Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Friday Night Special: 'PORNY' MORMON DENTIST MURDERS WIFE, BIZARRE TWISTS LEADING TO START OF TRIAL
Episode Date: July 12, 2025The lead up to James Craig’s trial has been bizarre.....two postponements, three different attorney teams, five added charges and a crazy action from an attorney, who allegedly set his own house... on fire. Still, the Aurora dentist’s trial finally got underway yesterday. Craig faces six felony counts: Murder in the first degree Two counts of solicitation to commit tampering with physical evidence Three counts of solicitation to commit perjury in the first degree Court Documents show Craig, jailed on a murder charge of his wife, Angela Craig, still allegedly worked to convince inmates, a former mistress and even one of his own children to tamper with evidence, to plant it to make it look like Angela Craig wanted to kill herself. Prosecutors say James Craig even made a botched murder-for-hire attempt on the case’s lead detective just before a second attempt at trial last year. Craig allegedly offered people cash and dental work in return for a coverup . Craig insists he ordered poison because she asked him to. James Craig and his wife Angela were married for over 20 years. They created a beautiful family of six, loving, happy family, happy children. Between work and taking care of their children, the Craigs still manage to fit a workout into their daily routine. The husband and wife go for a run or hit the gym together almost every day, and when they return home, James Craig makes protein shakes or fruit smoothies for breakfast while Angela delves into getting the kids ready for the day. Angela complains of having a really nasty headache, along with problems focusing her eyesight. She goes to the hospital saying she felt tingly and cold. Doctors cannot figure out what's wrong with her. Angela goes to the hospital multiple times, only to be sent home. When she goes back for a third time, that's when she's checked in and her condition deteriorates, coding quickly. Angela passes away. One of Summer Brooks’ dental assistants recalls opening a package for Dr. Craig—that had potassium cyanide in it. She googles the symptoms of cyanide poisoning, and is horrified at how closely they match Angela’s symptoms. She immediately calls Craig’s partner, Ryan Redfearn, hoping he has some other explanation for the contents of the package...but he doesn’t. While visiting Angela, Redfearn tells a nurse about the cyanide, explaining there’s no medical use for the element in their practice. As a mandatory reporter, the nurse calls police. With suspicions raised, Angela Craig is sent for an autopsy with additional toxicology screening. Tests reveal the otherwise healthy mom of six died of poisoning from both cyanide and tetrahydrozoline, a common ingredient in eyedrops. While investigators have no definitive evidence Angela’s food and drinks were poisoned with cyanide, the tests reveal her cyanide levels increased while she was in the hospital. Police then check Craig's computer finding strange searches. One of them was how to poison someone, how to make poison and top five or top 10 undetectable poisons that people won't be able to find after someone has died and will not signal foul play. Less than 24 hours after his wife’s death, dentist James Toliver Craig is arrested for Angela’s murder and additionally charged with tampering with evidence. A 52-page arrest affidavit details Craig’s concerning computer searches, three poison orders, an ongoing affair, and proof Craig took several measures to cover his tracks. Police then learn the dentist allegedly tried to hire his cellmate to kill Aurora PD’s lead detective Bobbi Jo Olson for $20,000. Calling Olson the “worst, dirtiest detective,” James Craig tried to recruit Nathaniel Harris to take her out for cash or free dental work. Olson wasn’t the only person on his list. Craig also asked Harris to kill another Aurora PD officer and two inmates ‘Roger’ and ‘Tommy.’ Joining Nancy Grace today: Eric Faddis - Trial Lawyer and TV Legal Analyst, Founding Partner of Varner Faddis Elite Legal, former felony prosecutor and current criminal defense and civil litigation attorney Dr. Shavaun Scott - Psychotherapist, Author of “The Minds of Mass Killers: Understanding and Interrupting the Pathway to Violence” Fil Waters - Former homicide detective for the Houston police department, President & CEO of Kindred spirits Investigations & Security, Inc., kindredspiritsinvestigations.com Dr Ernest Chiodo - Attorney, Physician, Biomedical Engineer, Toxicologist, Author: “Toxic Tort: Medical and Legal Elements”, www.ernestpchiodo.com Steffan Tubbs - Host: 'Arsenic, DDS - The Bizarre Case of Dr. James Craig'; Former patient of James Craig See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an iHeart Podcast.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Good evening, everybody. I'm Nancy Grace, and this is the Friday Night Special Crime Stories.
And tonight, terrible news for a Colorado dentist, a very popular dentist, accused of murdering his
wife with poisoned shakes.
Ruh-roh.
Again, good evening.
I'm Nancy Grace.
This is Crime Stories, and I want to thank you for being with us.
A lawyer who had been defending a Colorado dentist charged of killing his wife with, of course,
I mean really poison shakes, has just withdrawn from the case.
Has he just figured out he's got a liar for a client?
Seriously?
Because he did it just days before the start of the murder trial.
Now, wait, wait, wait for it. just days before the start of the murder trial.
Now wait, wait, wait for it.
After allegedly setting his own house on fire.
Okay, just recently we covered the case,
I'm going to tell you all about it,
of a lawyer who had called in bomb threats to the courthouse
because he wasn't ready to go to trial.
And then even ended up killing his divorce client. A beautiful woman, a
mother killed her in an ambush so he wouldn't have to go to trial. And now we
get a lawyer who sets fire to his own home just before trial. Okay, you know
what? I may not like it, but as a judge I
would absolutely give you a continuance. Anyway, can we get to the facts at hand?
Or maybe he just realized he's stuck between a rock and a hard spot. He's got
to go to trial and spout out a lot of things he knows to be a lie. Take a
listen to our friend Jackie Howard.
The lead up to James Craig's trial has been bizarre.
Two postponements, three different attorney teams,
five added charges, and a crazy action from an attorney
who allegedly set his own house on fire.
Still, the Aurora Dendist trial finally got underway
yesterday.
Hundreds of potential jurors were in centenials ofrapahoe County Justice Center, filling out questionnaires and
being questioned by attorneys. 46 year old Craig faces six felony counts,
murder in the first degree, two counts of solicitation to commit tampering
with physical evidence, three counts of solicitation to commit perjury in the
first degree court documents show that Craig
jailed on a murder charge of his wife.
Angela Craig still allegedly worked
to convince inmates, a former mistress,
and even one of his own children to
tamper with evidence to plant it to
make it look like Angela Craig
wanted to kill herself.
Prosecutors say James Craig even made
a botched murder for hire attempt
on the case's lead detective just
before a second attempt at trial.
Last year, Craig allegedly offered
people cash and dental work in
return for a cover up.
Craig insists he ordered poison
because his wife asked him to.
What happened to the must just's just say, frisky dentist
who had begun yet another sex affair behind his wife's back?
Clearly not his first.
And this with a fellow dental worker, a Texas orthodontist.
The dentist accused of poisoning his wife, Shakes, with cyanide
and a chemical that is found in eye drops.
Wow! If he put as much thought into fixing his marriage as he did into how to murder his wife,
that'd probably be the happiest couple on earth. That said, what do we know about what happened
to Angela Craig? Take a listen to this.
After multiple recent hospital visits, Angela again checked into a hospital Wednesday morning
complaining of a severe headache and dizziness.
Around 2 p.m. she had a seizure, her condition rapidly declining, doctors moving her to the
ICU where she was put on life support before passing away Saturday.
Joining me in All-Star panel to make sense of what we are learning.
This mom of six, six, and she's still really young as well.
Apparently, you know, college sweethearts fall in love.
They get married and immediately start having children.
That's how a mom this young can have six children already.
And I don't get it.
I want to go straight out to Stefan Tubbs,
host of the podcast,
Arsenic DDS,
The Bizarre Case of Dr. James Craig,
which is an incredible podcast, by the way.
Okay, I've done all this investigation and research,
and I learned even more by listening to that.
Arsenic DDS,
The Bizarre Case of Dr. James Craig.
Stefan, I want us to start with this young mom, Angela,
suddenly develops all these symptoms.
Nobody can figure out what's wrong with her,
and she just, bam, dies.
Now, tell me about her original sentence, Stephen Tubbs.
Nancy, she got incredibly sick and it wasn't just one time in the hospital. It was multiple
times that she was feeling nauseous, that she just didn't feel something was right,
severe headaches. And she went to a local hospital the first time to the ER.
He was discharged and then went to the same hospital
like a week later.
It was the third hospital.
Hey, Stefan, Stefan, hold on.
Hold on, Stefan.
I wanna go straight out to our shrink joining us
in addition to incredible panel of guests.
Joining me, Dr. Siobhan Scott,
psychotherapist, author of The Minds of Mass Killers.
So much more.
Dr. Siobhan, thank you for being with us.
Have you ever noticed how women's symptoms
just get discounted?
They come in, I'm nauseous, I feel dizzy,
I've got this severe headache,
and they're like, oh, you're fine, bye.
You have an over and over to Angela.
What is it?
Are all women, quote, hysterical?
Yeah, there's even something called the WW syndrome,
and that stands for whiny woman.
And medical doctors have been known
to talk about the women with WW.
Wait, wait, head blowing off right now.
The WWU syndrome, is that what you just said? Yeah, yeah, whiny woman. Yeah, I've read some,
some women doctors have written books about this problem in the medical profession where
women are just dismissed and not taken seriously. Okay.
I've got so much to say about that, but it will get me totally sidetracked off this woman,
Angela, mother of six.
Okay.
Back to you.
Stefan Tubbs joining me, who has researched and investigated this case just to the detail.
Stefan, so she had headaches, a severe headache.
I think from what I recall,
that's what really made her decide to go to the hospital.
She was having nausea and felt dizzy,
but it was the headaches.
I think she was worried that she was having a stroke
because the headache was so severe.
Yeah, she was very, very ill.
She was very, very concerned
about her own health and safety.
This is a mother of six.
Not all of the children were inside the home,
but she's incredibly sick and wondering how the hell she got sick.
Take a look at this. My stomach feels fine.
Although at one point she said she had nausea, but my head feels funny and dizzy.
Very strange. I'm dizzy. My eyes don't want to focus. I
don't feel right in my head. No, this is just weird. I'm dizzy in my head. My eyes
are working slowly. My body's responding slowly. I feel drugged. Response from
husband, the family man Dennis. Given our history, I know that must be triggering
just for the record. I didn't drug you. Whoa. Okay. As Shakespeare said, me thinks that
doth protest too much. You know, like when a cop walks by and you go, I don't have
drugs on me. Anyway, let's get back to it. Listen. She was complaining of having a
really nasty headache. She was also complaining about her eyesight. She was
having trouble focusing. She said that she felt tingly.
She said that she felt cold. She's concerned that it could be a sinus infection. And then there's
some conversation about maybe she's diabetic. No one is able to find an answer for what is causing
this otherwise healthy mother of six to be feeling these horrendous symptoms.
She goes back a few days later, March 9th, same symptoms, nausea, dizziness,
headaches, even some vomiting. Again, the doctors can't figure out what's wrong
with her. They send her home and then when she goes back for a third time,
that's when she's checked in and her condition deteriorates quickly.
And there you see Dr. Siobhan Scott with us who just dropped a bombshell on me about the
WW syndrome whiny woman syndrome. Now we're on round three. Okay she's at the hospital a third
time they keep sending her home and sending her home.
Now she codes.
I guess that means code red or whatever they call it in the hospital when you're dying.
Yeah, yeah.
Just a horrifying, horrifying situation for a young woman to be in with no explanation.
It's hard to imagine how frightened she must have been.
Eric Faddis joining me. High-profile trial lawyer,
TV legal analyst, founding partner, Varner, Faddis, elite legal, former felony prosecutor.
Eric, don't you just hate it when your own client who's not charged with anything,
out of the blue said, I didn't drug you, because that's what he said. Nobody said he did drug anybody.
And all of a sudden he goes, just FYI, I didn't drug you.
If my husband said FYI, I didn't drug you,
I'm going to need a defense attorney,
because who would jump up and say that
unless they drug the wife?
I hear you.
It's a curious statement, certainly suspicious
in the eyes of many.
On the other hand, I think his defense is going to argue that the marriage was on the rocks. Things were tense. Things were dicey. And so, you know, people say things in the heat of an
event like this that that certainly could be triggering for both parties. But yeah,
the gravity of the statement and sort of it coming out of nowhere is not lost.
Triggering, first of all, I don't know how that got popular, triggering for both parties.
Are you telling me he, the dentist, is triggered?
What are you talking about?
Why?
She's dead.
Okay?
Why are you talking about him getting triggered?
This conversation preceded the death.
What I was saying is that, you know, when the relationship is super rocky, sometimes
when there are serious medical events that come up or just serious life events, those
things can be, can add to the, to the tenseness of the situation, the stress of the situation.
And he could have been experiencing distress as well.
And sometimes things come out.
Rocky, Rocky, that's what you call a string of mistresses.
Rocky, that's more like an earthquake.
It is a serious event,
which just could have further been destabilizing
for the relationship.
When something serious happens, when your spouse is sick,
I think defense is gonna argue that,
hey, things were really distressing,
there was heightened emotionality,
and sometimes people just say things.
That's at least how the defense will likely frame it.
Who is this guy?
My name is Dr. Jim Craig and I practice at Summerbrook Dental Group.
My approach to dentistry begins with sincerely listening to the patient
and wanting to find out more about where they're coming from and what they're looking for and what they want.
Hmm. That's from the official Summerbrook Dentistry Facebook page.
I want to go straight out to Phil Waters, former homicide detective from the Houston
PD, President, CEO, Kindred Spirits Investigations and Security.
Phil, I know that Eric Faddis is going to turn purple and tell me this means nothing. But when your husband,
the dentist who sits on one of those little rolly chairs all day long, suddenly starts
working out and developing interest in getting spray tans, you better pay attention to what's
going on.
In homicide, of course, we'd call that a clue. You know, it watches behavior and the things
that he's doing there. I mean, I guess in isolation for that setting, he appears to be a very attentive
dentist and he's really into what he's doing and he's trying to entertain his clients, his patients, as well as do the proper dental work on them. So in that particular
setting it does look like if, of course we don't know what the timeline here is, but
if he's been hitting the gym and doing some things that are trying to get his physique
in a better shape, that might be an indicator, of course, to his, his wife
in a, in a general sense that though, are you doing this for me or are you doing this
for some other purpose?
Okay.
Take a look at this, Fattis.
Uh, and that's from the Summerbrook Dentistry Facebook page.
That's where we're getting that.
Do you see somebody's pumping iron in the gym all of a sudden?
He does look a little jacked there.
Defense is going to say so what everyone
is allowed to take care of their own
health as the homicide detective just said.
Maybe he was taking care of himself to
sort of rekindle the flame with his
wife at the time. We just don't know.
But yeah, I mean,
even if the relationship was on the rocks
and he was preparing for something new,
that's not a crime when Angela is
admitted to the hospital for the
third time in two weeks, James Craig only stops at the hospital for half an hour before
going out to get food for his wife. Craig returns an hour and a half later
and goes into Angela's room alone. Just a few minutes later, Angela has a severe
seizure and her vitals crash. While hospital staff attempt to revive Angela,
Craig takes photos
of his unconscious wife. Angela is stabilized with the ventilator but declared brain dead.
Takes photos of his wife? Before we go to a renowned physician and biomedical engineer,
Dr. Ernest Scioto, let me go back to Stefan Tubbs, host of Arsenic DDS. Stefan, why is he taking
pictures of his wife as she's dying and they're desperately trying to resuscitate her and she's
got all kind of tubes in her? What happened? He's at the foot of the bed and it's almost as if he's
almost halfway out of that room, Nancy. It was bizarre
to see for the first time, but this is really the goodbye. I think he was taking it for
some of her family that were not in town. She has a huge family. They mostly primarily
live in Utah, but he was there. He then calls the business partner and his wife, they had
all, you know, done things as couples before. And this was
the goodbye when she was coding out at CU Health. And it was there that, to me, the
entire domino started to fall.
Speaking of dominoes falling to Dr. Ernest Scioto, not only physician, but attorney, biomedical engineer, toxicologist, and author of Toxic Tort, Medical
and Legal Elements.
Dr. Scioto, thank you for joining us.
I'm sure in your residency and in practicing medicine, you've been in a lot of sick rooms
and even death rooms.
Do you not find that bizarre that he is taking pictures
of his wife as she's coding out, in other words,
as hospital personnel are furiously trying to save her life
and he's taking pictures?
It's highly unusual, yes.
Dr. Scioto, have you ever seen someone take photos
of their wife while they're trying to resuscitate
her and bring her back to life?
You know, pounding on her chest, using those electrical stimulators on her chest, everybody's
screaming, everybody's rushing into the room and he's in the corner taking pictures.
Have you ever seen that happen, Dr. Scioto?
No.
I haven't either and I have investigated,
prosecuted, and covered, I can't even count, the number of deaths and homicides.
To Dr. Siobhan Scott, right there as Stefan Tubbs said, that was when the weirdness was marked and noted.
When he was taking pictures, I don't care what he says, this is to send to her extended
family.
That's BS, technical legal term.
What does that mean?
I mean, I know something's wrong with it, but I don't know what it is.
Yeah. I mean, I know something's wrong with it, but I don't know what it is. Yeah, it's a puzzle to me as well, because it seems so out of the normal range of human behavior.
None of us can put ourselves in that situation and imagine that we'd be picking up a camera as our loved one was dying.
So what in the world was he doing? I don't know that I have a good answer for that, but it's definitely a red flag. While his wife, Angela, is fighting for her life in the hospital, her devoted
husband is emailing his mistress.
James told her something had happened to Angela and she responded with how sorry
she was for him and that she wished she was helping him not pulling him away.
She stated she knew it had to be so hard, what he was going through and that she
wanted to be there for him, but did not want to mix with his family and friends and pretend to be only
a friend when there was something more.
Oh yeah, that's so hard on a mistress when she has to pretend to just be friends in front
of his wife.
I hate when that happens.
Fattis, what do you have to say to that?
What about when a jury hears about him
while his wife is lying there dying? He's emailing his mistress, his hottie, and she says,
I can't take it. I can't stand to act like we're just friends when we're so much more.
Has everybody lost their minds? On the surface, certainly problematic. It's going to be difficult
to neutralize for the defense.
I think that they might consider something like,
there have been instances where even a person's wife has
given them an organ.
There's instances like that.
And then there is still infidelity.
There is still cheating.
Human beings do underhanded stuff.
They do stuff that is surprising,
that is hard to understand.
And I think that that could be what was going on here,
and that could be how the defense postures it to the jury.
But you know, there's another whole thing there.
Hold on just a moment.
To Dr. Siobhan Scott, many women would tell you, not me,
but many women would tell you,
I'd rather my husband just go have sex with somebody
than to actually fall in love.
I mean, if my husband did either one,
basically it's open marriage, open casket, bam.
That says it all.
But some women would prefer the husband
if they're gonna do anything,
to just go have sex with somebody, wham bam, done.
As opposed to falling in love with someone.
Can you explain that odd sentiment?
The difference between having that kind of deep attachment
with somebody, I guess, would be the love.
And so, yeah, there are even people
who have very open marriages
where sexual exploits outside of the relationship
are absolutely fine, but
the idea is that you always have your primary emotional bond with your partner.
Colorado mom of six, Angela Craig spends the month of March in and out of hospitals complaining
of strange symptoms for which doctors seem to have no answers. Meanwhile, her dentist
husband is receiving mysterious
packages to his office. You earlier heard podcaster, the star of arsenic DDS, Stefan
Tubbs refer to dominoes began to fall. Well, here they go. Listen, still in the parking lot.
After visiting Angela in the hospital, Ryan Redfern gets a call from James Craig, his partner in Summerbrook.
As Craig starts to ask Redfern if he had said anything to Angela's nurses, Redfern cuts
him off, saying he told the nurses about the package Craig received at the office.
Craig says the package contained a ring for Angela, but Redfern replies, it's not a ring.
We know what's in there.
After their phone call, James Craig sends Ryan Redfern a
flurry of angry texts, accusing him of creating huge problems by getting police involved without
talking to him first. Craig tells Redfern if he really is a friend, he and the remaining office
employees will not speak with cops anymore. Huge red flag when somebody says don't talk to the cop.
Huge red flag when somebody says, don't talk to the cop.
Crime stories with Nancy Grace.
Another bizarre twist in the case of a Colorado dentist
accused of murdering his wife with poison milkshakes,
his lawyer sets his own, the lawyer's, house on fire to get out of
trying the case, of defending him. Robert Working, a partner in LFD defense, along with
his wife, Lisa Fine Moses, was arrested last weekend after L.E. law enforcement fined him
sitting on the porch of his house as it burned
behind him.
This is according to the Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office.
Now he's not the first.
Workings withdrawal is the third time lawyers have removed themselves as defense attorneys
for the dentist, arrested after the death of his wife
and the mother of his, wait for it, six children.
He has six children with the woman and then kills her?
Really?
Prosecutors claim the dentist started a sex affair,
again, not his first, with a Texas orthodontist
and the next thing you know, his wife is dead.
But again, this is not the first time a lawyer
has gone to extreme measures to get off of a case.
Do you remember the name Gregory Moore?
Because I will never forget it.
He is accused of brutally murdering a Cleveland nurse
in this bizarre plot to avoid taking her case to court.
And he's just a divorce lawyer for Pete's sake, much less this guy who is defending a murder case
and sitting in front of his house burning down. Now Gregory Moore, that's a whole nother can of worms. The victim in that case, oh just a beautiful
woman, Eliza Sherman, was on her way to discuss the divorce case with her lawyer when she
was approached by a hooded figure and stabbed 10 times. Again, that wasn't his first. He
was accused of calling in multiple bomb threats to courthouses to get out of
trying cases. But back to the case in chief, attorney Robert Working, a partner at LFM
defense, along with his wife, this must be LFM, Lisa Fine Moore, arrested last weekend
after deputies find him sitting on the porch of his house while it burned to the ground.
This according to the Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office, all because we think he
wanted to get off the case of a Colorado dentist accused of murdering his wife.
Are the facts that bad in the case?
You said the dominoes began to fall.
What about the dental practice partner?
Yeah, Ryan Redford and some would consider him to be the hero in this because he's the
one that after the phone call and as you just outlined on the program, he tells Jim via
the cell phone. He says, Jim, stop talking, get a lawyer to backtrack. We're talking about
arsenic that was allegedly purchased online. I mean, the computer records at the dental practice were very easy for police investigators,
but it was the package of potassium cyanide that was delivered to the actual dentist's
office opened by some employee.
She starts to go, what is this potassium cyanide?
She literally sees the skull and crossbones on the packaging.
She looks it up.
She clicks in her mind, wait a minute, this is exactly,
these are the kinds of symptoms that Angela Craig is experiencing.
She then calls Redfer and the partner,
and that's how the dominoes start to fall.
And joining me, Dr. Ernest Scioto,
attorney physician, biomedical engineer, toxicologist,
and author of Toxic Tort, Medical and Legal Elements.
Dr. Scioto, explain what the symptoms of that particular poison would be.
Well, there's a number of different poisons involved, but cyanide, you just really have very rapid loss of blood pressure, loss of consciousness,
and very rapid death.
Arsenic, you tend to get peripheral neuropathy, you get burning in your hands and feet.
It's more of a slow poison. What's really interesting is the tetrahydrozole,
which is interestingly found in eye drops to get the redness out of your eyes.
It's what they call an alpha agonist. It causes constriction of
blood vessels and that causes confusion, can cause loss of consciousness, coma, and that sounds
a lot more like the symptoms that she was having in the hospital, the wife. Guys, we look carefully
at the movements and the actions leading up to her last hospitalization and
what led up to the previous two hospitalizations.
Listen.
The husband and wife go for a run or hit the gym together almost every day, and when they
return home, James Craig makes protein shakes or fruit smoothies for breakfast, while Angela
delves into getting the kids ready for the day.
We think he was using the poison Angela
over the course of several weeks actually,
putting it in her protein shake,
even helping her along or trying to reassure her
when she was complaining of sickness, dizziness, nausea.
He was sort of still encouraging her to drink a fluid.
Okay, let me understand something.
Stefan Tubbs joining me, isn't it true that on a prior occasion, she had gotten stabilized and then he goes out and comes back and brings her food like a doting husband in the hospital.
And suddenly she goes into seizures. That's true. Yeah, she was in the hospital. Remember three times. She was in the hospital three different times. Reading the affidavit,
which reads like a bad Hollywood script,
it looks like investigators feel
she is consistently being offered the food
in primary fashion, the protein shakes,
while she's in.
And keep in mind all of these text messages
that are going back and forth.
Do you feel like a smoothie?
Is there anything I can bring you? And this goes on for the better part of the month of
March.
Stefan Tubbs, are you telling me he would email her or text her in the hospital, say,
can I bring you a smoothie?
One thousand percent. That is in the affidavit. I've seen the screenshots of the text messages.
She's in the hospital three different times. There's text messaging. I mean, dozens and
dozens of them, if not hundreds of them going back and forth. Do you feel like
something? What do you feel like? Can I bring you anything? And it was usually
in the form of a smoothie. And then the other shoe drops. Listen with
suspicions raised. Angela Craig is sent for an autopsy with additional toxicology screening. Tests reveal the otherwise healthy mom
of six died of poisoning from both cyanide and tetrahydrosaline, a common
ingredient in eye drops. While investigators have no definitive evidence,
Angela's food and drinks were poisoned with cyanide. The tests reveal her
cyanide levels increased while she was in the hospital. Stefan Tubbs, her levels increased while she's in the hospital.
Yeah, I think that was probably the biggest shocker in a shocking story in
the Denver metro area that we got word and read the autopsy. Her levels of
cyanide increased while she's in the hospital.
I mean, to me, it was and remains unprecedented.
I've never heard a story like that.
And doctors didn't know again
what they were looking for, right?
And it was just when the domino started to fall
and people started to talk, the business partner,
that they started to look into, wait a minute,
these are the signs of poisoning.
And certainly we know what the autopsy revealed.
But I mean, to me, Stefan, it would all blow up when the dental assistant opens up a package
and it's cyanide.
Oh, remember though, Nancy, it was supposed to be a ring for Angela.
I mean, the cockamamie stories just were over and over and over.
Where do you get cyanide, Stefan?
You can just order it up on Amazon. I mean, where do you get cyanide, Stefan? You can just order it up on Amazon.
I mean, where do you get cyanide?
So one of the two,
there were purchase orders for amazon.com,
which was amazing.
I can't believe it was either cyanide
or the potassium side.
That was a joke.
Are you serious?
You can get cyanide on Amazon?
There you go, right there on your screen.
Yeah, I'm gonna buy this on Amazon.
First of all, somebody, Bezos.
Arsenic.
Oh yeah, arsenic.
Holy moly.
Yeah, and then the best of the arsenic.
Package left inside residence's mailbox.
So I guess he thought he was being super smart
by having it delivered to the dentist office
so his wife wouldn't find the arsenic.
Right.
Don't open this.
Okay.
So what happens, Stefan, when the dental assistant opens up a box and it's arsenic?
I think her eyes about bugged out of her head is what happened.
She sees this package, she opens it up.
Another office assistant came in and said, you weren't supposed to open that.
Well, cat's out of the bag.
She sees the skull and crossbones and then she again puts the pieces together. Wait a
minute, potassium cyanide. She calls Dr. Redfern, the partner of Jim Craig and says, you got
a package here. And then that's where you fast forward, you know, Redfern confronts
Jim Craig and says, why are you buying potassium cyanide for the dental
practice?
And of course the lie was, oh, that's really, it's a gift.
It was a ring for Angela.
Well, there was no ring inside.
Dr. Ernest Scioto joining us, a renowned physician and lawyer and author.
Dr. Scioto, she couldn't taste something odd in her protein shakes.
I mean, what does arsenic or cyanide taste like?
Arsenic is going to taste sort of have a garlic sort of taste, whereas cyanide really wouldn't.
Sometimes it has an odor of bitter almonds.
So whether or not she could taste the arsenic or cyanide would really be a matter of how
much was in the shake.
A small amount she may not taste it.
He clearly thought he was more intelligent than he was.
He was using a different computer in his dentist practice, the one that he owned. And then he had this alternate email address. I think it was something along
the lines of Jimandwaffles at gmail.com, at gmail or at aol or at hotmail.com. I don't
recall which exactly, but hardly a criminal mastermind. He was actually in $2 million of personal debt,
and it was because he made some really terrible investments
in some dodgy cryptocurrency turned out
to be worth absolutely nothing.
He gambled the family pot
with these really risky investment choices.
And then by the time we came to find out about him, he was really
up to his neck. He filed for personal bankruptcy, he filed for professional bankruptcy.
Oh, my stars, Eric Faddis, renowned attorney. Don't you just hate it when your mastermind just uses a fake email to find out all about cyanide and order arsenic from Amazon.
That really worked.
Well, Nancy, you know, there is a potential alternative explanation as to why he was doing
that.
As we've talked about, his marriage of 23 years was on the rocks.
He had filed for bankruptcy twice.
He had a history of depression.
Cyanide can be used to hurt
others, but it can also be used to hurt oneself. And that's something that one might not want
to broadcast to other people and might use surreptitious means to try to procure it,
which it sounds like he did.
You know, Eric, you know something? You've got to tell, and I better inform you about
it before you go to Vegas. The crazier your arguments get, the faster you talk. And I
love that about you. And I'm telling you because I really don't think you can stop
yourself.
But that said, so you're suggesting now you're just spinning it out, right?
Like you're throwing a frisbee, you're just throwing it at me that he really ordered the
cyanide and the arsenic for himself, right?
You just say that.
It acts as if it's equally consistent with that in some people's appraisal.
Okay. Well, what about this?
Have you ever had a client try to, um,
suborn perjury, kind of a deal, dentures for perjury?
Listen.
According to prosecutors,
this isn't the first time James Craig
has tried to recruit fake witnesses.
James Craig gets friendly with several inmates
at the Arapahoe Detention Center
and learns William Billy Walden's mother hates her dentures
but can't afford implants.
Craig asks Walden to let him talk to his mom
the next time he gives her a call.
Over the phone, Craig tells Rebecca Walden
he'll give her a brand new set of teeth when he gets out,
saying he's certain to get off
because he didn't kill his wife.
Craig gets Walden's address and tells her he'll give her more details in a letter.
So fat is dentures for perjury thoughts. Not the best deal. Certainly a bad look.
But on the other hand, defense is gonna say, Hey, look, he was he's been in jail
for a long time. He's been adamant about his innocence. He's getting desperate.
He needs to do something to try to change things.
And this is the sort of hair-brain scheme he came up with.
It's problematic, but doesn't mean he committed murder.
Okay, I had a funny feeling you would say that
about the dentures for perjury scheme.
Well, what about hotties for dentures?
Hotties, H-O-T-T-I-E-S, listen, fatties.
In early 2024, a letter from Craig to Rebecca Walden,
inmate William Walden's mother,
was returned to the Rappahoe Detention Center
as undeliverable.
The letter contains an offer to provide Rebecca Walden
with free dental implants
if she recruits several young, attractive women
to pose as Craig's affair partners.
Craig instructs Walden to have the women tell authorities that Angela confronted them about Craig's affairs, then recruited them to help her frame
Craig for her murder.
Okay, what happened, Stephen Tubbs? Where did the hotties enter the scene?
In a desperate plea to get out of the Arapahoe County jail. I mean, at this point, there's
no death penalty in Colorado. He has nothing to lose.
He's been accused of trying...
Solicitation for murder of the lead detective in this.
I mean, it's not just the hotties or the free teeth or whatever.
Jim Craig is trying any way that he can, at least according to those of us following the
case closely, watching him do whatever he can to possibly grasp at straws to convince one juror once this
thing finally starts to create that, that, that, uh, that doubt.
But it's been crazy.
The, the, the hits just keep on coming.
I literally less than two weeks ago had a guy reach out to me.
Don't know him from anybody.
He says, Hey, I was serving in the Arapahoe County detention facility with Craig until last October.
You won't believe what he told me.
He even gave me a letter.
It's crazy and it continues.
In the letters to Constantinitis,
Craig offers a blank check in exchange for spoofed texts,
phone records and doctored photographs
that can help convince authorities.
Constantinitis knew Angela in life
and that the mom of six was suicidal
after learning of his latest affair.
Craig details some of his previous affairs in the letter,
admitting he first cheated on Angela with a patient in 2009
and provides personal information about his children
in an attempt to make their lives seem credible.
to make their lives seem credible.
Crime stories with Nancy Grace.
An Aurora, Colorado dentist lawyer withdraws from the case after his arson arrest.
Also, we've learned that Craig's initial November 2024 trial was thrown off the rails when his
then attorney cited new information from discovery that compelled him to step down.
Gee, like what?
He did it.
Now, working's withdrawal after the arson marks another example of a lawyer leaving Craig's defense
team just as it's about to go to trial.
Craig has a slew of charges against him in addition to murder, soliciting, tampering
with evidence, perjury, another case, another charge of soliciting murder, attempting to arrange multiple murders from behind bars.
Now in another bizarre twist after the lawyer working's arrest his wife Lisa Moses who is
co-counsel for Craig, remains on the case.
She's there still with attorney Ashley Witham,
and they will represent Craig moving into the trial.
Now, all the documents related to the arson have been sealed
for some reason, claiming it is connected to the murder trial in some way.
There's no doubt, according to reports reports that it was an arson because fire crews found evidence
of an incendiary accelerant.
That means gas or toluene or some flammable liquid.
And that raises questions about exactly what went on that night.
That said, I'm going to go back to Eric Faddis, veteran trial lawyer, defense attorney.
In all seriousness, I've been pulling your leg a little bit with the fantastical nature
of some of the facts we're learning.
But we have a mother of six dead, not just dead, but suffering for months from cyanide
and arsenic poisoning before she died.
You say it's not the husband, I say it is.
He's still innocent, he has not been proven guilty in a court of law.
But let's just take a look at what we're hearing right now.
Not only did he try to arrange, quote, hotties, attractive women to claim they were his sex
partners, to tell authorities his dead wife confronted him about his affairs and that
she was going to commit suicide.
So your suicide fantasy is actually hatching in the defendant's mind. All right. So he's taking your cue.
But he's soliciting suborning, for lack of a better word, perjury by hotties to
say his dead wife confronted them. Not only that, he has a dentures for perjury
scheme with somebody else.
Now we're learning, according to Stefan Tubbs, we're learning he tried to order a hit on a detective.
Have a detective murdered. What about it?
You know, I think what he'll say is that a person who feels that they are innocent,
they are being railroaded, they have been in jail for a long period of time, months
and months, that they don't feel like they have a way to get out. They're going to resort
to desperate acts. And perhaps in his mind, he thought that, hey, if I eliminate the head
honcho in this investigation, perhaps the investigation falls apart. Certainly not lawful,
certainly not okay, but also not the
same thing as proving him guilty of murdering his wife. Dr. Ernest Scioto joining us, renowned
physician and author. Dr. Scioto, what does a victim experience as they die from cyanide
or arsenic poisoning? Well, they're's they're gonna be different. Arsenic
is going to be sort of a slow agonizing gap whereas cyanide is gonna be very
rapid. You're really gonna end up with sufficient cyanide. You're going to end up dying within moments. So, um,
there are really two different types of, of death due to two very different
toxins.
Phil Waters joining us, former homicide detective, Houston PD, president of
Kindred Spirits Investigations.com. You know, Phil, you and I have handled a lot of murders,
a lot of homicides, be they involuntary, voluntary,
or malice, murder.
It takes a special kind of mind.
Would you agree, Phil?
This is not getting angry and pulling a gun and shooting.
This is months and months of planning, of scheming,
of Google searches and lovingly feeding your wife protein shakes laced with poison and
then watching her suffer Phil.
Well, exactly. You know, this is a, this is an evil act on this guy's part.
I won't even recognize him by saying his name.
And we see this, and this is a, he is obsessed with killing his wife, murdering his wife,
the mother of his six children.
And this is something that for, as you put it, for months has been thinking about this
every minute of every day.
And so when he's going into these search engines and trying to figure out what kind of poison
is the best one to use and that kind of thing, I tell you what, it's just, I hope he's a better dentist than he was a murderer, because what he did is idiotic
in terms of trying to accomplish the task, which is murder his wife, and try to have some sort of
a story that's going to take the suspicion away from you. Everything he did in the process here
pointed to him. So when we get in these investigations, we
always look for affirmative links. We let the evidence take us where we need to be.
And it's always a journey for the truth. In this particular guy, I listened to the defense
with all due respect, these episodes of isolation that we're talking about where, you know,
he's cheating, that
didn't make him a murder, and so forth and so on. This has to be looked at in a timeline
of events if we can determine when this started. And then, of course, we know where it ended.
And what were the events that occurred in between that got us to that point? You know,
this taking pictures and so forth of his wife in the hospital when she's dying. You know, this taking pictures and so forth of the, of his wife in the hospital when she's dying.
You know, I, when I was listening to that discussion, I'm more prone to believe that he
was going to use those pictures to gain some sympathy from the woman that he was wanting to
disquire around. So, you know, he had a purpose for all the things that he did. And it was
just kind of stupid as it stupid does. It just continued to get more idiotic as he went
through this process, thinking that what people are going to believe, this story that he's
come up with.
And, you know, another thing, Phil, as you and I, you as a homicide
detective, me as a felony prosecutor, we would go about our business every day not thinking
that an inmate behind bars is trying to have us killed, have us killed to thwart the investigation.
I bet you never thought about that while you were detecting.
No, when I worked narcotics, I did have a contract put out on me, so I'm a little familiar with it.
But in terms of my work with the homicide...
Didn't we all, for Pete's sake, we've all gotten death threats.
The first one I had was faxed over from the Fulcher County Jail.
Didn't take too much to figure that one out.
But for someone to actually manifest, did you come up? Yes. County Jail. Didn't take too much to figure that one out. But it is, it is the level of
arrogance. Yes. Yes. The level of arrogance to think he can get away with everything and
fix it all by doing indentures for perjury scheme and having the lead detective murdered.
This woman is dead. and probably her last thoughts were
who's gonna take care of my children. This murder trial is going forward come
hell or high water. We wait as justice unfolds. Now when I said Friday night
special, see this was special. You believe me? Nancy Grace signing off.
Goodbye.
