Crime Junkie - MURDERED: Peggy Hettrick Part 2
Episode Date: May 27, 2025When Peggy Hettrick’s body was found in an open field in Fort Collins, Colorado, police rushed to the nearest suspect. But clues left behind on Peggy’s body later turn the case upside down, leavin...g justice undone and multiple victims in the wake of a sloppy investigation. In Part 2, we take a closer look at other viable suspects in Peggy's case, some who were ignored or dismissed by investigators, and others we uncovered ourselves.Join us in asking the Colorado Attorney General to reopen Peggy’s case, assign a new investigator and explore new DNA testing by following this link. Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit: crimejunkiepodcast.com/murdered-peggy-hettrick-part-2/Did you know you can listen to this episode ad-free? Join the Fan Club! Visit crimejunkie.app/library/ to view the current membership options and policies.The Crime Junkie Merch Store is NOW OPEN! Shop the exclusive Life Rule #10 Tour collection before it’s gone for good! Don’t miss your chance - visit the store now! Don’t miss out on all things Crime Junkie!Instagram: @crimejunkiepodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CrimeJunkiePod | @audiochuckTikTok: @crimejunkiepodcastFacebook: /CrimeJunkiePodcast | /audiochuckllcCrime Junkie is hosted by Ashley Flowers and Brit Prawat. Instagram: @ashleyflowers | @britprawatTwitter: @Ash_Flowers | @britprawatTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
Transcript
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Hi, Crime Junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Britt.
And we are here to bring you part two of Peggy Hetrick's story.
This is the story we took out on tour thanks to Pluto TV and State Farm.
And when we left off, Tim had just been exonerated.
He won a $10 million judgment after they wrongly, not only accused,
but convicted him.
He spent 10, almost 10 years in prison for a crime he did not commit.
But when he gets out, that leaves everyone wondering who really killed
Peggy Hetrick.
And in one of Tim's filings, one of the things his lawyer said is that there were
other viable suspects, and they were not wrong based on our investigation into the case.
So I want to talk about those today. All right, when talking about people we should be looking at, viable potential suspects,
the first that comes up is Peggy's on-again, off-again boyfriend, Matt Zulner, who was
29 in 1987.
And every detective, I think, has their person, right, that they look into the most.
And for Linda Wheeler, it is Matt.
Now, Ray Martinez, one of the detectives we talked about who was like first on the scene
for Peggy's case last time, he said a lot of people were quick to write Matt off.
Maybe because of his behavior, like he was acting how they expected.
Maybe because he had an alibi.
If you remember, Matt said that he had met that woman,
maybe Sean, again, just met her,
didn't even remember her name,
but he was with her till last call,
then she's at his place till like 3, 3.30 in the morning.
And a lot of what you'll see about Peggy's death
is that she died between one and 3 a.m.,
which yes, Matt would have an alibi.
Except when we got access to a lot of the investigative files,
what we realized is in the report,
it's actually a wider range.
I mean, they settle on one to three,
but the true range of time is between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m.,
meaning that there's potentially an hour and a half, two hours,
that Matt is unaccounted for if she died in that was like later time frame. The other thing,
which I haven't told anyone yet, been saving this up my sleeve, is that when Peggy was found
in her purse was a note that she had written to Matt.
Seemingly that very evening she died.
And so Britt, I'm gonna have you read the note.
Matt, I need your help.
Sharon has got my keys and isn't home.
No answer.
If I have to knock on your door at two,
please don't be a grump.
I don't wanna spend the night sleeping in the hall.
Peg. But this note is in Peggy's bag, like Matt doesn't have it.
No, no, this is in her bag.
So Matt actually lived even closer to the prime minister than Peggy did.
So there are two possibilities here.
Either she goes and puts this on Matt's door,
and then she goes out,
she ends up getting
back into her place, and then goes back to Matt's and collects the note because she no
longer needs to show up at his place at 2 a.m.
Or she writes the note, goes out, ends up getting back into her place before she ever
drops the note off.
She doesn't need the note at all.
She's in, it doesn't even matter anymore, and it's like a moot point.
It's like living in her person.
Maybe she forgot about it.
I don't know.
And did Matt see the note? Like what did he say about it?
That's the thing. So based on the files that I've seen, it doesn't appear like they asked
him about it, which like maybe they're just writing it off. But to me, it feels like it
feels really interesting. Like did she plan on coming to your place? Did you know she
was planning on coming to your place?
Did she mention it to you? Like something? Yeah.
Right. And we know they spoke and that like her coming to his house was never a part of the story he told
when they spoke. So just a reminder of his story. So Matt drove that night because he was kind of
bopping around to different places. And he said that when he got to the prime minister, Peggy was
arriving at the same time. They are like at the bar, they're chatting for a little bit, like
everything's normal. And then his date, this girl he's supposed to meet up with
comes, again, maybe Sean, he thinks it's her name,
they just met that night.
And he says that he offered Peggy a ride,
she said yes originally, but then at some point
in the evening, he went to the bathroom, he's coming out,
Peggy's leaving, so he's like,
oh, she must have changed her mind, whatever.
He stays till last call with maybe Sean,
and then they go back to his place till 3 or 3.30.
Now he does tell police though,
that even though their conversation was normal, it was great.
She made mention, Peggy did,
that she was seeing someone new during this time,
which he thought police should know.
You haven't mentioned that at all.
So my question is like, was she actually seeing someone
or was she seeing her on again, off again boyfriend,
Matt, with someone new?
She's like, oh, I too am newly in love.
He's so hot and so rich.
So tall, better looking than you.
Don't even worry about me.
Like was she bluffing?
I don't know.
I don't know.
So there's like some indications that maybe she was seeing someone, like casually.
I think it's also important to know that like Matt is that guy she would always go back
to there in Colorado.
And so much so that I found out that earlier in that week, I mean, they had had dinner
together.
Also, apparently, though, as far as I can tell, not something that police asked him
about, which is like, seems like a miss to me because like, like, they're very much in Also, apparently though, as far as I can tell, not something that police asked him about.
Which is like, seems like a miss to me because like, they're very much in each other's lives
and like, what did you talk about?
What were the days leading up to it?
I don't know.
Well, and the police don't ask about the note.
They don't ask about this dinner within like the week before she died.
Did they even ask about his alibi?
They did.
They did check his alibi. They did, they did check his alibi. They found maybe Sean and our reporter,
Emily actually found her all these years later
and spoke to her.
Turns out maybe Sean, her name is actually Dawn.
Matt, you were so close.
So close.
And her story is interesting.
It adds a little bit of context, a little bit of color.
She says that they
really did just meet earlier that night. They had saw each other in another bar and she
said they recognized each other because Matt, like a while ago, had sold her a car. So like
they've been in the same orbit before, but didn't even know each other's names, clearly.
She said Matt came over to her and was like, hey, you know, when you're done with your
friend, you should come to prime minister and hang out with me, which is what she did.
She says she shows up later in the evening. And when she walks in, Matt should come to Prime Minister and hang out with me, which is what she did. She says she shows up later in the evening.
And when she walks in, Matt is talking to this other woman who she figures out later
is Peggy, didn't know Peggy at the time.
And she said she kind of hangs back for a little while and waits, but a couple minutes
go by he's still talking.
So she decides to approach him.
As soon as she approaches, Peggy like turns at the bar and starts talking to the guy next
to her.
And so Don just made the assumption that Peggy was with that other guy.
And Matt doesn't introduce Don or anything.
He just was like, hey, go get a table.
So Don goes to get a table for four, thinking that maybe the other couple
is going to join them. But just Matt comes back.
And she said she didn't ask him about it.
She didn't even ask him about the woman when she realized
Matt's like kind of keeping an eye on her all night.
Like they just met. She doesn't know the history, but like she's not going to dig too deep. They're
like having a decent time. And they do. They stay till last call. She goes home with Matt.
They talk. They kiss a little. She says the night ends for like a combination of reasons.
Like, you know, he's doing the like, oh, like I got to work in the morning. And then he also makes
this comment about how he hates kids, like, not like dislikes
kids, like hates them.
And Dawn is like, well, I have one of those.
So this probably isn't going to work out.
And so she ends up leaving.
But when she talked to us, there was something else that she told us that really stood out
to her.
She said that when she was in his apartment that night,
it felt strange because she said it was so clean.
Like, not just clean for a boy kind of apartment,
but like, she's like, I couldn't find, you know,
a piece of clothing on the closet floor.
There was not a fork to be found in the sink.
Like, it felt like no one lived there.
Which was weird at the time, whatever.
But she said what was really strange for her was that police brought her back at some point years
later and they were asking her questions about Matt's apartment specifically. And they were asking
her like, had you seen a broken coffee table? Had you seen some spots on the floor and they're like showing her pictures of the apartment and we're gonna have one of these pictures up
I I think like you we talked about this were like originally imagining like a shattered coffee table
I hear broken table. It is a broken table. Very obviously
It's like this like piece of wood propping up one of the legs one of the legs is broken
And now it's like a piece of wood fully something my husband would like legs. Like one of the legs is broken and now it has a piece of wood.
It's fully something my husband would like do and then be like, it's fine for years if
it was his apartment.
Yes.
So and then the spots like they're not like overtly blood or anything.
There's just a couple of them.
I don't know if they ever get those tested.
And again, Dawn is saying, no, I never saw any of that because again, it's so clean.
But she said that wasn't even really the takeaway for her. As they're showing her these pictures,
the takeaway for her is like,
that's not the apartment I was in.
Which it was like full body chills
when she was telling us that.
And it's not like it was a completely different.
She said it looked the same, the layout was the same.
But this one looked lived in.
So lived in, I mean, if you see the pictures,
there's like laundry everywhere.
There's like stuff on the counters.
Make no mistake, this dude lives here.
Which I don't want to discredit Dawn's memory at all.
We know human memory is incredibly flawed.
There's a million statistics on it.
I won't go through all of them.
But there's one from the Innocence Project
that's something like 70% of wrongful convictions
come down to witness misidentification
or misremembering.
And that's like in the most perfect of circumstances, right?
In this case, it's in the middle of the night, it's dark, they'd been drinking.
And when they're showing her these pictures, I mean, this is like years later too.
Right.
So yes, I mean, there could be like, and I don't even know what to make of this memory
other than it's just so strange. But there were other strange things about Matt as well. Like,
when they went to talk to him the first day or two after they found Peggy, they did search his car
in his place. And apparently, they seized some wet clothes and shoes from his car and wet clothes
from his apartment. And not like damp. I mean, they said it looked like he'd gone swimming in these
things. But strangely, like a couple of days later,
Matt comes asking for those things back and they just give them back.
Sorry we didn't wash and fold them for you.
I mean, you say strangely, but a couple of days later,
they were all in on Tim.
I know. I know. But when you think about,
like at some point, I don't know what was happening years later.
I think it was probably the grand jury.
They're looking at these pictures, they're asking Dawn about them,
I think the implication was did something happen in Matt's apartment after Dawn left, right? Like
we got this maybe one and a half to two hours. Did a table break? Did these spots come after you
left the house? And I point that out specifically because there's one other thing that they
collected early on that I think is important. Outside of Matt's apartment, they also found
some footprints that matched the shoes Peggy was found in when she was killed, and a pile
of like 11 cigarette butts in the brand that Peggy was known to smoke outside of his place.
Which the show prints, I can kind of like excuse, right?
Like she has this note,
she might've been there to drop it off, then pick it up.
So she was in her purse.
Like, okay, but the cigarette butts,
like that is a stakeout amount of cigarette butts.
I know, I know.
And when they talk to her friends,
and this is like the little piece that comes out in that,
like when I talk about the 2D image of her in the newspaper, when they talk to her friends, and this is like the little piece that comes out in that, like, when I talk about the 2D image of her in the newspaper,
when they talk to her friends, her friends did say,
you know, it wouldn't have been that unusual.
She gets jealous of, like, when it comes to Matt.
It wouldn't have been weird if she saw him with another woman
that night and then she went to his place to,
we know she left ahead of them.
Did she stake it out to see if he brought Dawn home?
Did she stay and see if Don stayed or if Don left? And if she was still there when Don left, then did something
happen? Was there a confrontation at Matt's apartment? The problem with that is...
It doesn't fit the theory that the attack happens in the field.
I know. Like there's pieces that are missing because in my mind, like, if something happens with
Matt, like it is a heat of the moment, like passion thing.
It's hard for me to imagine a world where either something happens in his apartment
or even he like gets her in the car and then takes her to this place where someone could
see something, takes her out of the car, stabs her, drags her.
Like I can't make that up.
It doesn't make sense.
And I guess my question too is, was Matt a violent person?
Was their relationship volatile?
Because they've been on and off for a while.
Like, was there a history of that?
There's nothing reported that I can find.
In Matt's criminal history, he doesn't have anything violent.
I mean, there's like some DUIs and stuff like that,
but no domestic charges, nothing like that.
Which is why I go back to, I think if something happened
between them, it was heat of the moment.
But it's hard for me to imagine it happening at Matt's.
And then if not, it's hard for me to imagine how Matt gets her
in the middle of that field.
I mean, the biggest question, does Matt have Tom McCann shoes?
No. So they didn't find any Tom McCann dress shoes. They did take note of like a pair of
boots that were like propped up against his couch. But Don says those were the boots he
was wearing the night Peggy died. They're not the prints that match anything in the field.
And I get the sense that like, those were his nice shoes. Like he didn't have a lot of like- He's not a dress shoe guy. Right.
And so maybe for all of those reasons,
he didn't have Tom McCann's, he maybe had an alibi,
he was acting how they expected him to act.
Early on, people wrote him off,
even though he too, like Tim, failed to polygraph.
And he failed the question,
do you know who killed Peggy Hetrick?
Like the question.
Yeah, but the polygrapher decided
that he was probably telling the truth.
And so that's Matt.
Now, the other person we came across in the case file
was a guy named Donnie Long.
So the same year that Peggy was murdered,
there were two more murders.
39-year-old Linda Holt was stabbed nine times, bound, gagged, tied to a tree.
Now, like Peggy's case, there was no sexual assault, but unlike Peggy's case, there was no mutilation to Linda.
Then a couple of months after her, 30-year-old Monna Hughes is murdered.
She's stabbed 14 times. No sexual assault. Again, though, no mutilation.
Now pretty quickly,
police kind of pull Peggy out of this, even though you've got three cases that happen within nine months of each other,
within 30 miles, in an area that doesn't really see violent crime. Well, and all the victims are like kind of in the same age range, 37, 39, 30.
My crime junkie brain goes, their last names all start with H, Hedrick, Hughes, Holt.
That's Deck Investigates brain.
I know, but like, I think it's about the mutilation.
I think that's the why very early on they were like, Peggy doesn't fit in this
pattern and they end up finding the guy responsible for Linda and Mauna.
They end up getting this Donnie Long guy.
Donnie ends up confessing to Linda and Mauna's murders.
So they at least do the bare minimum though.
And like when he confesses to these, they like circle back and they're like, hey, you're
saying you did these two things.
Did you do this other thing?
He's like, no, I didn't.
And they're like, OK, thank you.
Bye.
Like, truly the bare minimum.
And we're just out here believing serial killers.
Like, this is not the first time we've seen this happen.
No.
It always confuses me, shocks me.
This happened recently, where I'm
like working on this case out of Washington
that I've been working on for like two years.
And me and one of our reporters, Emily,
we had a call with the FBI,
because we're like, listen,
we're not saying it's Israel Keyes,
but here's like 20 things we find very odd
that we feel like someone other than us should know.
And the agent was like, yeah, like, okay,
we'll talk to you, but like, we don't need to hear it.
He only killed four people in the state.
And I'm like, wait, how do you know
he only killed four people in Washington?
I feel like that's like news. And he's like, but he told us that. And I'm like, wait, how do you know he only killed four people in Washington? I feel like that's like news. Yeah. And he's like, but he told us
that. And I was like, Israel Keyes told us. So of all the bad guys to believe we're believing
Israel Keyes. Okay. So he said he didn't do it. So they think he didn't do it. We tried
to write to him when he was in prison, just to see if he would talk to us. We haven't
heard back from him. Which brings me to the third person I wanna go deep into.
And I told you, everyone has like their person,
like detectives.
And for Ray Martinez, this next one is his.
And for me, he's the person,
whether or not he had anything to do with Peggy's case,
I am very interested in.
Cause I think there is a much bigger story behind him.
And that is local ophthalmologist Dr. Richard Hammond.
Now in 1987, this dude is raising no red flags.
He has a thriving practice, he has a wife, two teenage kids, like live in the American
dream.
Except for, you know, the one red flag they raised about Tim
in that he lived really close to the crime scene.
In fact, you could see the crime scene
from his primary bedroom window.
But he wasn't doodling.
No, gosh forbid.
So, I mean, he was a part of the initial canvas
where they like came around.
Did you see anything, hear anything?
Him and his wife were home that night,
but they didn't see or hear anything,
and so they moved on.
Again, no red flags.
Plenty of red flags though, come March of 1995.
That's when a young woman at Colorado State University
found this note card on their like job board
for someone who needed a house sitter.
The Hammonds were going out of town,
she was gonna come house sit.
She brought her friend with her,
and you know, she's getting the tour of the house,
your room will be in the basement,
you can use this bathroom, but you know,
make yourself at home, use the house, whatever.
So her and her friend are there, hanging out.
There's something weird about the basement bathroom,
like they keep hearing something.
Now, I imagine if it were me, about the basement bathroom. Like they keep hearing something.
Now, I imagine if it were me and I was by myself,
I would be like, I'll just use the upstairs bathroom.
But she's not alone.
She has a friend with her.
Right, you got your crime junkie BFF with you
and you're like, today's the day
we're gonna solve the mystery.
Absolutely.
So they start snooping around, right?
Like they get a flashlight, they're going all around the bathroom, and it's like they
turn the light on, they hear the sound, they turn the light off, there's no sound on, off,
on, off.
And I imagine that, like, one of them is, like, at the light and the other one's like,
okay, shh, and like kind of darting around the room trying to hear the sound from, like,
where it's coming from.
Well, they end up getting a flashlight and they realize that there are cameras in the
vents.
Plural cameras.
Cameras.
But the cameras aren't set up like in the bathroom.
They're set up from the room next door.
So they go out the hall and go to that room, but the door, the knob is like won't turn.
It's locked.
And again, if I were alone,
I'd be like, is this where I stop? But you have your BFF with you.
Nicole I don't know how to pick a lock, but I'm about to find out.
Tess So they get their paper clips,
whatever. And as they're like getting ready to pick this lock, what they realize is that even
though it was locked, the knob wouldn't turn. When it was pulled shut, it didn't latch all the way.
So all they have to do is push it open.
And when they go inside, they see cameras,
they see recording equipment, they see filing cabinets,
and a quote, uncountable amount of videotapes.
And that's when the one girl freezes and she's like,
I think we need to phone a friend.
Like I think they're hoping that this isn't as bad as they think it is.
But when they phone this friend and they call somebody who used to be a cop,
he, quote, knows a lot about videotapes, very 1995.
But he gets here and he's like, no, this is worse.
We need to call the real police.
Quickly, the real police descend on this place.
And it's just worse than you could have imagined.
I mean, they even find this index on top one of the filing cabinets and it's like got
ages, names, dates.
Is it a shower shot?
Is it a toilet shot?
Is it a close-up shot?
And when I say close-up, this isn't just someone sitting on the toilet.
I mean, this is zoomed into their genitals.
And many of these names on the list are minors.
Like, kids, his kids go to school with.
Well, and with the close-ups, it makes me think of, like, Peggy.
I mean, she was, she had genital mutilation.
I know and that's not the only like thing they're piecing together. So like because this is
happening in the same place, it's a lot of the same people who were called for Peggy's case.
One of them being Sergeant Ray Martinez and he says when he first gets his call to respond,
he's like Hammond. Like why do I know the name Hammond? And then it hits him. He's like, during our
canvassing, we went to his house. And then all of a sudden, he's like putting the pieces
together.
So I'm tying this together, weird cameras, crime scene, near the crime scene back then,
and he's a doctor, and guess what we find in his closet?
We start looking through his closet,
and we find Tom and Ken's shoes.
Boy, does that ever ring a bell.
And so we called up Broderick, this other detective did,
and he refused to come out.
He wouldn't come to the scene.
He said, no, we already know who done it.
That's a moot point, basically.
When Jim Broderick said that and the officer told me about it,
I was angry about it because me as a past detective,
you don't overlook anything you flip
over every stone that you can you might be wrong where your lead was maybe this
is something different why not look at what's it gonna hurt right but he refused
to come out so I told the officer there so let's just seize everything the
seize the tapes seize the camera seize those Tom McCann shoes, you
know. So we did. We collected our own evidence and turned everything in and it
never went anywhere. I think a day or two days later he's found dead in a hotel
in Denver. They said from what I've learned that when they found him his
whole body was shaved. He shaved all the hair off his head and his body, complete body, and disposed of it.
So that to me is weird, other than he didn't want any trace evidence linked to him.
Why would you do that if you didn't think you might have left something behind at a
scene? behind at a scene. That to me is also weird.
Mm-hmm.
Full-on naked mole rat in a hotel room?
Dude, I don't know what to think of this.
I, if you like look at what the people around him said,
who were like supportive of him in a way saying like,
he couldn't do anything violent.
They would say that he was very into bodybuilding.
I, you know, I still try and find like old archives of like,
were there competitions?
Like, was this something he was actively doing for how long?
Because like, I want to know,
is this guy near smooth all the time or just on this day that he died?
Feels important.
I don't know.
But the people who supported him,
and supports the wrong word because nobody was like,
well, we'll get there. But his wife basically was like, I didn't know that any of the videotape
stuff was happening. But he's not capable of something violent. But how would she even know
like, she didn't know about the tapes? Like, how would she even have any idea of what he's capable
of? And that's the thing I like, I have such a hard time understanding. Like we tried reaching out to her.
We weren't able to get in touch, but I, I don't know how like she would, cause she
said she was totally blindsided.
She like didn't have any idea what was happening in her home, which is just like
quick PSA to people.
Like if your husband has a locked room in the basement, maybe go in it of yeah, of
you're the home you share, you're allowed to ask questions, but I don't know what
their dynamic was. Like, you know, when they you share, you're allowed to ask questions. But I don't know what their dynamic was.
Like, you know, when they gave her immunity deal to talk, she paints like a very vanilla
picture of their life.
She says that like, she would make dinner from scratch, he'd come home at 7pm, they'd
eat dinner together as a family, their kids would do homework, and then like they wouldn't
even watch TV.
Like they were, you know, all American family.
I don't think PBS was showing what Hammond was into.
I don't think so either.
But anyways, it seemed like, again, she didn't,
at least from what I've seen, didn't give any indication
that there was like dark parts of her marriage.
She was surprised by this.
So he gets arrested, he gets released on a $5,000 bond,
and it's when he's released
that he goes to that Denver hotel and he dies by suicide.
He has a cyanide drip to his leg that I mean is so corrosive,
it gets like down to the bone.
And it's interesting the way that things play out
after he dies, because when I say like people
like supported him, there were people who kind of came out
of the woodwork and there was like this battle
when you look at the newspapers of like reporters
reporting on what happened. And then people saying that they shouldn't because it's just making things worse and it kind of all starts with
Richard's suicide note, so I'm gonna have you read that
The media frenzy surrounding my arrest has caused immeasurable harm to many people especially my family
I've lost everything but I cannot survive the loss of my wife and son and daughter.
My death should satisfy the media's thirst for blood
so that hopefully everyone else who has been affected
by this case can truly begin the process of healing.
I love redacted family names very much.
I am truly sorry for hurting you so deeply.
Rich Hammond. So he puts it on the media that, yes, I did this thing, but I have to die because they're
so bloodthirsty.
They're making this bigger than it has to be and they're hurting people.
I'm just going to go away because of what they're doing.
Well, and not even what he did.
He says, who has been affected by this case?
Not by what he did.
That's true. So then, this is when the back and forth comes,
and there are people who come out in support of what he said,
like, the media should just stop, we should drop it.
There's this active campaign to just make this go away.
And just to prove the point, I want you to read something,
not the whole thing, but part of what was written
by a woman named Pam Hurley Nagel in the paper.
It saddens me that the Colorado and other media flits chose to feast on Richard Hammond's tragic plight. I don't condone his alleged behavior, which was limited to the privacy of his own home.
Collective gasp. That's like the craziest part to me.
Yeah. But the media exploited a man and his family's vulnerability.
Don't think anybody else's vulnerability was okay.
Rich Hammond was a man and doctor who took time to replenish his society with quality
medical care.
What he allegedly did was wrong, but in the scheme of things, the hurt he caused was exaggerated after the media got its
predatory claws in it. Was it? Here's the thing, I don't think that's a question we can answer
because of how things unfold next. So after his arrest and his death, they continue to find more
things. They find a secret storage unit no one knew about
with rubber-made tub after rubber-made tub
of more videotapes, pornographic materials,
receipts, sex toys.
They find out he had a secret bank account
that people didn't know about.
They find this like waist belt contraption
that like hooked onto his belt
and had all these little like sharp instruments that came out of it. Like what do you need that for? But the reason
we don't know the extent is because after all this is collected, everything from his home,
from this storage unit, it is all taken and over the course of like eight hours burned,
hours burned, like completely destroyed. And Jim Broderick, like some people were at least asking questions about this. And our guy Jim Broderick is back to give a quote to the Denver
Post about why they destroyed all of this evidence in this case. And he said, quote,
should we re-victimize all these women by telling them they are victims?
So really, it's an effort to protect them, to preserve these victims' rights.
Oh, Ashley, words are important to me, they're important to you, they're important to our crime
junkies. What he's saying here, like, I cannot make sense of it. Like, re-victimizing them by telling them they're
— that's not how that works.
No, the math isn't math-ing. And the thing I have the biggest problem with is this idea,
the last line, to preserve these victims' rights. That's why we destroyed this. By
destroying it. And not, like, with their permission or anything.
I'd say, like, I get, as a as a victim like wanting those tapes to be destroyed.
If that existed of me, I wouldn't feel safe even with a tape like that locked in an evidence
locker, but I'd want the choice.
Yeah, they didn't have it.
They made the choice for them to preserve their rights.
But by destroying it, what they did was actually take away any future right they might have
for repercussions.
They can no longer go after Hammond's estate.
Were there other people on those tapes
that they could go after?
We'll never know, because by the way,
when they destroyed everything,
they had not viewed most of it.
Like, they just took it all away without knowing
what was on the majority of those tapes,
which is bananas to me.
And the whole way that these were destroyed,
when they looked into this, this went against every policy
and procedure they had in place about how
to deal with evidence.
It just all goes up in smoke.
Literally.
Literally.
Yes.
And listen, Jim Broderick would have you believe that they
did this for a noble reason.
And I do think there are people out they did this for a noble reason.
And I do think there are people out there doing noble things for noble reasons.
I haven't seen a whole lot of them.
Love to meet more.
Yes.
But in the theme of always going a layer deeper, which is our new crime junkie life rule, I
like to ask not just what happened, but why do we think it happened?
Well, here's a fun fact. In the couple of days between when Hammond was arrested,
but before he died, they were having to think about,
like, taking this to a trial,
like there could be a case around this.
And they were gonna have to appoint a special prosecutor
because they quickly found out that members
of the DA's office, quote,
had been guests at Hammond's home
and may have been videotaped.
Oh, I think we have our reason for why all of that evidence
was destroyed.
Mm-hmm.
But they are quick to write this off.
Like, same way when like, when Tim, right,
when he gets exonerated, they're like,
let's just make this go away.
And when this happened, they wanted this to go away.
So much so that they were even writing off stories that made no sense. When he gets exonerated, they're like, let's just make this go away. And when this happened, they wanted this to go away.
So much so that they were even writing off stories that made no sense.
Like people were like, oh, he wouldn't have hurt Peggy because like,
he didn't even use a scalpel.
Yes, he was a doctor in surgical precision, all that, but he didn't even use scalpel.
But like a guy who he ran the practice with was like, yeah, we absolutely do.
And there's an affidavit from a woman who's like, he literally used a scalpel on me.
And just to show you how far under the rug
they were pushing this thing,
everything in the paper, like at the time,
was about the videotapes or whatever.
Nobody publicly was connecting this guy
to Peggy Hetrick in 1995.
And nobody was telling Peggy's family about him,
even behind the scenes.
Tom didn't find out about Dr.
Hammond until years later.
And the way he found out was bananas.
I remember a few years ago, they talked about a doctor.
I was coming out of the village in with my friend and he looked at the
news box, Rocky Mountain News, and had Peggy's picture on the front
cover of the newspaper. And he said, Hey, Tom, that's your picture on the front cover of the newspaper.
And he said, hey, Tom, that's your sister.
And so he got the newspaper.
We went back into the village and I read it.
I skimmed over and I went, what?
Who is this doctor?
You know, nobody's ever told me about this guy.
So the defense never knew about any of that.
Not just the Hammond stuff, but like so much of what we've talked about.
And in looking at the file, when I say there's more to be done, I mean, I also was coming
across names of people it doesn't seem like they really dug into.
A guy named Greg Case, who she was dating at the time, Derek Cordova, who she had gone
out with in the past, a guy named Tim Matthews, who apparently liked Peggy
and was jealous of Matt.
And I'm not saying those guys
had anything to do with anything,
but to me, those are people who were clearly close to her,
who hung out with her, who maybe were with her
in like times leading up to her death.
They were in her circle.
I know, and so when I say that more can be done,
like I don't think we can just rely on DNA and
like call it quits.
I think there's going to have to be legwork.
And I think there's still a lot of legwork that can be done even decades later.
Right.
But we know that Tim was exonerated in part by the DNA evidence.
So like whatever happened to those partial matches?
So we did get some partial profiles and none of those matched him.
So there were some important ones.
There was one on the front waistband of Peggy's underwear.
And everything we have comes from touch DNA, right?
There was no like semen or bodily fluids.
And I think their thinking was that the killer likely was the one who pulled her pants down.
So maybe they'd get touch DNA.
Then they got some samples from under her arms, coats, boots, pants. There was a single full profile on
her sleeve, but like guess what? It turned out to be the police who weren't wearing gloves.
So cross that one out. And while it hasn't been on record that they've gotten DNA from
like all three of the people I've talked about, right? Matt Zollner, Donnie Long, Richard Hammond.
I do know that they got one person's DNA for comparison.
And it is comparison, right?
There's no full profile to put into CODIS.
And one of those three people
did match the touch DNA on the underwear.
Not all the places, but the touch DNA on the underwear.
And that was Matt Zollner.
So we have this partial match on one of the samples.
Why isn't that DNA alone enough to charge him?
Right, like if it was Tim's, right, it totally would have been.
That's the question a lot of people are asking.
And for Linda, she thinks it should be enough.
I want Matt Zollner to know that I'm still after him.
I want him to know to make up some little hiccup
or something in his life, that he'll make a mistake
that we can catch him on.
But it's like I just...
When I know who did it and he's not held accountable
and he's been free for 30-some years, that
the attorney general did all they could, and I really felt that they did.
But it's like, but I'm not done, and I don't want to be silenced.
There's still a wrong that was done, and I still feel like something good might come
out of this case getting reopened and refocused on.
Somebody might come up with something that's said or done that we didn't know about that
allows us to take this case further and keep it open.
Now, I think it's important to note, I don't think that at this point you can take a case
to trial just based on that one piece of DNA.
There's a lot that has to be explained at this point you can take a case to trial just based on that one piece of DNA. There's a lot that has to be explained at this point. I mean, and again, it's touch
DNA. You don't know how it got there, when it got there.
And it's only one of the profiles that was found on her.
Yes. And we know that they had contact, right? Like they're going to dinner. They like they
saw each other that night. I think it is important. I think it is meaningful. And I think that
is like when you talk about a lead that tells you where to focus, I think it is important. I think it is meaningful. And I think that is like when you talk about a lead that tells you where to focus
I I think that's telling you where to focus
however
There is other DNA that's gonna have to be explained away
There is you're gonna have to prove it in a court of law and there's legwork that can be done
You also have when you when I think about DNA the Missy of it all. If anyone remembers our John Benet Ramsey episode, there is a DNA tech in Colorado who
from like, was there from 90s to 2023.
Her name is Missy Woods and she was like, like-
Not following protocol, mishandling evidence.
Exactly.
Not storing things correctly.
Right.
Not necessarily falsifying things, but really mucking up the system.
So all of her cases are getting called into question.
I don't know if she touched this.
And I know we sent some stuff to Holland,
but stuff was stored in Colorado.
Some of it was tested in Colorado.
Again, I'm only saying all of this,
because while I think this DNA is important,
you are going to have to back it up with legwork.
Well, and for me,
like Matt doesn't have this history of violence.
Even if it was something that happened
in the heat of the moment,
she was mutilated with surgical precision.
I know.
That doesn't, like, you don't learn that in, like, a heat of the moment situation.
We asked about that, and people who believe that Matt did this,
they think that maybe he was trying to, like, throw people off his trail by doing that.
But the precision of it.
I know, I know.
And listen, who's to say there isn't a world where someone killed Peggy and then someone
else came along and did something, right?
Like Richard Hammond had insomnia and could see that field from his bedroom window.
I don't think he wants to call police and alert them to what he's doing in his place.
You know what I mean?
And I'm not saying, I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know.
The reason that a lot of things might not fit
is because maybe there isn't just one answer.
And another problem that we're gonna face
when it comes to making a case is that
you will have this Richard Hammond thing
that is very open-ended.
And it can never be buttoned up.
Right, we don't know if Peggy was on one of those tapes
because some powerful people made sure we would never know
what was on those tapes, who was on those tapes.
And if you came to the live show,
this is where we started to wrap things up.
But I mean, as a lot of people might have noticed by now,
like the theme of these stories is going a layer deeper.
So while Britt and I were on tour,
I sent some of our reporters back to Colorado
to do some more digging, some more door knocking,
and like boots on the ground work,
mostly because I couldn't shake the feeling
that there is more to this Dr. Hammond story.
Like, as it relates to Peggy or like something else?
I don't know.
The way that everyone made it go away so fast
and like the operation we learned he had set up feels so much bigger.
So we got our hands on some investigative reports from Hammond's case and I was disappointed
to see that police just straight up stopped investigating after he died.
I mean, not surprised, but I'm disappointed.
Again, at the time they said it was all to protect the victims, blah, blah, blah.
But the question I have is like, no one can say for sure that Hammond didn't sell or share
the tapes.
What we learned is that his video setup was professional, it was elaborate, and his tape
catalogs were organized like a library.
And Hammond would even label the tapes by like date by victims initials, but some of the tapes were also labeled
ready
Ready for what? I don't know
Distribution to go somewhere our reporting team tracked down one of Hammond's victims
and she filled in some blanks for us and
Prepare to be disappointed yet again because she told us that not only did police never ask their opinions on destroying
the evidence, which we assumed, but when detectives were interviewing the victims, they were asking
these victims if they were in on it.
Like in on it?
How exactly? The cops were asking these teenage girls if they were
performing for the cameras. Like, did anyone tell you where to stand and like what to do?
And on top of that, she said that Fort Collins PD never once offered to let these teen girls have
a parent or trusted adult in the room with them during their interviews. So it just feels like the victims have never once had a voice in that case.
Every decision was made for them, even after the cops basically treated them like suspects.
Oh, and remember how I told you, we found out that there was a file that said some of
the DA's office had socialized at Hammond's, might be on the tapes, whatever.
Well, when we finally got to track down
Judge Terry Gilmore, that was obviously one of the things
we asked him specifically about.
We weren't able to talk to anyone else.
And he confirmed that the destruction of the tapes
did go against regular policy,
and he admitted to knowing Dr. Hammond personally
before his arrest, but he says that he only socialized
with him one time, and that he was never at the doctor's home.
And that's kind of where that ended.
Okay.
And then there's one more thing that I want to mention
before we wrap things up on Hammond.
So we got a hold of a woman who in 1988-ish
went to the eye clinic where Hammond worked for an emergency.
Like her son got like a sandy snowball lodged inside or whatever.
Now, Hammond is not the regular doctor,
but he was the one on call that weekend.
So they're alone in the eye clinic with him.
And Dr. Hammond was treating the boy,
he's like nine or 10, and his mom had to use the restroom.
So she went to the closest one that she could find,
which was the men's stall.
But Dr. Hammond came and like physically blocked her
from using the men's restroom,
and he insisted that she had to use the women's restroom and she's like
Okay, like whatever dude and when she got inside and flipped the light switch on she heard this like
Worrying so this is an 88. No one knows and won't know for years
About Hemin's secret taping hobby and what they ended up determining at his house is like,
it's the light switch.
So like when you turn it on,
that triggered it to start recording.
So he didn't even have to be there.
And she's hearing this at his office.
Now she says in the moment, she was certain it was a camera,
not even like years later, but in that moment,
like specifically one of those big cameras from the 80s
that had that distinct sound when it turned on,
specifically when it focused. And she even flipped the light switch off because she was like so freaked
out. She was like looking for a red light or any sign that she was being recorded.
Wait, did police find cameras at his practice? I mean, did they even search it?
So it depends on who you ask. Ray Martinez told us that they didn't. But our reporters
found an old article at the
CSU archives that said they did search the doctor's office, but that article also had
some other wrong information in it, so I don't really know for sure.
If we even know, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, Ray Martinez worked the case, so like I want to trust him, but like it's
also been so many years, you never know.
So anyways, fast forward seven years, and this woman is like seeing the headlines about Dr. Hammond's cameras in his basement. And she's like, she has this
like, oh my god moment, like it what I thought was real.
Did she tell the police about her encounter?
No, not right away. She said that once she realized Dr. Hammond had died, she wasn't
sure what could even be done. But as years went by, she kind of got curious as to whether
she was on any of the tapes.
Then obviously she found out Fort Collins PD
had destroyed them and then there was no way of knowing,
which tells me again that they burned all those tapes.
Like it's more proof to me that they did that
before identifying all of the victims
that they didn't want to revictimize
by telling them they were victims.
Now the only thing she was told by police
was that there was some tapes that looked
to be in a different room than the bathroom.
So clearly somewhere else was being filmed.
They never followed up with her after that, so who knows how many victims there were.
And when Dr. Hammond died, the case just got tossed.
And even though he had been arrested and charged,
when you go to the Justice Center in Fort Collins in District Court,
it basically looks like Richard Hammond never even committed a crime.
Which is like one of the most bananas part, I think, about the whole thing.
Yeah.
It just went away.
Literally disappeared.
And I think it might take friends in high places to make that happen.
So, still
looking into Hammond. I will forever be looking into Hammond. But there was one other thing
that came up as we were touring. So, another man named Randy Anglin, his name popped up
because there was a note on one of Tim's lawyers, like papers or something, that just said, Anglin cut off nipples too.
Which feels like an important note in this case.
Especially is what we're looking for, right? So we're looking into him still kind of actively.
We found out that he was on this crime spree from 77 to 87 in Northern Colorado, specifically
really active in 87 for burglaries, sexual assaults.
I haven't found any cases where a nipple was removed yet,
but we did get some records,
and in those he's clearly escalating.
And there is a tip in Peggy's case
about a car with Wyoming license plates near the area
at the time she died,
and he had a car with Wyoming license plates.
So again, more to be done on him, more to be done on everything, which is the whole
point of this story, is to tell people that I think it'd be really easy for police to
say, like, oh, or the DA's office, whatever, like, it's, we've tried everything we can,
it's a closed case.
There's still more that can be done.
And it's so obvious. But for some reason, after Tim was released,
after he won his, like, settlement,
it just stopped.
Now, Tim did go on to write a book about his case
that he self-published, and, I mean, in all these years,
he's been trying to make up for lost time.
He likes to work on cars, he works with horses,
he's spending time with people he loves, he's making up for lost time, he likes to work on cars, he works with horses, he's spending time with people he loves,
he's making up for lost time with them,
and he even has an unexpected confidant these days.
I think it is really ironic
that the former lead investigator in the case
who came to arrest me in 1992
is actually one of my dearest friends now, Linda Holloway.
Turns out she's a really good person.
She put herself out there so much,
Linda Holloway put herself out there so much
to do the right thing.
It just, for one, it greatly endears me to her.
I'm not good at words, but it's very endearing
that she did that.
She put herself out there for me,
and it just speaks volumes to her integrity.
She's just one of those people
that will do, she'll do the right thing regardless.
She just has, she does the right thing.
That's a rare person in this world.
I mean, a lot of people wouldn't go out on a limb like she did.
They would just go with the grain.
Life would have been a lot easier for her if she had just gone with the grain and not
gone against everybody else.
As for Peggy's brother, Tom, he was diagnosed two and a half years ago with stage four colon
cancer, which he said is what has made him so vocal.
He is one of Peggy's only remaining family members
fighting for her, and now he needs us
to take up that torch and fight for her.
I said, you guys have had 30-some years to do your job.
And I said, obviously, at this point,
you're telling me the case is closed.
And I said, but the fella upstairs is gonna,
they're not getting by him.
He already knows who it is.
And he'll take care of this problem.
And they just all, all their faces just turned white.
And I said, he will get the final say.
You've had your chance.
And I said,
what's it going to take to reopen this? Because they told
me it was closed. And they said, short of a full confession,
nothing. I said, what? And they said, unless somebody actually
comes forward and admits to it completely and fully,
we can reopen this case.
And I just, I was, as far as I was concerned
with that meeting, I was done.
I wanted to get out of there.
Because for over 30 some years,
we, I waited around for something to take place for this.
And then they take somebody and they put him in prison for nine years, and he's innocent
as the driven white snow, and they ruin his life to a certain extent.
And then he gets out, and rightfully so, and here we are.
Here we are today, right now, doing this interview, and still nothing has been done about it.
And it's like everybody just wants to turn a blind eye to it and move on.
What?
Move on?
Well, I don't have much longer to go because I have a disease that'll take my life soon
and I want something done about it. I want the people that have the ability to do their job to
get busy and do their job. That's what they need to do instead of just turning a blind eye. Well,
you know, it is what it is, case closed.
There have been a lot of mistakes in this case that I've learned through media, through
the newspaper, from Linda, quite a bit from Linda.
And I'm not happy.
I'm very upset about this.
So I don't have longer to go.
So I want something done about it immediately.
So crime junkies, this is where you come in.
Our team has spent months reporting on this case, producing this live show.
We've taken it to 17 different cities with a shared goal in mind, justice for Peggy Hetrick.
So we're asking you to join us in asking the Colorado Attorney General's Office to reopen Peggy's case, assign a new investigator, and explore new DNA testing.
And we've made it super easy for you.
All you have to do is click the link below, fill out your information, and we're going
to send an email on your behalf.
Literally, it could not be more simple.
This is why we do this show, and we know this is why you guys
listen. So please take a moment. I know a lot of you who went to the show were experiencing
technical difficulties. We have crashed the attorney general's website more than once.
So this is your reminder. If you were at the show and didn't get an email through, please
do that now. And if you're listening, please either stop what you're doing and do it now. Set a reminder.
This is so important.
And Tom is really looking for your help.
And then after your email is sent, we have a special surprise for you.
For those of you who weren't able to make it to a Crime Junkie Life Rule Number 10 tour
stop, or if you did join us and you just want to relive the experience as much as we do,
we are actually sharing a video version of our very first stop here in Indianapolis,
the hometown show. It's in the Crime Junkie Fan Club.
You can see us present this case on stage, watch the interviews with Tim,
Tom, and others involved, see maps and portions of Tim's interrogation, and so much more.
So to watch the Crime Junkie Life Rule Number 10 Tour and learn more about the Crime Junkie Fan Club,
visit crimejunkiepodcast.com.
["Criming Junkie Life Rule Number 10 Tour"]
You can find all the source material for this episode on our website, crimejunkiepodcast.com.
And you can follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast.
Britt and I are actually off next week, but we will be back the following week with a
brand new episode. The Crime Junkie is an AudioChuck production.
So what do you think Chuck?
Do you approve?
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