Anatomy of Murder - X2 (Jenna Pellegrini & Christine Sullivan)
Episode Date: December 10, 2024Two young women are found murdered. Paint on garage windows would prove an unlikely clue. For episode information and photos, please visit: anatomyofmurder.com/x2/ Can’t get enough AoM? Find us on... social media!Instagram: @aom_podcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @AOM_podcast | @audiochuckFacebook: /listenAOMpod | /audiochuckllc
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Christine was savagely beaten in the head and stabbed eight times.
Jenna was beaten in the head and stabbed 43 times.
And after he murdered them, the defendant concealed their bodies by wrapping them up and piling junk on top of them like trash.
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.
One of the characters that plays a pivotal role in today's story is one that appears far too often in homicide cases across the country, narcotics.
The buying and selling of illegal narcotics is a dangerous and ruthless criminal enterprise
that accounts for a huge portion of this country's violent crimes, including murder.
It also leaves a terrifying number of victims in its wake.
Men, women, very often young, whose struggles with addiction can lead them to some very dark places
with some very bad people. Jenna Pellegrini was born in New Hampshire, the only daughter of high school sweethearts
Amy and Michael Pellegrini, who joins us here today.
We were both young.
Amy was 19, I was 21.
So we had moved in with my parents.
And of course, they were thrilled because that brought Jenna along with.
My dad in particular was static. Neither one of my parents had girls, so I have two brothers.
So it was three boys. They got their first taste of a girl and it was pretty exciting.
And so much of Jenna's childhood was spent with her grandparents
and on the water off the coast of New Hampshire.
childhood was spent with her grandparents and on the water off the coast of New Hampshire.
My parents were avid sailors and of course when she was born and living with my parents, we were able to get her out right from the beginning. She pretty much grew up
right from the beginning sailing out the coast of New Hampshire and Maine.
Along with sailing on her granddad's boat, the Jenna Marie, named in her honor,
Jenna was also a successful student and a reliable infielder on her high school softball team.
She's very smart. She had a lot of friends through high school where she spent a lot of time with
them. A good amount of it was probably on the ball fields. That was her big passion. I mean,
she was into sports.
And like a lot of teenagers, Jenna was also fiercely independent.
She had her own ways, so as soon as she graduated, she was out the door. She wanted to be on
her own.
By the time she was in her 20s, Jenna had a boyfriend, a job doing hair, and by 2017,
two children of her own.
But she was also a night owl.
From my standpoint, you know,
I saw her as your normal everyday kid.
You know, you might go out with your friends drinking.
And that's pretty much the extent of it.
I don't know when things really changed or went downhill.
And I know this may start to sound familiar to some of our listeners, who may know someone
or has loved someone that has struggled with addiction.
At some point, Jenna began to experiment with various narcotics, and that experimentation
eventually led to regular use, an all too common problem that her own dad admits he
can relate to.
I had some issues myself that, you know, not real proud of, to be honest with you,
but didn't spend as much time as I could have or should have.
Jenna's dad eventually found the help and support he needed to get sober,
but he also feared that Jenna would not be so lucky.
She kind of got involved with some people that likely pushed her into that direction.
I don't know how involved she was. I know the people she was hanging out with were involved.
I know for a fact that a lot of them were not the right people to hang around with.
Jenna's children went to live with her parents, and sadly, her narcotics use eventually led to bouts of
joblessness and homelessness.
I used to call her all the time. And then as this went on, I wasn't able to get a hold of her. And then, you
know, she loses her job, you know, she doesn't have a phone, so you can't get a hold of her and then you know she loses her job you know now she doesn't have a phone so can't get a hold of her so that was kind of
the hard part for me that I wasn't able to reach her because she didn't have a
place to live you know or at least a permanent one. With his daughter in
crisis Michael was at a loss on how to help her. I didn't know what she was I
didn't know any of her friends I didn't know what she was. I didn't know any of her friends. I didn't know who to call.
This was the last week of January of 2017,
and Jenna had been staying on the couches
of a string of friends.
She eventually made it to a home on Meadowbrook Road
in Farmington, New Hampshire, a pretty rural area
about a three hours drive east of Concord.
Her friend, 48 year old Christine Sullivan,
had offered her a bed while her boyfriend,
Dean, was in Florida.
Christine was an amateur photographer
and had a passion for picking flea markets
for antiques to restore.
But she, like Jenna, was also struggling with narcotics use.
The two women were together at the house
on Meadowbrook Road on the night of January 27.
The next morning, Christine's boyfriend Dean tried to contact
Christine, but she wasn't picking up the phone or
returning his text messages. When he finally arrived back in
New Hampshire on the 29th, he still hadn't heard from her.
When he got to the house, he noticed a couple of things that didn't seem right.
Christine's car was there, but there were no lights on in the house.
And strangely, the windows of the garage looked like they had been painted opaque with green
spray paint.
Inside, the house was empty, but on the floor in the living room, he noticed a small rug
covering a large dark stain, and in the spare bedroom a mattress
covered in blood
Fearing the worst Dean called 911 a short time later police arrived at the home and as they began to inspect the property
They made a horrible discovery
Under the back porch of the house police found the bodies of both women
Wrapped in plastic tarps and hastily covered with household debris.
Christine had suffered a massive blow to the head and multiple stab wounds.
She also had defensive wounds on her arms indicating that she fought desperately for
her life.
Jenna, on the other hand, did not have defensive wounds, perhaps indicating
that she was attacked in bed while she
slept. Her killer demonstrating
a viciousness that left investigators
stunned.
She had been stabbed 43
times in the neck and chest.
Wounds that severed her jugular vein,
punctured her lungs and broke her ribs.
As investigators secured the crime scene, word of the double murder at the house in
Farmington soon hit the news and also social media.
Farmington had no relevance to us and then we found out that it was two girls
and of course Amy's frantic.
Remember, Jen's parents had no way to get in touch with her and didn't know where she
was living.
But with a child in crisis, whether she's an adult or not, you can imagine that any
bad news like this will leave your mind racing.
Monday came along and we started seeing Facebook posts, some people that must have known more or whatever, friends of friends
that, you know, so sorry Jenna and so on.
So of course that scared us like, oh, what's going on?
Michael called the Farmington police station from his home in Massachusetts.
I said I was on my way up.
Shortly after that, I finally got a call from the victim advocates office regarding Jenna,
but they did not say that it was Jenna,
but it was kind of obvious during that conversation
that one of the girls was her.
It was up to Jenna's parents to break the devastating news
to her young children.
It still kills me to this day, you know, when we told them Blake's eyes were kind of wide open and
then he started to bawl.
When Michael arrived in Farmington, investigators were still piecing together what might have
happened.
The info they could give us was that she was likely sleeping.
The info they could give us was that she was likely sleeping. They found the mattress that she was on with blood stains,
and she was stabbed 43 times.
Detectives were also trying to establish the relationship
between Jenna and the other murdered woman, Christine Sullivan,
as well as with Christine's boyfriend, Dean Smorok,
who was both the owner of the house and the man that called 911.
We had no idea who these people were, why she was there.
We had no idea who Christine was.
But you know who did know who Christine and Dean were?
The local cops.
According to police records, the couple had a history of distributing cocaine and methamphetamines.
In fact, they had been arrested just a year before
in South Carolina for their role
in a drug trafficking operation
that spanned the entire East Coast.
And what we have seen time and time again
is where drug trafficking goes,
violent crime often follows.
But there was still a mystery to unravel here,
not the least of which was how Jenna got caught
in something so violent and so vicious.
And while Dean and Christine's criminal record pointed towards a possible motive behind the
murder, cops also stumbled on a clue that suggested the motive could have been more
typical.
According to Dean, he and Christine had recently been going through a breakup and by his own admission,
their relationship could be described as rocky at best.
We believe that Christine was trying to get away from him and it may have taken place
or that may have been part of what was going to take place that weekend.
So early on, detectives approached this double murder like a potential domestic abuse case with Dean as the top suspect.
Here is a guy with a criminal history and a personal and contentious relationship with one of the victims.
You know, Christine might have been leaving, so Dean had them killed and Jenna just happened to be there.
It always kind of came back that Jenna was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Jenna didn't know Dean.
Dean didn't know Jenna.
But there was one glaring problem.
Autopsies of both women determined
that they were likely killed
in the early hours of January 28th.
And Dean claimed he was still in Florida,
not arriving back in New Hampshire until later that night.
And when investigators checked with the airline, as well as video footage from the airports,
his alibi seemed to hold up. Not to say that he was completely off the hook. And the reason,
due to the cold weather and the fact that the bodies of the two victims were found outside of
the home, there was some uncertainty about the exact time of death.
But Dean actually offered another way for backing his story,
showing investigators the video surveillance system he had installed in his house.
The video confirmed that Jenna and Christine were in the house together
for most of the day preceding their murders. But it also revealed the presence of a third person,
a man in a white hat who could be seen entering and leaving the house
several times, both through the front and the back door
on the evening before the murders likely took place.
He was in the video at the house prior to the time
that they were giving us, you know,
that the murders took place.
And it shows Jenna and Christine in the video
and nobody else on that Thursday evening
and into Friday morning.
Even more intriguing was the fact that this man appeared
to know about the video security system.
And just as the video's internal clock approached
the hour of the murder, the system suddenly shut down.
So while the security system had not captured the murder itself, it very well may have caught
the last person to have seen both women alive and possibly the person responsible for their
violent deaths. Two women brutally murdered in a house in Farmington, New Hampshire.
The most obvious suspect, one of the women's soon to be ex-boyfriend, who also happened
to be a narcotics dealer.
But security video footage from inside the home have presented investigators with a new
suspect, a man seen entering and leaving the crime scene the evening before the murders
took place.
And when Dean viewed the tape, he told police, oh yeah, I know that guy.
The man in the video was identified as 34-year-old Tim Verrell,
a close friend and associate of Dean Smorunk's.
He was kind of a small time dealer
where he would purchase small amounts of whatever,
meth or cocaine, I'm not positive, everything,
but from Dean and he would sell it.
So Tim Verrell worked with both Dean and Christine in their business and so would not have been
out of the ordinary for Verrell to be a visitor to that house.
But as investigators gathered information about Verrell, one of the first things they
learned was that he didn't really fit the profile of this kind of violence.
Tim didn't really have a record as being that kind of person. No arrests or nothing. So
it was kind of odd in that sense like why you know why would he do this? Not only that, but no one
familiar with Christine can think of any reason why Verroil could have done harm to either one
of these two victims. When we first found out I would imagine everybody kind of does this. I did kind of do a little research to see, you know, who the hell is this guy?
But I didn't really find much on him.
But I also did the same thing with Dean, only to find out that that's the a**hole that you
guys need to be arresting.
He turned out to be, you know, a huge problem.
And a lot of people believed he was guilty the entire time.
Still, with Varell captured on the video
of visiting the crime scene just prior to the murder,
he was certainly a top person of interest.
And so investigators brought him into the Farmington police
station for questioning.
When Varell was questioned by police,
he admitted to being at the house with both murder victims
on the evening of January 27th.
But he claimed that it was simply a social visit.
They listened to music, they talked, and they also consumed narcotics together.
He denied tampering with the security system, and he denied having anything to do with the murders.
So Scott, if we think about what they are learning pretty quickly here about this other guy, Varell,
I mean, just him being there at the crime scene so close to the murders, like obviously,
is he is going to be the person that has to be focused on at least initially, or at least one of them, I should say.
Absolutely. I mean, he would be the first one that they would need to eliminate.
He obviously had the opportunity to commit a crime. He was there.
So they need to dig into the relationship
that he had with both of the victims,
Anasiga and any potential physical evidence.
And when I say, remember the evidence of him being present
is not just enough, they need more than that.
But it could be that some other type of evidence
would help tell the story, will help paint that picture as we say,
had that crime scene talked to investigators.
And so while Tim Verrell revealed little to police
that could implicate himself in the murders,
the evidence collected at the crime scene,
as I mentioned, started to speak volumes.
And I'll call it the old OG,
because the first set of physical evidence
really was old school.
Fingerprints matching Varels were found on spray paint cans in the garage, the same spray
paint used to paint over the windows to the garage.
Even more telling, his prints were also pulled from the trash bags found in the laundry room.
Both trash bags contained blood-stained items that belonged to the victims, including a
bloody sheet containing Jenna's DNA.
His prints were even found on an empty bottle of Prestone deicing liquid, a piece of evidence
that proved to be critical in proving that Varell had a hand in at least attempting to
clean up the crime scene and cover up the murders.
And that's because investigators found a stain of Christine's blood on the back porch
of the house, a stain likely from a puddle that had frozen and the killer had tried to
de-ice with Prestone in order to clean it.
Now a second bottle of Prestone was later found inside his car, further connecting him
to the crime. Cleaning products that they show him purchasing
showed up at the house and in his car.
So it was obvious he was part of it, involved.
There's no video, obviously, of the murder.
So, you know, that's the only piece that's missing.
And so police and prosecutors were facing a question.
Could they use proof of a cover-up as proof that Verrell also killed the two victims?
It was obvious he was there.
It was obvious he tried to clean up.
It was obvious he was part of it.
The mystery that remained was whether Verrell was following orders or did he work alone,
targeting, killing, and attempting to cover
up two vicious murders committed with his own hands?
Tim Verrill was arrested on February 6, 2017 and remained incarcerated as prosecutors prepared
for his trial on two charges of first degree murder.
Part of that trial prep meant putting together a plausible theory for why Verrill targeted
the two women.
Was it an argument?
Was it sexual in nature?
Or was it something more planned, even maybe a hit for hire?
They gathered witnesses that knew Verrell's relationship with both Christine and his role
in Christine and Dean's narcotic business.
And one of those witnesses was prepared to testify that Verrill had been using narcotics heavily
in the days leading up to the murder.
Here is an excerpt from the lead prosecutor's
opening statement to the jury.
The defendant had started acting strange.
He was using a variety of drugs.
He grew distant and paranoid,
at times not even seeming to be aware
of what was going on around him.
The prosecutors also argued that Ferrell was in fact part of Christine and Dean's narcotics operation,
an operation that may have been fracturing along with the couple's romantic relationship.
Dean and Christine were drug dealers and the defendant worked for them.
In fact, the defendant would sometimes take over business when Dean and Christine went
away, such as when they would go down to Florida.
One thing that was clear was that Varel did not know Jenna Pellegrini, and it was her
presence in the house that may have sparked a paranoia about who exactly she was.
Their theory was that Tim did this
because he thought Jenna was an informant.
Again, here's the lead prosecutor summarizing statements
made by a friend of Varell named Josh
about his behavior on the night of the murder.
Apparently concerned for the drug organization
he was involved in, the defendant asked Josh
if Josh thought Jenna might be an informant or someone who provides
information to the police. The defendant expressed concern over whether Dean knew
Jenna was at the house and what Jenna might be doing there.
And so clearly, Verlop was worried about Jenna's presence, presumably in relation
to protecting his role in the narcotics business.
But also perhaps protecting Dean, the person who was known to run that business, the same
guy who Christine was perhaps about to leave.
What was not known was whether Dean knew Verrarel's concerns. Either Tim was actually paranoid
in thinking Jenna was a drug informant,
or as some people think,
and this is kind of my theory
because I don't believe the informant thing,
that Christine is leaving.
So that conversation could have resulted
in the exact same scenario one way or the other.
That can't happen.
I'll do this for Dean so that he likes me or he keeps me on board.
The prosecution had to focus on what they could prove.
And what they could prove was that Pharrell, not his boss, Dean, was at the house in Farmington
and had killed Christine and
Jenna. From January 25th until late on January 28th, Dean was in Florida. What
you'll hear is that Dean's cell phone repeatedly used cell towers in and
around Cape Coral Florida from January 26th through January 28th,
including as he was talking to people back in New Hampshire
and trying to reach out to Christine.
Obviously the prosecution has to go with the facts.
And the only facts they had was that Dean is on camera
down in Florida, so he didn't do it.
And Tim was there up until the morning that it happened,
so he must have.
Here again is more of the prosecutor's opening statement
at trial, in which he walked the jury
through the known facts of the case,
clearly implicating the defendant, Tim Verrell,
in the double homicide.
At about 2 a.m. on January 27th, the defendant arrived back at 979
Meadowboro Road.
Not long after arriving, the defendant began taking scattered steps to hide
different areas of the house from view.
First, the defendant blocked the view of one of the security cameras in the
house.
the defendant blocked the view of one of the security cameras in the house.
You'll see that the defendant went back and forth between the house and the garage multiple times.
Crime scene investigators would later find that all of the ground level windows in that garage
had been covered in green spray paint.
The green spray paint is an interesting and kind of haunting element to the story here,
because to me it indicates clear premeditation.
He was trying to black out the windows of the garage
because he knew he was about to commit a crime.
The last video captured by the 979
Meadowboro Road surveillance system on January 27th
shows only
the defendant
at about
657 a.m. The defendant quickly walked to the door and locked it
he was wearing a white trucker style hat a
flannel shirt and carrying his shoes in his hand.
There were no more videos from the 27th.
The prosecution contended that Farrell then disabled the security system and then locked the front door.
At some point after locking that door, the defendant struck. The murders were disorganized and hyper.
They weren't cold and calculated.
They were emotional and they were passionate.
The defendant struck Christine multiple times in the head with a blunt instrument.
These were extremely forceful blows, which caused bleeding in her brain. One of the blows was so powerful that it caused
extensive fracturing around a large part of Christine's skull. You'll hear that Christine
was alive for these blows. The prosecutor goes on to describe how Varell then proceeded
to stab Christine Sullivan eight times.
Christine tried to defend herself.
She suffered broken and cut fingers in an attempt to ward off this vicious attack.
But she wasn't successful.
His description of Jenna's murder is equally graphic,
but perhaps even more disturbing when you consider that she may well have been asleep in bed.
He stabbed Jenna 43 times in the neck, chest, and back.
There was no evidence that she tried to defend herself.
She was likely sleeping or unconscious at the time.
After murdering these women, the evidence will show the defendant tried to clean up the scene.
His efforts were as disorganized and hyper as the killings themselves. He hid the bodies by wrapping them in bedding, drop cloths, and a frayed tarp.
He then discarded the bodies under the porch, piling junk on top of them as if they were trash.
So the evidence found at the scene. We have the fingerprints found on the trash bags containing
bloody sheets, the pressed stone found at the scene in his car, and even trace amounts of
Christine's blood found on a white baseball cap belonging to Varell.
It all supported this theory of these cold-blooded murders.
Varell maintained his innocence throughout, and his lawyers were prepared to present an
alternative perpetrator defense, a theory the prosecution was ready to confront head-on.
I imagine when I'm done speaking with you in a few minutes, defense is going to come
up here and they're going to tell you that somebody else murdered Christine and Jenna.
They're going to create a boogeyman and they might even give that boogeyman a name.
And that name of course would be Dean Smororunk. Someone Verrel's defense team would claim
had a clear motive himself to kill Christine.
And the potential evidence that could prove it
would turn the trial upside down.
In the trial of Tim Verrell, the man accused of murdering Christine Sullivan and Jenna Pellegrini, the lead prosecutor had to address the elephant in the room that Christine's
own boyfriend looked like an awfully good suspect.
And it's true that Dean and Christine had a terrible relationship.
Dean was abusive, and he didn't hide the way he felt about Christine,
often saying and texting horrible things about Christine to others.
It was no secret among anyone acquainted with the two how Dean treated Christine.
But on January 27th 2017, Dean was in Florida. On January 28th, when Dean
thought something was wrong in New Hampshire, he came back. And when Dean came
back, he called the police.
We're not going to make any excuses for Dean or the way that he treated Christine.
But the evidence will show that when he thought something had happened to Christine, he didn't
run.
He wanted law enforcement to investigate. You know, Scott, I don't think it is necessarily
the deciding factor that he brings the police into this
because how many times have you heard the scenarios
that someone actually happily brings the police in,
is cooperative and talkative throughout,
really just as another way to try to move attention away
from themselves.
To me, it's clear the defense was counting on Dean
and Christina's relationship and how volatile it was.
And that was what the motive was behind her murder.
But the defense had to get over a huge hurdle
to prove that because it was clear at the time
of the murders, Dean was far away from the crime scene.
And yes, while, as you know, domestic violence often
is a motive, the prosecution's
case had a much more compelling argument and also compelling evidence.
Well, I don't think the fact, as I said before, that he brought them in really is dispositive
of him not being involved. Again, like as prosecutors, though, we can speculate and
think and think maybe, maybe not. But you have to prosecute based on evidence and evidence
alone. But also remember, too, there's no statute of limitations when it comes to murder.
So if they find evidence that implicates him
or anyone else later at any time,
well, then they can always charge them, too.
But for now, I absolutely agree that the evidence
fit together with the other theories
and the evidence only points right now to Tim Burrell,
and so that's what they went into court with. And I think Michael completely agreed.
Early on for us it was he's guilty and then to add to that in my opinion anyways
and probably many others is that you could see the defense basically throwing
on the wall to see if it sticks. And it didn't.
And it was kind of obvious,
which led us to believe that, well, they don't have anything,
so they're gonna try to do whatever they can
to convince people otherwise.
The case for Viril's guilt was a strong one,
and the trial seemed to be moving
towards a swift conviction.
However, on October 23rd, 2019,
the defense brought to the court's attention
certain irregularities regarding evidence discovery.
One officer in particular did not hand over
all of the information that he had,
which was related, directly related to the trial.
And these infractions would be costly.
Farrell's attorneys informed prosecutors that they had learned about emails that the
major crimes unit had received that not only could exonerate Farrell, according to them,
but also supported the defense's theory that Dean was still a viable suspect.
Over the next several days, the prosecution and defense
would learn that more than 500 pages of written documents
and 39 media discs had not been shared
with the defense in discovery.
And also among this evidence were disturbing texts
from Dean to Christine.
And I quote,
"'You have a short time left on this earth.
I wish you were dead already.
You might as well call the cops right now.
These were just a few of the texts that Dean sent
to his then girlfriend indicating a volatile falling out.
And as a result, on October 31st, 2019,
the judge declared a mistrial.
The defense went on to request that the case against Verrell be completely dismissed on
the grounds of double jeopardy, a request ultimately denied by the New Hampshire Supreme Court.
During the second trial of Tim Verrell, the prosecution's star witness proved to be his
close friend, who testified in detail about Viril's strange behavior on the night of
the murder.
When the defendant arrived at Josh's, he grabbed a beer out of his car and went inside.
Josh will tell you that when the defendant walked past him to enter the house, he said
to Josh, interesting night.
The defendant was behaving strangely and smelled strongly of body odor.
He was wearing only a t-shirt, not the flannel shirt that he had on previously. Continuing
with this strange behavior, the defendant asked Josh for a change of pants, which Josh
provided and which the defendant then changed into right there on the spot.
But for as convincing as this testimony was from the friend of both Dean and Tim Burrell,
it was also problematic.
And as someone who's handled multiple cases with witnesses sometimes similar to the one
here, I can say that here's why.
Because this witness, like several in this story, was involved in the narcotics trade.
Now, does that make what he was saying a lie?
Absolutely not.
People can tell the truth or lie no matter who they are or what they do.
But it will certainly cause the jury to be extra critical and cautious as they should
be.
But there's also another layer that needed to be considered as well.
He had been offered a reduced sentence for past crimes in exchange for his testimony. And of course, that is a fact that the defense is going to pounce on to discredit that testimony,
suggesting that the witness had incentive to deflect suspicion away from himself and
his business partner, Dean.
But I thought the lead prosecutor had a very poignant response to this.
Just listen to what he says here. first instinct to call the police when something suspicious has happened.
They likely lied to the police when asked about their own drug use and drug sales.
What we want to ask you to consider as you listen to those witnesses is that while witnesses
may lie about their own drug use and their own drug sales in an interest of self-preservation.
That same interest does not give them a reason to lie
about what they knew about the murders of Christine and Jenna.
— So depending on who you believed,
Tim Varell was either a narcotics user so impacted by the drugs
that he became completely paranoid,
who brutally killed two women
because he feared one was a police informant.
Or was he the fall guy for his narcotic dealing boss
who wanted an end to his business
and his romantic partnership with Christine Sullivan?
But like Jenna's father, Michael, said before,
all prosecutors could do was focus on the
facts based on the physical evidence that pointed to one truth.
That Tim Verrell was at the crime scene before, during, and after these murders.
He tried to cover it up because of the likely conclusion because he was the one responsible.
Also pretty convincing was a testimony of Verarell's own brother, who described Tim's behavior
on the day police first tried to reach out.
At the time, the defendant was at his brother Jeff's house
in Newton, New Hampshire.
The defendant and his girlfriend
had taken his girlfriend's car to Jeff's house.
The defendant told the trooper
he was willing to speak with investigators and
gave the trooper his brother's address.
But after he got off the phone, he told his brother he was going outside
to wait for the police, and then he left in his girlfriend's car,
leaving his girlfriend behind.
his girlfriend's car, leaving his girlfriend behind. But before driving away, the defendant removed his girlfriend's New Hampshire license plates
and replaced them with his brother's roommate's Massachusetts plates.
In other words, Farrell tried to flee.
But as they say, the arm of the law is long.
But as a prosecutor, I can say that we would also say that that is evidence of consciousness of guilt.
If he hadn't committed the crime, and if he didn't know that what he had done was wrong, he wouldn't have tried to run.
More than six years after the murders of Christine Sullivan and Jenna Pellegrini,
the fate of their accused killer, Tom Verrell, was up to a jury.
We were pretty confident, but obviously have to realize that there is always that slight
chance because you don't know the jurors, you don't know what they think, but we were
pretty convinced that they were all going to convict him.
But on April 9th, 2024, the jury surprised the courtroom when it returned a verdict of not guilty on first degree murder.
Instead, they found Verrell guilty of the lesser charge of second degree murder,
essentially saying that the killing was not premeditated, or at least that it hadn't been proven beyond any reasonable doubt.
Now, honestly, I would not disagree with the prosecution's position that Farrell took measures to cover
up the fact that crime was about to be committed.
I mean, premeditation, which essentially involves the planning or deliberate act in advance
opposed to, as you know, heat of the moment, which is less calculated in a sense.
I think it's clear that the defendant anticipated some obstacles to commit the crime, and he
tried to remove those obstacles by blocking the window to prevent witnesses from seeing
him or seeing any of the evidence, or also to clear signal that he disabled the security
system.
So if that's not premeditation, I don't know what is.
I'm going to take the other side here for a moment, because when I look at it from that
other side, we don't know if he did that to the windows maybe after he had already committed
those crimes, likely in a drug-fueled state.
And again, it takes time to try and clean.
It takes time to try and move bodies.
So yes, at the same time we're talking about the security system, could it have been at
the moment he chose to commit the crimes?
Boom, let me disable these cameras.
We just don't know. So while yes, of course, I think it's a stretch to come to those conclusions,
this is all about proof beyond any reasonable doubt. So if you can put a reasonable possibility
on those things, definitely disappointing to the prosecutor or family member. But I also
understand it from the standpoint of the jury.
And so the verdict was a disappointment for both Christine and Jenna's families. And Jenna's father and other family members used their impact
statements to address the judge and make their case for the stiffest penalty
possible. One of the things the advocate was telling us, you know, that this could
change it. The judge could listen to your statement, you know, so make it a good one. In the end, the judge took those statements to heart.
On May 17, 2024, the judge sentenced Farrell to the maximum sentence of 90 years to life
for the second-degree murders of Christine and Jenna.
Oh, well, we were relieved finally that, you know, for one, it was over.
He's going to jail for life.
To this day, Jenna's father is not totally convinced that Tim
Farrell was the only person involved in his daughter's
murder.
He was a follower not a leader anyone was going to do it,
it's the boyfriend from his criminal record from the time
he was in whatever high school or college. I mean, it goes always up the chain.
He was the guy that you would think would do it.
And here's this other guy that, you know, maybe just following orders.
Dean Smirank was sentenced to prison for drug trafficking in September of 2019.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons reports that he was subsequently released in 2022. annual charity softball tournament dedicated in her honor. The proceeds were donated to local charities offering support to people fighting addiction. For my thoughts on today's case, I just want you to imagine, just for a moment, sitting
in that jury box, bearing the weight of Timothy Verrell's fate in your hands.
The prosecution has laid out a compelling case, a chilling video, damning circumstantial evidence, all pointing towards guilt. But there's this dark cloud,
heavy with doubt and mistrust, casting a shadow over every piece of evidence. Allegations of
police misconduct, hidden evidence, these are not small missteps. These are stains on the integrity of this case, and that was the reason for the mistrial.
As a juror, you're asked to wade through a clouded reality, tasked with a monumental decision.
Can you, beyond all reasonable doubt, trust this case enough to condemn a man, knowing that that very process that brought him there may have been compromised.
But this is why our justice system exists in this delicate balance, to allow both sides
to be heard, especially when the stakes are life and death, and the memory of two women
whose lives were taken far too soon.
It is not easy to be a juror.
It's not easy to carry the burden of justice for both the
defendant and the victims. But it's the duty we're called to, to ensure that the truth, not just what
was presented, but the real truth, guides our decision. Because justice for Christine and Jenna
and fairness for Timothy Verrell depends on us getting this right. This is why we sit in judgment,
why we listen so closely,
and why we demand integrity at every step.
This case was important to us to feature for a reason
even beyond that there were two women,
Jenna Pellegrini and Christine Sullivan,
that were brutally murdered.
And that reason is because it is the type of case
that is often overlooked and not highlighted at all.
Certain things like narcotics, use, abuse,
often make people look away.
But as someone who's handled many murders over the years,
I can tell you there are lots of cases,
too many cases that fade into the shadows,
and that are as brutal
as this.
These two women deserve to be remembered, and didn't deserve what happened to them.
Being on the fringes of society due to an impairment or a life choice, whether self-created
or not, does not mean that we should not care.
Their killers assumed we wouldn't, but we are here to tell them that we do.
Jenna Pellegrini, Christine Sullivan,
this AOM community, we remember you.
["The Last Supper"]
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 and Philjohn Grande.
So, what do you think Chuck? Do you approve?