Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - GLAM MORNING TV ANCHOR STABS MOM, 80, DEAD IN BEDROOM BLOODBATH
Episode Date: November 4, 2025Shortly after 7:40am, Alyssa Castro and her boyfriend are in their car in their south Witchita neighborhood, when a neighbor waves them down. As the woman approaches, they see what appears to be blood... on the woman's hands. The woman asks to borrow a phone to call 911, then takes off with the phone back into a house. 911 dispatch is called about a possible stabbing and relays a message to first responders that a woman says there has been a stabbing in her home. Dispatch relays information that they person calling says the stabbing was in self-defense. She was trying to save herself from her mother. Arriving at the home at 7:52am Wichita police find a woman outside the home with cuts on her hands and blood on her clothing. Inside the house they find 81-year-old Anita Avers unresponsive in her bed with multiple stab wounds. Both women are taken to the hospital Joining Nancy Grace today: Jim Elliott - Attorney with Butler Snow, Legal Counsel for Various Georgia Municipalities and Other Governmental Entities Caryn Stark - Forensic Psychologist, renowned TV and Radio Trauma Expert and Consultant; Instagram: carynpsych, FB: Caryn Stark Private Practice Dan Murphy - Former NYPD Detective-Sergeant, Joint Terrorism Task Force, Former Chief Security Officer, US Bancorp, Co-Host of "Gold Shields" Podcast, and Author: “Workplace Safety: Establishing an Effective Violence Prevention Program” Dr. Priya Banerjee - Board-certified Forensic Pathologist and Anatomic Pathologist, Anchor Forensic Pathology Consulting Melissa McCarty-Reporter & Host of the “Killer Genes” podcast, Author of “The Making of a Crime Reporter;" TikTok: McCarty143, Instagram: MelissaMcCarty1, Dave Mack - Investigative Reporter, ‘Crime Stories’ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
A glamorous morning TV anchor runs from a bedroom bloodbath deadly stabbing.
I'm Nancy Grace.
This is Crime Stories.
I want to thank you for being with us.
Angel and Mock, a familiar face in the Kansas City news scene gained popularity as the morning
show anchor for Fox 2. Her career was marked by her engaging presence and dedication to delivering
the news, not knowing she would find herself back the limelight for all the wrong reasons.
That deadly, that fatal bloodbath in the home bedroom leaves her mother, 80 years old and
apparently bedridden, stabbed dead. What do we know? And what did a glam morning TV
anchor have to do with it. Why was she running out of the house, drenched in blood? Listen.
There was a woman who came and approached our vehicle with blood. Like, her hands were filled.
Her body was filled with blood asking to call 911. 7.40 a.m. Alyssa Castro and her boyfriend are
in their car in Wichita when a neighbor waves them down. As the woman approaches, they see what appears
to be blood. A lot of blood on the woman's hands. The woman asked to borrow a phone to call 911,
then takes off with the phone back into a house.
Faster, if she was a cane, she was pretty shicken up,
and she seemed scared, and she just ran off.
That from our friends at K-A-K-E,
straight out to Melissa McCarty, joining us,
investigative reporter, host of The Killer Jeans podcast
and author of a brand-need book,
The Making of a Crime Reporter.
Melissa, thank you for being with us.
Now, who is the woman sitting in a car
that observes Angeline,
the morning TV anchor running out of the home covered in blood.
Who is she?
She was a neighbor in the car with her boyfriend and she watched everything unfold and
she said she was traumatized by it.
Imagine her just sitting there pulling into the neighborhood and she sees this woman
frantically running towards them begging for help.
So obviously they stop and she's asking for a cell phone.
The boyfriend hands over her cell phone and she takes it runs inside.
the house and doesn't return the informant the neighbor refers to angeline muck as this woman specifically
this woman a lot of people are going to get face to face with a turkey this thursday because it is
thanksgiving and because so many people are going to be basing their turkey we do like to talk about
grease and where it should go a lot of people don't know that all that grease everybody on the
block is cooking a turkey and that grease can be very problematic that is from our friends at fox two
and that is Angela Mock, who ran from the home covered in blood.
Curious to Dan Murphy joining us, former NYPD detective sergeant, on the Joint Terrorism Task Force and former Chief Security Officer,
co-host of a hit podcast, Gold Shields. Dan Murphy, you know, this woman, the TV anchor, is drenched in blood.
When police finally get to the scene, they find something.
even worse. Her 80-year-old mother, apparently bedridden, is stabbed dead in her own bed.
That's the mom on the left. The mom is Anita Avers. I think she actually turned 81 just before her
stabbing death. So where do you even start with a scene like that, Dan?
So immediately upon response, you're going to want to give any medical aid you can.
At this point, if the person is not clearly deceased, and even if they are, medical personnel
have to come and attend to them, which is going to disturb the scene a bit, but it has to be done.
Then you're going to want to preserve all the evidence you can.
And I've been in blood bets, and you have to walk gingerly around them and wear those little
booties, but it needs to be done because later on, the evidence is all going to speak through experts
to a jury.
So right now, you're preserving evidence and preserving.
You know, a piece of evidence that is commonly fumbled through.
So nobody's fault, and that's footprints.
When you have a blood bath like the one that happened at the home of this Fox News Anchor,
every blood marking matters.
It could be sprayback.
For instance, this is a stabbing death.
The mother, an 81-year-old woman, is stabbed multiple times.
Think Ted Bundy, right, and the clubbing, right?
That's called throwback.
where the victim is hit forcefully,
and then the perpetrator swings back to strike again,
that blood is cast off, right?
The cast off, if measured correctly,
can determine maybe even the height of the defendant,
maybe the position in which they were
when the attack occurred.
You can tell how many times,
if you can't tell from the body,
you can tell from the cast off,
how many times the,
person was stabbed because every time there's a swing back, it hits in a slightly different spot
on the wall or the ceiling. And speaking of ceilings, significant. Explain why ceilings are important
in a case like this, that they be processed just like all the other blood evidence. Because blood
evidence is airborne once it becomes a part of Castoff and it will leave an impression upon the ceiling
in most buildings, especially a residential building like this,
that evidence is going to be important
because the blood spatter pattern analysis will be done
by crime scene personnel who understand serology
and understand the science of blood
and how it moves and how it forms
and what formations look like when it's cast off of a nerve.
So that preservation of evidence is vital,
and you would want to take pieces of that ceiling with you as evidence.
What do you mean take pieces of the ceiling with you?
you as evidence?
I've seen sealing pieces cut out by crime scene units, pieces of flooring cut out,
depending upon the nature of the crime.
Now, this we have, it became a homicide.
You're going to take that evidence seriously and take pictures of it,
but also you may want to take the actual physical piece itself.
If it's a simple piece of wallboard that you can cut out, you may want to take it.
It's something that may be challenged by defense.
You may want to have it as evidentiary piece of evidence with you in case it's
challenge, but those pieces of evidence are going to tell a story. And in thorough
investigations, I've seen pieces of buildings brought out and taken into custody.
You know, we got started on this discussion talking about floor evidence and how often
evidence is lost or ruined really through no one's fault when they come onto the scene.
You know, everybody's shoes have to be taken and there has to be a print made of them
to compare to bloody she prints, if there are any, on the floor.
The only people that should go into that room are the ones who are burdened with trying to save a life.
That's it.
And then if they can't save the 81-year-old mom's life, they have to very gingerly back out and get the hay out of there.
So the work can begin.
But when you're trying to save somebody's life, that's your paramount concern.
You're not worried about bloody footprints.
Okay, let's go back to what happened.
This is it, and this is a whole other can of worms, Dan Murphy.
This happened around 7 a.m. 7 a.m., which statistically, it's very rare for a blood bath, a deadly blood bath, to go down before breakfast.
Okay, listen.
911 is called and relays a message to first responders.
A woman says there has been a stabbing in her home.
This morning at 0751 hours, officers responded.
to a stabbing call in the 1,500 block of East Crowley.
When officers arrived on scene, they were met in the street with a 48-year-old white female
who had suffered from some cuts to her hand.
Joining me is a veteran trial lawyer, Jim Elliott, attorney with Butler Snow, legal counsel
for multiple municipalities.
governmental entities at butler snow.com. Jim, thank you for being with us. Jim Elliott,
you've tried a lot of cases in court. Blood evidence is very tricky, especially if you
don't know what you're doing. But one thing I would be looking at is the degree to which the
blood had coagulated at the time when EMTs and first responders get there. And it's really
difficult, Jim. You've been on a lot of scenes. They're trying to save 81 year old mom's life.
They're not thinking has the blood coagulated. They're trying to resuscitate her and get her
airlifted to the hospital. Where I would come in as the prosecutor is critical that we know
whether the blood had dried, not just coagulated. Coagulated means it's kind of like
Jello. It's not thin, liquefied like water anymore. It's more of a jello consistency. That's coagulated. And the harder it gets,
the closer it gets to being dried. In your experience, Jim Elliott, why is it so important
that we know whether the blood was still liquid as in water, semi-coagulated as in jello,
are flat out dried.
Well, certainly that goes to what time the crime actually occurred or the stabbing occurred.
And probably in that case, you're only going to have the eyewitness testimony of the first responders
who can indicate what they saw perhaps without a great deal of expertise in that regard.
Oh, yeah, they'll be torn to shreds on cross-exam.
We've got to have more than that.
We have to have the cops in there immediately processing the scene.
But the reality is Jim Elliott, it takes a beat for the entire CSI to arrive and you could lose
that critical evidence.
Why is it critical?
I need to know when this 81 year old mother was stabbed multiple times in her bed.
You know another thing, Elliot?
I notice this when prosecuting in intercity Atlanta.
When the victim is very young, like an infant or very old, for some way.
reason, those cases are very often pled down to like manslaughter of some degree. You got
voluntary, you got involuntary, um, just, I don't know why, but have you noticed that
phenomenon used to burn me up? Like somehow, because the victim is really young and hadn't
lived yet as an infant or really old, they don't matter anymore. Did you notice that? I'd love
to see a statistic on that. Well, that certainly can be the case, and I guess that's kind of
driven by the value of the life at the time of the passing.
You know, you indicated that he was bedridden, that's not doing all the
coverage of the event and her pictures seem to make it.
Sorry, him blowing off.
Commercial break.
The value of the life.
You know what?
You sound a lot like a civil lawyer right now where you try to get a money verdict from a jury
and you ask the jury to put a dollar value on somebody's life.
So what?
If they're old Jim Elliott, they're just not worth as much.
Go ahead.
Put it out there.
It's the usual measure of damages, Nancy, whether it's morally right or fits everyone's code of ethics or not.
That's the way our system works.
With regard to that measurement, that's what I'm talking about.
Well, maybe for you, Jim Elliott, and you've won a lot of cases with civil juries.
And now I see why.
Because you actually said that like it's true.
just because it is done, Elliot, does not mean it should be done.
That doesn't mean it's okay just because it happens.
A dollar value on a life.
That premise right there is concerning to me.
But that said, Jim Elliott, I want you to tell me the truth.
Isn't it true that when the victim is an infant and you don't have a whole lot of cute Christmas
pictures and, you know, baptizing pictures and family pictures at Disney, all that?
and a really old victim,
I am telling you it's anecdotal, not a statistic,
that those plea deals are cheaper than they are for just to say,
a young, vibrant man or woman.
Have you noticed that?
Be honest.
Yeah, I think it can be.
I think with regard to the younger people,
you can't really paint a picture of their life for the jury.
That's what prosecutors would probably worry about with regard to an older person.
And again, there's this, there's going to be this attitude that,
They lived their life and, you know, sadly, is it a great value.
That may be the attitude, Elliot, but don't bring it to crime stories.
Save it for your civil juries.
Okay, I'm going to let Elliot sit there and think about what he just said and move this case forward.
Listen.
Arriving at the home at 7.52 a.m., Wichita Police find a woman outside the home with cuts on her hands and blood on her clothing.
Inside, they find an 81-year-old Anita Avers on responsive inner bed with multiple stab wounds.
Both women are taken to the hospital.
Officers went inside the residence, found an 81-year-old, elderly female, suffering from multiple stab wounds.
Both were transported to local hospitals.
Back out to Melissa McCarty joining us, an investigative reporter host of The Killer Jeans podcast,
which is awesome, Melissa McCarty, and author of The Making of a Crime Reporter.
Melissa, what can you tell me about the victim's stabs?
What have you learned?
Anita Avers had multiple stab wounds to her as far as was an upper body, her face, the specific areas.
Police haven't released that just yet, but she was attacked reportedly.
her bed with multiple stab wounds.
I want to talk about what Melissa McCarty just said.
Karen Stark joining me, a forensic psychologist, renowned TV radio trauma expert consultant
at Karen Stark.com.
If you're looking for her, it's Karen with a C.
Karen, I want to talk to you about something that shocked me to the core.
And you know, Karen, you and I bonded together in very, very long hours.
in the dark at court TV studios where you and I would sit there, I believe they were three
or four hours shifts we had, watching trials live and commenting on them whenever there would
be a break.
Even after all that, after all the cases I've tried, after all the cases you have worked
on, I was so shocked with the Brian Coburger attacks in that, well, many things, but the stabbing
to the face of Kille Gonsalves and Maddie.
I believe Kiela Gonzalez was, she was stabbed multiple times, but in her face alone, there
were over 20 stab wounds.
Now, I'm just a trial lawyer, you're the shrink, but when a victim is stabbed repeatedly
in the face, there has got to be a psychological motivation.
there. I don't know what it is, but I bet you do.
That's rage, Nancy, and that's very symbolic because he's trying to wipe out her face.
He's angry. Even though he had no contact with her, this is a guy who just couldn't control himself
when it came to her. He was obsessed. And so you are wiping out the person. In some instances,
a killer will put a cover over somebody's face, a pillow, something to hide them. They just don't.
want to see and they want to obliterate that person. She was beautiful and that really disturbed
him. Like, let me get rid of who she is and all her beauty because she doesn't want me.
You know, another thing, Karen Stark, you know, my mom who's going to be 94 in December
lives with us. The act of stabbing a little old lady.
in her bed, either bedridden or asleep, that's a whole other level of evil right there.
Now, I know no one's life is more valuable than another person's life.
I don't care if we're talking about a movie star, TV star like Matthew Perry, or we're talking
about this 81-year-old ma.
But to attack a completely defenseless person, that's a whole other.
can of worms psychologically. What is that? It's like shooting, killing a mockingbird.
That's true. But we don't really know, Nancy, what was going on inside of that person's head.
Karen Stark, excuse me one moment. Did I just hear you say, it matters what's going on inside that
person's head, the stabber, the killer? I don't care what's going on in their head.
unless they're legally insane doesn't matter.
You know how many years it took me to figure that out?
It was either five or seven because I marked it.
I would sit in court looking over at the defendant,
always a violent felon because everything else would get plet out,
thinking why, why would they do this?
Finally, I think it was year five.
I'm like, why am I asking why?
It doesn't matter what's going on inside his head.
I have a case to prove, and I'm going to prove it.
So are you, as an 81-year-old bedridden woman in her bed,
stabbed multiple times, potentially in the face,
and you want me to figure out what's going on in the killer's mind?
Did you say that?
No, I said, we don't know what's going on,
but what I was trying to say, Nancy, is that,
Whoever this person was, they had tremendous, just like Goldberger, rage.
Rage to do so many stab wounds.
Rage to do somebody's face if that actually happened.
Something was going on where they really did not want to make that person be recognizable.
They were obsessed in this killing.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
College professors now have a high-tech tool to catch students who plagiarize.
A software called Turn It In analyzes a student's paper for places it could have been copied from other sources.
It highlights the copied segments and even gives the professor a percentage of the paper that was not the results of the students' work in the first place.
From our friends at Fox 2.
With over a decade of experience as a broadcast journalist, Angie Mock was known for her hard-hitting
reports on crime. Ironically, she now finds herself at the center of a murder case.
Joining us, Melissa McCarty, reporter and host of the killer genes, Melissa, both women were
transported to the hospital. Describe their two injuries because they are diametrically opposed.
Right. Anita Avers had multiple stab wounds, and when she was transported, she ended up dying
at the hospital was pronounced dead about 30 minutes later.
Now, Angie Mock had some cuts on her hands, and she was treated as well.
And release, if I am not mistaken?
She was treated and released, that's right.
Very same day.
Very same day.
Can I see Melissa McCarty, please?
Melissa McCarty, are you telling me that the 81-year-old mother was stabbed multiple times in the torso and possibly the face and dies?
and the glamorous TV anchor had some cuts on her hands.
Is that right?
That's right.
That's right.
She was also covered in blood.
Covered in blood.
Now, I find it very curious to Dave Mack joining us, Crime Stories investigative reporter.
Very curious indeed.
How did the morning TV news anchor survive the attack with a few cuts on her hands?
hands and her mother bedridden is the target of a maniacal killer and is stabbed dead.
How does that happen?
You know, Nancy, that's the question that they're going to have to answer very quickly
because she was able to get out of the house and wave down help.
Remember, Angie Mock actually went out into the street is waving down people for help
and get the cell phone from somebody she doesn't even know.
just gets it and runs back into the house.
So she's still got plenty of energy.
She's still able to get up and go and ask for help.
And yet her mother is there in the bed having been muterous massacred.
So I don't know what exactly transpired,
except she had plenty of energy to go out and get help for herself.
Dave Mack, do you know what you just did to me?
When you're talking about her mother,
I felt like I swallowed a lump of coal.
Like something stuck in my throat.
I just want to jump up and run to get to my mom and check on her.
Okay.
Well, you just brought up something really interesting that I hadn't thought of.
Not just that she survived the maniacal killer with a few cuts on her hands, but somehow
was drenched in blood.
Isn't that right, Melissa?
That's a yes, no.
She's drenched in blood all over the front of her, right?
Correct.
Dave Mack, back to you.
So she's drenched in blood from what?
The cuts on her hand.
but you brought up that she's still
an excellent condition
no blow to the head
no gas, no wound
to the back of her head
she is alert
she's not screaming
get the guy, get the guy, somebody broke in our house
which reminds me
was there any sign of forced entry Dave Mac
at all? None
whatsoever that we've been told about
at this point Nancy and like you said
she's got plenty of time and energy
to go around and go outside the house and seek help.
So she's able to have her thoughts.
She's not freaking out in that she cannot put a, you know, a thought together here.
She's able to go outside and get help.
And, you know, she didn't seem to be, other than the blood on her hands,
doesn't seem to be impacted whatsoever.
You know, that's also curious.
You said she's not freaked out, but she did run out of the house to borrow a strange,
It was a neighbor, but they didn't really know each other's phone, grab the neighbor's phone and then ran back into the home with it.
I wonder why she didn't use a phone in the home or her own cell phone.
I mean, I'm just trying to think this through, Dave.
If I found someone injured in our home, I would not run out in the street to try to borrow somebody's phone that may or may not be out there.
I would use the home phone if they have one or my cell phone.
That's odd, isn't it?
Don't you find that odd?
I found it odd that she ran outside the house because her mother is there in the bed.
And as mentioned, she's got multiple stab wounds, but she doesn't have the wherewithal to get a phone in the house.
I mean, come on, you've probably got in that home, you probably still got a phone on the wall,
not to mention several cell phones from the adults that are there in the home.
But instead of any of that, she goes outside.
And all I'm thinking of, if we're maybe she was outside.
Outside, afraid that the killer inside, I don't know, Nancy.
It makes no sense.
You wouldn't leave your mother in bed.
Outside, afraid of the killer still in the house.
I like that, Dave.
You've got a future of fiction.
Listen.
The 81-year-old Anita Avers found unresponsive in her bed with multiple stab wounds,
transported to the hospital, as is her daughter Angie Mock,
the woman who approached police in the street when they arrived.
Mock, a former television news anchor reporter, is treated in religious.
from the hospital. Happy Facebook Friday to everyone, and welcome Angie Mock. Thank you. I'm so excited
to be here, and I look forward to connecting with you guys out there in St. Louis. From Fox 2.
The former news anchor was living with her 80-year-old mother in their Wichita home. On Halloween night,
the spotlight shifted dramatically onto Mock as events took a dark turn. A dark turn. Again,
that's certainly putting perfume on.
on the pig, a dark turn.
It sounds like a mystery novel.
This is no mystery novel and it's not a dark turn.
It's murder and it's the murder of a defenseless 81 year old woman,
apparently bedridden.
You know, I just heard something to Melissa McCarty.
Is it true that the glam morning TV anchor was living with her mother, what in her mother's home?
Whose home was that?
That's what it seems so.
Police have not gone on the record to confirm it,
but it seems as though they were living together.
Hmm.
Guys, what happened in that bedroom?
How did Angeline Mock end up unscathed?
She was treated.
What, Jim Elliott?
They sprayed a little backteen on her and went goodbye, goodbye.
What?
And the mother's dead?
Stabed multiple times.
You don't have a problem with that because I do.
Well, so I think, you know, the difference is an 80 or 81 year a woman versus someone 20 or 30 years younger.
The younger person could arguably be more able to defend herself than what's her mother.
Okay, so you're saying she could defend herself.
Okay, I see where you're going with that.
Dr. Priya Banerjee is with us.
Dr. Priya, board certified forensic pathologist and anatomic pathologist with anchor forensic pathology consulting.
Let's just say she's seen a lot of dead bodies.
Dr. Priya, what is the difference between a defensive stab wound and a stab wound you would get to your hands?
When you are the attacker, for instance, your hand sliding down the knife, unless you're like Brian Coburger who had a K-bar knife, which has a hilt.
What is a hilt?
It looks like a cross.
There is a section that turns the blade.
It bisects it.
And if you're the stabber, your hand would stop at the hilt.
Okay.
So if there is a knife that does not have a hilt, how can you tell the difference between a wound sustained to the hand if you are the stabber?
versus a defensive wound.
Well, I think that can be challenging.
You need to look at where it is.
If you're putting your hands up this way on the back,
that is obviously defensive.
You're not going to in any way have the knife,
use the back of your hand to stab someone.
Now, if it's on the palms, and it's really deep,
maybe you did have a grabbing motion where the knife slipped.
Remember, repeated stabs make the knife bloody,
which makes it slippery.
Earlier, you heard a veteran trial lawyer, Jim Elliott, describe why the morning TV news star could have escaped a deranged killer unscathed because she's 20 to 30 years younger than her 81-year-old mother.
Typically, the state does not have to prove motive, but I'd be very curious to find out who would want to kill an 81-year-old little old lady asleep in bed.
The degree of physical acumen, the lack of aging symptoms, being very, very physically active.
Yes, I could see that as an excuse.
Let's take a look at Angeline Mock.
Farrell's biggest fan, Angie Mock.
Hey.
You're a big fan, right?
Oh, huge.
Lambert Airport better get ready for me.
You're going to be there, right?
Yeah, I may.
Stalker.
Stalker alert.
Angie Mock is a former TV anchor who's spent several years waking up the St. Louis area,
anchoring the morning news on Fox 2.
She spent years as a reporter and anchor working for Fox 25, Oklahoma City, KLKN, Nebraska, now, NBC, Montana, and others.
I love highlighting so many cool and interesting things that come to the St. Louis area.
How do we go about training like the professionals?
Last curve on, we'll straighten it out.
That's scary.
That's for our friends at Fox 2 News, and we showed you that to explain that Jim Elliott is absolutely
correct. She's in great physical shape. So is that how she escapes the deranged killer and her mother
does not? To Melissa McCarty joining us from Killer Jeans. Was there a forced entry? Did first responders
see anyone leaving the home or did the neighbor who lent her cell phone to mock? Did she see
anyone leaving the home or a car speeding away? Anything like that? There was no forced
entry, and according to police, there were two people, Angie standing outside the home and her
mom unresponsive inside the home. That's it. Did she make a statement at all to Dave Mac joining
us, investigative reporter crime stories? What, if anything, did Angie Mock have to say?
Well, she hasn't made anything public that we're aware of and only getting secondhand information
about what may or may not have been said to the 911 dispatcher.
Well, you know what?
I'm being very clear, Dave.
What did she say?
She said that she did it in self-defense, that she was trying to save her own life,
intimating that it was a fight with her mother.
And she had to use the knife to protect herself.
Angeline Mock, the Morning TV News Anchor,
actually says
she
stabbed her mother
in self-defense. I believe your
eloquent words were
she did it
in self-defense. What?
It was a kill-or-be-kill
situation? Is that what you're saying
Dave Mack? That is exactly
what I am saying that she
claims. Oh my stars! What a
difference a knight can make!
Check out Angie Mock in that
photo.
Ouch! There's a
side by side. I don't want to be part of that. Okay, hold on. Jim Elliott, you're the veteran trial
lawyer. I guess this is one of the reasons you tell your clients, shut your pie hole. Is anybody
going to believe that Angela Mock was defending herself against her bedridden mother in a
killer be killed situation? I mean, how do you even look at a judge?
She's going to have to explain that, and I mean, I guess they'll come up with some concept of, who knows, physical or mental abuse over her lifetime or something of that sort that she may attribute it to.
Okay. You know what, Jim Elliott. Now, again, you're just speeding it out. Put them up, please. Jim Elliott, you have children. I assume you read them the story of Rumpel Stilskin.
Yes, of course, yes.
Okay, so you know where I'm going with this?
Rumpel Stilskine took hay and he just spun it out into gold.
And that's what you're doing right now.
Now, do you, Jim Elliott, and again, you're a veteran trial lawyer.
Your record shows you've won a lot of cases.
You represent multiple state and local municipalities.
You're actually somehow coming up with the theory that this anchor, can I see here please,
the TV anchor
who can ad lib,
who can read script,
who can do all sorts
of on-air antics
that she endured
a lifetime of either physical,
mental, or emotional abuse.
Did you just throw that out
as a possibility, Jim Elliott?
It is a possibility, certainly.
And we don't know exactly.
I mean, all she said was to save myself.
We don't know what that means.
We don't know what that means
physically, whether there are,
There are other issues that play in their relationship or in her life or in our mother's
life.
And I think that has to be fully explored before we can understand.
But she's going to have to explain that.
Oh, my stars.
I need a shrink.
Crime stories with Nancy Grace.
I need a shrink.
Karen Stark, I'll forego the drink.
and I'll stick with a shrink.
You know, I don't want to hear about any of your specific clients.
But how many times do your clients blame a mommy?
You know, I've started a fund for my daughter and son for a shrink someday because I'm sure
they're going to blame everything on me.
Yes, mommy told me I was filling the blank.
My mommy made me fill in that blank.
It's all mommy's fault.
Did you hear Elliot?
The woman is bedridden.
She's 81 years old.
I don't know what care what she told you when you were five years old.
To stand up straight and eat your vegetables?
What?
Did you hear that?
Because that's where this is going.
It doesn't make any sense.
It really, if you think about it, yes.
Mothers, fathers, they really affect their children growing up.
And that's a fact.
Whatever is going on.
But this is, we're talking now about an adult and a mother who is 80, 8, 8,000.
There is no reason for that to still be held over and something that's in her psyche.
At this point, she's gone on with her life and she should be doing really well and not be
blaming anybody because she's independent.
Karen, you keep talking about it in her mind.
We don't even know if there is anything that the now dead mom did, the 81 year old for all I know,
she was an incredible mom.
We're just, you are actually buying into Jim Elliott's theory that maybe, maybe this woman was
emotionally abused by her mom for years and years and years.
So she just had to stab her dead.
Well, that's the whole point.
It doesn't matter what their relationship was like.
It really does, Nancy, because at this stage in her life, she's a functioning, we assume,
adult.
And she should not be carrying any kind of feelings about her mother that's interfering.
or would make her, who would do that, stab their own mother?
That hardly ever happens.
Police responded to a reported stabbing at Mock's residence.
Angeline was found outside, claiming she acted in self-defense after stabbing her mother.
Inside, officers discovered her mother in bed, suffering from multiple stab rooms.
Okay, this is a tactic that will likely be used by the state, if this case.
goes forward. All of the
clips that we're showing you,
every word
Angie Mock has uttered on air
will be combed through
and used, if possible, in court
to show that she was in her
right mind. I mean,
well, this is why. There's got
to be a mental defect defense
because she blurted it out
at the get-go. Listen.
I've heard you have to stop the mother to save herself.
And the library is about five to six knives and that's probably currently with her mom.
She's also injured as well and other weapons in the home.
This was good, wasn't?
Yeah, oh, it was wonderful.
Family was in town.
They're leaving today.
I don't know where my tissues are.
That's all right.
Families in town, they're leaving today.
That was from our friends at K-A-K-E and Fox 2.
I want to hear that one more time.
What she said on the scene or to the 911 dispatch and then her,
crying about her family leaving after the holiday.
Let's just watch that one more time.
I've heard you have to stab the mother to save herself.
And the Polly-Braid is right in her mom.
She's also injured as well and other weapons in the home.
This was good, wasn't it?
Yeah, oh, it was wonderful.
Family was in town.
They're leaving today.
I don't know where my tissues are.
That's all right.
Yeah, they don't have those fancy soft ply tissues behind bars, Ms. Mock.
That's from K-A-K-E and Fox 2.
Okay, Dan Murphy.
former NYPD
Detective Sargent
and so much more author
of Workplace Safety
co-host Gold Shields podcast
it goes on and on and on
thoughts
there's so many thoughts about this
when she came out of the house
and said what she said allegedly
she's putting herself
as the person responsible for it
the reasons for it can get figured out later
when you look at this situation
she's living with her mother
for whatever reason maybe as a caretaker
maybe a financial need
probably rent free. I'll just throw that in. Go ahead. Sorry. Oh, that's where our friends at Fox 2,
everybody. I'm sorry, Dan, go ahead. It looks as though life has dealt her a very bad set of hand,
bad hand, so to speak, set of cards. She does not look like the same person. Something is on a
downslide. Maybe she blames the mother for things in her life, sees the mother as holding her back
in many reasons. I would love to know the story, the true dynamic in the relationship,
why she's living there.
What cause this?
Has there been any other domestic cause there?
What would lead her to this?
Maybe it's narcissism.
Maybe she sees her as being...
Dan Murphy, I'm sorry, but are you a mental health professional?
Because I thought you were former NYPD detective sergeant.
I am, which is equivalent to a master's in psychology in many ways.
Dan, okay, you and I both know that motive is not required.
I don't care.
I mean, my, my non-prosecutor side does care, but I'm talking about the facts that we're going to put in front of a jury.
I am asking you, you're the former NYPD, and I keep saying that because you have more cases than practically any other jurisdiction in the country that you have handled personally.
analyze the facts will deal with her mental defect defense that she's you know really
painting herself in a corner with because she came out with self-defense so she's stuck with it
that's not going away she admitted she did it in self-defense of course I don't believe that and
I want to hear what you think about the facts not your amateur opinion as mine would be too
I'm not a shrink about why she did it.
Why does somebody stab a bedridden 81-year-old woman?
Don't care.
The Bear Fraxton.
Cops get to the scene.
She lives in the home with the mother.
And she is covered in blood, which is indicative of somebody who has either embraced a dead body covered in blood
or somebody who themselves was responsible for it and the blood comes out, arterial spurts and things like that.
Second, she's got defensive wounds, potential.
or potentially from a hands sliding down a knife that's being in a frenzied attack being used to attack somebody.
She makes a statement indicating she did it. There's no evidence of entry by anyone else into the residence.
She's the only person responsible. She's taking responsibility. The mother is bedridden and couldn't possibly have posed a threat with a knife to her daughter.
Fairfax. No other suspect. Here's a look at her top stories. Several victims survive a hail of bullets in two separate shootings.
But those shootings were at the exact same location.
A glamorous TV news anchor, Mock stands charged with first-degree murder for the fatal stabbing of her 81-year-old mother, Anita Avers.
Mock is being held in the Sedgwick County Jail on a $1 million bail.
From Fox 2.
At this hour, as of tonight, when we go to air, this case is still being built by L.E. law enforcement.
If you know or think you know anything about the death of this 80-1,000,
one year old mom.
Please dial
with Chaw PD 316-268-4-1-1-1.
Repeat, 316-28-4-1-1-1.
And remember, evil comes
in many forms.
Do you think the devil always shows up
at a tux? No.
Don't be fooled
by a killer's appearance.
Even if she's a
glamorous morning TV anchor.
Doesn't matter.
Try to keep your mind on the victim.
Maybe like your own mother, 81 bedridden, stabbed multiple times.
Keep that thought in your head.
We remember an American hero, Detective Corporal Christopher Mock,
St. Lucy County sheriffs killed in the line of duty.
After 21 years on the force, leaving behind, a wife turned widow,
Jennifer and two grieving children.
American hero, Detective Corporal Christopher Mock.
Nancy Grace signing off.
Goodbye, friend.
This is an IHeart podcast.
