Casefile True Crime - Case 312: Dustin Wehde
Episode Date: March 29, 2025*** Content warnings: Sexual assault ***When first responders arrived at the Roberts family home in the small town of Early, Iowa, on December 13 2001, they found 20-year-old Dustin Wehde ly...ing in a pool of his own blood. The homeowner, Tracey Roberts, claimed she’d shot Dustin in an act of self-defence after he and another unknown assailant broke in and threatened to kill her and her children. As investigators looked into possible suspects, several persons of interest emerged. But all was not as it seemed.---Narration – Anonymous HostResearch & writing – Elsha McGillCreative direction – Milly RasoProduction & music – Mike MigasMusic – Andrew JoslynAudio editing – Anthony TelferSign up for Casefile Premium:Apple PremiumSpotify PremiumPatreonFor all credits and sources, please visit https://casefilepodcast.com/case-312-dustin-wehde Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The evening of Thursday December 13 2001 started out like any other for married couple Ken
Lee and Jane Showmaker.
The two were relaxing at home in the rural town of Earley, Iowa when suddenly at around
7.07pm their pages started frantically beeping.
The couple volunteered as emergency medical technicians for the early fire department,
and the page announced that there had just been a home invasion at a residential address a few
doors down. Gunshots had been fired, and at least one intruder was injured while another had fled the
scene. The showmakers were stunned. Such an incident was completely out of the ordinary
for the small town of roughly 650 residents, where serious crimes were virtually non-existent.
They rushed to the property in question, a blue, two-story Victorian
style house that they knew was home to married couple Michael and Tracy Roberts and their three
young children. The Roberts family had moved there from Chicago two years earlier, seeking a change
of pace from the big city. Michael, an Australian expat, was a computer
security expert who ran a computer business out of the property next door to their home.
They were an upstanding Christian family who fit in well with the close-knit community.
The showmakers arrived before law enforcement did. As EMTs, they'd been taught never to enter a home
until it had been cleared by police. So they waited across the street for several minutes until the
first officer arrived. The officer approached cautiously with their weapon raised, scouring
the property for any sign of danger. The homeowner, 35-year-old Tracy Roberts,
appeared on the back porch, telling the officer that two men had broken into her house and launched
an attack. She'd managed to escape into her bedroom and grab one of her husband's guns,
which she'd used to shoot one of the intruders. The other had fled on foot, though she wasn't sure in which direction.
More officers arrived and cleared each room of the house before waving the EMTs inside.
The showmakers raced upstairs to the main bedroom.
Numerous empty shell casings were scattered near the doorway and the air reeked
of gunpowder. On the floor at the bottom of the bed, a young man wearing a brown leather
jacket lay slumped in a thick puddle of blood, his body resting in the fetal position. He'd
been shot several times in the head, one of the bullets striking him directly through the eye socket.
Blood spatter covered the northern wall of the bedroom.
Kenley's showmaker checked for a pulse, but found none.
Declaring the man to be deceased, his next priority was to check on the Roberts family.
Tracy and her three children were gathered in the downstairs dining
room, frantically trying to tell the officers what happened. While the kids were unharmed,
there was a red mark about two to three inches thick running horizontally across Tracy's neck.
She explained one of the intruders had tried to strangle her and she was having trouble swallowing.
While Tracy had initially appeared relatively calm, she was becoming increasingly hysterical.
Her husband Michael was away on a business trip, but Tracy said she was expecting him
home any minute.
It dawned on her that the man she'd shot could have been Michael.
Oh God, is it my husband? she asked, her breathing becoming short and shallow as the panic in her
voice grew. Tracy's 11-year-old son Bert chimed in. No, he said, I think it's dust and weedy. After being taken to the hospital for assessment, Tracy Roberts was given the all clear to provide
her full version of events to the police.
Tracy explained that she'd been upstairs giving her one-year-old daughter a bath when she
heard two men talking at the bottom of
the stairs. Initially, Tracy thought it was her husband Michael and his business partner as she
was expecting them home from their business trip that evening. She bundled her daughter up and
carried her out to say hello. That's when she realised the man climbing the stairs wasn't her husband, but a complete
stranger.
Terrified, Tracy yelled out to her eldest child, 11-year-old Bert,
Someone's in the house.
She bolted towards Bert's room, where he and Tracy's 3-year-old son were watching television.
Tracy hurled the baby into the room, when suddenly the man grabbed her from behind and
yanked her into the hallway.
Tracy yelled at Bert to shut his door and stay inside.
She began fighting against the man with all her might, thrusting backwards so hard that
she caused him to stumble into the wall.
You fucking bitch, he scowled, yelling out to the other man, get her. At that point, Tracy felt
something tighten around her neck and she was yanked back by her ponytail. All she could think
about was protecting her family. She managed to break free and race into
her bedroom where her husband kept a safe full of guns under the bed. Through the dark, she
dove into the space between her bed and the dresser, got her hands on the safe and pulled it out.
She tried to enter the combination but her glasses had been knocked off during the scuffle
and she couldn't see what she was doing. The safe wouldn't unlock. She tried again to no avail.
Then one of the men grabbed her by the neck from behind. Her hands still clutching the safe,
she pushed in the numbers one more time. This time, it clicked open.
Tracy grabbed onto the first gun that she touched, a 9mm Beretta, aimed it over her right shoulder
and pulled the trigger. Something snapped, but it didn't fire. Desperately trying to remember how
the gun worked, Tracy clocked the hammer back and aimed
it over her shoulder a second time. This time, a loud shot rang out, but the man continued to
struggle against her. Tracy got to her knees, turned as far as she could to her right and pulled the trigger several more times. This time the attacker stopped
moving. Tracy couldn't see much through the dark. Terrified, she sat still and listened.
The man was still breathing heavily, but she couldn't tell where exactly he was.
but she couldn't tell where exactly he was. Then, towards the doorway, Tracy saw a silhouette dart away, followed by the sound of footsteps descending the stairs.
Tracy grabbed a second gun, a six-shot revolver, and tried to summon the courage to leave the
bedroom. She saw something lying on her bedroom floor but couldn't tell if it was the
man or something else entirely, like a duffel bag. Eventually, she got the nerve to stand up.
Both guns raised, she turned on the light. The man she'd shot was lying face down on the bedroom floor.
Tracy carefully approached him, when suddenly he moved.
Stay there, she warned. It looked like he was trying to either get up or roll over.
He moved again. Tracy pulled the trigger on the Beretta, but it was empty. She pulled the trigger on the revolver instead. Several bullets shot into the back of the man's head until the weapon clicked empty.
Eleven-year-old Bert told police he'd been watching a movie with his little brother in
his bedroom when Tracy thrust their baby sister at them and told them to stay inside.
Bert did as he was told, grabbing a baseball bat from his bedroom locker and pressing his ear to
the door. He could hear the commotion unfolding outside, along with the voices of two men.
the commotion unfolding outside, along with the voices of two men. While he couldn't be sure exactly what the men were saying, Bert told the police it sounded like one of them said,
okay boss, followed by something about an axe. Bert thought it was a prank.
He yelled out to his mum, asking if she was okay. One of the men opened Bert's bedroom door and
warned, "'Shut up, or you're next.'" In the hallway, Bert heard the man discussing something about his
dad being killed. He recognised one of their voices. It sounded like Dustin Weedy, a 20-year-old friend of the family.
Shortly after this, Bert heard a gunshot. A man's voice said,
Holy fuck! Then there were several more gunshots, followed by the sound of someone running.
Tracy rushed into Bert's room and told him to take his siblings downstairs and
call 911. Bert did as he was told, telling the operator, "...my mum, somebody came into our house
and they tied her up and they were, they were choking her. My mum got the gun and shot the other one, and one ran off.
Other than the injury to Tracy's neck, which was deemed to have been caused by a pair of pantyhose
and some slight bruising to her left arm, she and her children were unharmed. But Bert's assumption was correct. The intruder in Tracy's bedroom was confirmed to be 20-year-old Dustin Weedy.
When Tracy was informed of this, she was shocked.
She told police she barely knew Dustin.
His mother Mona worked part-time for the Roberts' computer business, and her husband Michael
had taken Dustin under his wing.
Dustin was socially awkward and didn't have many friends, so Michael had invited him out
paintballing a few times to help build his confidence.
Tracy told the police that Dustin had knocked on her door several hours before the home invasion,
asking if she had any odd jobs he could do because he needed money.
Tracy felt uncomfortable being around Dustin alone, claiming Mona had told her that he'd
been physically violent towards both her and her two daughters. Tracy told Dustin to come back once Michael had returned from his business trip the
next day. She told the police she couldn't think of any reason why Dustin would want to hurt her.
Robbery seemed an obvious motive, yet nothing of value had been stolen despite there being
expensive jewelry, cash, and firearms kept on the premises.
The only item missing was an old computer, which had next to no monetary value.
Police found the computer packed neatly into the back of Dustin's car, which was parked
outside of the Roberts' business, and the hard drive contained nothing to indicate a
motive.
Tracy had never seen the other intruder before. She described him as being around 35 to 40 years old,
tall and of average build with dark wavy hair. He wore a black leather jacket, was good looking, and spoke with a Chicago accent.
Searches of the property and surrounding areas turned up no sign of him, or any clue as to who
he might be. But when the police asked if Tracy could think of anyone else who might wish her harm,
one person immediately sprang to mind. Her ex-husband, John Pittman.
Tracy had met John when she was just 20 years old. At the time, she was working as a radiographer
at a teaching hospital in Chicago, where 30-year-old John was completing the fourth year of his medical degree. The two
worked together before things took a romantic turn and they were married in 1988. But as Tracy
explained to the police, it didn't take long for John to reveal his controlling side. Tracy claimed John was abusive and domineering and also had some strange sexual habits.
Tracy said she put up with it because she was young and had lived a sheltered life,
being raised to believe that kind of behaviour was normal.
As time went by, Tracy gave birth to Bert, who was the couple's first and only child.
Tracy was thrilled to be a mother, but she soon found out that John was cheating on her.
She tried to make things work, but by 1992 she'd reached the end of her tether.
The couple separated and began sharing custody of Bert until the three-year-old disclosed a shocking revelation.
His father had been touching him inappropriately.
Tracy took Bert to see a doctor, who suspected the toddler was being sexually abused.
Tracy reported the allegations to authorities and social services got involved, but John firmly
denied the claims and no formal charges were ever laid against him. A bitter divorce and
custody battle ensued which lasted for many years, even after both Tracy and John remarried
and had other children.
At the time of the home invasion, the custody battle was still ongoing.
John Pittman lived with his second wife over a thousand miles away in the state of Virginia,
but as far as Tracy was concerned, John had the motive to want her out of the picture
and was capable of orchestrating an attack against her.
When Tracy's husband Michael Roberts returned from his business trip to find his wife and kids
being evaluated in the hospital, he agreed that John Pittman could be a potential suspect.
It had been a constant source of disbelief for Michael that John was continuing to fight for
custody of Burt despite the allegations against him. After one particularly heated day in court,
John allegedly called Michael and warned that nothing would make him give up, saying,
I have very deep pockets." Yet, despite this, John Pittman wasn't the first person Michael thought of when it came
to whom I want to harm his wife.
Four years earlier, Tracy had confided something to Michael that he hadn't been able to shake.
It was an incident that had occurred
just after he and Tracy had gotten married. Michael was still living in Australia at the
time and was in the process of relocating to the United States, while Tracy was living in Chicago
and working part-time as an assistant for an oral surgeon named Dr Jonathan Spencer, not his real name.
Tracy told Michael that Dr Spencer agreed to treat her for jaw pain she'd been experiencing.
He gave her some gas to sedate her for the procedure, but the mask slipped off halfway
through and Tracy regained consciousness. She found Dr. Spencer on top of her, masturbating. Tracy's
underwear had been removed and she'd been dressed in thigh-high stockings with a pair of high heels
that were a size too small. Realising what was going on, Tracy kicked Dr. Spencer in the genitals and jumped to her feet. After getting her bearings,
she managed to grab her pepper spray and used it to incapacitate him.
At this point, Tracy noticed several Polaroid photos on the counter.
They were provocative images of her taken while she was unconscious.
images of her taken while she was unconscious. Dr Spencer, who was married, begged Tracy not to tell anyone. He said he had friends in high places and it wouldn't end well for her if she
attempted to press charges. Eventually, after some negotiations, the two came to a mutual agreement.
After some negotiations, the two came to a mutual agreement. In exchange for Tracy's silence, Dr Spencer would give her $150,000.
He also agreed to pay for Tracy to attend an annual conference in Florida, as well as
the return airfares for her and Michael to visit Australia that coming Christmas. Furthermore, Tracey would be excused from repaying
$18,000 that she had recently borrowed from Dr Spencer to buy a new car after hers was in an accident.
Tracey agreed on the condition that Dr Spencer put all of this in writing.
They put together a contract in which Dr. Spencer
admitted to duping Tracy into consenting to be sedated. He confessed that he, quote,
"...secretly intended to remove and replace articles of Tracy Robert's clothing,
fondle her breasts and genitals, take photographs of her, and make subliminal suggestions.
He also admitted that he had a problem with the deviant sexual behaviour and pharmaceutical
drugs for which he agreed to seek help.
Tracy didn't tell Michael about the assault or the contractual agreement until Dr. Spencer
failed to pay her as promised. She then filed
a civil lawsuit against him for medical malpractice, but still he refused to uphold his end of the
bargain. Dr. Spencer disputed the civil suit, and eventually he and Tracy settled outside of court.
settled outside of court. Spencer agreed to pay Tracy just $6,000 in exchange for her dropping the civil lawsuit
entirely.
The settlement had been reached on Tuesday December 9, 2001, just two days before the
attack on Tracy. Casey. Police investigating the home invasion couldn't ignore the potential significance.
They looked into Dr Jonathan Spencer's whereabouts at the time of the crime, but he had an airtight
alibi.
Furthermore, he was still located in Chicago, which was roughly 450 miles from early, and
they could find no link between him and Dustin
Weedy. The same went for Tracy's ex-husband John Pittman who had been nowhere near early on the
night of the crime. John told the police he'd never met Dustin Weedy and had no connection to him whatsoever. But an item found in Dustin's
vehicle suggested otherwise. On his front seat was a hot pink spiral-bound notebook that contained
six pages of strangely worded and convoluted handwriting. It appeared to be Dustin's journal.
It appeared to be Dustin's journal. The first undated posts began with the words,
One day, about twenty years ago, a boy was born into a middle-class life.
Directly underneath that was a series of numbered entries in which Dustin said that a mysterious fellow named John Pittman had offered him some work.
Dustin wrote that he'd decided to start a journal so there was a record of this man,
whom he henceforth referred to as JP.
He went on to list several oddly-worded facts about JP, including that he was a white male from Virginia who was aged in his 40s
and that he worked as some kind of doctor.
Dustin wrote that JP, quote, "...had a thing for strippers and hookers," and that he torches
victims with household items from their homes.
He claimed that JP had an obsessive hatred for both Tracy Roberts and his current wife,
whom he wanted to divorce. Dustin wrote that while JP loved his son, he wanted him dead. He explained,
JP wants me to force his ex, Tiar, to kill her son Bert and then commit suicide.
If that plan failed, Dustin was to, quote,
make it appear as though Tiar committed the murder of her son and then committed suicide.
If the plan worked, Dustin wrote that JP would then hire him to kill JP's parents and frame his wife for the crime, in order to collect an insurance payout.
The notebook also implicated JP's lawyer, a man named Steven Comey, in the Murder for Hire plot,
saying that he would facilitate the payment on JP's behalf.
saying that he would facilitate the payment on JP's behalf. Unsure exactly what to make of the notebook, the police quickly decided not to tell anyone
outside of the investigation about it. They simply showed a sample of the handwriting
to Dustin's parents, Mona and Brett Weedy, who immediately recognised it as their
son's distinct penmanship. However, the Weedies refused to believe that their son could have
entered the Robertses' home with any ill intent. While Dustin had a history of mental illness and
had always struggled to fit in, his mother Mona described him as a sweet boy with a huge heart.
She felt he'd been misunderstood from a young age. Diagnoses for various conditions, including
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and oppositional defiant disorder disorder had led others to unfairly label him.
Having been bullied throughout his childhood, Dustin had very few friends, and he was therefore
thrilled when Tracy's husband Michael Roberts offered to take him under his wing.
He looked forward to their paintballing trips immensely, and was constantly asking Mona
when he could go out with Michael again.
It therefore made no sense to the Wheaties that Dustin would do anything to hurt Michael's family.
If anything, they wondered whether Dustin had been in the house because he was actually trying to protect Tracey and her children. Perhaps he'd witnessed something sinister going down and tried to come to the rescue.
Yet, a search of Dustin's room turned up another notebook. Inside it, Dustin had scrolled two
words that appeared to read, I KILLER PITMAN. Given that Bert's last name was Pitman, they wondered whether this was further evidence of
Dustin's intention to kill Burt or Tracy. They searched the Wheaties' home and ran forensic
checks on Dustin's computer, but uncovered nothing to indicate a link between Dustin,
John Pitman, or John's lawyer, Stephen Comey. There were no suspicious online searches,
nor was there any evidence that Dustin had been corresponding with anyone,
let alone planning the home invasion or any other crime.
Police also checked the Weedy Family's phone records from Thursday December 13, 2001.
At 4.34pm a call had come through that hadn't been answered.
Police traced it to a local man, 28-year-old Jeremy Collins.
Jeremy was an army vet who'd been discharged from service after suffering a traumatic brain injury
and being diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.
More recently, he worked as a delivery driver for a frozen food company.
Jeremy Collins vaguely fit the suspect description of the second intruder,
in that he was of similar age, height and had dark hair. When confronted, Jeremy said he knew who Dustin Weedy was,
but he denied that the two had ever spoken or spent any time together.
Police canvassed neighbours and local businesses, but nobody had witnessed anything suspicious on the evening of December 13.
As days passed with no arrests or breakthroughs in the case, Tracey Roberts gave an interview
to a local reporter from the Storm Lake Times, speaking at length about the attack.
She rejected the possibility that Dustin Weedy could have entered her home with goodwill,
saying,
it was Dustin who was pulling on me. That kid was not coming in my house to save me.
Struggling to understand it all, Tracy told the reporter,
a lot of things don't make sense. Why were they there? They never asked for money or jewelry. Why me and why my family?"
Despite the trauma of her ordeal, Tracy stated,
"...I want the Wheaties to know that we care about them, that our heart goes out to them."
That empathy was shared by the local community, with hundreds of residents gathering at the
early United Methodist Church for Dustin's funeral.
The Reverend told those in attendance,
There can be a moment of shock, disbelief, and even anger when we learn of the violent
death of a loved one.
Dustin enjoyed his short life. This is such a
tender, delicate hour, probably for the Robertses too. It's time to acknowledge a fractured community,
a town once known for its safety that suddenly reels for answers. Early was the kind of place where residents trusted one another and rarely bothered to lock
their doors. But with the second intruder still on the loose, the tight-knit community was gripped
by fear. They commended Tracy Roberts for her bravery, with many labelling her a hero for doing what she needed to protect herself and
her family.
The accolades did little to quell Tracey's anxiety.
Terrified that the second perpetrator would come after her again, she began wearing a
panic button that was connected to an alarm system.
To make sure investigators were doing their jobs, she drove past the county
attorney's office in the evenings to check if the office light was still on.
Tracy told the police that she couldn't stop thinking about who could have done this to her.
There's a hundred possibilities running through my head, she said, And right now, I'm afraid of all of them."
Tracey remained convinced that her ex-husband John Pittman had something to do with it.
Her son, Bert, thought so too. According to a report released by Dateline, in the weeks following
the crime, Bert told a social worker
that John didn't call in the wake of the attack to see how he was doing. Bert said,
if you were actually like a good father, I think if you're worried, you'd call.
While the police continued to search for any potential links between John Pittman and Dustin
Wheatley, Dustin's mother Mona contacted them, saying there was something she needed to get
off her chest.
Mona Wheatley was tortured by her son's untimely death and was willing to consider all possible
explanations as to how he came to be in the Roberts' home on the night he was killed.
She therefore admitted to the police that she was having an affair with the Jeremy Collins,
the 28-year-old who had called her home phone hours before Dustin was killed.
However, Mona was perplexed by Jeremy's incoming
call. She'd been out Christmas shopping on Thursday December 13 2001, which Jeremy had been aware of.
Why would he call her house at a time he knew she wouldn't be available?
Just hours after Dustin was killed, Jeremy had called Mona to end
their relationship. He'd also quit his job as a delivery driver days before the attack.
Although Mona didn't think it was plausible, she told the police she was concerned Jeremy
could have been the second intruder. Maybe he'd gotten
involved with the Dustin somehow. Investigators agreed that the timings seemed suspicious.
They spoke to Jeremy's wife, who said she'd been angry at Jeremy on the night of December 13
because he'd failed to show up for dinner.
She called him several times and discovered he was drinking at a bar in downtown Ida Grove,
a 30 minute drive south west of Early.
Jeremy invited his wife to meet him there, but she was so angry that she took their children
to spend the night at her mother's house instead.
On the drive there, she passed by the bar at around 7pm and saw his vehicle parked out the front.
Phone records confirmed her story, giving Jeremy a solid alibi.
Furthermore, police found nothing tying Jeremy Collins to John Pittman, nor was there any
evidence that he was connected to Dustin Weedy beyond having an affair with his mother.
As the days passed by with no developments in the case, Tracy's husband Michael Roberts
plastered flyers around town. He was offering a $10,000 reward for anyone with
information that led to the arrest and conviction of the second intruder, who he said had tried to,
quote, murder my wife and best friend Tracy by strangulation.
Michael told local reporters that he thought the second intruder was the one behind the attack,
while Dustin Weedy was just acting under their influence.
With the custody battle over Burt continuing, Michael was now convinced that Tracy's ex,
John Pittman, had something to do with the crime. Others in early weren't so sure. While Michael claimed to be out
of town on a business trip on the night of Thursday December 13, one early resident came forward to
suggest otherwise. Case file will be back shortly. He's my father. It's so good to see you, Missy. Experience the thrilling new series.
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In 1996, Australian businessman Michael Roberts began frequenting online dating sites and crossed
paths with the recently divorced Tracy in a chat room for Christian singles.
Online dating was a new concept at the time, and limited technology meant users couldn't
instantly share photos and chat via video like they can today, but the two quickly hit it off.
Tracy reassured Michael that she used to be a model and he would not be disappointed by her looks.
They had been speaking regularly when Tracy suddenly announced that she was flying to
Australia to visit Michael. 18 days after her arrival, they were married. Michael moved to Chicago to live with
his new bride. The pair soon relocated to Early to raise their family and start Michael's computer
business. On the outside, they presented as the perfect couple, living a successful and happy life. Behind closed
doors, it was a different story. In December 2000, a year before the fatal home invasion,
Tracey believed that her husband's business was doing well. She was therefore shocked to receive
a call from the bank asking for her signature on a $75,000
business loan that Michael had applied for against their house. Furious, Tracy confronted
Michael in his office, but he dismissed her concerns, saying the loan was none of her business.
According to Tracy, she went into the office kitchen and took out her frustration by kicking
a hole in the wall.
Michael ran in and threw her onto the ground.
He grabbed her by the hair and slammed her head into the drywall, yelling,
"'You fucking bitch.'"
Tracy was so shaken by the incident that she called the police to lodge a report.
When officers came to the Roberts House to take Tracy's statement, young Burt alleged that he too had been a victim of Michael's physical abuse.
Michael was subsequently charged with domestic violence and taken into custody for the night
while Child Protective Services looked into Burt's allegations.
But when pressed further, Burt clarified that he hadn't been talking about Michael Roberts when
he said his father abused him, he'd meant his biological father, John Pittman.
The following day, Michael pleaded no contest to the lesser charge of disturbing the peace and was free to return home.
Although the domestic incident was kept on the down-low, the following year when news broke that Tracy had been the target of a potential murder plot,
many townsfolk were quick to point the finger at Michael Roberts.
Some felt there was simply something strange about him.
It was a feeling shared by the police who had been wary of Michael from the outset of their
investigation. They thought it was odd that an Australian businessman would choose the small
town of early Iowa of all places to relocate to. They wondered if Michael could be hiding from something.
Police spoke to Tracy's friends who described Michael as controlling. He was also the only
person in the Roberts household who had a direct connection to Dustin Weedy.
Given that Dustin didn't have many friends and wasn't close to his own father,
police questioned whether Michael could have taken advantage of this.
Perhaps he'd convinced Dustin to try and kill Tracy on his behalf or had offered him money to do so.
Tracy's life was insured for a million dollars. With Michael's business struggling financially,
perhaps he saw her death as a way out of his problems.
While Michael claimed that he was out of town on a business trip on Thursday December 13, 2001,
a local doctor came forward to report having seen him at a bank in early that morning.
came forward to report having seen him at a bank in early that morning. He remembered it because Michael seemed to be in a hurry. Police questioned the bank teller who was working that day,
but they didn't recall seeing Michael Roberts. Michael's alibi was double checked, and police
confirmed that he wasn't in early when the home invasion took place. However,
that didn't mean he couldn't have orchestrated the attack.
Two months after the home invasion, the police summoned Michael Roberts to the station to sit
a polygraph test. They asked him three simple questions. Did you hire anyone to kill your wife?
Did you help or plan with anyone to break into your home on December 13, 2001?
Do you really know for sure who the second person was who broke into your home?
Michael answered each question with a firm no.
The results were inconclusive with the polygraph report stating,
It is the opinion of the examiner that the subject is unresponsive to this technique
and no conclusion as to guilt or innocence can be made in this case at this time.
By this point, Tracy had heard the whispers around town that Michael could have been involved. A friend told her that Michael had undergone a polygraph and failed, yet Michael hadn't
told Tracy a single thing about it.
Even Burt started to think that Michael could be behind it all. He later told Dateline that he
was troubled by the way Michael reacted upon arriving at the hospital on the night Dustin was
killed. To Burt, it seemed like Michael was surprised to find that his wife and children
were still alive. Regardless of these suspicions, Tracy stood by Michael and police uncovered no evidence linking
him or anyone else to the botched home invasion. Within two months, the case went cold. As the
crime was committed just two months after the September 11 terrorist attacks, police resources were stretched thin. With Tracy's actions deemed
justifiable self-defence and one of the perpetrators already dead, figuring out the identity of the
second perpetrator and who orchestrated the crime wasn't a priority. The detectives working Tracy's
case were reassigned to the more pressing Joint Terrorism
Task Force instead. For Dustin Weedy's mother, Mona, this wasn't good enough. Not only was she
left reeling from the loss of her eldest child, but she and her husband, Bratt, had since divorced.
It pained Mona that everyone unequivocally accepted Tracy's
version of events and was curious to know who masterminded the attack while
not seeming to care about what happened to her son. Mona had some serious
questions about what transpired on December 13, 2001, starting with Tracy's
claim that she didn't feel comfortable being left alone
with the Dustin. Tracy had told police that on the afternoon of the home invasion, Dustin stopped by
asking for work and she told him to come back when Michael was home later in the week.
According to Mona, this wasn't the case at all. Just a few days before the shooting,
one of Mona's daughters had been babysitting the Roberts kids when Tracy mentioned she had some
work for Dustin if he was interested. Dustin had recently lost his job at a local ethanol plant,
and while Mona thought it was important that he kept himself busy, she didn't think he had the skills to work for the Robertses'
computer business.
During a phone call with Tracy a couple of days before the shooting, Mona voiced her
reservations.
Tracy assured Mona she just needed him to make some photocopies and perform other basic
tasks and they could give it a go on a trial basis. assured Mona she just needed him to make some photocopies and perform other basic tasks,
and they could give it a go on a trial basis. She told Mona to send Dustin over to their place
in the next couple of days. For Mona, this explained why Dustin had visited the Roberts
home on December 13. After all, his car had been parked outside the office next door to their house
in full view of the neighbours. If he'd been intending to pull off an attack, she wondered why
he would leave his car where anyone could see it. And why would he park at the office instead of
right outside the house to facilitate a quicker getaway. Police had also found no signs
of forced entry, which suggested to Mona that Dustin had been invited inside. Mona also thought
it was incredibly strange that the one item Dustin allegedly stole from the Roberts was an old computer. It was an obsolete model packet bell which
Mona described as a piece of junk. Dustin had a strong interest in computers and electronics,
so it didn't make sense that he would take this valueless item when the Roberts home was filled
with expensive top of the range machines. Tracy claimed the computer had been taken from her children's
bedroom, but as far as Mona was concerned, there was no way Dustin could have gone upstairs to
remove the computer, taken it down into his car, and then gone back upstairs to confront Tracy.
Furthermore, when Dustin's body was found, he didn't have a single weapon on him. If he'd
planned to hurt Tracy or anyone else in the house, Mona wondered how he intended to do it.
Dustin wasn't particularly strong and certainly not the intimidating figure Tracy made him out to be.
While he'd had his fair share of struggles, Mona knew Dustin as a sweet boy who loved golf,
computer games, snowmobiling, and entertaining his family with goofy impressions. He'd been so
excited to have a friendly relationship with the Roberts family, it simply didn't make sense that he would be part of any plan to kill them.
Mona wasn't the only one reeling in the wake of Dustin's death.
Seven months after the incident, Tracy Roberts told the Des Moines Register that she was constantly on edge. She refused to let anyone into their home and cringed whenever she heard a car drive by slowly.
Simple pleasures like going to the movies became a thing of the past, with Tracy explaining,
I can't bear to see anybody getting attacked. You don't realise how much violence there is,
even on TV, until you have been in the situation."
She told another source she could no longer bring herself to wear pantyhose,
nor could she stand the smell of leather as it reminded her of the jacket Dustin Weedy was
wearing during the attack. Both Tracy and Michael appeared on the Montell Williams talk show to share Tracy's incredible
story of survival with the national audience. Tracy credited her quick thinking actions to
her maternal instincts. While she was hurt that Dustin had died as a result, she explained,
I did what I had to do to protect my family.
I did what I had to do to protect my family."
As the one-year anniversary of Dustin's death approached, his father, Brett Weedy, reached his breaking point. Brett was utterly tormented by Dustin's death and the accusations
against him. Not a day had gone by since that night that Brett hadn't ended up in tears.
On Thanksgiving in 2002, Brett wrote four letters and left them on his kitchen table.
He then drove to the cemetery where Dustin was buried to visit his grave.
Brett wrapped one arm around Dustin's marble headstone, took out a gun, then shot himself
through the heart.
Brett's suicide left Mona even more desperate for answers.
She hired an attorney who began looking over the case for themselves.
They quickly noticed that the version
of events Tracy Roberts gave to various media outlets in the days after the crime varied
significantly to what she told the police in the immediate aftermath. Further inconsistencies
arose when she spoke to detectives a week later. Some were small, like whether the lights in the house were on or off,
or when she first noticed the intruders. Others were more significant, such as how the altercation
in the hallway played out. Tracy initially told police she didn't know what she'd been strangled
with, but told reporters that she'd been strangled with a pair of panty
hose that had been hanging over the stair banister. While she told police she didn't know who the
intruders were, she informed reporters she knew one of the men was Dustin. She also said to
reporters that she'd blacked out during the struggle, while making no mention of this to the police.
that she'd blacked out during the struggle, while making no mention of this to the police.
Furthermore, Tracy initially told the police there had been not two, but three intruders.
Very early on, she dropped the mention of the third intruder, and police didn't question it any further.
There were also some questions about 11-year-old Burt's version of events. Most notably, Burt had
told the police that when Tracy came into his room after shooting Dustin, her hands were tied
with nylon. Not only had Tracy made no mention of this at all, it also raised the question. If Tracey's hands were bound, how had she managed to shoot
not one but two guns, and with such accuracy? Mona didn't shy away from speaking to others
about these inconsistencies. Her brother-in-law even wrote a letter to the editor of a local publication in which he raised
several questions about the investigation. Rumours began circulating around town that
Tracey could have been having an affair with Dustin. In response, Tracey sent Mona a scathing
five-page email in which she defended her actions and vilified Mona for spreading misinformation.
As reported by true crime author M. William Phelps, Tracy claimed her version of events had been
consistent from the get-go. She had no doubt that Dustin had acted with criminal intent
and even accused Mona of having romantic feelings for Tracy's husband, Michael.
If anything, Tracy believed Mona helped orchestrate the home invasion, either by convincing
Dustin to murder Tracy or by co-conspiring with her ex-husband, John Pittman.
These accusations further convinced Mona that Tracy had something to hide.
In a bid to get clear answers, Mona Weedy filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Tracy
Roberts in 2003.
This required Tracy and Burr to give depositions under oath, during which their stories revealed
even more inconsistencies.
To finance Tracy's defense, Shea and Michael lodged a claim with their insurance provider,
claiming that Tracy's self-defense efforts should be covered under their homeowners liability policy.
This prompted yet another deposition during which Tracy added even more contradictory details.
Ultimately, the insurance provider denied the claim, arguing that Tracy's actions were intentional
and therefore excluded under the terms of the policy.
While Tracy fought the lawsuit, her marriage to Michael crumbled. In April 2004, Tracy filed a
police report against Michael, claiming he was mentally ill. She said he'd become paranoid and
was convinced that Tracy was out to get him. Nervous about what he was capable of, she turned
in one of his guns and told police where they could find several
other firearms on their property. Two weeks later, Michael filed for divorce while Tracy filed for a
protective order against him. She was ultimately granted primary custody of the children and they
moved interstate to Nebraska to start afresh.
Meanwhile, the home invasion that resulted in Dustin Weedy's death sat untouched in
the cold case files at Iowa's Division of Criminal Investigation, more or less forgotten
about.
Until 2008, when Special Agent Trent Villatar came along. Agent Villatar was relatively new to the DCI
when he first started looking through the bungled home invasion case file. When he saw the crime
scene photos, he was stunned. Tracy Roberts had fired 11 shots in total from two different guns, and nine of the bullets struck
Dustin Weedy directly. Tracy claimed the shots from the first gun were fired over her shoulder
while she tried to fight Dustin off. She claimed it had been dark at the time, and her glasses were
knocked off during the struggle. If this was the case, Agent Villita wondered
how Tracy had managed to strike Dustin with such accuracy. Looking at the crime scene, Agent Villita
could see no other signs of a violent struggle. Tracy claimed she'd reached the gun safe while
fighting Dustin off, yet nothing seemed to be out of place.
Villita found it hard to believe that Tracy could have made it to the gun safe at all under such
circumstances, let alone opened it and retrieved not one, but two guns. Furthermore, firing a gun
so close to her ear would have shattered her eardrum or at
the very least caused damage to her hearing.
But Tracy reported no such thing.
To Agent Villeter, it didn't look as though Dustin had been shot in self-defense.
It looked like he'd been straight up murdered.
Then there was the question of where the second perpetrator was
while this was happening, and Burt's claims that Tracy's hands were tied up at the same time.
The more Agent Villeter learned about the case, the more convinced he became that Tracy hadn't
been telling the truth about what happened that night.
When he discovered that Tracy and Michael were now divorced and in the middle of a bitter
custody battle, Agent Villeter recognised his chance.
If either of them knew more than they were letting on, this just might be their time
to talk.
Agent Villeter started corresponding with Tracy via email, and all it
took was the mere mention of Michael's name to rile her up. In the years following their divorce,
Michael had defaulted in his child support payments and his relationship with Tracy had
grown even more hostile. Tracy, who'd reverted to her maiden name of Richter claimed Michael harassed her constantly.
She was convinced he was the one who orchestrated the home invasion, telling Agent Villator
she'd heard whispers that Dustin Weedy and Michael were having an affair. But when investigators reached out to Michael Roberts, a very different story emerged.
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to continue to deliver quality content. According to Michael Roberts, he'd only been married
to Tracy for a couple of months when the cracks began to show. Michael claimed that shortly after he moved from
Australia to be with Tracy, he discovered that she was having an affair. Michael was a born-again
Christian who didn't want to be yet another statistic in the divorce rates, so he decided
to do his very best to make the marriage work. There were a few happy years as they settled down and had children,
but Michael remained wary of Tracy's behaviour. Things came to a head in December 2000 after
Tracy discovered that Michael had applied for a business loan against their house. At the time,
Tracy told the police that after she'd kicked the wall in frustration, Michael
had violently thrown her to the floor, slammed her head into the drywall, and verbally abused her.
Speaking to Agent Villeter following their divorce, Michael claimed this was an outright lie.
He said that Tracy had become so enraged that she'd kicked holes in the drywall,
in turn damaging a 220-volt heater. Scared she was going to electrocute herself, Michael forced her
to the floor. It was only after Tracy went home and had a bath that she decided to report him for domestic violence. According to Michael,
things took a turn after the home invasion that resulted in Dustin Weedy's death.
Michael became so convinced that Tracy was going to try and implicate him in coordinating the attack
that he eventually started mentally preparing himself for the prospect of facing
prison time. When he later found out that Tracy had applied for several life insurance policies
against him, he was certain that she was going to kill him. Then, in March 2004, with their marriage
barely hanging on by a thread, Tracy suggested they participate in what she called a trust-building
exercise. Desperate to regain Tracy's trust, Michael agreed. Tracy instructed him to lay
down on a king-sized bedsheet with his arms by his side. She then wrapped him in the sheet as tightly as she could, leaving only his head exposed.
She secured the sheet with safety pins so that Michael couldn't move, and then covered his eyes
with a blindfold. Tracy left Michael alone on the bed while she went about some chores.
She returned about 45 minutes later with a plastic bag and put it over Michael's head,
pulling it tight around his neck and poking two small air holes near his mouth.
Tracey encouraged Michael to take deep breaths, promising that she'd removed the bag just before
he passed out. She claimed this would prove to Michael that she wouldn't kill him
even if she was given the chance. It didn't take long for Michael to panic.
As he started seeing stars, he begged Tracy to take the bag off. She refused, telling him to remain calm. In a fit of desperation, Michael managed to break
free of the bedsheet cocoon, but just as he went to rip off the bag, Tracy reached over and removed
it first. Days later, Michael filed for divorce. He claimed Tracy had been trying to ruin his life ever since, taking custody of their
children while painting him as the bad guy and sullying his reputation. With this information
coming to light, Agent Villatar also reached out to Dr Jonathan Spencer, the oral surgeon
whom Tracy accused of drugging and sexually assaulting her in 1997.
According to Dr Spencer, Tracy's allegations against him couldn't be further from the
truth.
He claimed the two had already had consensual sex a couple of times when Tracy showed up
at his office one evening and asked him to go into one of the private rooms with her.
She said she wanted to live out a fantasy of hers which involved the two of them having
sex while high on nitrous oxide, otherwise known as laughing gas.
Dr Spencer agreed. He got into the chair first and started inhaling the gas,
at which point Tracy suggested he inject some Medazolam instead. Medazolam is a common sedative
used in dental procedures to help patients relax while also having a retroamnesic effect.
relax while also having a retroamnesic effect. Again, Dr Spencer agreed. The last thing he remembered was Tracy walking towards him with his bag of medical supplies, holding the handle with
a napkin, presumably so she didn't leave any fingerprints. Dr Spencer woke up alone in the chair at 4am with a band-aid on his arm where an IV had been,
and no signs of any sexual activity having taken place.
The next day, he checked his mailbox and found a copy of the contractual agreement that he'd
apparently made with Tracy, in which he admitted to drugging and sexually abusing her and agreed to pay $150,000
as well as other expenses in exchange for her silence. Dr Spencer was stunned. Not only was
the entire contract full of lies, he'd never signed any such document. He then remembered that Tracy had previously convinced him to provide
his signature on a blank piece of paper. She'd claimed she was going to scan it to his computer
so that his assistants could send paperwork on his behalf. Dr Spencer was mortified by the entire experience. After seeking advice from his attorney,
he refused to pay the money, but decided not to report Tracey's extortion attempt to the police.
After Tracey filed a civil lawsuit against him, he eventually agreed to settle out of court for $6,000, eager to put the situation behind him.
Dr Spencer was adamant about one thing. Tracy Richter was not the innocent victim she portrayed
herself as. From the outset of the investigation, Tracy's ex-husband John Pittman had been named as a
person of interest. But as Agent Trent Villatar read over the statement Tracy gave police
immediately following Dustin Weedy's shooting, he noticed that she seemed very eager to bring up
John's name. Without being asked, Tracy had gone into great detail about their marriage,
including the allegations that John had sexually abused their son, Bert. This alone made Agent
Villator suspicious. Given everything Tracy had just gone through, why was she so eager to talk about John? Furthermore, since Tracy and Michael had
divorced, Bert had gone to live with John in Virginia. It was hard to believe Tracy would
willingly agree to such a thing if she genuinely believed John had been abusing their son.
Agent Villator picked up the phone and dialed John Pittman's number. Like Michael and Dr Spencer,
he was eager to set the record straight when it came to Tracy's allegations against him.
According to John, he hadn't harassed and abused Tracy, it was the other way around.
He claimed that Tracy had a history of acting erratically,
and that he'd long held concerns about her mental state. John claimed Tracy had cheated on him
throughout their entire marriage, having one affair after another, while accusing John of being
unfaithful. As well as lying constantly, she burnt through their money
frivolously and without explanation. She once used John's credit card to buy expensive gifts
for one of her secret boyfriends. When John confronted her about it, she claimed his credit
card had been stolen. Every job she had ended in drama or controversy,
with Tracy always claiming to be the victim.
John recounted one story in which Tracy had accosted him one night in a fit of rage
after he left a pair of dirty shoes in their house. She threatened to kill him and ordered that he leave the house.
Scared of what she might do, John was walking out the door when he heard a gunshot.
He went into the lounge room and found Tracy sitting calmly on the couch with a bullet hole
in the ceiling. She told him, I tried to kill myself, but I'm fine now.
Worried about Tracy's mental health, John called 911. When paramedics arrived,
Tracy begged them not to take her away. A social worker came out to do an evaluation and John agreed she could stay. After that,
things calmed down for a while, but Tracy soon went back to her old ways.
When John discovered that she'd taken out a life insurance policy on him without his approval,
he hired a private investigator to follow her around. The PI confirmed that Tracy was
dating several other men, including a bodybuilder. He also claimed that she had stolen one of John's
prescription pads and used it to fraudulently obtain steroids, which she then sold. The PI
warned John that his life might be in danger and advised him to leave the marriage.
John initiated divorce proceedings and that's when things got really ugly.
As he and Tracy tried to reach a custody agreement, John noticed that Bert would often
show up for visitations covered in bruises.
One day, Bert arrived with a welt on his face and said Tracy had hit him.
Concerned that Tracy was physically abusing and neglecting their son, John raised the
alarm.
It was only then that Tracy turned around and started accusing him of sexually abusing Burt.
She took him to a doctor who supported her claims.
Burt was questioned by social services and examined by an independent doctor
who found no evidence whatsoever to support Tracy's accusations.
John filed legal action against Tracy on the grounds
that she was trying to interfere with his visitation rights. No charges were ever filed
against John Pittman and he was granted joint custody of Burt. When Tracy remarried and Burt
went to live with her and Michael Roberts in Iowa, John began fighting for
sole custody. At the time Dustin Weedy was killed, a custody hearing was looming, and Tracy stood to
lose not only primary custody of Burt, but also $1,000 per month in child support payments from John.
per month in child support payments from John. As far as John Pittman was concerned, Tracy framed him in the Murder for Hire plot so that he'd be arrested and the custody hearing couldn't go ahead.
John believed if anyone was capable of orchestrating the
purported home invasion that resulted in Dustin Weedy's death, it was Tracy.
invasion that resulted in Dustin Weedy's death, it was Tracy.
While Agent Villeter dug deeper into the investigation, the custody battle between Tracy and Michael Roberts raged on. Tracy spoke to Agent Villeter often, casting suspicion on Michael as the mastermind behind the home invasion plot. In early 2009,
Tracy called 911 to report that someone had broken into her car and left a disturbing
photo of Dustin Weedy's dead body on the front seat. She accused Michael, telling officers on the scene that he was trying to terrorise her.
Officers immediately suspected Tracy was lying. Not only was there no evidence of a break-in, Michael had recently been granted a protection order against Tracy, and in response, she'd filed
one against him too. The hearing was scheduled to take place the following day, leading police to suspect she
was trying to delay or influence proceedings.
Suspicions raised, police were granted a search warrant for Tracy's apartment.
On the hard drive of her computer, they discovered some disturbing finds, including what was described as bizarre
pornography and pictures of dead bodies. They also found a passport that featured Tracy's photo,
but was issued in the name of Sophie Edwards. She also had an Iowa driver's license and a
social security number in the same name. Police discovered that Tracy had obtained
these items by providing the Iowa Department of Transportation with forged documents,
which were also found in her home. Tracy claimed she'd changed her name to avoid ongoing harassment
from Michael Roberts, but law enforcement suspected otherwise.
Believing she was trying to flee the country to escape the heat of the Dustin Weedy investigation,
they charged her with perjury and criminal impersonation, which was a felony offence.
In late 2010, Special Agent Trent Villator took everything he'd uncovered to the newly
appointed county prosecutor Ben Smith.
After reviewing all the files, Ben agreed that the case had been poorly investigated
the first time around, and that Tracy was lying about what transpired in her house the
night Dustin was killed.
The investigators agreed that Tracy had orchestrated the entire attack in the hopes of implicating
John Pittman, thus giving her an advantage in their upcoming custody proceedings.
She'd somehow convinced Burt to lie on her behalf. With that plan and her second marriage failing, she turned suspicion onto Michael Roberts
instead.
But as convinced as the investigators were, they lacked the evidence to prove it.
If they were going to press charges against Tracy, they'd need something more concrete.
Back in December 2001, the police had spoken to Tracy's friend Mary Higgins, who had defended
Tracy.
Knowing that loyalties change over time, in 2011 the new investigation team summoned Mary
in for another interview. This time, Mary admitted she
had many lingering questions of her own about the supposed home invasion. Tracy had told Mary that
the second intruder had been wearing a ski mask. If this was the case, Mary wondered how Tracy had provided a description of his face.
Mary had also been taken aback by the nonchalant, emotionalist way that Tracy spoke about the
shooting, as though she was reading items off a grocery list. Mary accused Tracy of being a
terrible mother who was physically abusive towards Bert. She detailed one occasion
when she and Tracy were discussing the home invasion and Bert entered the room.
Mary claimed that Bert became extremely agitated and started banging his head on the table, saying,
Why did you go back up there? You didn't have to shoot him.
saying, "'Why did you go back up there?
You didn't have to shoot him.'"
Mary said that in the wake of the home invasion, Tracy had told her that police suspected her
ex-husband John Pittman hired Dustin to murder her.
Mary explained to the investigators,
"'Tracy told me all the stuff in the notebook showed that Dr. Pittman was behind it.
At this, Agent Trent Villatar and Prosecutor Ben Smith exchanged a look.
For all these years, the pink notebook found in Dustin Weedy's car had been concealed from
anyone outside of law enforcement, including Tracy.
The only way she could have known about the notebook was if she herself had something to do with it.
By this point, Agent Villeter had amassed a number of emails between himself and Tracy Richter.
Looking over them, he noted that Tracy
had described her ex-husband John Pittman as enjoying playing mind games. She wrote that he'd
wanted to be a psychiatrist, but his parents wouldn't allow it. Agent Villitar realised this
sounded familiar. He looked over the pink notebook and noticed that when describing John, Dustin had not
only written that he liked to play mind games, but also that he, quote, wanted to be a shrink,
family disapproved.
Investigators were convinced that Tracy had dictated the contents of the notebook to Dustin,
they just weren't sure how or when. There was no evidence of the pair ever speaking
or spending time alone together. Yet, if Mona was correct in claiming that Tracy had offered
Dustin some work for their business, then this provided a window where Tracy could have manipulated Dustin into writing in the
notebook, possibly using money or sex.
The police who first investigated the crime had found a notebook in Dustin's house which
they believed contained the words, I KILL A PITMAN.
At the time, this had been deemed further evidence that Dustin
had been part of a plot to kill Tracy and Bert. Prosecutor Ben Smith was flipping through Dustin
Wheaties High School yearbook when he noticed a picture of a foreign exchange student named
Ilka Ditmar. Something about her name looked familiar. Ben compared her name to Dustin's
distinct handwriting and thought the supposed I kill a pitman text could have just as easily read
Ilka Ditmar. He spoke to Mona Weedy who confirmed that Dustin had a crush on Ilka and had once delivered flowers to her home.
An independent medical examiner was tasked with reviewing the photos of Tracy's neck injuries.
He determined that the marks on Tracy's neck weren't consistent with ligature marks, but friction burns.
consistent with ligature marks, but friction burns. In some accounts, Tracy claimed she'd passed out from the strangulation attempt, yet the
friction burns were positioned in such a way that they wouldn't have caused a loss of consciousness.
As far as the medical examiner was concerned, it was entirely possible that Tracy had staged
being choked. Ballistic experts and a blood spatter
analyst returned to the scene of the crime to conduct a reconstruction. They determined that
the first shots could have been fired from the space between Tracy's bed and the wall,
but they weren't shot over her shoulder as she claimed.
They'd been fired while Tracy was either crouched down or kneeling, and it was possible that
she'd been wearing earplugs at the time.
Tracy had always claimed that she'd shot Dustin in the head with the second gun because he
started moving and she thought he was trying to stand up.
The blood spatter analysis determined that these shots had actually been fired into coagulated blood
while Dustin's head was on the floor. This meant Dustin was already dead when Tracy stood above
him and shot him in the head. Not only did this prove that Tracy lied
about what happened, it also proved that Dustin was no longer a threat when she shot him again,
thus debunking her claims of self-defence.
The Cold Case team had spent three years diligently sifting through the cracks in Tracy Richter's
story before they finally felt they had enough evidence to make their move.
In late July 2011, Tracy was summoned to a Starbucks coffee shop under false pretenses,
where members of law enforcement from both Iowa and Nebraska placed the now 45-year-old under
arrest for the first degree murder of Dustin Weedy. Tracy firmly denied the allegations and the case
went to trial in late October 2011. Tracy's defence team discounted the importance of the
pink notebook recovered from Dustin's car,
saying it didn't provide any information about what transpired inside the Roberts
home on the night that Dustin was killed. They argued that Tracy was a heroic mother
who'd acted purely in self-defence during a terrifying home invasion.
The failure to catch the second perpetrator
and get to the bottom of the plot was blamed on incompetent police work in the early days of the
investigation. The defense cast suspicion on Jeremy Collins, the man Mona Weedy had been having an
affair with at the time, while describing Dustin as an unpredictable man with a history of mental health
and behavioural issues. Bert Pittman took the stand as the star witness for his mother's defence.
The now 21-year-old was as supportive of Tracy at the trial as he had been throughout the entire
investigation. He told the court he had no doubt that Dustin Weedy had
bad intentions when entering their home that night, testifying that Dustin looked angry and threatening.
Burt said that he'd been very, very, very scared that night and that he thought he and his siblings were going to die.
Bert denied Mary Higgins claims that he'd been upset with his mother for shooting Dustin, saying he had no doubt that Tracy's actions had saved the lives of herself and their family,
stating, "...if it wasn't for what my mum did, I wouldn't be sitting here today."
it wasn't for what my mum did, I wouldn't be sitting here today."
Then, for the first time, Bert made a shocking admission. He claimed that he'd seen Dustin trying to stand up after Tracy had shot him the first time round, thus disputing the forensic
evidence that Dustin was already dead when Tracy shot him in the head.
For the prosecution, this just added further fuel to their belief that Bert was lying to protect his mother. Under cross-examination, they asked Bert which versions of events had
been his most accurate. Bert agreed that the most accurate was the statement he'd given to police on the night
of the shooting.
The prosecution then presented him with all the inconsistencies he'd introduced since
then.
They questioned why he didn't mention any of those details during his initial statement.
Bert's explanation was that he might have given those details, but the interviewing
officer might not have written them down. After hearing all the evidence, it took the jury less
than five hours to reach a unanimous decision. They declared Tracy Richter guilty of Dustin Weedy's murder. Tracy slumped forward as the verdict was delivered,
bursting into tears, while her legal team appeared genuinely shocked. Bert sat stone-faced
before starting to cry. The next day, Tracy's father, 69-year-old Bernard Richter, who wasn't present for the trial,
collapsed from a heart attack at his home and died.
For Dustin Weedy's family, Tracy's guilty verdict was a major relief.
Ever since Dustin's death and his father's subsequent suicide, Mona had struggled with depression and alcohol abuse.
It pained her to hear Dustin being described in court as someone capable of hurting others.
While Dustin had his own unique set of challenges, Mona had never known him to be violent,
and she resented Tracy's claims that Mona had been afraid of him.
The guilty verdict brought some justice in restoring Dustin's good character,
and the family were able to speak on his behalf at a subsequent sentencing hearing.
The experience was too much for one of Dustin's sisters who became too overwhelmed with emotion and was unable to deliver
her victim impact statement. His other sister addressed Tracy directly as she said,
The worst part of all this is that you cheated my brother Dustin out of his future. He never got to
fall in love. He never got to get married or buy a car or a house.
He never got to have kids.
He missed everything because of you."
Mona told the court about how much she'd struggled in the years since Dustin's murder, her hands
shaking as she said,
"'There's not one day I don't envision my son's body, see his blood, or that I don't live
with the horror of my son's death.
I don't deserve to have to live my life with this pain, without my child.
Addressing Tracy, Mona said,
I can only wish that when you hear the sound of your door closing in your cold cell, you're
haunted by all the pain and misery you have caused to me, my family, and everyone else
you have used and abused.
Tracy who had chosen not to testify at the trial was also given the opportunity to speak
at the trial was also given the opportunity to speak at the hearing. She maintained that she'd
killed Dustin in self-defence and expressed her sympathy for the Weedy family, saying she would
rather spend the rest of her life behind bars for a crime she didn't commit than lose one of her
children. She continued to cast suspicion on her ex-husband Michael Roberts and tried to introduce inadmissible
evidence before the judge had to call her into line.
With that, he sentenced Tracy Richter to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
In the wake of Tracy's conviction, Michael Roberts feared for his life.
He told television news program 60 Minutes that members of Tracy's family harassed him
relentlessly.
Having been granted custody of his and Tracy's two children, Michael moved around constantly
in an attempt to keep them away from Tracy's family.
He wanted to take his children to live in Australia, but Tracy refused to sign their
passport applications.
He was also required by a court order to take the children to visit Tracy in prison.
The entire situation left Tracy and Michael's oldest son feeling conflicted.
He told 60 Minutes that all he wanted was to get on an aeroplane and leave, but he didn't want to
leave his mother behind, regardless of what she'd done, remarking, "...there's a war going on inside my head." Mona Weedy told 60 Minutes she supported Michael's
campaign to move the children to Australia, saying, "...Tracy's not coming back out. She has no rights
to her children. She gave up her rights when she pulled the trigger on my son as far as I'm concerned.
Tracey Richter has a dedicated group of supporters who continue to protest her innocence.
Among them is her son Bert who maintains that he's telling the truth about what happened on the night of the home invasion. On Bert's torso, he has a large tattoo depicting the home invasion. Inked in grey wash,
it shows a guardian angel with the head of a demon being embraced by a woman who is meant to be Tracy.
Bert showed the tattoo to Dateline producers, saying,
I know for a fact that if my mum didn't do what she did, I would be dead."
Until 2021, Burt ran a Facebook page called Free Tracy Richter in which he petitioned for Tracy's
release from prison. The Facebook group has been temporarily paused, with Burt explaining that a
new website is in the works.
Whether that website will ever be launched is unknown.
Mona Weedy has no doubt that Tracy killed Dustin to gain advantage in the custody battle
over Burt.
Through tears, Mona told 60 Minutes, 60 minutes. Finding out the true reason of why Tracy took my son's life to this day haunts me,
because in her process of trying to save her own son from her husband, she chose to take my son
away. That's just so hard. In my opinion, she killed my husband too. He didn't just go out to our son's gravesite and put a bullet
in his heart because he had no pain. She did that to him. She drove him to that."
Bret Weedy was buried directly behind Dustin, his gravestone highlighted by a heart-shaped ornament on Dustin's grave.
Mona does her best to remember the good times. Speaking to author M. William Phelps for his comprehensive book on the case titled Beautifully Cruel, she relived a fond memory from Christmas
morning when Dustin was just two years old. Mona and Brett had bought Dustin the most complicated
Transformer toy they could find, but when they opened it up they realised just how difficult it
would be to put together. Brett started reading the instructions to figure it out when they looked
over to find Dustin sitting quietly in the corner of the room.
The toddler had somehow managed to assemble the entire transformer on his own.
To Mona, this was just one moment that highlighted how intelligent Dustin was. She told Phelps, "'People called my son Slow and a special needs child, but he was not.
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