Dateline NBC - An accused killer pleads guilty, but not to murder. The next chapter in the Dulos case. Plus, a NXIVM story.

Episode Date: November 20, 2025

Brian Walshe, the Massachusetts art swindler accused of murdering his wife, pleads guilty to some -- but not all -- of the charges he faces ahead of trial. Michelle Troconis, the woman convicted of co...nspiring with her boyfriend to kill his estranged wife, Connecticut mother-of-five Jennifer Farber Dulos, has filed a thousand-page appeal. News on the murder of "Last Chance U" football coach John Beam and Karen Read's new lawsuit. Plus, Smallville actress and former NVIUM cult member, Allison Mack, shares her story on a new podcast. Find out more about the cases covered each week here: www.datelinetruecrimeweekly.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, there we go. You're listening in to the Dateline story meeting. We will just dive in. Our team is catching up on breaking crime news. I'm curious about the rest of the investigation. You know, everybody's talking about mom blowing him a kiss in the courtroom. The cops are like, why were you acting so strange? You were there the whole time.
Starting point is 00:00:22 Welcome to Dateline True Crime Weekly. I'm Blaine Alexander. It's November 20th, and here's what's on our docket. In Connecticut, Michelle Triconis wants a new trial. The woman convicted of conspiring with her boyfriend to murder his estranged wife filed a 1,000-page appeal. We'll boil it all down. The defense claims that those police interviews should have never been let in.
Starting point is 00:00:45 In Dateline Roundup, we've got details on Karen Reid's explosive new lawsuit, and we'll bring you the latest in the murder of the last chance you football coach. The two men were aware of each other in some capacity, they were not closely connected. Plus, Smallville actress Alison Mack breaks her silence on the sex-cold nexium. I feel like I at least have to say it out loud for myself, like once, you know. But before all of that, we're heading to the Norfolk County Courthouse in Massachusetts, where there has been a stunning development in the case of Brian Walsh.
Starting point is 00:01:24 39-year-old mother of three, Anna Walsh, has been missing since New Year's Day, her husband brian initially told police that anna had taken a ride share early new year's day to catch a flight to washington dc where she worked but there was no record that she ever took a flight and no evidence that she ever used her credit cards or her phone after that morning when they searched brian's home investigators found blood in the basement and a knife a week after anna's disappearance brian was arrested and charged with misleading an investigation and a few days after that Prosecutors hit him with two new charges, first-degree murder and improper conveyance of a body. Brian denied it all, and in the almost three years since his arrest, he has maintained his innocence,
Starting point is 00:02:11 that is, until Tuesday, when this happened. You wish to offer a change of plea from not guilty to guilty? I do. Brian did not plead guilty to Anna's murder, but he did plead guilty to all the rest. Joining us now is Dateline producer Dorothy Newell, who has been following this case. Dorothy, thanks so much for joining us. Happy to be here. Dorothy, did you get any sense that something was brewing,
Starting point is 00:02:34 or did all of this come as a complete surprise to you? Absolutely no idea that this was brewing. Yeah, it was a complete surprise. But I have to think that this was in the works for a while. Now quickly remind us, who was Anna Walsh? Tell us a little bit more about her. So Anna was an immigrant from Serbia, and she came to the United States in her early 20s.
Starting point is 00:02:54 She was talented, ambitious, charming, all accounts. She met Brian. They had three young kids. She started working in real estate. She worked in Washington, D.C. during the week while Brian took care of their three kids in their home in a Boston suburb. Now, the reason he could take full-time care of the kids is because he was on house arrest awaiting sentencing for art fraud. He'd pleaded guilty to selling some fake Andy Warholz. How did investigators start piecing together this case against Brian Walsh? It also started when her employer reported her missing when she didn't show up for work. So police went to the home to do a welfare check, and they met with Brian.
Starting point is 00:03:34 And according to prosecutors, Brian seemed cooperative at first. He handed over his cell phone and his electronic devices for them to check out. That's when the missing person's case became a murder investigation. Because right there, on one of the kids' iPads, there were some strange Google searches with titles like 10 ways to dispose of a body and how to stop a body from decomposing. Oh, gosh. And those searches were on the kids' iPad? Wow. They also learned from Brian's phone that he had visited some places that he had not told them about in the days after Anna's disappearance, right? Yeah. On the day after she disappeared, his GPS data on his phone showed that Brian had made a visit to Home Depot where he bought cleaning supplies, a mop, goggles, a hatchet, and baking soda.
Starting point is 00:04:24 Prosecutors also say that a man who looked like Brian was caught on camera throwing a heavy garbage bag into a dumpster. And they didn't find that garbage bag, but they did find others at a dump in the town where Brian's mom lived. And those bags contain some of her belongings and some of those items were covered in blood. Anna's body has never been found. Dorothy, do prosecutors have an alleged motive here? So prosecutors have a few theories. They say she told a friend that her marriage was in trouble and that she was thinking about moving. the kids to Washington, D.C., they also say that Brian's mother hired a private investigator to
Starting point is 00:05:00 follow her around to see if she was having an affair. Another theory is that prosecutors say Brian was the beneficiary of her $2.7 million life insurance policy, and he owed hundreds of thousands of dollars in his federal art fraud case. So was money a motive? His defense says he was already paying back the money that he owed in that case. And as far as the alleged infidelity, They say Brian didn't know anything about that. Dorothy, of course, this week we saw this unexpected plea, but there was drama in this trial even before we got to this week. I mean, a few weeks ago, the entire thing came to a halt. That's right.
Starting point is 00:05:38 So Brian Walsh was stabbed in jail this past September, and he recovered. But following that attack, his attorneys were concerned that he may not be mentally or emotionally capable of participating in his own defense. So they stopped everything, and he spent about 40 days undergoing psych evaluation and was only just last week declared competent to stand trial. And so that led us to this week. Tell me what happened there. It felt like it was all steam ahead. There was a hearing on Monday the attorneys were sparring over opening statements and about what the jury could hear. Reporters noticed that Bryant's mom was in the courtroom.
Starting point is 00:06:16 She even blew a kiss to her son. The very next day, though, that Tuesday, everything. changed. Right. Jury selection was supposed to start. Brian came in, then the judge, and then similar to the Colberger plea hearing for those who watched that, the judge made extra sure that Brian was sound of mind and understood what was about to happen. And then it became clear that he was pleading guilty to something. Mr. Walsh, did you in fact willfully mislead various law enforcement with the intent to impede or interfere with a criminal investigation of Anna Walsh's disappearance? Yes, Your Honor.
Starting point is 00:06:55 And you're pleading guilty to willfully conveying away a human body in violation of Massachusetts general laws. Do you understand that? Yes, Your Honor. So it's the two lesser charges, misleading the investigators, and improper conveyance the moving of a body. So just to be super clear here, he is not pleading guilty to murder. What happens with that charge? trial still get underway? Yeah. He's still heading to trial of this moment on the murder charge. In fact, not long after he entered the plea, jury selection got underway. Is that jury going to be hearing
Starting point is 00:07:30 about these pleas that Brian just entered? And how will all of this work, Dorothy? Yes, they will hear about the pleas that Brian entered. And some experts are saying that by taking responsibility for some of his actions, Walsh could be trying to establish some goodwill with the jurors. and hope they find him guilty of a lesser charge like second-degree murder or manslaughter. Then he might have a chance of parole way down the road. You know, listening to that, some could say that sounds risky, right? Brian is basically admitting that he, in fact, got rid of his wife's body. How will he try and convince a jury then that it wasn't murder?
Starting point is 00:08:06 That's the question on everybody's mind. You know, the fact is, if his defense is going to be that it was an accident or self-defense or suicide, Brian would have to tell that story on the stand because he's the only. one who was there. And if he testifies, he faces cross-examination, and that could certainly be brutal. So jury selection, of course, is still proceeding. Have they made any progress? The crazy thing is they made a lot of progress on the day that everything blew up. On the day that Brian pled, they actually sat nine jurors. Wow, old Dorothy, there is a lot to follow there. Thanks so much for joining us to break it down today. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:08:43 Coming up, a lengthy appeal from the woman at the center of the Jennifer Dullo's case. But is it enough to overturn her conviction? Seven years ago, Connecticut Mama 5 Jennifer Farber Dullos was in the middle of a bitter divorce and custody battle when she disappeared. search for this missing mother. It's a story that has captured national attention. Jennifer Deelos was lasting taking her kids to school. She's never been found. Investigators quickly suspected that her estranged husband,
Starting point is 00:09:25 Fotis, might have killed her. They tracked down security camera video showing him dumping garbage bags in the hours after Jennifer's disappearance. Inside those bags, they found zip ties, a razor blade, and bloody clothes. DNA on the items matched back to Jennifer. Fotus was eventually charged with his wife's murder, but before he ever went to trial, he died by suicide.
Starting point is 00:09:47 That might have been the end of the investigation, except, according to prosecutors, Fotis wasn't the only person involved in Jennifer's death. Almost overnight, she went from a possible witness to a person of interest in the case of a missing mama five. Prosecutors accused Fodas' live-in girlfriend, Michelle Triconis, of conspiring with him to commit the murder. Last year, she was convicted after a seven-week trial and sentenced to serve more than 14 years in prison. But outside the courtroom, her family insisted that she was innocent and vowed to fight on. My sister will eventually come out. She has to because she's innocent of everything that she's been charged for.
Starting point is 00:10:28 Their day to prove that finally came last week when her defense team filed a thousand-page document asking a judge to overturn her conviction or give her a new trial. We're joined today by NBC Connecticut's Kevin Geis, who covered every day of Michelle's trial and is here now to bring us up to speed on this case. Kevin, thanks so much for being here. Absolutely. Thank you guys for having me. Of course. So Kevin, before we dig into the appeal itself, we'll certainly get to that. But let's just remind all of our listeners of the main points that prosecutors made against Michelle during this trial. So how does she fit into this case? Absolutely. So they were able to weave together a narrative around Photus being the individual who physically, did the act of murder. Michelle was essentially an agent to help in the cover-up. So prosecutors alleged that she was in charge of things like manipulating Photos-Dulose's phone. She was involved with him in the disposal of evidence. She helped come up with what were referred to as
Starting point is 00:11:26 these alibi scripts, a rundown that they came up with and they wrote down in the event that they would be questioned about where they were. Now, the problem with those so-called alibi scripts was They would catch FOTUS on, you know, closed circuit television or security cam footage that told a completely different story than what was written down in those scripts. Well, speaking of security cam footage, I mean, that's another piece of evidence right there, right? We mentioned that up top that FOTUS was caught dumping bags. The prosecutor said that you can see Michelle on it too. You can.
Starting point is 00:11:59 And at one point, you watch her lean out of the truck. She says she was just in the truck with FOTUS on that afternoon. She didn't know what was going on. But you watch her at one point lean out of the truck. The defense says she was trying to scrape gum off of her hand onto the sidewalk. But when police investigators went back, they actually found some falsified Connecticut license plates that were dumped into a storm drain right in that area. And the state, again, sort of rolls that as, you know, we have you on security camera disposing of physical evidence, whether you knew what you were doing or not. Right.
Starting point is 00:12:34 That's still disposal of evidence. Talk to me about some of the interviews, because I understand that when she was interviewed by investigators, her story changed. Her story changed again. So she went back to meet with police investigators three times. And every single time either had some sort of new detail or a detail would change regarding where she was or what time or how this worked. And the defense claims that she was just trying to be helpful. And the more she thought about it, the more details that came to light. But of course, from a prosecution standpoint, you're looking at these as inconsistencies. Walk us through what Michelle's defense was at trial.
Starting point is 00:13:13 Yeah. So throughout the entire trial, the defense attorney, John Schoenhorn, sort of said, you don't have any concrete evidence tying her to the case. You don't have any sort of smoking guns, so to speak. And they also leaned pretty hard on the idea that Fodos Doulos was a manipulator. Fodos Doulos was someone that, you know, may have done it, but she was just sort of caught up in this love triangle. So that was her trial. But last week, Michelle filed her appeal with the Connecticut Supreme Court. I mean, we talked about it earlier, a thousand pages. Yeah, it's a long document. Boil it down for us, though, Kevin. What's the argument here? The main arguments that she makes is that there was insufficient evidence, as well as, you know, rulings on the police interviews.
Starting point is 00:13:56 So the defense claims that those police interviews should have never been let in. Yeah. At one point, Michelle and her team say those interviews were coerced, that she was only there because investigators threatened to charge her with murder if she didn't talk, right? Let's listen to a clip of that interview. This is your chance. If you want to see your family and your daughter and your mother and not get charged for the word, this is your chance and is your one and only chance. The defense is basically saying that playing those interviews warrants an overturned conviction, right?
Starting point is 00:14:30 Exactly. Because there was a lack of ability, according to her defense attorney during the trial, to really sort of defend how those interviews were used in court, it was a lack of. last second decision that they would be let in. I mean, prosecutors really kind of dove right into those interviews and said, hey, let's take a look at these and highlight every single inconsistency. So really sort of a tough thing for the defense to capitalize on from the get-go. Who is going to rule on this appeal? And when can we expect that ruling? Right. So it's in the hands of the appellate court. Every defense attorney I have been able to contact about this says this is going to be a long appeal. We're looking at potentially a year. Okay. Well, Kevin, we'll
Starting point is 00:15:13 Continue to talk to you as we follow this. Thank you so much. Yeah, thank you. Up next, it's time for Dateline Roundup. We've got the latest on Karen Reed and the shooting of Last Chance You coach John Bean. Plus, the story of Alison Mack, actress and former member of the sex cult nexium
Starting point is 00:15:32 in her own words. Welcome back. Joining me for this week's roundup is Dateline producer Marissa Meyer. Hi, Marissa. Hi, Blaine. How are you doing? I'm good. It's so good to see you. Thanks for joining us today. We've got a lot to talk about. Our first story is a big update in the Karen Reed saga. She's filed a major lawsuit in Massachusetts claiming she was framed for the death of her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O'Keefe. So Marissa, just walk us through all of this. What is she alleging here? Yes. So in this civil lawsuit, she lays out a long list of accusations. You know, of course, you remember, a lot of people remember, Reed was acquitted earlier this year. Prosecutors had tried and failed to convince the jury to convict her of murdering O'Keefe by backing her SUV into him. And now she is suing the investigators that were on the case, along with several people who were inside the Canton home where she says she last saw O'Keefe alive. So, of course, the big question here has been, what actually happened that night? What is she saying happened that night? Yeah. So it's very similar to what she alleged at her criminal trial, too. The lawsuit claims O'Keefe got into an altercation at the Canton home. He suffered a head wound and was attacked by the homeowner's German Shepherd. Reed points to the state medical examiner's autopsy, which did note scratches and what the suit calls. dog bite wounds. So according to the filing, people inside the home moved his body outside to make it look like he had been hit by her SUV and left in the snow. So since she has filed this separate lawsuit, have we heard from the people who were in the house that night? How are they responding?
Starting point is 00:17:29 They have repeatedly denied any involvement in O'Keeffe's death. In fact, they say O'Keefe never entered the home that night. And their attorneys said the allegations are entirely false, defamatory, and without merit. So, Marissa, the lawsuit also points the finger at somebody whose name will be very familiar to those who have been following this saga, former Massachusetts state trooper Michael Proctor, along with two of his supervisors, Sergeant Yuri Buchanick and Lieutenant Brian Tully. So what's new there? So the suit accuses all three men of failing to conduct a meaningful investigation into other suspects. And the lawsuit bashes Proctor's investigation. When it comes to Proctor's supervisors, the suit accuses them of failing to intervene when
Starting point is 00:18:16 they became aware of Proctor's misconduct. Have we heard any response from them yet? So all three men have denied any conspiracy in the past or undermining the investigation. NBC has yet to receive any comment from Proctor and Sergeant Buchanick about the lawsuit in particular. But an attorney for Lieutenant Brian Tolly said he was looking forward to a civil trial and quote, was never part of any so-called conspiracy and cover-up. Well, Marissa, of course, that is one that we are going to continue to follow very, very closely. Let's go to our next story. We're going to go out to Oakland, California, where there are major developments in the tragic
Starting point is 00:18:55 killing of longtime Lainey College coach John Beam. He's somebody who became a familiar face. A lot of people got to know him through the Netflix series Last Chance You. Well, Beam was shot on campus last Thursday and died the next day. suspected killer was arrested within hours. So, Marissa, what do we know about the suspect who's now in custody? So what authorities have said so far is that the suspect is 27-year-old Cedric Irving Jr. According to court documents Irving confessed to the shooting. Investigators say he told police he used a handgun that was found in his bag to shoot Beam inside the Laney College
Starting point is 00:19:33 Fieldhouse. And that is where Beam worked every day as the athletic director. I know that he appeared in court. What happened there? He did appear in court. Irving made his first appearance, but he did not enter a plea. He stood next to his public defender while wearing a padded safety vest, which is something the jail system uses when there are concerns about a person harming themselves. He said very little, and then the judge scheduled his next hearing for December 16th. Well, Marissa, do police have any sense of why he may have done this? Yeah, that seems to be the big question in this. Police have only said that Irving came to campus with intention, that the two men were aware of each other in some capacity, but they were not closely connected. So beyond that, officials
Starting point is 00:20:23 have not released any additional details about why this might have happened. And, Marissa, there was a very big turnout in the courtroom as well, right? Yes. The front rows were filled with Beam's family, friends, and one very recognizable face was there as well. NFL running back in Oakland native Marshaun Lynch attended the hearing to support Beam's loved ones. Just a terrible story, Marissa. Okay, we'll definitely stay on top of that one. And then for our last story, this is a really interesting one. We're turning to a group of criminology students who helped police crack a decades-old cold case in Texas. It was a class of criminology students at the University of Arlington, and investigators are saying that these students uncovered evidence that has led to an arrest in the 1991 murder of 25-year-old Cynthia Gonzalez. The Arlington Police Department had partnered with the class for the semester and gave the students access to hundreds of pages from the old case files. And after they reviewed up to 500 documents, the students know.
Starting point is 00:21:30 noticed a connection between Gonzalez and a woman named Janie Perkins. Detectives had found this link decades ago, but had never moved forward with charges. Earlier this month, Perkins was arrested on a capital murder charge. She's now 63, but police say that back in the 90s, she had no alibi for the night Gonzalez disappeared. She failed two voluntary polygraph tests, and she allegedly told several people that she was glad that Gonzalez was dead. Wow. So what happened next, Marissa? So Perkins was released on bail after posting a $150,000 bond. She is awaiting her next court appearance as the investigation continues. And that same class is now reviewing two more cold cases. So there could be other news from them in the near future. Very interesting story, Marissa. Thank you so much for joining us. Thank you so much, Blaine. I was excited by...
Starting point is 00:22:28 the power that I felt having these young beautiful women look to me and listen to me. That's the voice of actress Alison Mack, who first became famous for her work on the hit TV show Smallville. But in 2018, she made headlines for playing a far more sinister role. Actress Allison Mack is out on bail after facing a judge in Brooklyn. Prosecutors say she recruited women into a sex trafficking sorority. Federal prosecutors accused Mack of being a top lieutenant to Keith Ranieri, the founder of Nexium, the self-help group that many have called a sex cult. Reneery was convicted of sex trafficking and other charges and sentenced to 120 years in prison.
Starting point is 00:23:10 Alison Mack admitted to recruiting some of his victims and pleaded guilty to charges of racketeering and racketeering conspiracy. She was sentenced to spend three years in prison. Well, now she's free and she's rebuilding her life. And in Uncover, Allison after Nexium, a new podcast, series from the CBC. Mac is breaking her silence on all of this for the very first time. People can believe me or people can think I'm full of shit or whatever. People can not listen. Like, whatever. But I feel like I at least have to say it out loud for myself, like once, you know. Dateline's senior national producer, Tim Eulinger, has followed this nexium case for years and is joining
Starting point is 00:23:51 us now to share more from Mack's interview and to give us his thoughts on what she has to say. Tim, I am so glad to be joined by you today. Thank you so much for breaking all this down. Oh, it's great to see, Blaine. Well, before we get into her version of events, Tim, I wonder if you could just give us a sketch of what nexium was. It started as apparently a self-help group. You know, they began offering classes on self-improvement and said they could provide tools to help your career and your relationships. And they apparently had about 17,000 clients worldwide.
Starting point is 00:24:23 Their leader was a man named Keith Rennarie. And by the group, he was treated much more like a spiritual leader or a guru than a teacher. Does Mack explain ever what was so appealing to her about the group? Yeah. In this podcast done by the CBC, she, you know, at the time she was in her mid-20s, she was working in Vancouver as an actress. She was feeling a bit lost. And the teaching to her clicked. And after a few years, she moved to Albany to take classes directly from Keith Winery. Max said that she had been part of nexium for about a decade, 10 years, when she learned about a secret sort of subgroup in nexium called DOS. Tell us about that.
Starting point is 00:25:04 Yeah, DOS, DOS, is short for a Latin phrase, Dominus obsequious serrarium. And it, you know, it roughly translates as a master above female slaves. And it basically meant that small groups of women who called themselves slaves were led by a female master. and the master required absolute obedience from their slaves. But Renary was calling the shots, and he was the grandmaster. Max says that Renary was dictating almost every aspect of their lives. Yes. Max says she was only allowed to eat about 500 calories a day, meaning that she was, you know, practically starving all the time.
Starting point is 00:25:42 She also had to get Reneri's permission to travel and do anything. So at one point, Tim, Mack talks about sending her slaves off to, quote-unquote, seduce Reneery, and she says at the time, she didn't think that Rennary would actually sleep with them. That seems a little difficult to believe. Very hard to believe. Yeah. Well, she admits it was naive, and she thinks it was willful ignorance, perhaps. Really, from the hours of conversations that Alison Mack had with the reporter, Natalie Robomit, I mean, you can really hear her thinking this through and still trying to come to terms with things. But, yeah, you know, she admits it was naive and says she thinks that if she'd recognize,
Starting point is 00:26:20 Nice Ranieri was manipulating them all, she would have had to admit that she'd hurt people, too. Has there been any reaction so far to her words from any of the women who were, quote, unquote, her slaves in all of this? The one reaction I heard was from India Oxenberg, the daughter of the famous actress, Catherine Oxenberg, who led a years-long campaign to get her out of nexium. And India, in a quote to Vanity Fair magazine, said that she appreciates the fact that Allison is now talking and that she has a right to tell her story. What's really interesting about this series is how Mack describes breaking away from nexium. It's not something that she says happened overnight, right? Right. She says even after she was arrested, she still didn't know what to think, and that it's been an evolution for her.
Starting point is 00:27:08 And it's going to take time. Can you tell us? What is she doing with her life now? Well, after prison where she served about 21 months, she was released. Sturley on good behavior. She's now about 43 years old, and she's studying for a degree in social work and recently married. This is just an unbelievable case, Tim. Thank you for being with us today. We appreciate it. Well, thank you so much. That's it for this episode of Dateline True Crime Weekly. Next week, we'll be off for Thanksgiving, so we hope you have a great
Starting point is 00:27:39 holiday, and we will see you back here the week after. And of course, to get ad-free listening for all of our podcasts, subscribe to Dateline Premium. Coming up this Friday, Keats got an all-new episode. The brutal double murder of a young couple inside a Wisconsin farmhouse launches a decades-long quest for their killer. He's not a man. He is a monster. Watch Raising the Dead This Friday at 9-8 Central on NBC. Thanks for listening. Dateline True Crime Weekly is produced by Carson Cummins, Caroline Casey, and Keanu Reed. Our senior producer is Liz Brown-Kurloff. Production and fact-checking help by Audrey Abrams. Veronica Maseka is our digital producer. Rick Kwan is our sound designer. Original music by Jesse McGinty. Paul Ryan is
Starting point is 00:28:28 executive producer and Liz Cole is senior executive producer of Dateline. All right. Thank you. Bye-bye.

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