Dateline NBC - Troubled Waters
Episode Date: July 1, 2020In this Dateline classic, a romantic getaway on a boat turns tragic when a young wife & mother is lost at sea. The case goes cold for years — until a model with a checkered past goes undercover. Jos...h Mankiewicz reports. Originally aired on NBC on November 20, 2015.
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I was really afraid.
I said, I know something and it's terrible.
I couldn't live with myself.
I had to do something.
Male, kind of distraught, said that his wife fell overboard.
He went under, and when he came up,
he said he no longer saw his wife.
I was just going in circles, dreaming, looking around. He was just hysterical.
No one knows exactly what happened on that boat.
It doesn't appear to be feasible given the sea conditions.
This wife was tossed off by a rogue wave.
There's no way that Eric would have done that.
It was unfathomable to me.
I felt like the police were just trying to frame an innocent man.
I grabbed my partner and we went out there in the middle of the night.
He said, will you be willing to wear a wire?
And I said, yes.
My heartbeat was going so fast.
Pull my car over now.
I don't trust you.
I'm afraid of you.
She was good.
She was really good.
I said, you need to tell me the truth.
If you crave money or fame, or if you want to meet beautiful people, maybe even become one of them, you will find your way to Southern California.
It's where everything is possible, or seems to be. This is the story of two women drawn for different reasons to the sun, to the bright lights, to the blue water.
Both chased that promise of success. Both saw what can go wrong.
It was a gorgeous summer day in Newport Beach, California, the last of Fourth of July weekend.
Some lucky tourists aboard an eight-passenger boat called the Green Machine were marveling
at a school of dolphins playing in the water when they came across the unexpected.
We've got a loose boat out here, five miles out of Newport Beach.
The captain radioed the Coast Guard that a small speedboat was circling out of control
in the water nearby was a man holding onto a bodyboard.
The husband apparently fell off the boat, and the wife apparently fell off the boat.
The man in the water was frantic.
Copy, and does he still look like he's pretty distraught over it? Absolutely, very much. The man in the water was frantic.
His name was Eric Beckler.
His wife was Peggy.
But she was nowhere to be found.
Roger, and can you make out any words that he's yelling out over?
No, he's kind of slurring his words.
It'll be any time now that a unit should be on scene.
It was a stunning end to what began as a perfect day.
This Newport Beach couple was celebrating their wedding anniversary,
and Peggy just turning 38.
It was her birthday, you know, so she was in good spirits.
Glenda Slosser was one of the friends they'd invited to a big party a couple of days earlier.
She's talking about how much she loves Eric,
you know, how great life is.
And maybe life was great.
No, no, be real gentle, be real gentle.
Because Peggy had it all.
Her story begins in a small town, Dexter, New Mexico. This is where Peggy made her entrance.
I have often said that she was born winking at the doctor and swinging on the chandelier.
Peggy was June and Glenn Marshall's fourth child, and June says Peggy was going places from the very day she was born. She was never still. She danced, sang, played sports, and it seemed
nothing could hold her back. She had scoliosis as a kid. Young Peggy had to wear a brace around the
clock. That's a terrible burden for a young kid like that to bear.
But it also kind of ended up motivating her, didn't it?
It really did.
Peggy's doctor talked with her about a career in physical therapy.
She volunteered and loved it.
And she made up her mind right then that she wanted to be a physical therapist.
And she wanted to move to California and be a beautiful blonde.
So she did.
A farmer's daughter with big dreams. So Peggy left the small town of Dexter for sunny California and settled in Newport Beach. That's where she met Glenda, who was also from New Mexico,
and they immediately hit it off. Peggy was probably one of the most gregarious people
that I've ever met. She was happy and she was always smiling. And says Glenda, Peggy was driven
to establish herself as a successful physical therapist. She had almost everything she wanted.
She did want to find a guy. And the clock was ticking a little bit. It was. And then one day
on the beach, you found somebody for her. We did. So one afternoon on a weekend, Peggy called me
and said, what are you doing? And I said, well, I'm going to go down and watch Dave play some
volleyball on the beach. Dave was Glenda's husband. I asked Peggy if she
wanted to come down with me and she said absolutely. She immediately spotted Eric and said
who's that? Eric Beckler then in his early 20s was a walking commercial for the California Beach Life.
I'm going to guess that when she notices a guy playing beach volleyball, he's good-looking and in great shape.
Indeed he was.
And handsome.
Very. He was all those things.
And he was available.
He was also eight years younger.
Was that a problem for either one of them?
It was not a problem for either one of them.
Peggy, you know, when she sets her sight on something,
she's going to make it happen.
And it developed
really quickly, really, really quickly. Within a year, they were married. Within four years,
they had three beautiful kids. Peggy and Eric went into business together. She opened up her
own physical therapy business, and Eric, a computer whiz, managed the technical side of their venture, which quickly became very profitable.
Her business was doing good, and she was happily married.
And the happy couple was also happily spending a lot of money
on a German sports car, Italian clothing,
and a spectacular bluffside home in Newport Beach.
They were the little dream story. Beautiful girl, good-looking
guy, drive nice cars, beautiful children. Until that summer day in 1997, when the unimaginable
happened. It was a boating accident, said Eric, and the Coast Guard agreed, something they see all too often.
But soon, secrets emerged that would make some people wonder, what really happened to Peggy Beckler?
I absolutely thought they'd find her.
Maybe alive?
I did, because she was a fabulous swimmer.
Where was Peggy and what had
gone wrong on that boat? You know he'd been crying and his face is red and he looked upset.
There would be a sea of questions ahead. You thought what Peggy faked her death? It's said there's nothing more beautiful than the way the ocean refuses to stop kissing the shoreline.
This was supposed to be something like that.
A romantic outing. An anniversary and birthday gift Eric Beckler planned for his wife Peggy, but it turned into something else. And now Peggy was
gone. The Coast Guard immediately launched a search, but by nightfall, no sign of Peggy, alive or otherwise. And so Eric called
Peggy's mom, June. He says, we can't find Peggy. And I said, what do you mean you can't find her?
Where is she? What are you trying to tell me? Eric told June that Peggy was driving the boat,
towing him on a bodyboard,
when all of a sudden a wave wiped him out.
When he came up from under the water, he said, he could no longer see Peggy inside the boat.
We thought they should be finding her because we really just thought she would swim out of it.
You see, Peggy was quite at home in the water. Growing up,
it was the only time she didn't have to wear that back brace. And she became a very accomplished
swimmer. She wouldn't panic. She would swim because she loved the water. The next morning,
June and Glenn Marshall were on the first flight out to California.
Peggy had been missing almost 24 hours. Of course, that ocean is just bigger, bigger, bigger than you think about if you're in New Mexico.
Peggy's friend Glenda tried to stay optimistic.
I absolutely thought they'd find her.
Maybe alive.
I did, because she was a fabulous swimmer.
Glenda went to the Beckler house to see Eric.
How did he look?
Hysterical, a little bit.
You know, he'd been crying, and, you know, his face is red,
and, you know, all of those things.
He looked, um, he looked upset.
As he should be, one would expect.
She's the best. She's the best person.
This video from local news shows a devastated Eric.
It was now day two of the search for Peggy.
Still nothing.
The next day, the Coast Guard interviewed Eric. Eric Beckler could barely speak.
What did you take with you?
We had a couple bags of coolant.
We wanted to see if we could see Catalina, but it was so hazy.
I told Peggy that it was too hazy, we should go too far out.
Eric told the Coast Guard he tried to bodyboard on the way out
and said there was a pretty good swell in the ocean.
It was as high as the side of the boat, probably.
It was, you know, big enough to notice.
Eric said they stopped out here on the water to enjoy some margaritas Peggy had made.
And then later in the day they decided to try the bodyboard again, this time on their
way back to the harbor.
Peggy was driving.
Eric was being pulled on the board.
I mean, there's this way you get real big and all of a sudden it just jerked out my
hand.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, it's been holding on.
So I gave up. I thought Peggy out my phone. I just didn't hold on. I came out on my baby right there.
I was just going in circles, but I couldn't see her.
I just seen the penguin stand there on the wheel.
And the boat kept going farther and farther away.
And I couldn't see any other boat.
I was screaming. I didn't see any other boat. I was screaming and looking around.
It was my fault.
It could be over a year ago.
And so Peggy Beckler was simply gone,
maybe even within sight of the same beach that had spawned her marriage.
Eric seemed devastated, fearing his
wife and business partner was dead. But Eric's mother, Linda, saw things quite differently.
I was sure that they would find her, that it would all turn out well.
Not just because Peggy was a strong swimmer. Everyone knew that. Linda knew more.
A secret about her daughter-in-law.
And you thought, what, Peggy faked her death?
Or disappeared deliberately?
Uh-huh.
Peggy's secret.
What was it?
Stopped me on the stairway.
Said, I have to talk to you.
And enter the bikini model she
was just a hot number as they say how would she figure into all of this A brilliant Pacific Ocean sunset closed out day three of the search for Peggy Beckler.
And even though Peggy's family and friends tried to remain hopeful,
reality was slowly starting to set in.
And it was painful.
At this point, you didn't think she was alive anymore?
I kept thinking that she was, but how could she, you know, that length of time?
Unless, of course, what appeared to be an accident was not.
The Coast Guard conducted a reenactment at sea
to try to understand how Peggy could have fallen off the boat,
and they couldn't do it.
They said it just doesn't appear to be feasible to them given the sea conditions.
That's when the Coast Guard called the Orange County Sheriff's Office.
Detective Sean Murphy was put on the case.
They weren't able to duplicate even close to what was alleged by Eric Beckler,
that his wife was tossed off by a rogue wave.
If Peggy's disappearance was no accident, Murphy's job was to find out what did happen.
Detectives started by re-interviewing Eric and asking him about his relationship with Peggy.
He said his marriage was good. There was no problems with it.
You didn't take his word for it?
No. In our game, we don't take anyone's word for anything. We look into it, and that's what we did.
They met with the improbably named Kobe Laker, Eric's best friend. And Kobe backed up Eric.
They had a terrific marriage, and there was no problems whatsoever.
But if the marriage seemed solid, there were questions about Peggy,
at least according to Linda Beckler, Eric's mother.
Linda says Peggy told her something in confidence just before she disappeared.
Stopped me on the stairway as I was leaving and said, came on up and said, I have to talk to you.
She said, I'm afraid I'm going to jail.
According to court documents, about a year before Peggy disappeared,
the couple sold their physical therapy business to another company,
but they stayed on as employees.
Then, just four months before Peggy vanished, the Becklers were fired
amid allegations they had overbilled Medicare for more than a million dollars.
So, when Linda heard Peggy had vanished...
I started thinking about how disturbed she was about going to jail.
And she wondered if Peggy had somehow staged her own disappearance.
Peggy's friend Glenda said, no way.
White-collar crime and faking your death and leaving your children and your family
are two really separate issues. Glenda said Peggy adored her children and would never abandon them.
But now Peggy was gone and Eric was a single dad with three kids under the age of four.
And a new player was about to enter the story.
You were drawing Eric right away?
Yes.
Like countless young women before her,
Tina knew had drop-dead looks and Hollywood dreams.
She'd done some bikini modeling
and had a small part on the TV show Baywatch Nights.
But that turned out to be the peak of her career.
Soon, Tina found herself slipping into the darker side of showbiz. She started doing drugs and lost custody of her two young
children because of it, and fell for a succession of guys who did not treat her kindly. I mean,
I had an ex-boyfriend put a gun to my head. I play Russian roulette between me and him. I was held over the balcony
by my neck. Tina, who was broke and near rock bottom, was desperate. I got down on my knees,
literally begging, and I said, I'll do whatever you want. Lord, just help me. I can't do this
anymore. I need you to show me a sign. And the universe sent you Eric Beckler. The next day,
I meet him, and all my problems are gone. She had taken a modeling gig, eye candy, at a trade show.
Eric was there promoting his new business.
It was three months to the day since Peggy had disappeared.
I just thought he was really handsome.
So there was some serious chemistry from the beginning.
Yes.
We went out that night, actually.
He asked me out that night.
And then I moved in the next day, really fast.
You don't wait, do you?
No. Not then.
Eric lived in a giant house and drove a Porsche.
And he was a gentleman in her life, after a long string of men who were not gentle.
I'd never been spoiled like that. I remember thinking I was like Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman.
Tina was moved by
Eric's story. He said to me that his wife died in a tragic boat accident and that they were never
able to find her. She couldn't help noticing how great he was with his kids. He would sit on the
floor and play with them and I actually thought he was a great dad. And she was eager to help,
taking care of the kids while Eric went, as usual,
to the beach to play volleyball. I thought they'd lost their mom. They need someone to step in and
not be their mom, but do things their mom would do for them. But when they took the kids to visit
Peggy's parents. There was a lot of animosity towards me, and I understood why. But all they
saw was this hot young woman who'd been brought in to replace their missing daughter. Right, right. In exactly three months to the day. I can't even imagine
what they were thinking. Peggy's family wasn't alone. Detective Sean Murphy had also noticed
the new woman in Eric Beckler's life. Just ostentatious. I mean, she was just a hot number,
as they say. And she was cohabitating with him right after this horrible boating accident with his wife.
So Murphy arranged to bump into Tina.
And said, hey, if you have any information about this boating accident involving Eric, your boyfriend, just give us a call.
And I gave her my car, my number on it.
Nothing came of it.
Tina didn't call but someone
else did the best friend has second thoughts Kobe Laker goes undercover I protected you I basically
made you look like a saint and the new girlfriend is about to see this case in a whole new light.
I put the videotape in and I said, oh my gosh, what is this?
To Detective Sean Murphy, it sounded more than suspicious.
Eric Beckler taking up with a gorgeous redhead just three months after his wife was lost at sea.
But Murphy didn't have much more than a gnawing in his gut until his phone rang.
We got a call from Kobe's lawyer.
Said he wanted to arrange an interview again with Kobe.
Kobe Laker, Eric's best friend and volleyball buddy.
He told sheriff's detectives the Beckler marriage was great.
Now he had a different story.
Eric's told me on several occasions that he's sick and tired of his wife.
And he would tell me that he just couldn't take it anymore.
He was tired of it.
About seven months before Peggy vanished,
Kobe says he and Eric had a conversation that Kobe describes as haunting him ever since.
Eric asked me about what he thought, what I thought of the idea of him killing his wife.
And I was pretty much shocked.
I didn't know what to say.
He told me subsequently that he was thinking of taking her out to the ocean and dumping her in a barrel.
He said that when he saw that there was a boating accident and Eric's wife was missing,
he knew right then and there, he saw it on TV, he knew that he killed
his wife. And he lied to us, he said, because he panicked and he was afraid and he didn't know what
to do. Detectives convinced Kobe to wear a wire and to meet Eric at a restaurant in Orange County.
Eric had no idea that police were listening in. Even so, he stuck to his story that Peggy's death was a terrible accident.
I was there. I know what happened. And it's so hard for me to understand.
You know, there could be other people who could think anything else.
You never said, hey, look, man, I don't know what the f*** you guys are talking about,
but I'm innocent. You've never said anything about anything.
I have so. So what, do I have to say it every week?
Kobe tried again.
I protected you.
I basically made you look like a saint
in the interview I had with the detectives.
A dead end.
But detectives were now convinced that Eric killed his wife.
Even though it didn't lead to anything,
that conversation with Kobe,
that got you from suspicion to knowing.
Yeah, it moved it all the way over, so we knew we had a homicide.
But knowing it and proving it were two very different things.
You didn't get to process that boat as a crime scene for like almost a week.
Right, right. So that wasn't good. That hindered the investigation.
The boat, said Detective Murphy, was pretty clean.
Crime scene did find blood, just one drop, under one of the cushions.
But not enough to determine whether it was human blood.
It could have come from a fish.
Not enough evidence to arrest Eric for murder, or even prove that a murder occurred.
Peggy's close friend Glenda didn't believe Eric was a killer.
There's no way that Eric would have done that.
You know, I mean, there's just absolutely no way.
It was unfathomable to me.
Tina knew, felt the same way.
I felt like the police were just trying to frame an innocent man.
I thought, there's no way.
The way he treats me, there's no way he could have hurt his wife.
Tina also noticed that Eric kept photos of Peggy in every room of the house.
She could not imagine that a man who had killed his wife would want to see her face everywhere.
Eric was really the answer to all your problems for a while, wasn't he? Yeah, he was. So you
weren't too anxious to question him? No, I believed him. And after about six months...
He says, will you marry me?
Yes.
And you say?
I said yes.
You don't say no a lot.
Yeah, I mean, he treated me so good.
She also admits she knew Eric was due to collect more than $2 million in insurance money
once he was cleared in his wife's disappearance.
And everything would work out.
Everything would work out, yep.
Well, you were wrong.
I was definitely wrong.
They'd been a couple for two years, still not married, but living together off and on.
One night, Tina was showing Eric some of her old modeling shots and TV appearances.
We were looking at my pictures, but then I put the videotape in,
and yeah, I'm fast-forwarding it, and it just stops.
Purely by chance, Tina accidentally recorded a news report about Peggy's disappearance.
The whole screen was just a picture of her face, and I said, oh my gosh, what is this?
Then she turned to Eric.
And I looked at him, his face turned white. Like he literally lost the color in his face.
And he said to me, how did you get that?
And I said, I don't know.
His reaction troubled her.
But she hit play and it just got worse.
The news report did not match the story Eric had told her about Peggy's disappearance.
And he told me there was three to four foot waves.
It was really choppy out there.
But on the report, they said, on the day Peggy went missing,
there were only two foot waves.
And the weather was described as ideal.
He lied.
He lied all this time to me.
You know, and he was just really quiet.
He's sitting right next to you.
Sitting right next to me.
How does Eric look at that point?
Flushed and stressed.
I yelled at him and said, why is this different than what you told me?
And he just, like, got really quiet.
Then, she says, Eric Beckler told her a new version of what happened when Peggy fell off the boat.
He thinks she hid awake and she fell off.
And he said, and I didn't get to her.
And I said, you didn't get to her or you didn't want to get to her? And he said, at first he said,
he told me that he didn't get to her. Then later he changed it and said, I could have helped her,
but I didn't. Now that's completely different from what he told police. Right.
Chilling as that sounded, Tina feared it still wasn't the whole story.
She was determined to get the rest.
But like a career in showbiz, you have to be careful what you wish for.
I don't trust you. I'm afraid of you.
Nobody knows anything but you.
From model and actress to undercover agent, a secret operation to learn the truth.
This is where it gets really scary. Tina New thought she'd found happiness with Eric Beckler
until he changed his story about what happened the day his wife disappeared in the ocean.
You didn't think about going to police?
No, not yet.
I just felt like it wasn't telling the truth all the way.
And I was really afraid because he was always with me. Afraid, yet they continued to see each other, sleep together, and party together.
About two weeks after Eric changed his story, he and Tina went to a club and took the drug Ecstasy.
We get home, we walk inside the house, and we're just both laying on the bed staring straight up
at the ceiling together.
All of a sudden, as we were talking, it just came to me, and I said to him, I said,
Oh my God, you hit her over the head.
And he goes, How did you know that?
The fact is, she hadn't known.
Call it intuition, or the effects of the drug, or a random guess.
But it was an opening, and Tina barreled through.
I said, you need to tell me the truth.
He's calmly talking to me, and he says, I'm going to tell you the truth.
He goes, we had this huge party, so everybody could see how happy we were together.
All their friends were there, witnesses to the happy marriage.
Then a couple of days later, she says, Eric told her he took
Peggy out to sea on that rented boat. And although Peggy didn't know it, he took along some weights.
And then he goes, then I walked up behind her and he goes, Tina, I hit her so hard,
she didn't feel a thing. And I'm just like, what do you mean you hit her so hard? He goes,
I hit her over the head with a weight. She said he told her there was blood everywhere.
Then, Tina says, Eric Beckler told her how he got rid of his wife.
He did some knot that he knows, and he did her wrists and her ankles together,
so she was completely bent in half.
He said he took the two trash bags that he had and put her body in it,
and then he said he put the weights and tied it down to the robe and threw her in.
Two years after Peggy vanished, a stunning confession.
And then you go to sleep next to a man
that you believe is a killer?
No, actually, then we have sex.
And I felt like I had to do it
because I think that made him feel like
I was going to be quiet and, you know,
that he was, I don't know, sealing the deal with me or something.
But the deal was not sealed, not with anyone.
The case was still open and detectives had been keeping an eye on Eric and Tina all along.
They knew the relationship was growing volatile.
We were excited about it in a morbid kind of way because we knew it was going to go sideways.
Because when relationships go sideways, sometimes people start talking.
That's right.
And that's what happened two weeks after Eric's apparent confession.
A neighbor called 911 after hearing yelling coming from Tina's apartment.
When police arrived, Eric was gone.
But Tina was angry.
And she still had the business card Detective Murphy
had given her almost two years earlier. I grabbed my partner and we went out there in the middle of
the night and we met up with Tina. She told Detective Murphy and his partner Gary Jones
what Eric had said. A big break, yes, but not nearly enough for an arrest. Remember, Tina was pretty far from an ideal
witness. Detectives knew they'd need more than her word against Eric's. So they asked Tina,
will you wear a wire? Will you be willing to wear a wire? And I said, yes. Well, it's the only way
you're going to get them. Why would you turn in a guy who had basically taken you from a terrible
life and given you a great life. Because I couldn't live
with myself. I mean, no way. Police planted microphones in her car, in her purse, and on
her body, and Tina arranged a meeting. She told Eric that after the domestic violence call,
sheriff's homicide detectives came in to ask questions about Eric. This dinner date,
Tina told Eric, was to get their stories straight
in case the cops questioned her again.
Tina, wired up, picked up Eric from his home
and drove to a restaurant called El Torito.
Were you worried about this?
Not really. I was more worried that I wasn't going to get him to confess it again.
I have two stories in my head. I don't want to screw up at all.
Okay, there's no story to tell.
You weren't there. It was an accident.
Let's have some margaritas.
Once inside the restaurant,
Tina tried to get Eric to repeat the details of Peggy's death.
Eric wouldn't go there.
You don't have to worry about details.
Details are not important.
So Tina tried to get him to say why he did it.
It's no confession, but it's not a denial either.
Are you thinking to yourself at that point, that's it, I got him?
I honestly thought that was good, but I still thought that wasn't enough.
Peggy, you do know, there was a reason. Was it for the money or was it for the...
Remember, Peggy had a life insurance policy worth more than $2 million.
I think it was probably about the kids.
Again, she tried to get him to give her a reason.
What was it about her that made you want to go to that experience? Again, she tried to get him to give her a reason.
And Eric reassured Tina.
She was good. She was really good.
But the drama wasn't over.
Tina left the restaurant with Eric, still wired up. This is where it gets really good. But the drama wasn't over. Tina left the restaurant with Eric, still wired up.
This is where it gets really scary. So we're walking out to the car and he says to me,
let me drive. That was not part of the plan. We lose sight of him. Now, you know, in a movie,
this is where you hear the sound of gunshots. That would not have been good. In the car, with Eric now behind the wheel,
Tina cranked up her acting skills and the tension.
I can't live with a lie!
Just tell God I haven't talked about it for over a year and a half
and you don't remember the details.
You're making me lie and it's not easy for me.
I'm not making you do anything.
You can turn me in if you want to.
Turn you in for what?
Turn me the f*** in, I don't care at this point.
Turn you in for what?
F***, tell him everything. What? Whatever you f***ing want. Did she me f***ing what? I don't care at this point. Tell me everything. What?
Whatever you f***ing want. Did she talk to me that way? Now Tina tried to get Eric out of the car.
Pull my car over now. I don't trust you. I'm afraid of you now. I'm just, I'm asking. You
don't have to. Nobody knows anything but you. You don't have to tell anybody anything.
Eric pulled over and got out, and Tina hopped in the driver's seat.
You guys can still hear me.
We meet in my house.
That's where I'm going to be.
And just like that, Tina knew drove away from her old life.
In the end, you got enough.
Oh, absolutely, yeah.
You understand you're under arrest?
Eric was arrested and charged with Peggy's murder.
What was it like to get the call that Eric had been arrested?
Well, I just trembled all over.
I couldn't really believe it.
But two weeks after Eric's arrest made headlines,
Tina made some headlines of her own
that put the whole case in jeopardy.
I did not commit this crime.
Eric Beckler on trial.
And Tina's credibility?
That's on trial, too.
Do you think anybody would believe you?
No.
Without that statement, they don't have anything that makes this a homicide.
Beach volleyball is a kids game played by grownups.
Murder for profit is played only by adults, and it's for keeps. Prosecutors
believed Eric Beckler was trying to be successful at both. Detectives had put him in jail, but
then two weeks after Eric's arrest came this headline in the local paper. Witness in murder
case doubts suspect's guilt.
Tina knew who'd worn a wire and helped police nail Eric.
Now said, maybe he didn't kill Peggy.
I knew that the kids had lost their mom,
and now they're going to probably lose their dad for a very long time.
And so I felt guilty.
Guilty that she'd helped jail a man she once thought she'd marry. I remember he called me from the jail and he told me that he had tried to hang himself with his sheets.
It was Eric's frantic behavior from the lockup.
That was enough to make you think twice.
I didn't want him to die.
You felt guilty.
I felt guilty.
And you tried to roll the whole thing back.
Yeah, I did.
But she says she always believed he was guilty.
And in the winter of 2000,
Eric Beckler went on trial. The star witness, Tina New, a witness who was, to be fair, compromised.
Not just by her waffling about Eric's guilt and her own checkered past, but also by one detail in the story Tina says Eric told her, something defense attorney John Barnett says
is critical. You'd expect if Peggy's head was caved in by 35-pound dumbbells, there'd be blood.
Quite a lot of it. Everywhere. And there wasn't. On the stand, Tina tried to defend herself.
I'm a horrible witness when it comes to looking at me on paper.
Do you think anybody would believe you?
No.
You know, I knew that I told exactly what he had said to me,
and I knew that I was doing the right thing.
And I honestly didn't care what anybody thought.
Then there was the conversation she had recorded at El Torito, Eric's own words.
The jury heard all of them.
Nobody knows anything but you.
Barnett offered his own explanation.
I argued that the reason he said it is to shut her up, to calm her down.
In any event, the defense said, Eric never said on tape that he hit Peggy.
The only person who heard him say that was Tina, a drug user, a woman with a
fraud conviction on her record. Without that statement, they have a lot of circumstantial
evidence and a lot of what-ifs, but they don't have anything that makes this a homicide. The
defense offered another theory about Peggy Beckler. She was under a great deal of pressure and could easily be distracted
and in combination with alcohol, which she rarely drank, but she did on that day, could contribute
to a lack of care in driving the boat. You don't think Peggy Beckler faked her death. You think
she's dead. I don't think she faked her death. No, I do not think that. You think she died
accidentally and her body still hasn't been found?
That's right.
Prosecutor Debbie Lloyd argued Peggy's death was Eric's doing.
He basically had three and a half million reasons to kill her.
And that's about what he stood to gain if he had gotten away with it.
And, said the prosecutor, the circumstantial evidence was compelling.
Eric had a weight tree back at home
that appeared to be incomplete. Investigators believed Eric used the missing weights to kill
Peggy and then sink her body. And what about the blood? A luminol test conducted on the boat
indicated there might have been a lot of blood in the boat, but that it was cleaned up, matching Tina's testimony about
blood everywhere. And of course, there was Tina herself. Despite her past and her criminal record
and her drug use, she rang true to you. Yes, absolutely. Who would the jury believe? And
would Tina's past make a difference? It doesn't matter what I did before or after I met him.
You know, what I did with myself has nothing to do with what he did.
After seven days, the verdict.
Guilty of first-degree murder.
You're thrilled that the man who did it is behind bars,
but nobody wins in this situation.
Nobody.
The children now have no mother and no father,
so there is no winner. But the jury did
not believe Eric killed Peggy for the money. He was found not guilty of murder for financial gain.
At his sentencing, Eric Beckler addressed the judge, once again denying he killed Peggy.
The accident was a horrible tragedy that has befallen both of our families.
And as much as the marshals are hurting, my family is also hurting because I did not commit this crime.
The judge sentenced him to life without the possibility of parole.
Eric's mother, Linda, thinks the verdict was wrong.
Is it possible you don't know your son as well as you think you do?
Oh, baloney. I know that kid like the back of my hand.
Look, I can understand a mother not wanting to believe her son committed a crime.
Listen, if my kid was a druggie, doper, never do well, thief, rapist...
Murderer?
Well, yeah, but he isn't.
He isn't.
Peggy Beckler's
body has never been found.
You want to know what happened,
but you still don't want to hear murder.
But at least now you know. That's
still pretty hard to take.
And even with all this information,
we don't have a body.
You alright? Yeah. You discover you were stronger than you thought you were? Oh yeah. Peggy's mother and sister ended up raising her kids and one more
person who was stronger than she thought, Tina knew. You're leading a different life these days.
Completely different life now. She gave up drugs, married a nice guy, and now she's a stay-at-home mom with five kids.
A Hollywood happy ending? No. Sometimes real life is better.