen to his death.
Kathleen told him she had some tools there
that she wanted him to get rid of from the basement,
and the only way to get there was to go into the backyard.
Only when Steven came around the corner of the house,
Thomas Dorset was waiting for him,
armed with a heavy object.
He hit him across the head with it, and Steve went down.
And once Steven was down, Thomas strangled his former son-in-law
until he stopped moving.
They put him in the trunk of his mother's car
and Thomas drove off with it.
After her plea, the judge sentenced Kathleen
to a total of 58 years in prison.
She was the one behind all this.
Kathleen's mother Leslie received seven years
for her part in trying to kill Steven's mother.
The state, I think, recognized that Leslie was upon
being, you know, played by her daughter.
Thomas Dorset, meanwhile, was sentenced to 45 years
for killing Stephen after explaining
that he'd only done it or his daughter.
This day he continues to believe that his daughter is the best
daughter that any father could ever have.
Kathleen and Stephen's daughter remains in the custody
of his family.
Kathleen Dorset will be eligible for parole in 2057.
She will be 83 years old.
Thomas Dorset will be eligible for parole in 2040 at the age of 83.
Leslie Dorset was released on parole in 2016 at the age of 71.
She currently lives in Manchester, New Jersey. I love this.
you