Dateline NBC - The Mystery on Reminisce Road
Episode Date: August 22, 2023Crime fighting becomes personal for FBI Agents in Wilmington, North Carolina, when their own office manager is murdered. Josh Mankiewicz reports in this Dateline classic. Originally aired on NBC on Ju...ly 12, 2010.
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The first thing you have to know about Melissa Mooney is that she was punctual to a fault.
Larry Bonney was her boss.
I'm telling you, if she was a minute late, she called up.
She was somebody you could count on.
Absolutely. Worked hard all day, and if she had to stay late, it was not a problem.
It was August 6, 1999, a muggy summer morning in Wilmington, North Carolina.
That was the day Melissa was five minutes late.
Her co-workers were surprised.
Where was their office manager?
After all, they'd come in early to help her move into a new house,
the first home she'd ever owned.
She was real excited about this.
I mean, this was a real big event in her life.
It was a real big event for a reason,
and this is the second thing you have to know about Melissa Mooney.
She had a 4-year-old daughter named Samantha whom she adored.
Melissa was moving to the house on Reminisce Road
to give Sammy a big bedroom and a backyard.
Debbie was Melissa's older sister. What was she like around Sammy? They were best friends and they were always on the same page.
It was pretty neat. And she clearly had a strong bond with her colleagues at work.
So when 15 minutes went by on that August morning without a call from Melissa, everyone was
taken aback. Where was she? Worried? Yes. Even after only 15 minutes? She didn't want
to take too much of our time. She wanted to get it done early. They called her numbers,
no answer. So her co-worker, Paul Cox, drove to Melissa's new house in a brand new subdivision. Her car was in the driveway.
Then Cox saw the front door.
There is a noticeable footprint, clearly in a dirt pattern, on the door.
Like somebody kicked the door.
Exactly.
Cox called Melissa's number again.
He could hear her phone ringing inside the house.
No answer and no sign of her.
By now, Cox was concerned and he called Larry Bonney.
And he said, hey, I'm here. We got a problem.
It looked bad and Bonney knew it.
He told Cox to go inside.
I was calling her name and calling Sammy's name too.
And as I get to the back bedroom, at that point I see her on the floor.
Melissa's naked body was in the far corner, lying by a bare mattress.
Could you tell how she'd been killed? At that point, no.
Shocked, Cox backed out of the house, back through the jumble of a move in progress.
Cox was still calling Sammy's
name, though they'd soon find out that Sammy was safe, staying elsewhere during the move.
No one else in the house? No one else in the house at that point.
Looked like there'd been a fight? I did notice there was a photo on the floor that was shattered.
Outside, Cox worked the phones, talked to the new Hanover County Sheriff's Office and the State Bureau of Investigation.
Initially, you're just kind of on automatic pilot.
The toughest call of all was to his boss.
He said, she's here, she's dead.
It was a heartbreaking loss, their beloved office manager gone at the age of 28, just like that. For Bonnie,
it was especially hard. You almost made me paternal feelings about her. I did. So,
yeah, that hurts. Everyone in the office was hurting. Craig Ackley, another colleague.
We were in a small office. We felt like a family, and it was a family member.
But not just any family, because,
and this is the third thing you have to know about Melissa Mooney,
she was the office manager for the FBI in Wilmington.
Paul Cox and Craig Ackley were special agents,
and Larry Bonney was agent in charge.
On this August morning, the Bureau had lost one of its own.
You guys are both trained professionals.
I'm guessing, however, that finding the body of somebody that you knew and worked with and cared about
made this a little bit different.
We watched out for each other, so we felt those emotions
as well as the emotions you feel as an investigator on the case.
This is the first homicide where I actually knew the victim.
With the new Hanover County Sheriff's Office in charge and the State Bureau of Investigation joining in,
Melissa's colleagues began to put their feelings aside and work the case.
We had a tremendous amount of work to do in a very short period of time.
That day, Bonnie and his agents made it their mission to hunt down Melissa's killer.
And to find him quick and get him into the justice system.
Melissa's boss couldn't know it then, but an arrest would take years.
By the time it finally happened, Larry Bonney would be retired.
The killer's identity would surprise everyone, and investigators would track that person
for years, playing a bizarre game of cat and mouse.
But on that hot August morning, Larry Bonney knew only this.
There was a fresh crime scene to work, and he quickly realized Melissa's killer was both strong and angry.
She was half on the mattress and half on the floor, kind of over in the far corner of the room.
So this is a violent, sudden attack.
Absolutely. And she was tough. I mean, she would have fought.
So somebody really overpowered her.
What on earth had happened at 3108 Reminisce Road?
They would learn that Melissa, seen on store security tape,
had been running errands hours before the murder.
Around 10 p.m., she made a phone call, her last one.
She was strangled between 11 p.m. and 4 a.m.
That day, as crime scene investigators descended, She was strangled between 11 p.m. and 4 a.m.
That day, as crime scene investigators descended, Cox and Ackley canvassed the neighborhood.
I told Paul, I said, there's a man that's home at a residence down the street because I saw him washing his truck.
So let's start there.
They did, and took notes.
Did he see anything? Hear anything?
Tell me about that interview. He stated he had
never seen her, hadn't spoken
to her, had never been in the home.
The agents moved on.
At the crime scene, Larry Bonney already
had a gut feeling about
the killer. What are your first thoughts
as that investigation began?
Roger. In Pennsylvania,
Melissa's parents came
to the same conclusion. I tell Roger. Right away, Melissa's parents came to the same conclusion.
I tell Roger.
Right away?
Right away.
Roger Mooney, Melissa's ex-husband, a Marine with a temper, the father of her daughter.
And this is the fourth thing you have to know about Melissa Mooney.
Her family says she was terrified of him.
She said, Mom, he's going gonna do me in, I know.
It was August 1999. FBI office manager Melissa Mooney had been found dead in her home in a Wilmington, North Carolina suburb, and her FBI colleagues were looking for answers.
But Melissa's family, stunned and grieving, thought they had this mystery solved.
The first thing I said is, where's Roger? Melissa's boss shared their suspicions.
But why?
What was it about Roger Mooney?
The answer is wrapped in the details of the couple's five-year marriage.
Because to know Roger, you first have to know Melissa.
As a girl from the Pennsylvania coal country, Melissa was quiet, a reader.
But older sister Debbie says she was no pushover.
Mostly growing up, it always seemed to be me and my brother against her.
I guess she could hold her own.
Stubborn, Melissa was, and quite capable of keeping a secret.
Like the bombshell she dropped at home when she graduated from high school at 17.
I didn't even know about it until after she passed the test.
No.
I didn't even know she was taking the test.
None of us knew.
Melissa had taken and passed the entrance exam for a clerical job at the FBI, all on the QT.
And she said, I want to go to Washington and I want to work for the FBI.
Yeah.
I mean, she's never been to Washington, but she was moving there. She did well for the FBI. Yeah. I mean, she's never been to Washington. No? But she was moving there.
She did well at the FBI.
She also learned to have fun in the city.
And that worried her big sister.
Missy was like a magnet for just the wrong guys.
The wrong ones as in?
Argumentative, you know.
Melissa's family first heard the name Roger Mooney in 1994.
He was a Marine working in Washington.
At first, the two were just roommates.
Then suddenly, they were way more than that.
And then she called me and told me,
we're going out together.
And the next time she called me,
she tells me she's going to get married.
Well, then she found out she was pregnant. Is that why she got married? Yeah, yeah.
They got married in late 94, a civil ceremony in their living room. Roger had been married before,
and the Gallades weren't happy about any of it. They still hadn't even met their new son-in-law.
I'm guessing this was not the guy you'd always dreamed of marrying your daughter.
Oh, no. No.
And once Melissa's parents finally did meet Roger,
they didn't like the way he treated their daughter.
It was like, well, you're going to have my kid,
and you're going to be barefoot and pregnant for the rest of our marriage.
Samantha was born on July 4, well, you're going to have my kid, and you're going to be barefoot and pregnant for the rest of our marriage. Samantha was born on July 4, 1995.
And for a while, her family says, life was good.
But then Roger received the transfer he coveted to Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
It was 1996. The Mooney family was on the move.
She was happy to be in North Carolina. She liked the area. She liked the people. Melissa landed a job at the FBI's office in Wilmington,
about an hour's drive from Camp Lejeune. And under Larry Bonney, she flourished. But if things were
going well at the office, they were falling apart at home. Her new boss would hear Melissa arguing on the phone with Roger, often about who
would care for young Sammy. Sammy was kind of a ping-pong ball between the two of them, who was
going to be responsible when. Not a happy marriage? Not a happy marriage. She didn't take any guff
from him, and he didn't take much guff from her. Then one day, Melissa arrived for work with a bruise on her face. Her boss asked for an
explanation. Melissa said she and Roger had been arguing. She said, I was not letting him out of
the room until I was done with him. And he moved me aside so he could leave the room. She said,
I fell against the door. It sounded like the kind of story battered women routinely tell to explain their injuries.
But Bonnie says Melissa convinced him that was the extent of it.
She did admit she wanted to end the marriage.
And Bonnie, unusually protective of his young employee, found her an apartment close to the office.
He also had a warning for Roger.
I wanted him to understand that she was that close to the office and to where we all lived, and she had our numbers.
The divorce went through in April of 1999, but the two were still battling over child support.
Melissa wanted more money from Roger and went to court to get it.
She asked her boss to accompany her. Melissa's mom said her daughter
called home around that time and told her she was terrified of what Roger might do.
He told her, you're never going to see a penny of my money, never. And he stormed out of there,
and she was deathly afraid. Within weeks, Melissa Mooney was dead, and her ex-husband was everyone's favorite suspect.
It seemed an open and shut case, North Carolina in August 1999,
the obvious suspect was her ex-husband Roger, a Marine based at nearby Camp Lejeune.
Larry Bonney was Melissa's boss at the FBI. I called up one of
my agents. I told him to pull Roger in and start talking to him, which he did. Melissa's FBI
colleagues knew she'd had a troubled relationship with her ex, and agents would soon hear about a
chilling prediction Melissa had made to a girlfriend. If I'm killed, she said, Roger did it.
What does Roger say when he's told we found your ex-wife and she's dead?
Shocked and surprised. But investigators knew that didn't mean he was innocent.
You know, somebody has all night to think about somebody's going to come and talk to me because
I'm the husband and we had a contentious relationship. He's got time to come up with a story. When Roger Mooney was questioned that
first day, the FBI says he cooperated, but he was angry, said he didn't know a thing about it.
His alibi? He said he was at home near the base about 70 miles away. His roommate left for work
around 10 p.m. and Roger says he went to bed shortly after, his daughter Sammy asleep beside him. And as for Melissa's new house, Roger said he'd never been there. I'm guessing
that interrogation is not terribly friendly. It was not, and there was no question in his mind
that he was the target. Roger Mooney may have been the primary target, but he wasn't the only one. Investigators would look at other men in Melissa's life.
At least one was married, with reason to hide an affair.
Each was scrutinized and then ruled out.
Investigators looked at anyone with a possible motive, but they found nothing.
Roger Mooney stayed at the top of the FBI's list,
as investigators tried to either make a case against him or rule him out.
His abrasive personality, his anger issues, and everything else surrounding Roger Mooney and his relationship with his ex-wife that made him a suspect.
Just because you have a contentious relationship with someone doesn't mean that when they do turn up dead that you killed them.
Absolutely, but what it will do is make you a suspect right away, and it did with Roger Mooney.
Roger's car and home were searched exhaustively. His friends, family, past girlfriends, high school
teachers, all questioned. We literally turned Roger Mooney's world upside down.
They talked to his Marine buddies
and heard about something Roger had said at target practice.
He made a statement,
well, if I had put my wife's picture up there, I'd shoot expert.
In other words, if I had a photo of my ex-wife to use for target practice,
I'd be better.
That's the gist of it.
Yeah, that's the context of the statement.
And it was clear Melissa's
killer had been angry and strong. Angry enough to kick in a door. Strong enough to overpower a woman
using his bare hands. What we found significant about Melissa's injuries is what we didn't find.
We didn't find many defensive wounds. It's as if she was rendered absolutely helpless by her
attacker. Ben David is the
district attorney in North Carolina's New Hanover County. His twin brother, John, was the assistant
DA when we spoke. The Davids were not in office when Melissa was murdered, but they spent years
on the case. It was an intimate attack, strangling the life out of a nude woman in the bed of her own home.
But was it sexual? There was no DNA on her body. They kept looking and found a crime scene crammed with evidence, including dozens of hairs. That wasn't surprising since Melissa's new house had
been on the market. Plenty of potential buyers had been through, but one person's genetic signature
stood out. Roger Mooney's DNA, his semen, was on the mattress, and his hair was also at our crime
scene, and he claimed never to be at this house. It was direct physical evidence which seemed to
put Roger Mooney at the scene of the crime. He says to his friends, I'd be better at target practice if my wife's face
was on the target. She says to her friends, if I ever get killed, it's Roger. He has an alibi,
but it's pretty far from ironclad. And a hair of his turns up in the house,
and he never lived in that house. Aren't there people on death row for less?
There's no question we have probable cause to arrest him,
on what you just described.
The theory was that after his roommate left for work,
Roger got in his car, drove the 70 miles to Melissa's house,
kicked in the door, killed her,
then turned around and drove 70 miles home
in time to get his daughter to the babysitter at 515
and himself to the Marine base shortly after. It was a
lot of business in a very short time.
Back in Pennsylvania, Melissa's family remained convinced Roger was the killer.
I thought she got in an argument with Roger. He kicked the door down and it
just went really wrong. Melissa's family clung to assurances from the FBI that the case would be closed quickly.
After the funeral, I thought he'd be arrested.
She was wrong, and so was the FBI, about nearly everything. Investigators were under tremendous pressure to make an arrest in the Melissa Mooney case. We had a single mother, a member of the law enforcement family,
who was dead in her own home.
And there were people who said,
it's the ex-husband, you should be arresting him tonight.
The case against Melissa's ex-husband certainly seemed strong.
And nobody knew that better than the ex-husband himself.
I understand how bad it looked for me.
Roger Mooney, a kid from California who'd always dreamed of joining the Marines.
By the summer of 1999, he was a staff sergeant at Camp Lejeune, 29 years old and living his dream.
But on August 6th, Roger received an urgent summons to the
Naval Criminal Investigation Office at the base. The agents broke it to me that Melissa was found
dead. And then after a couple minutes, accused me of killing Melissa. Just like that? Just like that.
You did it. You killed her and you're a liar. A liar and a logical suspect. Homicide investigators always
start with the victim's inner circle. Remember, Roger was the husband with the temper who frightened
his ex-wife, whom everyone suspected once Melissa's body was found. And his DNA was at the crime scene.
You see where this is all going.
That's why I spent two or three years being investigated by it.
But logical suspect Roger Mooney had his own set of facts,
starting with this one.
He insisted he didn't kill Melissa.
The only thing I could rely on was the fact that I didn't do it
and eventually the truth would come out.
His truth. First, those marital arguments.
She had a temper, I had a temper, but it's always easy to point to the 6'1", 200-pound Marine guy as being the bad guy rather than the small, quiet, reserved girl.
Did you ever hit her?
Nope.
Never?
Never. Once put a hand on her. No. Why would ever hit her? Nope. Never? Never.
Not once?
Once put a hand on her.
No.
Why would I hit the one girl in the world that I actually loved?
You don't do that.
So how did she get that bruise on her cheek?
An accident, he says, in the heat of a fight.
I was walking out of the house, and she was so little,
she kind of got in my way to get out of the house,
and basically we collided into each
other and she hit the doorframe. I felt horrible about that. Did you say to other Marines at target
practice not long before Melissa died, my aim would be a lot better if that were my ex-wife's
face on the target? It was a tasteless joke, is what it was. And her mother's claim that Melissa was scared of him?
And her friend's story that if anything happened to her, it was Roger?
He says the friend is unreliable.
And as for Melissa's family?
Her parents weren't big fans of mine, to say it nicely.
And I think maybe Melissa may have said something,
and it was assumed to mean something else.
What about the angry comment that Melissa would never see a penny of the money she wanted for child support?
Roger says there's an innocent explanation.
What I said was, that's more than I make.
You'll never see it because I don't have it.
In fact, he says, a satisfactory settlement was eventually reached. To hear Roger tell it,
he and Melissa were the best of friends by the time she was killed, sharing custody of the
daughter they both loved. Melissa and I took care of each other, and Melissa and I took care of
Samantha. That was Roger's story, and he stuck to it. And over time, one FBI agent began to think
Roger might be telling the truth.
The other people in the room said,
it's Roger and we're going to prove it.
I started saying it should be Roger,
but I don't think it is.
There was no indication that Roger and Melissa
were fighting or were combative at that time?
None.
The provable facts began to bear out Bonnie's doubts. That boot print on the
door didn't match Roger's boots. And no one could find a scrap of evidence to prove Roger made that
140-mile drive to Melissa's house and back the night of the murder. We had agents canvas every
possible route, pull every convenience store videotape, receipts during that time frame.
It was a lot of manpower.
No trace of Roger Mooney.
No trace of Roger Mooney.
And even though they drove the routes again and again and knew it could be done,
investigators began to realize that their theory of the murder didn't hold up.
He's got to maintain that level
of anger while he's putting the child in the car seat, driving down that road at breakneck speed,
kicks that door open, kills her, races back, takes Sammy out, puts her back to bed, gets up,
takes her over to the babysitter, and is at PT in the morning. Would he have left Sammy behind,
asleep in her bed?
Unlikely, says Melissa's boss.
One thing you gotta know about Roger, Roger was a good father.
Roger was a responsible father.
But there was the matter of Roger Mooney's DNA at the crime scene.
The DNA on the mattress could be explained.
It had once been the Mooney's marital bed.
But how could Roger's hair be found
in a house he said he'd never been to? The answer could rest with their daughter, Sammy,
who often stayed with her father. Roger's hair could have ridden to the crime scene
on Sammy's belongings. So that didn't set off an alarm bell. It was absolutely logical to find hairs from Roger Mooney in those possessions in the house somewhere.
And finally, the issue of motive.
Investigators eventually concluded that Roger Mooney had every reason not to kill his ex-wife.
Why? Because he was a dad.
If Melissa were dead, his career in the Marines would crash and burn.
If he doesn't have a wife, he becomes a single parent.
If he's a single parent, he can't be deployed.
If he can't be deployed, he can't get promoted.
That was the worst thing that could have happened to him right there.
And that's what he says he tried to tell them.
I don't think you can blame the FBI for looking at you.
No, not at all. I don't resent being investigated. What I resent is they were convinced it was me
before they actually started looking at the evidence. Two years after Melissa was murdered,
after poking into every corner of Roger Mooney's world. Investigators were fairly certain of one thing
and one thing only.
We reached a point where we said,
Roger Mooney's not our guy.
But if Roger Mooney didn't murder Melissa,
then who did? Two years had passed since Melissa Mooney's murder.
Investigators had ruled out her ex-husband Roger and other possible suspects.
Despite that, they were nowhere close to an arrest.
But they weren't about to give up.
New Hanover County District Attorney Ben David.
Whoever did this had gotten away with murder.
So Melissa's colleagues in the FBI started fresh again.
We literally relaunched a new investigation.
They brought in new investigators and re-interviewed everyone they'd spoken with before.
And immediately ran across someone unusual, according to Melissa's co-worker, Paul Cox. They described him in one
word as hinky. They said, he's hinky. There's something about this guy. He was the very first
person agents Cox and Ackley had spoken with the day Melissa's body was found, the neighbor who'd
been washing his car. He told them then he hadn't seen anything suspicious that night.
But when investigators returned to his home two years later, the man wasn't cooperative.
The agents advised that he didn't want to provide certain information by himself,
either his phone number, date of birth, things like that.
We thought that was odd, that a man who had two children and a wife across the street from a woman who'd been murdered
wasn't trying to help us catch a killer in his neighborhood.
They learned the man's name was Tyrone Delgado, a metal worker.
Investigators started digging into his background.
He'd grown up in Louisiana, served three years in the U.S. Navy. He'd become a family
man. And he was the kind of guy who'd hook up a camera to the TV just to admire himself. He puts
the music on, takes his shirt off, starts flexing his chest muscles, his arm muscles, watching himself the entire time, and that's Tyrone Delgado.
And agents learned Delgado was trained in martial arts.
He's very proud of how high he can kick and how strong he can kick.
You've got to think of Melissa Mooney's door.
Absolutely. It's not easy to kick in a door.
But it was when they checked Delgado's criminal record
that investigators realized they'd missed something in the early days of the investigation.
You'd already canvassed the neighborhood.
Run everybody's criminal record?
Did not run everybody's criminal record.
We interviewed hundreds of people.
In retrospect, that probably would have been a good thing to do.
Had they run Delgado's criminal record then, they would have learned he'd been charged with
sexual assault in Louisiana in 1994. Those charges had been dismissed, but now Cox and
Ackley got the police file. They listened to a taped interview of the alleged victim,
a single mom named Lorraine
Frew. And the door flew open in my face. What they heard on that audio tape was compelling,
beginning with the way she says Delgado forced his way into her apartment around 2 a.m. Tyrone
grabbed me by my chest and my shirt. When we spoke with her 16 years later,
Lorraine Frew said she could still see the look on Delgado's face.
I knew that he was going to kill me that night.
He was, she said, big and strong.
And he'd been drinking.
He tried to, he put his hand here and his hand here, and he went like that.
Like he was trying to break your neck?
Yeah.
She says he started choking her.
And I'm hitting him, I'm punching him, and then all of a sudden, everything starts to go black.
She says she realized Delgado was enjoying the struggle, the power, and the control.
When he was choking me, he told me, he's like, look at me, look at me. The attack, she says,
turned sexual. Finally, Lorraine managed to get away and went to police. Delgado was arrested
and charged. But then, Lorraine says, Delgado's mother offered her $2,000 if she would
agree to drop the charges. You took the money? Yeah. But if I could go back, I would know.
After the case was dismissed, Delgado moved to North Carolina. Five years later, Melissa Mooney was killed, strangled, after an apparent
sexual assault, after her attacker burst through her front door late at night. And at the time of
the murder, Tyrone Delgado was living just down the street. If you listen to Lorraine Frew's interview. It's almost the voice of Melissa as well.
It's chilling. It's so similar.
Agents Cox and Ackley had a new suspect.
That really said to both of us at that time, this could be our guy.
Except for one thing. Delgado had an alibi for the night Melissa died, courtesy of his wife.
Her story was that they had been home that night.
The night Melissa was killed.
Right.
Yes.
And then things started getting strange.
As the FBI was investigating Delgado, he was doing his own investigation, trying to find out what they knew. Agent Cox had been interviewing people in
his world, and one day Delgado actually called the FBI office looking for Cox. Agent Craig Ackley
took the call. He starts screaming at me on the phone. You're out here, you're interviewing my
neighbors, you're interviewing my co-workers. I want you to knock it off. Ackley persuaded Delgado to allow a search of his
house. The search didn't last long. Delgado suddenly threatened Ackley with a sword. Then
he just as suddenly backed down. Just broke into a smile and said, just f***ing with you.
It was vintage Tyrone Delgado. There was more vintage Delgado to come.
As the FBI moved ever closer to an arrest in the Melissa Mooney case,
things went from just plain strange to flat-out bizarre.
Get cops up here! Get them on the phone!
Get them on the phone, man! Come on, man! The FBI was looking at Tyrone Delgado for the murder of Melissa Mooney and looking hard.
In 2002, three years after Melissa's murder, the investigation got a big boost thanks to what Assistant District Attorney John David called a silent witness from the crime scene.
One hair that was collected that evening was put in an evidence locker and sat there for two years.
Remember, Melissa's home had been on the market before she bought it.
Plenty of people had tramped through and plenty of hair and fiber remained behind.
After Melissa was killed, all of it became evidence.
And one of those hairs proved to be a partial DNA match with Tyrone Delgado.
Meaning it came from Delgado himself or from a close relative on his mother's side.
You had a hair that maybe wasn't
definitely his but couldn't exclude him. Couldn't exclude him. Consistent with his maternal bloodline.
But there could be an explanation for that hair. Delgado could have walked through the home when
it was for sale before Melissa bought it. So agents decided to dig deeper to find out whether Delgado had committed any attacks
similar to the alleged assault on Lorraine Frew. They reached out to law enforcement in every place
Delgado had lived, asking about crimes that carried what they called the Delgado signature.
Forced entry, choking, and sexual assault.
Those officers were able to just get us a great wealth of other victims and information,
and then we're able to compare those back to the Mooney crime scene.
By late 2003, agents believed they had established a grim pattern.
They shared their findings with prosecutors.
What we found was a string of victims around this country who were all saying what Melissa would have told us if she was alive.
Who all told remarkably similar stories. Who told remarkably similar stories about the worst night
of their life. There were more than half a dozen alleged victims, which left prosecutors to wonder
if Tyrone Delgado was responsible for such a trail
of brutality, why wasn't there more evidence of it on his criminal record? The more they learned,
the more certain they became of this theory. Delgado targeted vulnerable women,
who rarely pursued him legally. Mr. Delgado became very competent at bringing about real pain to his
victims and getting away with it around the country. Investigators still needed more.
In November 2003, they got it. Delgado's own wife, Anna, accused him of almost killing her.
She said he choked her, pinched her nose to cut off her hair.
Agents compared Anna's injuries to Melissa's
and found striking similarities.
Anna pressed charges, filed for divorce,
and then, in a huge break for the FBI,
Anna Cruz Delgado switched sides.
She no longer gave her husband that crucial alibi on the night of Melissa's murder.
She couldn't say that he was there for certain during the attack like she originally said.
She couldn't guarantee that he had been home that night.
That's right. In fact, that he had a pattern of getting up in the middle of the night
when he was drinking and going out in the community,
and she learned not to ask what he was up to.
Stop! Stop!
Delgado went back on the offensive,
challenging the investigators, or trying to.
I said handcuff me, yeah, handcuff me, let's go.
Delgado had been picked up in Louisiana for drunk driving.
In front of a surveillance camera,
he launched into a tirade,
demanding to speak to FBI agent Paul Cox.
I told you to get Cox on the phone, or I can talk to him right now.
By now, he and Cox had met a number of times as Cox pushed the investigation forward.
And once again, Delgado wanted to know what Cox knew.
Get Cox up here. Get him on the phone. Get him on the phone, man. Come on, man.
Cox couldn't get there quickly, so he offered to send someone in his place.
That angered Delgado.
Tell Cox to say, kiss my ass.
You want to talk to me, talk to me right now and kiss my ass.
Eventually, Delgado lost interest in talking.
But Cox says the tape is instructive.
You can see just how aggressive and manipulative he is.
And he starts to try to create a situation where he has to have interaction with us
because he's dying to know, where are they in this process?
Where were they?
They had a suspect whom they believed had committed a series of remarkably similar assaults.
A suspect whose alibi was now shaky.
A suspect who had means.
He was strong and trained in martial arts.
Who had opportunity.
He lived across the street from Melissa.
Mr. Delgado was one of only a few people on earth
that had the size and ability and intent to perpetrate a crime like this.
In late 2005, investigators and prosecutors decided they had a good case, and it was time to act.
Delgado was charged with the first-degree murder of Melissa Mooney.
What was that like?
It was a long time coming.
Feel good?
Yeah, I did.
Tyrone Delgado went on trial for Melissa Mooney's murder in Wilmington in 2008.
The prosecution put five women, including Lorraine Frew, on the stand to describe what they said was a pattern of attacks.
Delgado's defense attorneys tried to discredit the victim's testimony.
They also argued the DNA evidence was not exact,
that the FBI should not have investigated the murder of one of its own, and that others, specifically Roger Mooney,
had greater motive. It took the jury four hours to find Tyrone Delgado guilty.
For the prosecutors and the FBI, it was a deeply satisfying victory.
We took off the streets one of the most violent criminals
either one of us has ever prosecuted.
This case was very much about Melissa,
but it was also very much about potentially the next victim.
Roger Mooney says he's put his ordeal behind him,
in part because the same agents who made his life miserable
ended up clearing him.
I can't stay mad over it. Eventually they did the right thing, so I appreciate that.
But a family still struggles with a terrible loss. And Larry Bonney, a man who was something
of a father figure to an employee who was only late once on the day she died, still mourns the life that never was
for a young woman named Melissa Mooney.
You never lose what could have been for Melissa.
There was a good future for her,
and that still hurts. you