Dateline NBC - Talking Dateline: The Pin at Apartment 210
Episode Date: April 23, 2025Dennis Murphy sits down with Blayne Alexander to discuss her recent episode, “The Pin at Apartment 210.” When 22-year-old Jasmine “Jazzy” Pace went missing just before Thanksgiving of 2022, ...her family became their own detectives. What followed was a horrific crime scene, an arrest, and a bombshell twist at trial from the defense. Blayne tells Dennis about the family’s determined search for Jazzy and the clues they found along the way. Later, Blayne shares a podcast-exclusive clip from an interview with one of the jurors. Plus, Dennis and Blayne answer your questions from social media.If you have a question for Talking Dateline, send us an audio message on social @datelinenbc.Listen to the full episode of “The Pin at Apartment 210” on Apple: https://apple.co/44AZi43 Listen to the full episode on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/14y93y2XlJCQhcYqgrbrj6
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody, I'm Dennis Murphy and you have reached Talking Dateline.
And our guest today is Blaine Alexander, my colleague, and she's going to be talking about
her most recent episode, which was called The Pin at Apartment 210.
Hey Blaine, how are you?
Dennis, I'm so good.
I'm so glad to join you.
My friend, how are you?
Good.
You know, you had me all the way through right from the beginning.
I wanted to see what happened next.
And boy, once you set those horses running, this is a great story.
Thank you so much.
And I want to talk about it, but let's do a little recap first for people who haven't
seen it yet.
It's about 22-year-old Jasmine Jazzy Pace.
She went missing around Thanksgiving of 2022.
And her mom, Katrina, knew that something was terribly wrong.
When authorities weren't giving her the answer she wanted, she took matters into her own
hands even against police recommendations.
And for this Talking Dateline, we have an extra clip from an interview with a juror
in this case talking about her experience coming to a verdict back during that emotional
trial and it was.
Okay, so let's dive in and talk Dateline.
Blaine, the hardest thing I've always felt
in being a Dateline correspondent is sitting in a chair
talking to a family member who has lost someone
who was taken in such an ugly fashion way too soon.
Tell me about cousin Jackie.
Jackie was incredible.
Jackie is somebody that, I mean,
she really was kind of like the heart and soul of our story.
She spent a lot of time just kind of talking to us about Jazzy.
The two were very close.
I mean, they were very, very close.
And from the very beginning, you kind of noticed that, you know, when they were together, when
they were mourning Granny, they were the two that said, no, we got to make sure our moms
are okay.
We've got to do this.
So they were kind of, you know, you have that person in the family that you're like, okay,
we're going to take care of things.
That was Jackie and Jazzy.
That's kind of the feel I got from them.
But what a heaping plate full of grief this family had put on them.
Here was the great-grandmother, very beloved figure in the family, and all of a sudden
they're gathered at her hospital bed saying goodbye.
And then a few days later, Jazzy goes missing.
It was unthinkable, Dennis.
I mean, I think that, yes, Granny had had cancer.
She was in remission.
They thought she was fine.
And then basically that morning, I mean, it went from, hey, I'm not really feeling that
well.
Let me go to the hospital to, boom, she's gone.
I mean, it's jarring.
It's kind of whiplash for anybody.
And then, yes, that was the last time that their family saw Jazzy.
You know, they kind of talk about the fact that they're,
they're grateful that they were able to gather for,
for Granny because all of the family got to see Jazzy and then she was gone.
But later Jackie told me, you know, when we were talking, she said, later,
they realized we never got a chance to mourn Granny because immediately they
were into finding and then mourning Jazzy.
So it really was just a hard time for them and still is.
Who did Jazzy turn out to be to you, Blaine, the more you found out about her? And you
guys had remarkable photos. The videos were as good as any collection of gallery of those
kinds of things that I've seen. It really evoked a sense of who she was.
I think so. And I'm glad you felt that too, Dennis, because I think that that was one
of the things that really stood out about this. There were tons of videos about her, right? I mean, it's 2022, like, you know,
she's young, she's very online, if you will, right? And so finding videos and pictures
wasn't a hard thing to come by. She was vivacious. She was excited about life. I mean, she was
kind of in this place where, hey, I'm going to school, I'm getting, you know, my eyes
into what I really want to do with my life. She loved people.
She loved her family.
And I think that's something that stood out too, because you can think about going off
to college, you get kind of absorbed in your friends and your life and maybe I'll talk
to my mom every three days or whatever.
No, she was very, very close to her family.
So that's why they knew immediately when she wasn't answering and things like that, that
wasn't like her.
Well, what happened, Blaine?
I mean, Granny suddenly dies.
The family is in grief, and it's about to be Thanksgiving.
When did they start to become alarmed about Jazzy,
and where is Jazzy?
Different times.
And so, for instance, this happened the Tuesday
before Thanksgiving.
They were all expecting to see her on Thanksgiving,
and she didn't come.
So they get some messages from her phone saying,
hey, I'm going to go with my friend Emma,
you know, out of town with her family.
They said, that's not like Jazzy, that's very weird.
This was an important family time
and Jazzy needed to be at that table.
Exactly, exactly.
But also it was after they realized,
okay, no one's talked to her, she's only been texting us.
And so that's when, I mean,
and to this family's immense credit,
that's when their antennas started going up and they said, okay, let's look at her phone records, let's
call Emma, let's see what's going on. And the more and more they started to dig, that's
when they realized, no, something's wrong. And, you know, I think that this is one thing
that the family told us and will tell us, they didn't believe that they were getting
the help from police that they would have liked to have in those early hours, those early days.
Was that a fair assessment? The cops needed a fire put under them and they weren't getting
it?
You know, we asked the detective about that. We asked him about that when we had him in
the chair. And basically, he said that they did as they should. He didn't say that they
did anything wrong with their response, that they were responsive. But of course, when
it's your loved one that's missing, you want heaven and earth to be moved to find them.
I thought it was absolutely fascinating to be witnessing this dialogue in real time between
the family members and the police officers with their body cams at the place, at the
condo parking lot, I guess, where the vehicle had been ditched. You see in real time, the
grief, their fight to understand what's happening, they need
help, they need somebody on their side. And the cop maybe justifiably at that point is
saying, look, it's the middle of the night, but family really wasn't taking it.
And I should say Jackie was kind of the spokesperson, Jackie, Gabby, they spoke. Katrina didn't
want to speak with us for this episode completely understandably, but my hat's off to her and my heart went out to her because when I saw her in that parking
lot and everything that she was just kind of spinning through her mind and let's do
this, let's do this, what can we do?
I said, that's a mom, right?
I immediately identified with her because you're thinking through everything, but especially
when you think your child is in danger.
She said, okay, we can't do this.
Can we get security video?
Can we go to these gas stations and ask these people?
They were asking the security at the apartment.
The way that her mind was thinking under stress of what can I do next was impressive.
I'm not doubt about how they took this whole thing and became their own detectives.
I'm thinking how did they know how to do that?
How did they know how to do this?
But this is all about living in the digital world in the footprints we
leave around, isn't it?
That's exactly it. The first thing that really impressed me was when they had this phone
number, right? And they said, okay, who could it be? And Jackie immediately said, well,
I'm going to type it into my Cash App, right? Everyone who uses Cash App knows.
You know, I wonder about that. What is Cash App and why would you think to do that first?
So Cash App, if I were to send you $50, because you're amazing.
Thank you very much.
I would send it to you.
You absolutely are.
You deserve more than $50, by the way.
But I would send you $50, and I'd send it via Cash App, right?
I'd say, what's your Cash App?
You would probably give me your phone number, and I'd put it in, and then Dennis Murphy
would pop up if you're registered with Cash App.
So I could take, theoretically, any phone number.
And most people, I think it's safe to say,
are on Cash App at this point.
So, you can type in their phone number and up pops their Cash App ID.
So, that's kind of a very quick way to identify someone.
I mean, in the old days, you would have to like look through a phone book, I guess.
I don't know, Google a phone number maybe.
Get a goose quill pen out.
Yeah, it was a different era.
Send a carrier pigeon up to the heavens to figure out where it is. But I think that this
cash app and also Zelle, you could type it into Zelle. That's tied to a phone number.
So how did that app answer back? What did she learn?
So once you put it in, the name Jason Chen popped up. And that was enough to give them
really a thread to start pulling on. And that's kind of what came down to it. So Jazzy had
been hanging out with him, kind of on kind of on and off dating loosely, if
you will.
They took a trip to Chicago, but her mom knew the name.
And so her mom immediately said, yep, I know who that is and, you know, was off to the
races.
So Jazzy is missing, her car is missing, and they went looking for the vehicle, didn't
they?
They went looking for the vehicle and they found it.
You know, there's one piece that didn't make it into the story, Dennis, that I thought
was interesting.
When I was talking to Gabby, Jazzy's half-sister, who was there for the parking lot and going
into the apartment and all of that, she told me that when they found the SUV, she looked
in the window and she said she noticed that the seat was pushed all the way back.
So that indicates that a tall person was driving it.
And she said, Jazzy's short. Jazzy's tiny. There's no reason that the seat would need to be pushed all the way back. So that indicates that a tall person was driving it. And she said, Jazzy's short,
Jazzy's tiny. There's no reason that the seat would need to be pushed all the way back.
So she said that was her first indication of, okay, my sister wasn't driving this.
How sharp and how observant is Gabby, huh?
Very, absolutely. And so I think that all of them had their different moments where
they realized something's wrong, something's off. That was Gabby's moment for sure.
But then when Katrina, Jazzy's mom,
found that pin that she had sent her,
I can't imagine anything more heartbreaking
than to discover that several days after.
On the timeline of her disappearance, Blaine,
when does that happen, this pin drop message?
It was at 2 18 in the morning on the Wednesday, early Wednesday morning.
So the last time her family saw her was that Tuesday night at the hospital.
And what prosecutors piece together is that after that she had her long phone call with
Jason Chen, eventually goes over to his apartment.
And then in the overnight hours, like to around the 2am-ish hour, that's when she sent that
pin.
And that was also within three minutes of when Jason Chen's neighbors told the family
that they heard a scream come from the apartment.
And so, you know that something happened in that timeframe that Jazzy realized, when she's
in trouble, I need to call for help.
She obviously couldn't do much, but the best she could do was send a pin.
And it's something you can do on an Apple Watch too, even if you don't have your phone
beside you.
So somehow she was able to send off a pen.
I want to say something about the pen too, because I think some viewers may wonder, like,
how did you not see that?
How did you not see this text from your daughter?
Yeah, I would wonder that.
One, it came in the wee morning hours.
But two, remember, this happened after granny died, the person who raised her.
So Katrina was getting this kind of deluge of all of these sympathetic texts. Oh my God, I'm so sorry.
You know, what can I do for you? All these texts are coming through. And so Jazzy's texts
got lost in there. That's kind of how Jackie explained it to me. Terrible for Katrina to
realize later that she missed it. But that's kind of what happened there. So the pen, she
sees the pen, they're like, oh my gosh, let's follow this pin.
It takes them to the apartments and specifically in front of apartment 210.
Blaine, we're going to pause for a moment, but when we come back, we're going to hear
an extra bit of sound from that juror who will tell us about what was going through
their minds with this decision they had to make about premeditation.
Sounds good. So now the family is armed with this pin that takes them right to the front of the door
of 210 and the neighbors that say they heard something.
So who lives in 210, Blaine?
Jason Chen.
That's what they find out.
Jason Chen lives inside that apartment.
Somebody gets the bright idea to go back out to the car, find their credit card, and do
a break-in and get into apartment 210.
And I have to say, Dennis, if I ever needed to get into an apartment or a locked door,
I wouldn't know what to do.
Would you naturally know to just get a credit card and pop the lock?
I'm one who doesn't know what Cash App is, so no.
There you go.
I mean, I've seen it, you know, that you're supposed to be able to burgle a door with
a credit card, but that they have the knowledge and the foresight and the guts to go ahead
and charging into this thing.
And the skill.
It's just.
Yeah.
I mean, even if I'd seen it on like a TV show, I wouldn't have known how to take the credit
card and actually jimmy the lock open.
Blaine, what did they find inside?
The first thing that the family saw was Jazzy's overnight bag.
And so that was to them saying, okay, she's been here.
I know my daughter's bag.
That's her bag.
That was number one.
They found her driver's license.
They found several credit cards.
And then they said they found a series of other cell phones, just a bunch of cell phones.
All of that made them say there's something going on here.
And they called police.
You know, the police take that.
They obviously turn it over to the detectives, but they also say to the family, don't do
this again.
You can't go inside this apartment.
Don't go back inside.
Now, once police got involved and they ended up going into the apartment, that's where
they really did the real police work, right?
I mean, they obviously were going around seeing, I talked to the detective and he saw that
heel print
where it looked like someone was wearing socks, stepped in blood, and then left kind of like
a transfer from the sock print, just a little bit.
But it was enough for him to say, okay, we need to get crime scene in here now.
And maybe we should say, Blaine, well, there is criticism that they were slow in getting
up to speed once they had reason for their authority.
They did very, very well at this thing.
They did.
That's when they bring in the crime scene investigators
to come in and they spray.
They basically have a chemical that reacts
when there's the presence of blood.
And so they sprayed it on the floor
just to see is there any more blood.
And that's when they said about a third of the floor lit up,
which is stunning.
There was blood in almost every third of the floor lit up, which is stunning. There was blood in almost
every corner of the apartment, as the detective said to me. He said that there was blood on
the bathroom floors, blood on the main area floors, but also there was blood splatter
kind of on the wall. So he said that indicates obviously something very violent, right?
And there's an unforgettable sound bite from your officer, which is, we have now gone past
a missing persons investigation.
This is a homicide.
How chilling is that?
This is a homicide.
They said that when they saw that, they said that whatever happened, there's no way that
whoever was the victim could have survived that because of just how much blood there
was.
And so, yes, it's a very unusual place for detectives to be in.
There was nobody.
There was no suspect there.
No one had confessed.
But they knew just from the sheer amount of blood
that had been lost that they were
dealing with a death, a homicide.
So the question then, I guess, is Jason, where is he?
That's exactly it.
Give me a quick thumbnail of who Jason is.
What's the little biography?
So Jason Chen is son of Chinese immigrants. He was somebody who was at University of Tennessee,
Chattanooga, student there, been there for a couple of years, and he was a comp sci major,
computer science. And so this is somebody who obviously knows their way around phones,
technology.
He, meanwhile, has ended up back at his parents where the cops do a knock, knock, knock, and
there's Jason.
They knock and it's just outside of Nashville.
Parents come down first, according to the detective, and essentially, they kind of talk
to him and finally Jason comes down and says, hey, here I am.
And the other thing is they took him back.
They had some warrants to get DNA, just different things that they could get from him and then
ultimately issued the arrest warrants.
At that point, is he giving anything up?
No.
Police never did an interview with him because he refused to talk and refused to give any
sort of information.
But the phone told the story, didn't it?
The phone told the story, and I think that it's, again, without these kind of digital
pieces, he very likely wouldn't have been arrested.
And it takes a while for a case to get to court. I think people maybe don't understand
that it's often two years from the time that a story is in the newspapers to when it's
actually before a judge and a jury.
Yes.
And it took fully that long to get this case into court.
It did.
I'm wondering, Blaine, about this whole notion of pre-child rulings about what the jury
can hear about the evidence. And this is this whole thing of, you know, that maybe the family
jumped the gun by going into the apartment before the authorities and is everything going
to get thrown out? Do you have any insight on how that all went?
Well, it was kind of a double-edged sword because that's the first thing that Jason
Chen's attorney went after. He doesn't believe that should be admitted. From the prosecution side, I asked District Attorney
General Cody Wamb. She said, listen, there is no question that that was crucial, what
the family found. But on the other side of that, yes, that did kind of make things more,
I don't know, vulnerable if it wasn't admitted. So there were a lot of hearings back and forth
on that.
Ultimately, the judge did decide to admit it and the prosecution was off to the races
after that.
And of course, the defense attorney surprised everyone in the courtroom right in his very
opening.
He gave it up.
What did he say?
He is guilty, but he's not guilty of specifically what you're saying.
And so I think the question was never did Jason Chin end the life of Jasmine Pace, right?
The defense attorney said that from jump.
More so, what were the circumstances that led to that?
Was it premeditated as the prosecution was arguing?
So the defense strategy, I guess, is let's go for a lesser here.
We do not want a conviction on murder one premeditated.
Maybe we can argue it all the way down to manslaughter.
That's exactly it.
That's what he was trying to do.
The story that the defense wove was that there was an argument that was sparked because Jazzy
heard the phone ding and it was Tinder, basically him talking to other women, according to the
defense, that she got upset that they fought, there was broken glass and she came at him
with broken glass and that he had no choice but to defend himself.
And Blaine, this is very often a difficult concept for jurors to get their heads around.
What is premeditation?
How long do you need to plan your action to realize, I know what I'm going to do is wrong,
I'm going to go ahead and do it anyway?
Is that in an instant?
Does it take minutes?
Jurors seem to want to put premeditation on a timeline and it's not an easy concept.
It's not. And I think the prosecution kind of had this burden of saying, here's what
this is. It doesn't necessarily mean that you sat and thought for weeks and planned
this out and wrote out every detail, but it more so means that in some way you had foresight, right?
That you thought about this before committing this crime.
And so that was the argument that they were trying to make.
Blaine, you had a chance to talk to at least one juror after the trial.
And the issue was, what were you guys going through?
Take me into the room.
And it was juror number 11, a woman named Sarah.
Let's listen to a little bit and see what she has to say.
It came down to premeditation, which that all the way up
to the very end, the very ending closing statement
from D.A. Moyle or General Moyle.
And I think I know for sure that red light analogy
that Moyle gave is what really helped me understand
the premeditation side of it. And it's that essentially we've all been faced
with this choice when we're driving a car and you come to a yellow light you
can either step on the gas and go through it or step on the brake and stop.
And that there's so many factors that go into that. You're taking on other traffic
coming by, they're considering, are there people walking?
Is there, are you late?
We have all of these things that go through our mind in a split second to decide to go
through it or hit the brake.
And that's all it takes is a split second to decide.
And just, you know, just like making that quick decision to stop at a yellow light.
It's, you know, that really was what helped me solidify.
Like, there was so helped me solidify.
There were so many opportunities to stop.
I'm always struck that jurors don't get a manual on how to be a jury.
Especially Dennis, when you're confronted with legal terms, like premeditation and things
like that, that you have to sort through.
I thought that that was a fascinating way to look at it of, yes, everyone has been in
a car where you get to a yellow
light and it's like, do I gun it and keep going? Do I slam on the brakes? What do I
do? And so that's really kind of a way to think about it there. And again, I think the
sheer number of wounds really also kind of helped nudge it into the premeditation column
because yes, you can get to 25 stabs. Let me stop. Like, you know what I mean? There
are many chances to kind of, to,
to make a different decision. How long was the jury outplaying? Not long, I don't think. Less than an hour. Wow. 40 something minutes. I mean, really very quickly. It was a very quick
conviction there. Any reaction from him? No, none. He was, everybody that I've spoken to says that he
was very kind of stone-faced.
He would look down according to the prosecution.
It looked like he was looking down, but there was a monitor that showed some of the evidence.
So he was looking at that.
The only reaction from my understanding of talking to people who were there that he showed
was when his family or his mother was mentioned.
His mother took the stand during the sentencing phase and basically kind of pleaded for leniency for her son. That didn't happen. But he did show some reaction
when she spoke and then also when cousin Jackie said, another victim here is your mom, Emily.
Jackie's statement, victim impact statement was very moving. She took a glass jar, and
we kind of showed it in the episode, but you don't get the full effect. She took a glass jar, and we kind of showed it in the
episode, but you don't get the full effect. She took a glass jar and she took 60 stones
and one by one put them in the jar. And that represented each one of the stab wounds that
the Jazzy had just to show the sheer amount of times that he stabbed her, right? And then
she began her statement. So to do that silently
and then kind of begin her statement was really powerful.
Up next, we're going to take some of your questions to us from social media.
Blaine Goodold, Analog Murphy here, thinks about the letters we get from our viewers.
Of course, they're not letters. People are commenting very often when your story runs about what they thought.
We've called out a few reactions to your story.
Do you want to go through them and tell me what your take is on it?
I would love it.
We heard from Dateline viewer Valerie Lynn Smith-Bowen.
She wrote us, I would have done exactly what her mom and family did.
Yes.
I don't think that there's a parent in the world that would disagree with that.
That you know, hey, my child is missing.
What do I need to do?
It doesn't matter what I'm doing.
I'm going to do it to find them.
Absolutely.
And then there was Jude Marie Goudreau, I hope I'm getting the pronunciation right.
She says, I bet her mom thinks about that pin every single day.
My heart goes out to her.
That's what's so sad.
That they missed it or the implication that they missed it.
That she missed it, right? And you have to think, even as a parent going through something
like this, or anyone loses a love when you think a billion what ifs, but when you have
something that is that strong of a what if, of a possibility, that has to be just devastating
for her, truly.
Another viewer, two more perfect, went back to that apartment building when the scream
was heard. Why would you write down the scream time, but you don't call the police?
That's exactly what Cousin Jackie said to me. If it was startling enough to you to make
you write down the time, but not call for help. You wonder where that decision was made, why that decision was made.
We didn't, you know, weren't able to speak to them.
But that is certainly a good question that the family has and that I had it as well.
Paulette Haywood asked something I always ask when we finish these stories.
It's not so, it's not that difficult to answer the who question.
The why question is much more difficult.
And Paulette says, what on earth was the motive Blaine?
What do you think that is the biggest piece of all of this Dennis? I mean
There wasn't one I think that when we do stories and it's like, oh
Husband catches wife cheating on him and he goes crazy and kills her
Oh someone wanted insurance money and so they do it for that or whatever it may be
At least you can kind of wrap your head around this.
I mean, for all intents and purposes,
the prosecution said the same thing.
It seemed that he just wanted to kill her.
That's all that it was.
Which is not a satisfying answer, is it?
It's a terrifying answer because there's not a,
you think about people that you meet just in general, right?
You meet tons of new people every day,
and you don't know what's going on in their mind.
You don't know what's going on behind their kind of
normal facade of being a student and a comps I major,
whatever it may be.
And this is one of those terrifying examples.
We didn't talk about it,
but apparently in the apartment or at his parents' home,
found a bunch of post-its, notes to self
about his timeline and keeping his story straight.
Yes. It seemed like he was, according to detectives, it seemed like he was trying to work out his
alibi and so would write, okay, last talk to her this day or just different things or
if police come, what to say to parents or those types of things that he was kind of
jotting down notes of how to keep an alibi straight.
And he did everything wrong if the subject was how to get away with murder.
That's exactly it And he did everything wrong if the subject was how to get away with murder. That's exactly it, because he did not.
Finally, Blaine, we heard from Stephen with a pH.
I like that.
Tonight's Dateline 10 is a case that happened right here.
He's shocked that he's watching this TV set,
and there's streets that he knows and people
that he knows and institutions.
And it's on his TV set.
It brings it home in a way that's kind of shocking for him.
That's really interesting when we have viewers who are very familiar with either the story,
the crime itself, or certainly the place where it happened, right?
Because for most of our viewers, it's someplace that maybe they know they've traveled to.
But yes, when it's your city, when it's your street, you can kind of see these things on
local news, perhaps.
I know that this was a case that was covered locally, but I know that in the way that we do this, trying to really humanize the victim and tell more about
the person who was taken away, I think sets our stories apart. So hopefully, even if he
had seen kind of like different coverage, hopefully he learned more about who Jasmine
Pace was through our story.
Well, Blaine, congratulations. You and your team did a remarkable job in pulling this
whole thing together and telling us who the victim was, which is so important, the person that we lost here.
Thank you so much, Dennis.
It was truly an honor to get to know her and know her through her family and friends and
learn more about her.
And with that, Blaine, we'll put a button on this edition of Talking Dateline.
If you have any questions for us about stories you've seen on Dateline, you can reach us
24-7 on social media at DatelineNBC.
So that's it for right now.
We'll see you again on Friday, of course, as always, on Dateline.
And thanks for joining us, Blaine.
Good to have you.
I'll see you all along the way.
Thank you, Dennis. you