Skip to main content

tv   Dateline  MSNBC  January 8, 2023 12:00am-2:00am PST

12:00 am
reality come crashing down, only to be left with one sad unanswerable question. why did isaiah do it? >> i wonder how he could do something like that. and what made him do that. why was he so desperate to hurt someone so kind? and there's no one that can say she wasn't the most giving person, so why wouldn't you just ask? because if you would have just asked her, i'm sure she would have given you the world. >> that's all for this edition of "dateline." i'm natalie morales. thank you for watching. venus was my friend, my coworker. she was family. it just makes you sick thinking about it. it's like, you want to know where she is, butat the same time, you do not want to know.
12:01 am
>> hi, mom. >> this woman had gone out to get the mail and disappeared in her pyjamas >> the case was never closed. >> it was consuming all of us. >> the individual was wearing a baseball cap, hoodie with the hood pulled up and large mirrored sunglasses. >> oh, my gosh, did this really happen? >> i'm like, no, dude, i can't do this. there was a scream. a drop of blood came from her nose. >> it was like a game. he was a part of this game. >> we're done with the games. it needs to stop. it needed to stop. >> michigan snow blankets field and woodland with silent beauty, sometimes encasing ugly
12:02 am
secrets hidden beneath, never meant to be disturbed until finally they're revealed and all is made clear. >> i know a lot of people say, you wanted to find her. yeah, i wanted to find her, but then it was going to become so real to me that-- >> maybe you don't want to find >> yeah, yeah. >> start with the mother of two who vanished as she stepped outside her door to pick up mail. >> she wasn't there, and i was walking back into the house. there was limestone gravel all over the sidewalk. and there were bare spots right down to the dirt in the driveway and it looked like a struggle had taken place. >> an awful confrontation she herself had >> she had a conversation with my dad the day before the night it happened, and she says, i think he's going to come kill me. >> this is the night before? >>
12:03 am
the night before. she just felt it. i don't know if you have an idea somehow of if you know when your time is up. >> she said, dad, when i'm dead and gone, you remember this conversation. the next day she was gone. >> it was a mystery, a disappearance that would take two investigators years to finally unravel. >> i think it becomes kind of personal. it's just how we do business. we don't lee those little pieces unturned. >> a fiendishly complicated crime set in rural western michigan kept the rumor mill churning for eight years. where was she? this victim of a murderous scheme in which an xbox live gamer had investigators seeing double.
12:04 am
it's country out here. cornfields everywhere. two-lane roads and where a cheerful girl named venus was growing up with her family. the youngest child of larry and teresse. venus, a goddess to her mom even before she was born. >> i dreamed about this beautiful little girl with big dark eyes, and when she came out and i looked at her, i said, there's venus. i can't even tell you how much i loved her. i can't even describe the love. >> but was venus a little more trusting than she should have been? it was her naivety that bothered her parents. >> she came home and told us she met this guy that secretly confided in her that he was mafioso. we found out he worked at mcdonalds and was too embarrassed to he will her that, but she believed him. (no edits past here were done) >> reporter: at 24 venus was ready to go out into the world, a soon to be college graduate with a degree in criminal justice. >> she wanted to be an officer of the law and then found out she doesn't like guns so that wouldn't >> reporter: what did work instantly was her attraction to a guy doug stewart. she had a friend from work that knew jamie highway soft spot for guys in uniform. >> we set up the first date. there was three or four of us couples. we went out to a movie. they hit it off well. >> reporter: soon after my name
12:05 am
is, the two had become what did you see in her, doug? >> she was smart, articulate, some would call it love at first four days later we were married. >> reporter: a lot of people would go on a second date before they got married. >> i think we made it to the second date, but that's it. >> reporter: to say her percents were described a bit of an >> she showed up and she was married and we were dumbfounded. >> reporter: all very sudden, but dustin jasper, venus'brother got along with his brother-in-law. they both liked outdoorsy stuff. >> we went hunting together, fibbing together. >> reporter: it was a year after their quicky wedding that doug left the marines to keep his bride >> i was looking at deployments
12:06 am
and she had this fear that i was going -- something was going to happen to me, so she wanted me to get out of the military in 2003. >> reporter: in 2003 they began civilian life together. they moved into this house not far from where they grew up. venus worked at a bank and he at applebees. >> venus hoped and parade for two little girls. i hoped and prays for two babies. we both got her >> reporter: andd venus like being a mom? >> that was her number one priori >> reporter: but stay-at-home mom wasn't for her. so you became mr. >> absolutely. it was the best years of my life. >> reporter: when he kicked back, mom enjoyed his xbox. thanks to the game's live feature he's talk to other first-person shooters far and wide. they became fast he spent so many hours wandering the virtual world, he stopped
12:07 am
looking for work in the real one. the marriage began to crack. arguments led to time-outs, separati separations, and shared custody agreements. >> she was very immature, and venus just -- she wanted to be a mom. >> reporter: then venus had an idea for a fresh start. >> she wanted to move to williamsburg, virginia, miami, florida, or houston, texas. >> reporter: why did she want to go to such far flung places? >> she said there's, there's disney world, houston, sea world and six flags. williamsburg, there's u.s. busch gardens.
12:08 am
>> reporter: all right, mom, on give me a smile. >> reporter: newport news turned out to be the place. >> that was it. it put us smack dab in the middle of everything we >> reporter: she was thinking about the kids. >> she said, is shouldn't we give them excitement and fun every day? >> reporter: and you said? >> i couldn't argue with that. >> wow, this place is gorgeous. there's the car sell. i told you. >> reporter: if the home videos are to be believed the move from michigan was working. >> are you excited? >> the best place on earth.
12:09 am
>> reporter: doug found a job as a truck drive and home was on the ninth floor of this building. >> she wanted to live in a always a dream of hers. >> reporter: things were okay? >> it was the best year of our marriage, the best year of our >> reporter: but doug and venus'problems ran deeper than anything an amusement parring ride would paper over. a year after making the move, venus had had enough and suddenly bolted for her parents place in michigan. doug was left alone in virginia, more than 700 miles away. big surprise to you. >> very big surprise. >> reporter: two months later, a chilly monday morning started like any day at venus'parents'house. her mom went to work, her dad was sleeping and venus and the kids were slowly getting up. at 8:00 venus's father was groggy. he was startled awake. >> i heard the girls being loud out in the front room. i thought, why isn't venus quieting them down? she knows
12:10 am
i'm in here asleep. >> the girls were on the couch, watching tv. i asked them where their mom was. i thought, maybe she's downstairs, putting a load of laundry in. >> reporter: she wasn't in the her cell phone and keys were. >> now i'm scared and -- i went outside. i look for her. she wasn't there. >> reporter: he immediately called >> she's just not there? >> yeah, not here. >> is there a vehicle missing or anything? >> no. >> reporter: venus wearing nothing but her thin pajamas vanished. coming up -- >> left her purse, phone, identification, everything. >> reporter: where had she gone? the search for venus begins. >> i was frantic. just kept calling over and over. >> reporter: signs of a struggle and sign of trouble. >> we might have a crime scene her i think the hair on the back of my neck stood up. >> reporter: when "dateline"
12:11 am
o hide from the world. for years, i thought my t.e.d was beyond help... ...but then i asked my doctor about tepezza. (vo) tepezza is the only medicine that treats t.e.d. at the source not just the symptoms. in a clinical study, more than 8 out of 10 patients taking tepezza had less eye bulging. tepezza is an infusion. patients taking tepezza may have infusion reactions. tell your doctor right away if you experience high blood pressure, fast heartbeat, shortness of breath or muscle pain. before getting tepezza, tell your doctor if you have diabetes, ibd, or are pregnant, or planning to become pregnant. tepezza may raise blood sugar even if you don't have diabetes. and may worsen ibd such as crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis. (bridget) now, i'm ready to be seen again. (vo) visit mytepezza.com to find a t.e.d. eye specialist and to see bridget's before and after photos. why burn a candle when you can switch to air wick essential mist?
12:12 am
it's the modern way to transform fragrance infused with natural essential oils into a mist. air wick essential mist. connect to nature. my husband and i have never been more active. shingles doesn't care. i go to spin classes with my coworkers. good for you, shingles doesn't care. because no matter how healthy you feel, your risk of shingles sharply increases after age 50. but shingrix protects. proven over 90% effective, shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older. shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. an increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can also happen. the most common side effects are pain, redness and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach. shingles doesn't care.
12:13 am
but shingrix protects. ask your doctor or pharmacist about shingrix today. ♪♪ ♪ icy hot pro. ♪ ice works fast... to freeze your pain and your doubt. ♪ heat makes it last. so you'll never sit this one out. icy hot pro with 2 max-strength pain relievers. to you, it may just be an elevator. here goes nothing. but for a young homeowner becoming their parents, it's a learning opportunity. come on in. [ chuckles ] the more, the merrier. paris, huh? bonjour! we got any out-of-towners in the elevator? tom. it is not easy. 10th floor, huh? must be a heck of a view. okay, see how everyone else is facing this way? progressive can't save you from becoming your parents, but we can save you money when you bundle home and auto with us. okay, that was terrible. okay, let's hang back. we're gonna try that again. woman had gone out and
12:14 am
disappeared in her pajamas. >> the disappearance of ve venus stewart was the first big story dani carlson covered for abc's affiliate, wood tv. >> left her purse, phone, identification, left everything. >> reporter: venus'father made the 911 call that morning. >> the vehicle is here, her kids are here, and she is gone. >> okay. have you tried calling her? >> yeah, we can't get medal of >> larry called his wife who was at her restaurant job. her coworkers tried to calm her down. >> they said, she probably just went around the block. i just looked at everybody and said, get a grip. my daughter doesn't do that stuff. i said, i'm out of and i ran out the door. and i was shaking the whole way home. >> reporter: trooper aaron of
12:15 am
michigan state police was on the whenever a young adult goes missing police ask the family to wait 24 to 48 hours for things to shake out, but right away, the officersing issed this might not be someone who had take an a he can of her own volition. >> i didn't know what i had. like, we might have a crime scene here, so that's why we cordened it off and got additional units. >> reporter: venus'dad showed the patch of the gravel driveway that was scuffed up. he pointed out a pink hair tie on the ground and something he hadn't spotted >> tarp. cover, plastic wrapping with the bar code on it. i can't realize what it was. i just told them, that's out of place. he put a rock on it so the wind wouldn't blow it away, and they have people, i guess they're crime scene specialists that gather
12:16 am
>> reporter: crime scene techs were able to lift a finger print off the wrapper. the wrapper was for a tarp sold at walmart. but the officer was most troubled by what he heard from the parents just two weeks prior, venus won custody of her two daughters. >> i think the hair the back of my neck stood up. >> reporter: mike scott, one of michigan's top detectives had been brought up to speed about the marriage on the rocks. >> as he put it, it didn't look good >> there was a history. >> certainly was. >> reporter: you want to talk to the husband. >> first thing we wanted to find him. where was he? >> reporter: you knew he was living in virginia. >> yes, newport news. >> reporter: the day he went missing, she called doug's cell >> i was frantic. kept calling over and over again. >> reporter: finally detective scott reached him that night. what did he say to you?
12:17 am
>> he was in virginia that day. >> he goes, doug your wife's missing. my first reaction is, is my wife pulling something?. by missing is she just missing from the house? is she missing -- what's going on? fill me in? he says i can't do that. where were you today? >> he gave me a couple of locations to support that, one being his lawyer's office. >> he said, can your lawyer verify? [sound of gunfire] i said, no, he wasn't there it was just the two secretaries. >> reporter: it checked out. two women on the lawyer's staff confirmed it. they said they saw him come in that day. >> a bit shocking when they checked it out and he had an alibi >> reporter: the parents with were adamant in their belief doug had come and snatched
12:18 am
venus away. they describe for investigators the flights aplenty their daughter had with her husband, but eyewitnesss were putting him in newport news, virginia, more than 700 miles and there was surveillance video in his apartment building and garage and car do back up his how could doug be in two places at that wasn't possible, was it? coming up, a mysterious man by the lake. you're getting citizen calls, people saying i saw a funny looking guy at the lake. >> yes. >> reporter: had venus gone missing before? >> came home. she wasn't there. kids were there. i didn't know what to do. i've got this. ♪♪ >> reporter: the year before
12:19 am
12:20 am
12:21 am
12:22 am
venus stewart went missing she found religion. her brother dustin was the devout one in the family, and he was thrilled when venus was baptize in the 2009 at the age of 30. in the first days after her disappearance dustin would need his faith to believe she would be found soon and alive. >> i figure it was another desperate attempt of his to try to get her back. since she wasn't having contact with him and he wanted to manipulate her and coax her into coming back to him.
12:23 am
>> so we'll just stay on the fence. >> reporter: but police feared the worst and began looking for a they searched miles of rolling farm country, thick wooded areas throughout western michigan. >> helicopters came out. >> yeah, yeah, a helicopter came >> yeah. dogs. >> dogs. >> reporter: a lot of water around here >> we live around a river, so, you know, it's all around us. >> reporter: immediately after her disappearance, lead detective mike scott zeroed in on the obvious -- the husband. but when fbi agents verified his story he'd been in virginia, scott had to start thinking bigger picture. >> reporter: woman goes out the front door in pajamas and is never seen again. is there somebody crazy on the loose abducting people? >> absolutely. >> and you're getting citizen i saw a guy by the lake. >> he was wet and approached the witnesses for a cigarette.
12:24 am
>> right now with this case, we have so few clues to go on we're not going to discount anything. >> reporter: police dredged the chilly lake after report of the soaking wet man by the water's they worked around the clock but found nothing. >> it was miserable conditions. i didn't hear anybody complain once. >> reporter: doug stewart was not involve in the any of the when detective scott reached him that night april 26th, he was in virginia and remained there. >> reporter: he gave a reporter from wood tv a telephone interview. >> now that the time line is done so far, i'm getting very worried and concerned. >> reporter: despite their ceaseless marital battles doug insisted he still cared for her. >> i don't know what's next. just going to keep watching the news and pray and hope for the best. >> reporter: he was also still bitter about losing his kids in the custody showdown two weeks before, so his take on her disappearance was a unique one. he wasn't upset, he said,
12:25 am
because he believed venus was a runaway mom. >> my theory, my wife pulled another fast one. she ran off. couldn't handle the commitment of the situation she was in with the children by herself. >> reporter: the way doug saw it this was no different than that time two months earlier when venus had suddenly and surprisingly bolt with the kids. >> i came home. venus wasn't there, kids weren't there. the dog wasn't there. i didn't know what to do. >> reporter: doug says he thought venus disappeared that day, too. >> i called her cell phone. she didn't respond or pick up the i got very worried. i called the said, my wife hasn't come home. this isn't like her. >> doug tried to file a missing person's report. >> reporter: but police told doug not to bother. venus had been to the station herself earlier that day to file a
12:26 am
complaint against him. when police refused to look into she decided to take off for michigan with the kids and the dog, effectively end thing >> the police officers informed him that she was not missing that we knew where her whereabouts were, and she was not coming home. >> reporter: now it was early may and her parents and michigan authorities were sure venus was missing this time, in danger or where's. even though doug had an alibi, they went down to talk to him. >> we went down to investigate the disappearance of venus. didn't know what we were going to find. >> shane, a detective with the police, rolled in with his own forensics team. they met up with todd, the detective from newport news. together they all went to doug's apartment. >> we did not disclose we were from michigan. >> michigan police did not want doug to clam up or lawyer up
12:27 am
and they let the local cup do the talking. >> he didn't seem overly concerned about the disappearance. he felt like she had simply run away and that was some sort of stunt she was pulling. >> reporter: he said he didn't jump to any conclusions. >> i hadn't made a decision one way or the other whether she had run away or been abducted. >> reporter: with a search warrant in hand, they listened to doug's story, searched the apartment, and seized his computers. >> she was very cooperative. he told us about all the computers that were in the house. >> reporter: the michigan cops who knew about the bad blood between doug and venus were looking for any trace of her. dead or alive. >> what were you hoping to find there? >> we knew we wanted to search his apartment for her clothes. because that was the last thing that she was cnn, we wanted to find her clothes if possible. >> any signs of venus being around that apartment?
12:28 am
>> no. nothing. >> reporter: but the forensic experts kept looking. they searched doug's truck. the truck was an absolute mess. the debris from a disordered life, but there amidst the french fries and plastic lid, and crumpled up paper. was an unexpected clue, once it was analyzed that investigation would shift into another gear. coming up! >> when he called me, he said are you sitting down? >> a tiny piece of paper is about to provide a very big break. >> they were able to locate a receipt in there for the purchase of a tarp, a shovel, gloves, and a hat. >> where was the receipt from? >> it was from walmart. >> when dateline continues! teline continues wn it support your immune system with a potent blend of nutrients and emerge your best every day with emergen-c chevy silverado factory-lifted trucks.
12:29 am
where will they take you? ♪ ♪ (dog barks) ♪ silverado zr2, trail boss, and custom trail boss. because adventure is everywhere. flu symptoms hit harder than the common cold. so it takes the right tool for the job... to keep it together. now there's new theraflu flu relief with a max strength fever fighting formula. the right tool for long lasting flu symptom relief. hot beats flu. ♪ ...i'm over 45. ♪ the ♪ i realize i'mlong lastno spring chicken. ♪ef. ♪ i know what's right for me. ♪ ♪ i've got a plan to which i'm sticking. ♪ ♪ my doc wrote me the script. ♪ ♪ box came by mail. ♪ ♪ showed up on friday. ♪ ♪ i screened with cologuard and did it my way! ♪ cologuard is a one-of-a kind way
12:30 am
to screen for colon cancer that's effective and non-invasive. it's for people 45 plus at average risk, not high risk. false positive and negative results may occur. ask your provider for cologuard. ♪ (group) i did it my way! ♪ i was injured in a car crash. i had no idea how much my case was worth. i called the barnes firm. >> i'm dara brown, here's when a truck hit my son, i had so many questions about his case. i called the barnes firm. it was the best call i could've made. your case is often worth more than insuran call the barnes firm to find out i could've made.
12:31 am
what your case could be worth. we will help get you the best result possible. ♪ the barnes firm, injury attorneys ♪ call one eight hundred,est resul eight million ♪ what's happening, an nfl player, damar handle, and continues to approve after suffering cardiac arrest in the game on monday. he made his first public
12:32 am
statement since the incident on twitter today. telling his fans and supporters that he was thankful for their prayers, doctors say that he remains in critical condition. and he continues to improve. and nobody won the 940-dollar mega millions champion on friday night. boosting the next one to more than $1 million. friday was the six largest in u.s. history. now back to dateline! now back to dateline >> ten days into the investigation, the search for venus and whoever abducted her was now heating up into states, michigan, and virginia. in michigan, police were trying to develop a few clues that they found outside of her parents house. the fingerprint that they lifted at the scene was still waiting for analysis at the state crime lab. and then the tarp that police believed had been used in the abduction.
12:33 am
detectives were running down it's bar code, looking for where the tarp came from and who bought it. >> it looks like it had been recently purchased from walmart, but we did not know which walmart. >> the wrapping ends up as the murder scene? >> yes. >> i think that's the best place to. the north side. >> venus stayed with her grandparents in michigan while friends and families search for the girl's mother. >> she's out there somewhere. >> they organize the search groups, and even when she wasn't out looking she kept a shovel in her car so she could rush over the help dig anywhere, any time. >> you look for anything that's out of place. if the ground has been dug up a year ago you would be able to tell. >> reporter: more than 700 miles southeast in newport news, virginia, investigators were also searching. after nothing jumped out at them in doug's apartment, the special forensic unit began combing through his truck. >> the truck looked like a sty. >> it was in disarray, yes, it had not been cleaned. >> scraps of papers, old french
12:34 am
fries, and crumpled up receipts, it looked like leftovers from a college road trip, but all this dirt was about to become pay date of birth. one smudged receipt suddenly got the team's attention. >> they were able to locate a received and therefore the purchase of a tarp, a shovel, gloves, and a hat. >> reporter: they couldn't believe their eyes or their luck. >> we thought they were joking. who leaves that in a truck? but they weren't kidding. they had the receipt. >> reporter: maybe the single biggest piece of evidence. this crumpled up, tossed receipt? >> yes. >> reporter: an investigator on the forensic team immediately called detective scott back in in michigan. >> he called me and said, where you sitting down? >> reporter: in all this garbage there's a receipt, huh? >> a hat, gloves, a shovel, and an 8 by 10 tarp. that was an item we were looking for because of the wrapper found in the mccomb residence was for an
12:35 am
8 by 10 tarp. >> reporter: where was the receipt from? >> it was from a walmart. >> reporter: specifically a walmart in ohio. about two hours southeast from where venus disappeared. but not one of the walmarts that michigan investigators had checked out. >> i doubt we would have found that purchase had we not had the received. >> the date was smudged. we didn't know when the items were the investigators began contacting the walmart store to try to determine the date. we learned right away those items for purchased the evening before venus student went missing. >> ohio is not near michigan or newport news. what's going on? with the walmart in the state of ohio? >> it's in direct route in between newport news and michigan. >> reporter: but the feds proved doug had been in virginia. how did the ohio receipt get there? detective scott, and prosecutors don and
12:36 am
chuck meeting in the war room, suspected someone else was involved. but if that was true, they had no idea how. that did not matter to mcdonald, the youngest elected prosecutor in michigan who was itching to arrest doug right now. >> i said, all right, we got him. let's charge him now. >> reporter: it didn't happen. cooler heads prevailed. >> i had to listen to chuck and detective scott telling me, calm let's get everything ready to go. >> reporter: the fact was, the investigation was missing key evidence, not the least, a body. a major hole. maybe even a case buster for any would-be prosecution. >> do you say, let's go slow? nobody's going anywhere? let's see where this take us? >> correct. i felt there was more to be done to tie up any loose ends and put this case together , better. >> reporter: mike scott, working his last case before retirement knew the biggest loose end was discrediting doug's i was in virginia alibi. he asked the detective from newport news to keep digging.
12:37 am
>> this case became a top priority for me. >> reporter: todd, who kept an open mind when he first interviewed doug in his apartment was skeptical. >> lucky for us that receipt was not in a landfill between here and the state of michigan. >> reporter: he went back to the law office where he was spotted the day she disappeared. he had some follow-up questions to ask, ones the fbi left off their list. coming up! >> the individual is wearing a baseball cap, a hoodie with the hood pulled up, and large mirrored aviation type sunglasses. >> dug in disguise to visit his lawyer? downright strange. >> generally people don't come in disguising their appearance unless they're up to, you know, something of questionable activity. >> when dateline continues! when dateline continues
12:38 am
but her moderate to severe eczema could make it hard for her. now i'm staying ahead of it. dupixent helps heal your skin from within. so they can have clearer skin and less itch. serious allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems such as eye pain or vision changes including blurred vision, joint aches and pain, or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines without talking to your doctor. ask your doctor about dupixent. after advil. let's dive in. but, what about your back? it's fine. before advil. advil, dual action bites, pain, two ways. advil targets pain at the source. acetaminophen blocks, pain signals, advil, dual action. ♪ hey, i get it, commitment can be scary. but not when you're saving up to 15% with subscribe and save at amazon. you get free repeat delivery on your favorite items and if things don't work out, you can always cancel.
12:39 am
seriously, no one will judge you if you call it off. ok! learn all the ways to save with amazon. (music throughout) get the royal treatment. join the millions playing royal match today. download now. teeth sensitivity is so common. it immediately feels like somebody's poking directly on the nerve. i recommend sensodyne. sensodyne toothpaste goes inside the tooth and calms the nerve down. and my patents say: “you know doc, it really works." the abcs of ckd a is for awareness, because knowing that your chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes could progress to dialysis is important. b is for belief that there may be more you can do. just remember that k is for kidneys and kerendia. for adults living with ckd in type 2 diabetes,
12:40 am
kerendia is proven to reduce the risk of kidney failure, which can lead to dialysis. kerendia is a once-daily tablet that treats ckd differently than type 2 diabetes medications to help slow the progression of kidney damage and reduce the risk of cardiovascular events, such as heart attacks. do not take kerendia if you have problems with your adrenal glands or take certain medications called cyp3a4 inhibitors. kerendia can cause hyperkalemia, which is high potassium levels in your blood. ask your doctor before taking products containing potassium. kerendia can also cause low blood pressure and low sodium levels. so now that you know your abcs, remember, k is for kidneys, and if you need help slowing kidney damage, ask your doctor about kerendia. [coughing] hi, susan. honey. yeah. i respect that. but that cough looks pretty bad. try this robitussin honey. the real honey you love, plus the powerful cough relief you need. mind if i root through your trash? robitussin. the only brand with real honeyand elderberry. >> one month after venus went
12:41 am
missing, her father, a truck driver, had a heartbreaking journey to make. by then doug had moved out of the couples newport news apartment and returned to michigan, so larry headed south. >> the people that ran the apartment complex where she lived, and called us, and they said that there is all kinds of
12:42 am
stuff like the kids toys, pictures, would you be interested and i will send them to you? i said i will come and get them. i went down and got all the girls'toys, i got all the pictures that i could find. it was very painful. >> reporter: he found comfort from venus'neighbors. >> i saw where my daughter lived and everybody in the complex was so supportive. nobody likes doug, but everybody likes venus and the >> reporter: it's somewhere in these same weeks that venus'grandfather gets a call. >> my dad calls and said, venus is he said somebody called and at first it sounded like venus and at the end somebody didn't sound like venus, because all they would say was, i'm sorry, grandpa. couldn't get nothing out of her. but they kept saying, doug didn't do this. >> during the phone call, the
12:43 am
woman said, i'm in illinois near a relative's home. but the phone records didn't support that. we do not believe that phone call came from venus. we think that was somebody playing a sick joke on the family. >> do you think it was doug putting somebody up to it. >> i can't say that with certainty, but expect it. >> reporter: back in michigan there was a court proceeding taking place, but not the kind venus'family wanted. >> come on, doug, where is she? you're a disgrace to the marine. >> reporter: the preliminary hearing today as doug stewart works to get custody of his two young daughters. >> reporter: strange as it seems the court is going ahead with the custody issue. >> yes, and doug was dragging us into court trying to get custody of the girls back. there was no way he was getting those girls. >> reporter: doug's claim is he's the dad, he's around. the mother it's not. so he should have custody, not
12:44 am
venus'parents. hanging over the hearing was the strong suspicion by the family and protesters, that doug was the reason why his children were motherless. venus'father didn't pull any punches. >> i asked him if he murdered anybody lately. it was something that popped out of my mouth. >> reporter: the judge scheduled another hearing for three weeks later, but in the meantime denied doug custody and visitation writes with his young daughters. >> relieved. feel really relieved. that's all i have to say. >> reporter: while the court was delaying a final decision, on the children, detectives in michigan and virginia were stepping up their investigation. in newport news, detective fowler suspected doug's alibi was a ruse. what with the walmart received in the truck saying ohio, with area code for when i, and went doug had been telling everyone virginia. >> michigan state police told us doug had gone to his lawyer's office to make a payment on the pending child
12:45 am
custody dispute. the fbi went out to the office and confirmed he showed up and made a payment to them the morning she disappeared. >> reporter: but detective filer had his own follow-up for the secretaries in what was beginning to look like an outlandish scheme. he had two theories. >> one, the secretaries could have had a relationship with him and may have been lying to the fbi to cover his tracks. or that somebody posing as doug had come to the law office and made a payment, and indeed it wasn't doug. >> reporter: the woman described the man they had seen. but this time in greater detail. >> the individual was wearing a baseball cap, hoodie with the hood pulled up and large aviator style sunglasses. generally people don't come up with hoods and large glasses disguising their appearance
12:46 am
unless they're up to, you know, something of questionable activity. >> reporter: so detective filer asked them if they were positive it was doug stewart, and he got an important admission. >> neither one of them said they were 100% sure it was doug. >> reporter: as they now recalled it, even though the man in the hoodie made a payment as doug, he never looked them in the eye, and there was no small talk. then he rushed off instead of waiting for his receipt. filer called the lead detective scott in michigan with his take. >> i don't think it was him at the lawyer's office. he said, that's great. now we are one step closer to solving the case. >> reporter: a complicated, clever scheme was coming into the focus for investigators, centering around doug stewart and some mystery man in virginia. >> these points all represent cell phone towers. >> reporter: back in michigan, this detective was checking doug's cell phone records hoping to come up with some
12:47 am
answers. >> what jumped out at you? >> three or four days prior to venus'disappearance, there were numerous calls between 7 and 15 calls a day to and from doug to one particular number. >> a constant phone made, by the detectives also noticed a gap. the day before venus went missing the cell phone turned off. didn't go back on until the next night. >> all of a sudden the calls start coming back to and from this same number. >> reporter: the question becomes, who's at the other end of this phone call, right? >> right. >> reporter: it was quick work finding out who it was. the calls where traced to delaware to a young man named ricky spencer. he was a college kid living with his parents. you check to see if there's a sheet on him. >> yep. >> reporter: he's coming up clean. >> the father has a veterinary clinic. they are well to do. mother and father are extremely caring. he has siblings. >> reporter: it doesn't make why would he have anything to do with an old, or ex-military
12:48 am
man from michigan and virginia? in mid june, eight weeks since venus went missing, detective krieger and chuck christiansen decided to find out. they got in the car and headed he's. destination, bear, delaware. would the man on all those phone logs hold to key to what happened to venus stewart? coming up! >> we have a guy who i believe is an interest. he looks like doug. he makes a lot of calls to dog. he could pass for doug. he didn't want him to know we were coming. >> reporter: police pay a surprise visit to this mystery caller. >> how do you know doug stewart? >> through xbox live. >> reporter: he's got a spinning of his own. >> what was the business he needed taken care of? >> go see his wife. >> did he say why? >> to hide her. >> when dateline continues! hen dateline continues
12:49 am
nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your asthma specialist about a nunormal with nucala. even the most chill of parents know when it's time to go into protect mode.
12:50 am
nothing kills more viruses on more surfaces than lysol disinfectant spray. ♪ ♪♪ for skin as alive as you are... don't settle for silver. harness the power of 7 moisturizers & 3 vitamins to smooth, heal, and moisturize your dry skin. gold bond. champion your skin. plan a didn't work out? get plan b one-step. plan b helps prevent pregnancy before it starts, and it won't impact your ability to get pregnant in the future. find it yourself in the family planning aisle no prescription, no id. i've got this. ♪♪ >> two months in here's where
12:51 am
12:52 am
things stood in the investigation into the disappearance of venus. the western michigan mother of two had gone out to the mailbox one morning in 2010, and had not been seen again. investigators suspected her strange husband doug was behind it. his one solid alibi that he had been elsewhere was now on shaky ground. cops theorize that he maybe had a stand-in in virginia, so he could sneak off to michigan. but could they prove it? to find out detective shane kreeger and chuck christiansen drove to delaware to question a college kid named rickey spencer. >> we've got a guy who i believe it's of interest. he making a lot of calls to doug, he looks like doug, he could pass for doug. >> on june 21st, 2010, the detectives made an announced visit to this house. where ricky lived with his
12:53 am
parents. >> we did not want him to know we were coming. >> just not not? knock >> correct. >> detectives told him to come to the door. >> we thought he might have some information to help us in a case we were working over in michigan. >> at the barracks in an interview room the two cops appraised playing shoot-'em-ups and talking -- >> how do you know doug stewart? >> through xbox live. >> he told them that he knew them through the virtual road, playing shoot-'em-ups and talking long distance for a year and a half. then they met face-to-face for the first time during ricky's spring break from college april 2010, april fools'day. he said he was invited by doug, ten years his senior, to stay. he was there for a week. >> we went to busch gardens one time for, like, the day. and we were tryin'to go to the clubs. i'm not 21 yet, so -- >> you're not 21 yet?
12:54 am
>> no. >> okay. >> then we just played xbox. i mean, he was a chill guy. but it was just awkward, you know. >> yeah. >>'cause he's like, close to his 30s and i'm like in my 20s. >> right. when's the last time you saw him? >> my spring break, might be in the beginning of april. >> okay. >> reporter: but the detectives suspected that wasn't true. by then, they'd stitched together a solid timeline of the ricky/doug communications based on cell phone logs. on april 25th, the morning before venus disappeared, ricky's cellphone pinged in bear, delaware. >> the last call he made before shutting off his phone was to doug. >> reporter: then they both turned off their phones, except ricky briefly turned his back on. good for the investigation, bad for ricky. >> his phone hit off a tower just north of doug's apartment later that morning.
12:55 am
>> reporter: so he's not in delaware, he's all the way down in coastal virginia? >> correct. >> reporter: ricky then told the detectives that he'd recently learned from doug that something happened to his wife. >> he was like, "ricky, she's missing. i'm like, "what, dude? "'cause he was tellin'me like, she does weird stuff, like weird stunts. >> reporter: was ricky still covering up for both doug and himself? lt. christensen thought so. he tried to shake him up, taking a turn as the bad cop. >> i'll be blunt. doug stewart abducted and killed his wife, okay? we also know that somebody went into a legal office down there in newport news, virginia to pay a legal bill for him. we also know that you were down in that apartment during that time. >> yeah, i wasn't. wait. sorry. what? >> the 25th of april. and the
12:56 am
26th. >> of april? no. i was only there on spring break. >> he was reluctant to admit the truth. >> reporter: but he was starting to distance himself from doug, bit by bit. >> i googled his name again. and i saw some weird [ bleep ]. they found a receipt or somethin' from a different state close to michigan? and i was like, what the [bleep]? at that point, i was like, i'm not talking to this guy. that's weird. >> reporter: so detective criger put on his good cop hat, soothing, supporting, sympathetic. >> you're probably thinking, "what am i gonna get in trouble for? this what am i gonna do? i did know any of this was gonna happen. do you know what i'm saying? >> that's some [bleep] >> it is. i know. and i don't think you're involved with the planning of that. i think it was more him. and you just kinda got caught up in something you realized after the fact. "whoa, this is way over my head. i don't want any part of doing this anymore. you got a couple sisters, right? what.
12:57 am
>> yeah. >> what if this happened to your sister? you close with them? >> yeah, i'm pretty close with them. >> what if someone took your sister? >> be upset. >> you'd be upset, wouldn't you? >> yeah. >> that is what's going on with venus'family. they're right now going, "we need closure to this. we really do." you need to help us with that. because you are part of this game now, but not our main concern whatsoever. >> reporter: the detectives sensed ricky was ready to come clean. >> like shane said, if -- if we thought that you were -- you were a main player in this, do you really think we'd be dealing with you like this? absolutely not. so my first question to you is did he tell you he was gonna kill her before this happened, before you went down there? what did he say? >> he needed to take care of business up in michigan. >> reporter: finally, ricky sighed and started to unspool his story, a spellbinding thriller involving doubles and deception with doug stewart as its mastermind. >> what was the business he said you need today take care of? >> to go see his wife.
12:58 am
>> okay, did he say why? >> to hide her? >> to hide? or >> to get rid of her. >> lieutenant christiansen called detective scott back in michigan. they'd broken it. >> he's our guy. and mike's reaction was something to the effect of holy cow. >> reporter: mike scott, who'd preached patience with the prosecutor before, immediately dispatched officers to apprehend doug stewart. trooper aaron steensma was part of the team that tailed him to this convenience store. >> we just walked in and said, "douglas stewart, you're under arrest, and he turned around and placed the hand cuffs on him. >> were you surprised? >> absolutely. absolutely. i thought it was a mistake, and i'd get an apology. >> reporter: doug had told police from the beginning he thought venus skipped out on him and his kids, after his arrest, he said it again to detective scott. >> i got very upset. i told him, i said, "i've worked with you
12:59 am
from day one. i do not know where my wife is." >> therese, how did you learn that doug had been arrested? >> oh, the state police came to the house and told us. the same day they told us venus was deceased. >> they said they arrested him for murder, and [inaudible] right out from underneath her. >> i didn't want to accept that he would do that to her. >> reporter: police had declared her dead even without finding her body and prosecutors were preparing to file a first degree murder charge. but as doug stewart got ready to stand trial for murder, venus'family's trials were far from over. >> coming up! >> douglas stewart caused the death of venus stewart. >> in the courtroom how easy? >> he was very good at presenting himself as the all american guy. it was very bizarre. you're on trial for murring your wife and none of this seemed to effect him one bit. >> when dateline continues. o! (bridget vo) with thyroid eye disease... i hid from the camera.
1:00 am
and i wanted to hide from the world. for years, i thought my t.e.d was beyond help... ...but then i asked my doctor about tepezza. (vo) tepezza is the only medicine that treats t.e.d. at the source not just the symptoms. in a clinical study, more than 8 out of 10 patients taking tepezza had less eye bulging. tepezza is an infusion. patients taking tepezza may have infusion reactions. tell your doctor right away if you experience high blood pressure, fast heartbeat, shortness of breath or muscle pain. before getting tepezza, tell your doctor if you have diabetes, ibd, or are pregnant, or planning to become pregnant. tepezza may raise blood sugar even if you don't have diabetes. and may worsen ibd such as crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis. (bridget) now, i'm ready to be seen again. (vo) visit mytepezza.com to find a t.e.d. eye specialist and to see bridget's before and after photos.
1:01 am
why burn a candle when you can switch to air wick essential mist? it's the modern way to transform fragrance infused with natural essential oils into a mist. air wick essential mist. connect to nature. my husband and i have never been more active. shingles doesn't care. i go to spin classes with my coworkers. good for you, shingles doesn't care. because no matter how healthy you feel, your risk of shingles sharply increases after age 50. but shingrix protects. proven over 90% effective, shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older. shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. an increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can also happen. the most common side effects are pain, redness and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach.
1:02 am
shingles doesn't care. but shingrix protects. ask your doctor or pharmacist about shingrix today. ♪♪ ♪ icy hot pro. ♪ ice works fast... to freeze your pain and your doubt. ♪ heat makes it last. so you'll never sit this one out. icy hot pro with 2 max-strength pain relievers. to you, it may just be an elevator. here goes nothing. but for a young homeowner becoming their parents, it's a learning opportunity. come on in. [ chuckles ] the more, the merrier. paris, huh? bonjour! we got any out-of-towners in the elevator? tom. it is not easy. 10th floor, huh? must be a heck of a view. okay, see how everyone else is facing this way? progressive can't save you from becoming your parents, but we can save you money when you bundle home and auto with us. okay, that was terrible. okay, let's hang back. we're gonna try that again. >> february, 2011, a courtroom
1:03 am
in centerville, michigan, in st. joseph county. it had been nearly a year since venus stewart disappeared in her pajamas. her husband, doug, was now on trial for her murder, even though the body was never found. a fundamental fact of the defense's case. doug pleaded not guilty, and said he was surprised he was even arrested. >> this is my opening statement. >> reporter: the responsibility for prosecuting doug stewart fell to baby-faced john mcdonough. >> douglas stewart caused the death of venus stewart. >> reporter: seated at the defense table, doug stewart wearing casual guy sweaters and sweater vests. >> courtroom demeanor, what'd you see, john? >> he was very good at kinda presenting himself as kinda the all-american guy. it was very bizarre. 'cause we would go into chambers, he would talk out loud like he was one of the
1:04 am
guys. you're on trial for murdering your wife. none of this seemed to affect him one bit. >> reporter: as the prosecutor began his case, his opening witnesses focused on april 26th, 2010, the day venus vanished. state trooper aaron steensma, first on the scene, testified that he believed he was looking at a crime as soon as he talked to venus'parents. >> i pulled into the driveway and i was met by a female who was hysterical and crying. >> and what did you do next? >> she told me that he took her. he took her. he took her. >> reporter: early on, mcdonough wanted the jury to meet venus'parents, to see them as the stable decent and loving people they venus wasn't some kind of wild child bad mother. >> was it odd that your daughter would've left her children alone? >> it was more than odd. it was something that would not happen. >> reporter: after sketching out the last day that things might ever be normal for venus'parents, the prosecutor turned the clock back 24 hours and moved the scene from
1:05 am
michigan to northwest ohio. april 25th had been a chilly night in van wert, ohio. the man who walked in the front door of the walmart was easy to remember, according to the walmart security officer. despite the weather, he was wearing a loud shirt and flowery hawaiian shorts. >> that's the customer entering right here in the striped shirt. there he is right here. >> what is this a clip of? >> this is associate rebecca hill with the customer following her. >> reporter: jurors watched intently as the video showed doug marching through the aisles. at the defendant's table, the accused knew what was coming next, an inventory of the items he bought that night. he picked up a shovel, gloves, a tarp, and a hat. >> can you tell what's in his hand? >> this appears to be a shovel and the tarp in his left hand. >> reporter: the clerks at walmart had no trouble remembering the customer.
1:06 am
>> most people weren't wearing shorts at that time. >> reporter: donna stiffler, a cashier in the lawn and garden section, remembered approaching the customer who looked like he was going to a luau. >> i said, "welcome to walmart. can i help you? " and the first thing i think he asked for was lime. >> reporter: why would he ask for lime? >> you throw lime on anything that's decaying. it almost acts like baking soda would to absorb odours. >> reporter: donna told the shopper, sorry, they didn't sell lime. she said he grunted and kept on minutes later, he was back at her register to check out. >> do you remember what that person bought? >> a tarp, shiny shovel, silver, duct tape and gloves. >> do you see that person in the courtroom today? >> yeah. >> what was that? >> yes. >> could you point him out and describe what he's wearing?
1:07 am
>> i'm so nervous. he's over there. >> what is he wearing? >> a white vest. i remember his eyes more than anything else. >> you could tell that she was just terrified of this guy. my god. you know, i sold this guy these things that helped him kill his wife. >> reporter: and there was something else that tripped doug up, a credit card blunder. before he went to michigan, doug bought a throwaway cell phone called a trac phone that normally assures except, as you can see doug swiping here, he's just bought it with a credit card that created an electronic receipt revealing the phone's unique i.d. that made the phone, and doug's movements, easily traceable. >> he didn't think we would find these trac phones that he had. >> reporter: master criminals don't save receipts and buy on credit cards. >> absolutely not. >> reporter: criger could then follow the path of that particular trac phone through
1:08 am
gps technology, just as if it were a personal cellphone. >> using the phones, how close can you get him to his wife's driveway? >> pretty close. within five to seven miles. >> reporter: but, by now, something else put him even closer, old-fashioned forensics. remember, the smudge on the plastic tarp wrapper found outside venus'parents'house? it was a fingerprint, turned out, doug stewart's fingerprint, placing him at the scene of venus'disappearance. prosecutors believed it was damning evidence. >> yeah, i swear. >> reporter: but to close the deal, they'd have to put on the stand the college-kid impostor with a head-spinning tale to tell. would it be too incredible to be believed? coming up -- >> he said this is where you come in, ricky. i want you to be my alibi. >> reporter: ricky spencer lays it all out: a plan to murder. >> it was like a game. he was part of this game. >> when dateline continues.
1:09 am
1:10 am
1:11 am
>> and the rest of the evidence that you hear -- >> reporter: chief prosecutor john mcdonough called on his star witness who, in the course of two days, would tell one of the most mind-boggling stories
1:12 am
ever heard in this st. joseph county, michigan courtroom. >> please call your next witness and we'll have him sworn in. >> we call ricky spencer. >> reporter: ricky, now 21, seemed like a young boy in a grown-up world. his dress shirt, not his customary tee, ran big in the sleeves. >> how do you know mr. stewart? >> i met him on xbox live in december of'08. >> how often did you play xbox live with mr. stewart? >> anywhere from six to ten hours. >> a day? >> yeah, on a daily basis. >> this was his life. some people might sit and read, he played xbox. >> reporter: even though he'd never met him, ricky told the jury he felt a strong tie to the former marine. >> would you say he was your best friend? >> yes. he called us brothers from another mother. >> what did you -- >> brothers from another mother. >> this was his idol. probably one of the very few people he had social contact with. >> reporter: doug and ricky met in person on april fools day in 2010, nearly a month before
1:13 am
venus disappeared. doug was living alone and invited ricky down for spring break. surveillance camera footage showed ricky in virginia. >> "you know, we can party, you can drink and i can help you with your papers." >> reporter: ricky testified that for the first three days, they went to the busch gardens amusement park, played xbox live, and drank. they hung out like frat brothers. on day four, the prosecution asserts that doug got down to business. >> he's like, "hey ricky, i want to tell -- tell you something, it's really let me finish before you interrupt me. >> reporter: ricky testified that doug began to vent on his estranged wife venus. ricky said doug was portraying venus as an abusive, even dangerous mother to his two girls. that wasn't true, but ricky didn't know that. doug then told ricky he needed to do something desperate. >> he's telling me that he's going to go kill his wife. >> when he was telling you this, what were you thinking? >> i was just shocked. i
1:14 am
couldn't, like, believe what i was hearing. >> okay. >> and he said, "this is where you come in, ricky. i want you to be my alibi, just pretend to be me and live in my apartment. >> reporter: ricky's immediate reaction was an emphatic no. >> i was like "no dude. i don't want to [bleep] here anything about this." and he didn't talk about it for the rest of the day. >> reporter: but doug kept at it over the next two days. despite everyone else's portrait of venus as mom of the year, doug pushed negative venus stuff on ricky, telling him how she smacked around their older daughter. >> how did that make you feel? >> i felt bad for him. he was saying, like, "if only, you know, someone could be my alibi." i'm like, "no, dude, i can't -- i can't do this." >> reporter: doug kept ratcheting up his stories of abuse, concluding with the most graphic one -- venus had tried to choke one of the girls. >> "ricky, if i wasn't there at
1:15 am
that moment, the kid might have died. >> he again asked you to help him kill his wife? >> yes. >> and what did you say? >> i said -- "okay, dude, i'll be your alibi." >> reporter: ricky caved, and, according to the prosecution, doug had a plan ready to go. he took his recruit to a nearby park for a crash course in how to get away with murder. >> he asked me, like, "ricky, if you're trying to kill someone and you don't want any evidence, what do you use? " and i told him, "well, not a gun because it leaves evidence. and he says, "right, not a gun, so what is it? " "not a knife'cause that leaves evidence." and he says, "right, not a knife. so what is it? " doug said, "you choke somebody. >> reporter: and right there in the park, doug demonstrated on ricky his military chokehold. >> he gets me in that headlock, two seconds, and he puts me down, and i'm, like, out of breath. he says that if i do that to somebody for 10 seconds, you know, they pass out. do it for over 30 seconds, they're no longer alive. >> reporter: doug coached ricky to be aware of surveillance
1:16 am
cameras. to pull off this double vision ruse, ricky would need to wear sunglasses, a cap and a hoodie pulled up and over. ricky returned to delaware to wait for doug's signal. it came on april 15, 2010. doug drove up from virginia, ricky from delaware, and they met at a gas station in bethesda, md., outside the nation's capital. that's where ricky said doug gave him the things he needed to turn into doug, his clothing, cellphones, keys to his car and apartment, and a credit card. >> what's that a photograph of? >> this is the parking space area where i met with doug stewart. >> where did you go? >> i went -- i drove to virginia. >> where did doug tell you he was going? >> to michigan. >> what was he gonna do there? >> he didn't say kill his wife, but he said to take care of business up in michigan. >> and -- >> but i knew what he meant. >> reporter: sure enough, surveillance cam pictures taken
1:17 am
april 15th show ricky easing into doug's life in newport news. he parked in doug's garage, as instructed, and hung out in doug's apartment. >> this is the lobby in virginia. this is between 10:00 and 11:00. here's me with a hoodie, a piece of paper sticking out of my pocket, the wendy's bag. >> reporter: with doug's credit card, ricky had bought a double cheeseburger and fries at wendy's. >> why did he want you to use the credit card there? >> to make it look like that he was in virginia. >> somewhere deep down, prosecutors wondered, did ricky, a little slow on the uptake, think that this was all pretend? >> act like you're me. don't look at the camera. keep your head you know, wear this sweatshirt." and it was like a game. he was a part of this game. >> this was ricky's little mission. >> but the mission, "mortal mission i" in gamebox-speak, had gone amiss. doug had to hit the reset button. on his way to michigan, he'd been pulled over in the wee hours by a state trooper in ohio who said he was weaving lanes. the traffic stop
1:18 am
was irrefutable proof that he wasn't in virginia. >> i got a phone call from him. he said, you know "the plan's off." and i was relieved to hear it. >> reporter: but doug wasn't ready to call it quits after one bump in the road. he kept on talking. >> "hey ricky, i want to try doing this again." and i told him i didn't want to. it was like, a one-time deal, and i didn't even want to do it the first time. >> reporter: but then, according to ricky, doug upped the pressure. he told ricky if he didn't get onboard with the original plan, he was going to wipe out everyone, a massacre. >> instead of just making it look like she disappeared, he was talking about going in there and killing anyone that was inside the house, besides his kids. >> so what did you do next? >> i told him, "okay, dude. we'll do it again. i'll be your alibi again. >> reporter: there would be a "mortal mission 2." >> coming up -- >> a drop of blood came from her nose. >> reporter: a virtual world turns suddenly, violently real.
1:19 am
and a spellbound courtroom hears the most harrowing part of the story. >> he was going to go to bury her. -- >> when "dateline" continues. e" continues. support your immune system with a potent blend of nutrients and emerge your best every day with emergen-c chevy silverado factory-lifted trucks. where will they take you? ♪ ♪ (dog barks) ♪ silverado zr2, trail boss, and custom trail boss. because adventure is everywhere. flu symptoms hit harder than the common cold. so it takes the right tool for the job... to keep it together. now there's new theraflu flu relief
1:20 am
with a max strength fever fighting formula. the right tool for long lasting flu symptom relief. hot beats flu. i've never been healthier. t shingles doesn't care. lasting flu symptom relief. but shingrix protects. proven over 90% effective, shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older. shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. an increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can also happen. the most common side effects are pain, redness and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach. ask your doctor or pharmacist about shingrix today.
1:21 am
if you have diabetes, then getting on the dexcom g6 is the single most important thing you can do. it eliminates painful fingersticks, helps lower a1c, and it's covered by medicare. before dexcom g6, i was frustrated. all of that finger-pricking and all of that pain, my a1c was still stuck. my diabetes was out of control. i was tired. (female announcer) dexcom g6 sends your glucose numbers to your phone or receiver without painful fingersticks. the arrow shows the direction your glucose is heading: up, down, or steady, so you can make better decisions about food and activity in the moment. after using dexcom g6, my a1c has never been lower. i lead line dancing three times a week, i exercise, and i'm just living a great life now. it's so easy to use. dexcom g6 has given me confidence and control that everything i need is right there on my phone. (female announcer) dexcom g6 is the #1 recommended cgm system
1:22 am
by doctors and patients. call now to get started. (bright music) >> i'm dara brown, here is what is happening. police say that a six-year-old student shot a teacher during an altercation at a virginia elementary school. was taken into custody on friday. the teacher was hospitalized and is in stable condition. no students were injured in the incident. california is bracing for more severe weather this weekend, flooding is a major concern due to already saturated ground. the bomb cyclone left thousands without power, battered the coastline, toppled trees and caused at least six deaths. now back to dateline! >>now back to dateline >> >> do you recognize the person in this photograph? >> reporter: doug stewart was on trial for murder, but his
1:23 am
sister jaime couldn't bring herself to be in the courtroom. >> i don't know what to believe if i did but that's the hard thing. and you just don't know what to believe. and i -- i really don't want to think that my brother did anything terrible. >> reporter: but dustin jasper -- the victim's brother -- was there on most days, grabbing a bench seat within good stare-down range of the accused, doug. >> he never made eye contact with me. i think he's too ashamed. >> reporter: but on the stand, shame didn't seem to figure into the bold-as-brass story about doug that ricky spencer was telling the jury, how after the first run to michigan was a bust, doug called ricky again. >> and he said, "hey dude, it's done. i killed her and her dad." and i was like, "what? " and he says, "no, i'm just kidding." and i told him that wasn't funny. >> so he said he was kidding and you told him it wasn't funny? >> yeah. >> reporter: ricky's second day on the stand as the star witness. prosecutor mcdonough picked up his questioning with ricky's description of mission number two, the assault on
1:24 am
venus stewart. >> did you attempt it again? >> yes, we did. >> reporter: it was deja vu all over again. this time, sunday, april 25th. >> i went down to virginia. he was heading up -- back up to michigan. >> reporter: later that day, ricky said he made a call to doug's boss, pretending to be doug, under the weather. >> and i said in a sick voice, like, "hey bobby, this is me -- doug. i'm feeling like [bleep], i can't get to work." he said, "all right." so doug didn't have to come to work on monday. >> reporter: monday would be venus's last day alive, as ricky would explain in his chilling story of duplicity and death. it began, the prosecutor said, with doug in a field across from venus'parents'house. >> he parked there with his truck kind of watching things. i'd say probably 500 yards from venus'parents'house. >> reporter: doug called ricky at 7:00 a.m. from a trac phone and gave him his instructions. >> ricky, i want you to leave
1:25 am
anywhere from 8:00 to 8:15. nothing later." >> reporter: doug then sneaked up close to the house, police said, hiding behind this woodpile. back in virginia, ricky was establishing the alibi. >> you recognize that photograph? >> it's me leaving the apartments on the 26th. >> reporter: his next instructions were to wait for doug's call. that came just before 9:00 a.m. >> and what did he say? >> he said, "okay, dude, it's done. i was kinda shocked to hear that. and i said, "what happened? " he said that he called venus'parents'house in michigan and said that he was the mailman, he had a package for her and she came outside. >> reporter: just like that, ricky's virtual world had turned real. game over. he was displaying emotion on the stand for the first time. doug was showing nothing. >> and he jumped out. and he said that there was a scream, she only screamed once, and
1:26 am
that she tried putting up a fight. but he was able to get her in that headlock and a drop of blood came from her nose and that was it. i asked him if it was worth it. and he said it was, to protect his kids and give them some type of future. and he told me that -- he told me that -- he was gonna call me later'cause he was gonna go -- to -- [crying] -- bury her. >> did he understand the
1:27 am
consequences, ricky? >> i think when it was over it finally hit him, this really was a homocide. someone actually died here. it's not on the xbox. it's not somebody blowing up a cartoon figure. it was a real person. >> reporter: later monday, ricky continued in the supporting-actor role. he went to doug's lawyer's office, dressed in the hat, hoodie and sunglasses. doug told him to make a payment to one particular secretary. >> he said that she's not all there in the head, and that -- just hand her the envelope, say who you are and tell'em that you're in a hurry and tell'em to mail you the receipt. >> did you do that? >> yes. >> reporter: later that day, ricky and doug drove to their meeting spot in maryland to exchange clothing, cellphones, keys and the credit card. they talked briefly. ricky piped up to express a newfound fear. >> i was asking him -- i said "hey, dude, are you going to kill me? he said, "no." i said,
1:28 am
"good,'cause if you did, that would suck." and then he asked why, you know, why did i ask that? and i says, "because i know what you did." >> that was the first thing that came to my mind. you know, why in the heck didn't doug kill this kid? why did he leave this witness out there for somebody to find? >> reporter: the prosecutors fully expected their case with the jury would rise, or fall, on the shoulders of ricky spencer. >> reporter: and yet you've got to worry on cross-examination whether the defense is going to rattle his cage an undo him? >> that's always a worry. he probably could hold his own. but we didn't know. coming up -- >> quite honestly, his testimony is just so bizarre. >> was his a true tale or a tall one? ricky spencer's story, under scrutiny. >> what evidence do you have that venus stewart is dead? >> when dateline continues. but her moderate to severe eczema could make it hard for her.
1:29 am
now i'm staying ahead of it. dupixent helps heal your skin from within. so they can have clearer skin and less itch. serious allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems such as eye pain or vision changes including blurred vision, joint aches and pain, or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines without talking to your doctor. ask your doctor about dupixent. after advil. let's dive in. but, what about your back? it's fine. before advil. advil, dual action bites, pain, two ways. advil targets pain at the source. acetaminophen blocks, pain signals, advil, dual action. ♪ hey, i get it, commitment can be scary. but not when you're saving up to 15% with subscribe and save at amazon. you get free repeat delivery on your favorite items and if things don't work out, you can always cancel. seriously, no one will judge you if you call it off.
1:30 am
ok! learn all the ways to save with amazon. (music throughout) get the royal treatment. join the millions playing royal match today. download now. teeth sensitivity is so common. it immediately feels like somebody's poking directly on the nerve. i recommend sensodyne. sensodyne toothpaste goes inside the tooth and calms the nerve down. and my patents say: “you know doc, it really works." the abcs of ckd a is for awareness, because knowing that your chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes could progress to dialysis is important. b is for belief that there may be more you can do. just remember that k is for kidneys and kerendia. for adults living with ckd in type 2 diabetes, kerendia is proven to reduce the risk of kidney failure, which can lead to dialysis.
1:31 am
kerendia is a once-daily tablet that treats ckd differently than type 2 diabetes medications to help slow the progression of kidney damage and reduce the risk of cardiovascular events, such as heart attacks. do not take kerendia if you have problems with your adrenal glands or take certain medications called cyp3a4 inhibitors. kerendia can cause hyperkalemia, which is high potassium levels in your blood. ask your doctor before taking products containing potassium. kerendia can also cause low blood pressure and low sodium levels. so now that you know your abcs, remember, k is for kidneys, and if you need help slowing kidney damage, ask your doctor about kerendia. [coughing] hi, susan. honey. yeah. i respect that. but that cough looks pretty bad. try this robitussin honey. the real honey you love, plus the powerful cough relief you need. mind if i root through your trash? robitussin. the only brand with real honeyand elderberry. >> guesswork. if you think
1:32 am
about anything in this case, i want you to think about the word guesswork. >> reporter: in its opening argument, the defense asked jurors to pay close attention to a prosecution case that had no victim's body and no eyewitness who saw the defendant in michigan, much less killing his wife. >> i believe at the end of this case, the prosecutor is going to ask you to guess. >> reporter: after ricky spencer's riveting testimony, anticipation was building. would the defense be able to rock the wild story from the so-called double? the defense lawyers, jeff and kymberly schroeder, the married and highly regarded team, were poised to attack more than ricky's testimony. they were going after his character, too, and the deal, they claimed he'd made for leniency with the prosecution. >> my defense, my story, had to do with ricky evading life in prison, ricky being an
1:33 am
accomplished liar. >> reporter: cross examination strategy number one was to muss up the clean-cut young man image he projected from the stand. they started with the x-rated screen name, the tag, he'd picked for himself when he played xbox live. >> ricky, your gamer tag is dark [bleep], isn't it? >> yes, that's correct. >> what's a [bleep]? >> it means a bunch of guys. >> reporter: ricky explained to the jury the overt and very explicit sexual connotations of his online name. the defense wanted the jury to look at ricky as an unsavory young man without a moral compass. >> and if you believe his testimony, he decided to -- to help commit murder, rather than deciding to call the authorities. >> of course you don't want the jury to believe that story, but there's a moral issue that hangs over the testimony here. right. >> reporter: this guy could have thrown a wrench in the works and stopped it. >> he could have. >> reporter: he could have done the right thing, but elected not to.
1:34 am
>> if you believe his testimony. and i think that's one of the reasons why his testimony's not believable. >> reporter: evidence that ricky could be shifty with the truth? he'd already admitted in direct testimony that he'd lied to his parents about what he was doing over spring break. >> did you want them to know that you were going to visit mr. stewart? >> no. >> why? >> because it seemed kind of strange to go meet up with somebody that you played xbox live with who's a lot older than you. >> reporter: but the defense took a mostly hands-off approach with challenging ricky on all those very detailed recollections of his story. what he did which day in virginia, what he bought with the credit card, which security cams he played to. the defense stance was, jurors, a lot of detail here, but it's all a fantasy from a young man trying to save his own skin. >> thank you, that's all i have, your honor. >> reporter: after only 20 minutes of less-than-explosive cross examination, they got him off the stand. >> quite honestly, his testimony was just so bizarre. >> it's a strange story, isn't it? >> it's a very strange story. >> reporter: a story spun, says
1:35 am
the defense, so ricky could cut a sweetheart deal with the prosecutor. in return for his testimony, ricky would not be charged with conspiracy to commit murder but he would enter a plea to a lesser charge. >> i think that he was coached many, many times to give the testimony in the way that he gave it. >> he was taught to become a good witness, you think? >> i think so. i think that he had to do a good job. you know what, if he didn't bring the case home for the prosecutor, it's my belief that he thought he would be facing those charges. >> reporter: the defense called no witnesses. >> the defense rests. we're ready for closing arguments, your honor. >> reporter: doug stewart didn't take the stand. but he did sit down with "dateline" for an interview. >> after hearing everything that i've heard, everything that i've seen, i still haven't seen anything showing me that my wife is hurt, she's harmed. >> reporter: so what did he make of the star witness, the sensational testimony of ricky spencer, his young xbox buddy? >> i don't understand any of his testimony on the stand. i mean, he got locations right,
1:36 am
as far as he came down, he was on spring break. >> why does ricky come down? >> he mentioned to me, "well, i got spring break coming up from college. i'm coming down there to busch gardens with some friends." april 1st, i got a phone call, and he goes, "well, i'm almost there." and i said, "almost where? " "i'm almost to your apartment." he just showed up. >> now the guy's in your you're the host, and he's a sort of the uninvited guest. is that what's happening? >> i felt comfortable enough with him where i said, "okay, i guess you could stay here." >> so the story that he would tell authorities and then testify, under oath to in the court almost like a spy movie plot, none of that stuff is true? >> the whole idea of hurting my wife or doing any of that stuff is very strange and very weird. none of that is true. >> reporter: in his closing statement, jeff schroder hoped he could convince at least one juror that, without a body, there was reasonable doubt. >> what evidence of that kind in this case do you have to demonstrate to you that venus stewart is dead?
1:37 am
>> reporter: so what about all those purchases at walmart? doug stewart seen walking the aisles in loud, floral shorts? they asked rhetorically would a man about to commit a murder be so dumb as to call that kind of attention to himself? >> is he trying to hide things? he's wearing hawaiian shorts asking people where things are. does that sound like somebody who's going to use it in a crime? >> reporter: and he bought a shovel, the defense attorney noted. so what? >> what evidence have they shown you that a shovel was used in the killing of venus stewart? they have not. >> reporter: schroeder summed it up for the jury. he claimed the prosecutor had an illusion of evidence, a circumstantial case woven together with ricky spencer's tall tale. >> they've tried to make you think they have all this evidence, but they don't. and they haven't proved their case.
1:38 am
you have a duty to do. and that's to find doug stewart not guilty. >> coming up -- >> you believe she's alive? >> i've gotta believe she's alive. >> reporter: what would the jury do? >> the clerk will read the verdict. >> verdict and a whole new chapter in the mystery. >> he showed up to the door. he said that it was part of the case. >> the case was never closed. that's the missing piece. >> when "dateline" continues. a blood test helped show my asthma is driven by eosinophils, which nucala helps reduce. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your asthma specialist about a nunormal with nucala.
1:39 am
even the most chill of parents know when it's time to go into protect mode. nothing kills more viruses on more surfaces than lysol disinfectant spray. ♪ ♪♪ for skin as alive as you are... don't settle for silver. harness the power of 7 moisturizers & 3 vitamins to smooth, heal, and moisturize your dry skin. gold bond. champion your skin. >> reporter: march 11, 2011.
1:40 am
1:41 am
the jury had been deliberating. was doug stewart responsible for the murder of his wife venus? >> i dream about her a lot. thinking that she's still alive. then hugging her, you know. and then i wake up. reality hits me. >> you believe she's alive, or not? >> i've gotta believe she's alive. if she's not, i -- i
1:42 am
don't think i can handle it. i don't think my kids can handle it. >> if she's alive, that would be incredibly cruel, what she's doing. >> i could never forgive her. >> on the record, the people versus stewart. the jurors indicated they've reached a verdict. >> reporter: the moment had venus'brother and mother knew a guilty verdict would be small consolation, but they wanted to hear it anyway. a few feet away stood the accused, eyes blinking, face twitching. >> the clerk will read the verdict. >> members of the jury find douglas harrie stewart, as to count one, guilty of first degree premeditated murder. >> reporter: guilty. jurors clearly believed the star witness ricky spencer's story of being the alibi and the double. but they also determined that doug's fingerprint found at the crime scene on the plastic wrapper was powerful evidence. >> it's a scheme. it's a
1:43 am
conspiracy. there's one other person that knows what's going on, and that's is he lucky to be alive in your opinion? >> yes. he made the case for us. >> and if doug had killed him? >> it would be very difficult to prove this case without ricky. >> reporter: outside the courtroom, the young prosecutor, john mcdonough, hugged venus'mother. >> i was so happy to be able to reach out and say to her, you know, "we got him." we promised her we would do it and we did it. >> what difference does that make? my daughter is not here. that's all i could think about, that was venus isn't here. >> reporter: sweater vest gone, shackled at the legs and hands, doug wasn't giving an inch. >> i'm innocent. i did not do these crimes. >> reporter: his story, rejected out of hand by a jury that needed only three hours to convict him, was nothing if not consistent. "dateline" found that out in our interview the month after the verdict at the st. joseph county why did you want to talk today because you didn't have to talk. >> my biggest issue i wanted to
1:44 am
talk today was, was at the end of this trial i wanted to know what happened to my wife, where my wife is, if anything happened to my wife. i wanted answers. i didn't get them. so i guess i would -- i would ask that the police department does not fold this case closed. because even though they believe it is it's not. >> you're saying you didn't do it, and you don't know where she is? >> absolutely not. >> reporter: the judge saw it differently. >> i am sentencing the defendant to life in the michigan department of corrections without possibility of parole. >> reporter: doug stewart was sentenced to life without parole. and ricky, after testimony that swayed the jury, was allowed to plead guilty to a lesser charge, a conspiracy to commit manslaughter, and was sentenced to one year in county jail. venus'family didn't think that was enough, not by a long shot. >> he could have saved my sister. he could've let the authorities know. they could've
1:45 am
been waiting for him at my -- my parents'house, and it'd been >> reporter: the killer was put away for life. but for two detectives in michigan the story of venus stewart wouldn't be case closed until they found venus'but where to look? >> maybe do we want to split up and have a group on this side and have a group on this side? >> reporter: the search picked right back up again in this vast countryside of woods, fields and two lawmen driven. >> why pursue it? >> yeah, i mean, the case was never closed. the criminal part, yes, but because her body was never located, that's the missing piece to the case was that we were never able to locate her. >> reporter: and venus'family waiting and hoping for a closure. >> it's not too late for doug to do the right thing. he can repent for his wrongdoing. tell us where my sister's body is. >> reporter: four years after the trial, lt. christensen and det. petersen of the state police decided to call on doug in prison. maybe he'd be willing to tell them more now.
1:46 am
>> our first strategy when we went to the prison was to simply go and talk to him and see if anything had changed. that was back in 2015. i know we both felt after our meeting, that he was hostile. he was still hanging on to the fact that he had nothing to do with it. he was still trying to cast blame -- >> wrongfully accused, wrongfully convicted -- >> yes. >> somebody else did it. i'm not your guy. he's still holding on to that? >> he's holding on to that so much so that when we walked out of the room, we both had the conversation that i don't think he's ever going to give it up. >> reporter: doug was no help. so detectives decided to re-investigate an old rumor. one that had buzzed through the community for years. it had to do with a barn owned by doug's sister the same sister who introduced doug and venus years ago. jaime had poured a new concrete floor in her barn right after venus had gone missing. >> and what was the question you had for her, todd? >> i told her that there was a tip that you know, that venus had been buried and was
1:47 am
underneath the concrete in her barn. she immediately knew what i was talking about. she was aware of those rumors that were in the community. and she was real emotional about it, because it always kind of weighed on her mind what if he could have actually done it. >> do you remember that? were you expecting anyone? >> no. no, not really. but he showed up to the door. i knew he was there for doug. he wanted -- excuse me. he wanted to go over the concrete. he said that it was part of the case. >> reporter: investigators had chased this lead before. but now they were armed with a new technology, a ground-penetrating radar that could see through concrete. >> these rumors were going on for years, weren't they? >> oh, yeah. sister's got venus buried under her barn. and we're gonna follow dad in the pickup they were sure he was gonna -- he was gonna dig her up and move her and, you know, it -- yeah, it was hard. >> reporter: she knew full well there was nothing in that barn but compacted soil. and sure enough, the radar revealed nothing. but that didn't mean
1:48 am
jaime believed her brother was innocent. >> i had an old employer that i -- i ran into grocery shoppin', and she goes, "do you think he did it? " and i just kinda, you know, and she's like, "in your heart do you think he did it? " yeah, i do. >> reporter: a heart that was also heavy with guilt. the responsibility she felt for introducing her brother doug to venus back then. >> that does go through your mind. you know, thinking, jeez, if i never introduced this, this would have never happened. you know, but we also wouldn't have -- >> you beat yourself up for that? >> oh, for years. >> reporter: so the day the detective showed up at her doorstep, it was as though she'd been waiting all these years for just this kind of visit. she wanted to show the detective some rumpled pages of writing. >> she mentioned to me that she'd had this letter in her purse and she pulls it out and it's -- i mean, obviously you could tell that it had been there for seven years and it
1:49 am
was to venus'mother, >> and never delivered? >> never delivered. she said she didn't -- just couldn't get herself to deliver it,'cause she was afraid of the rejection. >> reporter: but now, by reaching out, making the first move, the convicted killer's sister would set in motion a sequence of events leading to the unravelling of the last mystery in the case. the sister and the victim's mother would unite and work together to find venus. >> coming up -- >> i wanted her to have venus back. i wanted everyone to stop hurting. >> where was venus? after all these years would they finally learn the truth? >> you want to know. you want to know where she is. but at the same time you do not want to know. >> when dateline continues.
1:50 am
1:51 am
just look around. this digital age we're living in, it's pretty unbelievable. problem is, not everyone's fully living in it. nobody should have to take a class or fill out a medical form on public wifi with a screen the size of your hand. home internet shouldn't be a luxury. everyone should have it and now a lot more people can.
1:52 am
so let's go. the digital age is waiting. millions have made the switch from the big three to the best kept secret in wireless: xfinity mobile that means millions are saving hundreds a year with the fastest mobile service. and now, introducing, the best price for two lines of unlimited. just $30 per line there are millions of happy campers out there. and this is the perfect time to join them... save hundreds a year over t-mobile, verizon, and at&t with xfinity mobile, and for a limited time get $400 off a new eligible 5g phone. >> reporter: pummeled with switch today. guilt that just wouldn't go away, jaime, doug's sister, wrote two letters. one for her two nieces. one for venus'mom. >> what was the message, jaime? >> oh, just told her how terrible we felt. you know, what -- what doug had done. and
1:53 am
that, you know, venus was my friend. she was my co-worker. and she was family. and basically i just wanted to be a family again. missing out on those last eight years of these girls growing up, i missed that. i missed eight years. >> reporter: so when detective petersen knocked on her door that day, jaime asked him for help in reconnecting with venus'mom, he set up a meeting at his office. >> does this begin with words or kind of wary glances at one another? >> oh, no. i was -- >> she hugged -- >> i was just -- blabberin', blubberin'fool. i mean, i just sat there and just cried profusely. and i was there to tell her i was sorry for what my brother had done. and here she comes across the room and gives me a big hug and tells me she's sorry for what my brother did to our family, which just -- >> where were you coming from, philosophically, at that point? was this about forgiveness or -- >> i -- she didn't do nothing to be forgiven for. you never done anything to be forgiven for. >> reporter: the building of family bridges was too late for
1:54 am
venus'dad larry. cancer had taken him six months earlier. but the two families, at odds for years, were now talking again, doing their best to reconnect and heal. doug, in the meanwhile, was sitting in his cell, still insisting he did nothing wrong. >> you know, he complains about being in there and how terrible it but guess what? we're all -- we're all out here living it. >> reporter: his sister had had enough, and she told him so. >> i wanted her to have venus back. i wanted everyone to stop hurting. and it's -- and that's the approach that it it took going to doug and telling him we're done. we're exhausted. >> once he found out that we were talking and were friends, then the jig was sorta up, because he had lied to her, he had lied to me. >> reporter: with his appeals exhausted, and his family applying pressure to reveal where the remains were, detectives went back to see doug. seven years after the trial now, his stance had changed. >> i didn't sense the anger that was there from our prior meeting. we spoke in hypotheticals about if you work
1:55 am
with us, can you bring us to the location of where she's buried? >> reporter: a few months and a couple of visits later, doug, a lifelong gamer, was ready to play. he made demands for his cooperation. >> when we spoke to him though, he had -- he had a specific list that he gave to us in terms of what he would like for a consideration. >> so "i will take you guys to the body, but i want this stuff on my list"? >> hypothetically, i could take you to the body, but i would like to have these items for me. >> reporter: on his list, doug wanted to teach in prison, join the canine program, and be permitted to attend his parents'funerals when their time came. and, one more request for his unit, a gaming console. and not just any. he wanted, no substitutes, an xbox. >> are you kidding? that's where this whole thing started. the xbox game? >> yes.
1:56 am
>> he wanted one for inside? >> specifically mentioned xbox because they were being used throughout the country in some of the other prisons. >> how much of that stuff was doable? where do you consider doing it? >> at first we both thought there wasn't a good chance we'd get all i believe in that first meeting we said, hey, if we can't get 1 100% of this, does that mean the deal is off, and he said no. and that was an eye opener he was serious about getting some things to make i guess his circumstances better. >> the michigan department of corrections said yes to most of his requests. an xbox in the unit was already in the works anyway. detectives went to see doug again. they'd delivered, would he? >> i told him specifically, "this is the time right now. if you wanna do this, we're going to do if you don't want to do
1:57 am
it, we're we're done." >> reporter: detectives say he took a long pause and then -- >> he started out, i believe, by saying, "you know i didn't kill her at home." and that's kinda where the narration started, where he described getting to the house and calling her from the house that morning. that when she came out is where he attacked her and began to put her in, like, a chokehold. >> reporter: doug says she passed out, and he put her in the bed of his truck. he then drove to a wooded clearing he remembered from his teenage years. there, he said, venus revived and they argued before he stabbed her. detectives weren't sure they believed the details of his story, but were struck by the fact doug showed no signs of remorse as he laid out the grisly details. >> i didn't see a whole lot of feeling there. there's a little bit of emotion right at that -- that moment where he describes where he takes her life. >> reporter: next doug needed to reveal the site where he buried the body eight years before. he quickly zoomed in on and pointed to a spot on a google map. >> it's a dirt road on -- in
1:58 am
the southern portion of kalamazoo county. right at the entrance off of this dirt road to a soy bean field. very wooded. >> you got him here in shackles and you're walking through the site? >> yes. >> yeah. >> how certain was he that this was where he had disposed of the body? >> positive. >> he knew it. this -- >> positive. no doubt in his mind. >> reporter: this police video, shot in october 2018, shows doug, in shackles, leading the detectives through the thick brush. >> this was the biggest open area. >> reporter: without hesitation, he pointed to the place where they should dig to find his wife's remains. >> i walked right into here and everything -- there were so many stumps, trees and debris, like he's standing, there's so much debris. like, this was the open spot. >> and then you started to dig. >> yes. >> what's he doing the whole time that you're digging? it takes you an hour or so to -- >> we talked to him up here in the clearing there and had him away from it. i think you could tell he really didn't want to be near it where it was
1:59 am
actually taking but he knew that we had to keep him here just to confirm that we were in the right spot until that >> reporter: and it was the right after about an hour and a half of digging and sifting, the years-long search was over. the remains were positively i.d.ed and detectives reached out to venus'mom and doug's sister whose rediscovered friendship had led to this moment. >> you want to know. you want to know where she is. you want to know what he did, but at the same time you do not want to know. >> no. >> you don't. >> i don't want to know the particulars. >> no. >> i never do. i'll never want to know that. >> reporter: the family had a burial service for venus in december 2018. the bond between the two families, once sundered, has been growing stronger everyday. >> how do you describe your relationship? >> i'd say she's like my daughter. >> yeah. >> jaime, you agree? >> yeah, i'd agree. yeah. >> yep. we can be a family. and we enjoy each other's company. we go -- we -- she loves the
2:00 am
girls so much now. >> the kids have a joint family that's the important thing, right? >> yes. yes, yes. >> reporter: several cold winters later, the mystery of the missing venus stewart has finally been put to rest. but memories of a loving mother, a daughter and a friend will be kept alive by those who hold the story of venus close to their hearts. >> she was my best friend. i never went a day without talking to her. the girls miss -- they missed out on a really good >> is she alive in their memory? >> oh, yeah. i talk about her all the time. >> we all do. >> reporter: as for doug stewart, the gamer, his decision to finally confess and give it up, changes nothing in his sentence. he, and his new xbox, will be in prison for the remainder of his life. ife.

328 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on