Anatomy of Murder - The Final Bow (Pasinetta Prince)
Episode Date: July 9, 2024A local actress is murdered in her home, leaving her family reeling. A trio of suspects would be investigated before one was revealed as the killer.                          �...�View source material and photos for this episode at: anatomyofmurder.com/the-final-bow Can’t get enough AoM? Find us on social media!Instagram: @aom_podcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @AOM_podcast | @audiochuckFacebook: /listenAOMpod | /audiochuckllc
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So this was my only opportunity for the jurors to see someone who was volatile, gets mad,
gets sad, overreacts to statements. And it's not a far jump to see how volatile he is
to make the jump from how he acts to someone who could commit a murder like this. I'm Scott Weinberger, investigative journalist and former deputy sheriff.
I'm Anasika Nikolazi, former New York City homicide prosecutor and host of Investigation
Discovery's True Conviction.
And this is Anatomy of Murph.
Today we're talking about a single mother and a rising theater star whose bright light was dimmed at the hands of a ruthless killer. 40-year-old Passionetta Prince was born and
raised in Omaha, Nebraska. Standing four feet 11 inches tall, Pashonetta was a small but mighty presence
in the local theater scene, with starring roles in productions of Ma Rainey's Black Bottom and
Death of a Salesman. On the last weekend of February 2006, Pashonetta was rehearsing for
her next big role. It was going to be in August Wilson's Seven Guitars at Omaha's esteemed John Beasley Theater.
The play tells the story of a blues singer that was killed just as he was about to make it big.
The play's parallel with real life here proved to be eerie.
She was really well-liked.
She was a local actress in Omaha, mother of one, stepmother of another child, ran a daycare out of her home. That was
kind of like, in a nutshell, her life story. That's Matthew Cousy, former deputy county
attorney in the criminal division of the Douglas County Attorney's Office in Omaha.
And the details of that February in 2006 and the investigation that would go on for the next two years are still etched in his memory.
As a single mother and a working actress, Pascinetta Prince was used to staying busy.
And that weekend was no different. Her 13-year-old son Cameron was spending the weekend at his
friend's house while she rehearsed for her upcoming play. Despite her busy rehearsal schedule,
Pascinetta was always a regular at
church on Sunday mornings. So on the morning of February 26, when she was a no-show,
her absence did not go unnoticed. She didn't show up for church, which her mother found
unusual since she regularly attended church with her mother, Beth Frazier.
But while missing church may be forgiven,
not picking up her son from his sleepover was totally out of character,
and Passionette's mother grew really concerned,
and she just knew that something was wrong.
She's not answering the phone, not answering the door.
So her mom got concerned, called the police.
Two uniformed police officers arrived at the home.
They didn't see any signs of forced entry into the house to let them believe that someone had broken in.
And eventually the police forced entry into the house.
Inside the small, tidy home, police saw nothing unusual.
There were no immediate signs of a break-in, no items that appeared out of place.
And in fact, Passionette's purse was still there and her keys sat on the counter.
But as police continued their search into the basement, they made an awful and shocking discovery.
There were signs of a struggle in the stairwell leading to the basement.
And when they got into the basement, that's where they found Pashineta Prince's body laying there.
Pashineta was dressed in her pajamas,
the front of which were spattered in blood.
It was obvious to first responders
that her death was not a natural one.
It was clear that she had been in a struggle.
There were signs of a physical assault.
She had bruises on her,
scratches on her face, on her arms,
and there was a noticeable ligature mark around her neck.
Pashineta had been beaten and strangled,
but there was also signs that she had put up a heck of a fight.
Near her body was an air compressor unit,
just like a black or gray box-type structure with a hose attached to it near her body.
The base had been broken.
I have a distinct memory of a clump of her hair
entangled in that base.
The air compressor was heavy and about the size of a shoebox.
It had an attached hose that looked to be a rough match to the marks on her neck.
When the autopsy was performed by the pathologist, the ultimate cause of death
was she died of strangulation by a ligature. So it wasn't a manual strangulation with your hands.
It was a ligature, So it wasn't a manual strangulation with your hands.
It was a ligature. So some device was used. Now, I think it's important that we sort of take a sidestep here when it talks about ligature marks that were found on her neck.
Ligature, by its pure definition, is something that's used for tying or binding something
tightly. But as you know, Anastasia, in criminal cases, it's an instrument for strangulation.
And we have seen cases of a rope or even something like a woman's stocking or even a telephone cord, which is used and wrapped around the victim's neck to strangle them.
And in this case, while the instrument used to strangle her isn't presented yet, it was used with such force that it caused a severe contusion to form, essentially a bruise at the back of her throat.
My position was that when you are strangling somebody and then you commit to it, you can tell someone's not breathing and you just make it even tighter and thrust it back like that.
That is the moment of premeditation where you decide that you are going to murder this person. When he pulled it
harder and threw that throat back into the neck, that was the moment he committed premeditated
murder. In other words, whoever killed Pashineta had not killed her by accident. Her attacker had
deliberately choked her until she was dead. Was it a stranger or somebody she knew? Investigators
hoped the answer lay somewhere in the evidence
at the scene. In the meantime, the search for her killer was on. After the discovery of Passionetta
Prince's battered and asphyxiated body in the basement of her home, Omaha investigators began
to retrace her whereabouts the weekend she had last been seen, to find out who could have crossed paths with a popular local actress.
Their search led first to a local bar where, after her rehearsal Friday night,
Pascinetta had joined some castmates to blow off some steam.
But according to friends, she had left alone.
The following day, her son had come home to pick up a fresh change of clothes
before heading back to his friends for another sleepover.
He said that no one but his mom was home when he popped by that Saturday afternoon.
He was a little boy when this happened,
so he didn't know a whole lot about what was going on.
But his visit did help place Pashonetta's death
sometime between Saturday afternoon and early Sunday morning.
A search of the crime scene also turned up some telling evidence.
Investigators found a man's watch as well as a pair of men's blue jeans,
jeans that appeared to have bloodstains on them.
Whether these items belonged to the killer, investigators didn't yet know.
According to Pascinetta's friends,
there was only one man they knew that would have access to her house.
And that was her on-again, off-again boyfriend, a man named Patrick Baldwin.
I think it was always kind of an on-and-off type situation.
But I think it's fair to say that, I mean, he was living there.
His belongings were in the house, but they were close, too.
And I think she had already told him that they were breaking up.
But if he regularly stayed in Passionetta's home, well, that could definitely explain why those items would be there.
And then, of course, a volatile relationship is also potentially, at least, a motive for murder.
Also raising suspicions?
In the immediate aftermath of the murder, as Pascinetta's family and friends gathered for support, Baldwin was nowhere to be
found. It was not until hours later that he made a surprise appearance.
Patrick Baldwin showed up at the Omaha police headquarters front lobby in an intoxicated state saying, I hear the police are looking for me.
Now, according to Baldwin, he had been at a family barbecue when the word of Pescianetta's death finally reached him.
And he had multiple people to vouch for him as his alibi.
Members of Omaha's homicide team went on to interview Baldwin for three long, meandering hours.
Yes, he was intoxicated, but he was not in such a state that he was not able to respond appropriately to the questions being asked of him.
He went from crying and being in just despair over her death to being angry with her and blaming her for everything that's happened to him because of
her. So it was a very unusual interview. He would make fleeting references to having an attorney or
wanting an attorney, but when pressed on it, he would say he didn't want an attorney. It was a
very confusing interview. You know, Scott, this is interesting, you know, that here they are talking to him when he clearly seems to have had a lot to drink.
And people might say, look, well, why are they talking to him?
We have to remember, number one, he's not a suspect.
Now, again, if you think that this is someone that you're definitely is going to be involved, you would very often wait.
But here it also is time is of the essence, because if he is not involved or maybe something's going
to happen to shut him down, I'm assuming that their thinking was, well, hey, if he's talking
now, let's hear what he has to say, see if it leads us anywhere, whether to him or away from
him, and then decide later if we can use it or not. To me, it seemed like a very erratic
conversation that could be for multiple reasons. You know, so much of it could be suspicious, while other parts of it could be nervousness. He did, in fact, admit that he was intoxicated at
the time he was being questioned. The point is the investigator needed just to be a sponge.
Show him the compassion that anyone normally would receive bringing that type of news
of a loved one who's been murdered. but as equal to that, evaluating some of the
statements that you've made, you know, enough of these situations that they've run into
in the past as investigators to know really what the body language is telling them.
If you're delivering bad news, it's one thing.
If someone is being evasive, that may mean something else.
And, you know, just as you're talking, Scott, I'm thinking about like, so they describe him as really kind of his story going all over the place or what he's saying
and his emotions are all over the place. And again, alcohol can do that to people. Or remember,
they had a messy relationship and that can do it too. He may have been feeling mixed emotions or
maybe it's because he's involved, you know? And so this way he's kind of dodging and moving around,
coupled with the alcohol.
Really, the possibilities are still all over the map.
That's true.
And what investigators could really surmise
from Baldwin at the time
is that when he last saw Pascinetta Saturday afternoon,
it was around 5 p.m.,
he then claimed he had left alone to meet his sister Michelle
and ended up crashing at her hotel room.
And then he said that Sunday he spent the day at the barbecue,
really accounting for all the hours between last seeing Pashenetta
and then showing up at the police department.
And his alibi was corroborated by his sister and multiple people that had been at the party.
And he didn't sugarcoat his relationship with Pashenetta at all.
He admitted to the issues in their relationship
that they were having, but completely 100% denied any sort of involvement in her death.
Eventually, the police terminated the interview, but did take photographs of him for his physical
characteristics and to see if he had any type of wounds or injuries on him.
That's when things got a little more interesting, so to speak, because police discovered several small injuries on his body that could potentially point to some kind of struggle. And that may
account for the bloodstain found on the jeans, which were located inside Pascinetta's closet.
But when police questioned him about the gash, Baldwin claimed that the injury occurred
while he was trying to repair a garage door
a few days before.
And it suddenly came loose and dropped on his leg,
and that's what caused the cut that he had there.
So outside of his denials and his alibi,
investigators really didn't have much to go on.
But what they did have was a known sample from him, which they can collect and use for DNA sampling.
And then they can compare that known sample to the genes that they found in Pascinetta's closet.
And investigators immediately went about comparing it to the blood found at the crime scene, including Pascinetta's clothing.
There's probably about two dozen little splotches on her shirt,
a varying size, you know, the size of a pinprick.
In addition to the blood spatter, they also found skin underneath her fingernails,
which might end up being important to this case
and also just might prove to be the evidence they've been looking for.
The splotches they did decide to test, it all came back to her.
But the skin under her nails was a different story.
It came back to this mixture of like, I think it was four, maybe five people,
including Patrick Baldwin, including Cameron Adams, including Patrick Baldwin,
and one or two other people.
So the DNA evidence from underneath her fingerprints wasn't super helpful
because it wouldn't be a surprise to find her son's DNA there,
Patrick Baldwin's DNA there, her DNA there,
because they all lived in the same house.
So it wasn't very helpful and it didn't really change anything about the case.
So while investigators were able to identify several DNA profiles from the tissue under her nails, it didn't really push the investigation forward.
But you know what does? A new suspect, which comes courtesy of Patrick Baldwin himself.
The man's name was Michael Scott, and he had been seen talking with Pashinetta at the cast party that Friday night into the late hours the
same night before her murder. He and Pascinetta either had had a relationship, were having a
relationship, he wanted to have a relationship. Not only that, according to her friends,
shortly after Pascinetta had left the party, Scott had followed her out the door. Obviously,
there can be a motive in that if he wants to pursue a relationship with Pashaneta Prince,
and let's say she doesn't, that certainly gives him a motive to commit this violent act.
And since he was known to Pashaneta, he was someone that she just might have opened the door for and let inside.
Since there was no forced entry at the home,
it had to be someone that she knew and would let in or could get in.
She would most likely let Michael Scott into her house.
So since there was this kind of relationship that these two had,
he was certainly someone that the police were interested in as well. In Omaha, investigators were zeroing in on the events that occurred in the early
morning hours of Saturday, February 25th, 2006, when a man named Michael Scott was seen paying
particularly close attention
to Passionetta Prince. They were at some party. I think she had too much to drink.
He, trying to be nice, followed her home. When contacted by police, Michael Scott voluntarily
sat down with investigators. And according to his account, he did admit to following her home,
but said he was just doing so to make sure that she was okay.
He said he watched her pull up to her house at about 3.45 a.m.,
but once she was safely inside, he pulled away.
But then he went on to say that something strange happened afterwards.
According to Scott, he spotted Pascinetta's second car,
a Chevy Impala, parked several blocks away.
Knowing it was a car often borrowed by her ex, Patrick Baldwin, he decided to return to Pashenetta's home to make sure that
she was okay. I think he was aware of Patrick Baldwin and aware of the issues that Pashenetta
and he were having. And for whatever reason, like went around the block and circled back. When Pashineta opened her door, Scott saw that she wasn't alone.
Standing right behind her was Patrick Baldwin, and he did not look happy.
According to Scott, she assured him that she was fine.
But when he left, he still felt uneasy and phoned Pashineta to double check.
And again, she assured Scott that she was okay,
and then they hung up the call.
But a few minutes later, Scott's phone rang.
Only this time, it wasn't Pascinetta.
It was Baldwin.
And that's when Patrick Baldwin confronted Michael Scott
about don't be following my girlfriend around.
Basically, hands off.
You know, Scott, this really can go one of three ways.
One of these two men is telling the truth and the other isn't, right?
So it is perhaps Michael Scott covering for himself and Baldwin was never around and he's just kind of throwing that out there to get police off his trail.
Or it could be that Baldwin wasn't being truthful and now they are getting the first real clues
as to what happened from this other guy, Scott,
or that these things really happened,
but that neither of them were involved.
Yeah, it's definitely an interesting question.
And I agree with all three of those, Anasika.
I mean, he's injecting himself even more
as a potential suspect,
just by saying, here's my alibi and you can check it out. So it
was an interesting thing that he pointed out and injected himself into that. So while investigators
were trying to figure out what was going on with Scott, it seems that Baldwin was getting much more
of their attention. Not only was his alibi looking a little more shaky, the more they learned about Baldwin,
the more he started to look less like just a bad boyfriend
and more like a really good suspect.
They got a volatile relationship.
It was later discovered that Patrick Baldwin
claimed to have some sort of job or something like that
and would pull out of the driveway every day, drive away as if he was going to a job, but really was not.
His job, as near as I could tell, was to live off of Passionetta Prince and her income.
I think that was one of the things
that caused a lot of fights in their relationship.
In fact, telephone records showed
that Baldwin had phoned Passion at his cell phone
19 times between 2.21 and 3.21 a.m.
That's just within one hour,
and it was Saturday morning,
the night of this supposed confrontation with Michael Scott.
And as we know, as we have unfortunately
seen before, that it is the type of jealous, sometimes obsessive behavior that can precede
instances of domestic violence. But we also have to keep in mind that the next afternoon,
Pastianetta's son saw his mom alive and well and accounted for. If police were going to try to prove
that Baldwin had something to do with her murder,
they would have to place him at the scene
closer to the suspected hour of her murder.
That's where the investigation really began to stall.
But Pashanetta's telephone records
would turn up a potential new lead.
When the police got these phone records,
the main investigator went through every single call in like a month.
And this investigator interviewed every single person on those phone records.
And that's how they kind of learned about the landlord.
Now, typically, it would not be out of the ordinary
for there to be a record of calls between a tenant and her landlord.
But some digging would reveal that there was a little more to that relationship.
And the landlord, he admitted as much, telling police that, yes, in the past, he and Pashineta had been romantically linked.
But investigators were much more interested in what he said next.
According to the landlord, Pascinetta had admitted that
Patrick Baldwin had been violent with her in the past, and she showed him the bruises to prove it.
In fact, just a couple weeks before she was killed,
Pascinetta had requested that her landlord change the locks out of fear of her violent ex.
The circumstantial evidence against Baldwin seemed to be just
piling up. But without hard physical evidence linking him to the crime, the prosecutor's office
just didn't think there was enough to make an arrest and bring Baldwin to trial for murder.
When the initial homicide happened and Patrick Baldwin was identified as a suspect in it,
the police would come over and brief either the
county attorney, the chief deputy county attorney, and whoever the prosecutor was who was going to
be handling that for a briefing on it to see if there was enough there to make an arrest.
And over the years, there wasn't. I think when the police would have some sort of additional
information, they would come back to the prosecutor and say,
hey, we found this.
Do you think that's enough?
If they're told no, they would come back later and say,
hey, we've got this additional piece.
Is that enough?
Sadly, the murder case began to go cold
and three years went by with no arrest.
You know, DNA are those three letters
that juries have become accustomed to hearing when it comes to prosecutors presenting their case.
It's almost like they expect it.
Without it, they think the two words, circumstantial evidence, maybe they believe it's a weak case.
But as you know, we know
that you watch all the different, you know, CSI shows and you think that there's all these various
forensic tools that are going to come up in every case. But we used to use this example, at least I
used to, of someone getting robbed or their purse taken down in the subway. You know, there is
someone just grabs their bag and runs. Well, there is no DNA going to be left behind. So you're going
to have to look at the old fashioned type of traditional evidence. Like, did someone see
something? Were there in more modern days a camera? There's other ways to prove cases that
the evidence is just as strong. But, you know, Scott, here, like beyond that DNA, investigators
didn't really have a whole lot. They had no direct evidence. They had just too many unanswered
questions to even link the pieces of evidence
that they did have at that point. You know, Anastasia, that is a great example of what the
CSI effect has now brought to courtrooms, is giving the prosecutor a reason to have to prove
a negative, is why something is not there. But in the end, they just didn't have enough.
I think it pretty much stalled with no other DNA from anybody else.
Patrick Baldwin had a story, not saying police believed it, but it wasn't one that they could crack.
And that's right about the time that Matt joined the new cold case unit.
I'd only been in the office for eight years at that point. And, you know, the county attorney wanted me to get some more experience
and gave it to me to kind of look over it
and see if there was anything that could be done.
And that's when I started looking at it,
me, my co-counsel, and the police.
And that's when we made some decisions
about how to move forward with the case.
Their answer? More extensive DNA testing.
Either we're going to take these additional steps and do this additional DNA testing, or this is going to be something that's still going to just
be sitting on a shelf waiting for some additional evidence to come in. The team decided that
investigators and Pascinetta's family had waited long enough. Some additional spots were identified to test, and that's what broke the case.
Some of those spots came back to a full-profile match of Patrick Baldwin, and of course, you know,
the probability of it not being him was one in septillion, some astronomical number. On June 23rd, 2009, three years after Pashineta had been killed,
Omaha police arrested Patrick Baldwin and charged him with first-degree murder.
Upon his arrest, Baldwin asked to speak to a detective working on the case.
And just like the last time he was interviewed three years earlier, Baldwin rambled on for hours, never admitting to killing
Pachinetta, but making several incriminating statements that Matt hoped to be able to use
at trial. It was all over the place. It was Patrick Baldwin talking nonstop for approximately
three to four hours. And all the detective would say would be,
okay, uh-huh, I see, like not even questioning him.
And it was just Patrick Baldwin in a stream of consciousness about everything.
Blaming Pashinetta, he had nothing to do with it.
He's the victim in all of this. He wants to find the real killer.
It was painful to listen to what was going on.
It was painful to have to listen to at the motion to suppress hearing. And it was painful to listen
to at the trial. But it was a key piece of evidence against him. Baldwin's lawyer tried
to exclude both the statements from 2006 and 2009, arguing that Baldwin's Miranda rights
have been violated.
And this one's really going to go to that right to counsel.
But if you listen to the recordings, you know, the one after he was arrested in 2009,
it is clear that the detective speaking with him stopped questioning him after Baldwin had requested counsel,
only to then have Baldwin on his own continue to speak spontaneously and unprompted moments later.
And that's exactly the type of thing that they were going to obviously be arguing about in court.
And the judge did rule that both interrogations were admissible as evidence and could be played for the jurors to see the real Patrick Baldwin, someone who was volatile, gets mad, gets sad, overreacts to statements.
It was my chance not just to see the substance of what he said, but also to see how he said it, to show them, like, this is the person that Pascinetta was having to deal with. And it's not a far jump to see how volatile he is to make the jump from how he acts to someone who could commit a murder like this.
You know, Scott, and I'm absolutely a believer and I know that you and I have talked about this before.
You know, statements can be incredibly important evidence, even when they're not those straight out confessions. You know, yes, he's denying being involved,
but it is those smaller pieces that very often can be used very effectively
and ultimately be important pieces of evidence for the jury.
Yeah, whether we talk about this on the podcast
or we've done it in our professional careers
and we've said to people who are listening,
people's reactions, people's body language makes a difference.
Words and body language, when they match, right? That's an important fact. And here's
an opportunity for this jury to see the way he speaks, his mannerisms, his tone, his position
in during this interview, this interrogation, and how he really presents this evidence to the detective,
if you tie all that together and you see it visually, it is powerful. And I think it's
something that we've been pointing out, Anastasia, you and I, for quite some time.
And that's exactly why, in part, Matt decided to use it here, because he thought that it was
important for him to let the jury see Baldwin, but also to hear some of what
he had to say. And then he would argue to the jury, you know, as he did, well, that doesn't
make sense. And why? And the state argued that Baldwin was jealous and he was violent and that
ultimately it was his run-in with Michael Scott that Friday night that triggered an argument
that would eventually lead to the physical altercation that ended in Pasheneta's murder.
Baldwin's alibi that he was with his sister on Saturday night had been a massive roadblock
in the investigation for years. But in time, his sister's story had changed. Now she claimed that
Baldwin had borrowed her car and left the hotel between 10.30 and 2 a.m. Here we go. There was this period of time
where he left the hotel in his sister's car, Patrick is unaccounted for. And that left several
hours unaccounted for on the same night that Pashinetta was believed to have been murdered.
So yes, like the sister is still trying to help him.
But now what the jury is left with is that Baldwin no longer has that airtight alibi.
Patrick's sister testified and was trying to alter the timeline.
My tack was, you're a sister who's trying to stick up for your brother,
who's got himself in a real bad spot.
Our theory was that Pashineta had had enough of Patrick Baldwin.
She discovered that he didn't have a real job anymore and was lying about that.
She was just tired of the relationship and she told him,
we're done. In the murder trial of Patrick Baldwin, Matt had laid out his theory of why and how
Passionetta Prince was killed. Patrick gets it in his head to leave the birthday party at the hotel,
drive over to her house. She either let him in or he had a key,
but he got into the house, started arguing with her, had this fight that probably started off
in the main floor and ended up in the basement, hit her in the head with the air compressor,
thinking that would take care of it. It didn't. He then got the air compressor hose, wrapped it around her neck and strangled her to death.
In 2007 alone, over 2,300 deaths in the United States were caused by domestic violence, making up 14 percent of all homicides.
Seventy percent of those victims were women.
I think that in any type of domestic violence homicide that I've ever done, like, why does this have to happen?
Why just the relationship is over.
Just accept it and move on.
It should never come to a point where someone has to be murdered, especially in such a violent way.
Why does someone feel the need that if I can't have this person or be with this person,
that I've got to kill him and take him away from everybody?
Helping prove Matt's case was Baldwin's DNA on the pajama shirt
that Pascinetta was wearing at the time of her death.
And remember that injury on Baldwin's leg that he claimed he got while fixing his garage?
Well, prosecutors tracked down the neighbor he had been with,
who he had done that garage work with,
and the neighbor said that Baldwin's story isn't what happened at all.
If I remember right, this would be the great garage story incident that he referred to.
The neighbor basically said, like, I didn't see him get injured, didn't see him get cut.
The garage thing was not any kind of big deal.
Baldwin's defense, they did their best to raise
reasonable doubt by directing suspicion at other men in Passionetta's life, like Michael Scott,
and even her landlord. But Matt welcomed the challenge, if only to shore up his own solid case.
In fact, Matt called all of the so-called red herrings, the person that the defense was claiming could be the actual killer.
He called them to the stand to make sure the jury gets a look at them.
The jury needs to hear it so we can combat the tunnel vision defense.
So that we can say, hey, this guy was a potential suspect because he had this relationship with passionate friends.
Yes, we had this relationship,
but here's where I was and here's what I was doing. And then we, you know, when the investigators
speak and testify, we have them say, and did you verify that alibi? Yes, we did. Because we weren't
going to do this whole just, oh, you're just picking on him because he's the boyfriend. There's
all these other people out there who could have done it.
We were nipping that in the bud.
At one point, Baldwin's defense even suggested that Pashoneta's adult stepson,
who had had some previous trouble with the law, that he had something to do with his stepmother's murder.
He was very close to Pashoneta.
He had issues with his own mother, but grew very close to her and kind of considered her to be the mom figure in his life.
And he was very unhappy that Patrick was trying to finger him for murder, especially if someone he cared so much about.
And I can tell you that Judge Mullen found a lot of what Marvell said to be very compelling.
His testimony proved to be some of the most moving in the entire trial, further demonstrating to to try and imply that he murdered someone that he cared about, who was like a mom to him. Marvell did not cry.
That's not his way, but he made it very clear that to suggest that he would do that really kind of
ate at him and really bothered him that that would happen. And I think his testimony was some of the more compelling testimony that occurred at that trial.
On September 14th, 2010, four years after Passion had been killed,
Patrick Baldwin was found guilty of second-degree murder, not the first-degree murder top count.
The difference is, is that first-degree murder requires proof of
that it was a premeditated act.
Again, my argument was when
he made the decision to
strangle her with that hose with such
ferocity that
that constituted the premeditation.
Second-degree murder
doesn't require premeditation, but
requires it to be an intentional killing.
A month later, Baldwin was sentenced to life in prison.
And unlike other defendants who I've dealt with in the past, after his direct appeal was done and over with and ruled on by the Nebraska Supreme Court, never heard a word.
No post convictions, no habeas, no nothing.
Haven't heard a word from him since.
The road to justice for Passionetta Prince was a long one and often frustrating.
But in the end, Matt hoped that the arrest, conviction, and sentencing had brought her friends and family,
especially her stepson and younger son, some degree of closure.
It's never going to be perfect. You're only going to get closure if the person is backing your life.
That's not going to happen.
But to have some modicum of closure
that I can put this behind me
and move on with my life,
no matter what the crime is,
no matter how serious it is,
it was just about helping people out
who are victims,
who are just in that bad way.
Pascinetta's son Cameron
moved in with his grandmother after his mother's death.
With neither a mother or father to guide him, he struggled for a while.
But today, he's doing really well.
Has some kids, has a job, and has gotten himself situated.
Last I heard, which was last year, her son is on the right path.
A month after Passionetta's life was taken, two Omaha theaters donated the proceeds from
several performances to a trust fund benefiting her family. The creative director of the John
Beasley Theater, remember that is a theater that she had been rehearsing for that upcoming play at
the time of her death. It was also a place where Passionetta regularly performed. Well, the creative director told newspapers that
Passionetta loved the theater, but that, and I quote, no undertaking was more important to her
than raising her son. Clearly, this episode has to do with domestic violence. And when domestic violence claims a life, the impact resonates beyond the immediate tragedy.
It is a stark reminder of the vulnerabilities that lie within what should be the sanctuaries of our lives, our homes.
This ripple effect of grief and loss underscores a harsh reality. When we lose somebody to domestic violence, we're all diminished,
united in a collective mourning and a shared resolve to prevent such tragedies in the future.
Tune in next week for another new episode of Anatomy of Murder.
Anatomy of Murder is an AudioChuck 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,
Megan Hayward, and Philjean Grande.
So, what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?
No!