48 Hours - Point Blank

Episode Date: January 29, 2026

In 2003, investigators were convinced that Traci Rhode had staged her husband’s suicide to get out of a troubled marriage and avoid a contentious divorce. After two frustrating years, they finally c...harged her with murder. But would a jury believe this loving mother was also a cold-blooded killer? “48 Hours" Correspondent Harold Dow reports. This classic "48 Hours" episode last aired on 3/21/2009. Watch all-new episodes of “48 Hours” on Saturdays, and stream on demand on Paramount+. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 October 15th, 2003 was the worst day of my life. I woke up around 4.45 in the morning. I took a walk, walked two miles, and came home, and took a shower. When I turned the water off in the shower, I heard like a moaning sound. I listened at the door and the moaning got louder. So I opened up the door and the bedroom was completely dark, completely dark, but I could see my husband laying in the bed. I walked around the bed and I touched his legs and I said, honey, are you okay? And he didn't respond to me. And I walked on up to the
Starting point is 00:00:58 side of the bed. He had the pillow over his head and I moved the pillow. And that's when I just saw all the blood. Now in one can I help you? Please, my husband just shot himself. Where do he shoot himself? In the head? I was just like, oh my God, what have you done? What happened? Why did you do this? You don't talk to me. Please talk to me.
Starting point is 00:01:31 Nothing. And I thought about my children, and they could not see him like that. And I ran and got them out of bed and out of the house. My name is Tracy Rody, and I'm Scott Rody's wife. I asked my mom if my dad was okay. And she told me, no, he's not, honey. Shane asked me, is Daddy okay? And I said, no, honey, he's not okay.
Starting point is 00:02:05 Daddy's very, very sick. Scott Rody is not a man that would have taken his own life. Scott Rody is a man who was a driven professional and a doting father of his three children. This was an intricate puzzle to put together. We had to put the pieces together to show that this indeed was an elaborate, staged crime scene. I took one look at that gun.
Starting point is 00:02:41 and I knew in my mind this was not a suicide. My name is J.D. Robertson. I'm with the Texas Rangers. I examined physical evidence, and from that physical evidence, I tell stories. I told the story of the murder of Scott Rody. It was a very difficult story to tell. In all the years that I've worked in law enforcement,
Starting point is 00:03:09 I've never seen an outcome like this. Black, tonight's 48 hours mystery. I could never have imagined. imagined what all would have transpired. There's no way to even think that any of this stuff was real. But all of it happened. October 15, 2003, the life Tracy Rody knew was over. As Scott Rody lay dying with a gunshot wound to the head,
Starting point is 00:04:02 his wife Tracy's ordeal was only just beginning. My husband is dying there in the hospital and they're taking me away to be questioned. Before we ask you any questions, Ms. Rody, you need to be aware of what your rights are. I was shocked when they asked me to go to the police station. I had already told them all that I knew that it happened. I mean, I wasn't there. I didn't see it. I didn't hear it. I only know what I found. So I kept asking the police officers, please let me go meet with my husband. He's dying. Can I please tell my children, my children don't know what happened?
Starting point is 00:04:55 Just a few more minutes and we'll let you go. Just a few more minutes and we'll let you go. By mid-afternoon, it was clear. Scott was brain dead and would not recover. And something else was clear, too. These people think I harmed the man I had loved for 20 years of my life that I spent my life with. It's not even a possibility.
Starting point is 00:05:19 Tracy says she can barely remember a time without Scott. They met in their early teens and became high school sweethearts in Fort Madison, Iowa. Scott was an only child from a troubled family. In Tracy, he not only found the love of his life, he found a home, says Tracy's mom, Vicki Lear. You'd have to send him home at 10 o'clock at night. But, I mean, they spent their time together, and he became part of our family. Tracy and Scott were married in 1990, only a few years after Tracy's home. high school graduation.
Starting point is 00:06:03 Storybook. They were just so much in love, and you could really tell when they would look at each other. Scott put himself through college, became an engineer. Tracy would go on to become a nurse specializing in birth and delivery care. The three things that she ever wanted in life, be married, be a nurse, and be a mom.
Starting point is 00:06:30 She got her wish times three. Hi, sweetheart. Shane, Nicholas, and Dalton. Go, Shane, go. In home videos, the Rody seemed to be the picture-perfect family. Scott, the picture-perfect dad. But there was another side to Scott Rody, says Tracy, and it was slowly destroying their marriage.
Starting point is 00:07:07 Was Scott a jealous man? Very jealous. Did he accuse you of having affairs? All the time. He was obsessed. She was almost like a possession. Raina Kant and her husband Kyle have been close friends of the roadies for years. She'd always tell me that Scott was saying that she was cheating
Starting point is 00:07:26 and having an affair with the different doctors that she worked with. Is there any chance that she was cheating with these doctors? There was no way that Tracy had an affair with any of these doctors. But there was no convincing him, says Tracy. She remembers one awful night when she had to stay a few hours late at work to help deliver a baby. I went home, it's midnight. I get home.
Starting point is 00:07:51 My husband's not there, my kids aren't there. As I'm calling the emergency room, thinking the worst, I hear the garage door open. And I go running out to the garage. You know, what happened? What happened? Is everybody okay? And he's screaming at me, you tramp, you whore, where the hell have you been?
Starting point is 00:08:13 And he said he went looking for me so he could show our children what a tramp they had for a mother and I live like that for years why did you stay in the marriage so long if you were constantly being accused of having affairs of other people I loved him and I mean as bad as our bad times were there was still good times he was the father of my children thank you he was my husband to me it was worth working out But Scott didn't make things any easier.
Starting point is 00:08:54 Tracy says her husband was so afraid of losing her to another man, he moved the family five times in 13 years. There would be stops in Mariville, Tennessee, Kenet, Missouri, and Batesville, Arkansas. Finally, ending up in Brownsville, Texas in 2003. And there was never anyone. I never looked at anyone. I never talked to anyone.
Starting point is 00:09:24 I've never, nothing until Brownsville. It was here, far away from friends and family, that Tracy really did meet somebody. His name was Sean Michaels. Sean was a big flirt with everybody at work. And I would tell him, you know, I'm married, and he's like, I know I'm just kidding. Over time, I could tell that it was more than just kidding.
Starting point is 00:09:53 One afternoon, they arranged to meet in a parking lot to talk. We just stood there talking and then he gave me a hug to leave and he kissed me. I was shocked, but yet it was good to have somebody pay attention to me. And then one week later, Scott confronted Tracy in their bathroom, once again accusing her of cheating. That's why you're all sweaty. That's why you're in here washing your face.
Starting point is 00:10:19 You've been having sex. And I said, no, I haven't. I've not been having sex with anybody. In the heat of the moment, Tracy blurted out her feelings for Sean. And I said for the first time in my life, there is somebody. It's not about sex. Somebody's paying attention to me. Was he upset?
Starting point is 00:10:40 He was very upset. And he just looked right through me and said, you have no idea what you've just done. But police didn't buy Tracy's story, any of it. I'm telling the truth. The truth, they say, is that she committed cold-blooded murder. Tracy Rody grabbed the gun, grabbed the pillow, put the pillow to his head, the gun to his head, and shot him. Nile-1-1- can I help you?
Starting point is 00:11:15 Can I help you? Can I help you? Yes, please. I'm going to have your name? Tracy Rody. Rody? Tracey Rody. Rody.
Starting point is 00:11:27 Tover 15, 2003, I was called out to a suicide. Initially, it was reported to me that Scott Rody had... Scott Rody had suffered a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Within hours, Brownsville Detective Sam Lucio's investigation had changed course. The investigation turned from attempted suicide to a possible homicide investigation. It had all the ingredients of a classic murder plot, says Lucio. A love interest, jealousy, and a pretty young wife who was behaving suspiciously. She's a nurse, but she gave no first.
Starting point is 00:12:11 to her husband whatsoever. And the reason she says she didn't give any first aid was because she was in shock. In shock, says the detective, yet she had the presence of mind to call work and say she wouldn't be coming in. Who would be thinking about I need to call work so they can get a replacement for me at work today because my husband got shot.
Starting point is 00:12:32 Even more troubling to Detective Lucio, she washed her hands in front of a police officer. What was she washing off? Gunshot residue? I just could smell blood. I'm a nurse. I'm sensitive to the smell of blood. And I just had my hands up there,
Starting point is 00:12:50 and I just walked over to the kitchen sink, and I just ran hot water over my hands, and I just stood there crying. Crying, says Tracy, from the trauma of seeing her husband with his head blown apart. Some might say, why didn't you try to do something else? You were a nurse. What could I do?
Starting point is 00:13:06 He didn't need CPR. He was breathing. My thought was, get the paramedics here. Get into the hospital. Let them see what they could do. It was not only Tracy's behavior that aroused the suspicions of Lucio and his partner, Detective Thomas Clipper,
Starting point is 00:13:30 it was also what they learned that day about the final weeks and hours of Scott Rode's life. Were there problems in the marriage? Problems that led detectives to the other man. Sean Michaels, the unit secretary at the hospital where Tracy worked, where Tracy worked, the very same hospital where Scott Rody would die. The detectives also learned that Scott had hired divorce attorney Nat Perez.
Starting point is 00:14:00 They were about to play hardball. And he was a man who had a plan and wanted to implement that plan. Just one day before the shooting, Scott took Tracy to Perez's office and blindsided her with his plan. I said, Scott will have custody of the children, but, but you would have liberal visitation. She just basically yelled out, what? And looked at Scott and said, you never told me that. You never told me that I was going to have the boys.
Starting point is 00:14:28 And if she chose to fight, they made it clear they would use Sean Michaels against her. I said, you know, that didn't matter to me. I would do whatever to fight for my children. I didn't feel like I should sign away my children. I love my children. I was a good mother. And she told Scott, we need to go home,
Starting point is 00:14:45 and we need to talk about this some more. Back home, emotionally drained, they stopped fighting and started talking, says Tracy. I told him I wanted joint custody of our kids. I wasn't doing anything wrong. I didn't deserve to lose my children. Tracy says both agreed they didn't want to put their kids through an ugly custody battle. But later that night, Scott's mood changed again. My wife made me goofy. Tracy says he suddenly flew into a rage in the lobby. laundry room over Sean Michaels. He went and got a ball bat.
Starting point is 00:15:25 And he wanted to know where Sean lived because he was going to go bash his head in. And he's screaming at me, you know, tell me where he lives. I don't know. I've never been to his home. I don't know. That's when he got physical with me. Grab me by the throat, put his fist up to me,
Starting point is 00:15:42 told me he was just going to knock the shit out of me. And I said, if that makes you feel better, just do it. I'm not having an affair. And I went into the bedroom and I started packing his suitcase. I was just going to go stay in a hotel. But he started crying and he begged me not to go. And then, you know, he said, you know, come lay down here with me and I laid with my head on his chest. It wasn't anger anymore.
Starting point is 00:16:09 It was just loving couple just trying to work out our problems. The next morning, Scott Rody was found with a gunshot wound to the head. Till the day I die, I will never accept that Scott committed suicide. What I believe is that he really felt like he was losing me. We were all each other had. I mean, he didn't have a relationship with his family.
Starting point is 00:16:41 It was just me, him, and the boys. That was it. It was better for Scott in Scott's mind to take his own life than it was to live without Tracy. He loved her that much? He loved her that much. Tracy's friend, Raina Kant, believes that after all the years of accusations, Scott found himself facing the real possibility there was someone else.
Starting point is 00:17:06 And it was more than he could bear. He loved her enough to move her from state to state to state, thinking she was cheating in every state, to get her to the furthest point he could, so he had her all to himself in Brownsville, Texas. I could see him easily at that point saying, you know what, I can't handle this anymore. Enough is enough. But Detective Lucio says Scott was no broken man.
Starting point is 00:17:31 He was going to take custody of his kids and move on, leaving Tracy with a double motive for murder. I think that the motive was clearly she was losing her children, she was losing her home, she was losing the life she was used to. And the only way she was going to have a relationship with Sean Michaels is if Scott Rody was out of the picture. Believing it was one thing, proving it another. The detective spent the next two years hunting for physical evidence linking Tracy Roady to the crime.
Starting point is 00:18:03 They swapped every drain in this house. There was no blood anywhere. They checked all my trash cans. There was no evidence. I didn't kill my husband. But the investigators kept digging until finally a break. A Texas ranger noticed a piece of evidence that had been staring him in the face all along. What does the evidence in this case tell you?
Starting point is 00:18:29 That Tracy Rody shot Scott Rody? On August 11, 2005, on what would have been her 15th wedding anniversary, Tracy was arrested for the murder of her husband, Scott Rody. While he was asleep? While he was asleep. Feeling after her indictment for murder, Tracy Rody turned to the only place in Brownsville she felt welcomed. The Vineyard Christian Fellowship. And those people were just amazing. They're just so giving.
Starting point is 00:19:20 We have to continue to pray for Tracy. Most of us felt in the gut there was some injustice going on here. Jim Odebassian is not only Tracy's pastor, he is a lawyer and a former assistant district attorney. This is a false charge. This is not right. I believe that Tracy is innocent. Thank you so much. Odabasian believes Tracy has told the truth about that dreadful morning when she got out of the shower and discovered her dying husband.
Starting point is 00:19:54 And when I lifted the pillow, all I could see was just blood. And as I'm dying 911, I saw the gun. That gun and where it was found would become one of the most disputed issues in this case. The gun was in between his hands. somewhere on the bed. In every good lie, there's a little bit of truth. Prosecutor Chuck Mattingly spent two years gathering evidence for his indictment against Tracy Roady.
Starting point is 00:20:28 Tracy Roady is a cold-blooded, calculated killer. A killer, says Mattingly, who orchestrated the final moments of her husband's life, down to the feathered pillow she placed over his head. I believe the pillow was used in an attempt to muffle the sound. I also believe she used that pillow to prevent any backspatter from coming back and getting on her hands. And thirdly, she used that pillow
Starting point is 00:20:52 to disassociate herself from her husband before she killed him. Police recreated their theory of the shooting and brought in Texas Ranger J.D. Robertson to help prove their case. Suspects and witnesses lie. The evidence does not. It tells the truth.
Starting point is 00:21:13 Robertson, a forensic bloodstain analyst, poured over police photos taken at the scene. I took one look at that gun, and I knew in my mind this was not a suicide. That gun was removed from Scott by Sergeant Pablo Flores, one of the first officers on the scene. I entered, as I was removing the handgun,
Starting point is 00:21:36 that's when EMS arrived. I put it on a hope chest. When he removed it, says Flores, the gun was lying in Scott's hands. The handle of the gun was resting on his left hand, his left hand and the bell on his right. He also said there was no blood on Scott's hands, and the gun did not come into contact with any blood on the bed.
Starting point is 00:22:01 The gun was not touching the bedding, the mattress, the sheet, the mattress cover, the comforter. The gun never came into contact with anything that had blood on it. And yet, there was blood around the handle and a thick glob of it in the mechanism of the gun. Robertson wanted to know how it got there. There was no blood in his hands, but yet there's a mass of congealed, coagulated blood
Starting point is 00:22:28 in the hammer and action. We have to find that source. That source jumped out at him while studying this photo. An enlarged print of the blood-stained carpet next to the bed. Robertson's theory is that the gun was lying in the pool of blood next to the bed. Using the carpet swatch taken as evidence, this demonstration shows where he believes both the holster and gun fit into the blood pattern on the floor.
Starting point is 00:22:59 To Robertson, this perfect fit made perfect sense in the prosecution scenario of what happened the morning of October 15th. Tracy Rody put the gun to his head with the pillow covering it. She discharged it. When she did, she dropped the gun and it landed on the floor. But waiting for her husband to die, Robertson says Tracy realized she'd made a big mistake. After some period of time passed, she realized that the gun's on the floor, and if this is going to be a suicide, it's got to be in his hand. Tracy, says the prosecution, then picked up the weapon
Starting point is 00:23:40 and put it into the hands of her dying husband. It was a murder made to look like a suicide in the staged crime seat. But Tracy says this was a suicide that, the prosecution made look like a murder. It's not okay what the police and the prosecutors do to people. They twist things. Starting, she says, with that gun on the floor. At any point, did you touch the gun?
Starting point is 00:24:06 No, sir. You never touched the gun. The gun, says Tracy, as far as she knew, was never on the floor. The gun was somewhere on the bed. His hands were something like this. Tracy's story is the same today as it was in two days. as it was in 2003 when she first talked to police. The gun was in between both hands.
Starting point is 00:24:26 The gun was somewhere laying on the bed, I think. Laying on the bed, and contrary to what the prosecution says, it was in direct contact with the blood-soaked sheets, says Tracy. I know when I lifted the pillow, the gun was somewhere up between his hands, and that's where all the blood was, and the gun was laying in that blood. Forensic criminalist Richard Ernest agrees. He studied the evidence for the defense and believes the gun was lying in the blood. Right here.
Starting point is 00:25:01 That area of him around his head, his arms, his hands was all bathed in a big pool of blood. And that is where the gun was taken from. Scott's hands were washed at the hospital. There are no photos of him at the scene. There's a tremendous amount of blood here. You'll note also that there's not only blood but feathers. And Ernest believes the feathers and the blood on the gun came directly from the bed. Obviously, this gun was lying in that blood for some period of time
Starting point is 00:25:35 and to say that there's no other way that blood could be in the mechanism of this gun than for it to be down on the floor for a while before it was placed in his hand is a ridiculous. is a ridiculous proposition to my way of thinking. Any bloodstained pattern on the carpet it almost looks like a Roershack pattern. You tend to see what you want to see. Did Tracy Rody kill her husband, Scott? Absolutely not. She's innocent.
Starting point is 00:26:10 Ernesto Games would defend Tracy in her upcoming trial. If the prosecution says she touched the gun and there was blood on the gun, and why weren't her fingerprints on the gun. Investigators did find a palm print on the handle of the weapon, but it was never identified as belonging to either Scott, Sergeant Flores, or Tracy. They found nothing, zero. They created a factual fiction.
Starting point is 00:26:36 From the day one that I first met this woman, this woman has been very consistent. Robert Garza, a former Texas judge, was co-counsel for Tracy. I believe her, by God, she's telling the truth. That's what I have done from day one. I have told the truth. The police and the prosecutors, they've taken parts of truth and twisted it around. This was a murder. The physical evidence points to it.
Starting point is 00:27:05 I wouldn't have taken it to trial if I didn't believe it was a murder. What's up, Little Psychos? I'm Investigator Slater, host of the Psychopedia podcast. Psychopedia is a true crime podcast delivering raw, real, real, and absolutely gripping episodes every single week. I dig deep to uncover fascinating details of heinous true crime cases while exploring criminology and psychology theories. I take you into the absolute darkest corners of the human psyche,
Starting point is 00:27:34 my favorite territory, and present cases like you've never heard them before. Follow and listen to Psychopedia everywhere you get your podcasts. Four years after the death of Scott Rody, his wife Tracy went on trial. Brownsville was a town divided. On one hand, a cry for mercy. Do I think that Tracy killed Scott? No, I don't. On the other, a cry for blood.
Starting point is 00:28:06 I wouldn't spit on her if she was on fire. To those convinced of her guilt, Tracy's crime was murder, but her sin was infidelity. Her relationship with Sean Michaels was at the center of the prosecution's case. How do you think of the prosecution portrayed you in court? Oh, they portrayed me to be a vindictive, cold-blooded, murderer-cheating wife. And that's not true. I'm not this tramp that they made me out to be. I'm not a whore. I'm not.
Starting point is 00:28:38 In the course of your investigation, did you ever find any proof at all that Tracy had slept with other men during the relationship she had with Scott? Other than rumor, no. The prosecution questioned Sean Michaels on the stand, but no audio recording was allowed during the trial. He acknowledged a mutual attraction, but clearly stated they did not have sex. That didn't stop district attorney Chuck Mattingly from branding Tracy an unfaithful wife. Going around with another man, kissing him passionately while you're married to your spouse, is that being unfaithful? Well, down here in South Texas, that's being unfaithful.
Starting point is 00:29:23 In order for her to continue this relationship with Sean Michaels, she had to be free from her husband. And how was she going to be free from her husband? She was going to wake up in the morning, put a bullet in his head. That's what she did. Did you kill your husband so that you could be with Sean Michaels? No, sorry, for one thing, I did not kill my husband. But Sean Michaels wasn't even a factor in my marriage. It wasn't this big affair that they've made it out to be.
Starting point is 00:29:53 But that changed after Scott died, and it did not play well at trial. We learned that about a week or so, maybe 10 days after Scott's murder, Sean Michaels and Tracy Rody checked into the Red Roof Inn. We didn't meet at the Red Roof Inn to have sex. like they have said. That's not what happened. They first met at a pancake house to talk. There were several police officers in there, and I was very uncomfortable. So they drove across the street.
Starting point is 00:30:33 We were supposed to go there to talk. Unfortunately, things went a little further than that. The appearance of all this, after your husband had died, you have to concede it doesn't make you look good. No, it doesn't make me look good, but I wasn't thinking about looking good. I was in a place 24 hours away from home, from any family. Sean was the closest person I knew, and I hung on to him with everything in me to get me through. Their relationship was on and off for about two and a half years.
Starting point is 00:31:09 That helped the state hammer home motive and make its case for murder over suicide. They claimed Scott Rody was too devoted a dad to kill himself. His children were everything to him. He took him fishing, he took him hunting. But Tracy says the detectives and prosecutors didn't even know her husband. Raina and Kyle Kant knew Scott and Tracy for years before they moved to Brownsville. Kyle was Scott's boss. I was not surprised that Scott committed suicide.
Starting point is 00:31:42 I was not surprised at all. The Kant say Scott was a deeply troubled man. At work, he believed people were plotting behind his back to his back to his back. to get him fired, says Kyle. Much like his paranoia about his wife, says Raina. I'm not an expert in psychology, but he was definitely manic-depressive or bipolar. There was something else there that just wasn't right.
Starting point is 00:32:06 Something was wrong. But Scott Rody wasn't the one on trial. Tracy was, and to prove her guilt, Mattingly turned to this. I really think that was probably the most damning piece of evidence. The prosecution showed the holster and the gun fitting neatly into the blood stain on the piece of carpet. If the gun was on the floor, how did that gun then get back into his hands while he was lying in bed?
Starting point is 00:32:41 The prosecution told the jury that Tracy Rody shot her husband. Startled, she dropped the gun on the floor. She later picked it up and put it in Scott's hands to make it look like it like he pulled the trigger. That's not what happened, says Tracy. She says she got up, walked about two miles, came back and showered before finding Scott. And she never heard a gunshot.
Starting point is 00:33:14 I don't even know if I was in the house when he shot himself. I don't know. I don't know when he shot himself. Defense attorney Ernesto Gamez argued that the prosecution was only interested in their own version of events and one outcome, murder. They could not see right or left, only that this was a murder. Gomes says the evidence was tainted in the hours after the shooting.
Starting point is 00:33:44 Remember, before it was a crime scene, it was an emergency medical scene, with paramedics working frantically to save Scott's life. removed, pillows were moved, the pistol was moved, the scene was extremely compromised. The first photographs weren't even taken until almost two hours after Scott was removed from the scene. Take a look at this. This photograph shows the blood pool at 8.11 a.m. The holster appears to be flush with the bed and the pillow is lying in the blood itself. At 2.14, the holster is now away from the bed,
Starting point is 00:34:33 and the pillow is pushed back, no longer touching the blood. And that says Gámez cast serious doubts on the prosecution's perfect fit. They were manipulating and distorting, displacing evidence to fit their belief that a murder occurred. After more than three weeks of testimony, nine women and three men filed into the jury room, the jury room to deliberate Tracy Roddy's fate.
Starting point is 00:35:05 But no one was prepared for the jaw-dropping decision the jurors would make. In all the years that I've worked in law enforcement, I've never seen an outcome like this. As she waited for the verdict, Tracy Rodi was haunted by one regret. On the advice of her lawyers, she did not take the stand. As bad as it is,
Starting point is 00:35:42 I want the truth out there. I want people to know. I did not kill my husband. I did not. But this story was far from over. Before it was finished, it would take a turn so controversial, so unheard of, it would rattle the core of Texas justice. A lot of people across America
Starting point is 00:36:04 will have a hard time understanding what happened here in Brownsville. So did I. The march towards the stunning conclusion began with the very verdict. After two days of heated deliberations, the courtroom fell silent as the judge uttered the jury's decree. Guilty. You, it was just like everything just disappeared. And I just immediately started talking
Starting point is 00:36:35 to God and asking God, why? Why have you forsaken me? The jury left and Tracy collapsed. She couldn't walk, and so she had to be wheeled out of the courtroom. I never once believed that she would be found guilty. I really did not, and it broke my heart. It was a somber moment for all, says Mattingly. There was no jubilation. I mean, this is not a happy occasion.
Starting point is 00:37:02 It's a tragedy. Three little young men, you know, they've lost their father. And we've just proven it was their mother that killed their father. Tracy was shackled and locked in a holding cell while awaiting her sentence. But defense attorney Ernesto Gamez assured her all was not lost. When you looked at the jury, you could tell. You could sense that they weren't sure. In Texas, the defense has the option of letting the jurors decide the punishment as well as the verdict.
Starting point is 00:37:38 Gomes opted for a jury sentence. So it was back to the courtroom for the second phase of testimony. This time, Tracy did take the stand. What did you tell the jury? That I did not kill my husband, and that I did not agree with their verdict. The two oldest boys also testified, boys who loved their father and adored their mother. It said that she didn't do this. She needs to be with us.
Starting point is 00:38:07 We need her and she needs us. And with that, the jury was sent back to deliberate Tracy's punishment. The prosecution asked for 60 years. The jurors struggled hour after hour. Two days later, their stunning decision. The same jury that convicted Tracy Rody of murder decided to let her walk away. Probation. No time in prison.
Starting point is 00:38:45 Gerald, siltz, neither, nothing. At first, Tracy didn't comprehend what was happening. My attorney was shaking me, telling me, this is good, this is good. And then I hear everybody all my family and church friends. Do you hear them say what? She will remain on probation for 10 years. It was like getting punched in the gut and having the wind knocked out of you. It was an awful feeling.
Starting point is 00:39:20 But the jury's decision was legal, and it was binding. the state's case against Tracy Rody was over. In all your years of law enforcement, have you ever seen a trial with an outcome like this? Not probation for cold-blooded murder, no sir. We hadn't seen a case like this either, so we went looking for the jurors to tell us how they came to their decision.
Starting point is 00:39:45 Only two agreed to talk with us, Javier Lopez and Sarah Vallejo. If you had to pick one thing, one event that assuaded the jury to come back with 10 years probation, what would it be? The testimony of the children, for the children having to stand up there and say that they didn't want their mother to go to jail. Thank you. It was the children.
Starting point is 00:40:15 After three days in jail, Tracy was released. I'm very thankful that I'm home. But I do not agree with their guilty verdict. I am innocent. Obviously, they had doubts about their verdict to give me probation. I mean, who would put a convicted murderer home on probation? Tracy was fined $10,000, and probation means she cannot leave the county and has an 8 p.m. curfew. So, no evening basketball games, no going to Dalton's championship taekwondo tournaments.
Starting point is 00:41:00 And now Tracy is facing the most agonizing decision of her life. whether or not to appeal. If she wins, she would clear her name. If she loses, she could spend the rest of her life in prison. I'm praying to God to give me the wisdom to know what to do, because I am so lost right now, I have no clue. People think I got off easy. How is 10 years probation and everything that it brings with it?
Starting point is 00:41:27 How is that getting off easy when you're innocent? I'm innocent. But until she can prove it, Tracy Rody will walk through life known as the cold-hearted woman who shot and killed her husband in his sleep.

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