48 Hours - Target Justice - Encore
Episode Date: December 11, 2016Shocking murders targeting Texas lawmen leave a community on edge.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-inf...o.
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In 2014, Laura Heavlin was in her home in Tennessee
when she received a call from California.
Her daughter, Erin Corwin, was missing.
The young wife of a Marine
had moved to the California desert
to a remote base near Joshua Tree National Park.
They have to alert the military.
And when they do, the NCIS gets involved.
From CBS Studios and CBS News, this is 48 Hours NCIS.
Listen to 48 Hours NCIS ad-free starting October 29th on Amazon Music.
Real people.
Real crimes.
Real life drama.
Kauffman County is a large county with a small town feel.
We're over 100,000 in population, but you wouldn't immediately think that. And especially great here in Kauffman where you have the town square.
Going to be another nice day, sunny, breezy, and warm with a high of 67 this afternoon.
I was in the tax office. It was my first month. Someone in my office came to me and said, Ma'am, I'm sure I heard shots fired back outside.
And then we went into lockdown.
Somebody's been shot.
Who is it?
One man went in that way, and this guy's been here and shot him about five times.
I come to the courthouse here almost every day.
And as I was driving in, I saw a person clothed all in black.
There was the shoving match, and then he took the gun and shot.
You heard the gunshots?
Yes.
How many gunshots did you hear?
I counted three. I knew there were at least two more.
We had one of our assistant district attorneys assaulted and shot and he is
deceased. His name was Mark Hasse. Kauffman County, the state of Texas and
especially my office has suffered a devastating loss today.
He was a good guy.
It's a daring daylight attack very close to the courthouse square.
It froze everybody. It was a huge story.
very close to the courthouse square.
It froze everybody. It was a huge story.
What was the first theory?
Aryan Brotherhood. White supremacists. A prison gang known as the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas, or ABT.
The largest and most violent prison gang.
34 alleged members of the Aryan Brotherhood.
Mexican drug cartels.
It was anybody's guess.
Mark was a prosecutor.
He was kind of the go-to guy in Kauffman.
The first thing that we did was
look at Mark Hasse's docket for that day,
and then we looked at previous cases,
and so on.
It was, you know, a whodunit at that point in time.
cases and and so on it was you know a whodunit at that point in time. I hope that the people that did this are watching we're gonna pull you out of
whatever hole you're in we're gonna bring you back and let the people of
Kauffman County prosecute you. Have they found any leads or caught anybody yet?
Everybody's on edge here. Keep my doors locked and my guns loaded.
You can't believe that, you know, an assistant district attorney has been gunned down,
you know, here in Coffman County. Nobody knew who was next. Resources were there and
we weren't making progress. It was very frustrating. And then I guess around Easter,
and we weren't making progress. It was very frustrating.
And then I guess around Easter, everything changed.
Authorities tell us they are operating
under the possibility that tonight's murders
could be related to that of former assistant district
attorney Mark Hasse.
If it could happen once, it could happen twice.
But I think I didn't want to believe it was true.
When you deal with bad people, you
know that there's always the potential
for these bad people to do something bad to you.
I'm Richard Schlesinger.
Tonight on 48 Hours.
Target justice.
As a kid growing up in Chicago,
there was one horror movie I was too scared to watch. It was called
Candyman. It was about this supernatural
killer who would attack his victims if they said
his name five times into a bathroom mirror. But did you know that the movie Candyman. It was about this supernatural killer who would attack his victims if they said his name five times into a bathroom mirror. But did you know that the movie Candyman
was partly inspired by an actual murder? I was struck by both how spooky it was,
but also how outrageous it was. Listen to Candyman, the true story behind the
bathroom mirror murder, early and ad-free on Wondery Plus and the Wondery app.
Mirror Murder, early and ad-free on Wondery Plus and the Wondery app.
In the Pacific Ocean, halfway between Peru and New Zealand,
lies a tiny volcanic island.
It's a little-known British territory called Pitcairn,
and it harboured a deep, dark scandal.
There wouldn't be a girl on Pitcairn once they reached the age of 10 that would still a virgin. It just happens to all of us. I'm journalist Luke Jones and for almost two years
I've been investigating a shocking story that has left deep scars on generations of women and girls
from Pitcairn. When there's nobody watching, nobody going to report it, people will get away with what
they can get away with.
In the Pitcairn Trials, I'll be uncovering a story of abuse
and the fight for justice that has brought a unique,
lonely Pacific island to the brink of extinction.
Listen to the Pitcairn Trials exclusively on Wondery+.
Join Wondery in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. DA was shot to death.
Three, four!
Thankfully, there aren't many small towns or big cities that have gone through what Kauffman, Texas has.
Their first assistant DA, Mark Hasse, was shot at 8 o'clock in the morning on a busy street just a block from the courthouse.
In this small town, there was a huge turnout at the service for Hasse, who was 57 and unmarried, but very well known.
very well known. Kaufman is just 30 miles from Dallas, but it's a different world, rural,
and until January 31st, 2013, quiet. I was driving up this road. I saw the shooter cross that street, and Mark was walking this way. When I first got out of my car,
I heard a gunshot, so I turned and looked towards this direction.
Linda Bush and Kelly Blaine were headed to the courthouse that morning.
Linda is a lawyer, a former police officer.
Kelly is a court coordinator.
Neither is a stranger to crime or criminals,
but they were not prepared for what they saw and heard that morning.
He shoved Mark like this, Mark straightened up, shoved back, and then he took the gun
and shot right into his neck.
What did he look like?
He had on a black mask that covered his face.
Couldn't tell what he looked like or his age at all.
The gunman fired two final shots into the air and raced to his car.
Just then, Linda Bush, the ex-cop, happened to be driving by on her way to work.
She saw the shooting and the gunman, whose face and body were completely covered.
So Linda pulled in to try to read the license plate number on the shooter's car,
but there was the license plate number on the shooter's car.
But there was no license plate.
The shooter took off.
And so did Linda.
She followed the car for about three blocks down this road.
She tried to call 911, but she was nervous and she had a new phone.
So she fumbled and kept dialing 991.
And the killer got away.
Linda hurried back to the crime scene where she was captured on a police car's dashboard camera, giving Hassee CPR.
I gave CPR until the police officer came and they took me aside and they said, we'll take it now.
CPR until the police officer came and they took me aside and they said, we'll take it now.
The identity of the masked murderer remained a mystery, but there was no disguising the impact of Hasse's killing. Sheriff David Burns and Hasse's boss, DA Mike McClellan, had a press
conference within hours. We're in the process of running down many leads right now. It felt like a family member died.
My name is Mike McClelland. I'm the criminal district attorney for Coffman County. We lost
a really, really good man. He was an excellent friend and a spectacular prosecutor. And this
was pretty unprecedented. I mean, it was an attack on the judicial system the way we looked at it.
precedent. I mean, it was an attack on the judicial system the way we looked at it.
Because Hasse was Mike McClellan's chief deputy, special prosecutors had to be brought in.
Dallas attorneys Toby Shook and Bill Worski took over one of the most important cases they'd ever had. Killing a prosecutor is like killing a police officer. Another one's going
to take his place. We thought we were the right ones to take Mark Hie's place and to try to get justice to the person that murdered him.
Local police immediately began the hunt for the killer. Soon, state and federal officers
swarmed Kaufman to offer help. It was up to Lieutenant Jolie Stewart of the Sheriff's
Department to help run the investigation.
First order of business, find that getaway car.
We knew we had a light-colored, maybe silver or tan sedan, four-door, maybe a Ford Taurus,
and that was going to be our suspect vehicle. You just don't realize how many cars fit that description until you start stopping them.
Linda Bush had told police
everything she could remember, but it wasn't much. So the Texas Rangers turned to a hypnotist
to try to dredge up whatever was stored in her subconscious memory. Well, I'm always a little
bit skeptical about things like that, but I was certainly willing to do it if it would help.
things like that. But I was certainly willing to do it if it would help. Under hypnosis, Linda said there was an unusual pattern on the back of the car. That would help a lot before long, but it
didn't mean much then. Investigators were relying on more traditional police work. The mindset when
you have a major crime like this, it is to reach out and touch every suspect you can as fast as you can and try to account for them.
And the accounts we were getting about how it happened with the murder, getting up close with Mark,
it just told me it was probably a grudge or a grievance this person had that was extremely personal.
Mark Hasse was one tough Texas prosecutor.
tough Texas prosecutor. Over a long career, he'd sent a long line of murderers, armed robbers,
and drug dealers to the penitentiary. Some of them were free now, bearing grudges and bearing arms.
We were literally swamped with suspects. This investigation from day one was like drinking out of a fire hose. There was one man right in Kaufman who police went
to see right away. Eric Williams. He was a lawyer and a justice of the peace, but he may well have
had a motive to kill Hasse. Williams had been caught and convicted of stealing computer monitors
from a county office. The case had been prosecuted by Mark Hasse.
You know, it was quite common knowledge that he was not happy with that.
Sheriff Burns had detectives immediately go to his house.
He comes to the door with his arm in a sling and claims that he has had shoulder surgery.
The deputies tested Williams' hands for gunshot residue. They found none. You know, we had
no reason to disbelieve him at that time, but we still, you know, he was still on our radar. That's
when public attention started focusing on a white supremacist prison gang, the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas, or ABT.
The ABT had just been front-page news
after a federal indictment charged members of the gang with murder and drug trafficking.
The indictment had been sought by a group of prosecutors,
including Mark Hasse.
And then there were other high-profile shootings
of law enforcement officials by members of other white supremacist gangs.
About two months after Hasse was killed, Evan Ebel, a member of the 211 prison gang, murdered the head of the Colorado prison system.
Two days later, Ebel was pulled over on a lonely Texas highway by a sheriff's deputy who thought something was suspicious about his car.
Ebel shot the deputy and sped away, leaving the wounded officer in the grass.
He led police on a high-speed chase through the Texas countryside, about 125 miles from Kauffman.
He was finally stopped after hitting a truck
and then killed in a shootout.
Turns out that Evan Ebel wasn't even in Texas on the day Hasse was killed.
And while the white supremacists were getting all the headlines,
investigators could not shake the feeling
that they were spinning their wheels.
The bottom line for those gangs is money.
And killing a prosecutor, killing a police officer
is just bad for their business.
But as the weeks went by without an arrest
or a major break in the case,
the question became,
could whoever have killed Mark Hasse get away with it? Even kill again?
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Hot shot Australian attorney Nicola Gaba was born into legal royalty.
Her specialty? Representing some of the city's most infamous gangland criminals.
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She's going to all the major groups within Melbourne's underworld, and she's informing
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in criminal justice as a prosecutor and defense attorney,
I've seen some crazy cases, and this one belongs right at the top of the list.
She was addicted to the game she had created.
She just didn't know how to stop.
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Listen to Informance Lawyer X exclusively on Wondery Plus.
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And listen to more Exhibit C true crime shows early and ad-free right now.
For weeks after the murder of Mark Hasse, investigators were drowning in information.
Tips and leads that Sheriff David Burns says all went nowhere.
99.9% of what we gathered was not helpful.
Nobody had any answers here, right?
No.
was not helpful.
Nobody had any answers here, right?
No.
The sheriff and his team began eliminating some suspects with no possible links to the crime.
They were convinced that neither the Aryan Brotherhood
nor a drug cartel was involved.
In Kauffman County, we're not prosecuting any cartel cases.
Yet Mark Hasse's murderer was still on the loose.
And everyone around the courthouse was looking over their shoulders,
wondering if they were safe or if they were next.
Kelly Blaine works in one of the courts.
One of the hardest things of all of that to me was
helping my 70-something-year-old judge put on a bulletproof vest just so he could
leave work and go home. They're turning over every stone. Hasse's boss, District Attorney Mike
McClelland, always carried a gun, but his son, J.R., says he worried about people he worked with.
That was the thing about Dad. Being the D.A DA he felt responsible for everyone in that office.
Was he armed? All the time. In fact he was seen on video at a local gun store looking for weapons
for his staff. I tried to tell him keep a gun on you at all times. And then just hours after he
went to the gun store two months after Mark Hasse was shot down in broad daylight,
there was another, if possible, even more shocking killing.
Breaking news right off the top tonight.
Hoffman County District Attorney Mike McClellan and his wife
have been found shot and killed in their 40 home.
It was a grisly killing.
The district attorney himself and his wife were murdered at dawn in a hail of bullets.
It was a bad, bad scene.
Probably one of the worst two crime scenes I've ever been on because of the blood and
the corn.
Cynthia McClellan was shot repeatedly with one final shot to her head.
J.R. McClellan was driving when he got the news.
I got out of the truck and stood there.
I had my kids in there with me.
Didn't know what to say.
Didn't know what to do.
He had to tell his sister, Krista.
I was shocked for two or three seconds, and I just broke down.
The first thing you think of when you hear something like that is, you know, how long did they suffer?
The murder of the McClellans meant the law enforcement community was now dealing with a serial killer
who so far had set his sights on them.
Sheriff's Lieutenant Jolie Stewart.
Was there any doubt in your mind that these two murders were connected with Mark Hasse's murder?
It was one of the first things that entered my mind when I got the call.
We knew that it was, they were connected.
County officials immediately got round-the-clock armed police protection,
and Special Prosecutor Toby Shook took precautions, even though he lived 30 miles away in Dallas.
I had my wife take out two guns, told her what the situation was, and not to open the door.
Not even for a police officer?
No. And I told her I would be texting her or calling her before I came back to let her know it'd be me coming through the door. I wanted to think I knew that nobody was coming after any
of us, but the paranoia was crazy. After all the false leads since the Hasse murder, police got a
significant and unexpected break just one day after the McClellans were gunned down.
An anonymous tip came into a Crimestoppers website, and the tipster's opening line of his email?
Do we have your full attention now?
He, or they, certainly did.
It was very specific as to the type of ammunition that was used on Mark Cassie's death.
So somebody who had that much knowledge probably knew a lot more.
So he was definitely somebody that we wanted to start a dialogue with.
Whoever it was seemed to be taunting the police and in the email exchange on the Crime Stoppers website threatened to commit
more murders.
By now with every other suspect eliminated, police turned their full attention to Eric
Williams who lived here.
He was the one time Justice of the Peace who stole those computer monitors.
He wasn't hiding, he was riding around town on a Segway.
And he was talking to investigative producer Jack Douglas of CBS station KTVT.
Jack Douglas, My heart goes out to all the families that have been affected by this tragedy,
and especially to the people that work at the Gord House.
I worked there for several years while I was going to law school.
And so I know that it's a tight-knit family.
This is devastating to them.
There was a coldness about him.
It didn't look genuine to me.
Special Prosecutor Bill Worski.
He looked smug. He looked like he was smirking.
And he just looked like a psychopath.
What's it make you feel like knowing that you've been somehow wrapped up in this?
It actually makes me feel that the police are doing the thorough job they need to.
Williams was right.
The police were hard at work, learning everything they could about him.
Jenny Parks thought she knew Eric Williams pretty well, and she liked him.
Professionally, very friendly. She's a local attorney in Coffman County and has known Williams since he was a young court coordinator in town.
Anything you needed done on that docket, he would make sure it got done or set. So I didn't know of
anyone that didn't like him, you know, back when he first started practicing law. But everything
changed in May 2011,
just six months after Williams had been elected
Justice of the Peace.
That's when he was caught repeatedly on surveillance video,
taking those monitors and other equipment
from a county building.
He said he needed them for his office,
but within two weeks, he was arrested.
I don't think that you actually
believe, I mean you're an educated person, I see your class ring on your finger, that you
can just walk into a ID department and say I need a monitor, I'm taking that one.
I mean there's places that do that. Places being here in Colman County or?
Well, I mean, there's businesses that do that.
It was Mark Hasse and Mike McClelland who decided to prosecute Williams
for the computer theft, a felony.
And some people thought they had gone too far.
I thought it was crazy.
I just know he wasn't stealing them from the county, misappropriating them. He was going to use them for a legitimate purpose. I feel sure about that.
He maybe didn't go through the right channels to obtain them because he didn't get along with
the person that allotted them. There was even speculation that this was a political prosecution.
Williams had supported McClellan's opponent in the election. I don't think my dad and Mark Hasse tried Eric Williams any different than they would have tried anybody else
if they had done something that broke the law and had charges filed against them.
And in fact, prosecutors offered Williams a deal.
Plead guilty to a misdemeanor, and avoid jail. He refused. He told me because it was
all fabricated and he would win and there was nothing to worry about and there was no problem
and he didn't want to have a misdemeanor on his record. Eric Williams was a member of the
International High IQ Society, MENSA, but his decision was not a very smart one. Williams went on trial and was
convicted of a felony, and it cost him almost everything he had worked for. Shortly thereafter,
of course, he lost his right to be an elected public official. He lost his health insurance.
He lost his law license eventually, which meant his livelihood, his ability to provide for his family.
So he lost a lot.
Yes, sir.
Didn't go to jail.
No, sir.
But he lost a lot.
Yes, sir.
And Prosecutor Toby Shook says Williams was out for revenge.
And the judge sentenced him to probation, and the computer record showed the next day on LexisNexis, he started searching Mark Cassie, where he lived, and that sort of thing.
Tanya Ratcliffe started hearing about Eric Williams from her close friend, Cynthia McClellan, the DA's wife. They were both members of a quilting club, and she knows
the McClellans were concerned about Williams ever since that trial. They told me about some of his
history with having been prosecuted before, and that they thought he had just the personality
type that couldn't stand being humiliated. Did they think that he was humiliated? Yes.
Did they think that he was humiliated?
Yes.
And after Hasse's murder, the McClellans were even more concerned.
Did they feel like targets?
Possibly, yes.
Did she ever say anything?
Yes, she did tell me that she felt that Eric Williams was behind it and that they were going to take precautions at home to take care of themselves.
was behind it and that they were going to take precautions at home to take care of themselves.
Mike McClellan from day one, minute one, knew that it was Eric Williams that had gunned down Mark Hasse. That's why sheriff's deputies went to Williams's house that day. They checked out his
story that he had had shoulder surgery and within days they determined he was lying. So we asked Sheriff David Burns
why wasn't Williams arrested then? For what? Murder. Well where's our evidence that he did it?
We had no evidence. He lied to the police about? That's not an offense. It is federally. You can't
lie to a federal officer. You can lie to us all day.
And quite frankly, we can't expect most people we talk to to lie to us.
They needed more.
They needed Eric Williams, the man from Mensa, to do something dumb.
And they were about to get lucky.
For being a self-proclaimed genius, thinking he was smarter than everyone, he made some pretty stupid mistakes.
After DA Mike McClelland and his wife Cynthia were killed...
Kauffman County courthouse employees looked visibly shaken.
Texas lawmen knew any one of them
could be next.
But even though they felt certain
Eric Williams was their man,
they didn't have enough on him.
So everyone was on edge,
especially at the courthouse.
Some employees felt safer
going into the building
escorted by law enforcement officers.
Others vowing to protect themselves
packed a lunch and a gun.
And they were running out of time.
Remember that anonymous Crime Stoppers tip?
The tipster had threatened
that the killings would resume soon.
Then he made a threat that these assaults would continue
unless a Kauffman County judge resigned by the next Friday.
The police had to find the source of the tip before the fatal deadline.
With the clock ticking, they found this surveillance footage from businesses near the McClellans' house taken around the time of the murders.
We saw white Ford Crown Victoria on different pieces of video footage entering the neighborhood at about the right time and exiting at about the right time.
So at that point, in addition to trying to interview Eric Williams, our focus was trying to find that white Ford Crown Victoria.
Eric Williams had hired lawyers who prevented police from talking to him,
but luckily for the police, that changed suddenly. We get an email on our phone from Eric Williams'
lawyers saying we no longer represent Eric Williams, and that was a big moment in the
investigation because we immediately realized he's not represented by lawyers, so we can send
officers over to attempt to interview him. But police still didn't have enough evidence to get
what they really wanted, a warrant to search here, inside the house where Eric Williams lived.
They'd have to get his permission, and that didn't seem very likely, except Williams was full of surprises. And when the police asked, he said yes and invited them in.
And that fits in with his psychopathic, egotistical mindset.
He thought he could fool law enforcement in this case.
Armed with Eric Williams' permission and several pistols,
Major Dwayne Dockery of the Texas Rangers and another officer entered the house
well aware that they were now alone with the man they believed had committed three murders.
One of us had to be watching him all the time because if he did have weapons in there,
he would have known where they were. We wouldn't have known where they were.
The officers made an audio recording of the entire search. Because they had no warrant, they could only look for things where Williams allowed.
Is this your white stuff? Yeah, look in there. I don't want to see it. But they saw enough.
They found parts of weapons that could have been used in the murders. First, they found a gun site.
He had told me that site hadn't been on a gun, and I asked him about that. This has they found a gun sight. He had told me that sight hadn't been on a gun,
and I asked him about that. This has been on a gun at one time. I mean, it's even got oil on it,
which has been cleaned and everything. Yeah, that doesn't surprise me. His only response then was,
well, that wouldn't surprise me. And they found more.
Okay, what is that? Secret 3500B? I asked him about it. He said he didn't know what it was.
And it's a device that uses infrared technology to find heat signatures up to 900 feet away.
Heat signatures can help find people.
It was enough to get that warrant they wanted for a detailed search of the house.
And they came back the next
day with more manpower including the fbi they went through every inch of the house and they got very
lucky biggest thing they found during the search is we found a title to a white ford crown victoria
just validated what we thought that we were on the right track, that Eric Williams
was our killer, and we were getting close to getting him. It was a huge break, but not the
only one. Here in the entryway to the Williams house, police found a scrap of paper tucked inside
a computer bag. There were some numbers scribbled on it, and it didn't take long to figure out what they meant.
When you call in a Crimestoppers tip, you get a personal ID number,
because all that's anonymous.
We contacted the administrator on Crimestoppers,
and we were able to find out that number was linked to that certain tip that we got.
That tip was the one that correctly identified the ammunition used to kill Mark Hasse
and threaten to kill again.
It was enough to arrest Williams for something.
And that very night, he was arrested without incident
at his home for making deadly threats.
But there was still not enough to charge him with murder.
We still hadn't located the murder weapon. We hadn't located the getaway car.
And we were a little bit dejected after the search that we didn't locate the white Crown Victoria.
One thing that happened during the execution of the search warrant is the media showed up.
We have breaking news now in Kauffman County. Investigators are searching the home
of former Justice of the Peace Eric Williams. And the search was carried on live TV. Chopper 11 is live right
now. And that led to the biggest break yet. The morning after the search was televised,
one viewer called Bill Worski. It was a friend of Eric Williams who told me, hey, I've got some
information I think you need to know.
I know about a secret storage place that Eric Williams has.
JOHN DAVIS, A secret storage place?
BILL WIERSKI, Yes.
He told us that he had rented a storage unit on behalf of Eric Williams because Eric Williams
didn't want his name associated with this storage unit.
And he was able to lead us to that storage unit.
JOHN DAVIS, Police quickly got a warrant for the unit that Williams secretly rented a few towns away.
We had law enforcement just surrounding the storage unit.
We finally cut into the lock.
Once we raised the door, there's the white Crown Victoria.
Once we raised the door, there's the white Crown Victoria. The Crown Victoria, one of the crown jewels in the case against Eric Williams.
And it was like Christmas morning and the Dallas Cowboys went in the Super
Bowl all rolled into one and there are a lot of hugs and high-fives. And I told my
wife this, that I said other than the birth of my children, that was probably
the best feeling I ever had.
Besides the car was a boatload of weaponry, dozens of guns, thousands of rounds of ammunition, police badges, bulletproof vests, and a crossbow.
That locker was a tactical officer's dream.
And it was more than enough for the detectives.
So on April 18, 2013, almost three weeks after the McClellans were killed,
Eric Williams was charged with capital murder for shooting them and prosecutor Mark Hasse.
But it turned out Williams did not act alone. In December 2014, 20 months after being charged with murdering D.A. Mike McClelland,
his wife Cynthia, and prosecutor Mark Hasse.
And be seated, please.
Eric Williams went on trial in front of people who used to be his courthouse colleagues.
And to the indictment, how do you plead, sir? Guilty or not guilty?
Not guilty.
Plea is not guilty, and we are for trial.
It had been a long and difficult investigation. You'll hear circumstantial evidence, forensic evidence, fingerprint evidence.
JOHN YANG, And now, Prosecutor Bill Wierske could finally tell everyone in the
courtroom it was Eric Williams who shot down their friends for revenge after being prosecuted
for stealing those computer monitors. He began to plot.
He began to plan to seek vengeance,
fatal and vital retribution.
This case was undeniably personal to Wierski,
and he got up close and personal to Williams
when he said Williams killed Cynthia McClellan
because she was in the way.
She died because she was married to Mike McClellan,
and she died because this man didn't want to leave a witness
to a murder.
Prosecutors had a ton of evidence.
The weapons stockpile, the Crown Victoria, police uniforms
and badges, and compelling witnesses.
She was just laying on the ground in the dry blood, coagulated blood.
Dallas police officer Charles Tomlinson was the first at the McClellans' house that night.
He'd been down the street visiting his parents, who were good friends of the McClellans,
and they followed him to the crime scene.
My parents were behind me, and my mom immediately hit the ground.
When you say hit the ground, describe what you're talking about.
She just fell to her knees and started crying.
The defense made no opening statement and called no witnesses.
Mike McClellan's son, JR, and daughter, Krista, looked on as Williams' lawyer made the case,
but the prosecution had not made its case.
ERIC WILLIAMS, JR.: Eric Williams did not commit these murders.
There's not one single piece of biometric evidence that ties Eric to the McClellan home.
Not one fingerprint, not one piece of DNA, not one hair, nothing.
All rise for my jury.
The jurors seemed to decide not only was there no reasonable doubt, there was no doubt at all.
They took just an hour and 40 minutes to reach a verdict. We, the jury,
unanimously find the defendant, Eric Lyle Williams, guilty of capital murder as charged in the
indictment. You may be seated. But some of the most shocking testimony would come next in the
sentencing phase of the trial where the jury would decide if Williams would get the death penalty.
jury would decide if Williams would get the death penalty. It was the debut of a star witness.
You are Kim Williams? Yes, I am. The wife of Eric Williams? Yes. Eric Williams's wife of 16 years,
Kim, had also been charged with all three murders. She admitted she drove the getaway cars after all the killings. Were you a willing participant in these murders?
Yes, I was.
Kim had since filed for divorce and said she took part in the murders
because she was addicted to painkillers.
Tell the members of the jury what you were addicted to.
Oxycontin, morphine, Valium, Provigil, a lot of stuff. The soon-to-be ex-Mrs. Williams confirmed her husband's motive
for murder was anger, fury really, that he was convicted for stealing those computer monitors.
Why did you agree to drive the murder of Mark Hassell? I was so drugged up and I so believed in Eric
and everything that he told me.
His anger was my anger.
This is the getaway car Eric Williams used
after the Hasse murder.
Remember Linda Bush, the ex-cop who witnessed the shooting?
She recalled under hypnosis the shooter's car
had a strange pattern on the back.
Turns out this car had a strange pattern right where Linda Bush
remembered. It was paw prints. The former owner had been a cat lover. After the Hasse murder,
this car broke down and didn't last long enough to use in the McClellan murders. He wanted to use
the original car that we used for Mark Hasse, but the transmission blew. Couldn't use it.
Kim said that's why Williams bought that white Crown Victoria.
And she said he dressed up like a police officer to dupe the McClellans into letting him into the house.
She also said after killing the McClellans, she and Eric celebrated.
said after killing the McClellans, she and Eric celebrated.
We had barbecue steaks. Well, we had steaks on the grill, and Eric cooked those.
What was the mood like at the cookout?
Happy. Joyous.
And Williams was also apparently not finished.
After the McClellans were killed, were there more on the hit list? Yes.
Kim said judges would have come next, specifically the one who'd mentored Williams and urged him to take that plea deal in the theft case. He bought a crossbow with razor tips.
Home State's exhibit number 407. Among all the items found in the storage unit, one of the
most puzzling and chilling had been homemade napalm stored in, of all things,
pickle jars. Kim Williams says it was meant for the judge. He was gonna wait
for him and shoot him with the crossbow and then bore his stomach out and put
the napalm in it.
Kim Williams' testimony might well have sealed her husband's fate,
but Mike McClellan's family wanted a chance to talk to him.
McClellan's son and daughter, Krista and J.R., did not hold much back.
You're a sorry SOB, and we hope you rot.
I wish you could look me in the eye right now,
but you can't. J.R. heard how Williams had celebrated after killing Mike and Cynthia and taunted him. Tonight, while you're eating bologna sandwich, I'm going to have steak, ribeye, baked potatoes, a glass of sweet tea.
And I'll be there to watch you die along with the rest of my family.
And Cynthia's daughter, Christina Foreman, might have given the kind of send-off
most people in Kauffman would have wanted for Eric Williams.
Pretty much the only thing I have to say is,
F*** you, Eric Williams. I much the only thing I have to say is, f*** you, Eric Williams.
I apologize to the court.
And I hope that you get exactly what you deserve.
Eric Williams was sentenced to death.
The people of Coffman County, I know you've been scared for the last couple of years.
No reason to be scared anymore.
We're in recess.
No reason to be scared anymore. We're in recess.
He always thought, and probably still today thinks, that he's the smartest person on the face of the earth.
Well, look where he is now.
Exactly. He may be the smartest man on Texas death row.
Kim Williams pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 40 years in prison.
What did you expect justice to feel like? I guess you expect it to feel like this big ball of relief just rolls over you and everything is
good now and everything was terrible and now everything's great. And what did it feel like?
It felt no different. It was the outcome the McClellans wanted and needed. But
justice can only take a person so far. It is still up to the McClellans, like all survivors,
to find a way to move on and move past the trial and the tragedy. You know, Dad wouldn't want us to sit and grieve him forever,
so you pick up, you go home,
and start living life again.
But I don't think it'll ever be easy.
Eric Williams' request for a new trial was denied.
Williams has filed for a stay of execution.
It can take more than 20 years of
appeals before an execution. Hear from Mike McClellan's children on their father's love for
his job online at 48hours.com. If you like this podcast, you can listen ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app.
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