Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Mark Sievers Granted Death Sentence Appeal Extension in Murder of Gorgeous Mom/Doctor Found Bludgeoned Dead on Kitchen Floor
Episode Date: December 7, 2025A judge has granted an extension for closing arguments in Mark Sievers' latest appeal. State prosecutors and Mark Sievers' defense had 45 days to file written closing arguments. It ...was due a week from Monday, Dec. 15. November 19th, Sievers post conviction attorneys, Megan Montagno, Julissa Fontan and John LoBianco, filed a motion seeking the time extension. They cited the impending execution of another death row inmate they represent. Lee Circuit Judge Bruce Kyle granted the extension. A beautiful and brilliant medical doctor, Dr. Teresa Sievers, takes her family on a vacation trip to visit extended relatives with her husband and her two little girls. Teresa comes home early, leaving family behind in Connecticut so she can go to work the next morning. Mark Sievers calls a co-worker of his wife to go to the home and check on her when she doesn't show up. Dr. Teresa Sievers was found brutally bludgeoned, still wearing the outfit, complete with high-heeled shoes, she wore home from the airport Sunday night. The kitchen is covered in blood, a hammer by her side. Husband Mark Sievers is ultimately charged with murder, accused of arranging for his childhood friend, Curtis Wayne Wright, to murder his wife. Wright pleaded guilty to 2nd-degree murder, cooperating with prosecutors in Mark Sievers's trial. Sievers is convicted and now is appealing his death sentence. Joining Nancy Grace to discuss the case: Ashley Willcott: Judge and trial attorney, Anchor on Court TV, www.ashleywillcott.com James Shelnutt: Attorney, served 27 years as Atlanta Metro Major Case Detective, SWAT Officer Bethany Marshall: Psychologist Dr. Tim Gallagher: Medical Examiner Amanda Hall: Reporter, WINK TV, Ft Myers, Florida Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
It's the 10th anniversary of a murder that shocked not just Southwest Florida, but beyond.
Do you recall the name Dr. Teresa Severs because I will never forget it?
Her husband, Mark Severs, and his high school buddy who was a,
doppelganger, get together and murder his wife, the mother of their two little girls.
She was everything, just precious, cute as a button, a tiny, diminutive woman, the mother
of the two, she was a medical doctor.
Listen, she not only brought home the bacon, but fried it up and put it on the table.
You see what I'm saying?
She supported him.
How did he repay her?
By killing her.
I mean, and believe it or not, Mark Severs, the killer, now wants out of jail on a pill.
Surprised, I'm not.
I'm Nancy Grace.
This is crime stories.
I want to thank you for being with us.
He just won't go away, will he?
After evidence proved him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, Mark Severs now decides, hey, I want to
to get out of jail. He should have thought about that before he had his wife murdered in this
elaborate plan. Ridiculous. His main point of contention is Jimmy Rogers, one of the convicted
killers hired by Severs to murder his wife. Now, Jimmy Rogers claimed in an interview
with W-I-N-K that there was no conspiracy.
and accused his former friend, Curtis Wayne Wright, the high school doppelganger,
of lying during his plea deal testimony against husband Mark Severs.
Now, if you will recall, the high school friend, now convicted felon, Curtis Wayne Wright,
testified in court. He and Rogers, the killer, were hired by husband Mark Severs, and they
They were promised a huge payout of life insurance money to kill Teresa Severs.
High school friend Curtis Wright said, Dr. Severs arrived home earlier than expected from
an out-of-town trip, and he and Rogers used a ball-peen hammer to murder her.
This tiny, little female doctor who had these gorgeous twin girls.
quote from high school friend I hit her with the hammer I actually think she thought I was
Mark because she said why oh this is what happened to Dr. Teresa Severs
I'm there at a friend's house he's out of town and I came here to check on the
wife and she's dead on the floor okay the address is okay still my
Oh, sir, hold on, stand the line.
Yes, yes.
Okay.
You're doing very well.
Good job.
Just a moment.
We're going to connect you.
They're going to ask for the address.
Okay.
And is that a house for an apartment, sir?
Tell me exactly what happened.
My friend, Princess Severs, she's a doctor.
I'm a doctor.
She came home last night.
Her husband is in Connecticut, and she was supposed to go at 9 o'clock.
They called me, and I was on my way into the workplace I swung by, and she's down on the floor.
And there's a hammer at the side, and she's bashed in the back of the head.
You are hearing the 911 call from a coworker, Dr. Petrides, telling dispatch that his dear friend,
a beautiful mother of two girls, a beloved doctor who practiced holistic medicine throughout that
Florida region to many, many women is dead on the floor.
First thing I noticed, not only the injuries to Dr. Teresa Severs is a tiny woman about
4-11 or 5 feet tall, she was still wearing the shoes, the, I call them stiletto,
really high heels she'd work because she was so short that she was wearing the
night before, the Sunday night before, she came home from a family vacation with relatives to
Connecticut, including her husband and two little girls. That told me a lot about the timeline.
Seemingly, she still had on her clothes. She hadn't gone back to her bedroom to take a bath and put on
PJs. She was ambushed right as she came home from the airport while someone following her.
Did someone know her flight plan? Or was it just a burglary gone wrong? Let's start at the very
beginning. Take a listen to more of that 9-1-1 call.
Sam-alone, Mr. Smithy, sir, okay? Yes.
Sam-al-on-lakey. Um, Sheriff Officer, are you on the way? Yes, no. Okay. And so you said
you're a doctor? Okay. Are you with her now?
Uh, I'm outside of the house because I don't know if there's anybody in the house.
Okay. All right. So how old is your recent? Uh, she's 50s.
Forty-sendous. All right, sir. And is she awake? No, she's down before. She's cold.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
All right.
So I do have paramedics, fire department.
Also, law enforcement is on the line with us.
Okay.
They're going to be going out, okay.
Okay.
Okay.
I want you to stay on the line one moment.
I'm sure.
Yeah, I'm going to stay here until I get here because, you know, I don't know if anyone
still help.
Okay.
It was right.
All right.
All right.
All right.
Just stay on the line.
Okay.
the comping you on what to do next.
Okay.
Sir, are you inside the residence then?
No, I'm not.
I'm standing in the dry place.
Okay.
And then when you walked inside the house,
you said the blood was dry or what did you say?
Yeah, half the blood is dry, half the sweat.
She's cold.
She's dead cold.
You know, I can't help, but analyze that 911 call.
And this coworker, Dr. Petrudey, seems very, very calm.
I want to go to Dr. Bethany Marshall's psychoanalyst,
joining us from L.A.
You can find it at Dr. bethanymarshal.com.
Dr. Bethany, I was the same way in court,
No matter what happened, at least in front of a jury, I would stay extremely calm, even once when a prisoner lunged at me with a shank.
Didn't make it, by the way.
But long story short, not in other areas of my life, but I guess when it's your duty and you're trained a certain way, you just carry on.
What do you make of the 911 call, Dr. Bethany?
Well, Nancy, let me tell you a little story.
When I was doing your HLN show, I had a patient who tried to kill her.
she overdosed on benzodiazepines.
She called me up, she into like a sort of a coma-like state.
I called 911, and my biggest fear was that the 911 call was going to be played on the evening news.
So I was very formal in how I reported it.
I said, this is Dr. Bethany Marshall.
This is my license number.
This is where I got this call.
This is the woman's address.
Here's her diagnosis.
Here's the benzodiazepines, the number of pills she took on down the road,
because I knew that that was a very formalized.
report that this could be played in court. This could be played on the evening news, as I just said.
So this is a doctor who walks into a crime scene. The woman's back of her head is bashed in. She's
still wearing her stiletto shoes. He is the first one on the scene. So yes, Dr. Kim Gallagher is
correct. You have to be authoritative. You have to be calm in the midst of the storm. But there's
also this anxiety about how you are going to come across as you report the incident. You are the
first responder, you're the person who's going to be questioned. So how you make that verbal
report is extremely important. With me, an all-star panel today to break it down, put it back
together again. Of course, in addition to Dr. Bethany Marshall, with me, Judge and Trial Lawyer,
anchor, court TV, Ashley Wilcott. You can find her at Ashley Wilcott.com. James Shelna,
27 years Atlanta Metro Major, K-Swat Officer, now lawyer. But right now to Amanda Hall.
special guest joining us, an investigative reporter from W-I-N-K-TV, Fort Myers, Florida, who has been on
the story since the get-go. At the beginning, Amanda, let's just take what we know. Tell me about
the crime scene. For those of you just joining us, a stunning development in the case of a murdered
mom and doctor, Dr. Teresa Severs. Remind those listeners that don't already know, Amanda Hall,
when cops came in, what did they find at the scene? Nancy, when police came,
men in June of 2015. They came inside the Siever's home and they found blood in the kitchen
and they found Teresa Severs bludgeon to death with the claw end of a hammer.
Blood. Amanda, Amanda, Amanda, Amanda, Amanda, Amanda, Amanda Hall joining me, W I and K. When you say
blood in the kitchen, I mean, you know, this morning, I was chopping up green beans and I have
to chop the tips off. Every single one or Lucy won't eat it. And I cut my
finger. Okay, we're not talking about that kind of blood, Nancy. What do you mean by blood? Just a tiny
drop. Tell me the whole thing, Amanda. Nancy, there was so much blood in there. You know, when we have
interviewed investigators and detectives who were initially on this case, some of them had never
seen anything like it. The amount of blood was stunning. When you look at the report, 17 crescent-shaped
cuts to her head. I mean, she was bludgeoned over and over and over and over so you can just
imagine the amount of blood inside of that home. What else did they find, Amanda? The other thing they
found was that the crime scene was staged to make it look like a break-in, to make it look like a
robbery. The thing is, Nancy, they stuffed cash in different parts of the home, and there was a
whole cachet of guns that were untouched.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
You know how when you think you squash a roach and then suddenly, there it is again?
Same thing here.
Husband Mark Severs, I thought he was put away for life, but here he is again.
Now he wants to get out on a pill.
Let me just have a quick refresh.
on what happened to the beautiful young mom of two, Dr. Teresa Severs.
The hammer sitting next to her and you had left it and did you touch anything?
No, I did not touch anything.
I touched her.
I shook her a little bit.
Okay.
All right.
One moment.
You're doing really well.
So the last time you had seen her is what time?
Probably three weeks ago.
Two or three weeks ago.
Okay.
And you said she returned today?
I don't know when she came back, but she was supposed to go back.
She was supposed to go to work today at 9 o'clock, and her husband called me from Connecticut to say she didn't show up at work, and she's not answering her phone.
And he checked her, he tried calling, tried calling.
He was going to call her mom.
And he said, if she was swinging by, can he swing by?
And I knocked on the front door, and nobody answered.
And the lights were on.
I can see her purse.
And she didn't answer.
I pounded, pounded.
And he gave me the key code to get into the garage door.
I opened the garage door.
and the door leading to it was open and I walked and I just opened up the door.
I walked in the door and she kept on the floor.
Welcome back, everybody.
I'm Nancy Gray's.
That is the 911 call of a coworker, Dr. Petrides, who shows up when this gorgeous young mom
of two little girls, Dr. Teresa Severs, very well known in the Bonita Springs area,
practiced mostly with women and had a very holistic method.
toward medicine, very inclusive to the whole community, never turned a person away.
Tiny, diminutive woman, I think she was about 4-11.
And that's important because she always wore high heels, okay, and to, you know, give her a little height.
And she still had on her heels, or at least one of them, when she was found that she had just
flown in from Connecticut, her husband and children still in Connecticut.
And normally you look at the husband first, husband, lover, boyfriend, ex.
He's in Connecticut with the children on a vacation with her family.
It was only when she didn't show up to work that morning that co-workers became concerned and went to her home.
Again, I'm Nancy Grace.
This is Crime Stories.
Thank you for being with us.
And you know, Ashley Wilcott, Judge and Trial Lawyer, Anchor Court TV, Ashley Wilcott.com.
Ashley, you and I both have a girl.
And imagine two of them.
You've got two boys and a girl.
I have a boy and a girl.
And John David is always just, you know, happy, go lucky, carefree.
You know, he just wants to go outside and jump on the trampoline.
He wants to play with his friends on the computer.
You know, nothing.
He'll eat whatever I fix.
He'll wear whatever I lay out.
He doesn't care if his hair is come.
Nothing.
He's just perfect.
Girls are a whole other ballgame.
And you need your mother.
You need a loving, guiding hand.
Somebody that can say, stand up, don't walk like a field hand, and they don't get hurt.
You're loving them.
You're helping them through all life's curveballs.
These two little girls are with dad at a Connecticut vacation with extended family.
Their mom is gone.
I mean, how do you break something like that to two little girls, Ashley?
Yeah, you know, I don't know, Nancy.
You can't even imagine.
because depending on the age, they don't even necessarily understand what that means.
And so every day they're going to still look for their mom and wonder where their mom is
and try to grasp what it means that she's literally gone forever.
But the other thing that bothers me is, of course, it happens that one spouse is somewhere with the kids
and the other spouse has to travel back to work.
But this, to me, was the beginning of the story to say he's in Connecticut with the kids.
she's here at home and happens to then get killed the first night.
Does this mean anything or not?
Take a listen to the questions the 911 operator poses to Dr. Petrides.
Okay.
And so you were there because they asked you to take care of the house.
Is that correct?
Mark, her husband called me to say, please, can you check on her because not like her
not to show up to work in New Lake?
Okay, so, and I know you told him before, but when, um, after he called the Chuck and his wife, because of, she wasn't at work?
Correct.
All right, and in, in, I would talk to him one.
Okay.
And he gave me the code number.
He sounded a little, you know, whatever.
And he received the call from work saying she wasn't there?
I don't know.
Okay, that's fine.
You know, he's her office manager.
Oh, she's the office manager of his business?
No, he's the office manager of her medical practice.
Okay, right there, we're getting a lot of clarification.
Did you hear that?
To Amanda Hall, our special guest joining us from W-I-N-K-W-Wink TV, Fort Myers.
This is in her backyard.
So, this is a common misconception.
The 911 operator is trying to figure out how this ComCool collected co-worker,
a male coworker, happens to show up at the home.
to find a dead body and he says that the husband mark severs out of town far away
calls and says he found out she wasn't at work and had him go over and check on dr severs his
wife gives him the burglary code the burglar alarm code why would he know that because he's the
office manager and at first you hear the 911 call operators say oh she's his office manager
and he says no
Amanda Hall
tell me what's your understanding
is how did Dr. Petrides end up
on the scene to find a dead body? Because
I always look at who finds
the body and who calls
911 because that tells me a lot
circumstantially. Yes it does Nancy and
the reason that he was there is because he
was called by her husband Mark
Mark was alerted that she
hadn't shown up for work which is very
unlike her. You know Teresa
flew home a day ahead
of the rest of the family just so that she could be at work Monday morning.
She had a late flight in Sunday night and was to see patients Monday morning.
So when Monday morning rolled around and she wasn't there, the staff called Mark who ran
the office and said, hey, we haven't heard from Dr. Severs. She's not here.
I want you to take a listen to what our friends at ABC News says.
Severs returned to Florida alone, calling her husband to let him know she'd arrived safely.
When she didn't show up for work Monday morning, worried colleagues called police who discovered her body.
During our hearing our friends there at local ABC, the crime scene overwhelming.
But as Amanda Hall just told you, the crime scene seemed staged because no money was taken.
There was a cash of guns there as well.
Amanda Hall, I've never known
there to have been alleged
any type of sex attack. Is that correct?
Correct. So she's bludgeon dead
in the kitchen. And it's my understanding.
Her pocketbook was there too. Right, Amanda?
Right. She came home,
pulled into the garage, and went from the garage
into the house, and that's where she was attacked.
You know, my first thought
that when this happened was the burglar alarm,
James Sheldnut. And James,
this is not a plug, but I'm coming out with a book in June called Don't Be a Victim,
and I had to research, and I included this case, case after case after case regarding
burglar alarms, locking your doors. That night, that day, I heard about Dr. Teresa Severs
being murdered. My first question was, what about a burglar alarm? It's hard for me to believe
that a medical doctor
with an office manager husband
and two little babies to take care of
doesn't have a burglar alarm.
I mean, you can get a burglar alarm
for $99. It covers your whole house.
And why wouldn't
they have a burglar alarm? Then I found out,
James, they did have a burglar alarm.
And that was a brain twister for me, James.
Yeah, absolutely. And so
from everything I've researched,
they indicate that Mark Severs had actually
told, I believe it was either
his mother or her mother not to set the burglar alarm because he was afraid that the pets
may set the alarm off.
Husband Mark Severs convicted in the murder of his wife, Teresa, the mother of his children,
wants Rogers, Curtis Rogers, to testify for him and his attempt to get off death row.
Hmm.
Did anybody think these two might be helping each other?
Has that dawned on anyone?
Well, those two can plot and plan and scheme all they want, gnashing their teeth and twitching their tails.
But this is what we learned in court as to the death, the murder of Dr. Severs.
Severs was a popular fixture in her community.
She had the quality like a mother, Teresa.
She cared and she had nothing more than love.
If she had nothing else to offer, it would be her care and her love.
for the patient.
Thinking about Dr. Teresa Severs
and you were just hearing
about how she was often called
Mother Teresa
because of the way that she treated
her patients in the community.
That was ABC News reporter
Rina Ninen.
But I want you to take a listen
to something very odd
that happened at the funeral.
We were seeing her sisters
on one side
and the look
that we were getting
wasn't a look
of sadness. It was look of hatred. Frank Hayes and his wife Sandra say the look didn't just come
from Dr. Siever's sisters. They were getting the same look from the grieving widower.
I hugged him. What do you say? I said, Mark, I am so sorry. I don't have words to say to you.
And he squeezed me so tight and nothing came out of his mouth. Then Sandra hugged him. And when Mark
hug Sandra, his teeth
grinned, and
it wasn't nothing of
sorrow or sadness. The
look was hatred. I stepped
back. I saw, holy. You are hearing
our friend, I know you recognize that voice,
Aaron Moriarty at CBS 48
hours. A look
of hate at the funeral?
And Dr. Bethany
Marshall, psychologist joining me out
of L.A. Dr. Bethany,
it's not that looking back,
he concocted this. At the time, he
said he recoiled and was shocked at the look on the husband's face. Why? Did he somehow blame her
family? Why? Why would hatred be a part of a funeral? That's the first thing. After a death
that's unsolved, you start looking at the crime scene, then at the funeral. Nancy, can you imagine
going to a funeral? Teresa Severs is dead. Her husband's there. You expect him to be crying and
grieving and instead he's looking at a former employee with hatred tells me first of all he's
worried about all the wrong things but he's been worried about all the wrong things all along he
disarms the alarm because of the pets his wife's coming home alone he stays behind with the girls
if he's a real man why not go home with your wife and help facilitate her going back to work
he's the office manager well she's out there seeing patience i mean on the face of it nothing
wrong with that. But he's sending her out to work while he's doing the easy work behind the desk.
I mean, all along this whole story, this husband has never acted like a husband. So the fact
that he is glaring hatefully at one of the attendees of the funeral tells me that he's
actually trying, if he indeed is the one who did it, he's trying to shift the blame onto somebody else.
Let me go to Amanda Hall, special guest joining us from W-I-N-K-TV, Fort Myers, Florida.
What do we know about the husband?
And yes, I know he was in Connecticut at the time.
What do we know about Mark Severs?
Where is he from?
What's his deal?
Well, we know that the two met while he was a nurse,
and she was a new doctor practicing in St. Petersburg, Florida.
We know that they married very quickly, had their first daughter,
shortly after they were married on the beach.
They had two girls, 11 and 8 years old at the time,
and he became the office manager of her practice, propping her up to do what she did best,
and that was treating people with a blend of traditional medicine and holistic medicine.
And he was really the more of the caregiver for the two girls.
Neighbors said that they always saw him, you know, outside, playing with them and attending to the two daughters.
Where did you tell me he's from, Amanda, to start with?
Mark Severs grew up in a little small town in Missouri.
Hmm.
Okay.
I want to go to Dr. Tim Gallagher, medical examiner.
I want you to describe, if you could, the wounds to Dr. Severs' body.
And again, there was no sex attack and no theft or burglary from her person or the home.
So her wounds were concentrated mostly on the back of her head.
So they were the crescent-shaped impressions that a half,
would make when they strike soft flesh.
So she had a lacerations to the back of her head.
It was extensive bleeding.
There was a physical brain damage done.
The shards of the broken skull had penetrated into her brain,
and there was massive bleeding.
What did you just say about shards of the skull?
Well, when the skull is broken,
they are broken into very sharp pieces.
And as the attack continues,
as the hammer keeps now striking these pieces of bone, these loose pieces of sharp bone
are now being driven into the actual brain, causing the tearing of the brain tissue and
cutting of the blood vessels that supply blood to the brain.
I'm just trying to think about this massive attack on this tiny woman.
And Amanda Hall, reporter WI&K TV in Fort Myers, Amanda, Amanda,
most of the blows were to the back of the head.
Did she ever even get a chance to fight back?
No, Nancy, she didn't.
You know, she rolled her suitcase into an attack, an ambush.
So her suitcase was still sitting there?
Her suitcase was still in the garage.
She had just, you know, walked in the door, hadn't had a chance to unpack anything,
hadn't even had a chance to change your clothes or do anything.
This is telling me so much about the attack.
James Shelnut, 27 years, Atlanta Metro,
major case, SWAT officer,
now lawyer, James Shelnut,
somebody, I mean, it's no coincidence
that somebody is right there in the kitchen
as she walks in from the garage,
parks her car in the garage,
gets her suitcase out of the car,
still sitting there in the garage,
she walks in the kitchen, and bam,
she's attacked.
Nothing stolen, nothing taken from her,
not her pocketbook, not her cell phone,
nothing, all that money they had
hidden in various spots, the guns that the husband kept, nothing taken, no sex attack,
but someone is lurking right there. She can't even get past the kitchen. They're waiting
for her to come through that garage door. Yeah, all of this adds up to the fact that you need to
start looking at someone who is closely connected to this victim. This is not something random.
There's too many coincidences. The coincidence
about the husband, you know, not flying back, the coincidence about the alarm not being set.
She walks into a house. There's no other motive evident. At that point, you start where you
traditionally start.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Husband turned killer Mark Saver's legal team is continuing their death sentence appeal
as a new hearing approaches. I thought he was gone. I thought he would be in jail the rest of his life
until he got the death penalty. But no, he's back causing a stink. Recall Severs was found guilty
of hiring two men, his high school buddy Curtis Wright, aka a doppelganger, they look exactly
alike, and Jimmy Rogers, a near-do-well, to carry out a savage killing of his wife.
there at the couple's home in Benita Springs, Florida.
Why?
He didn't want to work like all of us have to do.
He wanted the payout on her $4.43 million life insurance policy.
Wright was a longtime friend of Severs, as I mentioned before, and Rogers, the two of them, carried out the attack, while the husband, Mark Severs, made himself scarce and gave himself an alibi.
Well, I don't care what those killers are planting behind bars.
This is what I know happened at trial.
Crash bags, flushable wet wipes, black towels, black shoes, and a locked picking kit.
They paid cash for their purchase with a $100 bill.
Who in the hay are these two?
You're hearing CBS Aaron Moriarty describing two guys, Curtis Wainwright and Jimmy Ray
Rogers. Coincidentally, Curtis
Wainwright, long-time
friend of Dr. Severs' husband,
Mark. Not only that, if you look at the two
of them side to side, they look like twin
brothers. They'd often joke that
they're brothers from another mother.
They look identical to
each other, and they grew up together
and went to high school together.
What were they doing in town?
What were they doing near
Teresa Severs' home?
A real red flag as then
raised. Listen to Aaron Moriarty.
When investigators uncovered five life insurance policies for Teresa, totally more than $4 million, it was a red flag.
So was that trip Mark made to Missouri to be Wayne Wright's best man.
And as it turns out, the other suspect Jimmy Ray Rogers was also a wedding guest.
Taylor Shoemaker Jimmy's girlfriend claimed this was a murder for hire and that Jimmy was supposed to be paid $10,000.
dollars eight months after teresa severs was killed wayne right facing a possible death sentence
suddenly turned on his brother from another mother and he took a deal you're hearing our friend
aaron moriarty straight out to amanda hall reporter w i nk tv fort meyers how did these three
hook up tell me the whole thing amanda hall okay wayne right is a childhood friend as you heard
of Mark Severs.
They called themselves brothers from another mother,
but they really looked like real brothers.
They looked like twins.
So, Wainwright is getting married,
and Mark Severs is his best man.
And they started planning this while he was there
for the wedding.
Mark is saying that his wife is going to leave him,
and he's worried that he can't pay
to battle her for custody of their two daughters,
And that his only option is for Teresa to die.
And so he hires Wayne to do the job.
He says he'll pay him $100,000 from the insurance money.
And then Wayne brings in Jimmy the Rogers Hammer,
a man that he met while they were both serving time in prison for other crimes.
So Mark hires Wayne and Wayne brings in the hammer.
Okay, now that's a heck of a nickname.
You know, I've got to go to shrink on that.
Dr. Bethany Marshall, The Hammer.
Well, it's interesting he called himself the hammer because that's what he used to bludgeon the victim to death.
And he did it quite aggressively, quite maliciously.
And Nancy, this was overkill.
When Dr. Gallagher was talking about shards of the skull in the brain, I realized they could have hit her once and killed her.
They hit her multiple times.
So Jimmy the Hammer has this fetishized interest in using.
a hammer on a woman. Imagine what you want from that, but this is an extremely aggressive
man. Amanda, to backtrack, how many times is she bludgeon with the hammer? Doesn't. At least
17, we know from the autopsy report that there were 17 crescent-shaped wounds to the back of her
head. To Dr. Tim Gallagher, 17. I thought there were 18. Well, sometimes it's difficult to say
exactly how many there are when the number is so high. A lot of them are intersecting and a lot of
them obscure the one underneath it. So 17 is probably a very conservative number that they could
definitively say, but often it's quite more than that. I'm just so repelled at this. 17, at least
17 blows to the back of her head with what I understand as a claw hammer on this tiny,
tiny little lady
to Ashley Wilcott
judge and trial lawyer, anchor court
TV. Ashley, did you
hear what Amanda Hall said
that according to these two co-defendants
of course, who knows if they're telling the
truth, they're shifting all the blame to somebody else and off
themselves. Look at him, not at me.
They say that at one of their
weddings, he basically said
we're going to split, we're going to battle for custody.
I have to kill her. Why not just have joint custody,
Ashley? No, isn't that a great question
that we continue to entertain on this show?
because their defendant after defendant chooses to kill someone instead of getting a divorce or having joint custody.
You know, who knows why? You can't answer the why. You can only look at what is the evidence show and going after the person that the evidence showed did such a terrible thing.
You know, just thinking through all of the evidence. To Amanda Hall, reporter W-I-N-K-TV, as a former prosecutor, you have to assess the witnesses and see there are.
false. And here, these two, Curtis Wayne Wright, the childhood friend of the husband, Mark
Severs, all the way through high school together is an identical twin to Severs, and Jimmy
Ray Rogers, nicknamed the Hammer, just 29 years old. They're POCs, pieces of crap. Okay,
technical legal term. So why should I believe them? What can you tell me about these two?
Wayne Wright and Jimmy Rogers are both 1,100 miles away from Benita Springs in a small town in the middle of Missouri.
And the way those two are connected was from a stint in prison.
So that tells you a little bit about the character and the kind of people that they are.
Jimmy Rogers is rumored to have been a hitman before.
In fact, it's something that he regularly bragged about.
And that's why Wayne ultimately brought him in because he was afraid he wouldn't be able to go through with it.
So he needed a guy who has done it before and would do it again, and he knew that he'd be the one to actually kill her and go through with it.
So 51-year-old Curtis Wayne Wright went to school all the way through with Mark Severs, childhood friends in Missouri.
And Severs moves to Florida meets Teresa. They marry.
Then, when Mark Severs decides he needs a murder done and he needs a hitman, Curtis Wayne Wright contacts Jimmy Ray Rogers, who he met in jail, 29-year-old Rogers, aka The Hammer.
Now, it would be so easy for these two to blame Mark Severs, to take the heat off of them, but then enter another witness.
Less than an hour later, in the early morning hours of Monday, June 29th, the GPS shows Jimmy and Wayne on the highway headed northbound for the 17-hour drive back to Missouri.
The electronic trail would eventually lead detectives to Jimmy Ray Rogers' door.
Just like Wayne, he denied being involved.
But when they pulled in Jimmy's girlfriend, Taylor, what a story she had to tell.
He asked her to throw out parts of his cell phone and a jumpsuit.
What a couple of demons.
You know, if the killer is the devil, these two are his minions.
Now, we know that Curtis Wayne Wright, the childhood friend,
please guilty to second degree murder.
Then Rogers, so-called the hammer, goes to trial and is convicted of second-degree murder.
But in the case against Mark Severs, take a listen.
In the circuit court of the 20th Judicial Circuit,
in and for Lee County, Florida, criminal action.
State of Florida versus Mark D. Severs,
case number 15 CF 673B.
Verdict.
We, the jury, find as follows as to the defendant in this case.
Count one, first degree murder.
The defendant is guilty of first degree murder.
Mark Severs challenging his death sentence.
A judge is granted.
an extension for closing arguments in Mark Siever's latest appeal. State prosecutors and Mark
Severs' defense had 45 days to file written closing arguments. It was due a week from Monday,
December 15th. Mark Severs' mother and stepmother testified in court at his October 13th appeal
hearing. Jimmy Ray Rogers, one of Severs' convicted accomplices, also maintains Seaver is
innocent. November 19th, Severs' post-conviction attorneys,
filed a motion seeking the time extension.
They cited the impending execution of another death row inmate they represented.
Lee Circuit Judge Bruce Kyle granted the extension.
January 13th is the new 30-day deadline.
Jimmy Ray Rogers is also appealing his conviction.
According to Jimmy Ray Rogers, Curtis Wayne Wright worked in the Severs Benita Springs home,
doing computer work as well as painting jobs.
According to Rogers Wright asked him,
if he wanted to drive to Florida.
Speaking of the trip for weeks,
Rogers said after a 19-hour drive,
they parked in the Sieber's driveway,
but no one was home.
Rogers says Wright had a traumatic brain injury years before,
which causes him to get dates and times mixed.
So they drove to the beach.
When they came back, Teresa Severs was home.
Rogers said Wayne explained he messed up the times,
but they argued, as Teresa told them they were a week early.
All three walked into the garage,
which Teresa Severs closed behind them.
The argument continued as she unloaded a van.
With Wright becoming frustrated, trying to hold his temper,
Rogers says then Teresa Severs said she would fire Wright.
Wright then grabbed a hammer and hit her.
He says she survived the initial attack near their deep freezer
and ran into the kitchen.
Wright chased her.
Rogers says he chased two, yelling for Wright to stop.
He says in the kitchen he saw Wright swinging Teresa Severs to the ground,
holding her by her hair.
Then Wright struck Teresa Severs with the hammer over and over.
Wright then said the pair needed to make the murder look like a burglary gone wrong.
Rogers said he feared for his life and did not alert authorities.
We wait as justice unfolds.
Goodbye, friend.
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Thank you.
