48 Hours - The Teen Killer’s Pact

Episode Date: June 24, 2024

A 15-year-old boy goes to a dance and never returns. Teen killers keep a secret for 40 years -- until one of them cracks. Richard Schlesinger investigates.See Privacy Policy at https://art19....com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to this podcast ad-free right now. Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app today. Even if you love the thrill of true crime stories as much as I do, there are times when you want to mix it up. And that's where Audible comes in, with all the genres you love and new ones to discover. Explore thousands of audiobooks, podcasts, and originals, with more added all the time. thousands of audiobooks, podcasts, and originals, with more added all the time. Listening to Audible can lead to positive change in your mood, your habits,
Starting point is 00:00:35 and even your overall well-being. And you can enjoy Audible anytime, while doing household chores, exercising, commuting, you name it. There's more to imagine when you listen. Sign up for a free 30-day Audible trial and your first audiobook is free. Visit audible.ca. 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
Starting point is 00:01:00 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. You go back to the first days after the murder, this might have been a dispute between teenagers. It might have involved a girl. It might have involved drinking. between teenagers. It might have involved a girl.
Starting point is 00:01:43 It might have involved drinking. Whoever knew about John's killing kept this secret for over 40 years. That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind. September 26, 1969 is the day that changed the lives of Bill and Neville McCabe forever. I don't think I've had a whole night's sleep since it's happened. If it's not too painful, can you tell me about his last day? Winter dance, his second dance.
Starting point is 00:02:40 Fifteen-year-old John McCabe was looking forward to going to the Knights of Columbus dance that evening. Took a shower, scrubbed his hair, put his father's aftershave on. He didn't shave, but put his father's aftershave on. Oh yeah, he got all spruced up. 11 o'clock I started looking out the window. That's when the dance closes. He should be home by midnight. So I went down to the dance and checked the road, screaming out the window, John! John! No, John. I started praying at that point. The day after John McCabe went missing, three young kids were cutting through a vacant lot when they made a horrifying discovery,
Starting point is 00:03:26 which was the body of John McCabe. He had been bound and gagged and tied with rope. After John's body was found, Bill McCabe, a pillar of strength, had to do the unspeakable. That was identify the body of his dead son. Never forget it. People keep talking about closure.
Starting point is 00:03:47 You can't shake it. He then had to go home and inform his family of what had happened. Bill said, honey, my son's dead. Well, I was a senior in high school. Were you fearful? Yes. They hadn't caught the people that killed my brother.
Starting point is 00:04:08 Did you think when you looked at kids in your classes, maybe it's him, maybe it's him? Yes, maybe it was them. Maybe they knew something. How could they not know anything? Without physical evidence, without a witness, this case remained unsolved for several years, and several years became decades.
Starting point is 00:04:29 This is it. I pray every day justice will be served. There was only one way this case was going to be solved. Do you solemnly swear that And how old were you in 1969? 17. And that's if someone came forward and talked. How do you know how John McCabe died?
Starting point is 00:04:49 I was there. Richard Schlesinger reports, The Pact. the pact. It took almost every ounce of strength left in his 85-year-old body to get to the witness stand, but Bill McCabe waited 43 years for this day and the start of this trial in January 2013. Good morning, Mr. McCabe. Do you remember September 27th, 1969? Yes, sir. How old was John at that day? He was 15 years, six months, and two weeks. I always visualized him as being a big shot somewhere. John Joseph McCabe, my son JJ, you know.
Starting point is 00:05:58 But I never got to see any of those things. In the fall of 1969, two men had just landed on the moon. Beautiful, just beautiful. Thousands had just crashed at Woodstock, and John McCabe, 15 years, six months, and two weeks old, was living with his family in Tewksbury, Massachusetts. I think we have a right to be proud of them, yeah. John's father, Bill, was an engineer. His mother, Evelyn, worked at the school library. His sisters, Roberta, who was six, and Debbie, who was 17,
Starting point is 00:06:40 remember a brother who was always busy doing what brothers do. It was pretty interesting. You open the closet door and your closet's filled with grasshoppers. I just remember his hands were always dirty, like with oil or grease or a frog in his hand. So you brought home a goose once, too. Oh, yeah, a Canadian goose. Big sucker. It's fun to watch you talk about this because your eyes light up.
Starting point is 00:07:03 I mean, you have very fond memories of those days. Evelyn holds on to any reminder of her son. I have John's money. I can't spend it. And you've had it all these years. Yeah, 25 years. Every now and then, the smell's gone off of it now. I almost put it in the casket with him. And then I thought, no, I'll just
Starting point is 00:07:28 keep it with me. And when I see him again, I'll give it to him. When she last saw John, Evelyn gave him permission to go to that dance at the Knights of Columbus Hall. I let him go. I let him go out the door. I shouldn't have. The next day, police came to the house and took Evelyn's husband to the basement to talk. They didn't want me to know anything.
Starting point is 00:07:58 But you heard. I heard them. Evelyn got on her knees and pressed her ear to a vent in the bathroom. Evelyn McCartney, Jr.: This is where I could hear everything that was going on down solo. John McCartney, Jr.: The police were telling her husband John's body was discovered in a vacant lot in the neighboring gritty city of Lowell. Well, what did you hear?
Starting point is 00:08:26 I heard that he was tied up, and there was tape on his eyes and his mouth. I heard a lot. I cried. I laid there and cried. A huge investigation was launched by the Lowell, Tewksbury, and Massachusetts State Police. What evidence did they collect at the scene?
Starting point is 00:08:52 The rope that was used to tie John up, tape that was used to tape his eyes and his mouth, all of his clothing, his shoes. Jerry Leone was the local DA who years later took on the case. Today, he's a partner in the law firm Nixon Peabody. There was forensic evidence, but it wasn't really meaningful because you couldn't tie it to anyone in particular. But the case looked promising at first. But the case looked promising at first. A witness had spotted a car near the crime scene that night.
Starting point is 00:09:39 I believe the way he had described it was a 1965 Chevy Impala colored plum or maroon. Then another tip led police to a schoolmate of John's, 16-year-old Mike Ferreira, who says he barely knew John. I probably seen him like a handful of times in my life. I don't, you know, I didn't really, he wasn't a friend. Ferreira and his friend, Nancy Williams, were questioned because they had picked up John when he was hitchhiking on his way to the dance. I picked him up and I gave him a ride to the corner and I never saw him again. Ferreira told police that while the dance was underway, he left Nancy and met up with his best friend, Walter Shelley. Me, Walter, and Bob Ryan took a ride to Lowell to try to get some beer.
Starting point is 00:10:21 They were in Walter Shelley's car. took a ride to Lowell, tried to get some beer. They were in Walter Shelley's car. It was maroon, and it was a 1965 Chevy Impala. Police searched it but found no evidence. Still, Walter Shelley was now a person of interest. He was brought in for questioning and later polygraphed five times. The test showed he was lying in all vital areas of the questioning. If you read the reports, now you start seeing Ferreira and Shelley, Shelley and Ferreira.
Starting point is 00:10:55 Ferreira was questioned multiple times. I knew where they were going. Not totally stupid. But Ferreira wasn't helping himself. At one point, while joyriding with some friends he suddenly blurted out that he killed John. I was 16, we're drinking, joking, and I said yeah I did it. They knew I was joking, I was a joker. Leone says police were not amused but there was no way to corroborate what Ferreira said. Without physical evidence, without a witness statement putting him at the scene,
Starting point is 00:11:32 the Ferreira lead kept drying up. There were dozens of other people police investigated, other teens, local drug dealers, and pedophiles. Detectives worked this case hard for two years while Bill McCabe worked on a record of his son's life. I wasn't trying to be an author or anything like that. I was just looking at ways to hold on to him, keep his memory. I was just looking at ways to hold on to him, keep his memory.
Starting point is 00:12:10 He also tried to make sure the police never forgot his son. I was always on the phone talking to the police. I'd be up in the middle of the night. She'd be saying, what the hell are you doing up? Get back to bed. Despite Bill's persistence and the intense police effort, there were no arrests. Shelly and Ferreira went into the service in 1970, so the following year the two of them left the area. And the McCabe family was left without any answers for decades. for decades. I'm Erin Moriarty of 48 Hours,
Starting point is 00:12:52 and of all the cases I've covered, this is the one that troubles me most. A bizarre and maddening tale involving an eyewitness account that doesn't quite make sense. A sister testifying against a brother. A lack of physical evidence. Crosley Green has lived more than half his life behind bars for a crime he says he didn't commit. Listen to Murder in the Orange Grove, the trouble case against Crosley Green,
Starting point is 00:13:13 early and ad-free with a 48-hours-plus subscription on Apple Podcasts. Hot shot Australian attorney Nicola Gaba was born into legal royalty. Her specialty? Representing some of the city's most infamous gangland criminals. However, while Nicola held the underworld's darkest secrets, the most dangerous secret was her own. She's going to all the major groups within Melbourne's underworld, and she's informing on them all. I'm Marsha Clark, host of the new podcast, Informants Lawyer X.
Starting point is 00:13:44 In my long career 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. Now, through dramatic interviews and access, I'll reveal the truth behind one of the world's most shocking legal scandals. Listen to Informants Lawyer X exclusively on Wondery Plus. I'll reveal the truth behind one of the world's most shocking legal scandals. Listen to Informant's Lawyer X exclusively on Wondery+. Join Wondery in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
Starting point is 00:14:12 And listen to more Exhibit C true crime shows early and ad-free right now. This is the little compass so he can find his way home. With each passing season, John McCabe's case grew colder. In the passing season, John McCabe's case grew colder, but his mother kept asking the most painful questions about how he died. I tried to strangle myself just to visualize what it felt like. I wondered, did he call for me? What kind of a mother was I?
Starting point is 00:15:07 I wasn't there for him. For a time, Evelyn set a place for John at the dinner table. His absence was a constant presence in the house. You can't just do something wrong and not have to pay for it. the house. You can't just do something wrong and not have to pay for it. The case stalled for some 30 years until November 2000. John and I went just about everywhere, you know. When Jack Ward, a childhood friend of John's, made good on a decades-old promise to Bill McCabe. He would say, Jackie, have you heard anything about John? Keep your eyes open, let me know. I says, have I ever heard anything about John McCabe?
Starting point is 00:15:48 You know, I'm going to tell you. Ward had been at a cookout at this house in Tewksbury where he ran into a kid from the old neighborhood, Mike Ferreira. This photo was taken that day. We're all sitting around drinking
Starting point is 00:16:04 and that's when he just blurted out, I know who killed John. And he said it to me again, I know who killed John. And, you know, finally I said, who? And he says, Walter. I said, Walter Shelley. He says, yeah. Walter Shelley.
Starting point is 00:16:24 I said, what would be Walter's motive to kill John? He said, Marla, because of Marla. Marla Shiner. Ward said she was Walter Shelley's girlfriend back then, but he said the trouble was Marla also seemed to like John McCabe. and by all accounts, Walter Shelley was one very jealous young man. The footage you see was taken a few years after the murder. Ward admits he sat on the information for a while, worried about how to tell Bill McCabe. You go knock on somebody's door and say, hey, I know who killed your son. You better have it right. I was shocked when he told me.
Starting point is 00:17:10 So I scribbled it on a piece of paper. I put it in the Bible on the page beginning the Book of John so I wouldn't forget it, and I immediately called the police. But it took many more calls from Bill McCabe and three more years for police to show up at Ferreira's door. It was now 2003. Ferreira worked as a forklift operator, lived in Salem, New Hampshire, and Nancy Williams, his friend back in the day, was now his wife. Mike wouldn't hurt a fly. I know he wouldn't. Ferreira says he remembers the cookout conversation with Jack Ward very differently.
Starting point is 00:17:54 Jackie went and told them, I said, Walter Shelley killed him. I never said that. And at this cookout, you know, I already had a few drinks and he's's running his mouth, Shelly did it, Shelly did it, and this went on all afternoon. And finally I got sick of hearing it. I says, he probably did it. Next thing I know, three years, four years later, I had the cops down at my house wanting to talk to me about John McCabe. Ferreira also denies discussing the jealousy motive with Ward. That's his theory. I never said that.
Starting point is 00:18:26 But again, there was no corroborating evidence. So, again, the case stalled. Well, what did they tell you about the investigation? It's going fine. It was always going fine. And how long did they tell you that? And you know what? It was sitting on a freaking shelf.
Starting point is 00:18:46 But the police had not forgotten John McCabe. All right, thanks. In January of 2007, 37 years after the murder, Jerry Leone was sworn in as Middlesex County District Attorney. The Lowell Police Department took it upon themselves to visit me weeks after I'd been elected to say, we'd actually like you to focus on this one and take a hard look at it with us. Investigators had gone back over the files and a name jumped out at them in Mike Ferreira's latest interview with police. In recounting the night of the murder, Ferreira said he was with Walter Shelley, but this time he added a name and said the other guy with them was Alan
Starting point is 00:19:34 Brown. Edward Alan Brown's name surfaces as someone who we're going to focus on. Edward Alan Brown was 17 and lived not far from the McCabe's when John was killed. He had long since moved away, but when police tracked him down, he said he knew nothing about the murder, never even heard of it. So how likely is it that he would never even heard of the murder of John McCabe in a town the size of Tewksbury? I'd say curious at the time. And police got a call from Brown's wife that was even more curious.
Starting point is 00:20:13 His wife told police that she thought he was lying. His wife said that she thought he was lying? Right. Carolyn Brown indicates to police that 20 to 25 years earlier, her husband had told her about an evening where he was involved in a young man being killed. But even that wasn't enough. It was the same old story. corroborating evidence and no real movement in the case until 2011, when Detective Linda Coughlin was assigned to find the killers. You think this case really took off when you met Detective Linda Coughlin? Yes, definitely. Why did you feel that way? Because of her attitude. attitude. She said, I'm going to get them. And she did. Detective Coughlin zeroed back in on Edward Allen Brown. He was retired from the Air Force and living in New Hampshire. Coughlin
Starting point is 00:21:16 interrogated Brown just twice. But when Brown learned he failed a polygraph, he suddenly broke down. He confessed that he was there when Walter Shelley and Mike Ferreira killed John McCabe. Why? Lowell Police brought in the McCabes and told them Brown's story about John's final hours. My dad started crying. He killed over on the table. On April 15th, 2011, nearly 42 years after John McCabe's body was found in that vacant lot, his father's perseverance finally paid off. Mr. McCabe held our feet to the fire. He never let us forget John McCabe's murder. The DA's office announced the indictments of Edward Allen Brown for manslaughter and Michael Ferreira and Walter Shelley for first-degree murder.
Starting point is 00:22:33 Two names known to police since day one. Two names also gathering dust here in John's Book of Mourners. The murderers came to the wake, and they came to the funeral. Why do you think Edward Allen Brown confessed? Chat now on Facebook and X. It would take almost two years to bring the men accused of killing John McCabe to trial. Two more years, the McCabes would have to wait. On January 18, 2013, Edward Allen Brown was called to testify against his one-time friend, Mike Ferreira, the first
Starting point is 00:23:29 defendant to go on trial. Do you see Michael Ferreira in the courtroom today? Yes, over there. For the first time, Brown publicly shared the details of the night John died. Brown says he was at home watching television when Mike Ferreira and Walter Shelley pulled up to his house. They wanted me to go with them to help them. Help them do what? I didn't know at the time until I got in the car and we left.
Starting point is 00:24:06 Brown testified they were on their way to the Knights of Columbus Hall when he learned of their plan. They said they wanted to go find this kid that had been, you know, messing around with Marla to teach him a lesson. And how did you know Marla Shiner? That was Walter's girlfriend. Michael noticed John McCabe was thumbing, and he said, there he is. And we pulled up next to John. Michael got out and grabbed him and pushed him into the back seat where I was. Michael was facing back at John, trying to smack him.
Starting point is 00:24:45 And John had his arms up to try to stop him from doing that. We went under the Spaghetti Vale Bridge. Brown says they drove up a dirt road to the vacant lot and pulled over. And we got him outside the car. Who pushed John out of the car? I did. I thought they were just going to slap him around. What happened next? Then Michael and Walter wrestled John, tripped him up and got him on the ground brown testified that he and shelly held john mccabe down while ferrera tied
Starting point is 00:25:14 him up michael tied his ankles then went around and tied his his wrist together then he took another piece of rope around his ankles and attached it up to his neck. They had put tape on his mouth. John's squirming, wiggling, trying to get out. He's lying on his belly with his legs up in the air and his head turned sideways. Then they said, that this will teach you to mess with Marler anymore. And we got in the car and left. Brown says they drove around, drinking beer for a while. Then I told them that we should go back and let him go.
Starting point is 00:26:04 Brown says they eventually returned to the lot. Michael and Walter got out of the car and went over to him. They were there for about 30 to 45 seconds, and they came quickly back to the car. We started to drive off, and one of them said that he wasn't breathing. John McCabe had died of strangulation. I wonder, I wonder what he thought of that night. Then they brought me home. What did you do?
Starting point is 00:26:47 I remember, I think I cried. Brown says he kept the murder a secret for 41 years because he was afraid of Michael Ferreira. Michael said, if anybody talks to anybody about this, I'll kill them. Alan Brown's a friggin' liar, and I mean, they know that. According to the prosecutor, he's been to Iraq and Afghanistan, five tours. Maybe he's got something wrong in his head. They talk about these people that give false confessions.
Starting point is 00:27:18 Either he did it with somebody else or by himself, or he is really a messed up human being. My sense of Edward Brown was he was easily led. Eric Wilson, Michael Ferreira's attorney, believes that police pressured Edward Allen Brown because he was someone they could force into confessing to a crime he did not commit. They also offered him a deal, no jail time. Edward Brown did not walk into Lowell Police Department headquarters and say, look, I got to get this off my chest. After being interrogated by trained detectives over the course of many days, he was faced with the threat of
Starting point is 00:27:57 spending the rest of his life in jail. Or he could tell the police what they wanted to hear. Walter Shelley and Mike Ferreira picked you up at your house at 10.30, right? Yes. The question that I had to answer for the jury is, why would he tell them that if he didn't do it? Did you think you could do that? That's a tough sell. It was a tough sell, but Ed Brown gave me a lot to work with.
Starting point is 00:28:22 You were fed information it was a dirt lot, right? Yes. Over the course of two days, Ferreira's attorney grilled Brown relentlessly. And in your four or five trial prep sessions. Until Brown admitted that the prosecution had fed him parts of his story. You were fed information that it was near a railroad tower, right? Yes. And you're being told that Shelley was jealous over Marla Shiner, right?
Starting point is 00:28:45 Yes. There are certain pieces of information that an investigator may provide to someone who they're interviewing to see whether or not they know anything about that, to see whether or not it jogs their memory. Well, but couldn't that also be a way of telegraphing to the witness what you want them to say?
Starting point is 00:29:03 Well, in this case, that didn't have to happen because Brown was the one who talked about the rope, the tape, the binding of John. However Brown got his story, Wilson claims it cannot be true because it does not fit the evidence. In fact, in the 1969 police reports, detectives noted that they were unable to find any evidence of a scuffle. There was no suggestion anywhere around John McCabe's body or the scene that that struggle described by Edward Brown ever took place. Why would Edward Allen Brown lie and implicate himself so directly in what happened unless it was the truth?
Starting point is 00:29:45 Your testimony has not always been 1030, has it? Wilson thought it was not enough to try to discredit Brown. He also had to punch holes in the alleged motive, jealousy over a girl. He'll do it by calling that girl... My name is Marla Shiner. ...to the witness stand. That you would have known each other from being in the same kitchen.
Starting point is 00:30:10 As a kid growing up in Chicago, there was one horror movie I was too scared to watch. It was called Candyman. But did you know that the movie Candyman was partly inspired by an actual murder? Listen to Candyman, the true story behind the bathroom mirror murder, wherever you get your podcasts. 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 reach the age of 10 that would still have heard it.
Starting point is 00:30:48 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
Starting point is 00:31:15 to the brink of extinction. Listen to the Pitcairn Trials exclusively on Wondery+. Join Wondery in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Mr. Brown, you've lied under oath when you're scared, right? Yes. You've lied under oath when you're nervous, right? Yes. You've lied under oath when you're frightened, right?
Starting point is 00:31:42 Correct. Prosecutors had a problem with their star witness, Edward Allen Brown. He seemed to wither under strong cross-examination from the defense. You still can't get your facts straight, can you? No. So Prosecutor Tom O'Reilly called Detective Linda Coughlin to counter accusations that she'd forced Edward Allen Brown to confess and fed him details.
Starting point is 00:32:07 At any point, did you feed him information as to the investigation? Never. But Eric Wilson says Coughlin also had tunnel vision and ignored evidence of other suspects. There were a number of investigative reports and material that you either overlooked or didn't even know about. True? I don't know what you're referring to. How about Richard Santos? Richard Santos was flagged in this Tewksbury police report as a suspect in the McCabe murder in 1974.
Starting point is 00:32:42 Santos was arrested for committing a crime eerily similar to John McCabe's murder. This young woman was abducted on Route 38. Her feet were bound, her hands were tied behind her back, her mouth was duct taped, and her eyes were taped shut. All of the facts that surround Santos as a possible subject lead you to be suspicious. But there was never anything tying him to mode of opportunity means. Information on Richard Santos. Still, the judge allowed the jury to hear about Santos and another suspect. With respect to Robert Morley. Robert Morley, a local 25-year-old who reportedly knew both Ferreira and Shelley
Starting point is 00:33:28 and was suffering from mental illness. He was labeled long before you were assigned this case as a strong suspect, right? There is a report that uses the word for him, strong suspect, and the very same report mentions Mr. Ferreira as a prime suspect. But it's how Morley became a strong suspect that makes him so interesting. Police learned about him shortly after the crime from his own brothers. Morley's own brothers went in and said that they thought he might have been involved in it. Yeah, they thought he might have. Former D.A. Gerry Leone says Morley's brothers were mistaken.
Starting point is 00:34:14 I think what happens in matters like this is people will say, sure, you should take a look at X or Y, because they have a profile of somebody who would do something like this and they were around the area at the time. But then you have to look at the evidence and see whether or not the evidence leads you to believe that they had anything to do with it. Do the brothers have any specific evidence that you're aware of? They did not.
Starting point is 00:34:41 He split to Florida the day after he was questioned by police. Mr. Morley, years later, in my estimate, committed suicide. You learned of his death, his suicide, right? He jumped off a bridge, right? His brother says he fell off a bridge. The defense also tried to punch holes in the alleged motive for the murder and called a surprising witness to do it. Yes, my name is Marla Shiner and my spelling of my last name is S-H-I-N-E-R. Thank you. Marla Shiner, the girl who Walter Shelley and Mike Ferreira allegedly killed for. Edward Allen Brown had just testified that Marla
Starting point is 00:35:20 was Shelley's girlfriend in September of 69, and Shelley was jealous because John was flirting with her. But Marla says John never flirted with her. Did you ever go to a dance with John McCabe? Never. Did he ever convey to you that he had any type of romantic interest in you in August or September of 1969? None. The McCabes say it doesn't matter if the flirting was real or imagined.
Starting point is 00:35:47 She could have been just stopped and said hello to John. And Shelly could have walked by and seen it. And he's going to explode. Next, Marla threw the prosecution a curveball. September 26, 1969, were you dating Walter Shelley? No, I was not dating Walter when John McCabe died. When did you start dating him then? I believe it was after that death. How old were you? 13. You were 13 September 69. I don't know. I can't do the math right here. But according to police, Marla told them she was dating Shelly
Starting point is 00:36:25 at the time and was just 12 years old when they started seeing each other. You didn't tell the police that you were dating Walter Shelly in 1969 when John McCabe was killed? I, no, I don't believe I did tell him that. Why lie about dating someone unless it was because of her that John was murdered? 48 Hours had questions for Marla Shiner, too, but she declined our request for an interview. Marla eventually married Walter Shelley, but it didn't last. She said he was very violent. Ms. Shiner, was Walter Shelley a jealous man? Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:37:08 It appears that we're ready to precede them. Judge, at this point in time, the defendant would rest. This was a hard-fought trial till the end, and then it was up to the jury to decide. Did Mike Ferreira help Walter Shelley kill John McCabe over a girl, Or was Edward Allen Brown telling a story the prosecution wanted to hear? It only took jurors five hours to decide. I told Michael that we had to hope for the best, but be prepared for the worst. And he was ready for that.
Starting point is 00:37:42 May I have the verdict slip, please? For the McCabe family, more than four decades of waiting and working came down to this moment. What did you think the verdict was going to be? Guilty. My God, he was guilty. If for no other reason, he was there. It's hard to understand how the jury could, you know, anticipate otherwise.
Starting point is 00:38:08 Bill McCabe was too nervous and too sick to sit in the courtroom that day, so he waited in another room while Evelyn and their daughters heard the verdict. What say you to this indictment, ma'am? Is the defendant guilty or not guilty? Not guilty. Not guilty. Everyone, including Mike Ferrera, was so stunned, it took a while to sink in. When the verdict came in, when you heard that Ferrera had been acquitted — I had to go tell my husband that. Were you afraid to tell him? Yes.
Starting point is 00:38:42 Why? I was afraid he was going to die. Tragically, Evelyn was right. Just four days after the verdict, Bill McCabe's heart gave out and he gave up. What do you think killed your husband? Stress. The stress of the trial. While Evelyn McCabe laid her husband to rest next to their son, the DA's office had a decision to make. After losing the case against Mike Ferreira, would it go ahead with the trial of Walter Shelley? One game of Monopoly. Introducing the best idea yet. A brand new podcast from Wondery and T-Boy about the surprising origin stories of the products you're obsessed with
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Starting point is 00:40:17 dominate your next dinner party. So follow The Best Idea Yet on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to The Best Idea Yet early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus. It's just the best idea yet. All the girls are singing love songs. All the boys sing Halloween. Those wedding bells are ringing. I still don't believe Bill's gone. I can still hear him snore in the night. And then I feel the bad he's not there.
Starting point is 00:40:59 Evelyn McCabe was determined to honor her husband's dying wish. He laid in the hospital bed. I says, I'll pick up and take over for you. She'd see to it someone would pay for John's murder. The jurors find Michael Ferreira not guilty. Watching Michael Ferreira go free was tough for some jurors, too. So how hard was it for you to acquit him? It was very difficult.
Starting point is 00:41:28 One of the jurors, Michael Duquette, says the biggest problem was Edward Allen Brown. The plan was to teach him a lesson for messing with Marlon. Did the majority of the jurors believe him? No. Why not? They just felt that he was not telling the truth. I thought they were just going to slap him around. They felt that he had been fed information, and that didn't make a ton of sense to me.
Starting point is 00:41:51 Maybe he wasn't the best witness, but I just can't see somebody saying, I did it, when they didn't do it. Duquette came to believe Brown and wanted to find Michael Ferreira guilty of something. believe Brown and wanted to find Michael Ferreira guilty of something. But the only choices the jurors had were first and second degree murder. So what did you want to convict him of? Man slaughter. And it wasn't an option. We are extremely pleased with the jury's verdict. Despite the Ferreira loss, prosecutors decided to try to convict the other suspect in the murder,
Starting point is 00:42:26 Walter Shelley. The acquittal in the Ferrera case didn't do anything to lessen our belief that we had the right people who were responsible for killing John McCabe. All rise. September 3rd, 2013, seven months after Michael Ferrera's acquittal. This murder is about John McCabe. It was Walter Shelley's turn to stand trial. Shelley was 17 the night of John's murder. He's now 61, remarried, and has lived quietly in Tewksbury ever since, just a few miles from Evelyn McCabe. Walter Shelley is sitting on the small of his back holding a handshake. McCabe. If convicted of first-degree murder, Shelley could spend the rest of his life in prison. It was the same case prosecutors presented against
Starting point is 00:43:16 Michael Ferreira, the same motive, and the same evidence... The ropes that came off the victim's body. Presented by the same witnesses, Marla Shiner, Detective Linda Coughlin, and once again the state's star witness, Edward Allen Brown. I heard one of them say, he's not breathing. Was it any easier to sit through the second trial? No, I want to say it was harder. Dad wasn't there for backup. You were called a liar repeatedly. Yes, I was. Brown seemed less rattled this time, more confident,
Starting point is 00:43:52 and the McCabes allowed themselves to hope. I can keep my fingers, my toes, everything crossed. During closing arguments, the defense called Brown a liar. He'll tell you whatever you want to hear. But the prosecution argued that Brown would never implicate himself in a crime he did not commit. What did he confess for? He was locked into it? A week-long trial went to the jury.
Starting point is 00:44:19 This would be the McCabe's last chance to see someone held accountable for killing John. We had faith that the jury was going to come with the right answer this time. Finally, two days later, a verdict. Has the jury agreed upon its verdict? Yes, we have. Pass the verdict slip slower, please. Walter Shelley's wife and family waited nervously. Evelyn McCabe couldn't bring herself to even sit in the courtroom and had to wait outside. She couldn't hear another not guilty.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Did the verdicts be reported, Your Honor? She was scared she was going to drop dead. Charging the defendant, Walter Shelley, with the offense of murder. What say? Was the defendant guilty or not guilty? Guilty. Guilty of what? offense of murder. Let's say it was an offense of guilty or not guilty. Guilty. Guilty of what? First degree murder. Guilty and life behind bars for Walter Shelley.
Starting point is 00:45:13 This jury believed Brown. So when you heard guilty, do you remember the first thing you thought? I thought my father would be proud. We got one of them. It was the final twist in a mystery filled with them. For the same crime and on the same evidence, one man walked free, one man went to prison. Hey, John, guess what? We got him.
Starting point is 00:45:59 Billy, it turned out beautifully. He didn't live to write about it, but Bill McCabe finally got the end he was looking for To the story he wrote about John's life and death A story that took four decades to play out He was 15 years, six months, and two weeks About his boy, who will be 15 years, six months, and two weeks old forever. Please, John. Please take great care of him until I get there. Please.
Starting point is 00:46:36 And then I will. If you like this podcast, you can listen ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app. Before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a quick survey at wondery.com slash survey.

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