Snapped: Women Who Murder - Melissa Napier
Episode Date: August 22, 2021When a determined son urges police to investigate the disappearance of his father, he meets a storm of family tragedy and betrayal.Season 23, Episode 6Originally aired: February 21, 2018Watch... full episodes of Snapped for FREE on the Oxygen app: https://oxygentv.app.link/WsLCJWqmIebSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm Lindsay Graham, the host of Wonder East Podcast American Scandal.
Our newest series looks at the story of OxyContin,
a popular painkiller that helps spur an epidemic of addiction and drug abuse,
in which prompted a broad campaign to hold the pharmaceutical industry accountable.
Listen to American Scandal on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
She was living the picture perfect life,
with the picture perfect family in a gorgeous mountain paradise.
They found some properties up in Virginia,
and it was just beautiful.
They were living a dream life in the country.
Their deep devotion to each other took the burden off their age difference.
It kind of worked together, like him acting younger than his age.
She acted older in some ways.
He was definitely in love with her.
But when this loving older man suddenly disappears,
investigators discover this May December romance was riddled with secrets.
There was no money in the bank.
Everything was dry.
There's allegations of mental illness and also
extramarital affairs.
She thought that he was losing his mind.
She starts crying, acting just hysterical.
They were clearly very damaged people.
He was a very short timber, something was wrong. I can't think of a worse way to die. April 11, 2012.
It's a crystal clear night in the quiet mountain town of Gate City, Virginia.
But the tranquility is soon pierced by the sound of screeching tires.
Billy Jack Napier and his wife, Crystal, are racing to his father's isolated farmhouse,
just off Highway 634.
Me and Dad kept in contact, not ever not, and maybe not every week, but if we went by without
one of his colony totes, something was strange, and I didn't hear from him for weeks,
there's a little bit of worry starting to develop.
And then they get a call from my aunt Red,
and she said, I'm worried about your dad.
I dropped the phone, me and my wife got my truck,
and we're doing 90 miles an hour all the way there.
We've already got about this bad feeling
by the time we reach the house.
It's dark by the time we get there.
There's no live zone.
We tried to open the door of the house.
It was a lot.
Everywhere we'd ever lived,
had it always left me a key.
I knew where the extra key to the house was.
The first thing I'd done was looked for I knew where the extra key to the house was.
The first thing I'd done was looked for them.
There was no key to the house.
I knew something was up.
Dad would not have took them keyed away.
The keys aren't all that are missing.
So our Melissa and Savannah Napier,
Bill's wife and daughter.
All the vehicles are gone.
So there's another red flag.
Just something's not right.
Billy Jack and Crystal walk the perimeter of the house,
looking for an open window.
That's when they make a disturbing discovery.
My husband, he haulers for me.
He's like, hey, come here.
What is this?
And there was a big hole right there next to the cruise.
There was a fresh dirt, probably eight feet long,
probably four feet wide.
The holes look like they're about the size of a grave,
and to see something like that is really worrisome.
I tell Billy I'm like something's wrong.
That's when I was just panicked, sitting in a started shaking.
I was really worried.
Born and raised in Harlan County, Kentucky,
Bill Napier was a mountain man through and through.
That was an outdoorsman, and just he loved nature.
He was very knowledgeable about anything you go walk in the woods.
He knew what all the trees were, the plants you could eat for a stomachache.
Bill was the father figure to us last kids that was at home, which were five of us. And he helped feed us.
He helped raise us.
He helped me to do everything.
He was so busy working to help mom feed us
that he worked most of the time for people in corn fields,
whatever they had to do.
You went to work in a coal mine, really.
You're young, like at 12.
You quit school, like in Fiskare, just to help take care of the family like farming.
When Bill turned 18, he jumped at the chance to join the Air Force.
It was in there three years.
When he came out, he bought a home in North Carolina, Lincoln to North Carolina.
And it was a real nice home.
And he got a job.
They had a furniture factory over there.
It had a molded plastic factory over there
made furniture and stuff.
Although Bill was able to find steady work
and by himself a house, he unfortunately
didn't fare as well in the romance department.
By the mid-90s, he was a single dad
with a failed marriage behind him,
but he never gave up hope of finding true love.
However, not even Bill imagined he'd find it
in the want-ad section of the local paper.
There was an ad in the newspaper,
someone was selling a car engine,
Bill responded to that ad,
and that's how he met Melissa.
It wasn't the most likely match,
but there was an obvious connection.
Like Bill, Melissa Bailey grew up hand-to-mouth in the foothills of Appalachia.
Melissa had had a very difficult life herself.
She had been put up for adoption when she was about five years old.
Melissa bounced around from foster family to foster family until she was 12.
Then she was adopted by a family in North Carolina.
Melissa got married very young.
We're talking right out of high school.
It was kind of an out-of-the-frying pan
into the fire type of situation,
and the relationship didn't last.
I understood that there were some serious issues,
probably substance abuse,
and other types of abuse in that situation as well.
Meesee, from what I'd heard from her stories
and from what he would say, that she had told him
that she had come from a broken home and been abused
and was not treated well by her previous husband.
Because Bill was so charming and the chemistry between them
was so strong, the two had no problem looking past their age difference,
which spanned more than three decades.
He looked 15, 20 years younger than his actual age.
People hardly ever believed his actual age.
Kind of worked together, like him acting younger than his age.
She acted older in some ways.
like him acting younger than his age, she acted older in some ways.
Although they'd both come from hard-scrabble upbringing,
74-year-old Bill Napier and his 40-year-old wife, Melissa,
managed to carve out a fairy tale life for themselves
in the mountains of southern Virginia.
In a matter of a month or two, I think she'd moved in with us.
It was hard.
She was the same age as my oldest sister, so I viewed her as sister, not as somebody my
dad was dating.
In 1995, Bill and Melissa officially tied the knot, and by 1998, they welcomed the birth
of their first child,
a daughter named Savannah.
He was ecstatic.
I mean, Savannah was his life.
He worshiped Savannah.
That was his last kid he would tell me in his baby.
It seemed like Bill and Melissa couldn't be happier or more in love.
With Bill's older children now out on their own, he and Melissa focused completely on young Savannah.
They hoped to provide more for her
than the two of them had growing up.
So when it came time for her to start school,
Bill and Melissa moved to a small town near the state line.
They moved to Lansing, North Carolina.
However, soon after the move, Savannah started having problems at school.
They had some trouble with my half-sister, getting bullied in school.
It was that big age difference between her parents.
That's what the kids would pick on her for.
They would either call Bill her grandfather or her great-granddad and even ask if he was
her real father.
It was very upsetting for Savannah and Bill and Melissa felt the principal wasn't doing
enough to put a stop to it.
The bullying got so bad that the Napier family moved to a small town an hour outside of
Charlotte.
They bought a really not house in Lincoln to North Carolina.
But for two country mice like Bill and Melissa, the move to the Burbs proved to be a difficult transition.
The link is literally like a development
and you had a house 20 feet away.
I don't think he was happy there.
The head was not a city guy.
He liked the mountains.
Didn't like a lot of neighbors.
In 2011, Bill and Melissa made a bold move
and purchased a cozy farmhouse in the foothills
of southern Virginia.
It's very rural farms, farming area.
The neighbors live about 100 yards off the road.
It had a barn, so it must have little sister-in-lawed horses.
And dad, he loved the hills and the mountains.
The farmhouse was definitely what you call a fixer upper.
So to start, they moved into a trailer on the property
while Bill was renovating the main house.
The house needed a lot of work.
He just had this talent for going in and making
a place so beautiful.
We've strung barbed wire for a fence,
landscaping, planting gardens.
Melissa was homeschooling Savannah
and also trying to find a caretaking job in the area.
And at the time, Bill was in his 70s, but he really had the energy of someone 20 years younger.
After a blissful year in a new home, it's hard to imagine Billy Jack arriving at this once
peaceful location to discover such a frightening scene. The house was completely abandoned,
and there were holes that dug around the property.
Billy Jack and his wife were really worried
that something was wrong.
We knew we needed to get to the police station.
Billy and Crystal rushed to the police station
and explained what they've discovered.
Based on what they were telling us,
what Billy Jack was telling us,
it was obvious from the start that something was wrong.
The mystery takes a sudden turn at the Virginia State Police
station.
The Napier family was meeting with police
and then all of a sudden a call comes in to one of the family
members.
Coming up, this phone call adds an even more peculiar twist to the case.
She said there'd been a car wreck and Michigan.
I was like, is everything OK?
And she's like, no, it's not.
And leads detectives to a gruesome discovery.
We found a deceased body.
There was so much decay that we were unsure whether it
were a homicide.
They also couldn't immediately tell who their victim was. The Malesa Nebier and her husband Bill have been living an ideal, peaceful life in the hills of southern
Virginia.
They had it great.
They loved the quiet, rural way of life, and for them,
it really didn't get better than this.
On April 12, 2012, state troopers received word from Bill's son,
Billy Jack, that something is a miss at the Napier Residence.
No one had seen or heard from Bill Napier.
His wife and teenage daughter also appeared to be missing,
and there was what appeared to be freshly dug graves
on the land around their farmhouse.
While Billy Jack and his wife Crystal
are meeting with police at the station,
a call comes in that adds an even more bizarre twist
to the case.
The call coming into Crystal's phone
is from none other than Bill's wife, Melissa Napier.
Missy was just whaling. She was doing this, um,
I don't know how to describe like this moaning
in the background.
The troopers asked Crystal to put the call and speakerphone
so they could hear everything she had to say.
And the story she unraveled was just completely bizarre.
She said there'd been a car wreck in Michigan, and my dad was dead.
She was saying that he had wrecked, he was racing some guy, and it was in his car, and on a bridge in Michigan,
that had had exploded, and that they could not identify the body
and they needed dental records.
Melissa also told him that Savannah isn't with her,
that she is with friends in North Carolina.
At that point, the call abruptly cuts out.
Calls like this can be confusing.
Is there any truth to what Melissa is saying?
Really, at this juncture, the only thing police can do
is collect statements from Billy Jack and Crystal
and then search the Napier's property.
While waiting for a judge to sign off
on a search warrant for the Napier residents,
the investigator continues questioning Billy Jack and Crystal
in hopes that the couple can shed light
on the strange sequence of events.
According to Billy Jack, it started a few weeks back when he realized he hadn't spoken with his father in quite some time.
March 2012, I had wanted to see him, I think, the 18th.
I just remember driving up there. It was on the weekend, but, and then I didn't hear from him.
He originally just tried to call his dad.
He talked to his dad two or three times a week.
He tried calling the house a few times,
but Melissa kept telling him his father was either out or busy.
He and Crystal decided to drive up from North Carolina
to see what was really going on in person.
Billy Jack says as they pulled onto the property
on April 4th, Melissa met them in the driveway.
She comes out, meets me outside the truck,
and I was like, is everything okay?
And she's like, no, it's not. No.
So she just grabs her head and starts rocking back and forth
and starts screaming that he's left her
and he's been cheating out.
I remember Missy crying acting just hysterical. She said that he had been having an affair.
She said that he had told her he was gonna leave and go marry her, that he was gonna sell the
form over there and he'd go on his way and he'd take Savannah.
Melissa said that Bill stormed off in a rage and that he hadn't been home since.
She said that he had gotten his car, he had a 87 trans am.
He really locked.
He was his toy, so...and that he needed to get away for three days and he was going to
Jin Singhun in Kentucky, which I believed, because that's something that would have done.
According to Billy Jack, at that point,
a tearful Melissa told him that Bill never returned home.
Melissa believed he'd moved in with his mistress.
She sounded very just upset, like she was crying,
and she said that she didn't know what she was gonna do.
According to Melissa, there were more reasons
to worry about Bill.
She thought that my Uncle Bill was
in her words losing his mind,
that he didn't know things,
and he was forgetting a lot.
She would tell me that she thinks he's got dementia,
that he was losing his memory.
She was taking him to the doctor,
and that he, the doctor, gave him medication,
and that she would give it to him
without his concern if necessary.
She was saying like how he was losing his memory,
and how she felt like he would get violent.
Billy Jack tells the detective that Melissa's description of Bill didn't really make sense to him.
We'd go work together.
He would tell me things that happened 50 years ago, things that happened the two weeks before we'd come up.
So I didn't see none of that in here.
But according to Billy, Melissa seemed genuinely upset
and appeared to be telling the truth.
Wainted up, leaving, still didn't feel real sure
what was going on.
And that Billy claims is the last time he saw Melissa.
Based on what they told me, the suspicious things
that his stepmother had told him that happened to his father,
a Billy Ray Napier, I felt that the search warrant
would be pruned in this case.
Thankfully, just moments after concluding their interview
with Crystal and Billy Jack, investigators are notified
their search warrant has been approved.
They begin a formal search of the property
with Billy Jack and Crystal accompanying them.
We're able to go to the property.
They wouldn't let us go up to the house
so we parked mantra at the bottom of the property.
As we walked into the kitchen, there
was gasoline and hay bales sitting in the kitchen.
That was the first door that we came into.
Even on a farm, these aren't the type of things
you see lying around in the kitchen.
It really looked like someone was trying to start a fire.
There was a tarp in the living room.
There was a hatchet.
But it's in the bedroom at the back of the house
that police make their most shocking discovery.
We found a deceased body. the bedroom at the back of the house, but police made their most shocking discovery.
We found a deceased body.
There was so much decay that we were unsure whether it
were a homicide, whether it was a suicide or death
of natural causes.
They also couldn't immediately tell who their victim was
because of the level of decomposition.
It was a terrible gruesome scene.
From that point, I called for our crime scene investigators
who works out of our office.
And they come down and conducted the crime scene investigation.
In order to determine the identity of their victim
and cause of death, police released the body
to the county medical examiner.
So an autopsy can confirm the identity of a victim and cause of death, police release the body to the county medical examiner.
So an autopsy can confirm the identity of a victim
and the cause of death, but it's a process
that could take some time.
As the coroner's team carts off the remains,
the CSI team combs the house for evidence.
Their job is to examine everything
and determine what materials were involved in this crime.
and determine what materials were involved in this crime.
There were tarps, hatchets, and things of that nature,
which could be used to cut up the body. In my 10 years experience as a news reporter,
there are so many possibilities in this situation.
An intruder could have entered the home,
killed all three family members,
and then planned to torch the entire house,
but abandoned those plants.
At this point, you can't rule out that the holes
around the house could contain another body,
or maybe multiple bodies.
There's even the possibility that the victim
is an unidentified third party,
and that the napiers are responsible for that death
and are now on the run.
With so many possibilities to explore, investigators reach out to the medical examiner's office,
hoping to narrow the focus of their investigation.
The autopsy results provide the first real break in the case.
They work the remains of Billy Ray Napier.
Dental records are a match for Bill Napier, as is the clothing that the deceased was wearing.
Not only has the medical examiner identified the body
as that of Bill Napier,
he's also determined the cause of his death.
They did a post-mortem and discovered he'd died by it,
bullet to the brain,
and I believe it was a 22.
We knew that he had been shot,
but what we didn't have is who shot him.
And so we needed answers. bullet to the brain. I believe it was a 22. We knew that he had been shot, but what we didn't have is who shot him.
And so we needed answers.
MUSIC
Coming up, if Bill was shot to death in his own home,
why would Melissa say he died in a car crash?
Did she have something to do with Bill's death?
Or could she and Savannah be in danger themselves?
Every indicator, there's something more to this case.
I have to get into this case more.
Something's going on.
It comes down to one simple thing.
Police need to find Melissa and Savannah.
As investigators take a closer look at Bill and Melissa's marriage,
dark secrets begin to unfold.
She started being gone a lot, and then money problems started happening.
There was some concern on his part, like what was going on.
Hey, listener. It is Jason Bateman. We've been fortunate to attract so many a list guests
to our Smart List podcast, but we've never put together a lineup quite like this. I'm
talking about Will Ferrell, Conan O'Brien, Kevin Hart, Mark Cuban, Jimmy Kimmel, Matt
Damon, and more available four weeks early and ad free on Wondery Plus. If you've seen
our docu series, Smart List on the road, you know we had an incredible time on our tour
where we recorded 10 amazing interviews, Sean.
This is Sean Heiss.
Not only are these some of the best episodes
that we've ever recorded,
but the atmosphere with the live crowd
is unlike anything we've released before.
It was incredible to engage with an audience
of thousands of our biggest fans
as we traveled all over the country
from Brooklyn to Los Angeles.
You can listen to these episodes four weeks early
and add free with 1-3-plus, find 1-3-plus
in the Wendry app or on Apple Podcasts.
And this is Will Arnett, I'm telling you,
you really should listen.
Do it, do it, do it. The idyllic existence of Bill and Melissa Napier
has been wiped out by a gruesome murder mystery.
Bill's dead body has been found inside the family's farmhouse,
while Melissa and Savannah are still unaccounted for.
When the police are killed,
the police are killed.
The police are killed. The police are still unaccounted for.
When the police entered the home, the master bedroom
was where Billy Ray, Nate Beard's body was laying.
And they did a post mortem and discovered he died by a bullet to the brain.
After receiving word of the coroner's findings, investigators must now deliver Billy Jack,
the heartbreaking news.
The detective said we found him body,
and it wasn't a burglar. It was my dad.
Plenty of shurtin' and blue jeans and that's what my dad wore
around the house, you know.
Billy Jack called me when he went, and blue jeans and that's when my dad wore around the house, you know.
Billy Jack called me when he went over there, you know, with the police. And he said that, uh,
me was dead.
My mom didn't want to accept that or believe it,
but I just felt like he's dead because the
uncle bill that I know wouldn't have been disappeared like that and not have
contact with anybody. He wouldn't have taken off and not told his son, his daughter,
my mother. You know the reason I hold doors open for people and say please and thank you
was because of my dad.
He had his problems.
Everybody's got their own issues,
but I really respected the man.
So that's what he was to me.
He was my hero.
Just a really loving father.
He had a big heart for the ones he loved,
fiercely protective.
It was devastating.
I saw him bring my husband's heart.
-♪ -♪
-♪ -♪
So now, state police have gone from having three missing persons
to two missing persons and a homicide,
which really ups the stakes of the investigation significantly.
With what looks like a trio of freshly dug graves which really ups the stakes of the investigation significantly.
With what looks like a trio of freshly dug graves behind the Napier residence, everyone fears the worst.
We did see the holes that were dug in the yard
that Billy Jack Napier said that he saw when he went to the house.
There is the possibility that other bodies could have been buried on the property.
As investigators remove the dirt and rubble
from what they fear might be makeshift graves,
they are relieved to confirm there are no additional bodies found.
The holes were all empty, there was nothing in them.
The fact that there were no other bodies in those holes
coupled with the phone call that Melissa made the day before
could be a hopeful sign that Melissa and Savannah
are still alive.
But at this point, the bigger question might be, are they
in danger?
Are they being held captive by whoever killed Bill?
That evening, investigators ask Crystal to call Melissa.
Crystal is the one Melissa called with the bizarre claim
that Bill died in a car crash in Michigan.
So police thought that if Crystal called her back,
Melissa might answer.
She did answer the phone.
We had it on speaker phone.
And when we called Melissa,
she continued to say that Billy Ray Napier
had died in the car crash in Michigan.
We knew that that was not true.
Crystal Napier told Melissa that the police were at the house
and they found a dead body in the residence.
Immediately, Melissa hung up the phone.
Investigators immediately asked Crystal to call Melissa back.
But this time, there's no answer.
And the same thing happens when police tries Savannah's phone, too.
Melissa wouldn't answer any of the phone calls.
Savannah wouldn't answer any texts.
There is still a chance that Melissa and possibly Savannah
are being held against their will
and their captor has cut off all contact with police
now that they know how Bill died.
But who would want to basically murder Bill
and kidnap these two women?
Perhaps the answer lies in Bill's alleged affair.
Allegedly, the affair had been going on for quite some time.
So possibly the mistress had a husband or ex-boyfriend
who found out about the affair and was wanting to seek revenge.
According to Billy Jack, the rumors of his dad's infidelity
are just that, rumors.
In fact, in the weeks before his death,
Bill told friends that he believed Melissa was the one having an affair.
The last six months, as I traveled up there,
there was a lot of times heard when my little sister was gone.
She was gone a lot, and I just thought that was strange.
One time dad kind of joked, he was like,
you know, she's probably all seeing her boyfriend.
I know Billy, one time walked in the house
when he got there to visit his dad,
and she was in the bathroom fixing her hair and getting all fixed up
and that she was leaving, you know, for the weekend.
I didn't notice that she was going more frequently when I would go visit.
I wasn't going to do it in a best of case.
You know, I figured if he thought something that he wanted to tell me,
that he would let me know.
and he wanted to tell me that he would let me know.
Billy Jack also tells investigators that the biggest problem in Bill and Melissa's marriage
wasn't infidelity. It was money.
Money problems started happening.
That was a very private. He didn't want me to worry,
so I didn't know details, details, but I did see there was some concern on his part, like what was going on.
They owned the home in North Carolina and when they moved to Virginia,
he decided to rent that home out and then the rent off of that home would pay for the house
that they're in in Virginia. An agent there working for the Napiers
would look over the property and collect the rent
from the renters there.
They then would send that rent to Melissa,
and then Melissa was supposed to send that money
to BB and T to pay for the mortgage.
The field had pretty much let her type control
of the fine ate system.
According to Bill's family, Melissa wasn't using the cash
from the rental in North Carolina
to pay for the mortgage on the Virginia farmhouse.
She'd spent all the money that he was getting for,
at least on the house in Lincoln, to North Carolina.
He thought that Melissa Napier was making
the payments on that residence, as she should.
However, that was not the case.
She was taking the money and forging checks to make it look like that she was paying for
that.
He should have had both properties paid for by this time and instead he was getting
more closed on it.
As investigators are listening to Billy Jag, they become increasingly suspicious
that Melissa had a hand in Bill's death
and may be responsible for her daughter's disappearance, too.
The evidence that we gathered,
the person that was in control was Melissa.
She had control of the monetary bonds
and what they did, she was in control was Melissa. She had control of the monetary bonds and what they did.
She was kind of in charge.
There's been allegations of dementia,
infidelity, financial issues, all sorts of things.
Then the question was, where's Melissa and Savannah?
What did they know about Bill's death?
That afternoon, investigators issue a Bolo
for Melissa Napier and her daughter, Savannah.
But before the polo goes into full effect, the case takes another turn.
Later that evening, we get a call from an attorney out of King's Port Tennessee that says that
he has been into contact with Melissa and she wants to come talk to police.
Coming up, Melissa turns herself in and includes a jaw-dropping statement which turns the entire investigation upside down.
She starts talking about him being abusive and how
Savannah has been abused for years. MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC
MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC During the body of Bill Napier in the bedroom of his Virginia farmhouse, state police now believe that his wife Melissa, and perhaps daughter Savannah, played a role in his gruesome
murder.
Investigators put out a be on the lookout or bolo, and just a few hours later, we received
word that Melissa was in Tennessee and ready to talk to police.
Melissa did ultimately turn herself in as my understanding.
She presented herself at the office, being King's port Tennessee,
and she turned herself in from there.
When we confronted Melissa Napier regarding the stories
or the lies that she told in relation to Billy Ray
dying in a car crash in Michigan,
that's when she immediately said that it was self defense.
She said that he was abusive towards her.
He had hit her in the past.
She starts talking about him being abusive,
and how Savannah has been abused for years.
According to Melissa, the abuse her husband inflicted on their daughter, Savannah,
wasn't just physical.
It was sexual as well.
She did make an allegation that she had seen Billy Ray grab
Savannah inappropriately.
Savannah was not entirely comfortable being left home
alone with her father.
She would call her mother and beg her to come home
and things like that.
Never overtly saying what was going on,
but telling her I need you home now.
that never overtly saying what was going on, but telling her I need you home now.
Melissa claims that on March 20, 2012,
she confronted her husband about his alleged sexual abuse
of Savannah, and their argument quickly escalated.
She said there was shouting, there was hitting,
and then things took a more serious turn.
She told us he had picked up a 45 caliber weapon.
She said there was another gun in the room,
so she picked up that gun and shoots it.
She said she did it for Savannah.
She was worried that she was going to be hurt
that she suffered from sexual abuse.
Melissa claims that after shooting Bill,
she took 14-year-old Savannah to stay with family friends
in North Carolina, then returned to the farm
to dispose of the body.
She had rented a backhoe and tried to dig like holes in the yard.
I guess she was going to try to bury him in it or something.
Only sub talked about visiting him,
sitting there with him over his dead body.
She wouldn't say about it,
but she would say I would talk to Billy
and tell him about the yard, the house,
and just everyday things.
It was so morbid.
It's unimaginable.
Without concrete evidence to support Melissa's claims of abuse,
police have no choice but to arrest her.
We charged her with murder at that point,
because number one, we know that she shot him.
Number two is she gave a bunch of different statements.
There were a bunch of different lies on how he died.
With Melissa in custody, investigators
are desperate to speak with the one person who can help
sort fact from fiction.
Bill and Melissa's daughter, Savannah.
Savannah Napier was the only other person
that lived in their residence besides Billy Ray Napier and Melissa Napier was the only other person that lived in that residence besides the right
Napier and Melissa Napier.
So she would know what went on that day, what went on in that house.
Melissa stated that Savannah was staying with friends in North Carolina and when police
did reach out to those individuals, Savannah was located.
The investigator Jason Jenkins and another female investigator came to bring me to Virginia and it was about an eight-hour trip, so they were very nice to me.
Once at the station, Savannah claims she endured years of abuse at the hands of her father. My dad was very mentally and emotionally and physically abusive.
So that put a strain on our household.
He was driving me.
And he would strike her as well.
Other people that we talked to, he was a very short temper and an angry man.
According to Savannah, her father wasn't the only one in the house who abused her.
Mom really didn't abuse me that bad as much as dad would have, but she was very rough
in some cases.
I've been hit a couple of times in the face.
She would kind of snap on me if she felt
that I was doing stuff wrong.
As for her mother's claim that her father sexually abused her,
Savannah tells police that's an outright lie.
Savannah denied that her father ever sexually assaulted her.
So what was the real reason Melissa shot her husband?
Well, according to Savannah, she said the night her father died
was the night that he found out Melissa wasn't making their mortgage payments.
I feel like dad had started to find out that there was, obviously, there was money.
That was going to be seen. There was issues with bills.
That day, B&B and T calls, informs Mr. Napier that there were
four clothes on his house.
Mom was scared about that being upset.
A woman that were arguing.
And my mom started crying, and it was really bad.
He wanted to know where that $900 a month was going.
There was no money in the bank.
Everything was dry.
Savannah said that her dad stormed out of the house
to go work on his car.
That's what he did to go cool off after a fight.
That was upset, and my mom started crying.
She said, I can't do this anymore.
And then she just told me it's me, you're him.
According to Savannah, an hour later,
her father came back in the house to get ready for bed.
That's when her mother asked for an unusual favor.
My mom had told me that she needed me to go
and learn how I can to distract him.
Savannah goes up and hugs her dad.
Savannah is facing towards the door as she's hugging her dad
and Billy Ray's back is to the door.
So he couldn't see what was going on,
but Savannah had a perfect viewpoint of what was going on.
Melissa enters the room, has a weapon, a rifle,
it's a 22 rifle in her hand.
She did make a statement there in her interview
that she put her head on her dad's shoulder.
She said, Daddy, I love you.
I love you.
And hugged him a little tighter.
And didn't let him turn around.
Normally, in any fight, I try to call my dad down.
I'm always the one that goes in there and talks to him
and calls him down to keep anything bad from happening.
But I had no idea what was gonna happen.
And then next thing I know the gun went off
and he was gone.
Mom had left me in the room.
Dad had fallen between the, in front of the bed
and the door and I was stuck there
and I liked that when she was gone.
And there was nobody there and I was just screaming.
She said that her father, just before Melissa,
hold the trigger, turned around to see what she was doing behind him.
And I think to myself, if you're a father and you realize your last moments
in life is your wife shooting you, that's just a gruesome and a terrible way to end your life.
After Savannah Statement, I went and interviewed Melissa.
She was at the regional jail.
I told Melissa what Savannah said.
And Melissa acknowledged that was true.
Savannah has implicated that she was complicit
in her father's death.
Now prosecutors must decide if she should be charged with murder.
After careful thought and this is probably one of the toughest decisions I've made,
we charged her and we ended up charging her as an adult.
Coming up, as prosecutors begin preparing for trial,
Melissa makes a desperate attempt to plead her case
and plead for her daughter's freedom.
I want your honor to understand what life was built with wine.
Melissa indicated early on that her concern was Savannah,
that she didn't want Savannah's life to be destroyed by this. [♪ Music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, Melissa Napier appeared to be living the dream life.
A wonderful daughter, a loving husband,
and a dream house in the mountains of rural Virginia.
Now, Melissa stands accused of Bill's murder,
alongside her daughter, Savannah.
When Melissa learns that her daughter has been charged,
she offers to sign away her own life
if prosecutors will be lenient on Savannah.
Well, listen, indicated early on that her concern was Savannah.
That she didn't want Savannah's life to be destroyed by this.
They agreed that Melissa would plead straight up
and she'd take whatever the judge gave her
and in exchange they would give this plea agreement to Savannah.
We had someone that we believed was a victim
and someone that we believed I was
comfortable for a heinous crime.
Prosecutors might be convinced Savannah's involvement in the crime doesn't
merit a harsher punishment but the rest of the victim's family isn't so sure.
Me as he really manipulated her but at the same, I feel that she knew, brought from wrong. She knew her dad loved her.
And she, in my opinion, she helped murder her.
On August 6, 2014, Melissa Napier
goes before a Scott County judge and pleads guilty
to the charge of first degree murder.
First off, they have a story I am for to happen.
I want you and Bill's family to know that by what happened, I did love Bill.
Though she admits guilt, Melissa explains that she only murdered her husband
because she was afraid for her safety and that of her daughter.
I have pled guilty and I am taking responsibility for Bill's death.
But I want your honor to understand what life with Bill is like.
I can't explain my actions except I had to protect her and I cannot bear to part with him.
Despite Melissa's emotional plea, the judge sentences her to 45 years in prison.
There's not an opportunity for her to be paroled out.
So in all actuality, she'll probably
spend the rest of her life in prison.
I can't think of a worse way to be killed than to have
my child hold me in place while my wife shot me in the back of the head.
As for Savannah, her mother's plea agreement,
she's treated as a juvenile by the courts,
and receives a far lighter sentence than Melissa's life in prison.
She was sentenced to the maximum penalty for a juvenile
when she was in detention till her 18th birthday.
She's now on intensive supervised probation.
I'd have 10 years suspended on a definite supervised probation and basically until I pay off all my funds and
then I could be
possibly released from probation.
There's always a different way out of a situation.
It never had to be like that.
I try to remember to give part of him and yes I was very close to my dad.
I remember the the mountain man part of him. How he how he loved to be.
Melissa Napier is scheduled for release in 2021. She will be 79 years old.
Abuse is never okay.
If you or someone you love is in an abusive relationship,
there is help available.
Call the Domestika Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE.
For more information on snapped, go to oxygen.com.