Anatomy of Murder - Broken (Lisa Knoefel)
Episode Date: July 8, 2025Murder, manipulation, and a calculated plan. Untangling the pieces would be the challenge for investigators.View source material and photos for this episode at: anatomyofmurder.com/brokenCan’t get e...nough AoM? Find us on social media!Instagram: @aom_podcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @AOM_podcast | @audiochuckFacebook: /listenAOMpod | /audiochuckllc
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Why did you stop when you realized this isn't going away?
Because I said, well, it's too late now.
I'm going to go to jail anyway.
Better just get it done.
I'm Scott Weinberger, investigative journalist and former deputy sheriff. I'm Anasiga Nicolazzi, former New York City homicide prosecutor and host of Investigation
Discovery's True Conviction.
And this is Anatomy of Murder. There are countless ways in which one person can exert power over another, whether that
power is expressed physically, emotionally, or psychologically.
And as we've seen in many domestic homicide cases, an uneven power dynamic in a relationship
can be not just unhealthy, but downright dangerous, and is often at the root of an abuser-victim relationship.
But power in its many forms can also be wielded
like a weapon itself, used to manipulate someone
into committing careless, criminal, or even violent acts,
acts that can sometimes blur the thin lines
between victim, accomplice, and killer.
With us today, Sergeant Ron Parmenta, a 30 year veteran of
law enforcement and head of the Detectives Bureau in Willoughby
Falls, Ohio.
And ever since I can remember probably I'm guessing it was
like eight or nine years old, but I knew that I wanted to
become a police officer when I grew up.
Ron, like so many members of law enforcement started his career of public service in the military,
serving in the Marine Corps before working his way
up through the ranks of the Willoughby PD.
We're probably about 10, 12 miles from the city of Cleveland,
from the downtown area.
But Willoughby Hills is, you know,
we're about 11 square miles city.
We have a population of around 10,000 residents.
But the community itself, it's really a picturesque community here in Northeast Ohio.
You know, we maintain a delicate line between our country living and our city living.
Our motto for the city here is, you know, where the city meets the country.
Another public servant in their community was a woman named Lisa Marie Knafel,
a civilian social worker for her County Department
of Children and Family Services. Lisa was a wife and the loving mother of two children,
whose commitment to helping others, especially the vulnerable and the victimized, was recognized by
all that knew her. Lisa was a very heartwarming person and everybody that knew her loved her. She had a big heart
and you know she's always willing and wanting to help people that are in
trouble. Not in trouble because they put themselves in that situation but in
trouble because like they've grown up in a you know in a bad situation at home
where they didn't have that opportunity to make that choice.
Lisa was married to Kevin Knafel, a 42-year-old truck driver,
and they lived together in a modest three-bedroom home with their two daughters,
age 13 and 3. But as we've said before, Lisa had love to give,
and in July of 2011, she and Kevin became foster parents to a 16-year-old named Sabrina.
Like many young people in the foster system, Sabrina was the child of parents who had struggled
with addiction.
She was also a survivor of sexual abuse and had spent many years living in both group
homes and foster families.
Her childhood had been rife with pain, loss, and uncertainty, but moving into the Knafel
stable home gave her hope and a chance to reshape her future.
Sabrina got along well with Kevin and Lisa's daughters and was quickly accepted as part
of the family.
But her adjustments were still a challenge.
There were fights at school, arguments with Lisa, and other instances of acting out, all of which
Lisa handled with the patience and grace of a professional.
But the escalating arguments between Sabrina and Lisa was taking a toll on the family,
and even with attempts to smooth their family road, there wasn't much improvement.
Lisa and Kevin had talked about giving her back to the county, but then it was agreed upon that they would keep her up through the time that she graduated high school.
But tragically, Sabrina's time with the Knaifels would come to an end much sooner than that.
At approximately 1.15 a.m. on the morning of November 16, 2012, a 911 call was received by a dispatcher at the Willoughby Police Department.
On the line was Lisa and Kevin's 13-year-old daughter.
What's going on there? Who has the knife? My sister.
Lisa's daughter told the dispatcher that she had woken to the sounds of screaming and
entered her mother's bedroom to a nightmare, the sight
of Sabrina repeatedly stabbing her mother.
The female was frantic on the 911 call and at times it was hard to understand.
Why is your mom going to die?
What happened?
She stabbed your mom?
Where is she stabbed at?
Police immediately responded to what was an active and very potentially dangerous situation.
The now 18-year-old Sabrina was armed with a knife and Lisa's two young daughters were
still in the house.
The officers got to worry about their safety, number one, the safety of anybody else in
the house, number two.
And then, you know, also deep down in the back of your mind, you got to wonder if there's
anybody else involved in this.
First responders entered the home carefully, weapons drawn, clearing the living room before
moving slowly down the hallway to the primary bedroom.
When the officers arrived, they observed our 911 caller who was our victim's daughter.
She's screaming in at the front door, telling officers, you know, like she's down the hallway and she's pointing as the officers are coming in to their left.
In what was an incredibly tense scene, officers called for Sabrina to come out of the bedroom.
Sabrina comes out of the room and she has a 12 inch bread knife in her hand and she raises it above her head
as officers are given her commands.
Our officer that was given the commands
thought that he was going to have to use deadly force on her
because he didn't think that she was going to comply
with his orders to drop the knife.
After a second or two,
she did comply with the officer's orders
and did drop the knife.
Let me just say, you know, the movies and TV might lead you to believe this happens
all the time, but it's actually very rare for law enforcement to respond to a crime
scene while the crime is still taking place, subduing a suspect who is not just still present,
but is still armed with a deadly weapon.
Which of course is a testament to Lisa's young daughter who called 911 and the response
time of Willoughby PD.
The officers were able to disarm Sabrina, who was bleeding from several wounds to her
arms and appeared to be in a state of shock, and immediately then they put her into custody.
But when they entered the primary bedroom, they realized that even their quick response
was unfortunately not enough time to save Lisa, who was found on the floor next to her
bed covered in blood.
They attempted to do life-measuring safety caution on the victim and it was obvious that
she was deceased.
Lisa's body displayed what looked like dozens of stab wounds to her head, neck, and chest.
Defensive wounds on her hands, arms, and legs indicated that she had fought desperately for her life before succumbing to her injuries.
We just want to warn our listeners that the content of the crime scene may be graphic.
It was one of the bloodiest crime scenes that I've had in my career.
I think when it started, she was in bed and it looked like she was in a fight of her life.
There was blood spatter on the ceiling, the wall, like right above the bed.
And then obviously the carpet was blood stained.
It was like a scene out of a horror movie.
And yet, for as bad and as disturbing as the crime scene was,
investigators couldn't help but think what might have happened if they had not arrived when they did.
We go into the master bedroom where this incident happened, and on the right is
the master bathroom, and then on the left is like a walk-in closet. As the officers walked in there,
they heard what they believe was crying,
and they opened the door and found a three-year-old daughter
hiding in the walk-in closet.
Lisa's three-year-old daughter was in the bedroom
and had witnessed Sabrina's attack on her mother.
Thankfully, she was at least not physically harmed
and was then removed safely from the home.
As for Lisa's older daughter who placed the 911 call, she was interviewed by police and was able to provide a clear and terrifying account of what happened, an eyewitness account, and a firsthand
account of Sabrina stabbing Lisa repeatedly with the very knife she was holding when police officers arrived.
At this point in time, it's not a whodunit. It was pretty clear that Sabrina stabbed
her foster mother, whether it was from anger or whatnot, but she committed the crime.
An autopsy would later reveal that Lisa had been stabbed 178 times, including what doctors called complex wounds where the knife had
been plunged in her body and twisted, removing any doubt that the intentions
by Sabrina were to end Lisa's life. So investigators went straight from the
crime scene to the hospital where Sabrina was being treated for her
superficial wounds. Despite everything they already knew about the crime,
her answers to their questions would still be critical
to the investigation.
She was just pretty nonchalant.
When we started to question her,
like, you know, we told her that she was being investigated
for a homicide and she didn't react to that.
Like, you know, most people,
if they're being investigated for a homicide,
rather, if they didn't do it,
there would be some type of reaction.
But like, what?
That didn't happen.
Told her that, you know, Lisa was dead
and that she's the one who stabbed her.
Her question back to me was, I killed her?
Ask him the question to me.
And I told her, you know, yeah, you know,
you're the one that killed her.
She said to me that, you know, if this is true,
you know, the three-year-old and the 13-year-old,
you know, saw me kill their mom.
And then she said nobody needed to see that.
Teron, it sounded an awfully lot like an admission of guilt, but Sabrina stopped short of making
a full confession, instead claiming that she actually didn't remember a thing.
Before she went to bed that night, she said she was just working on a work project.
She went to bed around midnight, and then she came down into the bathroom and got some ibuprofen and then
she blacks out and then she all of a sudden remembers being in the back of an ambulance.
Now there was obviously no way to know for sure if this was true. Memory loss can occur
in instances of a psychotic break. But to investigators, the blackout alibi was a little too convenient
and also frustrating.
I was kind of sick to my stomach. I was wanting answers to know why she did what she did so
I can at least get answers for Lisa's children and her family. But Sabrina just continued
saying that she didn't remember anything, which was very frustrating for us as investigators when you know they're sitting there lying to your face that she didn't remember anything, which was very frustrating for us as investigators
when you know they're sitting there lying to your face
that you didn't remember.
Despite having a suspect in the murder already,
not to mention an eyewitness and the murder weapon,
there was still so much investigators didn't know
about how and why the homicide occurred.
Ron also had the difficult task
of making contact with Lisa's husband, Kevin,
who was supposed to be out of town for work. And the goal here was actually twofold. It
was a death notification, but as a matter of procedure, it was also important to verify
his alibi for the night of the murder. We want to try to like verify like where Kevin's
whereabouts were on the time of the day the homicide what time he left the house
Where exactly he was around the time of the murder so on so forth and we confirmed
It was a truck driver and that at the time of the homicide
He was in the area of the Ohio Michigan border
So Kevin was nowhere near the house when Lisa was killed
But officers hoped he could still
provide some background on why their foster daughter would have any reason to hurt his
wife.
But here's where the investigation had its first strange twist.
Because upon Kevin's return to Willoughby Hills, his behavior struck detectives as more
than just a little odd. I had a little bit of contact with him that night in our police lobby, which was very
limited.
Tell him we're sorry for his loss.
And, you know, he was just kind of mopey.
He just would nod.
There's no tears.
Didn't have any questions.
Never asked, well, who killed her?
No questions about the house.
He just did not have any questions.
Somebody that's been a victim of a crime,
you know, they have a thousand questions.
It was enough to make detectives wonder
if maybe Kevin knew more about his wife's murder
than he was letting on.
And that despite the overwhelming evidence pointing
to Sabrina as Lisa's killer,
this investigation was far from over.
Police in Willoughby Hills, Ohio had identified Sabrina Zunich as the primary suspect in the
fatal stabbing of her own foster mother, Lisa Knafel.
On November 19th, just three days after Lisa's death,
the high school senior was arrested and charged
with first degree murder.
Lisa's young daughters had witnessed the attack
and police arrived at the scene to find Sabrina
holding the bloody murder weapon.
So there was little doubt of her guilt,
but her motive for such a vicious crime, that still remained a mystery.
So I don't think we necessarily have an initial theory besides, you know, that Sabrina did kill Lisa.
But at this point in time, we didn't have a theory that there was anybody else involved.
There was nothing that really that was pointing us in that direction.
But no matter how clear the case looked against Sabrina, police still had to collect the evidence
to prove their case in court and unravel whatever circumstances may have led up to this terrible
tragedy.
So we looked at the crime scene, obviously we knew we needed a search warrant, so that
was our top priority.
Looking for electronic devices such as phones, computers, you know, things like that just
to see if there's anything
that would tell us a story about what may or may not have happened prior to the homicide
occurring.
We talk about how digital forensics like tracking location data and recovering files can often
yield tons of incriminating evidence.
But sometimes, just a peek at a call or text history can be the first
step in developing an investigative theory. And that's just what happened here. No expert required.
The first thing we're going to examine is going to be your phone. And when we looked at the phone
history, we saw that maybe seven-day period, Lisa and Kevin maybe talked or text 50 times,
and that Sabrina and Kevin talked or text
over a thousand times.
And we thought that to be very, very suspicious
at that point.
Now, of course, it would not have been out of the ordinary
for Kevin and Sabrina to be in contact,
but the sheer volume of their communications
hinted at a relationship more than that of Guardian and Child.
I think it was a few weeks later when we got some phone records back and we started going
through phone records that our eyebrows started to raise a little bit.
We were learning that he was barely talking to his wife, who he's married to, rather
text or telephone call. And most of his
conversations that he was having was with Sabrina. Friends of Lisa's had
described a growing tension between Sabrina and her foster mom over the last
few months. But now investigators were starting to see why. We also had a
teacher at the school say that there was times when Kevin and Sabrina would be at the school
and that they would be acting inappropriately towards each other.
And just to him, it did not appear to be the normal father-daughter type of relationship.
He thought it could possibly be something more.
So if Lisa had grown suspicious of the relationship between Sabrina and her husband Kevin, maybe
that is the real reason behind her suggestion that it is time for Sabrina to have moved
out of the house.
Which means Sabrina was at risk of not just losing her home and also the man she may have
fallen in love with, which, taken together, sounds like a motive for murder.
But if that was the case, detectives wanted to know
if Kevin may have been aware of her plan or maybe even complicit. We spoke to Kevin over the phone
until we wanted to come in and talk to him and agreed a few minutes later his attorney called
and so the attorney agreed to bring Kevin into our police department to interview him.
So you know it's's interesting, Scott.
I think people normally think about people of interest
speaking to police or prosecutors
without their attorneys present,
but obviously it definitely happens.
While we haven't talked about it a lot on AOM,
it happens more often than people think in real life.
But again, I mean, and you can speak to this
from the perspective of law enforcement,
but certainly from a prosecutor
and having seen a lot of these videos.
Like, it doesn't change it all that much, to this from the perspective of law enforcement, but certainly from a prosecutor and having seen a lot of these videos.
It doesn't change it all that much except obviously it's more formal, right?
And so the questioning, I should say, is different because it's a different scenario.
It's less casual, which I think actually does not usually make for potentially as productive
or honest a conversation.
As far as an approach, Anaseega, I think it's really no different for me.
It's just about establishing that you as the investigator,
this is your interview.
So whether he's in the room or she's in the room or not,
all of that information will eventually get
to that defense attorney.
The only thing different is they have the opportunity,
of course, to tell their client not to answer the question,
but there is an advantage for investigators as well.
Bulletproof admissibility.
I mean, if they happen to confess,
it drastically reduces, as you know, Anasika,
the risk of a confession or a statement being thrown out
for potential coercion or Miranda violation.
And I think that's exactly it, Scott.
I think you just made a great point
that one of the potential biggest downsides of this, while there's lots of upsides once you get to the's exactly it, Scott. I think you just made a great point that one of the potential biggest downsides of this,
while there's lots of upsides once you get to the courtroom with it, is the lawyer obviously
stopping their client from speaking at a point that they see down a road that it's going.
But you know, these are all the things that it's the balancing act, if you will.
But again, here, they had the lawyer and so he went into the interview room along with
Ron and Kevin.
We brought him in and Tim, his attorney sat down.
So we started asking him about the night of,
I think that's how we started off,
is tell me about what happened prior to,
you leave him for work.
And his attorney wouldn't let him answer that.
We kind of got an idea that his attorney's
not gonna let him answer anything
about the night of the homicide.
And of course, that is his absolute right.
But as an investigator, it also raises more questions than answers.
And it did little to settle the suspicions they had that Kevin was somehow
involved or at least knowledgeable maybe about his wife's murder.
He only allowed me to talk about Lisa's work, what she did there, who her
friends were, who she hung out with outside of work.
But as far as any questions about the night of the homicide,
he refused to let Kevin answer.
And this is probably something that Ron was thinking
about, Anasiga, when he posed the question,
could it be that the interview would be shut down?
And that's exactly what happened,
because he had asked the question of the nature
of the relationship between Sabrina and Kevin.
That's when Kevin's attorney shut the interview down.
But as you all can imagine, it did not mean an end of the detective's questions or investigation.
So our next move after that is we went and actually spoke to Kevin, Kevin's son from
a different marriage.
Thing that struck us was he recalled a conversation
that him and Sabrina were having.
And for some reason, the conversation was about
if they can kill one person and get away with it,
who would it be?
Not that they were planning on doing this.
I forget who his son said, but his son told us
that Sabrina said it would be Lisa.
Was it a joke?
Maybe, but given the circumstances, it felt a lot more like circumstantial evidence
of premeditation.
But aside from Kevin's son and some of those whisperings around school, the best and most
shocking information about Sabrina and Kevin came directly from someone that knew Sabrina
best. Her name is Autumn. And the reason why she is important in this case
is because Autumn and Sabrina were best friends.
And Autumn, we used to spend a lot of time
over with Sabrina and Kevin.
And this new young witness also spent a lot of time
on Facebook.
And shortly after news of Lisa's murder broke, she wasted no time and expressing her opinions
online.
After the homicide happened, it might even been that day or
maybe a day after, Autumn posted a message on Facebook,
said something about, you know, oh my god, you know, that was my
friend, speaking of Sabrina, it stated, you know, that Autumn
didn't think
that Sabrina would do this as if it was planned out.
The post raised even more eyebrows by what they read next.
Sabrina's friend made it clear that in the past,
Sabrina had actually talked about killing her foster mom.
The Facebook page said something about,
she thought that Sabrina was bluffing
when she told her that she was going to do this.
But she just figured like other kids that they hate their parents and they all say they want to kill their parents, but they don't actually kill their parents.
When questioned by police, Autumn confirmed that the tension between Sabrina and Lisa had everything to do with a brewing affair between her and Kevin.
And that Kevin had even been exploring ways for them to stay
together if he and Lisa got divorced.
But then the talk of divorce, it evolved into something much darker.
Autumn said that there was a plan to kill Lisa because they had this $750,000 life insurance
policy and that she's worth more dead than alive. And in fact, according to this bombshell witness,
she was privy to multiple plans to kill Lisa,
but that it was Kevin, not Sabrina.
That was the mastermind behind all of them.
You know, they had a couple of different plans.
The first plan was they were going to make it look like a robbery.
The other plan was Kevin asks Autumn if she can get a hitman and because I guess allegedly Autumn
had some type of connections to some mafia people.
Now that her connection to hitmen, well that turned out to be more teenage fantasy than
reality, but Kevin's intentions to kill his wife, those seem to be very real.
She was just kind of putting Kevin off but kept saying that she's working at it, she's
working at it. And I think just after some time, Kevin got impatient. So him and Sabrina
moved on to another phase of him, them killing Lisa.
Sabrina's friend became a critical, cooperating witness in the investigation and in hopes that
she may be able to get Kevin to incriminate himself, investigators even got her to pay Kevin a visit
and she also wore a wire. And what I mean by that is a hidden recording device. And to protect
her identification, we have altered Autumn's voice. We're with Autumn, wired her up. We're going to Kevin Knafel's home at 251H Grand Drive
and we're going to attempt to talk to him about his activities.
She calls him and starts making some small talk with him. He knows exactly who she is.
It's clear as day.
I wanted to see if I could talk to you.
If it's alright.
What about?
Just some things have been bothering me lately,
and like I'm really nervous about a lot.
There's cops that have been contacting my dad,
trying to find me, and
I have no idea
what's going on, like what am I supposed to say to them?
Because of the whole, like, the hitman thing
that we talked about on the phone.
She starts saying, you know, hey, I'm getting scared.
The law enforcement is out sniffing my way.
You know, I don't know what to do.
You know, he just says, you know,
just do your own thing, keep your mouth shut.
She also said that you and her collaborated or put together some type of plan that you
were going to make it look like, you guys were going to try and make it look like a
robbery. So, it's like, well, how are you you gonna do that? Well, she goes, well, Kevin told me
that I should go in to her room while she's sleeping
and put the pillow over her head with that gun.
With a gun?
Mm-hmm.
And then just shovel it on some jewelry
and make it look like a round one.
If I wanted someone to do it,
it would have been with a gun.
He says, I have a lot of them.
Right.
That conversation left little doubt
that Sabrina's friend, Autumn, and Kevin,
that they not only knew each other,
but that she knew information that could incriminate him
and that he was also, from the way he sounds,
clearly suspicious that he might be walking into a trap.
Do you think if I got a lawyer, I would look bad?
Probably the reason you need to get a lawyer
is if you're in trouble.
So, Autumn calls him back five or six times
over the next two days, and he never answers the phone.
So, what, if anything, did investigators get from this,
if nothing else, that they were definitely on the right track.
I even made a telephone call to Kevin. I know that he had just talked to Autumn that day.
So I called him and I was like, hey, you know, Kevin, there's a couple names that are coming
up. I just want to know if you're familiar with them. So I read it off a couple names. He's like,
no, I don't know who that is. No, I don't know who that is. When it came to Autumn, he was like,
that is, no, I don't know who that is. When it came to Autumn, he was like,
yeah, that name vaguely sounds familiar.
I don't know where she went.
Her last time I heard, she's in California or something,
and I don't know what's going on with her.
I haven't heard from her.
Knowing that he just talked to her either that day
or the day before.
So now they had more than just their suspicions.
Now they had proof that he was lying.
Not only that, there was reason to believe
that with or without Sabrina,
he was already trying to cash in on the murder.
There was a life insurance policy,
for I wanna say it was like 250,000,
one of the policies were,
that the agent was calling me,
asking me if Kevin was cleared as a suspect
because he was asking for this money.
You know, we told this employee that, you know,
he has not been cleared at this time.
It was becoming clear that Kevin's motive to kill his wife
was not so much his affair with his young foster daughter,
but the windfall that Lisa's
death would bring. And the longer Sabrina sat in jail, the more that reality began to set in.
Feeling abandoned and manipulated by her foster father and the man she was having a relationship
with, she finally agreed to cooperate with investigators in early August of 2013.
cooperate with investigators in early August of 2013. After multiple talks between our attorney and Sabrina's attorney, it was agreed upon that she would do a proffer.
A proffer is basically you come in, you tell exactly what happened, you know, you be as truthful as you can be, obviously.
And, you know, what we would do with that information is we would try
and figure out if this is usable or not.
As part of her conversation with police in the presence of her attorney,
Sabrina gave a detailed confession outlining her relationship with Kevin
Knafel and the planning of Lisa's murder.
Here is part of Sabrina Zunich's conversation with police.
Take us back a little bit in terms of when this first started to be discussed between yourself and Kevin
and who brought it up, whose idea it was, and what the details of that were.
It was Kevin's idea, and it was talked about after we were having sexual relations,
and him and Lisa were having
problems in marriage. So she confirmed what Autumn told us about the multiple
times, the different plans that they had to kill Lisa. But as shocking as her
confession was, her description of her relationship with Kevin Knafel was
almost just as disturbing.
When was it after you started to live there on a daily basis that your relationship with
Kevin changed?
It all started not with sex but with massages because he was a truck driver and his legs
would cramp so it was in her thigh. And then it progressively moved on.
She described how it progressed
to multiple sexual encounters.
In all, Sabrina described how Kevin had begun grooming her
as early as 2012 when she was just 16
and had just moved into the Knafel's home.
And obviously it goes without saying
that as a survivor of sexual abuse, Sabrina had
been in need of a safe refuge.
Instead, she found herself in the crosshairs of a predator.
Does he ever tell you, hey, you can't tell anybody about this?
All the time.
Okay, what would happen?
Do you say what would happen if you told him?
Then you'd be taken out of my care and I could lose my foster parent license.
According to Sabrina, she had fallen in love with the man that promised to love and protect her.
The only thing threatening that promise was his wife Lisa.
He had promised Sabrina that, you know, they would live in this White House, this white picket fence, and they would have children together, grow up happily and not be bothered
by anybody.
She would never have to go back into foster care ever again.
He just really played into her.
You know, Scott, we just have to stop here for a moment because here we have, like, just
in what Ron's describing, it's an adult manipulating a teen who we've already heard has had a rough
road and is vulnerable.
He's basically promising her everything she would want most, stability and love.
Completely taking advantage of her history, knowing that a father figure or a mother
figure was all that she was really looking for, for as long as she was in the foster system.
So playing on that vulnerability and giving her hope of a real significant family and somebody to
take care of her was how he weaponized the situation.
It's clear to see that Sabrina had second thoughts, but Kevin was relentless.
Sabrina even claimed that on the morning before the murder, Kevin cried and told
her he would kill himself if Lisa wasn't dead.
After he brought up, well look I'm to kill myself if she doesn't leave because
I can't deal with this anymore.
That was afterwards.
And so when he said that, it kind of triggered me.
I was like, no, I don't want that to happen.
And so I was like, okay, I'll do it.
She was remorseful.
She felt very bad about the death of Lisa.
She recalled exactly what happened.
You know, that ibuprofen story was a hoax.
According to Sabrina's statement to police,
the plan was Kevin's,
a plan that conveniently left him out of the house
and out of town on the night of the murder.
She confirmed that it was Kevin who also told her
how to commit the crime
and even what knife to take from the kitchen drawer.
We do want to warn you,
the following conversation
is graphic and disturbing.
Was there any discussion about what knife to use?
Yes.
It was, what knife should I use?
Use this bread knife because there's gripping on it
and there's ridges and it's long,
therefore go in and stab her and twist it and jab it don't
take it out but so this way there would be bleeding to death and too much
cutting up for her to live and so we went to the kitchen, he showed me, and the knife and which one to use.
And he was like, I do not know word for word,
but it was going over the specifics, using the knife,
what kind of knife to use, how to do it.
Either if she's laying on her side
with her back towards you,
go for in between the shoulder blades,
or if you can get to the
other side without her waking up, go for the neck, or don't go for the heart because it
could be possible that it would not work.
So he told you to either stab her in the back, or if she's facing you, or you're facing her
to stab her in the neck?
Correct.
Told me that she came down the night of November 16, 2012.
It was about 1 in the morning.
She said that Lisa was sleeping on her bed.
She got the knife that Kevin told her to get,
got on top of Lisa, and started stabbing her in the chest,
in the head, face, on her arms, her fingers, her hands, until she stopped moving.
When asked why, why she continued stabbing Lisa so many times, Sabrina's reply is chilling.
Because I said, well, it's too late now. I'm going to go to jail anyway. Better just get it done.
Sabrina Zurich agreed to testify against Kevin Knafel
at his trial as part of her plea deal
and accepted full responsibility for her actions.
And as horrible as those actions were,
it was also clear that she too had been victimized by Knafel.
There's absolutely no doubt about it she's a victim.
Doing this profession for as long as I have.
We know that, you know, kids in foster care are vulnerable.
There's no question that Kevin Knafel took it full advantage of Sabrina's vulnerability.
There is just another aspect of this crime that I think also showed just how cold blooded
Knafel was and that it was his plan to have Sabrina kill Lisa in their home
while his own children were there, with no consideration for their safety, both physical
or psychological. Every plan that was told to us by Sabrina and by Autumn all involved them killing Lisa at the house.
It did not involve, you know, when the kids were away
or when Lisa was at a different place
other than the house.
Every single plan was about them at the house.
The investigation had exposed Kevin Knafel
as a master manipulator, a remorseless predator
unashamed to victimize one young life entrusted to his care and plot the taking of another.
And with Sabrina's statement, police believe they now had enough to arrest him for the murder.
So at the time I was part of the US Marshal Violent Fugitives Task Force.
We end up getting our team together.
We were aware that there were guns in the house.
So we had brought up proper equipment and came to the door.
He came down defeated and we took him into custody
with no issues.
Kevin Knafel was indicted on charges of conspiracy
to commit aggravated murder,
as well as six counts of sexual battery
relating to his statutory sexual assault
of the then 16 year old Sabrina.
So Sabrina Zunich pled guilty and as we'd said before,
she agreed to cooperate as part of her plea deal.
Knafel's trial began in May 2014
with Sabrina Zunich's testimony
at the heart of the prosecution's case against him.
As far as when it comes to Sabrina,
we didn't have any concerns.
You know, it was pretty point blank
that she's the one who did it.
With the Covens trial, it wasn't a classic case of,
look, here's all the evidence we have,
and you can see it right in front of your face.
We have to figure out from a prosecution standpoint
to get all this information to the jury
so they actually can understand and see where we're going with what we're
trying to accomplish.
The prosecution asserted that Knafel manipulated Sabrina into
murdering his wife to collect life insurance and continue
their sexual relationship.
Prosecutors also emphasized Kevin's calculated behavior leading up to
the murder, including his strangely calm demeanor and lack of grief following Lisa's death and
his eagerness to collect on the life insurance policy.
The day of the homicide, his best friend came over to his house and was speaking with him.
He had his best friend log into his account and start looking
up life insurance policies. The day of the homicide.
As for the defense, Knafel's attorneys argued that Sabrina Zunich acted independently, claiming
she attacked Lisa in a moment of emotional instability after learning she would be removed
from the home and denied that Kevin Knafel had any involvement in planning or encouraging the murder.
But the testimony of multiple witnesses who described Kevin's inappropriate closeness with Sabrina,
including his visible displays of affection and sexually suggestive jokes, proved to be pretty damning.
And ultimately, so was Sabrina Zunich's testimony and chilling
account of their conspiracy to commit the crime.
Sabrina went up there and I believe this till the day I die.
Sabrina was telling the truth because she had the exact same
story that she told us back in May when we proffered her for
this crime.
After deliberating for nine and a half hours, the jury found
Kenefel guilty on all 11 charges,
six counts of sexual battery, three counts of complicity to commit aggravated murder,
and two counts of conspiracy to commit aggravated murder. He was sentenced to life in prison with
the possibility of parole in 2043 when he will be 73 years old.
After pleading guilty to the aggravated murder, Sabrina Zunich was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole in 30 years.
At the heart of this story is a painful irony.
Sabrina was already a victim of sexual abuse before she came to the Knievel's home.
But the very place that was supposed to be refuge from danger became a place of nightmares.
It's ironic that Lisa was somebody that worked against sexual abuse children and the foster
child that she brought into her house, her husband was actually sexually abusing the foster child.
There are just so many victims in this story.
Lisa, who had dedicated her life
to helping vulnerable and at-risk children,
and Lisa's three and 13-year-old daughters,
who now lost not just their mother,
but in the act of committing the murder,
their father on that same day.
And then there are the many people in Sabrina's life, from social workers to teachers who had
worked so hard to help the troubled teenager secure a stable future, a future that, for now,
she's spending behind bars. As I look at the facts of Lisa's case, one thing becomes absolutely clear. This wasn't a crime of impulse or emotion. It was a calculated act
rooted in greed and manipulation. Lisa opened her heart in her
home to a vulnerable teenager, only to have that compassion
exploited in the most horrific way. What makes this case even
more disturbing is how Kevin Knafel, someone who was supposed to be a protector, weaponized the foster care system for his own selfish gain.
He groomed a child in crisis, used her as a pawn, and orchestrated a murder not out of rage or revenge, but out of money.
It wasn't about love.
It wasn't about anger.
of money. It wasn't about love. It wasn't about anger. It was about control. And Lisa paid the ultimate price for someone else's twisted ambition.
I'm often asked why people commit crimes, why some people are capable of such brutality and cruelty.
There is no easy answer, often no answer at all. But I've definitely seen my fair share of
murders committed by people who had horrible childhoods themselves.
And I often think that they were almost set up in a way to be so uncaring and not value human life
because no one valued them.
It's not an excuse, not at all, but it's something that I've thought about over the years
and think it's something that if we maybe tackled it as a society more effectively would not only help the children, but potentially
stop them committing future crime.
But it's important that we end on Lisa honoring her memory and thinking of her other children
who now have to walk through life without her. Tune in next week for another new episode of Anatomy of Murder.
Anatomy of Murder is an audio chuck original.
Produced and created by Weinberger Media and Frasetti Media.
Ashley Flowers is executive producer.
This episode was written and produced by Walker-Lamond,
researched by Kate Cooper,
edited by Ali Sirwa,
and Philjohn Grande.
So, what do you think Chuck?
Do you approve?
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