Skip to main content

tv   Dateline NBC  NBC  January 30, 2016 8:00pm-10:00pm EST

8:00 pm
>> i thought, "they better get to him before i do." >> reporter: but there were rumors of trouble on this side of the fence. a husband's lust -- >> did he tell you, "she sent me some topless pictures?" >> yes. >> did you see them? >> yes. >> reporter: then a wife's double life exposed. >> that was her biggest secret. a case that would test three juries and shatter two families. before uncovering one terrifying truth -- >> reporter: this has gotta be just more than your brain can absorb. >> definitely. >> it's heartbreaking. >> just like somebody hit me in the stomach. >> reporter: the cornfields of iowa. are a far piece from memphis. but it was here, in
8:01 pm
named after a princess. lisa marie. yup, that one. >> as a kid, i was pretty big into elvis. i knew that my first daughter was gonna be lisa marie because of elvis, of course. >> reporter: just as todd caldwell hoped, his little lisa lived up to her big name. >> she was just the life of the party. once she started talking, she hadn't shut up. >> reporter: they're divorced now but tracy and todd caldwell watched their girl grow up all but unstoppable. a vivacious, winning teen. bowling, todd, we're not just talking recreational saturday night now and then? >> no, we're talkin' about a state champion bowler. anything she did, she had to be the best at it. >> lisa, look over here. >> reporter: lisa was a teenager when her parents divorced. todd remained an active father to lisa and his three other children. all the while, he was working a stressful and dangerous job as a
8:02 pm
he found comfort in several ways. one was his occasional hobby. he'd take out his sketch pad from time to time. and then he met and fell hard for a nurse named amy. before long, he was starting fatherhood all over again. with twin daughters this time, he was getting lots of help from lisa. she was the twins' default babysitter. she was more like a second mom to the twins than a big sister. >> she was just a caregiver to anybody. >> reporter: you had a very close relationship? >> uh-huh, very. i would get into bed with her. we'd watch old episodes of the golden girls. [ laughter ] >> reporter: that's a sweet relationship. >> yeah, and she always says that i was dorothy because i'm such a grouch all the time. [ laughter ] but yeah, that was my favorite time with lisa. i'm so lucky. >> reporter: but step-mom amy
8:03 pm
came to lisa's teenage romantic life. >> i wanted to know who the boyfriends were. i wanted to know who their parents were. [ laughter ] i was the one that they had to pass the test with. >> the boyfriend who passed with flying colors was seth. he came from a long time local family. his grandfather was the mayor. mom was a social worker, the dad owned a local bowling alley. the bowling alley was where seth as a young teen began noticing lisa. his dad was her high school coach and seth bowled almost but not quite as well as lisa. the two worked part-time together at the lanes. they were becoming boyfriend/girlfriend and that was fine with both families. >> you liked this young girl? >> a lot. >> she was a part of our family. >> they were a church going family and seth's mom remembers how the compassion shown on a
8:04 pm
after hurricane katrina. >> he just would talk to the folks for hours and hours. they became very good friends. i have a lot of memories like that of seth. >> helping people. >> yeah. and lisa wanted to help people, too. she followed her father into law enforcement and then as a jailer in a neighboring county. >> i told her that she would have my blessings if she wasn't just an average cop. i wanted her to be a really great cop because i didn't want to have to worry about her inefficiencies maybe endangering her life. >> after years of hearing patrons at the bowling alley joke about when they would get married, they made the inevitable official. >> how did you find out they were getting hitched? >> seth came to our house and met with us and asked us our permission to marry lisa.
8:05 pm
>> after dating for seven years, seth and lisa got married in october 2011. she was 22, he was 21. >> i just told him that, no matter what he did, to take care of her and protect her. >> and he said? >> he said he would. >> lisa's sister, another namesake, got much more than a brother-in-law with seth. >> he was my best friend and he was that other person that i could always go to. >> he called me dad. we told each other we loved each other. we hugged every time we left each other. i felt as close to him as i did my son. >> for lisa, it wasn't just gaining a husband, it was having all his buddies come along, too. a package deal. >> how did she put up with you guys? >> she was interested in the same things that all of us were. she liked to go fishing. she liked to go hunting. she liked to shoot guns. >> was she okay? >> sounds like you would have been happy if she were your girlfriend? >> seth was lucky.
8:06 pm
but seth knew it was time to settle down and get a real job. like lisa, he was drawn to service. he drew a paycheck as a security guard. his father-in-law todd was helping him get a higher rung in the ladder. the soon to start job as a jailer for the sheriffs. >> they were very close. seth. that's why i think he went into law enforcement. >> now more changes for seth. he was going to be a father. they picked a name for the unborn girl, zoe maria. in may 2012, they were halfway through the pregnancy. >> seth and lisa, a baby on the way were starting out their married life in this humble little trailer. it was a gift from his dad purchased on a beautiful piece of property. a starter home to save money for the future. the only apparent cloud in the picture was an escalating feud
8:07 pm
neighbor. there was bad blood. it happened at 5:00 in the morning. a sudden horrifying sound that shattered two young lives. >> 911. >> saturday, may 26, 2012, memorial day weekend. >> not breathing. >> does she have any medical problems? >> she's been shot. >> a shotgun blast that ended all the plans of mr. and mrs. seth techel. deputies race to the scene where anywhere. >> someone could have shot you. that was possible the whole time. nothing's left behind.
8:08 pm
are you clean enough to go commando? (laughs) are you serious? totally. how do you feel? oh my goodness, it's amazing. only cottonelle has cleanripple texture so you're clean enough to go commando. indulgence... no longer comes at a price. well, actually it does... but it's just $9.99 new hot shot whisky chicken applebee's grill & bar favorites made a little better for you. featuring new dishes loaded with flavor, and all under 650 calories. oh my gosh, stephanie we're, like, so goth. sfx: knocks on door. honey? i'm dying my hair, mom. hair dye? honey... it's just purple. teenage daughter? get scrubbing bubbles. kill 99.9% of germs and destroy grime. with scrubbing bubbles for 100% problem solved. why have your glasses fit manually, when there's the lenscrafters accufit system. replacing basic handheld measuring tools with a digital system that's five times more precise. brandon thinks hellmann's is heaven in a jar.
8:09 pm
farmers committed to responsibly sourced oils... blended with ingredients like cage-free eggs. mmm. heaven. real ingredients. that's how we're working to bring out the best. guys the sign's working! get unlimited data so you can watch, stream, and download where and when you want.
8:10 pm
>> reporter: it was the end of a long overnight shift for sheriff's deputy marty wonderlin, the only deputy on duty in wapello county, iowa. all was quiet and with the first hint of daybreak that saturday morning, marty relaxed and turned up the music in his cruiser. >> reporter: it's the ragged end of the shift for you, huh? >> yeah, i'm taking my last little loop around the county and going to watch the sun come up and go home and go to bed. >> reporter: that plan came to an abrupt end around 5:30 a.m., when seth techel made a
8:11 pm
house. >> she's been shot. i'm going to [ bleep ] kill who -- i was getting ready for work and i heard a gunshot and i came running out and she was shot in the side. >> reporter: dispatch relayed the message to marty wonderlin. the young deputy had never gotten a call like this. >> i have a report of a lady not breathing. i have now been advised this lady's just been shot. >> reporter: is your heart pounding a little? >> oh, yeah. that's an understatement. >> reporter: with his car and his mind both doing 90, marty raced to the house in under ten minutes. he slowed along the rise of the gravel country road and stopped at the end of the driveway. he had no idea what he'd be facing. his dashboard camera captured the scene as he approached the house. >> reporter: here's how you get in the trailer. what do you see, right about here?
8:12 pm
on the porch. he was wearing cargo shorts and a belt, and he just bent over, you know? >> reporter: what's he doing? >> sounds like he's crying, just sobbing. >> reporter: the toughest call of marty's career was suddenly so much more complicated. he knew the grieving husband on the porch, considered him a friend, knew his wife lisa too. and her father, todd, was a respected, fellow deputy. the unfolding tragedy had just become very personal. >> reporter: deputy, how do you set your brain in compartments, where you got to be very professional? this is the first time you've had a major crime, and yet it's also people you know? >> it's tough. >> reporter: were you scared? it's okay if you were. >> yeah, definitely was scared. you know, concerned about a lot of different things. >> reporter: you didn't know if somebody could have winged a shot at you? >> yeah, i mean, that was possible the whole time. >> reporter: as the only cop at a dangerous, chaotic scene, the possibility of a live shooter still on the grounds, marty's adrenaline was pumping. when he entered the trailer, a
8:13 pm
she was lying in her bed. it didn't look good. marty's only thought was to help her, but he had to secure his rifle, so he ran back to his cruiser to lock it up. >> i got on my radio and i think i told dispatch, "get 58 out here." >> call 58 and have him get out here. >> reporter: badge 58 meant deputy todd caldwell, lisa's father. >> in hindsight, i wish i wouldn't have done that. i wish i would -- >> reporter: why do you say that? >> well, because i saw a lot of things that morning and now because of me, because of asking him to, you know, come out there, he's going to have to live with some of those same images that i do now. >> reporter: todd caldwell was asleep, but his cell phone was plugged in next to the bed, always ready for a middle-of-the-night emergency call. >> we get a call from, you know, a dispatcher i've known for 20 years and i can tell that his voice is different. and from what i remember, he just said, you know, "you need to get out to lisa's house. she's been shot and isn't breathing." >> reporter: todd's wife amy
8:14 pm
her step-daughter, her best friend, needed her. >> i kinda left him behind. i didn't put shoes on, didn't have socks on. i went in my pajamas and drove 90 miles per hour, you know? i'm an e.r. nurse. i'm thinking -- >> reporter: you're sort of in nurse mode there too? >> yeah, i'm thinking, "well, you know, maybe if i get there fast enough -- >> minutes matter. >> there will be something i could do. todd raced behind in a separate vehicle. >> i just repeated over and over, you know, "oh my god. oh my god, oh, my god." i just remember that's all i could think and say is, "oh, my god. oh, my god, oh, my god." >> reporter: at the scene, deputy wonderlin ran back to the house and did what he could to help the emt. >> started giving lisa cpr, so the paramedic could -- i think he was getting, like, a defibrillator ready. it felt like forever. you know, and i'm asking him, you know, "you want me to do cpr still?" he told me not to. >> reporter: there was nothing more to do. she was gone. along with her unborn daughter.
8:15 pm
23 years old. >> i ran in there and you could tell that she was gone. >> reporter: so you went into the bedroom? you saw her? did you tend to her? >> yeah, i held her hand and i rubbed her belly and i just said, "my -- my lisa, my lisa." >> reporter: todd, did you go into the house? i hope not. >> yeah, i did. i went in there and i seen her laying there and i seen the amount of blood that was on the bed and i knew, from my experience, that that was too much blood to sustain life. when i listen to like the tape recording of it, i hear myself bellowing. i don't know how to describe, but i don't even remember doing that. >> what happened? >> reporter: it was a heartbreaking scene, but deputy marty wonderlin had a job to do.
8:16 pm
homicide. so you're in the barrel here. >> got to start working it. >> reporter: there was an immediate lead from, of all people, todd caldwell. the veteran cop, who had just seen his precious daughter lying dead in a pool of blood, said he knew who the shooter was. and in a voice filled with rage, he told his fellow deputies to take the suspect down. >> that [ bleep ]. go get him. go get him, now. >> who was todd caldwell talking about? turned out there was someone in seth and lisa's life that had everyone worried. >> things were escalating.
8:17 pm
fearful. you mind helping us out with a little taste test? which one of these do you think is v8? the red one. red. definitely the red one. guess what, they're all v8! really? (laughs), yea. y'all came out with some new flavors. do you want to cheers? here's to v8! bringing veggie power to the people. v8 veggie blends. veggies for all! aaaaaaaand we're back at cricket wireless! switch and get a brand new lg risio for $19.99, or take a spin with the samsung galaxy grand prime for $29.99! cricket wireless.
8:18 pm
>> reporter: lisa techel was dead, murdered in her own bed. her distraught husband seth was outside, shirtless and barefoot. when lisa's little sister >> your best friend. >> yup. >> reporter: seth was inconsolable, and acting out. first got there and i tried
8:19 pm
he pushed me away. he punched his truck, and i said, "don't do that, seth, you know, let me see your hand." >> reporter: todd offered to take seth back to his house, but doug techel knew this was a moment his son should be with him. >> it was just bad. i mean, it -- he was sobbing. and we just hugged and cried. >> reporter: marty wonderlin, working his first homicide, was the first deputy to speak to seth. how'd that go? >> you know, i ask him what happened. >> i came running out. and i looked in the bedroom and she's laying there. >> reporter: through the overwrought husband's sobbing, a story started to emerge. was in the shower gettin' ready to go to work, and he hears a gun go off. >> i ripped open the -- shower curtain and i grabbed my towel
8:20 pm
i didn't see anybody down the hallway. i'm gonna kill whoever the -- did this. >> reporter: there's been some sort of an intruder. >> yeah, that's what he's tellin' me, that someone came in while he was in the shower, shot lisa and ran away before he could catch him. we'll figure it out, brother. >> i can't -- tell todd. >> we'll figure it out. >> reporter: lisa's father todd thought he'd figured it out and already had a suspect. >> that -- go get him. go get him. now. >> reporter: todd's rage was directed at the neighbor on the other side of the fence topped with barbed wire, a 56-year-old disabled army veteran named brian tate. >> i just remember saying, "go get him. go get him now," and i thought, "they better get to him before i do." >> reporter: brian tate had been embroiled in an escalating feud with his neighbors lisa and seth. todd knew all about it, and was certain his daughter was now dead because of it. this is this culmination of bad blood's been goin' on for a
8:21 pm
uh-huh. >> reporter: it started about two months before the murder. seth pulled a dead deer off the road along the property line. brian tate later tossed the hide onto seth's property. seth tossed it back, and the battle was on. tate made several calls to the county, complaining about nasty acts of vandalism. todd caldwell responded to one in april. and tate pointed the finger at his young neighbor. >> i can't remember names. >> seth, seth techel. >> seth techel? >> yup. >> torkel? >> techel. >> techel. >> yeah, his dad owns champion bowl. okay. >> and i'll tell -- i just -- they're good people. they really are. >> reporter: now this guy, brian tate, does he know that you're the father-in- law of the neighbor? >> no, and i don't wanna tell him that because i don't want that to affect maybe what he does or doesn't do. >> reporter: and he thinks that's the source of his trouble? >> right. >> reporter: those people over in the trailer property across the way? >> yeah. >> well, if you can, let us deal with it. >> what if -- what if -- what if
8:22 pm
him? >> reporter: brian tate told todd that dog feces and rocks had been hurled at his home. he then showed todd the evidence. he described the vandalism of his home in stark terms. >> he says that he thinks these are acts of terrorism and, you know, kind of - - a bell goes off like, "terrorism's kind of a weird word to use." and the whole time -- half the time, i guess, he's sitting there. he's -- i notice a shotgun layin' on the ground, you know? and i'm like goin' "that makes me feel a little --" >> reporter: does that make you a little twitchy? >> yeah, yeah. exactly. >> reporter: so twitchy that todd sent a heads-up email warning fellow deputies about tate, that he might be dangerous. >> i'm thinkin', "i don't wanna be the reason a deputy goes out there and gets hurt." okay, if you go out there, be careful. tate might be 1096, which means mentally, you know, challenged. >> reporter: in fact, tate did have a history of mental
8:23 pm
he'd been diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic. seth's mother lorraine, a social worker used to dealing with mental patients, was worried and talked to both seth and lisa about their neighbor. >> she was terrified. this was when things were escalating. they thought that they could, you know, handle whatever. and um -- but they-- they were fearful. i was fearful. >> reporter: on may 15th, just 11 days before lisa was killed, an agitated tate made another call, complaining that the vandalism -- the terrorism -- was getting worse. accompanied by fellow deputy don phillips. >> i'm trying to have a you know it? >> i don't wanna be yelled at either. conversation with you and i walking. >> you're raising your voice at me. i am. >> what i'm wondering -- >> because you're not listening. >> reporter: did you think he >> yeah. yeah. >> reporter: a guy who was capable of flipping out? >> i -- i did. i did. >> reporter: and now, lisa was
8:24 pm
marty wonderlin, the first deputy at the scene, already knew all about brian tate and had zeroed in on him as his candidate for prime suspect. all the direction is heading across the fence to this guy whose name is brian tate. >> it is. >> reporter: and police decided it was time to pay a visit to tate. they armored up and got out their long guns, not knowing what their suspect might do. >> if you're ballsy enough to break into a house, shoot lisa and make it back out, you're ballsy enough to do just about anything.3 f2 >> a continuacion la policia loaded. now preview the cost of your copay before you fill.
8:25 pm
working on my feet all day gave me pain here. in my lower back but now, i step on this machine and get my number which matches my dr. scholl's custom fit orthotic inserts. now i get immediate relief from my foot pain. my lower back pain. find a machine at drscholls.com i've smoked a lot and quit a lot, but ended up nowhere. now i use this. the nicoderm cq patch, with unique extended release technology,
8:26 pm
to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose nicoderm cq. with my moderate to severe ulcerative colitis, the possibility of a flare was almost always on my mind. thinking about what to avoid, where to go... and how to deal with my uc. to me, that was normal. until i talked to my doctor. she told me that humira helps people like me get uc under control and keep it under control when certain medications haven't worked well enough. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection.
8:27 pm
ask your gastroenterologist about humira.
8:28 pm
>> reporter: on the main street of tiny agency, iowa, bad news traveled fast. a pregnant woman was dead and a gunman was on the loose. just as quickly, fear took to roost. >> the 23-year-old reserve sheriff's deputy was shot and killed in her home in the town of agency. she was five months pregnant. >> reporter: lisa's murder was the first in the farmtown in 15 years. deputy don phillips, seen here unspooling crime scene tape, had a personal stake in cracking the case. lisa's dad is one of his best friends. todd and i began the same year at the sheriff's office together. i watched lisa grow up. i just reassured him that we'll figure this out. we'll find out who did this. >> reporter: whatever's happened here is really within your family, the law enforcement family -- the county? >> correct. we're a small sheriffs office. we know everybody.
8:29 pm
>> reporter: and they also knew something about that guy next door, brian tate. ever since the first deputies arrived at sunrise, they'd been peeking across the barbed wire. just how dangerous was this fussing neighbor? were they another shotgun blast away from finding out? at 1:00 that afternoon, eight hours after lisa was shot, deputy phillips and a team of investigators, were ready to confront the neighbor. >> reporter: so the decision is made. "we gotta talk to brian tate." >> yes. he was definitely a person of interest that we need to go talk to. >> reporter: did you put your body armor on? >> yes, i did. >> reporter: marty wonderlin did, too. he was preparing for anything, even a shootout. >> we got strapped up. we're all ready. ready for business. >> reporter: marty was in the backup car, while deputy phillips and a partner drew line-of-fire detail -- approaching brian tate for an interview. >> he's our prime suspect. it's very possible in all of our minds that he just shot and killed lisa.
8:30 pm
team walked slowly up to the tate house, marty and the chief deputy provided cover in the driveway. >> i had my, my rifle out, locked and loaded. had the red dot turned on. if things popped off, we were ready. >> reporter: nerves screaming, everyone was poised for battle, everyone but, it turned out, brian tate. he wasn't armed, or belligerent. they could all exhale. >> as we walked up there, he was accommodating, got some chairs out for us. >> reporter: this is brian tate, huh? >> brian -- brian did. and we sat down in his front yard. >> reporter: in the front yard in lawn chairs, his mother and brother by his side. no shotgun in sight. so the cops turned on a recorder and started asking questions. you asked him, "5:00 a.m., where were you, huh?" >> yes. >> reporter: he said he was in bed in his basement bedroom, sleeping off a higher dose of medication for his schizophrenia. >> i went to bed about 8:30. >> right after i did. >> yeah, after mom did.
8:31 pm
didn't hear nothing. didn't get up till 11:00. >> reporter: he said he was still asleep when the shooting must've happened before dawn. tate's mother corroborated his 15-hour sleep alibi, though the cops knew full well that mothers can often be biased witnesses. >> did you hear anything in the middle of the night last night or see anything? >> i was in bed and normally i would've been up doing guard duty with all this that happened. but, i'm schizophrenic paranoid. >> reporter: guard duty. the ex-military man called himself a sergeant major and walked the picket on his property line, vigilant ever since his property had been littered with dog feces, his barn pelted with rocks. deputy don phillips knew all about the vandalism complaint tate had filed. he and todd caldwell were the deputies who'd responded to tate's house just 11-days earlier. they'd downplayed his complaints then and thought he was a crank off his meds. >> you said earlier, brian, that you, you'd sit outside here. >> at night? >> at night, yeah. when's the last time you did
8:32 pm
>> oh, it's been a good week or so. >> week or so? >> they don't want me to do guard duty anymore. they want me to get sleep, take more medications. >> you were such a calm quiet guy until this vandalism started, and then you're just like a different person. >> i was mr. nice guy for a long time. it done me no good. people took advantage of me, so i'm kinda taking a different approach to life right now. >> i mean when -- >> being more serious and more not such a nice guy. >> reporter: after venting about the vandalism, the 40-minute interview was over. but investigators weren't done. they'd be back to question tate again. so what'd you think you had when you got back in your vehicle? >> we still had a whodunit in our mind. >> reporter: but lisa's step-mom and sister had no doubts whatsoever. >> i thought it was brian tate. >> reporter: but investigators knew they still had to talk to the husband. when agents scheduled an official interview with seth for that same day, it didn't sit
8:33 pm
>> is this how you -- how you always treat grieving husbands? and i started crying. i'm there thinking, "they're being so mean to him." >> we kinda got into an argument 'cause i'm like, "they have to do that." >> reporter: would-be cop seth techel agreed completely. he knew the spouse had to be ruled out. he said he was eager to get crossed off the suspect list as soon as possible. so he went downtown and instructed his parents no lawyers. >> i remember sayin', "do we need to go get a lawyer?" >> he was adamant. he said, "no." >> he said, "i didn't do anything." >> "i have nothing to hide." >> "i don't need a lawyer." >> reporter: was that a mistake? seth had told his story to one familiar face after another at the scene. but now, he'd be talking to an
8:34 pm
the tone of the investigation was about to change. deputies learn that seth may be hiding something. >> told them that seth had a tracfone. >> a secret phone. >> yeah. the peach! mmmm, yoplait. to turn knorr rice sides into something new, just saut\ some chicken. stir in knorr rice sides with fresh tomato and basil and you've got knorr creamy bruschetta chicken. knorr rice sides. as a main dish. if you're trying to be a little better... things just got a whole lot better. introducing entrees loaded with flavor, not calories. applebee's grill & bar favorites made a little better for you.
8:35 pm
all under 650 calories and starting at just $9.99. (donkey sound) (elephant sound) there's a big difference between making noise, (tapping sound) and making sense. (elephant sound) (donkey sound) when it comes to social security, we need more than lip service. our next president needs a real plan to keep social security strong. (elephant noise) hey candidates. enough talk. give us a plan. there are many sides to basketball star an fashion icon russell westbrook. and with coverage in the middle of anywhere from u.s. cellular, he can find some new ones. like, farmer. russell's brussels. russell speaking. paleontologist. hashtag t-rex. park ranger.
8:36 pm
and t.v. spokesperson. that's my line. i got it. with u.s. cellular, you can do all the things you like, from the middle of anywhere.
8:37 pm
returned home destroyed. and the longest day of their lives wasn't even half over. >> my remaining kids, i know
8:38 pm
investigation, the dci providing forensic resources and expertise, the deputies offering local knowledge and manpower. dci's tony birmingham was lead agent. he hand-picked fellow agent chris thomas to interview seth. >> there was no doubt in my mind that chris was the person that needed to do that interview. >> we only get one shot at it. and we have to be prepared that this could just be information collecting or we have to be prepared that this could be our suspect. >> reporter: so, only eight hours after his pregnant wife was murdered, seth's formal interview with dci agent thomas got under way. >> you can just call me chris, i guess. you're free to, uh, go out of here at anytime. >> reporter: in the interview room, agent thomas was in the white shirt, back to the camera. to put seth more at ease, a deputy familiar to him sat in. >> you have a job? >> reporter: it started routinely. >> currently, i work out at uh
8:39 pm
actually next month i'm coming to work here in the jail. >> reporter: seth had already given his account twice to deputies at the scene, but this would be his first time on videotape. his story begins somewhere around 5:00 a.m. >> exactly. >> i turned the shower on. i wasn't in there for more than five minutes and i heard this loud noise. >> reporter: he said he thought it might be a gunshot so he jumped out of the shower to check on lisa. he heard her moaning then made out another sound, coming from possibly the back deck. he said he grabbed his handgun from the nightstand by the bed. >> i run down the hallway and i will be honest, i had every intention of shooting whoever it was. i don't see anybody. i don't hear nothing. i run back inside. i run into the bedroom. and i said, "lisa, lisa, are you okay?" and she's not breathing. >> reporter: during the interview, seth sometimes seemed overcome by emotion. >> i couldn't do it, i couldn't protect her when i'm 10 feet
8:40 pm
why can't they still be alive? why? why? why couldn't i have done something to protect the woman that i loved? >> reporter: the agent asked seth what he thought had happened. >> let's go with your theory here that it was an -- intruder, right? i mean, is that fair to call -- >> that's the only thing i can think of. >> what do you think this person's intent was? >> i don't know. you'd have to be a complete -- to walk into somebody's house and shoot them. >> reporter: seth then bolstered the cops' leading theory of the crime so far -- that the neighbor, brian tate, had shot lisa. >> who was the first person that came to your mind? >> tate. my crazy neighbor who thinks that we're terrorists. >> reporter: seth went into detail about that juvenile tit-for-tat dispute with tate that started over a deer hide. he suspected tate tossed it over the fence so he said he responded in kind. >> i did the immature thing,
8:41 pm
on his property. >> reporter: the dispute escalated for several weeks and intensified with the incident in which tate claimed dog feces and rocks were thrown onto his property. that brought seth's father-in-law, deputy todd caldwell, out to tate's house for that official visit over tate's vandalism complaint. >> todd said that tate, the whole time, was sitting on his front porch and he was rubbing a loaded shotgun. >> reporter: seth said he knew todd had filled him in later. his father-in-law also gave him a strong warning. >> "hey, if you're doing anything to his yard, knock it off. if your buddies are doing anything to his yard, knock it off. do not mess with this guy. he's off his rocker. he's going to be the next person -- >> sure. >> to shoot a cop." >> and i said, "i'm not messing with him. i'll make sure nobody else is." >> reporter: the murder weapon hadn't been found so the state agent asked seth about the firearms he kept in the trailer. maybe one of those had been used.
8:42 pm
are missing at your house? >> i haven't looked. >> if one of those guns is used in the homicide, we wanna know where it's at. >> don't you agree? >> oh, yeah. >> so i just ask him to write down the guns that are in his house. and he writes 'em all down. >> reporter: inevitably, the agent turned to the sharp-edged, intrusive questions that all husbands with a murdered wife have to answer. wannabe cop that he was, seth knew very well what was coming. >> we're going to ask you some tough things, okay. >> that's fine. >> okay. >> i know i'm, obviously, probably number one right now. >> let's talk about, um, people that are in your lives, and lisa's lives, um, was there any extramarital affairs? >> no. >> reporter: seth didn't hesitate. there were no other women. but out at the trailer, quite unexpectedly, someone was about to put the lie to that rosy marital picture. a good friend of seth's named colton had walked up to the
8:43 pm
he told the deputies and agents there that he was looking to pick up his puppy that seth had been boarding for him. the investigators began peppering the young friend for info about seth and lisa. a detail that tumbled out surprised them. what was the story you told 'em, colton? >> i told 'em that seth had a tracphone. >> reporter: so kind of a secret phone, huh? >> yeah. and he had been talkin' to a girl. >> reporter: the investigators had no idea where this would lead, but the unexpected revelation that there might be a girlfriend in the mix meant that they had to get on the horn with agent thomas downtown and pronto. seth was still in the interview chair, but he could walk at any moment. more about seth's secret phone. seems it wasn't just for talking. >> detell you she sent me some >> did you see them? >> yeah.>> yeah. >> did you see them?
8:44 pm
along with diet and ercise, helps lower blood sugar. januvia works when your blood sugar is high and works less when your blood sugar is low, because it works by enhancing your body's own ability to lower blood sugar. plus januvia, by itself, is not likely to cause weight gain or low blood sugar (hypoglycemia). januvia should not be used in patients with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. tell your doctor if you have a history of pancreatitis. serious side effects can happen, including pancreatitis which may be severe and lead to death. stop taking januvia and call your doctor right away if you have severe pain in your stomach area which may be pancreatitis. tell your doctor right away and stop taking januvia if you have an allergic reaction that causes swelling of the face, lips, tongue, or throat, or affects your breathing or causes rash or hives. kidney problems sometimes requiring dialysis have been reported. some people may develop severe joint pain. call your doctor if this happens. using januvia with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. to reduce the risk, your doctor may
8:45 pm
your doctor may do blood tests before and during treatment to check your kidneys. if you have kidney problems a lower dose may be prescribed. side effects may include upper respiratory tract infection, stuffy or runny nose, sore throat, and headache. for help lowering your blood sugar talk to your doctor about januvia. [ male announcer ] even ragu users a. chose prego traditional over ragu traditional. prego?! but i buy ragu. [ thinking ] i wonder what other questionable choices i've made. [ pop muzak plays ] [ sigh of relief ] [ male announcer ] choose taste. choose prego. sfx: ziploc bag opening sfx: ambient office sounds, a phone rings, laughter life makes you deal with things far outside your job description. life needs ziploc sfx: containers stacking sc johnson jane didn't like restrictions. not in life. and not when it came to watching her calories.
8:46 pm
that's why jane loves light & fit greek nonfat yogurt. bursting with rich creamy awesomeness and 12 grams of protein. all for 80 calories. no settling here. what else does jane love? that you could win a fitbit flex from light & fit. learn more on specially marked packs. light & fit.
8:47 pm
>> reporter: seth techel had gone downtown voluntarily, but now his interview had dragged on his father grew concerned, so he called in a lawyer, who said he >> and we had called the sheriff's office and said, "we have a lawyer waiting to go see seth." >> reporter: but inside the sheriff's interview room seth kept talking away. he was oblivious to the fact that the interrogator confronting him was getting real time bulletins from the crime scene. >> i got a text. >> reporter: the text was from a fellow agent at the scene who had spoken to seth's best friend, the guy with the puppy. >> reporter: and this person had told him a story about a girl named rachel. but agent thomas held his fire at this point, in part because his information was still limited. seth, however, likely could see
8:48 pm
the husband -- father-to-be, who had answered an emphatic "no" to the question about an affair, then made an admission, perhaps a preemptive strike. >> there was a female from work that i was texting. >> reporter: he said her name was rachel mcfarland, but seth immediately downplayed her importance. he said even lisa knew about her. >> but i wasn't seeing her, it wasn't anything. it was just, "hey, how was your day type of thing." >> would it be considered sexting? >> no, no. none of that. >> what are you wearing? >> no, there wasn't any of that. lisa found out. everything was kosher. i stopped talking, you know, we got over it. >> we have to be honest about her, okay? is there anything that you haven't told us yet? >> no, everything is going to add up the way i just told you. >> rachel's dna won't be maybe on your clothes or? >> i never had sexual -- sex with her. no, nothing oral, nothing like that.
8:49 pm
kissed her. >> reporter: by now, seth's father and attorney had arrived and were trying desperately to end the interview. but it was after-hours, and the outside door was locked. >> bang, bang, bang on the door, doug. is that you? >> that's me. that's me. >> they wouldn't stop. >> they -- >> they didn't come out. >> didn't stop. >> reporter: they didn't have to. remember, seth was advised by agent thomas that he was free to leave any time. everything was legal. lead agent birmingham, watching seth on a monitor, simply ignored the commotion outside. >> i did get information that they were wanting to get in. and wanting to come in and tell seth to stop. >> reporter: which would shut you guys right down. >> seth is an adult. and he has the sole obligation to invoke his right to remain silent or his right to an attorney. and no one stopped him from doin' that. >> reporter: so thomas kept asking questions, and seth kept answering them. >> have you ever lied to lisa about rachel? >> no.
8:50 pm
was that. >> reporter: meanwhile, both dci agents birmingham and thomas had now learned more complete details from the scene from seth's best friend, the guy with the puppy. the friend, colton, had explained that seth was using his special tracphone as a steamy hotline. >> i know they were exchanging photos. >> reporter: did he tell you, "she sent me some topless pictures?" >> yes. >> reporter: did you see them? >> yes. >> reporter: armed with this information, agent thomas decided to show his cards and see what happened. >> we've talked to colton. did colton, uh, know about you texting rachel? >> mm-hmm. >> did you tell him about it? >> yeah. >> this is an ongoing investigation, and it's up to you to be honest. >> there's obviously more to this rachel thing. she was under the impression that lisa was going to be packing her stuff up and leaving. >> when? >> last night, today. >> reporter: he said he'd talked to rachel about him divorcing lisa as recently as the night before, at work. >> she just asked if i was going to go through with it and i said, "yeah." i mean, i shouldn't have lied,
8:51 pm
>> reporter: he admitted he liked rachel's attention but said he really was just stringing her along. >> we were having a baby. i wasn't going to leave her. i couldn't leave. >> reporter: lying to rachel was wrong, he said. but he claimed that lying earlier in the interview was a way to spare his grieving father-in-law, todd caldwell, the embarrassment. >> this is something i didn't want todd to find out. >> reporter: the interview had been going on close to four hours now, and agent birmingham was well aware that seth's father and a lawyer wanted to shut it down. agent thomas then took a break, leaving seth inside the room to stew. he met with birmingham, and they decided he had to go nuclear. >> reporter: be confrontational, because the clock is ticking. >> and if we're ever gonna be tough, now is the time. >> now is the time. >> here's the deal, okay? the facts right now, these case facts, show us you're responsible for killing your wife.
8:52 pm
i can't kill my wife. i can't do it. what facts do you have that i killed her? >> listen, i've seen rachel, okay? i know what guys see when they see her because i see the same thing. okay? >> i'm telling you, if i wanted to be with rachel i would get a divorce. i would not kill my wife over something that small. you know what? right now i guess i don't give a -- what happens to me, okay? i know what happened, i know what you're trying to do. >> what am i trying to do? >> you're trying to get me upset and it's working. congratulations. >> reporter: upset at this hostile line of questioning, seth said he'd had enough. got up and, strangely, shook thomas's hand. >> appreciate it. >> reporter: and then he walked out. in the end, what did the investigators have? that seth lied about sex, but was it even that? all he admitted to was making
8:53 pm
and on the big question, he insisted, over and over again, that he did not kill lisa. even agent thomas expressed disappointment with the outcome of the marathon interview, nearly five hours long. you felt you'd come out of a 15-round fight? >> it was exhausting. felt somewhat like a failure, in some regards. >> reporter: why? >> we didn't get the full confession. >> reporter: maybe that's because seth didn't do it. agent thomas just didn't know. but the women in the caldwell family, without knowing any of seth's admissions about rachel, believed with 100% certainty that seth did not kill lisa. especially lisa's sister and seth's great friend, presley. >> i was never thinking that seth did it. >> reporter: only todd caldwell was no longer a true believer. seth needed to lawyer up. his own investigative instincts also kicked in, though he'd asked his fellow deputies not to
8:54 pm
were ready to make an arrest. and late on day one of the investigation, they weren't even close. >> i would say, at 10:00 on saturday night, may 26th, that neither seth nor brian tate were completely eliminated as suspects. >> reporter: at that time, investigators were meeting at the sheriff's department command center to take stock. they knew they had a husband with a possible girlfriend and a maybe crazy neighbor with a vendetta. but they also learned by that night there was a missing shotgun. what did it all mean? one piece of the puzzle falls into place. >> that was a huge thing in the case. >> it was. >> and another round of heart break for lisa's family. >> this has got to be more than
8:55 pm
>> definitely.ys when used at the first sign. learn how abreva starts to work immediately at abreva.com don't tough it out, knock it out, fast. with abreva. it's easy to love your laxative when that lax loves your body back. only miralax hydrates, eases and softens to unblock naturally, so you have peace of mind from start to finish. love your laxative. miralax. you wanna see something intense? new pantene expert gives you the most beautiful hair ever, with our strongest pro-v formula ever. strong is beautiful. now you can create your own tour of italy at olive garden, starting at $12.99. choose 3 of 10 favorites to enjoy on one plate. plus unlimited salad and breadsticks. the best tour of italy is the one you create.
8:56 pm
>> reporter: it was sunday, the been shot to death. but it wasn't a day of rest for the techels and caldwells. they had to discuss arrangements. seth was there, but under instructions from his lawyer not to speak about the case. he shared an emotional moment with lisa's sisters and her mother, tracy. grabbed the girls and hugged the did it." we all hugged seth, you know, told him we loved him. >> reporter: when investigators finished their forensic work
8:57 pm
and his parents went out there to retrieve some of lisa's things. >> it was very tough. i was just amazed, the way it looked. >> reporter: crime scene techs have been all over it, hadn't they? >> all over it. i guess i went into dad mode and tried to protect seth a little bit. and i -- i wanted to cover up the bed. >> reporter: what was your thinkin' there? >> i just didn't want him to see the blood. >> reporter: how was your boy dealin' with all this, in these hours after? >> i think he was just shocked. >> reporter: that sunday wasn't a day of rest for the men and women trying to solve the crime either. investigators were focusing on the murder weapon, and were working a lead on a 12-gauge mossberg shotgun. it belonged to seth's friend, lucas howell, who'd been rooming with seth and lisa and had just moved out. we showed lucas this photograph taken of seth at his home. if you look in the upper right-hand corner, lucas, it's the gun rack. is your mossberg in that rack? >> yes, it's the middle one. >> reporter: lucas talked to deputies about the gun on the day of the murder.
8:58 pm
it with me and it should be there. >> reporter: but his 12-gauge wasn't there when crime scene techs scoured the trailer. and cops knew another place it wasn't -- on the list of guns kept at the house that seth had written out for the dci agent. investigators felt certain the mossberg was used to kill lisa, but a big question remained. >> where is it? that's what we wanna know. where is the gun? >> reporter: that same sunday morning, a team began searching the big, beautiful piece of property where seth and lisa were starting married life and preparing to raise a family. deputy marty wonderlin, working his first-ever homicide case, was back at the scene. not too long into this sunday morning search, over here by this big old tree, what do you hear? >> i hear, "we've got it. you know, shotgun here." they were goin' nuts. >> reporter: there was the mossberg in the tall grass, about 20 yards from the back door of the trailer. boy, that was a huge development in that case.
8:59 pm
mood doubled or tripled when they found that gun. >> reporter: ballistics would later match the mossberg with the slug that killed the pregnant lisa. investigators could fill in one big box on their checklist -- murder weapon. next, they worked on possible motives -- was it a neighbor with a vendetta or a husband lusting after another woman? state agent birmingham and deputy phillips decided to have a talk with seth's work friend, rachel. >> we interviewed her on tuesday, may 29th. >> there's no tricks here, someone has lost their life. actually two people have lost their life. >> reporter: over the course of two hours, birmingham and phillips peeled back the layers of rachel's relationship with seth. >> they were having, you know, kind of an ongoing relationship. there are sexually explicit text messages. there are pictures, sexually explicit pictures, sent back and forth. >> he kissed me, but it never led into anything else. he just used to tell me i love you. that's about it. >> reporter: it sounds like they were making out rather than
9:00 pm
>> yeah, yes. that's correct. >> he always used to tell me how pretty i was and how he'd like to be with me. but i always made it clear that he is married and has a wife, and he's having a baby, and i don't wreck families. >> reporter: rachel told the investigators the seth she knew couldn't be a murderer. >> would it surprise you if he did this? >> honestly? yes, it would. >> reporter: but seth was a suspect, and if he did fire that shotgun blast, that would place rachel at the heart of a murderous love triangle. >> i think that's why i feel so guilty, because i don't want it to be because of me. >> reporter: the next day, deputies phillips and wonderlin were back at the neighbor brian tate's house. >> deputy wonderlin and myself deputy phillips are pulling up here at the tate residence to re-interview mr. tate. >> reporter: this time, they asked him point blank about the murder of his neighbor. >> we're just trying to figure this all out, you know. did you have anything to do with
9:01 pm
>> no, i didn't. >> reporter: tate stuck to his alibi: home and asleep, after taking his medication. lead agent birmingham thought he was telling the truth and crossed brian tate off his suspect list. so you only had one suspect at this point. >> yeah, one suspect and only one suspect. >> reporter: that evening, lisa's loved ones gathered at a funeral home for the visitation. the turnout was impressive and included many of todd's friends in the sheriff's department. your fellow officers are there as they would be, you know, they-- you know, want to show respect. >> right. >> reporter: the mood inside was somber and uneasy. the caldwells gathered near lisa's coffin. the techels stayed in the back of the room. seth was there. his sister-in-law presley will never forget what happened next. >> he actually came up to me, kind of in the middle of it, he gave me a big ol' hug, and he said, "you will always be my little sister and i love you." and i was like, "i love you back."
9:02 pm
visitor was gone, only the two families remained, still at opposite ends of the room. >> then i saw the two dci agents come in and sit down behind me, a couple rows behind seth and i. i said, "is this a personal visit or professional --" >> reporter: is this condolences or somethin' else, huh? >> yeah, and he said, "it's professional." >> reporter: marty wonderlin was there. >> we asked seth to, you know, come outside. and we did it quietly, i thought. >> reporter: and when they were outside, deputy wonderlin carried out his orders, he arrested his friend seth techel. a fellow deputy put the cuffs on him. they were lisa's cuffs, the ones she'd used as a reserve deputy. so this has gotta be just more than your brain can absorb. >> definitely, yeah. >> reporter: little sister, "i'll always love you," and now, he's going downtown, he's about to be charged. >> yep. i couldn't understand it. we wouldn't ever dream or ever understand that it could be him. >> reporter: seth's dream was to
9:03 pm
deputy. but now the wannabe cop was cuffed, riding in the back seat, and about to be charged with the murder of his wife. seth techel goes on trial. but before it even starts, the prosecution suffers a major blow. >> bad for us, great for them. >> then a clue changes everything. >> i believe it to be the most
9:04 pm
the whole case. >> reporter: for lisa techel's family, it had been a heartbreaking, relentless week. thursday didn't promise to be any better. lisa's funeral was held at the first lutheran church in ottumwa. seven months earlier, todd caldwell was at the very same church, walking his daughter down the aisle on her wedding day. now, he'd return to lay her to rest. lisa was buried in her jailer's uniform. a special detail of officers served as pallbearers. law enforcement had come out to honor one of its own. >> lisa woulda thought, you know, "this is all for me? i was so proud. >> i should've been able to be there and -- and watch her become a mom. she was just a joy. >> reporter: mothers shouldn't
9:05 pm
>> never. never. >> reporter: after the funeral, the caldwell and techel families turned their attention to the upcoming murder trial of seth techel. lawyers started to plot strategy, with the neighbor, brian tate, expected to be right in the thick of it. tate's sister cheri says he never could shake the feeling that the authorities would come after him. >> he still feels like they're saying he's a murderer. brian had even seen in the paper that they were callin' him a crazy and deranged neighbor. it just devastated him. >> reporter: that summer, brian tate tumbled into a downward spiral and never recovered. he died in september 2012, just four months after lisa's murder. the coroner would think it was heart. >> yes. >> reporter: what's the family think it was? >> we think it was heart. a broken heart. >> reporter: and now prosecutors andy prosser and scott brown -- from the state's attorney general's office -- worried that a jury might think the deranged, deceased, neighbor did it.
9:06 pm
as a witness. >> on the theory that the devil you know is always better than the devil you don't, we wanted the jury to see mr. tate. >> reporter: but now with a trial date approaching, prosecutors had lost a key witness. >> bad for us. good for them. it's great for them. >> reporter: the long-awaited murder trial of seth techel was in hometown ottumwa. >> ready for the jury, gentlemen? >> reporter: february 2013, can you see yourself going into the courthouse? >> yeah, i remember. >> reporter: what do you say to one another? >> we gotta stay strong. >> reporter: the caldwells never wanted to believe seth killed lisa. but, heading into trial, they were all now convinced that he did, even presley, once his staunchest supporter. >> there's really no other explanation for what has happened. >> when you left the techel residence, who was there? >> reporter: two prominent families, the caldwells and techels, once close in- laws, were now fiercely divided, camped on opposite sides of the
9:07 pm
seth had pleaded not guilty. >> i was like, "just look at me, like, i wanna see kind of in your eyes, how you're doing," but he doesn't look at you. >> she was like my best friend. >> reporter: prosecutors called to the stand their emotional trump card. todd caldwell remembered his lisa. >> everyone would tell me how much lisa and i are alike, and i would just tell everybody that she's the best parts of me. >> reporter: the prosecution had the burden of proving the charges, first degree murder and nonconsensual termination of a pregnancy. what did you think your strongest fact was going forward, strongest part of your story for a jury? >> probably the most important single piece of evidence was the shotgun. >> reporter: ballistics showed this mossberg 12-gauge was the murder weapon, a firearm that seth kept inside his house, and
9:08 pm
morning, prosecutors argued. >> no murderer who wants to kill lisa techel comes to the murder scene without the murder weapon. >> we argued the impossibility of his story. some unknown assailant breaks into his house and kills the wife that he says he's gonna leave. >> tyler batterson is our next witness. >> reporter: prosecutors called one of seth's young friends to show the jury, they said, just how deceptive and manipulative seth was. this witness was one of the boys, it turned out, behind all the vandalism across the fence. he testified he was just following seth's orders. >> he told us to go mess with his neighbor tate. >> reporter: how were you gonna mess with him? >> fill five gallon buckets full of dog manure and go dump 'em on his property. >> reporter: remember, seth had assured his father-in-law -- and the state agent who interviewed him -- the exact opposite. >> and i said, "i'm not messing with him. i'll make sure nobody else is." >> reporter: looking back, that incident was what turned todd
9:09 pm
place, fixing the idea in his mind that his kids' neighbor was a deranged, maybe dangerous crank. >> i'm goin' by what seth had told me about him. >> reporter: as for tate's complaint-calls with deputies, as captured on dashcam video, it became evidence for the prosecution. >> we feed the squirrels, birds and deer. >> we were hopeful that the jury would see brian tate as we saw him. >> reporter: and they saw him as an eccentric, but harmless man. certainly not a killer. then, at last, it was time for the state's star witness, rachel mcfarland -- the other woman -- to show up and tell her story. did you need the jury to like her? >> we needed the jury to believe her. >> reporter: rachel testified her relationship with seth started heating up in december, 2011, which was two months after seth got married. >> it became more sexual, asking me to send pictures. or, i don't know just showing
9:10 pm
>> reporter: on may 20th, 2012, seth and rachel met at a nature preserve, where they took this selfie to remember their time together. >> i mean he kissed me, touched me. he said that we had everything in common and that he had tried working things out with lisa and things weren't working and i was exactly what he wanted. >> reporter: she said seth repeatedly told her he was going to divorce his wife. >> did he say he loved you? >> yes. >> reporter: but rachel was hedging her bets. she told seth she was also interested in a co-worker named brandon, who just happened to call her during her tryst with seth in the park. >> he just started getting really jealous. >> and so on the 20th when he learned that you were communicating with brandon, he said what? >> just give me two more weeks. >> did you ask him what he meant just give me two more weeks? >> yes, and he just repeated the same statement. >> reporter: six days later, lisa was murdered in her own bed. >> and here we have a motive that we can understand. love.
9:11 pm
rachel was evidence that was like a countdown to lisa techel's death. >> reporter: but defense attorney steve gardner countered, arguing the motive of an affair falls flat without the essential element -- sex. >> seth techel was being accused of murdering his wife for an affair that he was hopin' to someday have. >> you never had intercourse with him. >> no. >> you've never had oral sex with him. >> no. >> never had your clothes off. >> no. >> and you kissed a few times. >> yes. >> is that a fair assessment of the extent of your romantic relationship with mr. techel. >> yes. >> reporter: the defense also didn't accept the state's take on the neighbor as a harmless eccentric. >> the most compelling evidence as to how this occurred involved the neighbor, mr. tate. he was mentally ill. >> i'm done talking to you. >> reporter: and, according to the defense, dangerous, too.
9:12 pm
the portrayal of the unpredictable neighbor by using todd's own complaint summary from that day. you're in the awkward situation of being their best witness. >> right. >> you believed he could become a danger. anyone who should respond to that residence again should use extreme caution. >> that is correct, i did. >> reporter: the defense theorized that tate entered the trailer through an unlocked door and shot lisa for revenge. the key defense evidence that suggested an intruder was a stray peanut butter- and-jelly sandwich, in a baggie, left on the back deck. >> there was a sandwich that would not have been there the night before that was there. >> reporter: critters should have devoured it, he argued. he told the jury it must have been the killer's snack. >> i believe it to be the most compelling piece of evidence in the whole case.
9:13 pm
jury to decide. but it wouldn't be easy. in the jury room deliberations and drama. >> he started pounding on the door, saying he wanted out of there, and we were in tears. recently, verizon had to use tiny red balls to try to make you think they had a much better network. but there's one big thing they left out. the new sprint lte plus network delivers faster download speeds than verizon, at&t and t-mobile, based on data from an independent third party. that's because we've been obsessed with building the network of the future. and to celebrate, we're cutting their rates in half. switch to sprint and save 50% on most verizon, at&t and t-mobile rates. you get the new lte plus network and we'll cover your costs to switch, up to $650 per line. only from sprint. (troublehearing on the phone, visit sprintrelay.com) indulgence... no longer comes at a price. well, actually it does... but it's just $9.99
9:14 pm
applebee's grill & bar favorites made a little better for you. featuring new dishes loaded with flavor, and all under 650 calories. sfx: ziploc bag opening sfx: ambient school cafeteria sounds, children talking life doesn't cry over spilled milk. it cheers. life needs ziploc. sfx: ziploc bag closing sc johnson nivea in-shower body lotion. first i wash... then i apply it to my wet skin. it moisturizes with no sticky feel. i quickly rinse off. and i'm ready to go.
9:15 pm
hi. brandon thinks hellmann's is heaven in a jar. that's because our ingredients come from... farmers committed to responsibly sourced oils... blended with ingredients like cage-free eggs. mmm. heaven. real ingredients. that's how we're working to
9:16 pm
>> reporter: back in the deliberation room, wrangling jurors in the seth techel murder trial were driving the case into
9:17 pm
they stay out and they stay out and they stay out. what are the prosecutors telling you, todd? >> that there are some that are guilty and there's some that are not guilty, and they're just not agreein'. and i'm starting to get worried at that point. >> reporter: micah sheheen was on the jury. she said one holdout juror in particular was responsible for the stalemate. >> he started pounding on the door saying that he wanted out of there. and we were in tears. a lot of us because we knew that we were up against a wall, that nothing else could be done with this person. >> after weeks of testimony and three full days of deliberations, the seth techel murder trial came to a sudden conclusion today. >> reporter: it was all over. >> the motion for a mistrial is granted. a mistrial because of a hung jury. hung jury? punch to the gut, andy? you ever have one? >> well, i never had one in almost 30 years. >> reporter: prosecutors case. the vote had been ten to two for conviction. >> of course we're disappointed
9:18 pm
>> reporter: the caldwells had lost a daughter and sister and, now, they couldn't even get the closure they desperately wanted. and they'd have to do it all over again. >> it's hard to know that you're gonna have to endure another one. >> reporter: a trial date was set for seven months later, october 2013. and trial number two would be heard in a new courthouse. there'd been a change of venue to the town of mt. pleasant. making it even tougher on the caldwells, the daily treks to court, lives disrupted. the new courtroom had a distinctive layout that put the caldwell family directly behind the defendant. >> he's literally sitting right in front of me like you are. >> reporter: which only made it more frustrating for presley who was still trying for any kind of connection to someone she once loved like a brother. >> i'm just staring at him, like, "just glance at me, do something," and he doesn't. >> reporter: and even more
9:19 pm
having to sit through -- again -- all that heart-breaking testimony, and raw crime scene photos of their lisa, and the unborn baby girl. >> reporter: other than the change of venue, seth techel's second murder trial played out as a carbon copy of the first. same lawyers, same judge, same arguments. a replay of two opposing theories -- brian tate, the "other suspect," versus seth techel, the husband with the "other woman." rachel mcfarland was, again, the prosecution's star witness. >> here on may 4th of 2012, he sent you a message with a picture of his, his own smiling face saying, "miss you bella." >> mm-hmm. >> is that a term of endearment that he called you, his bella. >> yes, yes. >> you sent him a picture of you in either a bikini or your bra and underwear. is that right? >> yes. >> and then he says, "well, wish
9:20 pm
i love you" at 10:51 p.m. on may 24 of 2012. what was he asking you to wish him well with? >> i believe that he was going to tell her that he wanted a divorce. >> reporter: two days later, lisa was dead. by now, her family had hardened opinions about rachel. >> i don't think too highly of her. i felt like she destroyed my sister's marriage and her life. >> reporter: todd, rachel, huh? >> actually, i'm, i'm maybe not the most popular view. i blame her for what part she had to play with seth but i think she's kinda been a victim as well. >> he's manic, he's up all the time. >> reporter: the defense offered the jury the same bogeyman as before. >> the defense went even harder at brian tate than they had the first time around. >> he could quickly become volatile and agitated. >> reporter: this time, the defense, over strenuous prosecution objections, got tate's psychiatrist to testify. he'd treated him near the end of his life in a hospital mental
9:21 pm
you find him to be paranoid, paranoid delusional? >> yes, sir. >> and was there a general topic of delusion of which he was paranoid? >> he seemed to make reference that there were some governmental conspiracies affecting him. >> reporter: after three-weeks of trial, a second jury had seth techel's fate in its hands. and that's when things got deja vu all over again. the judge read a note from the foreman. >> we're not going to reach a what's next? again. >> yep. months wortha trials and we're right back to the beginning." >> reporter: but the judge wasn't ready to give up. he told the jurors to keep trying. emotions in the open courtroom were raw, especially on the caldwell side. the jury couldn't help but hear it. >> presley and i were crying. we weren't crying uncontrollably or anything. but you could hear us sniffling a little. >> reporter: as the jury filed
9:22 pm
gardner rose, to scold the spectators. stop the over-the-top outbursts, he said, or he'd demand a mistrial in fairness to his client. >> i do not desire this jury to be influenced by the public. >> reporter: now, it was the prosecutors turn to seethe. >> the defense is making this speech about the caldwell family trying to somehow influence the jury, which we thought was ludicrous, i squeezed andy's arm, and i said "i'll take this." >> to stand up here and suggest that anyone in the courtroom is trying or attempting to intentionally influence the jury is absolute nonsense. >> reporter: the courtroom started to settle down and clear. but seth remained at the defense table, his former father-in-law coiled behind him, ready to pounce. >> i was just praying, "please just let me stand here. >> reporter: for more than a minute, glaring, burning a hole in seth's back. if looks could kill. >> there's just kind of an urge to move forward.
9:23 pm
god, please don't make me do that. just let me stand. >> reporter: what were you doin' in your mind? >> i don't really wanna even think of what i was doin' in my mind but i was -- i was wantin' to do somethin'. >> reporter: two hours later, the jurors returned. but nothing had changed. >> a mistrial is declared. >> reporter: unbelievable. veteran prosecutors who'd never had a hung jury before, were now o for 2. again, the state didn't hesitate. seth techel would go on trial for a third time. >> our intent is to retry it. that was an easy decision to make. >> reporter: even though the jury's vote was again in favor of conviction, this time nine to three -- lisa's family was starting to have its doubts. >> is there something that i'm just overlooking? like did he not do it? is there something that they just see and they're like -- he's not guilty? >> reporter: but just when they thought they couldn't suffer any more heartbreak, the caldwells would be devastated by new findings by a brand new defense
9:24 pm
>> i heard it about a week before the trial and it -- just like somebody hit me in the stomach. the defense comes out swinging. >> we chose to focus on the sloppy work done by the law enforcement. there was absolutely no dna, fingerprint, confession. introducing the ever us two-stone ring. one diamond for your best friend ... one for your true love. for the one woman in your life who's both. ever us. new this valentine's day at jared, kay and zales. all the hard work... time in the service... community college... it matters. it's why we, at university of phoenix, count your relevant work
9:25 pm
as credits toward your degree.
9:26 pm
>> reporter: two families. two trials. and so far, no winners. but trial number three promised to be different, starting with a >> the previous trials were not and seth came dangerously close to being convicted in each of them. >> reporter: state-appointed defense lawyers roger owens and jake feuerhelm knew that, in two trials, 19 of 24 jurors had voted to convict seth techel. they didn't like those numbers, and decided to head in a different direction. >> we chose to focus on the sloppy work done by the law enforcement. there was absolutely no dna, fingerprint -- confession. >> reporter: feuerhelm would argue it was a botched investigation.
9:27 pm
tests to match the slug to the murder weapon, but never check it for fingerprints or dna that might link it to the shooter? >> did you test the bullet that was in the chamber that killed this woman? no, we forgot, or we didn't do it. >> reporter: whoops. >> whoops. >> reporter: the new defense team had a new story to tell -- it was all a rush to judgment to blame seth, who'd been in jail ever since his arrest two years earlier. and there was another big strategic shift. they would soften the focus on the boogeyman of the first two trials -- brian tate. >> our conclusion was after listening to the tapes of mr. tate, that he wasn't the deranged person that they tried to portray him as being. >> the way he was speaking to law enforcement that afternoon would not seem like the person that would have walked into a trailer home at 5:00 in the morning and murdered his neighbor. >> reporter: the defense attorneys made a tactical decision. since recordings of tate didn't make him look like a dangerous killer, they would not show
9:28 pm
and they'd roll the dice, hoping the prosecutors wouldn't either. >> the caldwells and techels had been put through the wringer for more than two years, their once close relationship had frayed. and now the third trial was pushing everyone to the brink. it was an impossible situation, but somehow todd caldwell and doug techel managed to find a moment of grace. >> i went over to him and i just said, "doug, i want you to know that i think you're a great guy. i think you're a good person." >> reporter: did you really? >> "no matter how this turns out, i just want you to know that." and he said, "i think the same thing with you, todd." and i went to shake his hand and he just hugged me and we both just hugged. >> reporter: the two fathers then returned to opposite sides of a murder trial. july 2014, for the third time, the state of iowa versus seth techel. >> counsel, you ready for the jury? >> reporter: this time in davenport, three hours from the
9:29 pm
the prosecutors once again argued that seth's story defied logic. >> he would have to be the victim of one of the largest coincidences ever known. and that is he told his girlfriend that he left his wife. and a little less than 17 hours later, some unknown assailant breaks into his house and kills the wife that he is -- says he's gonna leave. >> with a weapon which he hasn't brought with him. >> correct. with a weapon which he hasn't brought with him. >> i had a mossberg model 500 shotgun. >> a 12 gauge. >> yes. >> reporter: and seth, prosecutors said, had easy access to the murder weapon, the shotgun that his friend lucas kept in seth's house. >> is that the 12 gauge mossberg shotgun that you left behind in the techel residence when you moved out in may of 2012? >> yes. >> reporter: and, the prosecutors argued, only seth had a motive. they said seth and rachel's steamy texts and cell phone photos played like a countdown to murder by seth. >> at 9:20 p.m. on the 24th, you ask him, do you really want to be with me? and he responds, "forever." >> right, yes.
9:30 pm
two days before lisa's death, and in a follow-up text, rachel asked seth if he'd told his wife he wanted a divorce yet. >> and he responds, "well, we talked. i told her i wasn't happy, she got mad then sad, then i slept on the couch, so hello, mrs. resuscitator." >> correct. >> reporter: rachel told the jury that she and co-workers nicknamed seth "mr. resuscitator" because he was a volunteer firefighter who often bragged about his life-saving cpr heroics. >> so he was going to be mr. resuscitator and you were going to be mrs. resuscitator. >> yeah. >> reporter: then to drive home their contention that seth chose murder over divorce, prosecutors called a co-worker who'd been a confidante of seth's. >> i just expressed he just needed to either end his marriage or end it with rachel. >> and in saying that he should
9:31 pm
techel, did he make any comment concerning child support? >> he asked me if i wanted to pay his child support. >> reporter: and then the witness recalled another remark seth made about lisa. >> he stated that it would be better off if she was in a car wreck and died. >> reporter: prosecutors hoped their third time would be the charm. but, the new defense attorneys would come at them with everything they had and that
9:32 pm
this time, it was about lisa.7 cc3 i take prilosec otc each morning for my frequent heartburn because you can't beat zero heartburn! ahhh the sweet taste of victory! prilosec otc. one pill each morning. 24 hours. zero heartburn. come on! don't drop your phone, drop your network. bring your phone to cricket wireless. we have more 4g lte coverage nationwide than t-mobile or sprint. cricket wireless. something to smile about. you mind helping us out with a little taste test? which one of these do you think is v8? the red one. red. definitely the red one. guess what, they're all v8! really? (laughs), yea. y'all came out with some new flavors.
9:33 pm
here's to v8! bringing veggie power to the people. v8 veggie blends. veggies for all! for adults with an advanced lung cancer called "squamous non-small cell", previously treated with platinum-based chemotherapy, it's not every day something this big comes along. a chance to live longer with... opdivo, nivolumab. opdivo is the first and only immunotherapy fda approved based on a clinical trial demonstrating longer life... ...for these patients. in fact, opdivo significantly increased the chance of living longer versus chemotherapy. opdivo is different. it works with your immune system. opdivo can cause your immune system to attack normal organs and tissues in your body and affect how they work. this may happen any time during or after treatment has ended, and may become serious and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you experience new or worsening cough;chest pain; shortness of breath;
9:34 pm
severe nausea or vomiting; extreme fatigue; constipation; swollen ankles; loss of appetite; headache; confusion; hallucinations; rash; or muscle or joint pain, or flushing as this may keep these problems from becoming more serious. these are not all the possible side effects of opdivo. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions including immune system problems or if you've had an organ transplant, or lung, breathing or liver problems. a chance to live longer. ask your doctor if opdivo is right for you. bristol-myers squibb thanks the patients and physicians who participated
9:35 pm
>> reporter: from the day lisa techel was murdered, brian tate >> go get him. get him. now. >> reporter: and he'd been exploited by seth's defense ever since. >> the question that you will have to consider is whether or not the state has proven that seth techel did it. >> reporter: new defense attorneys roger owens and jake feuerhelm had a completely different strategy.
9:36 pm
name. rachel, offered as seth's motive for murder in earlier trials, was also minimized this time. >> good afternoon, miss mcfarland. >> hi. >> reporter: in cross-examination, rachel was on the stand for a scant seven minutes. tick tock, there's the message on thursday. mr. and mrs. resuscitator, blue skies ahead. we're a couple. what do you do with something like that? >> i tried to be as straightforward as i could with the jury. who in the world is going to murder their wife to facilitate a relationship that hasn't even >> you're not having any sex with this man right? >> correct. >> and the only time you'd actually seen him in person, in your whole entire life, outside of work, was four or five times. >> correct. >> i have no further questions. >> what we wanted the jury to think about her is that you're gonna shoot your wife for this? >> reporter: attorneys feuerhelm and owens then went on the attack, characterizing the work of investigators as woefully shoddy.
9:37 pm
inconsistent, incompetent, incomplete. >> reporter: the new defense thrust was on what the investigators did not do. this state criminalist had to admit they did not test for gunshot residue on seth techel. >> how many times do you think you testified in criminal trials that gunshot residue was evidence of a crime? >> a lot. >> but in this case, no, we can't argue it because we don't have it. >> yeah exactly, we'll never know. >> never know. >> reporter: and the defense said it was even more shocking that this state expert had to make a similar admission about the fatal shotgun shell. >> this is the shell that killed lisa techel. >> yes. >> the very shell that killed this woman was never examined by the state. they just said, "we -- we forgot to do it." >> reporter: but the centerpiece of the defense case against the cops was something else they didn't do. they'd been so busy
9:38 pm
behind bars since his arrest two years before, that they never really paid attention to lisa. the new defense team would change all that, starting with her cell phone and the secrets it held. you found out the story told by the phone? that there was this guy -- co-worker? >> right. >> reporter: it was a bombshell. lisa was having an affair with a fellow jailer. >> lisa's lover was a married man, a father of four. >> reporter: and this is not making out in the back of the car? >> no. he thought he could even be the father of her -- of the child. he thought that. >> reporter: so they called lisa's lover, jason tinnes, to the stand. >> back in may 2012, did you know lisa techel? >> yes i did. >> reporter: jason testified that the affair started before lisa married seth and ended just weeks before her murder. >> mr. tinnes at some point did your relationship with lisa techel become sexual? >> yes, it did. >> now when we talk about a sexual relationship we're not talking about texting, are we?
9:39 pm
>> we're talking about actual sexual intercourse correct? >> yes, sir. >> reporter: for lisa's father, the revelation that his daughter had a lover was the cruelest blow yet. >> the first emotion i had is, "why? why, lisa?" you know? and my second thought is, "i don't wanna tell amy 'cause i know she's not gonna be happy." >> reporter: does it taint your memory at all? >> really, what it did for me more than anything is, i have so many more questions that i'll never get the chance to ask her. i mean, i love lisa and she was a human being and she made mistakes. >> reporter: the graphic testimony about lisa's affair, and how police overlooked it, fit perfectly with the defense's theme of a botched investigation seth. >> here's a legitimate suspect that should have been investigated. >> reporter: investigators never spoke to jason while they were building their case against seth. prosecutors finally contacted
9:40 pm
trial started. >> so between may of 2012 and sometime in june of 2014, no one talked to you, you didn't talk to anyone about this at all. >> no, sir. >> reporter: but prosecutors fought back. jason had an alibi witness -- his wife. they called her to the stand. >> do you have any memory miss tinnes as to the whereabouts of your husband on may 26, 2012 at approximately 5:00 a.m.? >> he was sleeping with me at our house. >> reporter: and dna testing on jason, done right before trial, also proved he was not the father of lisa's baby. but the defense still believed that raising the story of lisa's affair, and how police never uncovered it, would give jurors reasonable doubt about the entire investigation. 'cause this is the big part of your case in trial three. jurors, you're seein' some really shabby police work here in terms of investigation? >> it fell right into our theme,
9:41 pm
>> reporter: testimony in the third trial, streamlined by both sides, took half the time the others did. that was another part of the new defense team's revised strategy. there'd already been five holdout jurors in the previous two trials. now todd caldwell worried that the new defense team had produced a cloud of even more reasonable doubt. >> you kinda think, "okay. if i was on this side, that's kinda how i woulda handled it." "they're doin' a pretty good job." and i'm convinced it's gonna be another hung jury. why wouldn't it be? todd and just about everyone else is in for a surprise. >> has this jury reached a verdict? delsym lasts three times longer than the leading cough liquid.
9:42 pm
try delsym -the #1 doctor recommended 12 hour cough liquid. this has been medifacts for delsym . to turn knorr rice sides into something new, just saut\ some chicken. stir in knorr rice sides with fresh tomato and basil and you've got knorr creamy bruschetta chicken. knorr rice sides. as a main dish. why have your glasses fit manually, when there's the lenscrafters accufit system. replacing basic handheld measuring tools with a digital system that's five times more precise. check this out, bro. what's that, broheim? i switched to geico and got more. more savings on car insurance? yeah bro-fessor, and more. like renters insurance. more ways to save. nice, bro-tato chip. that's not all, bro-tein shake. geico has motorcycle and rv insurance, too.
9:43 pm
oh yeah, i'm all about more, teddy brosevelt. geico. expect great savings and a whole lot more. oh my gosh, stephanie we're, like, so goth. sfx: knocks on door. honey? i'm dying my hair, mom. hair dye? honey... it's just purple. teenage daughter? get scrubbing bubbles. kill 99.9% of germs and destroy grime. with scrubbing bubbles for 100% problem solved. if you're trying to be a little better... things just got a whole lot better. introducing entrees loaded with flavor, not calories. applebee's grill & bar favorites made a little better for you. featuring new dishes, all under 650 calories and starting at just $9.99. cut! this is way too much. i just want to talk to women about my decision to use poise. i've had four kids. ladies, who leaks a little when they laugh? uh-uh, uh-huh. you see? switching to poise helps make life easier. roll that thing! get 3 in 1 protection
9:44 pm
and unlike period pads, poise thin shape pads have thin flex technology.
9:45 pm
>> reporter: july 24, 2014. this time things were different. as seth techel walked into the courtroom and sat down, his face showed no expression, no hint of he didn't glance in any direction. not at his family, and certainly not at todd, his former father- in-law. this is the young guy you used to clap on the back and say, "i love you." >> yep. "just take care of her. that's all i ask." >> reporter: but todd was staring directly at seth, hoping to find something, anything. now, the moment was at hand. >> has this jury reached a verdict? >> it has. >> reporter: the judge asked the court attendant to read the verdict. lisa's mother could barely contain her emotions. lisa's sister, a bundle of
9:46 pm
>> count one -- we the jury find the defendant seth andrew techel guilty of murder in the first degree. signed by the head juror. count two -- non-consenual termination of human pregnancy, guilty. >> reporter: the justice system had finally spoken for lisa and unborn zoey. and then you hear the words? what do you see? >> i hear the words guilty. and i see nothin', not one single emotion from his face. >> reporter: the jurors had taken four hours to convict. on their way out, several reached across to shake tracy's hand. presley still had one big question. >> i would love to ask him why.
9:47 pm
then, there's seth from may 26 on, and it's almost like i don't know who that is. >> reporter: seth's parents tried to fight back tears. >> it's heartbreaking. >> reporter: on the caldwell side, tears of joy and displays of overwhelming relief. there were hugs and more hugs, more than two years of pent-up emotions finally coming out. the caldwells then walked across the aisle. the two moms embraced, united in tragedy. we know this family. i know it's not doug and lorraine's fault. it's not their family's fault that any of this happened. todd searched out doug. only three years before, they were all celebrating their kids' wedding together. doug and lorraine still support their son and say he didn't do what he's now convicted of doing. do you have a whisper of doubt, either of you?
9:48 pm
>> none whatsoever. i never have and i never will. >> everybody's a loser. nobody wins. but i will say this. i think lisa knows somewhere that the system that she wanted to be a part of worked. >> reporter: the caldwells and techels weren't the only ones with a stake in the verdict. brian tate's sister cheri had been waiting for this moment, too. >> i started cryin'. it wasn't tears of sorrow, it was tears of joy. they had finally gotten this s.o.b. i hope he rots in prison. >> reporter: todd still carries the burden of helping to pin the blame on tate in those awful moments after lisa's murder. >> i can never tell the family how sorry i am that they had to go through what they had to. we're gonna have last word on brian tate. this is an innocent guy that was made a victim by seth. >> all rise. >> reporter: a sentencing hearing was held in september
9:49 pm
the caldwells were given a chance to address the court, but talked directly to seth. >> you know how close lisa and i was. and you know what you took from me. out of everybody in this room, you know. >> reporter: presley, lisa's sister, walked up to take her turn. during all three trials, she'd desperately tried to make eye contact with seth. >> seth was my best friend, my brother, who i loved so much. >> reporter: now, she finally got what she wanted. as she spoke, she looked straight at him. and, for the first time, seth stared right back at her. >> i'm going to leave you with one final thought, that i'm no longer your sister, and i no longer love you.
9:50 pm
life in prison, with no possibility of parole. when it was finally all over, todd went to the cemetery for a private moment with his oldest daughter. >> i went out there and i just told her that we did it and she could be proud of everybody. >> reporter: todd's been back many times since. lisa's grave is a special, deeply personal place for him. he designed her headstone. what are the figures in it, todd? >> the first thing i would do when i started like sketching it is, i would just draw a heart out. for some reason in my head, it should be in the shape of a heart. the second thing i would put in there is a mother holdin' a baby. and lisa and i had this thing that we would say to each other. we texted to each other and everything. it's from, "the notebook," movie and it's -- we've always said, "if you're a bird, i'm a bird." you know, i mean, whatev --
9:51 pm
"whatever you are, i am." so in the hair of this, i made two birds in there, by the time i got it done with, you know, we all loved it. and it's kind of just, kinda bonded like, you know, "hey, >> announcer: coming up later on qvc, at midnight, it's "applique fever with georgeanne bice", at 12:30, it's "belts, belts, belts", and, at 1 a.m., it's "jewelry addicts late night nod-off!" but now, a special message from senator john mccain and sarah
9:52 pm
9:53 pm
9:54 pm
9:55 pm
9:56 pm
9:57 pm
9:58 pm
9:59 pm

331 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on