Anatomy of Murder - Fatality Review (Jenean Chapman)
Episode Date: July 22, 2025A young career woman is discovered dead after a welfare check. The unraveling of what happened and who did it would strike at the heart of it all.View source material and photos for this episode at: a...natomyofmurder.com/fatality-reviewCan’t get enough AoM? Find us on social media!Instagram: @aom_podcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @AOM_podcast | @audiochuckFacebook: /listenAOMpod | /audiochuckllc
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I mean, you couldn't look at those autopsy photos alone, even without the science behind
it.
And then just how we left her.
I mean, she's half dangling off that bed.
Everything about it was brutal and violent and offensive and degrading.
I'm Scott Weinberger, investigative journalist and former deputy sheriff.
I'm Anna Sega Nicolazzi, former New York City homicide prosecutor and host of Investigation
Discovery's True Conviction.
And this is Anatomy of Murder.
Why does one homicide make headlines while another one doesn't?
Maybe there's details from that particular crime that are shocking or some unthinkable
violence that can both horrify and fascinate the public.
Sometimes it isn't just the brutality that grips us.
It's where it happens.
A murder in an upscale neighborhood or the heart of a busy tourist hotspot forces us to lean in to wonder how violence could
shatter a place we once thought was safe.
But we found that one of the most common reasons
that the public responds to a certain case
is the connection they feel with the victim.
Maybe it's a public figure, but more likely,
it's just someone who shares the same background, maybe
the same dreams, or the same challenges that we face.
We feel like we know them,
making the pain of their death more palpable
and the fear that it could one day be one of us more real.
And that feeling, it's especially resonant
when it comes to the case of intimate partner violence,
something to which our guest today
has dedicated her entire career.
My name is Brandy Mitchell. I am the division chief of the Family Violence Division at the Dallas
County District Attorney's Office, where we prosecute felony intimate partner violence cases
from third degree felonies up to murder and capital murder. In September of 2023, Brandy was notified
of a call that had come in from Dallas PD from a concerned employer at the company, and it
was totally unlike her not to be online, even from her remote office in Dallas.
I think they were very concerned that she was communicative.
And I think the type of jobs that she had when they work so remote like this, you have
to be communicative.
And you need to see that you're working.
And she was not responding to calls or texts.
And that just was unlike Janine.
So Janine's employer, a company called Critical Mass, made a call to the Dallas County Police
Department requesting a welfare check. Could someone please visit Janine Chapman and ensure
that she was safe and well? Janine's employer knew that she lived alone in an apartment in downtown
Dallas and rather than just hope that everything was okay,
she requested that the police conduct a check to be sure.
This building, downtown Dallas, is one of the newer ones.
It's very swanky and has a lot of really cool
high-end restaurants in it.
So there are people going in and out of it.
One of those has a hotel and the residences,
but also these really nice bars and restaurants.
So the public's going in and out of this building as well.
Standing 51 stories high,
the National Residence was amongst
the most sought after address in Dallas.
A mix of sprawling apartments, office space,
and a luxury hotel and spa,
Janine Chapman was listed on the lease
for a one-bedroom apartment
overlooking the downtown skyline.
Accompanied by the building manager, officers knocked on her door, but there was no answer.
With one swipe of an electronic key card, the door swung open.
They discovered her in her bedroom and she was lying across the bed with her head sort of down
towards the carpet.
The visible injuries to her head and face were severe.
She was only partially dressed.
She was not breathing.
It was very apparent that they needed to call detectives in
at that point.
I mean, it was very apparent she was not alive
and it looked suspiciously like a homicide.
Every member of law enforcement knows not to make assumptions
about a scene.
Not everybody winds up being a criminal investigation. But these officers knew immediately that
there was likely at least to be foul play. What looked like blunt force trauma to her
face was just too severe. The positioning of her body too suggestive of a brutal attack.
There were no stab wounds and certainly no gunshot wounds, but she was very, very
beaten up.
A swollen eye shot and it looks like possible strangulation.
Her mouth was like it had been punched over and over again.
So it looked like a physical assault on her had happened.
When detectives arrived, they made careful note of other critical elements of the
crime scene.
Now, there was a knife on the bed, and so that was sort of confusing to them.
And also her underwear was torn and pulled up like in the middle of her torso.
So she was completely naked except for underwear that was pulled up and torn.
So did the crime indicate any sort of a sexual attack?
That was one theory at the forefront of the detective's minds.
And what about the idea this was maybe a break-in
or some kind of robbery that had turned to brutal violence?
Based on the evidence, detectives quickly ruled out both.
A, you have to kind of fob in,
and there was no indication that anything had been broken into.
B, she had, like, these designer sunglasses and things like that.
And I think some contents of her ID, stuff like that. None of that was messed with. It
was a one bedroom apartment, very nice. And then everything looked intact.
And as we know, no signs of break-in or robbery often means that any potential suspect may
have been known to the victim, someone that Janine recognized or knew well enough to let
in through the front
door.
And you're probably not going to be surprised to hear that there were signs of a struggle.
The bed sheets were pulled from the bed and the bedside table was overturned.
But there was also confusing elements too.
The most glaring, a large number of over-the-counter pills that had been strewn about the apartment.
There was a whole lot of open Benadryl,
which was very confusing to everybody.
It was the pills, not the liquid.
And just like boxes and boxes of them,
they had popped out a bunch of the pills.
They're just out on the kitchen island, just laying there.
Having four or five boxes of Benadryl just laid out
and opened some of them,
I mean, there was still some of the pink pills in it,
but a lot of them had been popped out as if someone had been taking them.
So, toxicology reports would answer a lot of questions here. It would hopefully tell detectives
if the drugs were self-consumed by Jeanine, possibly to sedate herself. But then why the
signs of a struggle? The evidence was carefully collected in hopes that it would eventually lead
to some answers.
Law enforcement also began the task of gathering more information about who may have been in and
out of Janine's apartment, finding out if there were surveillance cameras at the building,
checking if the apartment key fobs retained data about when they were used,
and speaking to neighbors to see if they could find any witnesses.
But as with any homicide investigation, police also had to learn as much as they could about
their victim, Janine Chapman, her background, her love life, and whether she knew anyone
that could have possibly wanted her dead.
So who was Janine Chapman?
Well, as we said, she was a successful marketing executive who by all accounts was one of life's
high achievers.
She was close with her family, popular, hard-working, smart and successful.
She was a daughter to Jamaican immigrants.
Janine goes to school at Syracuse, graduates from Syracuse, comes back to New York and is working sort of like advertising PR,
media relations, all of that. At some point during this, she is working for the former Duchess of York.
I don't know if you call her the former Duchess of York,
but I think she is, that's Sarah Ferguson.
Janine was polished and poised,
often photographed alongside her royal client
as they attended glamorous black tie events in New York.
But no matter how glamorous that life was,
as personal assistant to a royal, Janine had higher ambitions black tie events in New York. But no matter how glamorous that life was,
as personal assistant to a royal,
Janine had higher ambitions
and an itch to explore the West Coast.
And I think at some point she felt like
she had sort of conquered New York
and done well in New York
and she wanted to go out to the West Coast.
So that's when she moves to San Francisco.
And again, it's the same kind of type of jobs
that she's getting sort of that media relations,
PR, advertising, and she's just really good at it.
In her new life on the West Coast, Janine found a great job, a close circle of friends, and a new romantic interest by the name of James Michael Patrick.
They were very social. They had no children. They were a little bit older when they met, like in their 30s, and they liked to go out.
They liked to party.
And so that was a big part of their relationship.
But according to her friends,
Janine's relationship with James was not always a smooth one
and their careers complicated a longer commitment.
They kind of have this on and off again sort of relationship.
He ends up coming back to Dallas to work
and he's kind of does the same thing that she does more sales
Than I would say media relations and PR and all that but it's more sales job
But despite their sometimes rocky romance Jeanine eventually moved to Dallas and in June of
2023 Jeanine and James were married and shortly after James moved into the apartment at the
National. But if they were married where was James now? Well as police soon found
out less than three months after the wedding James had already moved out and
no one seemed to know where he was. He was an ex-husband, someone with likely
access to the apartment and now he was nowhere to be found.
In Dallas or anywhere else, there is a name for that,
a suspect.
In Dallas, Texas, the battered body
of 46-year-old Janine Chapman was found in her high-rise apartment.
The postmortem exam had revealed a host of traumatic injuries, although the exact cause
of death was difficult to determine.
Homicidal violence with strangulation and suffocation could not be ruled out.
So that means homicidal violence is going to be the blunt force trauma and the strangulation. That was the finding of the ME. A successful marketing executive who had once worked
alongside the Duchess of York, Janine had lived what seemed like a charmed life until she found
herself the victim of extreme violence. And now investigators wanted to know if her recent breakup with a man named James Patrick
could have been the motive for her murder.
Now, that's a question that easily
could have been answered if James had been at the scene.
But James Patrick was nowhere to be found.
So obviously, tracking him down became
a priority for investigators.
But let's take a second to learn a bit more
about their relationship. because as we know,
sometimes what appears to be a storybook romance,
there can lie some pretty dark secrets underneath.
According to Janine's friends,
the two had met back in San Francisco
and for a while seemed made for each other.
But soon their whirlwind romance showed signs of stress.
They're fighting more and more, you know, whether it's the partying or what, but they're definitely fighting more and more.
It doesn't take too, too long for the relationship to become somewhat rocky.
Janine and James' on-again, off-again relationship was complicated when James moved down to Dallas.
But the most dramatic turn came on a night in February of 2023, when Janine had gone to see him.
They get into an argument. There was accusations of cheating, particularly by James Patrick,
that she was cheating on him all the time. He just wasn't as successful at his job as she was at hers.
Eventually, the police were called to defuse the escalating argument.
He waits down in the lobby, the police get there,
they go up and talk to her.
He says that she assaulted him by, I think, slapping him.
I think he calls it punching, but slapping.
I believe she did admit to, you know,
maybe getting him away from her,
but based on what he said and based on what she said,
they arrested her for a misdemeanor assault.
It was a minor assault, but one which would have
a devastating impact on Janine's work
life.
From a jail cell waiting to be bonded out, Janine reached out to her employer.
I believe she does tell her job out in California or asks her sister to say that she was in
a car accident because here she is sitting in jail.
She can't log back on.
She can't work.
But eventually Janine came clean with her work
about the arrest.
But she also seemed to be more honest with herself
about how her toxic relationship with James
was starting to allow her life to spin a bit out of control.
I believe she resigned.
She didn't even wait to get fired.
She just resigned from that job.
But this argument that ended with Jeanine getting arrested and losing her job,
that wasn't the last straw in her and James's relationship.
In fact, it may have even drew them closer together.
Shortly afterwards, things seemed to be back on track for the couple.
Jeanine moved to Dallas, found a new job, and by the summer of 2023, she and James
were back together.
I think they really did enjoy each other's company.
And again, you know, they were a little bit older.
They had some money, there's some change in their pocket.
They were having a good time.
It was a good time.
In June, they were married only to break up again, three months later.
To say their relationship was turbulent was an understatement, something that the staff at
Janine's apartment building knew all too well. They did know that James Patrick was living with her.
They knew he had moved out recently. They knew there had been some problems so that weren't
completely privy to them, but he had moved out and they had seen him and he had been there trying to
get some stuff and also that she had called and and said, please don't allow him into the building, up to these
residences anymore.
So that's already piqued their interest.
And it wasn't just the building staff that had expressed concern about the man Janine
had recently kicked out.
Several of Janine's friends soon reached out to share some disturbing information.
She has two really good friends from Syracuse, Laurel from Critical Mass, and then some friends
from out in California, and then of course her sister, Shereen, with whom she was very
close.
But that's how we're getting her side of the relationship is through text messages
from them.
And what you are seeing is a lot of manipulation, things like, I can't be friends with you
anymore, or please change my number or block my number.
Her friends also shared some screenshots of texts from James to Janine that clearly demonstrated his increasingly unbalanced and erratic behavior.
Some from just days before her murder.
It was a lot of, I'm going to kill myself, you know, that kind of level of manipulation.
So I do believe they would get back together with each other.
I do believe she did love him or want a relationship to work, but it did seem that he was hell-bent
on making sure that she stayed with him at all costs.
He was sending her videos at the end of him, you know, miming, putting a gun to his head
and killing himself, crying.
The relationship between Janine and James was obviously volatile, and showing itself also to be manipulative, with James going so far as to threaten Janine if she ever tried to leave him.
Her sister would be like, this is enough, Janine, enough. Like, you were so beautiful, talented,
stop putting up with this. Things that we all say to our best girlfriends or our family members and
she knew it to her core, she knew it, but then she would help him or she would
forgive him. So in any homicide investigation an intimate partner is
usually one of the very first people that police want to talk to. Obviously
one to make a compassionate death notification
and the other to clear him or her as a suspect.
And thankfully, in the majority of all homicide cases,
that is exactly what happens.
They get cleared.
But when you consider that James had not been in contact
with police or Janine's family,
and also that police now had all this information
about their unhealthy relationship,
clearly James is going to be someone that investigators wanted to track down and speak
with.
So their first thing is where is this guy named James Michael Patrick?
So they're getting, you know, identification of him, what does he look like, getting a
driver's license of him, and where did he go?
And they're also calling, I believe Detective Aldez is calling his mother, trying to figure
out where he went.
They knew he didn't leave by a car. I don't believe they had a car. So he also started looking
at Greyhound stations. Boom, he had left by a Greyhound down to Austin.
Skipping town by bus just a few days after your wife's murder? Not a good look.
And you know, Scott, obviously they have to also think about could there be an innocent
explanation like or is it maybe just coincidence, right?
Now, not so likely, obviously, but as we know,
speculation isn't evidence, at least not yet.
Yeah, true.
It's a threat.
It's something to follow up on and determine, you know,
why did he leave town?
If he has a very good reason and he has somebody
to corroborate that reason, then great.
But if not, that's sort of a head tilt moment
where you say, okay, I need to really dig in deeper.
And so with nearly 200 miles between Austin and Dallas,
James did have a healthy head start.
But just as Dallas detectives prepared
to launch a statewide manhunt, the phone rang.
Detective Valdez gets a call
from the Del Seton Hospital down in Austin.
They're part of the UT Southwestern Medical Center.
And so University of Texas police officers get in touch with Detective Valdez
about this guy being down here.
A man calling himself James Patrick had been rushed into the hospital
after having some sort of seizure, at least that's what was expected.
He'd been sitting on a park bench when he'd had some type of medical episode that passerbys were concerned that he'd been suffering from heatstroke,
dehydration, and for whatever else they thought might be going on that they had decided at that point to call him an ambulance.
Was he seizing? Was it a drug overdose? What was going on with him? And because of that, they had called in a social worker
because they didn't know if this was sort of a suicide thing
or what.
And so the social worker starts talking to James Patrick,
who has now gotten his fluids.
He's sort of stabilized and he's now talking.
And he says, you can call my wife.
He gives them the number and she calls and it's just dead.
It doesn't go anywhere.
But when John asked hospital workers my wife. He gives them the number and she calls and it's just dead. It doesn't go anywhere.
But when John asked hospital workers to call Janine's employer,
alarm bells started to sound.
So then he says, well, you can call her job.
And he gives the number of critical mass, which is what they Google.
And they get to critical mass. Critical mass is then like, oh my gosh,
we had just called Dallas police department to do a welfare check on her. It was at that point that the staff at the hospital decided to make another call.
That one was to police. And that's when John Valdez had, you know, done some of his investigation on
his end, but he wanted to go ahead, get the warrant and get him detained. But James Patrick
was not only showing strange medical symptoms, he was also showing no sign
that he knew anything about what had happened
to his wife, Janine.
And so as Dallas detectives rushed to the hospital
in Austin looking for answers, those would not come easy.
When James Patrick was brought in for questioning, officers also took pictures of his body. There were no signs of any struggle or injury aside from a badly bruised finger, which
he told doctors was a recent injury.
He had had a fight with his wife and that's how he had a really, really bruised
tip of his forefinger.
And that it was his wife who had,
I guess they got into a fight and she bit his finger.
And that's when he says, I just came down to Austin
to get away.
I've had a fight with my wife
and she bit my finger, I think he said.
But it doesn't elaborate any more than that.
Admission of a fight
with Janine wasn't proof that he killed her, and James wasn't admitting
to anything else.
So the detectives needed to build a picture which could disprove James' story of a fight.
And by now, friends and family of James were also beginning to talk.
Then he finds out from James' ex-wife that he had reached out.
Janine had kicked him out, that he didn't have any money, that he didn't have anywhere
to go.
So that's where Detective Aldez is figuring out, okay, so we know he got kicked out.
And then this is leading him to narrow down, you know, when is the last time that anyone
is talking to Janine Chapman.
And I think that's when he starts figuring out that there were some local people in Dallas
that they were hanging out with.
According to friends, on the Wednesday evening
before her murder, Janine Chapman had agreed
to meet up with a male friend named Willie
at a local barn near her apartment building.
But unbeknownst to her,
Willie is also speaking to James,
and Willie tells them where they're going to be.
And this becomes a big deal
because when Willie
and his other two friends meet up,
it's just them and Janine and they hang out.
And at some point, James shows up.
The three friends of Janine's know that this is not going
well, that she's kicked him out.
And so it gets sort of uncomfortable.
Janine and her friends moved on to another bar,
but James Patrick followed them.
Trouble was obviously brewing.
So they go to the second bar,
and I believe it was a rodeo bar at a hotel
in downtown Dallas.
He does show up there by downstairs.
I mean, it's just like a four or five stairs down.
And according to the witnesses,
they do get into an argument.
Janine and James are getting into an argument. According to the witnesses, they do get into an argument. Janine and James are getting into an argument.
According to these witnesses, the latest chapter in the turbulent relationship between Janine and James
ended with Janine walking back to the National with two of her pals, leaving James back at the bar.
She was texting with one of the other guys that was there, and she was very apologetic as to how that happened.
And she understands that was uncomfortable for everybody, does not want to be and doesn't want that to happen
again. And, you know, really kind of said, I'm sorry, you guys had to even be a part
of that. I'm just done. I'm done with him. I'm done.
The following day, Janine texted her boss in Colorado. And that conversation became
another important piece of the timeline leading up to her murder.
Because it hinted at the fact that Janine felt threatened by James.
And Janine had been telling her that there were some issues going on between her and James Patrick.
And that she was going to need to be offline for a while, and that she was going to need to take some time.
And also, she started talking to Laurel about is there any possibility that
she could leave the Dallas area and relocate.
James, meanwhile, was at his friend Willie's house. Yes, the same Willie that had originally
gone out with Janine. And James was there drinking heavily. His friends finally put him in a
car and sent him back to his own apartment. But had James gone home or not, detectives
in Dallas were determined to find out.
Detective Valdez does not have their phones, but he has their phone numbers.
So then he does the warrants to get the cell data records and then the cellular tower records. That is when Detective Valdez figures out, okay, his phone is moving not to the SOBA,
but his phone is going to the national.
His cell phone had placed James Patrick
at the scene of the crime
within hours of Jeanine's estimated time of death.
Detective Valdez had already requested
all of the surveillance footage from around the National
to see if James or anyone else
might be seen coming or going.
But so far, the footage had not offered
any conclusive evidence of his arrival.
But James Patrick was familiar with the building's layout and he was used to accessing the building
through the delivery entrance, avoiding the normal access points, which could explain
his ability to avoid the cameras.
Data from the key fob system at Jeanine's apartment had also been analyzed.
It showed the door being opened on the Thursday night
and again on the Friday.
That last action appeared to be someone
leaving the apartment on Saturday morning.
It looks like Saturday around 11.38 a.m.
it was closed and no deadbolt.
So it was just closed, which means presumably
just somebody left because they couldn't
deadbolt it from the inside.
A grim timeline of Janine's murder was coming into focus.
Even without the cameras, you know, you have sort of tumultuous relationship.
You have her kicking him out.
She is getting increasingly upset about his behavior.
And then what happened to the Wednesday night going into Thursday morning, the phone going to the national. Officers suspected that Janine had been killed on
Thursday in the early morning hours. If James Patrick entered the apartment on Thursday,
as his phone indicated, he could have killed her inside and then not left until Saturday the 23rd, almost 48 hours after her murder.
Or that door is closed on the 23rd.
On the 24th, he has got his Greyhound ticket and is going down to Austin.
And on the 25th, he is found at Delcetan Hospital.
We felt good about it circumstantially.
A circumstantial case is tough.
What you're looking for is a smoking gun, something which undeniably places a person at the scene when that crime
happens. But that's not always possible. And sometimes it's the best you can get. But Anasiga,
you've always said circumstantial case is a okay with you.
Because it's all the little pieces that sometimes only add up to one thing. You know, they're
in this case, you have their history, you have his threats that she kicked him out, you know, he shows up when she is out
with friends, you have his phone going to her apartment and she's never seen
alive again. So again, each one in of itself, Scott, and you and I have had
these conversations a lot, like it's not gonna prove anything and certainly not
be dispositive, but when you put it all together, and obviously there's other
pieces here too, do those pieces paint one firm picture? And then, as we've said, sometimes it is much stronger than
just one person pointing the finger and saying, I saw X do that. And he was talkative. I mean,
he did give direct evidence of what he was doing and where he was during his initial conversation
with cops. So at this point, it was more than enough
to proceed to trial, and that's exactly what happened.
In January of 2025, a court in Dallas County
convened to hear the case which Detective Aldez had built.
And it was Brandi Mitchell, our guest today,
who led the evidence.
So my opening statement was, you're gonna hear a lot about a toxic relationship
or on and off again relationship,
but this is what I'm gonna bring you.
And at the end, I believe that you're going to find
beyond a reasonable doubt that he did this murder.
But James Patrick did put on a defense
and it took everyone by surprise.
The defense stood up and basically said,
he's gonna testify and that he's going to say what happened.
He chose in his opening statement to say that he was at the apartment that early morning on Thursday,
that they did get into an argument, basically a form of self-defense, and that he left and fled to Austin.
James Patrick was arguing self-defense.
He didn't deny being at the National and he admitted that there had been a fight.
But he claimed that it was Janine who was the aggressor and that he just defended himself from
the violence. But as for how she died, James Patrick claimed it was entirely self-inflicted.
He brought an expert medical examiner from another county to testify.
It was a strangulation.
I think in his opening statement, he also said that because of her drug use, their
drug use and her drug use, particularly cocaine, that it was basically her heart
that killed her.
So it wasn't a murder.
They did get into a fight.
He was there, but it was not a murder.
And it was reported that a small amount of narcotics had been found in Janine's system,
so there was likely some recreational drug use going on.
But the medical examiner concluded that her death was in no way the result of narcotics.
The violence, the injuries to her head and neck, while they couldn't conclusively say
which one, they did determine that it was those injuries that were the cause of her
death.
But James Patrick doubled down on his claims in court.
He then suggested that he panicked, staying in the apartment until the following morning,
the Friday, where he'd gone out to do some shopping.
And then the next morning he leaves, he goes back to his hotel, he takes a bunch of the
Vasanex.
That doesn't do anything.
He goes to a 7-Eleven on the way back to the National, buys a bunch of this Benadryl, goes
back to the National where her body has been laying for 24 hours at this point, a little
longer.
And he's crushing the Benadryl, taking it along with I think that Nyquil.
And then when that didn't work and he didn't overdose on that one, that's when he leaves that Sunday.
It does look like there's some vomit around where maybe he was puking some stuff up.
Well, it appears to be vomit in the apartment at the National.
From there, James Patrick admitted fleeing Dallas and getting the Greyhound to Austin.
But under cross-examination, his story began to fall apart.
He admitted that he disposed of Janine's phone in a downtown trash can,
and Brandi kept pressing with her cross from there.
I think my point was, yes, it just, this doesn't make sense.
Or explain to me again how this is self-defense,
how you have zero injuries whatsoever,
why you made no move whatsoever to call any help.
I mean, you're in the national.
You were the person that could have gotten her help
and tell your story, I guess, at that time. But you didn't. And you left. But he wanted to bring it
back to, no, no, no, this was her heart and this wasn't me. But you couldn't look at those autopsy
photos alone, even without the science behind it, the photos alone. And then just how he left her.
I mean, she's half dangling off that bed. I mean, it was just everything about it was brutal and violent
and offensive and degrading.
But for prosecutors, even when the defense clearly lying, you still have to prove your
case and prove it beyond any reasonable doubts that no juror has that doubt. Thinking, I
think this is what it is, but I'm not sure. Well, that just doesn't cut it in court. And
while the case seems strong, dare I say even solid, you never know
what a jury is going to do until their verdict is read. And one of the things in the prosecution's
advantage here are the photographs taken of James Patrick when he was first brought into custody.
They show that apart from the bite injury to his finger, there are no other wounds. Now,
you might expect if he was
fighting for his life and you know obviously fighting to the point where it
was his self-defense that he probably would have suffered some type of
abrasion or bruising or even fractures right but the photographs they proved
otherwise and the case for the prosecution really grew stronger.
And after four hours of deliberations,
the jury returned with their verdict.
James Patrick was found guilty of Janine Chapman's murder.
The jury believed he had intentionally taken her life,
likely because she'd ended their relationship.
I believe he was mad.
He was at the end of everything
and he wasn't the James Patrick that he wanted.
That it's not the lifestyle that he wanted.
Everything was in his mind being ripped away from him and it was her fault.
And he firmly blamed her for it.
A judge decided that James Patrick would need to serve 72 years in prison before he could be eligible for release.
For Janine's family, the verdict brought some relief.
But for Brandy Mitchell, who has spent 22 years prosecuting cases of domestic violence,
it served as yet another example of these types of tragedies.
She's been involved in a study to try to understand just how many homicides could potentially
be avoided if warning signs had been spotted sooner.
We in Texas do have, or at least in Dallas, I'm working with some of the shelters,
do have a fatality review team. And we are looking at, you know,
where there could have been intervention before the murder.
And too often there is almost no intervention whatsoever.
No documented police calls, no CPS, maybe a trip to a hospital that could
be connected, could not be connected. But I would guess over half of our murder cases,
there is no previous intervention from most sort of social service agencies, including
the police.
And while Janima surrounded with friends, coworkers, and family that loved her, she
also was boxed into that feeling of being utterly alone, alone in a toxic relationship
with a man she couldn't seem to get away from.
When she finally says, enough, I'm done with this, it's a hugely dangerous time.
She was alone in Dallas.
And then the three people that she was with that night, besides James, I mean, they were
just acquaintances.
I mean, she knew Willie the best and he was still basically an acquaintance.
She was on her own.
And I think she's a strong woman and that was okay.
But if you look back at it now, it is amazing that all of this love and support was around
her.
But she was alone there.
Janine Chapman's death is a grim reminder that domestic violence crosses all social and economic boundaries.
Her case shows the critical importance of noticing and acting on warning signs,
the role employers and communities can play in safeguarding individuals,
and the ongoing need for robust support systems for those at risk.
As we honor her memory, let's commit to listening, intervening, and advocating for anyone who
may be suffering in silence.
I prosecuted intimate partner violence cases towards the beginning of my career.
And beyond the crimes, the control, and the violence, there are so many other things wrapped
into these cases.
Finances, family,
emotions, and feelings of self-worth or lack thereof. The cycle is extremely hard to break,
and it can be anyone. It doesn't depend on your status, education, wealth, or brains.
Janine Chapman is the reminder that this type of toxicity can happen to anyone. And it seems to me that she would want part of her legacy
to be one of support and strength.
Let us all look for signs with our friends and family.
If they're in danger, if we see warning signs,
give us all the strength to say something
and be that support needed
if someone is able to make that choice to walk away.
Community is the backbone I wish we could rely on more,
because supporting and helping one another benefits us all.
Janine Chapman, the life you lived,
the love you gave to those close to you,
and the successes you had are remembered today
by this AOM community.
["The Last Supper"]
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 Darrell Brown,
researched by Kate Cooper, edited by Ali Sirwa,
and Philjohn Grande.
So what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?
Oh!