Dateline NBC - Son arrested in Rob Reiner killings. Brian Walshe verdict. Plus, Keith Morrison on deadly jealousy.

Episode Date: December 18, 2025

In Hollywood, "When Harry Met Sally" director Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele, are found slain in their bedroom. Their troubled middle son, Nick, is suspected of murdering them. In Massachusetts, the... jury delivers its verdict in the trial of Brian Walshe, the art swindler accused of murdering and dismembering his wife, Ana. Plus, a new Keith Morrison podcast, "Something About Cari." 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
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, good morning. Hey, good morning. You're listening in to the Dateline story meeting. Let's jump in here. Our team is catching up on breaking crime news. How quickly do they get to the brother and wife? What would be his motive is what I'm wondering. They can find no skeletons in his closet.
Starting point is 00:00:21 Welcome to Dateline True Crime Weekly. I'm Lester Holt. It's December 18th, and here's what's on our docket. In Massachusetts, the closing chapter in the trial of Brian Walsh, the art swindler, accused of murdering and dismembering his wife. We've got a verdict. We saw the defense team walk in with no word. Walsh came in with a bailiff, shackled. In Dateline Roundup, the defense team in the Sandra Birchmore case makes a surprising request, and Karen Reed's SUV is back in the news. The car was in disrepair, including a missing radio, and the infamous.
Starting point is 00:00:58 broken taillight. Plus, Keith Morrison will be here to talk about his latest podcast, something about Kerry. They had had a kind of a little flirtation. It had a sort of a quasi-date, and then all hell broke loose. But first, we head to California for the latest on a double murder that has left Hollywood reeling. Actor-director Rob Reiner was the genius behind some of Hollywood's most beloved films from
Starting point is 00:01:27 This is Spinal Tap to When Harry Met Sally. It was on the set of When Harry Met Sally where he met his wife, photographer Michelle, Singer, Reiner. They raised three children at their home in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles, and that's where police found Rob and Michelle dead on Sunday afternoon. Tonight, as we come on the air, we're following several breaking stories, including the murder of director Rob Reiner and his wife. Six hours later, U.S. Marshals apprehended the man, investigators, suspect was Rob and Michelle's killer, their very own son, Nick.
Starting point is 00:02:03 NBC News Entertainment correspondent Chloe Malas has been following the case closely since it first broke and is here to tell us what she's learned. Thanks for joining us, Chloe. Thanks for having me, Lester. Chloe, it's such a tragic story. Tributes have been pouring in since the deaths of Rob and Michelle were announced. Tell us a bit more about them. You know, Lester, it's so tragic. Rob Reiner, he came from. from a storied entertainment family. His father, Carl Reiner, was a very famous comedian. His mother Estelle was an actress and singer, and a really good family friend was a man by the name of Norman Lear. And Norman Lear ended up casting him in the 1970s hit sitcom all in the family.
Starting point is 00:02:51 He played Meathead, and he won two Emmys for that. And then he went on to direct movies like the Princess Bride, a few good men. When Harry met Sally, and that's the movie where he met his wife, Michelle. He and Michelle went on to have an incredible marriage. They were known for their political activism, their philanthropy, and it's just so tragic. Yeah, I had got a chance to interview him at one point. What a terrific guy, very friendly, very affable. What are they used to call him the mayor of Hollywood. I remember the first time I saw him, I think, was in a Starbucks. on Santa Monica Boulevard, and he was just kind of the guy, so an apt title, certainly. So let's go to this past weekend. A lot of us got push notifications on Sunday when news
Starting point is 00:03:39 apps announced that something had happened at the Reiner home. What were the first bits of information you were hearing, Chloe? Sure. I got a phone call from our news desk who said that there was police activity and that our affiliate was on the scene and that two individuals had been found deceased in the home. Since then, we've come to find out that it was the Reiner's daughter, Romy, who called 911. She had gone over to check on her parents because she hadn't heard from them. And police officers were dispatched, and they found the Riner's dead in their bedroom. And the initial indications were that there was a knife involved. That's going to be part of the evidence.
Starting point is 00:04:23 Absolutely. And we do know more Lester now from our reporting as to the hours that played out before their tragic ending. They were found dead Sunday afternoon. But what we know happened Saturday night was that Rob Reiner, Michelle, and their son, Nick, went to a holiday party hosted by TV legend Conan O'Brien. And there were a lot of celebrities there. And Rob, like you said, affable man walked in, introducing his son, according to two sources that I spoke with, to the celebrities and the guests that were there. And these sources telling me that Nick's behavior was odd and disruptive and that he was interrupting conversations that people were having and just walking up to them, asking odd questions. And we know that this then turned into a conversation that his parents were having.
Starting point is 00:05:18 having with him about his mental health. They go back to their home and then they were murdered. We know from reporting that Nick was arrested after his sister called 911. You know, we haven't heard anything from Nick, but what we do know is that he had long suffered with addiction. And this was something that his parents and he were actually very public about. But at points, it sounded like he had become more stable. You know, a lot is really unclear right now. In 2016, Nick and Rob put out this semi-autobiographical movie called Being Charlie about a father and his son who was dealing with addiction. And you heard Nick talk about his years-long battle that began when he was just 15 years old. And you heard Rob Reiner, his father, talking about all the doctors and the help that they were trying to get for his son.
Starting point is 00:06:17 and that they really wanted to do this movie to pull back the curtain and say, look, just because we're this famous Hollywood family doesn't make us immune from addiction. Yeah, I think that's what's so chilling about this. Everybody kind of looks and thinks, you know, what would I do in a situation like that? So Nick is being held without bail the Los Angeles County Jail. Usually the prosecutor has 48 hours to file charges against someone in custody. And our cameras were outside the Superior Court of L.A. County waiting for news on that when our arrest. reporter spotted a familiar face. That's right, Lester. Alan Jackson, who famously represented Karen Reid during both of her murder trials, he is representing Nick Reiner.
Starting point is 00:06:59 And when asked about who retained him, he wouldn't say. And later on Tuesday, L.A. District Attorney Nathan Hockman held a press conference and announced the criminal charges Nick is facing. These charges will be two counts of first-degree murder with a special circumstance of multiple murders. He also fesses a special allegation that he personally used a dangerous and deadly weapon, that being a knife. So the maximum sentence for the charges is either life in prison without the possibility of parole or the death penalty. But Hockman said that no decision has been made yet, Lester, about whether or not they're going to pursue the death penalty, and they're going to want to
Starting point is 00:07:40 talk to the family about that. There have been candles and flowers placed on Rob Reiner's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. It's not. just celebrities in mourning. Chloe, why do you think his life and his body of work has had such an impact on people? I think everybody has a story, Lester, and so many of us are struggling with something. And so many families in this country understand the depths of addiction. And obviously, not many can relate to a double murder. But this is something that is touching people in a very profound way, Lester. Nick Reiner's arraignment is scheduled for early in the new year,
Starting point is 00:08:21 so we'll find out more then. On Wednesday, Jake and Romy Reiner issued a statement thanking people for their outpouring of support and asking for their parents to be remembered for the incredible lives they lived and the love they gave. Well, we appreciate you joining us. I know your team will continue to work all the angles of the story and we'll be watching along the way, but thanks again.
Starting point is 00:08:44 Thank you. Coming up, Brian Walsh and his defense team make a bold decision in the final days of his murder trial. What did the jury make of it? For eight days, a jury at the Norfolk County Courthouse in Massachusetts heard prosecutors make their case against Brian Walsh, the arch swindler accused of murdering his wife, Anna, a New Yorker. year's day back in 2023. In devastating detail, the prosecutors showed the jury the steps Walsh had taken to get rid of his wife's body, shopping for supplies to dismember her, dropping off garbage bags containing bloody items at dumpsters in the area, lying to the police flat out, all the actions of a man they argued who was methodically covering up a murder. But what the prosecutor
Starting point is 00:09:42 could not tell the jury was how Anna died. The prosecutor offered no theory of the murder itself, no proof that she had actually been killed. According to the defense, that's because Anna was never murdered at all. They admitted Walsh had illegally disposed of Anna's body. He pleaded guilty to it before trial, but they said there was a reason. Walsh had simply panicked after finding Anna dead in bed from natural causes. What they called a sudden, unexplained death. When it came time for Walsh to present his defense, his attorney made a bold decision. He did not call any witnesses, not even Brian Walsh himself.
Starting point is 00:10:24 Have you made a decision about whether you wish to testify at this trial? Yes, I have. And what is your decision? I will not testify. Well, then after some dramatic closing arguments, the case was in the hands of the jury. Dateline producer Dorothy Newell was in the courtroom. for all of it, she's here now to tell us what happened next. Thanks for being here, Dorothy. It's quite a story. Hey, Lester. Thanks for having me.
Starting point is 00:10:49 You got it. Well, first, can we talk about the defense strategy? No witnesses. Brian Walsh, as defendants often decide, did not choose to testify. We used to prize by any of their strategy? Sure. I think a lot of people were surprised. I'm not a defense attorney, and a case like this is complicated, and it calls for all kinds of strategies that may or may not work. Keep in mind, the defense did a lot of work cross-examining the prosecution witnesses and poking holes in the prosecution's case. Both the prosecution and defense gave closing arguments. The defense, they went up first. What did they have to say?
Starting point is 00:11:25 Defense attorney Larry Tipton was clear. He said the prosecution didn't prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt, especially that Brian Walsh planned to murder his wife. He agreed that, yes, Brian lied to police. He made incriminating internet searches, and he disposed of On his body. But those actions didn't make Brian guilty of murder, let alone murder in the first degree. They may be argued that they show consciousness of guilt. The people do things. Terrible things sometimes.
Starting point is 00:11:58 Not out of guilt, but out of fear, out of disbelief, out of confusion. Tipton described Walsh as a loving father and a loving husband, and that he had no reason to kill his wife. Yeah, but the prosecution said Walsh absolutely had a motive that Brian Walsh knew that his wife, Anna, was having an affair. Now, what did Larry Tipton have to say about that? Did he walk around it or take it on? Well, they were pretty subtly throughout this trial
Starting point is 00:12:25 saying that Brian Walsh knew his wife, Anna had a crush on William Fasto, but that Brian didn't know about the affair and that the two were preparing for a future together. He showed the jury pictures of a show. champagne bottle Anna gave Brian on New Year's Eve. And a message, Anna wrote. Quite a year. And yet we are still here and together. Let's make 2023 the best one yet. So this all goes back to motive. If Brian didn't know about the affair, how could the prosecution say that was his
Starting point is 00:12:54 motive to kill his wife? Walsh was facing a charge of first-degree murder. In other words, the prosecution needed to prove that there was some kind of planning premeditation. What did the defense have to say about that? Well, Brian's defense attorney focused on the timing of the internet searches. Remember, there was digital evidence that Brian had Googled questions like, best way to dispose of a dead body. But all those searches happened after Anna died. According to the defense, if Brian was planning to kill her and get rid of her body, he would have started looking for that kind of information much earlier. So then it was the prosecution's turn. They immediately attacked the defense's theory of Anna's sudden unexplained death. Let's see.
Starting point is 00:13:36 Take a listen to that. Anna, while dying a sudden death from natural causes, defies common sense. She was in great shape. The defendant told police that Anna was a sturdy, serbian woman. Those are his words. And as for those grisly internet searches, according to the prosecution, that was one of Brian's biggest mistakes. He made those searches on his MacBook, not realizing they would show up on his son's iPad. Turns out, the devices were sinking up.
Starting point is 00:14:06 So the jury deliberated four hours on Friday before returning on Monday morning to continue deliberations, and then two hours later, they returned their verdict. What say the jury, is the defendant guilty or not guilty? Guilty. Guilty of what, sir? We're in the first degree. What was it like to be there when that verdict was announced? Well, first of all, there was no big, we have a verdict moment.
Starting point is 00:14:29 We were all just sitting on the benches right outside the courtroom when we saw the defense team walk in with no word. one of our reporters from the NBC station in Boston just quietly told me, I hear we might have a verdict. And then Walsh came in with the bailiffs. He looked calm. His mother who was there was stoic. And when the verdict came, she took it quietly. He did too.
Starting point is 00:14:51 After the verdict came down, the Norfolk County DA Michael Morrissey spoke to reporters outside the courthouse. Remember, this is the same office that tried Karen Reed and took a lot of heat after her acquittal this summer. Morrissey reflected on what it felt like to win a conviction this time around. It's not about winning a losing. It's about getting the right answer. And this was the right answer. And so we don't look at cases as a wins or losses. We look at getting justice for someone.
Starting point is 00:15:18 So let's not lose sight of that fact. Walsh is being sentenced later this week and faces a mandatory life sentence. Well, Dorothy, thank you so much to bringing us this case. Thanks for having me. Up next, Dateline Roundup. Speaking of Karen Reed, we've got an update for you in that case. Also, there's news on Sandra Birchmore. Plus, Keith Morrison will fill us in on his epic new podcast series set in the American Heartland, Something About Carrie.
Starting point is 00:15:58 Welcome back. Joining us for this week's Roundup is Dateline FieldP, producer Alex Lohray. Thank you for being here, Alex. Hey, Lester. Thanks for having me. For our first story, we're heading over to Michigan for a surprising development in a story dateline first started covering years ago as part of our Missing in America series. The alleged murder of Michigan grandmother and entrepreneur Deanne Warner. Alex, can you give us a quick recap on that case? Yeah, so 52-year-old Deanne Warner was reported missing by her three adult children in April of 2021. They suspected that her
Starting point is 00:16:32 Her husband, Dale, might have done something to her, and it was alleged that the marriage seemed to be in trouble. Family members just wouldn't believe that she would up and leave her 10-year-old daughter without a word. And Deanna, I know, owned thousands of acres of farmland, and Josh talked about the extensive searches investigators conducted looking for her in his episode on the case for missing in America. More searches followed. Those were done by helicopter and on foot, canine and cadaver dog searches. Zone searches. Ground penetrating radar. Forensic searches. They could not find D. That's right, Lester. But even though they didn't have a body in November of 2023, Dale was arrested and charged with her murder and also charged with tampering with evidence. Then, nine months later, there was a break in the case. The Michigan State Police found Deanne's remains sealed into a fertilizer tank on Dale's property.
Starting point is 00:17:28 Wow. And Dale is expected to go on trial in late January. He's. pleaded not guilty. So what's new this week? So according to our affiliate, WTOL, in Toledo, Ohio, a former detective in the case has been arrested by U.S. Marshals. His name is Kevin Greca. He was on the case in the early days and has since retired. So why is he under arrest? According to the prosecutor handling the trial of Dale Warner, the former detective is a material witness, someone with critical information. In October, the prosecutor filed a petition asking any peace officer in Michigan for help tracking the detective down to bring him before the court. So fast forward to late last week,
Starting point is 00:18:07 an Ohio judge signed an arrest warrant accusing him of fleeing to Ohio. On Wednesday, Greca appeared in court back in Michigan. His defense attorney told the judge he hadn't fled the state. I wanted to be very clear that he was not fleeing in any capacity. He was out to dinner in Ohio when your order was executed upon him. This idea that he was a fugitive from justice simply doesn't apply. After paying bond, the former detective was let out of jail, and his attorney says he plans to cooperate moving forward. We still don't know what he knows about the case, which the prosecutor thinks is so important.
Starting point is 00:18:44 We'll keep an eye on that one. For our next story, we're back in Massachusetts, not far from the courthouse where Brian Walsh was on trial. We have an update for you on the case of former Stoughton police officer Matthew Farwell, who was accused of murdering pregnant teachers' aide Sandra Birchmore and staging her death to look like a suicide. Farwell has pleaded not guilty. So, Alex, just this week, prosecutors made a big decision in this case. Yeah, that's right. They said in a court filing that U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi has directed the government not to seek the death penalty. So that's off the table.
Starting point is 00:19:21 And meantime, the defense is doing something I'm pretty sure I've never heard of before. they're attempting to get the case moved to a different state because of pretrial publicity. Yeah, so back in November, the defense asked the judge to move Farwell's trial from Massachusetts to Rhode Island. The defense says cherry-picked details from an FBI agent's affidavit were written up in the press before Farwell had an attorney in the case. They claimed that media coverage has biased the public into believing that he's guilty. In a court filing last week, federal prosecutors pushed back. They said that Farwell has failed to show that the pre-trial. trial media coverage will prevent him from having a fair trial in Boston.
Starting point is 00:19:59 So we're waiting to see what the judge is going to decide. Well, for our final story, we're staying in Massachusetts, where the Karen Reed case continues to make news. Nearly six months after Reid was acquitted of murdering her police officer boyfriend, John O'Keefe, by reversing her SUV into him and leaving him for dead in the snow. Her SUV is now going to auction. Yeah, Lester. So Karen Reed's Lexus SUV was in police custody for years as evidence. The car was in disrepair, including a missing radio, rodent debris, and the infamous broken tail light. But in June, it was acquired and restored by J.B. AutoCare in Weymouth. J.B. AutoCare plans to sell the car off at auction and donate the proceeds to Karen Reed. The operator of J.B. AutoCare spoke to NBC Boston. really, really interesting being a part of the whole thing. Now it's up and running and all ready to go.
Starting point is 00:20:58 Hopefully it goes really good at auction and hopefully, you know, helps her out and pay some of her legal fees. Not sure what to think about that one. What could this car go for? Any idea? Yeah, so the company facilitating the auctions, J.G. Manning auctioneer, says a used Lexus like this would sell for about $70,000. However, they say this is not a sale of a typical Lexus SUV, but a sale of a vehicle involved in a very high-profile case. so it could go for much more. Okay. Well, with that, we will say goodbye. Alex, thanks very much. Thanks, Lester.
Starting point is 00:21:33 Well, for our final story this week, Keith Morrison and Dateline National producer Shane Bishop are here to talk about their latest original podcast series called Something About Carrie. It's a really riveting yard set in the American heartland that involves murder, arson, stalking, and has quite a few twists that you won't see coming. At least I didn't see him.
Starting point is 00:21:55 Keith and Shane, welcome to the show. Good to have you with us. It's good to be here. Thank you, Lester. So the first episode starts with this very dramatic scene in an Iowa park. A call comes into 911 from a woman who says she's been shot. Let's listen. Is there any serious bleeding?
Starting point is 00:22:12 Oh, my. She's a way to kill from blood. Oh, Jesus. Shane, why did you decide to start the story at that moment? Dayline likes action at the top. It's kind of a strange story, Because the usual Dateline stories are in a murder case, there's some big event, like a 911 call when somebody finds a body, for instance, in a case. And in this one, by the time this shooting took place, the strange goings on had already been set in motion about three years before.
Starting point is 00:22:40 But when this 911 call came in about a shooting in a park, it finally helped lead police to unwinding the whole confusing thing. So that's kind of why we decided to start right there. Well, it certainly wasn't a attention getter, I would call it. The Kerry in the title of the series is Carrie Farver, a computer programmer, single mom who went missing in 2012. You interviewed Carrie's son, Max, and her mother, Nancy. Max was just 14 at the time Carrie went missing. You know, there was a very intense bond in this three generations of Farvers. Carrie was very close to her mother, and her relationship with her son, Max, was.
Starting point is 00:23:21 unusually close. You know, a mother-son relationship can be that way, where if the mother is single and she has one child, a son is almost like they're one person in a way. And they felt so close a bond that both were mother and son were so flummoxed by the whole business. And Kerry, when she apparently decided to take off, and she was sending them text messages and electronic communications for years that were hurtful and strange and an indication that some psychic break must have happened. And they didn't know what it was. They got the police to help them and it didn't go anywhere. They couldn't find her. And it just got worse and worse. Yeah, and then Kerry is simply nowhere to be found. But then Dave Krupa, a man she had started
Starting point is 00:24:08 seeing just before she vanished, he tells police Carrie had been sending him threatening texts, vandalizing his car and threatening the mother of his children. This is frightening stuff. It was very serious stuff. Yes, exactly. And they had had a kind of a little flirtation. It had sort of a quasi-date. And then all hell broke loose when she came over and stayed at his place.
Starting point is 00:24:33 And strange things began to happen. And then she took off, vanished, whatever, and started sending him these terrible messages. But he was a wonderful, if I may say so, a wonderful character. Everything he said resonated, and so we wanted to play as much of that as we could. I think you'd agree with that, wouldn't you, Shane? We've all been in enough interviews, and we've seen people freeze up or change once they get on camera. Dave Krupa, he was just unvarnished Dave, and that's what I loved about it. And he really explains the idea of what it's like to be the target of stalking and the toll it takes on people's lives.
Starting point is 00:25:07 Let me ask you about the stalking, though, because it escalates at one point to an incident of arson. That's a different playing field, certainly in terms of getting the attention of police. Carrie is suspected of setting fire to the home of Dave's ex-girlfriend. It seems incredible that Carrie can keep committing these crimes and avoiding detection. It turns out that the fact that Omaha is on the west side of the Missouri River, and that's where Carrie worked, and her hometown in Iowa is on the east side of the Missouri River in Iowa, played a big role in that. I think that when you have several agencies across two states involved, and it seemed like most of the crimes were minor things really, like stalking and vandalism until it escalated to that arson, it was tough to get all the agencies on the same page for a couple of years and for them to commit the resources to find carry until finally a sheriff's office in Iowa dedicated two detectives to the case and they finally broke it open.
Starting point is 00:26:04 There's a lot of great detective work, Christy, in this story, but what really stuck out to me was the willingness of the investigators to give the case a fresh look, a fresh set of eyes, their open minds and doggedness, and they realized that maybe not all was it as it seemed. It wasn't all as it seemed, and it took a long while for these smart detectives to unravel it, and even when it was unraveled, a lot of people weren't so sure that could be true. The twists and turns and the folds of material in this story, where you lift one fold and there's another surprise underneath, it was full of those kinds of things. Well, we don't want to give too much away, but it turns out,
Starting point is 00:26:39 the shooting in the park that you led this program with and the stalking techs are connected. They were orchestrated by the same person, and it's not carry. It's a person seemingly driven by one motive, jealousy. How often do you see jealousy turned deadly in the cases you encounter? Probably a lot. In most murder investigations, most of them involve people who know each other, and most of them have to do with either love or money. And sex and jealousy almost always.
Starting point is 00:27:08 I'll leave it at that and let you tune into the podcast itself. But Keith and Shane, thank you both for being here. Thank you. It's a delight. Thank you. Well, that's it for this episode of Dateline True Crime Weekly. Next week, the Dateline correspondence will be here to talk about the true crime stories that got our attention and yours in 2025. That's Dateline True Crime Weekly's Year in Review.
Starting point is 00:27:35 And starting this Friday, don't forget to check out Keith's brand new Morrison Mystery, the Snow Queen. She is beautiful, that's for sure. Steely blue eyes, sweeping lashes, a heart-shaped face framed by sparkling white fur. All episodes will be available to binge wherever you get your podcasts. Thanks for listening, everyone. Dateline True Crime Weekly is produced by Carson Cummins, Carolyn Casey, and Keanu-Reed. Our associate producers are Ellery Gladstone.
Starting point is 00:28:07 Groff and Aria Young. Our senior producer is Liz Brown-Kirloff. Production and fact-checking help by Audrey Abraham's. Veronica Masekha is our digital supervising producer. Rick Kwan is our sound designer. Original music by Jesse McGinty. Paul Ryan is executive producer, and Liz Cole is senior executive producer of Dateline. Bye, everybody.
Starting point is 00:28:37 Thank you.

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