Dateline NBC - The Officer's Wife
Episode Date: December 1, 2020When police officer Levi Chavez finds his wife, Tera, shot to death in their home, an investigation into her murder begins as buried secrets are revealed. Josh Mankiewicz reports. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Lester Holt, and this is Dateline.
Please, I'm sorry, call me right away. Please.
It was disturbing. A young, handsome police officer, a young, beautiful wife.
Somebody that I talk to almost every day is gone. It doesn't make sense.
When you hear suicide...
No, no way.
Things about it started stinking.
She'd met another man. Yep. It's a No, no way. Things about it started stinking. She'd met another man.
Yep, it's a big, messy triangle.
How many other women besides you was Levi Chavez
having an affair with?
10.
10.
And you know what the problem is?
You've got so many freaking girlfriends.
I know.
She had told her boss that she had done something bad.
I think the last statement within her diary said it all.
We knew we would get here.
We just had a lot of hurdles to get over.
I'll never forgive myself, ever.
Here's Josh Mankiewicz with The Officer's Wife.
The life of a police officer is full of danger and stress.
They have rough days at work and they end up holding it in.
They're our first responders.
It's hard. It's hard work.
From one call to the next, you don't know what you're going to meet up with.
But our story is about what happened when a first responder had to face a crisis in his own home. He was telling me that he didn't get out of town.
A cop pleading for help from his fellow men and women in blue.
Tell him, I'm a cop, please tell him to hurry.
Okay, okay.
In one moment, a family is shattered.
It was like disbelief.
It's like a surreal moment.
And over time, an entire community's secrets
would be revealed. I laid there and cried. It doesn't make sense.
It starts here in the village of Los Lunas, New Mexico, 25 miles south of Albuquerque.
Tara Chavez grew up in a loving family with her twin brother Josh and younger brother Aaron.
Joseph and Teresa Cordova are the parents.
She was a girly girl, very motherly.
She always was working with drawings and poetry,
always writing.
Melanie Gonzalez was Tara's best friend growing up.
She was amazing.
She was shy.
I know a lot of times in school people thought that she came off, kind of stuck up.
But that wasn't her?
Not at all.
Then one day at summer camp, that shy girl met the handsome boy who would change her life in so many ways,
Levi Chavez. How did she talk about him? She loved him. It didn't take very long before
she fell hard for him. He was charming towards her and she thought he was gorgeous.
Tara was quiet and artistic. Levi was a guy's guy who loved basketball and boxing.
Their love bloomed in the New Mexico desert.
Tara got pregnant while they were still in high school, and they got married just before her graduation.
He was happy about it. Scared as well, just like she was.
Something that neither one of them expected. It just happened.
Every time we would see them, they were happy.
Michael Romero is Levi's uncle, and as a town magistrate, he performed the ceremony.
On that wedding day, the whole family was there?
Yes, our family was there.
It was a joyous occasion.
They're a lovely couple.
And together, they dreamt of the life they'd have.
Tara worked as a hairstylist, but had bigger goals.
She was really wanting to start her own business.
Her own business, meaning her own salon.
Yes.
So she approached me.
I'm all for it.
I'll be a silent partner.
Although she did laugh at me.
Because, Dad, you're not silent levi worked long hours as an officer
with the albuquerque police department it was his dream job in levi's world police work was known as
the family business his grandfather from his father's side was a police officer and he has
four or five uncles that are police officers and i'm an ex-police officer myself he was a police officer, and he has four or five uncles that are police officers, and I'm an
ex-police officer myself. He was a natural police officer? He was natural. By 2007, they were raising
two children, Andrea and little Levi, and had settled into a new house in Los Lunas. But while
Levi was out fighting crime in the big city, Tara was finding out that life in the suburbs
wasn't entirely crime-free.
Tara's brother, Aaron.
She called me and told us, you know,
I think somebody tried to break in my house.
So we immediately, let's go to the house.
We checked, and the door did look like
somebody had messed with it a little bit.
Whoever did that didn't steal anything,
but it put Levi and Tara on alert.
He says he suggested she keep
one of his old duty guns at home to protect herself. Do Levi and Tara live in a tough
neighborhood? In Valencia County in general, I think they have a high crime rate. They tend to
have a lot of break-ins, a lot of crime there in that area. And Levi and Tara were about to
experience it firsthand. Levi had recently bought an expensive new truck.
Late one night, Tara was home alone and heard their dog bark.
She looked outside, and the truck was gone.
She said, hey, guess what? Levi's truck got stolen.
And I was like, well, what happened? Are you okay? Is Levi home?
She said, no, he was at work last night.
That made Melanie worry, and it turned out there was plenty to worry about.
Two weeks later, on a Sunday, the kids were away visiting Levi's dad.
Levi himself had a pretty quiet weekend on patrol.
But when he stopped to check on Tara and saw what was in front of him,
this police officer found himself on the other end of an anguished call to 911.
When we come back, a close-knit community reeling with grief and shock. It was disturbing. A young,
handsome police officer, a young, beautiful wife. The distraught husband, overcome by guilt.
I hope I never forgive myself, ever.
It was a blustery October night, with high winds gusting over New Mexico's Sandia Mountains.
Albuquerque police officer Levi Chavez called 911 from his own home.
Kevin, please let go, please.
He told police he'd found his wife lying in a pool of blood in their bed.
In a panic, Levi begged for help.
They're on their way. Levi, is it going to be easier for you to go to another room?
I can't leave her alone.
Okay, okay.
Oh, my God.
Aaron Jones was a detective with the Sheriff's Department in suburban Los Lunas.
I received a call from my sergeant saying that there had been a police officer's wife that had been shot.
It was just after 9 p.m. when Jones got to the Chavez home.
It was disturbing. I mean, it was a young, handsome police officer, a young, beautiful wife.
Jones saw Tara lying on the bed with a gunshot wound to
her head, and he found this Glock 17 by her body. It was the same gun Levi said he'd given her for
protection. It was his service weapon. It was his service weapon. That he left at home? Yes.
And beside the bed, on the nightstand, there was a three-word note, I'm sorry, Levi.
Jones quickly determined that Tara hadn't been a victim of crime,
but had turned the gun on herself.
She was only 26.
We do have a lot of suicides out there.
Unfortunately, Valencia County has a high rate of suicides.
It's not uncommon.
The uncommon part of it was the fact that it was a police officer's
wife. Within minutes, members of Levi's own police department in neighboring Albuquerque came over to
the house to offer Levi's support. As the news of Tara's death spread, one officer's wife called
Tara's best friend, Melanie. She just came out and said it, Mal, Tara's dead. And it took me a minute to process it.
And I was like, what do you mean? I don't understand. At the scene, police saw an inconsolable
husband. He kept referring to himself as a piece of crap and other things that he just should have
been a better husband and should have just been with her. I hope I never forgive myself, ever.
I better go ahead.
Jones, the local detective, took a statement from Levi, the big city cop, who bared his soul.
To the rest of my life, I'll never move on.
He told Jones he blamed himself for Tara's suicide.
His wife was prone to drama and depression, he said, but at times he didn't take it seriously.
Now it was too late. Healthy kids.
The detective did his best to bring a weeping Levi under control. Whatever is going on right now,
take a deep breath. You're trying to make this guy feel better. I am. I was concerned that possibly my sympathy and empathy was gone at the point of afraid that he might hurt himself too.
Officers went through the scene in the bedroom and stumbled on something.
Tara, the writer, had kept a journal tucked under her mattress.
Parts of it were very dark,
described a young woman that was having some dark times in her life.
Tara had laid bare the depths of her despair, writing,
Sometimes I want to just disappear, and I'm depressed.
I want to fall off the face of the earth.
Every day I feel my time and work, kids and endlessly trying to make my marriage work.
I'm getting nowhere. I never do.
That sounds like depression to me.
Classic depression.
And police found another page of writing that sounded desperate,
torn up and buried in the trash can.
And Levi showed Detective Jones something else.
I got a text.
A text he'd received from Tara earlier that day. It says,
I'm afraid I'm going to hurt myself. I'm so S-O-O-O, upset, sad, and hurt.
Open and shut. By 2 a.m., police were wrapping up their work at the Chavez house,
and Detective Jones headed to Tara's parents' home to break the news.
He introduced a deputy and a chaplain.
He said, it's about your daughter.
So I'm already feeling weak.
What did you think?
I thought that was a terrible traffic accident.
I never, never thought to hear otherwise. I asked him what happened, and Aaron Jones said,
it's an apparent suicide. Possibly the most painful news a family can ever hear,
but the Cordovas weren't prepared to accept it, and they felt a deep conviction that no one outside
this family saw coming. When you hear suicide, what do you think? No way. No, no way. That girl
loved those children, and I knew right then and there that she would not take her life
and leave those children behind.
Coming up, heartbreak and disbelief.
It's not the Tara I knew.
I never would have in a million years thought that she would ever take her life.
Was Tara's death definitely a suicide?
Just something about it, just things about it started stinking.
When Dateline continues.
Family and friends awoke to a piercing sadness in this tight New Mexico community.
Tara Chavez, the wife of an Albuquerque police officer,
had died by suicide. I laid there and cried. I couldn't believe it. I mean, somebody that I talk to almost every day is gone, and you don't know why. You don't understand it. It doesn't make sense. When Levi's uncle Michael tried to help his nephew that next morning,
he says he saw a broken man.
I went and saw Levi, and he was in bed,
and I just didn't know what to say.
I just, it's the worst thing that could happen to anybody.
What did Levi say to you that day? Do you remember?
He didn't say, he, he, he, he,
he was too emotional. He couldn't even speak. But along with the shock, Tara's best friend was
overcome with a sense of disbelief. Part of me was like, no, this isn't right. This isn't what
happened. Like they're lying. It's not, it's not true. And that's exactly what Tara's parents were telling the detective
who'd come to their home with that terrible news.
For one thing, they told him there was simply no way Tara would leave her children.
You would not be the first family of a loved one who committed suicide
who did not want to believe that that was possible.
Well, Josh, I don't know about other families,
but I knew Tara.
I knew Tara.
But what about the depressed person
who emerges from that diary police found at the scene?
Tara's family points out
that many of the darker passages in that journal
were several years old.
Her journal, I think, was an outlet for her,
just to vent sometimes.
Gina Cordova is Tara's sister-in-law.
I mean, I'm married, I have kids.
Sometimes I just want to disappear,
and it doesn't mean that I'm going to harm myself in any way.
And the very last entry, three months before her death,
suggests Tara was in fact the opposite of depressed. Tara wrote, goodbye to the person I used to be. Welcome new
day. Happiness. I think the last statement within her diary said it all. Happiness. And her family
says she had lots to be happy about. Tara was finally making plans to
open that new hair salon she had long dreamed of. She was even starting to look at real estate.
She was so excited to do it. Gina says Tara had an appointment to look at this location with her dad
scheduled for just two days after her death. She was thinking about how she was going to decorate
and how it was going to be, you know, girly,
and she was just really excited about it.
That's the Tara her brother Aaron saw all the time.
And he says just two days before she died,
Tara had sent him this funny video of her kids.
They were dancing around the shop, just being goofy, joking around, you know,
and it was pretty funny, actually. Nothing on that video to suggest that she was in a miserable
place. There's a little second in there on that video that you see her and she's laughing because
her daughter and her little boy are just being goofballs, you know. And Tara's best friend,
Melanie, reread the last text Tara had sent her around that same
time and saw nothing frightening. It was real simple. She just said, hi, I haven't talked to
you all day. How are you doing? Doesn't sound like someone in the middle of a terrible depression.
Not at all. Could you have conceived of her taking your own life? It's not the Tara I knew.
I never would have in a million years
ever seen or expected
or thought that she would ever take her life.
Melanie and the court of us say
their instincts were telling them
something was wrong in that suicide scene at the house.
And they let Detective Jones know it.
I talked to Aaron Jones.
I don't think he believed you.
No, I'm sure he didn't.
It looked like a suicide to them.
That's correct.
But something you said to him, or some way you said it,
made him think that he needed to dig a little deeper.
Yes.
I promised Tara's mom and dad that I would look at it.
I knew that I couldn't just close this case out without looking at it and digging into it.
To begin with, Jones knew from experience that bedroom scene was very unusual.
Women make up just 10% of gun suicides.
And he wondered about that recent break-in attempt and Levi's stolen truck.
Had someone been casing the neighborhood?
Maybe targeting the officer's house?
I wanted to check and make sure that there wasn't any kind of indication of any kind of break-in
or that maybe somebody else had done this.
But nothing seemed to be missing from the house,
and Jones could find no sign of forced entry.
Still, he went back to the photos from the bedroom,
started noticing things,
like what appeared to be a swipe of blood on the bed.
What could that smear of blood on the bedsheets indicate?
Well, it could indicate the fact that she didn't commit suicide
and the fact that the person that fired that fatal round would have had blood on their hands.
And the detective remembered something else from that night that now struck him as odd.
A red substance in a toilet on the other side of the house.
Was it Tara's blood?
And if so, how did it get there?
You're in a situation where someone's died.
They certainly didn't get out of bed and go bleed in the toilet.
Jones also focused closely on that gun and noticed the
patterns of blood on it. To the detective, it looked like whoever had fired it had to be left-handed.
The areas of the gun that didn't have blood on them. Like a perfect handprint. Looked like a
perfect handprint of a human hand. A left hand. Yes. Tara was right-handed. Yes.
Was it suicide?
Or could it be homicide?
Jones turned all of it over in his mind.
He even handled the gun himself.
You physically put a Glock in your own mouth?
Well, yeah.
Yeah.
Unloaded, I hope.
Well, of course.
The medical examiner, however, had ruled Tara's death a suicide the day
after she was found. And the lid on this case might have been shut then and there. But Jones
hesitated. It was written as a suicide. Unless I came up with something pretty contradictory to
that, then my job was to write it up as a suicide and close the case. And why didn't you?
Just couldn't do it. Just something about it, just things about it started stinking. After three
weeks of investigation, instead of closing the case, Jones asked the medical examiner to change
the manner of death from suicide to undetermined.
Now the hard part, determining what really happened to Tara Chavez.
Coming up, it didn't take police long to find out that Tara had a secret.
She'd met another man.
Yep.
It's a big, messy triangle.
But was it a motive for murder? The more Detective Aaron Jones looked at that scene where Tara Chavez died,
the more questions he had. Then he says a light bulb went off, something that seemed like the key
to the case. Jones says that when he found the gun next to Tara, the magazine with the bullets
wasn't locked in place. It had been partially released. Suggesting what? Suggesting that the
scene was tampered with. So someone uses the gun to shoot Tara. The gun recycles, and then what?
In putting the gun down or dropping it,
they accidentally release the magazine.
Well, that's what I believe, yes.
But if Tara didn't shoot herself, then who shot her?
Now Jones would have to delve into Tara's life and relationships.
And soon, Jones learned that Tara had a secret.
She'd met another man.
Yep.
Jones heard from Melanie and others
that Tara and her husband had been growing apart for years.
And three months before she died,
Tara stepped over a line.
His name was Nick Wheeler.
Like Levi, he was another handsome police officer in the Albuquerque PD.
Nick would get his hair cut by Tara every Thursday, and sparks flew.
What drew Tara to this guy, to Nick?
His personality.
He treated her great.
Another guy that comes in and is nice to her and shows her attention and treats her good.
And you've got the recipe for an affair.
Exactly.
But there was a problem. Tara was married to Levi and Nick.
He was married to a friend of ours.
Of yours and Tara's?
Yes, sir. It's a big triangle, messy triangle. Now that big messy triangle was suddenly part of
Detective Aaron Jones's investigation and a tricky one. Jones and Nick Wheeler had been friends.
Back in like 2005, we'd worked together in the field. He was a very likable guy.
But Jones said he couldn't let that get in the way of his investigation. He was going to take
a long, hard look at his friend. And he remembered something that now seemed suspicious. The night
Tara was found, Nick had called him, digging for information. Probably within an hour of me getting
on the scene, I started getting texts and phone calls from him. Nick wants to know what? Well, I wasn't sure at first, but he was just asking questions about what was going on and
if I knew anything.
Was Nick concerned about keeping his affair with Tara under wraps or something else?
Melanie told the detective that Tara had broken things off with Nick before she died and told
Melanie that it had not ended well. She just told
him it's not right. You know, we're both married. What we're doing is not a good thing. Her conscience.
Mm-hmm. He didn't want to let her go. It didn't sound like it. Now Jones thought Nick could be a
potential suspect. So he and another detective visited Nick's home
and didn't tell him the conversation was being recorded.
Nick quickly admitted the affair.
His wife, Samantha, was right there to hear all of it.
There's going to be some things you hear, Sam, that you ain't going to want to hear.
It's just...
This is your husband.
It's your wife.
I know.
Tell me. Tell wife? Tell me.
Tell me.
Detective Jones found himself witnessing the kind of domestic argument
that investigators usually hear about only after the fact.
How many times did you sleep with her?
We're saying sleeping, we're talking about sex.
How many times did you touch her?
Well, she kissed me in my trunk.
And you kissed her back?
No, I kissed her back.
Why did you just leave me?
I said I wanted to.
But you wanted to kiss her.
Then Samantha said something that surprised Jones.
She had known all about the affair because Tara had confessed and apologized.
She was so nice and I told her, I said, Tara,
I'm not going to say anything until Nick tells me because that's his responsibility as a husband.
She said she didn't want me to kill her. She wanted me to go after her and beat her ass. I
told her I would never do it because I understand where she was coming from. So if you believe that, the two women
in this love triangle had made peace. If you believe that. Did you think it was possible that
either Nick Wheeler or his wife had killed Tara? Absolutely. Well, let me ask you a question.
Did you kill her? I really loved her. Really, I did. I did. That left one more question about the man in the middle nick where was he
that weekend tara died
he was her alibi and she was his pretty much yeah and that doesn't necessarily mean anybody's lying
sometimes that's the way it works out it is because they were a couple and I knew from experience with them that they
spent a time, you know, either with friends or family or with themselves at home.
The investigator says he didn't dismiss the wheelers as potential suspects,
but he had no evidence to link them to Tara's death.
So Jones started focusing on the man any detective would
need to look at, Tara's husband Levi. And Jones says there was plenty to examine.
Their whole relationship seemed like it was just a roller coaster.
Coming up, investigators find out that Levi had a lot more to hide than his wife did. In fact, when it came to cheating, they'd never seen anything like it.
How many other women besides you was Levi Chavez having an affair with?
Ten.
When Dateline continues. If Tara Chavez's death was homicide and not suicide,
then her husband Levi would be a natural suspect.
And it didn't take long for Detective Aaron Jones to find out that
when it came to Levi Chavez, the Albuquerque cop,
there apparently was something about a man in uniform.
Levi's a very charming guy. Levi's a very charming guy.
He's a very charming guy.
He clearly knows how to talk to women.
He clearly does.
There's no evidence that Levi knew about Tara's brief affair with Nick Wheeler.
But it turns out that Levi was carrying far more secrets than his late wife had.
Levi had been cheating on Tara, but that doesn't quite tell the story.
Levi Chavez was racking up so many infidelities,
he could barely remember some of his girlfriend's names.
Tara's friend Melanie says that kind of thing had been going on ever since high school.
And it wasn't just one girl, two girls. It was numerous girls.
So he never really stopped?
No.
Detective Jones tracked down this woman, Rose Slama, a married mother of three.
Rose says that at the time of Tara's death, she and Levi had been sleeping together for two years.
By the time I came around, I was shocked to be number three.
Number three, you were the third affair he'd had?
No, I was on his phone when he opened it up.
I was number three on his phone speed dial.
So Levi was open with you, not just that he was married,
but that he, in addition to being married, in addition to having an affair with you,
had another girlfriend.
Someone who was, what, a little higher up in the hierarchy than you were.
And you were okay with that?
Yeah.
Juggling multiple mistresses
while married was apparently nothing new for Levi. And Rose said Levi's multitasking skills
made it all possible. How many other women besides you was Levi Chavez having an affair with?
Ten. Ten? Yeah. You and nine other women? Yes. How did Levi find the time to be with ten different women and still presumably also, you know, fight crime?
We were actually almost neighbors.
We lived really close to each other.
That would be essential in a situation like that.
Yes.
You couldn't have like a one-hour commute to see somebody because when there's like nine others.
I think a couple others lived around us.
Where did you and Levi usually meet up?
On the running trails, the kids' school, my school, the duck ponds between our houses.
So there was a lot of meeting up outdoors. Yeah, and even if I went to his house and the kids were
there, he would just pop in a movie and have the kids watch a movie, and we would take off and do adult things.
And Rose says those adult things didn't have anything to do with love.
I didn't love him. I just...
This was just sex?
Just sex.
But listen to this.
One time when Rose and Levi were together at his house, she noticed a photo near the bed.
I put two and two together, and I had asked Levi,
and he said, yeah, we're married.
Rose recognized the woman in the photograph
because she knew Tara and had just figured out
she was sleeping with her hairstylist's husband.
And you say, great honey, lie down.
Not, I got to get out of here, this is weird.
It was a little weird,
I'm not gonna lie, but there seemed to be no love lost between them. There was like no love there,
so I didn't care. Rose told Detective Jones a lot about her affair with Levi, but didn't seem to
know anything useful about Tara's death. So Jones turned to others on Levi's speed dial,
including Heather Hindi, a fellow cop in Levi's department.
In fact, she'd been on Cops, the TV show.
APD as well as UNM return fire.
Jones interviewed Heather, but she didn't seem to have any leads.
So he found Levi's more serious girlfriend at the time,
another cop named Deborah Romero.
I think she believed that Levi was going to be the real deal for her.
Levi had admitted to Jones in their very first conversation that he'd been with another woman the night Tara died.
Now Deborah Romero would become a key part of Jones' investigation as he began to track Levi's whereabouts that weekend.
He said he hadn't been home until he discovered the body. All right. The detective believed Tara
had been killed sometime on Saturday night, and Levi's story was that he'd been on duty until
midnight and then went to Deborah's house. Jones went to talk to her. What is the first recollection that you have of seeing him physically at your house?
When I woke up, he came into the bedroom.
He was still in his uniform.
Deborah confirmed she was with Levi from the time he got off work that night until the following evening.
You wrapped up together the whole time?
Yeah.
It was an alibi for both of you together?
Yes.
Correct.
So mistress as alibi.
Maybe not a squeaky clean defense,
but for now at least,
their stories were in sync.
K-11-29.
But Jones still had questions for Levi.
So the next time Levi came to his office,
Jones set up a camera to record their conversation
without Levi knowing.
He wanted to see how Levi would react to the suggestion that Tara had not killed herself.
It seems like you kind of caught him off guard.
I did. I wanted to make him know that I had some concerns about some of the behavior that was going on.
At first, it was all pretty routine.
But whatever you need, I mean, I have nothing to hide you. Nothing.
Then, Jones told Levi he suspected Tara had been murdered.
Well, Levi, do you understand why this whole thing looks like a pile of s***?
No.
I mean, I really don't.
When I walked into your house that night, man, I really honestly believed this was a suicide.
But the problem is, man, as evidence, don't lie.
Somebody killed your wife.
I don't know.
That blows my mind.
It'd be easier to tell my kids that
than really what really happened,
what I think happened,
but I can't say it was possible.
I mean, I didn't see,
I think I would have saw something.
Jones tells Levi he has some questions
about all those women.
You know what the problem is, dude,
is I mean, what it looks like is this.
I mean, you've got so many freaking girlfriends, dude.
I know. I mean, you're like, you don't even mean, you've got so many freaking girlfriends, dude. I know.
I mean, you're like, you don't even remember,
you got so many, you don't even know their names.
I told you that, I know.
And how am I being an asshole about this?
You're like a Major Romeo, dude.
A Major Romeo who said he still cared for his wife,
despite all those infidelities.
She's like my partner, man.
Who?
Like, we might not have been in love, but...
Business partner or parent-raising partner or...
Just everything, partner. We've been through so much together.
Well, it almost looked like she was your nanny.
Well, you know what? I'm sorry, man.
If you want me to apologize for being a bad husband, I was.
No, no.
I don't know what you want me to tell you.
I'm divorced, dude. Trust me.
Bad husbands, I'll probably take the cake.
I don't know what you want me to tell you, dude. dude. Trust me. Bad husbands, I'll probably take the cake. I don't know which one we tell you, dude.
I mean, I was a husband, dude, but I didn't have nothing to do with this, man.
He admits to some of the affairs.
He admits to being a bad husband, but says he's no murderer.
I don't see a guy who looks tremendously guilty there, but you did.
Well, not necessarily over just that.
I mean, it was the totality of everything.
That's because the totality of everything for Jones
included some startling information he was getting,
something Tara's family and friends say she told them just before she died.
Coming up.
She had made a couple statements to me that if anything ever happened to her that Levi did it.
It took me a while to even think, oh my God, maybe she was right.
Did Tara have a premon she took her own life.
And they also didn't buy her husband Levi's story about how he found her.
There were a lot of just suspicious things.
Nothing added up.
To Tara's sister-in-law Gina, the so-called suicide note found on the
bedside table just didn't make sense, mostly for what it didn't say. I think my first thought was
like, I want to read it because I want to see it. And the note says, I'm sorry, Levi,
but it doesn't mention her kids. Can you conceive of her writing a note like that and not mentioning
her children? No, she wouldn't have left her kids. She would not have left her kids.
Detective Jones had come to agree. The one sentence didn't seem like a suicide note.
At least, not one Tara would write.
She was a very expressive person.
You would have expected a more detailed and more expressive note?
Absolutely. Tara's best friend also told the detective
that the behavior of the Levi she knew
was much worse than the philandering he had admitted to.
He would break her down so bad verbally.
He would tell her all the time that she was worthless,
that she was nothing without him.
Tara tried to keep it to herself,
but especially from her dad.
We didn't like seeing our daughter go through what she was going through with Levi.
And being the father and wanting to fix everything,
I think it created this curtain of don't let dad know.
But in the months before she died, Tara did tell both of them
she was getting fed up with Levi
and was ready to end her marriage.
She just told me she was going to be okay and the kids are going to be fine.
They were going to be getting divorced and she was going to be moving forward.
After Tara's death, the cordovas say Levi never appeared to be the grieving husband,
but instead seemed cold and distant. By the time of Tara's
funeral, they say, Levi had already wiped away all traces of his dead wife. Everything my daughter
did in that house was either in a box or somewhere, somewhere else. It wasn't in the house
any longer. We were there to pick up clothing for a viewing that was going to happen Wednesday afternoon.
And there was nothing left?
There was nothing. Who does that?
Who boxes up the person that made that house what it is?
Within 48 hours?
Within 48 hours. She was gone.
It made the family wonder if evidence of Levi's guilt was also being boxed up
and hidden, especially when they learned that potential evidence from the house had been
destroyed the night Tara was found. Remember that red substance Detective Jones saw in the toilet
that night? It turns out that never made it to the crime land. Were you able to collect that evidence?
No.
Because?
Because it had been flushed by a Albuquerque police officer who was in the house.
One of Levi's friends who'd come over to offer support.
Well, friend's co-worker.
So, was it Tara's blood?
Was it even blood?
We're never going to know.
No, we're sure not.
And that bedding with the mysterious blood swipe was also removed by APD cops.
Tara's family couldn't shake the feeling that Levi's fellow officers from Albuquerque
might have been helping out their friend,
and that the local investigators in charge should have stopped them.
I was extremely angry.
In the midst of the Lynch County Sheriff's Department, I was beside myself stopped them. I was extremely angry. In Bethfield, the Lynch County Sheriff's Department,
I was beside myself with them.
How could you allow another agency
to come into your jurisdiction and enter that house?
The jurisdiction of the man who found the body?
Yes.
Detective Jones says there's no evidence of a conspiracy or cover-up,
and he blames himself for not immediately treating the house as a crime scene. Because of that,
he was forced to work backwards to find both evidence and a possible motive. And soon he
found something interesting, a life insurance policy that covered Tara. How much money would Levi get in the event
of the death of his wife? $100,000. What about if it was a suicide? $100,000. And Tara's family
told the detective that the couple, headed for divorce, had been having financial problems.
But the main reason Tara's family and friends believed Levi had something to do with her death
is this.
She had made a couple statements to me that if anything ever happened to her that Levi did it.
Did you take that seriously?
Obviously not serious enough.
It took me a while to think, oh my God, maybe she was right.
And her mom said that a few months before she died, Tara told her the same thing.
She did tell me,
if anything ever happens to me, Levi did it. And I immediately asked her if she was okay,
and if the kids were okay. And she told me everything was fine. But why say something
like that? I couldn't tell you why she said that, but she did tell me that.
Tara told her mom not to worry and not to say a word to her dad.
And you didn't tell him.
And I didn't tell him.
I don't blame my wife for anything.
Tara knew me well.
She knew that I would intervene.
Is there any part of either of you that thinks that Levi might not be responsible for this?
No.
Now, the family and the detective were on the exact same page.
You didn't believe Tara had killed herself?
No.
You thought Levi killed her? Faked it? Made it look like a suicide?
Yes, sir.
But the feeling that Levi was responsible for Tara's death wasn't widely shared in law enforcement, largely because Levi had that
alibi, Deborah Romero, a fellow police officer who said they were together that night.
Jones wanted to interview Levi's police co-workers who'd been on the scene that evening
and his many other mistresses for more information,
but some weren't talking. After a year, the investigation had reached a standstill.
I was allowed to officially work the case for some time, but after that, I worked it when I could
and however I could. Levi's uncle and family of cops felt Jones's investigation was pure witch
hunt. When the police start to focus on Levi, what do you think?
When you mention police, my thought is not police, it's Aaron Jones.
You think this is all him?
This is all Aaron Jones.
He was driving the bus here?
He was driving, and he was the only one on that bus on the highway.
While Jones' bus was stalling, the Albuquerque press corps rolled on with the story.
Even though no arrest was made, Levi was put on administrative leave at his job and remained
the one and only person of interest in the case.
To be honest with you, they didn't have a case.
And I think they were trying to make Levi look like a bad guy.
So maybe he's not a good husband, but he's not a murderer.
No, he's definitely not a murderer.
She took her life and Levi found her.
But Jones refused to give up and was determined to dig up new information any way he could.
He began to think outside the box and suggested something highly unusual.
I had told the court at the time, if you've got
to sue me, sue me. You've got to sue somebody. But in order to get some answers on this case,
you're going to have to file a civil suit. So they did. A wrongful death suit against Levi,
the city of Albuquerque, and members of the Albuquerque Police Department,
claiming they had all played a role in Tara's death. It was a huge fishing expedition.
But would they catch anything?
Levi's first testimony under oath.
And one of his girlfriends tells a new story of what happened the night he found his wife's body.
He's like, my wife just died while I was in the shower, and I heard the pop.
When Dateline continues.
Tara Chavez's parents were determined to help get their son-in-law arrested for their daughter's murder.
So for their civil suit, the family's lawyer subpoenaed more than 50 people for depositions
with the hope of learning something new.
Please state your name for the record.
Levi Chavez.
Levi was called in to give a videotaped deposition.
Were you aware that Officer Wheeler was seeing your wife?
He'd always been cooperative with police in the past.
But this time, Levi was under oath.
And now, as his lawyers invoked his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination,
Levi was far less chatty.
When do you remember receiving an alleged text message from Tara saying she might hurt herself?
We're going to assert the same privileges
to that. So little was learned from Levi that day. But attorneys also put his talkative mistress,
Rose Slama, under oath. And in her deposition, she revealed something she had never told police
and later told us. The night that I had talked to him and I text him, he's like, my wife just died. And I was
like, well, what happened? And he was like, well, I don't know. I was in the shower, and I heard the
pop. Levi told you that he was there in the house in the shower and heard a pop? Mm-hmm. And then
when he got out, he had found her dead. Levi's story to investigators had always been that he'd
been with one of his other girlfriends, Deborah Romero, that night,
and only found Tara dead when he returned home to check on her.
But this story Rose says he told her is quite different.
You know you're the only person that tells that story?
Yes.
You're sure that's what he said to you?
I'm absolutely positively sure.
This new story was puzzling to Jones, but it did match one thing the detective
recalled seeing at the scene, a wet towel. And Rose had even more to reveal in her deposition.
Remember, she'd been sleeping with Levi, but had also been a client of Tara's at her salon.
Presumably you chatted with her the way women do with their hairstylists.
Mm-hmm. And it was this double-edged role as paramour to Levi,
and as it turned out, confidant to Tara,
that would put Rose Slama at the center of this investigation
and lead investigators to a possible motive.
The last time she saw Tara,
Rose says Tara told her something odd about that truck
that had disappeared from the family driveway.
You had a conversation with Tara about Levi's truck being missing.
We were talking, and I was like, well, what's going on with the truck?
And have you guys heard anything about it?
And she's like, it didn't come out stolen.
I was like, what do you mean it didn't come out stolen?
Rose says Tara told her the story of the truck being stolen had been a lie,
and that she believed her husband Levi, the cop, was mixed up in something very illegal.
She said that Levi had some friends take it to claim the insurance, so he had the truck taken.
So Tara was very upfront with you that she thought that the truck's disappearance was part of an insurance scam by Levi.
Yeah, and she told me she was going to call the police and tell
him. And when she later saw Levi, Rose says she told him his wife thought that he was involved
in some kind of scam. What was Levi's response when you told him about that? Said she didn't
know what she was talking about. Levi maintained the truck was legitimately stolen. Yeah. Still,
if Tara was telling Rose she thought her husband was a criminal,
what might happen next? I believe he was scared because she was going to turn him in and he had
a lot to lose. To Detective Jones, that sounded like a reason for Levi to want to make his wife
disappear. And he found more evidence to suggest Tara was planning to report her husband. Six days
before she died, the New Mexico Insurance Fraud
Bureau received a tip about a fake stolen vehicle. The investigator's notes say the caller's name
was Sarah, but later said he thought it could have been Tara. And in fact, the woman's contact
number was for the salon where Tara Chavez worked. What did you learn from people who worked at that
salon? About three days prior to her death, she had told her boss that she had done something bad and that if she ended up dead,
Levi killed her. I feel a sense of responsibility for Tara's death because if I never said anything
about the truck to Levi,? Yeah. Then what?
Then maybe she should be alive.
As the Cordova's civil lawsuit
wound its way through court,
Detective Jones retired from law enforcement.
But the revelations that came from the suit
jump-started the investigation into Tara's death
and eventually caught the attention of prosecutors.
Assistant DA Brian McKay.
You thought the truck was a motive. We think the truck was a motive in a really simple sense. He's
just moved to APD. He's wanting to move up the ranks. I'm sorry, you know the brass is going to
do something if everyone's going around your wife's reporting that you're committing fraud.
All of the defendants except Levi settled their parts of that civil suit, denying any liability. But the Cordova family
got what they really wanted. In April 2011, more than three years after Tara's death,
Levi Chavez was charged with her murder. Coming up, Levi Chavez goes on trial.
Will his alibi hold up in court?
Is there any way for you to actually know what time he got there?
I do not know. In June 2013, Levi Chavez was to stand trial in a New Mexico court for killing his wife, Tara.
He'd been out on bail, fired from his job as an Albuquerque cop after he was indicted.
The trial for an APD officer accused of killing his wife is finally underway.
Tara's family and friends thought justice was near.
Was there a time when you thought Levi was never going to be prosecuted?
No, we knew we would get here.
We just had a lot of hurdles to get over.
Levi's family saw the trial very differently, as a chance to clear his name and theirs.
You ever have any doubt as to whether or not Levi was capable of this?
I didn't have no doubt. From day one, I was one that was, you know, advocating that there's no way, there's no way that he could have done this.
All rise.
Two families, once joined by marriage, could now hardly look at each other as they sat on opposite sides of a courtroom.
The state set out to prove Levi, the cheating husband, killed Tara and staged her suicide to keep her from exposing a big secret.
This was not a suicide. It was a purely circumstantial case.
But lead prosecutor Brian McKay thought he had more than enough to brand Levi a cold-blooded killer.
So the perfect homicide equals suicide.
You begin by talking about the perfect murder. Is that what you think this was? Yeah.
A cop knows a suicide, if they're convinced early on that this is a suicide, it's closed.
It's over. It's done. There is no investigation. Prosecutors thought a big part of their case
would be Levi's alleged involvement in a stolen truck scam. Rose Slama came to court
to testify about what she'd heard. I had asked her about the truck situation and she had told me that
Levi had had it stolen for insurance. Prosecutors told the jury they would prove this was Levi's
motive for murder. He knows Tara's telling people that he is involved in some kind of a fraud.
That's bad news.
But the state couldn't really deliver on that supposed motive.
Levi always maintained the truck really was stolen
and fraud charges were never filed against him.
So the judge wouldn't allow any testimony at a trial that would back up Rose's
story. The jury also never heard family or friends testify that Tara thought Levi might hurt her,
perhaps over the truck. All of that was hearsay. Still, McKay and his co-counsel Ann Keener
believed they had much more evidence against Levi, and made his infidelity the centerpiece
of their case. They said Levi had simply grown tired of Tara. How would you describe him?
Levi Chavez is a very me-centered person. Everything about Levi is about Levi.
Among the mistresses who arrived in court was Katrina Garley,
a Verizon store clerk Levi met shortly before Tara's death.
They began an affair the day they met,
and a few weeks later, they were in bed together again,
in the same home where Tara had died.
When you went to the residence, did you have a sexual encounter? Yes,
I did. Do you know if the children were there? He said they were, but I did not see them.
Next up, a fellow APD officer, Regina Sanchez. Tara had called her when she learned Regina
had been sleeping with Levi. The nature of the phone call was to pretty much just get mad at me,
ask what was going on. Was she upset? Yes, very. And investigators showed that not long after that
phone call, someone had typed in a web search on Levi's computer, how to kill somebody. After the
how to kill somebody search, there was a web page that was visited, and that's on how to kill someone.
The state's implication? That Levi thought murder might be easier than divorce.
The prosecution said Levi had grown tired of Tara.
That computer shows you that something's going on.
He tells Tara she's holding him back, calls her a worthless piece of skin.
And the prosecution suggested Levi had a plan to get rid of Tara for a new girlfriend, Heather Hendy.
She was the other Albuquerque cop who got to know Levi in the weeks before Tara's death.
You had indicated that you didn't start a sexual relationship until the end of November of 2007.
Correct.
63 days after Tara died, the man who once tearfully told Aaron Jones he would never get over his wife's suicide gave Heather a diamond ring.
And when did you get married?
July 5th, 2008. The official story is that Heather and Levi met just a couple of weeks before Tara's death,
but things didn't evolve until long after Tara's death.
Knowing what we know about Levi, do you believe that?
No.
I think she was the ultimate goal.
And the state had something else.
Deborah Romero, the mistress who had been Levi's alibi,
now took the stand to testify for the prosecution.
I actually think he called me that evening.
Romero originally told investigators Levi was with her right after his shift ended,
during the period when it's believed Tara was killed.
Now, years later, she testified that she couldn't be sure when he arrived at her house.
Is there any way for you to actually know what time he got there?
I do not know.
According to the prosecution, Levi got off work at midnight
and did something that his cell phone records show was highly unusual.
He shut off his phone for 15 hours.
On October 21st after midnight, 2007, the defendant turned his phone off.
His phone's off for a longer period of time than it had been off in a very long time.
Yes. That was a huge piece of evidence because of the timing.
I mean, really? That's the only time? This big break and it happens to be when your wife's killed?
Prosecutors then laid out for the jury exactly what they believed happened that night. They said Levi got to the
house and walked inside to the bedroom where he found his wife asleep. Slams that gun in
and pulls the trigger, instantly killing Tara Chavez.
And then he pulls the gun out, and he turns it over, and he lays it down.
And then?
And then at that point in time is when he hops in the shower,
in case the gunshots heard.
Comes out, nothing, nobody's responded, towel.
That's when he sends that text.
Prosecutors said it was Levi who sent that text from Tara's phone. I'm afraid I'm going to hurt myself. I'm so upset, sad, and hurt. It was the
text Levi would later show investigators. But Detective Jones took the stand to describe what
he believed was Levi's one mistake. Did you push the magazine release in this case? No.
Detective Aaron Jones testified how he had found the gun at the scene with the magazine already
released. The state called experts to the stand to say that if Tara had shot herself,
she wouldn't have been able to release it. I found that it took better than five pounds of direct pressure in order to
release this magazine. And prosecutors believe the person who did release the magazine was Levi,
the cop. They said Levi's perfect crime wasn't perfect after all. This is not a suicide. Defendant killed Tara Chavez.
But the defense was ready to tell a very different story.
One of a lovesick woman in a spiral of despair.
Coming up, the case for the defense, starting with a cross-examination of the lead detective.
Turns out, he had a troubled past.
Dr. Roll basically found you mentally unfit to be a police officer, right?
That's what he ultimately said, yes.
When Dateline continues. It seemed all of Albuquerque was transfixed by the sex-drenched narrative that was the Levi Chavez trial.
Prosecutors argued the former police officer killed his wife and staged it to look like suicide.
Now it was the defense's turn. Their first argument,
the reason investigators initially thought Tara took her own life,
was because she did. Defense attorney David Cerna. It was called a suicide because their
own investigators, whose job it is to go and see what kind of death it is, call it a suicide. Stating what he knew the jury must have
been thinking, Cerna admitted Levi was a failure as a husband, but said that didn't make him a
murderer. He was completely unfaithful to her. Just about every way. Absolutely. Just about every
opportunity. Absolutely. But, you know, he talks about Tara being his partner. She
was his partner because they had gone through so much, they had had children
together. All along, Levi's family felt the investigation into Tara's death was
flawed and fueled by an obsessed detective. When one theory came up and it
didn't pan out, then he had another theory. I think in
police work, you've got to have evidence. You have to have something that we can hold on to.
In a series of testy exchanges, the defense tried to discredit Aaron Jones on the stand.
Thought as a world-class cop, maybe you could, or were clairvoyant as well.
I'm working on it. I know
you are. I bet you are. I have no doubt of that. Cerna grilled Jones about his work history.
Turns out he'd been fired twice and formally reprimanded for his handling of cases,
including one that caused Jones to be written up as unfit for duty. Dr. Roll basically found you in a five-page written report, mentally unfit to be a
police officer, right? That's what he ultimately said, yes. Jones was later found fit to serve and
left law enforcement voluntarily. But the defense argued his troubled record cast a cloud over all
his police work.
How important was it to sort of chip away at Aaron Jones' credibility?
It was absolutely necessary.
It was absolutely necessary that the jury see Aaron Jones for what he is.
Remember Jones' theory that the blood pattern showed that the shooter was left-handed while Tara is right-handed?
That theory never made it into court because it couldn't be backed up with forensics.
And that insurance policy covering suicide that Jones found suspicious,
the defense showed it was an old policy
that had been in place for years through Levi's military service.
My client never changed the amounts or coverage or clauses or anything
of his insurance policy, right? I didn't know that then. And to cast more doubt on Jones's
investigation, the defense suggested he never really took a serious look at Tara's lover
and his former buddy, Nick Wheeler. So they never got, they never took your DNA? Did they take
fingerprint exemplars from you? No, sir. In the end, the sheriff's department concluded there was
no evidence that Nick Wheeler or his wife had anything to do with Tara's death. As for Rose
Slama. I had an itch and he scratched it and that was it. You had an itch and he scratched it?
That was it.
Serna argued Rose couldn't be trusted.
In fact, she was facing felony charges of her own.
You were arrested for fraud over $2,500, right?
Yes, sir.
And forgery over $2,500, right?
Yes, sir.
The defense suggested Rose made up the Levi stories,
hoping for leniency with her own legal problems,
which she says all stemmed from a messy divorce.
She would later plead out the lesser charges and get probation.
But Rose swears all her testimony was the truth.
I got no deal.
I testified because it was the right thing to do.
And the rest of that parade of mistresses?
The defense argued those women only bolstered Levi's case,
proving he was a lousy husband in a crumbling marriage,
which gave Tara ample reason to be depressed, even suicidal.
He wasn't a good husband, and he wasn't there,
and he didn't respond when she was making these cries for help.
And he feels horrible.
The defense's suicide expert, Dr. Alan Berman, testified
all the evidence pointed to Tara taking her own life.
She had a number of both chronic and acute risk factors for suicide.
And the I'm sorry note left on Tara's bedside table?
Dr. Berman said that note was too ambiguous for him to call it a suicide note.
But that ripped up page found buried in the garbage,
the expert said that had the hallmarks of a real suicide note.
The line, I hope you'll be happy now, is something we sometimes see in suicide notes.
Originally, the state suspected both notes were forgeries,
but their own handwriting expert confirmed Tara wrote both of them. So you came back with an opinion that Tara wrote both of
these so-called suicide notes? I don't know what kind of notes they are, sir, but they're those
notes, yes. One thing to keep in mind, no expert on either side could say when those notes were
written. That day Tara died? Years earlier? No way to tell. But the weekend Tara died,
the defense said there was more evidence of her spiraling out of control. She called Levi 315
times. And that's the reason Levi shut off his phone. Not to escape detection, but to escape
his wife. He doesn't want to be having his wife bugging him,
bugging him, bugging him when he's, you know, hanging out at his mistress's house. Or he
doesn't want any record of where he is. Well, now look at this. The prosecution's theory is,
is that he knew about all of these cell phone tower pingings. Well, he didn't know anything
about that at all. Well, there isn't a police officer in America who doesn't know about that. Well, he doesn't know that there's going to be a trail of where he is every minute.
I got to tell you, Levi is not a criminal mastermind. That still left the question of how
Tara could have shot herself and then partially released the gun magazine.
The defense hired a crime scene expert to make this video, demonstrating how they believed
it could be done.
The magazine released.
But when he came to court to do the same demonstration in person, he failed.
The gun is cocked.
If you work the trigger, can you get around to the magazine release?
And sometimes I can, and sometimes I can't.
Sometimes you can get to the magazine release after you fire the gun, but today I can't.
Did you think when that's happening, this is like the greatest thing?
Oh, absolutely.
And the fact that he gets up there to show how his theory would work and is unable to do it,
you know, once again went absolutely to what we were saying, she could not have killed herself.
Would that one mistake cost Levi his freedom?
The defense attorney didn't think so because he had another strategy, a surprising and
risky move.
The defense calls Levi Chavez.
Coming up, Levi Chavez takes the stand and tells his story.
There was a little light on from the TV.
I couldn't believe what I was seeing.
Teresa Cordova says the woman Levi's defense attorney described at trial was not her daughter. Tara was a very needy person. She was a desperate wife. I walked out of there numb. It was horrible. Attorney David Cerna said Tara Chavez was a sad,
needy woman desperate for male attention. And the breakup with Nick Wheeler sent her over the edge.
That was really the double whammy, because now she thought she found someone else to,
you know, latch her star to, and he said nope to her also.
Latch her star to?
How about, you know, make her feel happy and not cheated on?
Okay.
I mean, there's very little to suggest that Tara was interested in latching her star to anybody.
I think you're right.
She wanted somebody that was going to treat her right.
The defense calls Levi Chavez.
And now the man whom everyone agreed had treated her so wrong
was going to take the stand himself.
Please spell your last name.
Levi Chavez.
C-H-A-V-E-Z. Levi said he and
Tara had been living on the verge of divorce for years, and she had become lonely and depressed.
Did she express ever thoughts to you like she just wanted to disappear off the face of the earth?
All the time. And he said that on the weekend Tara died,
he did ignore the 315 phone calls his wife placed to him.
She would call and I would just hit the end button.
I didn't want to be bothered.
Levi says he worked till midnight on Saturday,
then went directly to his girlfriend's house.
Deborah was nice. She was like a nice person. I didn't want, I liked her. I don't want,
I didn't want to take my phone in there and just ringing off the hook and have to explain,
you know, it's my ex, I'm sorry. So I just turned it off so I didn't have to deal with it.
His attorney took Levi through his account of the next day, Sunday. The kids were out of town at his dad's.
Levi said he'd gone from Deborah's house to his mom's house,
where she was watching Desperate Housewives.
His mom said she couldn't reach Tara and was concerned.
When I was talking to my mom,
you know, everything was kind of coming together in my head,
like her threats and...
And when you say threats, what do you mean by threats? you know, everything was kind of coming together in my head, like her threats and... No.
And when you say threats...
200 phone calls.
What do you mean by threats?
Like, I'm going to hurt myself if you don't come home.
Okay, threats to herself.
Yeah.
Okay.
So, like, I had that information,
and then she just stopped corresponding totally.
And then my mom said she called in sick
and didn't go to work on Sunday.
I got afraid.
He says fear made him race to the house to check on Tara.
I walked in and the house was dark. Do you need a little time?
Do you need a little break to collect yourself?
It's like a matter.
So I walked in, and our bedroom's to the left.
And there was a little light on from the TV.
I couldn't believe what I was seeing.
He says he instantly knew what had happened and that he was to blame.
It felt like I was telling myself, like, this is your fault.
Like, this is right here.
It's your fault.
Because I had answered the phone and I was,
I blamed myself.
What emotions were you feeling?
Guilt, but guilt doesn't even begin to even describe it.
It's like there was something gone.
And I was by myself for the first time.
And it felt like God was telling me,
this is all your fault.
This is all your fault.
After his emotional account of finding Tara,
his attorney gave Levi a chance to explain away a series of other prosecution points.
That computer search for how to kill?
Levi told the jury that all came from his passion for martial arts.
And I remember looking up how to rip somebody's throat out
because I wanted to find that martial art.
And Rose Slamma? Yes, they had an affair.
But Levi testified the rest of her story was a lie.
Rose Slamma told you Tara seems to think that your truck wasn't really stolen.
Did Rose Slamma ever say such a thing to you? Never. She never told me
nothing like that. I didn't even, I don't even know for sure if Tara really cut her hair.
And remember how Tara's things were so quickly packed up? Levi said his family did that all on
their own. Did you know anything about family members of yours boxing stuff up?
No, I didn't have anything.
All I remember is the bed was gone.
To close, the defense lawyer had two more questions for his final witness.
Did you kill your wife, the mother of your children, Dara Chavez?
Absolutely not.
Did you tamper with any evidence to make her death look like a suicide when it was really a murder? No, I did not. Did you tamper with any evidence to make her death look like a suicide when it was really a murder? No, I did not. On cross-examination, Prosecutor McKay tried to rattle Levi,
grilling him about that text the state believed Levi had faked from Tara's phone and showed
investigators. You thought that was an important text, didn't you? Of course I did. The prosecutor
thought it suspicious that Levi had deleted all of Tara's other texts that weekend.
Yet you deleted every text except that one.
I don't know. How am I supposed to know what texts I deleted?
McKay went on to needle Levi as a lying philanderer.
The answer? That was the old Levi. And he was now a changed man.
It's impossible for any person to change in one day. It was a process.
And Levi wasn't afraid to interrupt to make his points.
I was explaining to the jury that it's a process. Let me explain to my jury, please.
Referring to the jury as my jury.
Early October.
Can I speak to my jury, please?
Your Honor, no. You need to answer
the question. In nearly six hours of testimony, Levi Chavez tried to show he had nothing to hide
and that he did not kill his wife. Turns out Levi didn't do it. Nobody else did it.
Tara wrote those suicide notes and they are suicide notes. But would his jury agree?
As they begin deliberations, jurors are unanimous on at least one point.
Someone made the comment, can we all agree that Levi Chavez is a dirtbag?
But would that influence their verdict?
When Dateline continues.
The trial of Levi Chavez was drawn to a close as the judge charged the jury to deliberate.
Go into the jury room, select a four person.
Was Tara Chavez's death a
suicide or murder?
If Levi's convicted,
life in prison. Yeah.
Life in prison. Or he walks
free. Yeah.
Behind closed doors, after five
weeks of testimony, the jury could
finally discuss the evidence.
It's mentally, emotionally draining.
We spoke to six of the people Levi called my jury. What did you think of him continually
referring to my jury? That was a little disturbing. Yes. They began deliberating and took a quick vote
and realized they were far from unanimous. But they did agree
on some things. All of you know someone who's had an affair? Yeah. Yes. Yes. Yes. Any of you
know someone who's had as many affairs as Levi Chavez? No. Someone made the comment,
can we all agree that Levi Chavez is a dirtbag? And apparently they could agree on that while simultaneously setting it aside,
concentrating on the evidence and not Levi's bad behavior.
But we all felt that we couldn't judge him on his character.
It was our job to judge him on the facts that were presented to us. But some of the
comments the state said Levi made about his wife, they couldn't get over. He called her a useless
piece of skin. To me that meant I'm done with Tara. So that's kind of what made me think he killed her.
They thought long and hard about how Tara was found and about the gun that killed her. They thought long and hard about how Tara was found and about the gun that
killed her. They asked for the Glock to be brought into the jury room. We played a lot with the gun.
We put the magazine in. We took the magazine out. We put the magazine in. We compared it to the
photos. After a day of examining the evidence, they couldn't agree. My question was, what happens
if we can't make a decision?
I thought for sure there was no way. We were too far apart. The jurors went home for the night,
and when they came back the next day, they took a vote. Now they were unanimous.
The court summoned the Cordova and Chavez families. I'm shaky. I wasn't quite prepared for that moment. How did Levi look? He looked very worried.
Before I call out the jury and find out what the verdict is, I've been observing throughout
this trial that there's a lot of animosity in this courtroom. You could cut the tension with
a knife in here. The judge ordered quiet in the courtroom and instructed the families to leave separately after the verdict.
Okay, jury number 51 has a jury reach state verdict.
Yes, sir.
Can you have the verdict for me?
Mr. Chavez, please rise.
We find the defendant, Levi Chavez, not guilty. I'm starting to hear a charge in Catalan.
Not guilty. Levi Chavez was about to walk free.
Were you looking at Levi at the moment they read the words?
Yes. All of us were hugging and said a little prayer after.
It was very, I mean, it's just like it's over.
But the other family in court listened in agony and quickly left.
Justice has not been served.
I immediately put my arm around Teresa and got her out of there.
And I wanted to get her home.
I was shocked, disappointed, and disgusted with our system.
So how did the jury reach that not guilty verdict?
Prosecutors, they said, had simply failed to make their case.
Several said they were baffled at how little evidence was presented.
When the prosecution arrested, I was like, seriously?
I was expecting much more from them.
I really would have hoped them to take out two of the mistresses
and put in something else that would give us more hard evidence, but they didn't.
Many told us they specifically didn't believe one of those mistresses.
Rose Slama.
No.
Didn't trust her.
No.
Not at all.
What'd you say? Don't trust her? No. Not at all. What'd you say?
Don't trust her with a ten-foot pole.
Erin Jones, good police officer?
Definitely not.
No.
Jones testified that the Guns magazine had been released.
But when the jury looked at the photos, they weren't so sure.
For me, no one proved to me that that magazine was unseated.
So the fact that the defense expert tried to show how it could be done and couldn't do it,
that wasn't some huge fail for the defense.
No.
Not enough.
Remember, the jurors never heard the comments attributed to Tara from her family and friends,
that if something happened to her, Levi did it.
In the end, all of the jurors
we spoke with said it came down to reasonable doubt. One was upset that they weren't able to
convict. And it was not a decision that I wanted to give, but I had to because of the reasonable
doubt. So you think Levi got away with murder? Unfortunately, I do.
The jurors that I talked to said they were stunned when the prosecution rested. They
thought to themselves, that's it? There's no more? You guys screwed this up? No, we gave them the
evidence, one, we were allowed to give, and two, that that was out there we don't get to create
the evidence so my question is was it worth it yeah yes even though you didn't get the result
you wanted yes yes we know the truth we know the truth and terror's words even though they
weren't heard in that courtroom, they're being heard today.
I'm not guilty. I'm innocent.
After the acquittal, Levi charged out of court,
and straight through the press corps,
he felt had been harassing him for years.
I knew I'd be acquitted. I didn't do anything wrong.
I'm not surprised at all.
You are the only member of Levi's family who's willing to talk to us.
How come Levi doesn't want to talk?
Well, I feel that the media has really, I don't think they gave him a fair chance.
None of my family has ever said anything bad about the court of us.
We're all victims, and I really do feel sorry for them.
I really do.
They can take this apology from my family, but you know what?
Levi is a victim. His attorney says
Levi has no plans to return to law enforcement. He still lives in the Albuquerque area with his
wife, Heather, their young son, and Levi's two kids with Tara. You think Levi's being a better
husband to her than he was to Tara? Levi's being an excellent husband and father.
The Cordovas later decided to drop their wrongful death civil lawsuit against their former son-in-law.
We're all here to remember Tara. A few weeks after the trial, family and friends came together in Los Lunas
to remember Tara Chavez on what would have been her 32nd birthday.
For all of those who loved her, Tara is never really that far away.
I'd be in good company if something ever happened to me now, wouldn't I, Josh?
I have.
I have my baby.
She's looking over.
She's my angel.
That's all for now.
I'm Lester Holt.
Thanks for joining us.