Mind of a Serial Killer - CYCLE OF JEALOUSY: Kaitlin Armstrong Pt. 2
Episode Date: December 4, 2025After shooting cyclist Mo Wilson in cold blood, Kaitlin Armstrong vanished. Using her sister’s passport, she fled the U.S. for Costa Rica — changing her name, dyeing her hair, and even getting pla...stic surgery to hide from authorities. But as investigators closed in, Kaitlin’s confidence became her downfall.In Part 2, Vanessa Richardson and Dr. Tristin Engels follow Armstrong’s desperate escape across borders, her stunning capture in a Costa Rican hostel, and her shocking attempt to flee custody before trial. Through psychological analysis, they explore the fragile ego and delusional self-assurance that led Kaitlin to believe she could outsmart everyone — even after committing an unforgivable crime. If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Killer Minds to never miss a case! For Ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Killer Minds is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to other Crime House Originals Clues, Crimes Of…, Murder True Crime Stories, Crime House Daily and Crimes and more wherever you get your podcasts! Follow me on Social Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, Crime House community. It's Vanessa Richardson.
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This is Crime House.
It's good to have confidence, to feel good about our ability to succeed and navigate our own lives.
But for some, confidence can be blinding.
It leads them to believe they can do anything and outsmart anyone, even the law.
In 2022, Caitlin Armstrong thought she had what it took to achieve the biggest challenge
life had thrown at her yet, getting away with murder.
But Caitlin's outsized confidence prevented her from realizing the fatal errors she made
along the way.
And eventually, she walked into a trap she should have spotted from a mom.
a mile away.
The human mind is powerful.
It shapes how we think, feel, love, and hate.
But sometimes it drives people to commit the unthinkable.
This is Killer Minds, a crimehouse original.
I'm Vanessa Richardson.
And I'm Dr.
Tristan Engels. Every Monday and Thursday, we uncover the darkest minds in history, analyzing
what makes a killer. Crimehouse is made possible by you. Follow killer minds and subscribe to
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bringing you breaking cases, updates, and unbelievable stories from the world of crime,
that are happening right now.
Today, we conclude our deep dive on Caitlin Armstrong,
the Austin-based yoga instructor
whose on-again-off-again relationship
spiraled into something deadly.
In 2022, when Caitlin's jealousy became too much for her to bear,
she took violent measures to hold on to the man she loved.
And in the aftermath, she went to extreme lengths
to avoid getting caught.
And as Vanessa takes you through the story,
I'll be talking about things like why some criminals betray their own loved ones in an attempt to evade justice,
the outrageous lengths some might go to to cover their tracks,
and what might be going on in a killer's mind when they're finally caught,
but they refuse to speak or show any emotion.
And as always, we'll be asking the question, what makes a killer?
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On May 11, 2022, 34-year-old Caitlin Armstrong shot and killed 25-year-old cycling star Anna Mariah Mo Wilson.
For months, Caitlin had been jealous of Mo's brief romance with Caitlin's on again off again,
boyfriend, 35-year-old Colin Strickland. After Mo's body was discovered on the night of the
11th, Caitlin quickly became the main suspect in her murder. But by the time police in Austin,
Texas went to arrest her, Caitlin was gone. On May 14th, about three days after killing Mo,
Caitlin sold her Jeep for $12,200 and hopped on a plane to New York. That evening, Caitlin arrived
at LaGuardia Airport. All she had with her was a backpack of belongings and her yoga mat.
Caitlin smiled when she spotted her younger sister, Christy, who was there to pick her up.
Caitlin planned to stay with Christy at her remote cabin in the woods, about 100 miles outside
New York City. Once they arrived at Christy's cabin, Caitlin could finally relax and plan her next
move. For the next few days, she and Christy spend a lot of time together catching up.
Whenever Christy wasn't around, Caitlin scrolled through the news.
The cycling community was reeling from Mo Wilson's murder.
Reports mentioned Colin, but they said he'd been cleared as a suspect,
and police hadn't publicly named Caitlin as their current person of interest.
Caitlin knew she couldn't stay hidden with her sister forever,
but she was unsure where to go or what to do next.
Then on May 17th, just three days after arriving in New York,
everything changed.
While Christy was out running errands,
Caitlin saw breaking news headline.
The Austin Police Department
had issued a warrant for her arrest.
Caitlin knew it was only a matter of time
before the police came knocking at Christy's door.
If she wanted to remain a free woman,
Caitlin had to leave,
not just the cabin, but the country.
She did some quick research
trying to figure out where she could start a new life.
She landed on Costa Rica.
It seemed like a perfect location,
full of American tourists and expats who went there for yoga retreats.
Caitlin started to book a flight, but stopped herself
when she realized she couldn't use her own passport.
Her name would now be on a watch list.
Border Patrol would catch her immediately.
So Caitlin rifled through the cabin until she found Christy's passport.
She booked a flight under her sister's name
and prepared to embark on her new life.
When Christy got home, Caitlin told her she was going back to Austin.
The next morning, Christy drove her to Newark Airport.
Caitlin hugged her, promised to stay in touch, then disappeared into the terminal.
Using Christy's passport, Caitlin passed through airport security without raising any alarms.
She and Christy looked enough alike that the agent didn't notice anything unusual.
Caitlin's betrayal of her own sister is sadly not uncommon when someone is in self-preservation mode.
like this. With Caitlin, it also reads a bit like entitlement. Throughout her story, we've seen
her pattern of using people as emotional or practical resources, starting with her peers at her
yoga retreat. They were her emotional regulators and validators. Then it was Colin for safety
and security, Mo as the target of her projection, and now Christy as a means of escape. This isn't
a sudden behavioral shift. It's consistent with her history of instrumental thinking, where
others exist to serve her immediate needs. Psychologically, what she did to her sister may not have even
registered to her as betrayal. Under stress, someone like Caitlin is operating in survival mode,
rationalizing her choices through cognitive distortion, like, I need this more than she does,
or she'll be fine, she'd want to protect me. And that kind of self-justification protects Caitlin
from guilt and keeps her focused on her goal, which is staying in control. But choosing to use her sister's
identity shows the degree of her moral disengagement. She truly does not seem to be concerned or
experiencing any guilt, hesitation, or remorse for what this could do to her sister even.
Well, it seems like Caitlin knew how to flip the switch depending on what benefited her in the
moment. And less than six hours after leaving Newark, she landed in San Jose, Costa Rica.
From San Jose, she boarded a bus toward the coast to the town of Santa Teresa.
Caitlin had read that Santa Teresa was a popular destination for digital nomads and yogis from the U.S.
It was small, quiet, and filled with surf shops, juice bars, and funky hostels.
After two long bus rides, Caitlin finally arrived.
Since there were so many Americans there, Caitlin figured she wouldn't draw attention and she could easily disappear into the crowd.
The only problem was her long red hair.
She needed to disguise herself, so she picked up a hair-dying kit on her way to her hostel.
Once there, she checked in under the name Ari and paid in cash.
In her room, Caitlin cut her hair short and colored it dark brown.
When she looked in the mirror, she barely recognized herself.
Caitlin thought back to four years earlier when she'd embarked on another long international trip to Bali for a yoga retreat.
During that trip, she'd told the other attendees she was,
running away from her life.
This time, Caitlin was doing more than that.
She was erasing her life.
In Santa Teresa, she could become a brand new person.
Yeah, and on the surface, it seems like a tactical move
to want to change her appearance and her identity to evade capture.
But by the sounds of this and how you've described it and her history,
it's likely more than that.
When we look back, we see this tendency in different forms,
like you mentioned, the yoga retreat, for instance.
wasn't simply a trip to find peace, it was a symbolic escape, a way to start over without
resolving what she was running from internally. And her relationship with Colin worked the
same way. She fused her identity with his, borrowing his world, his cycling passion, and even
his social circle. This is a psychological reenactment of the same patterns she's done before.
Each transformation offers the illusion of control and reinvention, but it's rooted in
avoidance behavior. It's almost like her coping mechanism. When some things be
become unbearable, she seeks other people to contain it or becomes someone else.
Escaping is existential for her.
Caitlin was convinced that she could slip into a new life.
Now going by Ari, she slipped into the rhythm of life in Santa Teresa.
She set up a virtual private network, otherwise known as a VPN, to encrypt her laptop and cover
up her internet activity.
Soon, she moved to a new hostel where no one had seen her red hair.
There, Caitlin kept to herself, quietly typing on her laptop in the corner of the common area.
She was keeping tabs on the murder investigation back in Austin.
Within a few weeks, she learned that the case had gone national
and that the U.S. Marshal's lone star fugitive task force
had joined the Austin PD in their search for her.
This meant the authorities knew she'd left the country,
but she still thought that by keeping a low profile, she could avoid detection,
and eventually maybe the world would forget about her.
Caitlin felt completely comfortable in her little corner of the world.
At night, she sometimes went to Cook's Smokehouse, the only bar in town.
People offered to buy her drinks and tried to get to know her.
Caitlin engaged just enough to seem normal, but never revealed too much about herself.
Once she felt more comfortable there, she started going multiple times a week.
It's not really a wise choice to establish a public or two,
one that's witnessed by others when you're on the run like that.
But her decision to do that actually fits with her psychology.
Caitlin was embracing a new identity and part of her likely wanted that identity to be seen.
She needed others to mirror it back to her for it to feel real.
Also, the routine gave her a sense of normalcy and control.
It was a way to convince herself she was building a new grounded life rather than running from
her old one, similarly to how she was establishing herself in body.
and that's consistent with the pattern we've seen all along. She performs stability in order to
feel stable. From an attachment perspective, this also makes sense. People with anxious or
disorganized attachment styles often need connection to regulate their sense of self. So even
when she was supposed to be invisible, she couldn't tolerate isolation. Making friends, chatting with
locals, all those small interactions anchored her emotionally, even temporarily. But at the same time,
made her visible. So in a way, she's trading safety for connection because to her being unseen
might have felt more threatening than actually being caught. She has a need for validation and
visibility that seems to override her judgment. During this time, Caitlin found another way to regain
some more normalcy in her life, resuming her yoga practice. She contacted studios and asked
if they needed a substitute teacher. She taught a few classes on the beach where she felt renewed
by the salty air. Her life soon became a cycle of yoga in the morning, surfing in the
afternoon, and a drink or two at Kook's smokehouse a few times a week. However, as more time
passed, Caitlin started feeling more on edge. As she moved around the small town, she was always
aware of who might be watching her. If a stranger struck up a conversation, she'd make up a fake
name. When they asked about her past, she'd invent something. Caitlin was hiding in plain sight.
and it was exhausting.
This was partly because despite her desire to keep to herself,
she found herself drawn to other people.
She longed for companionship, like you said, Dr. Engels,
especially from men.
One afternoon she met a man named Teal outside a tattoo shop.
She told him her name was Ari.
They started hanging out more frequently.
Then one evening, while they were hanging out,
Teal leaned in for a kiss.
But Caitlin pulled back.
She told him she'd just gone through a bad breakup and she wasn't ready to spark a new romance.
Yeah, it's human nature to want connection with others.
Anyone who moves somewhere new, especially alone and especially another country, would seek out that connection.
But for Caitlin, in this particular circumstance, connections served a much deeper purpose.
Her identity depended on it.
And based on what we know, intimacy for Caitlin often function as a form of regulation.
relationships, whether romantic or social or even professional, provided stability because they
grounded her, validated her, and gave her a sense of direction. So in this new environment,
being isolated, vulnerable, and living under a false identity, seeking romantic connection
likely felt like emotional survival. But her decision to ultimately reject Teal is justice telling
because that closeness may have felt or began to feel threatening because it was too
exposing. That's consistent with approach avoidance behavior, which we often see in people who have
insecure or disorganized attachment styles. She craved connection to feel safe, but the intimacy that
this connection required risk destabilizing the control she was trying to maintain. So even if her
version of authenticity had always been somewhat performative, maintaining a relationship now would have
required vulnerability, and vulnerability meant risk. So I think that's likely why she withdrew.
After her close call with Teal, Caitlin resolved to be more careful around people.
She needed to keep her distance.
Then one day in the middle of June 22,
Caitlin checked the news online and saw her face on the U.S. Marshals wanted posters
under the words, armed and dangerous.
The marshals were offering a reward of $5,000 for her arrest.
She realized that it was only a matter of time before someone recognized her.
Her new hair wasn't enough to disguise her.
So Caitlin decided to do something drastic.
In June 2022,
34-year-old Caitlin Armstrong was hiding from U.S. Marshals in Santa Teresa Costa Rica.
She'd been on the run for a month.
Caitlin was feeling the stress of living as a fugitive.
She'd dyed her hair and was using a fake name,
but she knew she was still recognizable.
She had to make a bigger change
if she wanted to avoid getting caught.
Caitlin made a risky move.
She left the beach town
and headed back to the capital, San Jose.
The long trip was nerve-wracking.
The closer she got to the city,
the closer she was to both the airport
and the authorities.
She kept her hoodie pulled low,
a mask over her face,
and her eyes glued to the window.
Once in San Jose, she moved quickly.
She stepped off the bus and walked to a small medical office with tinted windows and a sign that read AVA Surgical Center.
Caitlin had an appointment there.
When she went inside and the receptionist asked for her name, Caitlin called herself Allison Page.
Then Caitlin pulled out a thick envelope containing over $6,000 in cash.
It was about half of what she'd made from selling her Jeep back in Austin.
She'd been careful with her money since leaving the U.S.
As Caitlin settled into an exam room, she reviewed her plan.
She would have lip fillers, a brow lift, a nose job,
just enough surgery to look different from the woman staring back from wanted posters.
When the surgeon finally entered the room, he examined her closely,
marking her skin with a blue pen.
Everything seemed routine until he reached for a camera.
That simple gesture stopped Caitlin cold.
The last thing she wanted was a photograph of her old face.
That would be a traceable image that could connect her life
to the life she was trying to erase.
For a tense moment, she refused.
But the doctor insisted that photographs were required before surgery.
Without photographs as a record, he couldn't proceed.
Caitlin hesitated.
Then she offered a compromise.
The photos could be taken, but only on her own phone.
The doctor agreed.
And after taking the photos, they proceeded with the operation.
Our research and writing team sent me the before and after picks of Caitlin.
I don't know if you saw them, Vanessa, but they're pretty drastic.
She looks completely different.
And considering that she's living off the money she made from selling her car,
she does not have much left over.
And all of this is very psychologically significant,
and it goes beyond evasion.
She is attempting to sever herself from her identity entirely.
She wants to make herself unrecognizable to everyone, including herself.
And that's a possible sign of intense identity fragmentation.
Changing your face doesn't change the internal structure of your identity.
And when you look in the mirror and you see a literal stranger looking back at you,
that just reinforces the disconnection you've been running from all along.
At the root of this is her desperation to control perception, avoid accountability,
and manage shame and intolerable emotions.
But once again, she's going about at the same.
way she always has through avoidance, reinvention, and fear.
Yeah, Caitlin looked a lot different after that surgery, but when she woke up after the
surgery, she still didn't feel as safe as she wanted to. When she left the clinic, Caitlin was
again wearing her hoodie and her mask. Now she also had two black eyes and a bandage on her
nose from the operation. She was headed to a hotel nearby to recover for a few days before
making the long journey back to Santa Teresa.
After the operation, Caitlin deleted the surgeon's photos from her phone.
She now had a new face, another step to becoming a new person.
While Caitlin was busy building a new life, U.S. Marshals were reconstructing her old one.
Piece by piece, investigators built a timeline, starting from the moment Caitlin walked out
of the Austin police station on May 12th. Using registration records, they found her
Jeep Cherokee at a CarMax dealership, discovered the sale, and then traced her online purchases,
including her trip to New York. From there, security cameras captured a thin woman with long
red hair walking through Austin Bergstrom International Airport. Just like Caitlin had anticipated,
investigators tracked down and interviewed her sister, Christy. That's when they learned that
Caitlin had stolen her passport. Working with Interpol, investigators found that someone using
Christy's passport had flown out of the country from Newark Airport on May 18th.
Flight records showed her final destination, Costa Rica.
They contacted Caitlin's internet service provider to review her online searches further and
discovered she'd been researching yoga retreats, surf lodges, and beach towns.
The marshals focused on one spot known for all these things, Santa Teresa.
However, when Caitlin's internet activity suddenly stopped, they realized she'd likely
installed a VPN, which meant they would have to go to Costa Rica themselves if they wanted to find
her. Deputy Marshal's Amir Perez and Damien Fernandez flew to Costa Rica on June 20th,
2022. Two days later, they reached Santa Teresa, carrying photos of Caitlin and the hope that a fit,
red-haired yoga teacher might stand out in a small Central American town. But they quickly realized
their mistake. Santa Teresa was full of athletic American women in their 30s. If Caitlin was there,
she would be hard to pick out. The marshals adjusted their strategy. They sent a female
operative to local yoga classes, hoping she might recognize Caitlin. She attended three classes
at three different yoga studios, but had no luck. So,
They tried another tactic.
They posted an ad on Facebook seeking a yoga instructor.
They were hoping to lure Caitlin out of hiding,
but pretty soon they realized the ad wasn't getting any responses.
Agents Perez and Fernandez were discouraged
and decided Santa Teresa was probably a dead end.
They left Caitlin's photo with the local police
and asked them to keep an eye out for her before flying home.
Almost as soon as they left Santa Teresa, Caitlin returned.
She was still recovering from her plastic surgery.
Her black eyes were healing, but her lips were still swollen and her nose was still bandaged.
At the same time, the surgery was a big expense, so her main focus now was managing her money.
She started looking for cheaper places to stay as well as job opportunities.
Soon, Caitlin found the perfect thing.
a Facebook ad for a yoga instructor in Santa Teresa.
She reached out to set up a meeting.
Caitlin just went through an invasive and expensive surgery
to essentially dismantle her old identity and reinvent herself again,
only to emerge and reconnect with something from her old identity,
which was yoga.
Yoga wasn't just an interest, it was an image that she relied on
to build a calm and controlled persona.
And given her life is anything but calm or calm,
controlled right now, it makes sense that she would be drawn back into a role that gave her an
illusion of what she is seeking. This is also where we see how her need for control and her need
for recognition overrides logic. That compulsion to perform and return to yoga and her need to
sustain her fugitive lifestyle at the same time, seeing she spent so much of her money, created a
psychological blind spot for her. And this is common in individuals who rely on external identities
to regulate their self-worth.
Whatever the reason for Caitlin's mistake,
she hit Send just in time.
In the city of San Jose,
agents Perez and Fernandez were preparing to leave the country
when they saw that someone had responded to their ad.
The person suggested they met at a hostel in Santa Teresa.
The agents rushed back to the town.
On the afternoon of June 29th,
they entered the hostel lobby
and saw a woman in the corner,
scrolling on her laptop and chatting with another guest.
The woman looked a little like Caitlin,
but they couldn't tell for sure if it was her.
Agent Fernandez approached her and asked her a question in Spanish.
Caitlin fumbled with her phone,
then held it up and asked him to speak into a translation app.
When Fernandez leaned in,
he noticed the woman had bloody nostrils and a bandage on her nose.
Then he saw her eyes,
and he became certain he was staring at King's.
Caitlin Armstrong.
Fernandez excused himself, then stepped outside and called in the local police.
When they got there, they took Caitlin into custody and searched her room at the hostel.
In a lockbox, they found a receipt for plastic surgery totaling $6,350 under the name
Allison Page, along with Christie's passport.
There was nowhere left for Caitlin to run.
But she refused to face reality.
At the station, she gave a fake name before refusing to speak altogether.
But this was no problem for the marshals, who flew Caitlin back to Texas.
When her plane touched down, reporters were waiting on the tarmac.
They shouted questions, but Caitlin's expression didn't change.
For all the running she'd done, she was now right back where she started.
But soon, Caitlin would prove that she would never stop trying to get away.
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A decade ago, I was on the trail of one of the country's most elusive serial killers,
but it wasn't until 2023 when he was finally caught.
The answers were there, hidden in plain sight.
So why did it take so long to catch him?
I'm Josh Zeman, and this is Monster, Hunting Lisk,
the investigation into the most notorious killer in New York since the son of Sam,
available now.
Listen for free on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, wherever you get your podcast.
On June 29th, 2022, 34-year-old Caitlin Armstrong was arrested in Santa Teresa Costa Rica for the murder of 25-year-old Moe Wilson just over a month earlier.
Caitlin's face, now altered by plastic surgery, filled the news cycle. Moe's family released a statement that they were relieved that the hunt was over.
At the same time, Caitlin was booked into Travis County Jail on July 5th.
but she never confessed to the crime.
A couple of weeks later, on July 21, 2021, 22,
Caitlin appeared in court for her formal arraignment.
In the courtroom, she sat near motionless and appeared detached.
The prosecution described how they believed
Caitlin had waited outside the apartment where Mo was staying
before following her inside and shooting her multiple times.
All the while, Caitlin's face remained unreadable.
She only spoke to enter her plea, not guilty.
The court set her bond at $3.5 million.
While Caitlin remained in custody over the next few months,
prosecutors continued to build their case against her,
but Caitlin refused to own up to her actions.
Instead, she spent her time in jail,
preparing for her next scheme.
While in jail, Caitlin worked out incessantly.
She ran in place, lifted weights,
and, of course, practiced yoga.
She built a regimented strength-building program for herself,
all so that she could escape.
Almost a year later, in October 2023,
with about a month until her trial was set to begin,
Caitlin put her plan into action.
She told officials that her leg was injured.
She made it sound serious enough
that the jail arranged for her to receive medical attention.
On October 12, 2023,
35-year-old Caitlin was driven from the jail to a doctor's office.
She wore the standard striped prison uniform and handcuffs,
but because of her injured leg, her lower body was unshackled,
giving her some freedom of movement.
As she walked out of the medical office after her appointment,
she saw her chance.
Caitlin bolted across the parking lot.
The two corrections officers flanking her shouted,
but she just kept running.
As she got further away,
Caitlin wriggled one hand from the restraints around her wrists.
She then ran up a small hill beside the fenced-in parking lot
while an officer closed in behind her.
But the officer tripped and fell, allowing Caitlin to scale the fence and keep running.
The officers radioed for backup.
A chase ensued, and after running for a while, authorities finally caught up to Caitlin.
However, she didn't surrender without a fight.
She struggled with the officers as she tried to break free.
but they overpowered her.
By the time she was returned to custody,
Caitlin required actual medical attention
for minor injuries incurred during the struggle,
and so did the two officers who apprehended her.
I'm always surprised when an incarcerated individual
attempts to escape custody because they're always caught,
and the consequences are never worth the risk.
But I am not surprised why she did it,
given what we do know about Caitlin so far.
her entire life had been about movement. She was active, yes, but she was also active by running from feelings, accountability, and identity. So when she found herself literally immobilized and contained in detention, and her image and identity was now that of criminal offender, alleged at this point, the distress from that became physical, much like it was when she was in Bali, her distress manifested physically. She definitely planned for this moment.
as you can see, she planned very methodically. The degree of exercise she did in preparation for
this likely served two functions. It built endurance for this moment and it came with a plausible
explanation for an injury requiring medical attention, which was her way of attempting to escape.
It gave her the option or an outlet to attempt this. But her strategy was in no way rational,
much in the same way most of her behaviors until this point were not rational. She was not going to be
successful and this behavior was highly manipulative. So why does Caitlin never fully think through her
plans? It seems like, you know, it's so short-sighted. How does that short-sightedness relate to other
traits of hers that we've discussed so far? Caitlin lacks emotional intelligence and foresight.
She tends to act on the immediate need to release distress rather than on the long-term consequences
of her actions. And that's emotional impulsivity. And that's a defining feature of someone who struggles with
self-regulation. Allegating, distressing emotions is so important and such a priority for her that
judgment and reasoning take a back seat. And this short-sightedness is also tied to possible
narcissistic and avoidant traits. Narcissistic thinking can make a person overconfident in their
ability to manipulate outcomes. The person assumes that they can handle whatever comes next because
they've handled it before. And avoidant tendencies mean that they don't want to think too far ahead
because doing so would force them to confront the fear, guilt, or shame that they've been trying to outrun.
And how does she not see that she's only making things worse for herself?
So aside from, you know, her poor emotional regulation skills, impaired judgment, and likely deficits in reasoning and impulse control,
I think this really comes back to that rescuer victim pattern that we talked about earlier.
In Caitlin's internal logic, every crisis eventually resolves because someone steps in to fix it.
So that's the pattern she's used to.
And I know I've outlined this a few times in both episodes, but I'll do it again for clarity.
In her relationship with Colin, when she created chaos or distress, he soothed her, protected her, and reconnected with her, or even rekindled things with her.
And even when she crossed boundaries or escalated conflict, someone would ultimately save her from the fallout.
So when she fled after Mo's murder, her sister became the rescuer.
She opened her home. She lent support and unknowingly facilitated her escape. So in Caitlin's mind, rescue is rescue, whether it's given willingly or not. So when we look at this latest escape attempt, the same dynamic is there. She runs, she gets injured, and she ends up getting saved again, this time by medical staff. This attempt was not going to be successful. She's trying to run up a hill in an enclosed area with correctional officers. She's handcuffed. There's no way she was going to be successful.
But escape for Caitlin isn't just about getting out of jail.
It's about being seen.
It's about being tended to and emotionally coddled.
And in this sense, she's succeeded, at least temporarily.
All of this only provides temporary emotional containment, though.
So she'll probably try something else, you know, the more and more she remains behind bars.
Caitlin's escape attempt was not only a failure.
It also led to more charges against her.
felony escape leading to bodily injury.
And despite her attempted flight,
her trial for the murder of Mo Wilson began on schedule
on November 1st, 2023.
In the courtroom, Caitlin maintained a blank expression
as Moe's friends and family tried to catch her gaze,
but she ignored them,
letting their presence wash over her.
She was the center of attention, yet completely detached.
In their opening statement,
prosecutors said the evidence would show
that on May 11, 2022, Caitlin Armstrong tracked Anna Mariah Moe Wilson's location and drove to the
apartment where Moe was staying. Caitlin's phone had been turned off before the shooting,
but surveillance video showed Caitlin's black Jeep near the scene. Screams, followed by the sound
of gunfire, were captured on neighborhood cameras. Shell casings found beside Moe's body,
matched a gun recovered from Caitlin's home, and Caitlin's fingerprints were found
at the scene. Prosecutor said this evidence proved that Caitlin had followed Moe into the apartment,
shot her twice, and then stood over her body and shot her one more time through the heart.
Finally, they explained that Caitlin did all of this out of pure jealousy.
Caitlin Cash and some of Mo's other friends testified against her, and they all described
Caitlin's obsession with Mo. Then on the fourth day of the trial, Caitlin's now,
ex-boyfriend Colin was called to the stand. It was the first time that Caitlin had seen him since
their lawyers had told them to separate during the investigation over a month ago. When Colin
entered the courtroom, he didn't look at Caitlin. He walked to the witness stand with his shoulders
slumped forward, his eyes fixed on the floor. Even before he spoke, his discomfort filled the room.
Caitlin sat straight at the defense table, hands folded, eyes trained forward. Eyes trained forward.
as Colin recounted the years they'd spent together, the turbulence of their relationship,
and Caitlin's intense jealousy. As he spoke, prosecutors projected photos and messages onto a screen,
the two of them smiling at races, the text they'd exchanged, a video of Caitlin firing the gun
Colin had bought her. Caitlin watched as fragments of her old life flashed before her.
Colin testified for eight hours, over two days.
As his testimony wound to a close,
the prosecutor asked him if he had loved Caitlin.
He said he thought he had,
but then Colin said that he wasn't sure he actually knew her.
By the time he stepped down,
Colin seemed completely drained,
and Caitlin still showed no sign of emotion.
Caitlin had an intense fixation on Colin in the past
when he was her rescuer.
her source of validation, her security and safety, and her emotional anchor. But right now, in the
courtroom, he's a literal mirror reflecting to her and an audience, the truth of who she really is
and who she really was and what their relationship was really like. And that would cause someone
like Caitlin who goes to great lengths to avoid internal accountability to dissociate or detach
in the moment. It's also consistent with her history of control through performance. So throughout her
story, Caitlin has tried to manage how she's perceived by acting composed, spiritual,
victimized, or in control. And remember, the courtroom is just another stage for most offenders
like this. If she can appear unaffected, she can avoid appearing powerless and maintain that
illusion of control. When it was time to present her defense, Caitlin's attorneys argued that she
was not a jealous girlfriend, but rather a frustrated partner who had been repeatedly lied to.
Not only that, they claimed that Caitlin was not the killer, and in fact that she had fled
the country out of fear that the real killer would target her next.
Before the defense rested, Caitlin was offered a chance to testify, but she declined.
After deliberating for just two hours on Thursday, November 16th, the jury returned its
verdict, guilty of first-degree murder.
Moe's family and friends wept openly in the courtroom.
Caitlin sat completely still, staring straight ahead.
She was sentenced to 90 years in prison.
Ten days after her sentencing, Caitlin filed an appeal.
Her petition claimed inadequate representation and cited an alleged pregnancy at the time of arrest.
However, no other information was provided about the pregnancy, and her appeal was ultimately denied.
In September 2024, Caitlin's lawyers tried again.
They claimed there was new evidence in the case.
They also raised issues with the DNA evidence found at the scene
and again pointed to Caitlin's alleged pregnancy.
So far, the courts have upheld the conviction,
leaving Caitlin's fate uncertain as the appeals process drags on.
In addition to the criminal case,
Caitlin faces ongoing civil consequences.
In June 2024, a Texas court ordered her to pay $15 million to Moe's family
in a wrongful death lawsuit.
Her parents had originally sought
just over a million dollars,
but the court issued a default judgment
after Caitlin failed to appear at the hearing.
Then in July 2024,
the Wilson's filed a second lawsuit
accusing Caitlin of transferring assets out of the country
to avoid paying what she owed.
For someone like Caitlin,
conceding guilt or responsibility
would mean dismantling an identity
she spent years protecting.
She can't cycle.
psychologically tolerate being the villain in her own story. And that's why she continues to fight her case and fight Moe's family in court like this. In her mind, as long as she's still arguing, still filing motion, still fighting, she hasn't fully lost. There's also likely a degree of narcissistic entitlement here, the belief that she shouldn't be punished because she's special, misunderstood, or even wronged. And fighting most family lets her preserve that distorted sense of moral superiority.
Obviously, this is not a fight for her freedom anymore.
She's fighting to maintain a fictional story so that she can remain the victim.
Is Caitlin really incapable of just empathizing with Moe's family's suffering?
Can she actually truly empathize with anyone?
So I think she can likely recognize someone's pain on an intellectual level,
but I doubt that she can feel it in a way that moves her toward change.
So for empathy to be genuine, it has to lead us toward accountability.
or compassion. And when it comes to most family, authentic empathy would require Caitlin to confront
the devastation she caused. And doing that would mean dismantling her own denial, which she relies on
for ego preservation, defense, and image control. Psychologically, she can't tolerate that kind of
exposure. If she hasn't been willing or able to acknowledge her internal causes, the emotions and
insecurities that drive her external behaviors, then she's certainly not ready to acknowledge how
those behaviors have caused pain for someone else.
And that's the difference between knowing about suffering on an intellectual level and
then truly empathizing with it.
The ongoing lawsuits continue to take an emotional toll on Moe Wilson's family and friends.
But Caitlin now has plenty of time to reflect on her actions.
She's currently incarcerated at the Dr. Lane Murray unit in Gatesville, Texas.
Her earliest chance at parole is in 2052 when she's 6,000.
64 years old. The story of Mo Wilson's murder has drawn sustained media attention, in part because of the high-profile love triangle and Caitlin's obsessive jealousy.
The case has also raised important questions about digital privacy and the ways social media can intersect with real-world crimes.
Mo Wilson's parents, Karen and Eric, have spoken publicly about their loss, describing Mo as a vibrant talent taken far too soon.
They've established a foundation in her honor to promote organizations dedicated to recreation, sports, and educational programs.
They say their legal actions aimed to hold Caitlin accountable beyond her prison sentence and to secure some measure of justice for their daughter's memory.
Thanks so much for listening.
Join us next time for a deep dive into the mind of another killer.
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