Dateline NBC - Consumed
Episode Date: May 27, 2026A home in Kentucky is ravaged by fire in the middle of the night. Firefighters work their way to the bedroom where they make a grisly discovery. Dennis Murphy reports. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz... company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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I could not believe it.
I couldn't imagine anyone that would ever want to hurt her.
I had no idea what could have happened.
Married to her high school sweetheart, family meant everything to her.
It was always a lot of talk about children.
She wanted grandchildren fast.
But it all went up in smoke the night she died in a mysterious and monstrous inferno.
It was to the ride of the mattresses that we found the remains of Julie.
Shocking as the blaze was, it was nothing compared to what investigators found in the embers.
It's a bullet.
Yes.
So this woman's been shot to death.
Yes.
The obvious suspects, neighborhood thieves.
There were half a dozen house bargaining and saw.
Investigators also dug into a favorite theory.
The husband did it.
I was angry.
I felt that the detectives were on a manhunt and they were after my dad.
And anyway, he,
He was in another state.
He's over 200 miles away.
Then, up popped a text that might just be a clue.
You could say, wait, and maybe she's driving events here.
That's correct.
The truth, beyond twisted.
Leaving behind smoking ashes and burning questions.
I physically started shaking and I started crying.
I want to know why.
I'm Lester Holt, and this is Dateline.
Here's Dennis Murphy with Consumption.
The Canterbury Hills subdivision in Paducah, Kentucky is a good place to raise kids.
Tidy homes kept up by neighbors living ordered lives.
So as the front porch lights winked out on just another day,
what happened when cold January night in the wee hours was especially alarming.
Orange flames were licking the treetops.
A roaring, all-consuming fire was devouring one of the nice homes.
It was awful. Half of the house was gone.
What would rise from those ashes was far more than a fire marshal's investigation into cause.
There would be a probe into the deepest roots of a treachery beyond most people's comprehension.
It's not true. No way.
What had they all missed?
A monster, a liar, a cheater.
He's destroyed my entire family.
Before it became charred rubble, the house was home to a longtime Paducah.
couple, Keith and Julie Griffith, churchgoing, golf playing, high school sweethearts, 36 years
into a marriage that had produced two sons, Aaron, the older.
They were very supportive parents. They were loving. They loved my kids.
Aaron took after his dad, athletic, easygoing, level-headed. Younger brother Zach was more of a
firecracker like his mom. There was the time, for instance, in the sixth grade,
Zach grabbed a shovel and started digging a hole for a coy pond in the backyard.
My parents come home. They're like, what are you doing? I'm like, we're going to have a pond.
Were they okay with it? Yeah, they were fine. And they were kind of like, well, this is going to be a nightmare.
When Aaron and Zach flew the nest, the Griffith's lives seemed to only get busier. They joined a motorcycle class through their church.
Frequently were a golf foursome with friends, Craig and Temple Bradley.
Everybody that knew Keith loved him. Great guy.
Did he become your best friend?
Yeah, definitely one of my very best friends.
Temple felt that way about Julie, too.
She had a heart of gold to do anything for you,
but she also wasn't afraid to tell you exactly how it was either.
Did she get people's feathers ruffled?
Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. But everybody loved her.
After early retirement from the water company,
Keith found a second career as a traveling lawnmower salesman,
which left Julie to spend a lot of nights alone in the house.
But Keith never worried for her well-being in a safe neighborhood.
Their own door watched over by their beloved Great Dane Cleo.
Aaron's wife, Allie.
I know that for a long time they didn't even lock their door.
They would leave and go to dinner or go to town and leave the door unlocked
because Cleo was the guard dog.
Fulfilled as the Griffith's lives seemed to be.
Keith and Julie were transformed when Aaron and Allie brought into the world their
first daughter, Aria. When I had that first child, it was the greatest day of her life, I think.
Julie lived for my little girl. She wanted to be a part of everything that she did.
And Julie was there for Allie when she went into labor with their second daughter, Annalise.
Her white knuckle dashed to the hospital earned Julie the affectionate nickname NASCAR Nana.
The flashers were going and she was honking the horn.
And what is she saying to you? She says, don't have a baby in my car. She says,
Keep your legs crossed.
Don't have a baby in the car.
Everything seemed to be going great for the Griffiths in 2013.
Keith had weight loss surgery and dropped more than 100 pounds.
Julie was over the moon with two granddaughters.
But also that year came the rift.
Zach disclosed to his very religious conservative parents that he is gay.
It was definitely hard.
I mean, went from my mom was my best friend and going from talking to her multiple times a day.
to just being completely, just completely shut off.
Julie visited Zach that fall.
They tiptoed around the elephant in the room,
but the time together gave Zach hope.
Was that the step as you look back
to patching things up between you and the mom?
Yeah, yeah.
There was a way forward.
There was definitely a way forward.
We just needed more time.
But then came that cold night in January.
911, where's the emergency?
There is a house on fire in Canterbury,
and there's not a fire truck here.
A deputy drove toward the Griffith home, his dash cam recorder catching this quick glimpse of the blaze.
Soon the fire trucks arrived.
Then McCracken County Sheriff's Detective Matt Carter received a call in the middle of the night.
It's a bad fire.
Very hot.
That whole left end of the house was just completely consumed with fire.
It took about an hour for firefighters to knock down the flames.
Hours more for them to make their way through the block and wreckage of the house to what seemed
be the heart of the fire, the master bedroom, ghastly, what they would discover.
What they found in the embers would rattle the neighborhood and shatter the family.
Everything was just consumed by fire to the point that things were unrecognizable.
When we come back, investigators make a pair of discoveries and realize they're dealing
with both a tragedy and a mystery.
He had recovered a projectile.
A bullet.
Daybreak revealed the grim aftermath of the blaze at 307 Tudor Boulevard.
Wisp of smoke rose from the black water-soaked wreckage that was once the Griffith Hall.
Detective Matt Carter.
This entire structure had crumbled.
It was a pile of ashes that was on the ground.
We didn't even know if anyone was home or not.
We knew that they were in and out of town a lot.
As firefighters carefully walked through what appeared to be the fire's epicenter,
center, the master bedroom, their worst fears were confirmed. Julie had in fact been home that night.
It was to the right of the box mattresses that we found the remains of Julie. They were
unsure initially that it was human remains. Even with all their experience? Yes. Everything was just
consumed by fire to the point that things were unrecognizable. As for Keith, he was away calling on
customers in Indiana. Word of Julie's death spread almost as fast as the fire had raced through the
house. I'm getting ready for work, have the TV on in the background. We are live in the Canterbury
Hills subdivision on Tudor Boulevard. Then Temple Bradley's phone rang. It was a friend who also knew
Julie. She said, did you know there's the fire? And I said, yeah, it's all on TV. She said, it's
Keith and Julie's house. And I'd have sat there. Did she know at that point that Julie in fact was gone?
She knew. So she told me.
Temple's husband immediately tracked down Keith as he was making the three-hour drive home from Indiana.
He said, I'm on my way. I'm probably, you know, two hours away.
I said, are you all right? He goes, yeah, yeah. I could tell he was in shock.
The news hit Zach Griffith particularly hard. Since coming out to his mother, his relationship with her had been strained.
And now this.
I guess you're just beating yourself up something terrible
that you'd been sideways with her.
Yeah.
And I know that if we were just given more time,
that we would have been close again,
that we would have been,
you know, that mom and son duo that we were.
But we just, we didn't have the time.
It was ripped away from us.
And never get it back.
Aaron, the elder son, had more of a take charge reaction.
I got to take care of my brother.
I got to take care of my dad.
got logistics before the grief the news can even get absorbed.
Yeah, for me, it's just kind of the way my brain is wired, I guess.
Within hours, the Griffiths would head from all directions toward what used to be an anchor in their lives, the family home.
Just gave my dad a big hug, and we were both crying, we're like, I can't believe this, you know, what happened?
Keith's good friend, Craig Bradley, was there to lend his support.
And how was he doing? This is the first time you'd have a chance to see him, I'd eye.
I could just tell him was shaking.
As if the news couldn't get any worse, the Griffiths had.
Great Dane Cleo, along with the second pet, Daisy, had also perished in the flames.
Craig and Keith walked the property surveying the damages.
And we get to the coy pond, and he's like, got to get those fish out of there.
Julie killed me if something happened to those fish.
I was like, you know, let's not worry about that right now.
Overwhelmed by loss, the Griffiths were faced with the question.
How could this have happened?
The first thought was that it was the new heating and air unit.
It had just gone in.
The unit had been installed just days before the fire,
adjacent to the master bedroom.
That was my very first thought,
that somehow the new heating and air unit wasn't put in properly.
Faulting installation.
As for the cause of Julie's death,
that was left to the county coroner's office,
deputy coroner Ben Bradford.
What were you working with?
A very charred body.
I could not very well identify it being a person.
The cause of death seemed obvious, but just to be sure, Julie's remains were sent onto the medical examiner for an autopsy.
What he discovered was as deeply troubling as it was unexpected.
He had recovered a projectile in the remains.
A bullet?
Yes.
Suddenly, what was thought to have been death by smoke inhalation was now a homicide.
Closer examination revealed three bullet holes in all in Julie's torso.
The deputy coroner immediately called the sheriff's office.
I said we need to get some people back to that house because this is going to be a homicide.
Would you think? Wow.
Absolutely.
A lady in a nice neighborhood, good house.
Right.
And now she's got three bullet ones.
That's right.
On a who did it crime.
Back at 307 Tudor Boulevard, fire equipment pulled out as sheriff's cruisers pulled in.
Would the charred wreckage of a home once filled with joy and laughter now hold clues pointing to a killer?
Coming up, could Julie's murder have been a burglary gone bad?
Somebody's looking for the laptop or whatever jewelry in.
Right.
The thing goes down.
Right.
And then this detective spies what could be a critical clue on someone's phone.
Ping, up comes a text message?
That's correct.
When Dateline continues.
The theory that Julie died by accidental fire had collapsed as suddenly as the Griffith House itself.
For Detective Matt Carter, a 45-caliber slug recovered from Julie Griffith's torso, turned the charred rubble into the scene of a homicide.
So I'm guessing your day has changed a whole lot here, Detective.
It's changed a lot.
Despite more than a decade on the job, the detective had his work cut out for him.
No hair, fiber, bloody footprints, none of that stuff.
Right.
you've got an arson that's destroyed any chance of obtaining any of that from the scene.
For Detective Carter, the most obvious theory, this homicide was the work of a home intruder.
A burglary gone bad.
Somebody's looking for the laptop or whatever jewelry and...
Right.
The thing goes down.
Right.
We had had some burglaries within a few miles of this area.
What, within weeks or months?
Within weeks.
Within weeks.
As police canvassed the neighborhood for leads and witnesses, the investigator also had to consider the perpetrator may have been someone Julie knew.
You're not ruling anyone out or in. You're simply going through the motions. You're speaking to immediate family first and working your way out.
The Sheriff's Department did not tell the Griffiths Julie had been murdered.
We were not told anything by the police at that point.
But anyone at the scene might have guessed foul play was somehow involved.
There was just cops all over the property.
So he said, why the cops are there?
Exactly, yeah.
Naturally, the first person, Detective Carter, interviewed, was Julie's husband, Keith.
Well, first of all we are sorry for your loss.
At first, Keith talked about what everyone perceived was the cause of the inferno,
an accidental fire set off by a newly installed heating unit.
You had a new gas back put in Tuesday?
Okay.
I mean, it was a whole new system.
Keith explained the contractor was a friend of his
who'd done the work just a few days earlier.
They put a rush on it.
I mean, you know, it's kind of what friends do for each other.
Okay.
And I hope to God that this problem is not his.
But eventually, without giving details,
the detective revealed Julie's death was no accident.
The investigation is showing that, that foul play is involved.
I do not believe at this point in time,
that this was any kind of an accident.
I'm going to ask for your cooperation on several things, okay?
One of the first things Detective Carter asked about
was how Keith and Julie were getting along.
Any problems at all that?
If y'all had, anything like that whatsoever?
No, she's my best friend.
Okay.
I mean, I know.
I mean, that woman loved everybody.
The investigator also asked Keith for details
about his business trip to Indiana.
What hotel?
Comfort suites.
Comfort suites.
Okay. Didn't leave the hotel?
I did leave the hotel about, at about 11 o'clock, I went and got something to drink.
And I left again about 4 o'clock and just went and got a donut and a Coke.
Like I say, I get up pretty early.
And what about weapons? Did Keith own a gun?
I have a 45 ACP in my work truck that I just got, and it's never had any.
I mean, it's never been loaded.
As part of standard protocol, the detective asked for Keith's clothes.
They would be tested for gunshot residue.
What you're wearing now, was that fresh clothes from this morning when I review?
This is what I wore yesterday.
Before wrapping up the interview, the detective took a look at Keith's cell phone.
While I'm reviewing this phone, I see that he obtains a text message,
an incoming text message from a lady by the name of Deanna-Jane's.
Ping, up comes a text message?
That's correct.
The message read, did you make it home okay?
Keith was quick to point out his relationship with Deanna was completely platonic.
She's more like a guy for him.
No big deal, nothing sexual.
That's right.
After that, Keith was released to go and grieve with his family.
Detective Carter, meanwhile, set out to verify Keith's story.
He had a receipt where he'd stayed.
So that puts him three hours away from his house fire and the death of his wife.
It showed his check-in time and checkout time.
A quick check of Keith's gun showed he was telling the truth about it as well.
The gun looked as though it had never been fired.
So maybe he's not the guy.
He may not be.
So then, who was?
Coming up, the detective sits down with Deanna.
Was she really like a guy friend to Keith?
You could say, well, maybe she's driving events here.
Maybe she wants to get rid of the wife.
That's great.
Julie Griffith's family had hardly had time to absorb the horrific news.
of her death in a house fire, when disturbing rumors started reaching them that investigators thought
her death was foul play. The sheriff's department kept details of the murder quiet for days.
I could not believe it. Daughter-in-law, Allie.
I couldn't imagine anyone that would ever want to hurt her, much less set the house on fire,
the dogs perish. I had no idea what could have happened.
No enemies. I mean, it made no sense, just who would want to kill her.
Keith was released the night of his interview with detectives.
He headed straight to his friends, the Bradleys.
They were floored to hear the line of questioning that he recounted.
What was up with his marriage?
His alibi, the gun he owned.
He had been questioned to the point that he almost felt like that they thought he did, that he had done this.
Son Aaron also got called down to the station that same evening,
and he, too, was questioned about his parents' marriage.
noticed anything lately in their relationship as far as any problems or anything like that
to you're aware of or anything on nothing was there any money troubles was there any relationship
things that we knew of but to a person in the griffith circle the very idea that keith might know something
about julie's death was well just flat out crazy i knew he didn't do it there wasn't any way that
keith was involved in this i remember sitting there and looking over
at Keith and just watching him for a while.
And then finally I just said, you can't even grieve, can you?
And he said, no, they've taken it all the way.
The friend's working theory was a botched break-in.
They'd heard about the neighborhood's recent rash of burglaries.
Maybe that's what happened to Julie.
They come in and they startled Cleo.
Dog started to bark and go for them.
It caused Julie to wake up and they got scared.
And they shot her.
And made perfect sense.
But for Detective Carter, the Browellie.
burglary theory of the crime wasn't panning out.
Even as they sorted through the rubble,
detectives at the scene found untouched valuables,
two safes, a cache of guns,
and Julie's purse sitting in plain sight.
You'd think an intruder would have grabbed it?
You would think so.
So Carter set out to follow the most promising lead he had.
Who was this woman, Deanna,
the text messenger who wondered if Keith had made it home okay?
He had described her as a guy friend.
There was just something about that text message that seemed to stick out,
and it seemed to create that question of, you know, what's missing here.
Carter had called ahead to the authorities in the Indiana town where Deanna lived.
They'd arranged to bring the woman down to an interview room.
She was waiting.
My name's Matt Carter.
Deanna was about to tell the detective a story that would dramatically reshape his investigation.
Is she a guy friend?
No.
It was more than that.
Deanna shared the same story with us.
He wanted me to love him.
Deanna says she and Keith first met years earlier at a vendor fair.
She was the CFO of an IT company.
Keith, the Road Warrior lawnmower salesman, had a booth there.
Keith was sitting there, and I guess I caught his attention right away.
You noticed he was lying there.
Right, I noticed he was staring at me, and so I kind of, you know, just smiled.
She says he asked her to dinner.
They quickly discovered how much they had in common.
He talked about both his sons and being a grandpa.
So I just really connected because I had grown kids too.
After several dates, Deanna says, Keith expressed interest in a relationship,
but she wanted to keep it just friends.
They stayed in touch but didn't see each other for a while.
Then just a few months back, he sent her a flirty text message.
The text just said, did you cast a spell on me?
And I'm like, I looked down at my phone.
And I'm like, what?
He says, well, I was in a party last night, and this woman was chatting me up.
He goes, and all I could think about was you.
Deanna, who was in the throes of a traumatic, romantic breakup, agreed to start seeing him again for dinners.
And she says, he seemed excited to show off the new post-surgery Keith.
He goes, you're not going to recognize me.
And he goes, I've lost over 100 pounds.
I said, you have.
Did he look okay?
He looked fine.
I mean, he felt, I think he was more confident as well.
Deanna says Keith now began aggressively courting her, showering her with gifts, flowers, notes of affection.
It was all, she said, a bit much.
He kept pushing for more, and I kept telling him, you need to back off.
You need to slow down because I'm just not there.
Deanna says she couldn't put her finger on it, but there was something about Keith that was holding her back.
Maybe it was the fact that he still seemed unusually bound to a woman he called his ex-wife.
From the very beginning, Deanna says, Keith told her that he was divorced.
Very first conversation.
I'm a divorce guy.
Right.
By the time she was sitting across from Detective Carter in that interview room, Deanna says she and Keith had never been intimate, but they were dating.
And Keith was talking long term, house hunting for them.
He said, I don't want to scare you, but I want you to know that I'm looking for properties here in Morrisville to buy.
so for us to be together.
For the detective, Deanna's story put a whole new spin on the investigation.
Keith Griffith now seemed like a man with a very big secret.
Or, thinking like a homicide detective, was she the one with a secret?
You could spin it another way and say, well, maybe she's driving events here.
Maybe she wants to get rid of the wife.
That's correct.
We were open for that being an idea or a possibility.
In fact, the detective had led her tell her story without ever explaining the reason for his visit.
Now, he laid out his cards.
Was he not divorced?
No.
He says, first of all, he's not divorced.
According to him, he's been married to his high school sweetheart for 36 years.
And I just broke down because I...
But, of course, there was more.
We are conducting an investigation.
and this investigation involves what we believe to be a homicide of his wife.
I was in shock.
I was like, oh my gosh, I couldn't believe what he just said to me.
I had no idea.
So you believe she had been played by this guy?
I believe that she had.
So Detective Carter wondered if Keith Griffith had manipulated and lied to this woman,
had Keith lied to him too?
Maybe it was more about what Keith had.
said. Rewind to that moment when the detective had dropped what should have been devastating
news on Keith. The investigation is showing that, that foul play is involved. Did he ask you the
questions, what happened? What are you telling me here? She was killed? No. I mean, you'd expect that,
right? Julie was shot by an intruder? What's going on here? That's right. There was no questions
to that. But if Keith Griffith was somehow involved in his wife's murder, how on earth had he pulled it off?
After all, he was hundreds of miles away at that hotel the night of the crime.
Unless, of course, he wasn't.
Coming up, a security video surprise.
You're scrolling through the tape.
Bill it through, fill it through, and then where'd your bingo moment come up?
And then, a twist rocks the entire Griffith family.
We were all frantic.
We had no idea how it could have happened.
When Dateline continues.
Six days after the cold-blooded murder,
of Julie Griffith, family and friends gathered at her church to say goodbye. Between the visitation
and the memorial service, son Zach, was overwhelmed. Just showed like what an amazing woman
that my mom was to have that many people come out just to say that, you know, they just wanted
to give their condolences. To close friends, Craig and Temple Bradley, Julie's husband, Keith, was more
emotional that day than they'd ever seen him. Tears. Tears.
sadness. I'd never seen him cry, you know, in my life.
But even as the Griffith family mourned, Zach and his brother were feeling uneasy about the
investigation, which seemed to be focused exclusively on their father.
I was angry. I felt that the detectives, the sheriff's apartment, were on a manhunt,
and they were after my dad.
Because the husbands always do it?
Yep, husbands always do it. And they just seemed like they just zeroed in on him.
and we're going out at 110 miles an hour.
And we're not respectful to my brother and I
about any of developments or anything going on.
But Detective Matt Carter had an ongoing investigation,
and he felt there was ample reason to pursue their dad.
After his interview with Deanna,
he'd driven to the hotel that was Keith's alibi.
There he uncovered a bombshell.
Remember Keith saying to the detective
he'd been at the hotel the entire night,
ducking out just twice to get a drink and a snack?
Well, unhappily for Keith's alibi, when the detective hit play on the hotel security video,
it told a vastly different story.
Keith is seen leaving as he'd claimed around 11 p.m.
But, I think within 15 to 30 minutes, he's going to be returning.
That never happened.
You're scrolling through the tape.
Going through, going through.
And then where'd your bingo moment come up?
He finally arrived back at that hotel six hours and 34 minutes after he left.
initially. Gone for more than six and a half hours. Was that enough time for Keith to drive
all the way back to his house in Kentucky, commit the crime and return? So what did you and your
partner find when you put a clock to it? Driving the speed limit to and from, it would have allowed
approximately 20 minutes at least to have committed the crime. Is that enough time on the
ground for him to do this lethal act, kill his wife and torture house? I believe it was
ample time. Fifteen, 20 minute window? Yes.
Keith Griffith was arrested and charged with arson and murder.
You care to answer the allegations, sir?
He could face the death penalty.
He pleaded not guilty.
We were all frantic.
We had no idea what was happening, how it could have happened.
Because at that point, we knew that there was no way that he had anything to do with it.
So this is nightmare country?
Yes.
But again, we thought it would all be explained.
They would do their job.
They would take him, and the truth would come out.
I was 100% convinced that he was innocent, and then they were taking the wrong person in.
Meanwhile, the person who actually did it was getting away.
Family and friends were, for sure, distressed to learn that Keith had another woman on the road.
But the revelation wasn't enough to shake their support for him.
It was a shock, but it was something that we accepted as a mistake, but that did not mean that he killed Julie.
There's no way he did it.
Not to Julie, is why.
Kid's mother.
There's no way Keith did it.
But when Keith Griffith went to trial in February 2015,
all right.
Prosecutor Raymond McGee laid out a formidable circumstantial case.
On January 17, 2014, Keith Griffith decided that he could kill his wife.
A cornerstone of the case was that hotel security video.
Not only did it show Keith gone for enough time to commit the crime, the prosecutor said.
It also caught him in a lie.
Remember, in his interview, Keith told police he hadn't swapped clothes that night.
They didn't at any point change clothes.
But a look at the security footage showed he had.
He left wearing one set of clothes.
He was one of his work shirts.
He came back, dressed in all black.
The prosecutor also showed security video captured from her residence near the Griffith home.
It caught a glimpse of an SUV pulling into the subdivision shortly before the fire.
It was a little blurry. It was a few seconds long, but it sure looked like Keith Griffith's car.
And another circumstantial bet. Who else but Keith, the prosecutor, said, could have gotten by the Griffith's aggressive Great Dane Cleo, certainly not an unknown intruder.
The dog and Keith were very close, but a burglar couldn't have come in, a family member could have.
As for the why question, how could Keith, a man who by all accounts loved his wife, actually do it?
Well, the prosecutor turned to two age-old motives.
almost every case involving a husband and a wife, it's lust and greed.
One or the other, and this one had both.
The lust part of the equation, he said, was Deanna.
Raise your right hand.
She took the stand and told the jury that not only was Keith house hunting for them,
he was also making plans to bring her down to Paducah for a concert
and introduce her to his family.
I'd love for you to come for the weekend, stay for the weekend.
We'll go to the concert, and I would really like.
like for you to meet my dad.
As for the greed part, that was life insurance money.
Two policies on Julie's life worth $250,000.
One of them, the prosecutor said,
had taken effect just eight days before Julie died.
Keith Griffith got to the point in his life.
He just wanted to start something new,
and he didn't want to give Julie Griffith
what she would have needed in a divorce and been entitled to.
Keith's daughter-in-law, Ali Griffith,
listened to the entirety of the prosecution's case.
All she heard were theories.
They spun a story, and they told a story how they wanted it to go.
And they had facts that supported their story, but did not prove it.
And that's what Keith's defense attorney, Mark Bryant, hammered home for the jury.
What's no evidence mean?
They didn't have DNA.
They didn't have any kind of forensics.
They didn't have a confession.
They had nothing.
They had circumstantial evidence.
In their haste to arrest Keith,
the defense argued the police had gotten it wildly wrong.
Yes, he conceded Keith wasn't the husband of the year.
But he said, Deanna's story that Keith was pursuing her for a long-term commitment was nonsense.
Rather, what he wanted was a port in every storm.
As for the life insurance, $250,000 was far from a financial windfall, he said.
Even the Bradleys knew that the reason Keith and Julie bought that new policy was because of a friend's recent tragedy.
had been nagging them about making sure they had plenty of life insurance.
And he argued the footage of the SUV pulling into the subdivision was far too blurry
to ID it as Keith's Ford expedition. Besides, if a guy is going to go to this much trouble
to kill his wife, why would he drive an expedition that everybody knows he has?
But the big question still remained. If Keith hadn't driven back to Paducah to kill Julie,
where had he gone the night of the murder?
The only person who could answer that was Keith himself.
He was very adamant about taking the stand.
He wanted to talk to the jury.
He did.
What would he say?
And would the jury believe him?
It was Roll the Dice Time.
Coming up, Keith's eyebrow-raising alibi.
I was embarrassed and ashamed to what I was doing the night my wife died.
And then what Keith revealed to us.
That's what I've told everybody when they hear the story,
they're not going to believe it.
Why, even a jury couldn't end this case.
Keith Griffith was about to take the stand
and explain the most damning piece of evidence against him.
Hotel security footage that put him off the grid
for more than six and a half hours
the night his wife, Julie, was murdered.
But if he wasn't perpetrating the crime during that time,
then where was he?
Tell us your name, please, sir.
Keith Wayne Griffith.
Keith's explanation came with an embarrassing secret.
His lawyer argued that ever since becoming a traveling salesman,
Keith had struggled with an addiction to sex.
Keith, until you got out on the road several years ago,
did you have this kind of a sexual addiction?
No, sir.
And the night Julie was murdered,
he said he spent those hours out prowling for women.
After he left the hotel,
he changed out of work clothes into his man-out-looking dunts.
Didn't like people to put my job with my carouille.
With your carousing.
He says he went to a massage parlor, a bar and a couple of strip clubs.
But try as he might, he never found a hookup.
I was trying to pick somebody up.
Wasn't anybody available or interested or whatever you want to put it.
After last call, he said he went down to the river to watch the boats
before returning to the hotel to catch some shut-eye.
As for why he lied to the police.
I was embarrassed and ashamed to what I was doing the night my wife.
Did you kill your wife?
No, sir, I did not. I loved my wife.
Did you burn that house down, Keith?
No, sir.
Did you kill those dogs?
No, I loved those dogs.
When the case went to the jury, Keith's friend, Craig Bradley, didn't know which way the jury would fall.
I didn't know if he'd get acquitted, but I didn't think he'd get convicted.
I mean, I really felt like it'd be a hung jury.
Turns out, he was right.
After six hours of deliberation, the jury was deadlocked.
I'm going to declare a mistrial at this time.
Keith would sit in jail for another year as he awaited a second trial.
A long time for his family to process the story he told on the stand.
He left to go to a bar to go cruising or something,
and then he goes and sits on the riverfront.
Like, he has never done that before in his entire life.
So when he stepped down, you thought my father did this thing?
Yeah.
I mean, I definitely wasn't saying it out loud,
and I wasn't ready to accept it,
but I definitely was moving in the direction
of the only thing that makes sense at this point
is that he committed the crime.
After months of wrestling with his thoughts,
Zach decided it was time to send his dad a letter.
I'd put in a letter my opinion was that you did it.
You know, you took away that's the last chance
that I had at rebuilding a relationship with my mom.
You know, you're no longer allowed to contact me
and I don't want you to ask about me to anyone.
Wow, dear dad, you are dead to me.
Exactly.
His brother's wife, Allie, had started to feel that way about Keith, too.
It seemed like he was fabricating everything that came out of his mouth.
But there was a split in the family.
Despite doubts of his own, her husband Aaron, the one closest to his father, was still a supporter.
Whatever issues my mom and dad would have had,
I just could not believe that my dad would take my kids away from their nana.
Then a few months before Keith's retrial, Detective Carter's phone was,
rang. There was news from the jail. An inmate had some information about Keith, and it was as
eerie as it was chilling, the detective in the bullseye. Keith had come forward to him,
I wanted to have me killed. To put a hit on you? Put a hit on me.
Orchestrating your death. Yes. He'd drawn a map of what he believed to be my residence,
suggested the caliber of weapon to use to kill me. The informant specifically asked him,
what if my family was present? And his response was one word.
And that was tragedy.
Wow.
That does make the hair on your neck stand up.
It does.
That wouldn't look good to a jury.
The development brought Aaron to a tipping point.
Were you no longer wavering at this point, Aaron?
Had you come down on the side of, oh, my God.
Yeah.
My father killed my mother.
Yeah.
Now Aaron II wrote his dad a letter.
If he was guilty.
It's time.
It's time to man up and do what you should have done two years ago.
Keith's defense attorneys went to the prosecutor to hammer out a plea deal.
They agreed on 30 years in prison for the murder and for soliciting the hit.
Moments later, Keith was standing in a Paducah courtroom speaking the words,
his family and friends never in a million years thought they'd hear him say.
Yes, he murdered Julie.
There's no excuse for what I did, and I can't take it back.
And she was my best friend.
and then I don't know what happened to me.
But I did it.
There's nothing I can do about it.
Temple Bradley, who works near the courthouse, was there.
My heart is breaking that the person that I have wholeheartedly put my dress in for two years has lied to my face.
You know, I just can't believe we've been deceived in that way.
Because we were there for him the whole time.
For Keith's family and friends, there are.
so many questions, but one seems to tower above all the others.
I want to know why, and I want to know how you go from a loving husband and father and
grandfather to driving all that way, killing your wife, and then covering it up, and then
lying to your family for so long, knowing that we had everybody doubting us, and we still
defended him.
It's disgusting.
He's a monster.
All I can tell you is that had a lot of bad thoughts, wrong thoughts, mistakes.
We sat down with Keith hoping for answers.
But as many times as we asked him why this all happened.
Why'd you do it?
I really can't tell you.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, just a bad decision.
We never did get a satisfying response.
So this isn't some kind of delayed midlife crisis here?
No.
Where you're trying to be with Deanna or someone like her to have,
No.
A final happy chapter in your life?
No.
New House.
And I were happy.
Do you see how perplexing it is to hear this story?
I know.
It's absolutely confounding.
That's what I've told everybody.
When they hear the story, they're not going to believe it.
I have a hard time believing that I did what I did.
And one thing he didn't do.
How about a divorce?
Never crossed my mind.
Keith now says the remorse began the moment he pulled out of his driveway.
Trying to get out of the subdivision.
crying before I ever get out, regretting what I done.
I probably drove 100 miles an hour all the way back, hoping to get caught.
As for the future, Keith says he is prepared to die in prison.
I don't have anything to live for, except maybe forgiveness.
From who?
From my boys.
And that's why you're talking today.
Exactly. Yes.
Well, it's between you and them.
but I'll tell you my take on it, you got some distance to make up.
I know I do. I've got a lot to make up.
Of the countless things Keith stole from his family,
resilience was not among them.
Aaron and Zach said that once they knew what happened to their mother,
they could finally mourn her passing
and focus on keeping her spirit alive
for those two little granddaughters who were the center of her universe.
My oldest daughter will remember, like I said,
she talks about her almost every day.
We have pictures of her up in her room,
As my youngest gets older, we'll tell her the NASCAR Nana story about when she was born and just never let her memory die.
That's all for now. I'm Lester Holt. Thanks for joining us.
