MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Square Dance of Death (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: December 2, 2024On a cold December night in 2013, a 59-year-old widow stood on stage at a square dance club in Arkansas, watching some of her closest friends dance together. The woman had owned and run the s...quare dance club for years, and the people out on the floor were just like family to her. But as she listened to the music and called out different square dance steps, she didn’t notice that one of the dancers had their eyes fixed right on her. And the woman did not know that this dancer had become obsessed with her. In fact, the dancer had started losing sleep just thinking about the woman. And now the dancer had decided it was time to act, because they believed they would never find peace until the object of their obsession was dead.For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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On a cold December night in 2013, a 59-year-old widow stood on stage at a square dance club
in Arkansas, watching some of her closest friends dance together.
The woman had owned and run this square dance club for years, and the people out on the
floor were just like family to her. But as she listened to the music and called out different square dance steps,
she didn't notice that one of the dancers had their eyes fixed right on her. And the woman
didn't know that this dancer had become obsessed with her. In fact, the dancer had started losing
sleep just thinking about this woman. And now the dancer had decided it was time to act,
because they believed they would never
find peace until the object of their obsession was dead.
But before we get into that story, if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark and Mysterious
delivered in story format, then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we
do and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday.
So if that's of interest to you, please offer the follow button a nice, refreshing cup of water while they run a marathon, but don't tell them you've replaced the water
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On the night of Monday, December 2, 2013, 59-year-old Patti Wheelington walked across
a gravel parking lot toward her favorite place in Texarkana, Arkansas, the Guys and Dolls Square Dance Club.
Patty was the owner of the club, a spot where club members from town got together each week
to socialize and square dance, which is a traditional type of partner dance that had
once been extremely popular in the American South and West.
Patty had managed the club for years with her husband Ray, but Ray had died a year earlier, leaving Patty to run things on her own with some help from the most dedicated club members.
The couple had always considered Guys and Dolls to be like their second home,
and now that Ray was gone, Patty felt like this club was the most important thing in her life.
And tonight was her first day back at the club since taking a short trip for Thanksgiving,
so she was looking forward to seeing some of her friends and getting back into her weekly routine.
Patti opened the front doors, stepped inside, and her face immediately lit up. This old-fashioned
dance hall was housed in a metal building that almost looked like a large storage unit
from the outside, but the inside was bright and festive. String lights and decorations
hung along the walls,
and Patty saw a group of older women dressed in colorful Western skirts and petticoats,
and older men wearing their cowboy boots and hats.
And everybody was socializing and laughing and having a great time,
while filling up their paper plates with food.
The moment Patty walked inside,
the club members turned, saw her, and shouted hello,
and some rushed over to greet her like she'd been away for months.
They told her they'd been anxiously waiting for her to come back because they hadn't known what to do with themselves while the club
was closed over the holiday.
She told them how much she missed them too and thanked them for getting everything set up for the night.
As she talked, Patty heard somebody calling her name.
She looked over at a long table lined with food and she saw two of her closest friends waving to her. They were Phyllis' neighbors and Virginia Hyatt. Patty went over to the table,
and the women hugged each other and talked about their Thanksgiving holidays until Patty noticed
it was almost time to start the night's dance. Patty walked across the dance hall, got up on
the stage and tapped the mic, and then welcomed everyone back to the club. And immediately everybody cheered and took their spots on the dance floor with their
partners.
Well, at least almost all of them cheered.
As Patty looked out from the stage, she noticed one of the couples whispering to each other
while pointing her way.
Patty almost tripped over her words as she began wondering if that couple was talking
about her.
But she quickly caught herself and figured she was just reading too much into it.
So she wrapped up her welcome back speech and then led club members in saying the Pledge
of Allegiance, which they did every time before the dance together.
Once the pledge was finished, Patti, with a huge smile on her face, started the music
and kicked off the dancing for the night.
And as she watched everybody out on the dance floor, this sense of almost complete calm
came over her.
She knew most people would laugh at her for thinking this, but she believed being up on
the stage and running this square dance club was her true calling.
It was a way for her to give back to her community and to help the people she loved continue
to thrive. The next morning, around 7.50am, Patty stood in the kitchen of her home and poured herself
a fresh mug of coffee. She slid her phone and pack of cigarettes into the pocket of
her bathrobe and walked outside onto her front porch. A blast of cold winter air immediately hit her, so she pulled her bathrobe tighter across
her body, sat down in a swivel chair, set her coffee on a small wooden table, and lit
a cigarette.
Now, in the past, on a cold day like this, Patti would have very likely just smoked inside
of her home.
But, more than five years earlier, a raging fire had ripped through her home and destroyed
half of it.
Now, the blaze wasn't caused by a lit cigarette, in fact the fire had started while Patty and
her husband Ray weren't even at home.
But they had hired a good friend of theirs from the Square Dance Club, who was a contractor,
to restore their house, and he'd done such an amazing job overseeing the construction
project that the house looked almost brand new.
So now, Patty would never risk lighting a cigarette inside, no matter what the weather overseeing the construction project that the house looked almost brand new, so now Patty
would never risk lighting a cigarette inside no matter what the weather was outside.
Patty smoked her cigarette and sipped her coffee, and just when she started to feel
like she was really waking up, her phone rang.
She put her coffee down and grabbed her phone out of her pocket.
She looked at the caller ID and saw it was one of her many friends from the dance club,
so she answered it.
A few minutes into the conversation, Patty heard a car slowing down just beyond the trees
at the edge of her property that isolated her house from the main road.
Patty's friend kept talking on the phone, but Patty was no longer listening.
She heard the car turning up her long gravel driveway toward her house, and she wondered
who would be visiting so early without telling her they were coming by first.
Patty watched as this car emerged from the trees and headed straight towards her, and
as it did Patty immediately told her friend on the phone that she'd just have to call
them back.
Over seven hours later, at around 3.30 p.m, Patty's close friend, Phyllis' neighbors,
received a call from a mutual friend from the dance club.
And as soon as Phyllis answered the phone, this mutual friend said he was very worried
about Patty.
Patty was supposed to pick him up to take him to a doctor's appointment, but she had
never showed up and was not returning his phone calls, and this was totally unlike her.
Over the next hour, Phyllis tried to reach Patty several times without any success. So eventually she called another friend from the club, Barbara Ricketts, and told her that she
couldn't get in touch with Patty and she had this bad feeling that something might be wrong.
Barbara said she had also been trying to get in touch with Patty and had not been able to
reach her all day. And so at this point, Phyllis said that she was been trying to get in touch with Patty and had not been able to reach her all day.
And so at this point, Phyllis said that she was just going to drive out to Patty's house
to see what was going on.
But Barbara told Phyllis to hold on a minute and stay put and wait for her.
She wasn't letting her go out there alone.
By the time Phyllis and Barbara finally got to Patty's place, it was starting to get
pretty dark.
Barbara drove slowly and carefully
up Patty's long gravel driveway because the light coming from inside Patty's house was actually the
only thing guiding her way toward it. She parked right behind Patty's car and the two women got out
and started walking toward Patty's house. When they got close to the porch, they noticed something
lying at the foot of the front door. Phyllis squinted and thought it looked like a bunched up rug. Phyllis climbed onto the steps to get a better
look at the object, and when she reached the middle step, she suddenly froze. Then she
gasped and quickly turned her face away. She stumbled back down the steps, grabbed her
phone, and dialed 911.
Texarkana police cruisers and an ambulance converged on Patty's house within minutes
of Phyllis' call.
A police officer stepped out of his car and turned on his flashlight.
He scanned the area and saw Barbara sitting inside her car and crying,
and then he saw Phyllis standing in front of the porch. Her hands were shaking and she
was muttering to herself.
The officer, along with two EMTs, began walking toward the house, and as they did, Phyllis
looked up and saw them and went right over to them and then pointed back at the front
porch and said they might as well send the ambulance away, because they were too late.
The officer walked past Phyllis, reached the front steps, and right away he saw what she
was talking about.
In front of the door to the house, there was a woman in a bathrobe, lying face up, gripping
a cigarette in her right hand, and clutching her chest with her left.
And the officer noticed that her skin was pale and blotchy.
One of the EMTs walked over and bent down to feel for a pulse,
but he was already confident he was not going to find one.
And when he actually felt the woman's cold, waxy skin,
it confirmed that she was dead.
The officer kneeled down and shined his light on the body,
and he saw there were blood stains in the woman's bathrobe
and blood spatter on the wooden slats beneath her.
And it became very clear that this woman did not die of natural causes.
Minutes later, another car pulled up the driveway and two men stepped out.
Texarkana police detectives Paul Knoll and Jason Hack, who were about as physically mismatched
as two people could be.
Knoll was round and bald and Hack was who were about as physically mismatched as two people could be. Knoll was round and bald, and Hack was tall and thin.
They looked like an odd pairing, but these two men were actually almost always on the
same page, and they were both sharp and meticulous investigators.
Texarkana, Arkansas only had a few murders every year, so whenever Knoll and Hack got
a call for a homicide, they knew it was not going to be an ordinary day at the office.
And as they sized up their new crime scene, they could tell right away that this murder
seemed especially out of the ordinary.
The dead woman looked much older than the average murder victim in the area, and this
neighborhood was more affluent than where they usually responded to violent crimes.
Nall and Hack quickly met with Phyllis and Barbara, but both women seemed so shaken they
could barely talk.
However, Phyllis did offer, in a very trembling voice, that the deceased was their friend,
a woman named Patti Wheelington.
Hack looked at the time and figured he should start canvassing the neighborhood while the
neighbors were still awake.
He told Nall he'd be back in about an hour.
As Hack walked to his car, he was struck by how eerily quiet it was.
Even during the drive here, he had noticed how the woods seemed to isolate everything
and how much land there was between each house.
And as he pulled out onto the road to begin his canvassing, he didn't feel optimistic that any of Patty's neighbors would have witnessed anything.
Meanwhile, Nall stepped onto the front porch and began examining Patty's body and the
area around her, trying to make sense of what had happened.
For Nall, there was no mistaking the five small, perfectly round wounds on Patty's
body for anything other
than gunshot wounds.
He observed a bullet hole in the swivel chair where he guessed Patty had been sitting, and
then another bullet hole in the bedroom window directly behind the chair.
It looked as though the first shot was fired while Patty was seated and it missed her.
He then noticed another bullet lodged inside the front door of the house which looked like
yet another missed shot.
Nall took a step back, trying to picture the crime as it happened. He looked down at Patti
and saw the cigarette wedged between her fingers now burnt down to the filter. He noticed the
way Patti's body was positioned, face up with one knee raised, and Nall visualized Patti
leaping up from her chair after the first shots were fired and desperately trying to
retreat into her house as more bullets hit her until she collapsed onto her back. From how quickly it
looked like things had unfolded and how the gunshot wounds appeared to have been fired from close
range, this crime looked very intentional. It seemed like whoever had killed Patty had showed
up on a mission, like they'd come here to kill Patty. Knoll looked through the hole in the back of the swivel chair, and then repositioned
himself until he could see through the hole in the chair, and also through the hole in
the bedroom window, both at the same time so they're aligned.
This way he could get a sense of the bullet's trajectory into the house.
And while he was doing this, headlights suddenly swept across the porch as the coroner's van
pulled up to the house.
The coroner got out and met with Nal, and Nal told him he was free to remove the body.
So with the help of two police officers, the coroner lifted up Patty's body, placed it
into a cadaver bag, and carried it off the porch.
With the front door now clear, Nal entered the home and went straight to the bedroom,
where he found a.38 caliber slug on the bedroom floor.
Right where he calculated he would find it.
He then began doing a walkthrough of the house, going from room to room, looking for any signs
of ransacking or burglary.
But nothing appeared out of place.
In fact, it didn't look like Patty's killer ever entered the home.
It was as if they drove up to the house, exited their car, immediately began firing, and once
Patty was down, they got back into their car and drove away.
Just as Nall started a search of the kitchen about an hour after he'd arrived, his partner,
Detective Hack, walked in and quickly brought Nall up to speed on what he had learned during
his canvas of the neighborhood.
Several of Patty's neighbors reported hearing gunshots around 8am that morning.
After hearing this, Nall looked over at the half-empty pot of coffee still on the kitchen
counter, he'd seen Patty lying dead in her bathrobe, and she had obviously been dead
for at least several hours before she was discovered, so it definitely seemed like she'd
been killed that morning, possibly around 8am.
But then Nall wondered why none of these neighbors had called the police if they heard gunshots
that morning.
Hack said he'd asked the neighbors the same question, and the explanation was pretty simple.
People in that area fired their guns into the air all the time to scare geese out of
their gardens or deer off their front lawns, so hearing gunshots would not exactly be cause for alarm.
Then Nall started updating his partner on what he had found on the porch and inside
the house as the two men searched the kitchen.
But then suddenly, Nall stopped talking.
He picked up several pieces of paper that were lying on the counter near the coffee
pot, and as he read them over, he turned to Hack with a smile on his face.
It looked like he had just found a huge piece of the puzzle.
Nall handed over the papers to his partner, and after reading it over, Hack as well got
the same look on his face.
The first piece of paper was an invoice for a locksmith. Just a day earlier, Patty had
paid someone to change all the locks on the doors to her house.
Hack looked up at his partner with his eyebrows raised.
If Patty was suddenly changing her locks at the house she'd lived in for years, it very
likely meant she was afraid of someone who she knew well enough to maybe have a key to
her house.
Nall nodded in agreement and told him to wait until he saw what was on the other papers
he'd handed him.
And as Detective Hack started reading those papers, his mouth fell open and he started shaking his head side to side. Because what he was looking
at was Patty's life insurance policy. Each of the beneficiaries listed in the policy
stood to gain $20,000 in the event of Patty's death. And the last two names on the list
were Phyllis' neighbors and Barbara Ricketts, Patty's friends, who also were
the two women who had found her body.
In a quiet suburb, a community is shattered by the death of a beloved wife and mother.
But this tragic loss of life quickly turns into something even darker. Her husband had tried to hire a hitman on the dark web to kill her.
And she wasn't the only target.
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Nall and Hack arranged for police escorts to bring Phyllis and Barbara down to the station.
And when the two women got there, Nall and Hack interviewed them separately in two different rooms.
Phyllis told Detective Nall that she had first met Patty at the Guys and Dolls Square Dance
Club about a decade earlier, and she had been very close with both Patty and Patty's husband,
Ray.
And so had Barbara.
Nall asked Phyllis if she knew that she and Barbara were beneficiaries on Patty's life
insurance policy, and Phyllis began laughing and nodding. Nall couldn't tell if this laughter was maybe nervous laughter or if it was designed
to mask just how important this money may be to her. Phyllis kept on laughing and said Nall's
question had reminded her that when she first learned that she and Barbara were beneficiaries,
she had jokingly said, oh, real cool, Patty, you're younger than all of us. We'll all be
dead before we see this money.
Nal smiled at Phyllis and sort of played along like this was a good joke, but secretly, he
thought that everything Phyllis was saying and doing made her seem a little bit suspicious.
So after she stopped laughing, Nal asked her to go through her day to help him establish
a timeline, hoping that if she was involved, she would implicate herself.
Phyllis said she woke up at 8 that morning and then sometime around 10, she sent Patty
a text message.
Phyllis said she didn't really think anything of it when Patty did not reply, she just assumed
that Patty was still asleep, and then she got distracted when her friend came over to
watch a television game show with her.
Null nodded and wrote everything down that Phyllis said, but privately, he wondered if
maybe she had sent that text message to Patty just to throw off investigators and make it
look like she'd been innocently trying to reach her friend on the morning of her murder.
In the next room over, Detective Hack was asking Barbara a similar round of questions.
And like Phyllis, Barbara had an alibi. She said
she was with her husband all day, and her husband could verify this.
Hack leaned back in his chair and looked across the table at Barbara. As much as he tried
to picture Barbara as Patty's killer, he just couldn't see it. Barbara reminded him of
his grandma, and she looked so utterly shaken by her friend's death that it was hard not
to feel sorry for her. But Hack had enough experience to know that he should never take anyone's emotional state
at face value. This could all just be an act. And so as he sat listening to Barbara talk,
he found himself calculating in his head how much money Barbara may have been willing to pay
someone else to kill Patty in order to still turn a profit on that $20,000 life insurance payout.
Patty in order to still turn a profit on that $20,000 life insurance payout. It was after 9pm by the time detectives Nall and Hack wrapped up their interviews, but
they didn't want to stop working right now when they felt like their investigation was
really starting to take shape.
And so after Phyllis and Barbara left the police station, the detectives began going
through the text messages and recent calls on Patty's phone.
They hoped they might find something that would give them more information on Patty's
two friends.
But none of the text messages between the women seemed in any way out of the ordinary.
Instead, the detectives discovered something strange that they hadn't even been looking
for.
One of Patty's most frequent correspondents was someone she had saved in her contacts
only as M.F.
Patty and M.F. communicated multiple times every day and it was clear by reading their
messages that this was more than just a friendly relationship.
This was romantic, and it was also suspiciously discreet.
Everyone else in Patty's contact list had been saved under their first and last names,
except for this one person.
Hack ran MF's phone number through a reverse directory, but all he was able to determine
was that it was a mobile phone number, because the directory only gave him the name of the
carrier, not the name that the phone number was registered to.
And so he would need help from the phone company to find out who this number actually belonged
to.
But he also knew at this time of night that could be very difficult to make happen, and
it could take a while.
So Hack handed over that task to other members of the investigative team, and while he and
Detective Nall waited for the results, they started tracking down and calling members
of the Guys and Dolls Square Dance Club.
Even though it was getting late, several of the members answered their phones and were
actually quite eager to help the police.
None of the members could think of anyone with the initials M.F., but Hack and Nall
quickly discovered that these people loved to gossip.
Several of them told the detectives that rumors had been circulating for a while that Patty
was having an affair with a married club member, a man named James Hyatt.
And as soon as Detective Knoll and Hack heard this name, they stared at each other in shock.
This was not the first time in this investigation that they had run across James Hyatt.
Because James Hyatt was the third beneficiary on Patty's life insurance policy,
right behind Phyllis and Barbara. In the event of Patty's life insurance policy, right behind Phyllis and Barbara.
In the event of Patty's death, James, like Phyllis and Barbara, stood to receive $20,000.
And so now the detectives had three possible suspects, Phyllis, Barbara, and James.
They also started to wonder if maybe all three of them had conspired together to kill Patty
for the insurance money.
In their conversations with Guys and Dolls club members, Nol and Hack learned that James
was married and he had known Patty for years. Patty and her husband, Ray, used to go out
on double dates with James and his wife, and they had become even closer with James in
2008 when they hired him as a contractor to help restore their fire-ravaged house. In
fact, Patty and Ray had trusted James so much that they had made him the executor of their
wills. This definitely seemed like a guy who Patty and Ray might have given a house key
to. So, the detectives thought, you know, maybe James was the person Patty had changed
her locks to try to keep out.
As the detectives were working through this potential theory in Knoll's office, the door
opened and an excited young cop walked in.
He said they'd gotten lucky.
The phone company had been able to help them and gave them the name connected to the MF
phone number in Patty's contacts.
And it was a burner phone for James Hyatt.
Nol and Hack immediately got in their car and drove across town towards James' house.
They still considered Phyllis and Barbara suspects, and they thought there was a chance
the women had worked together with James.
But based on the text messages the detectives had found between Patty and this MF person
and now the burner phone, it seemed pretty clear that James and Patty were having an affair, which
automatically made James a major suspect in his own right. On top of that, it made it
even more likely James would have had a key to Patty's house, and as a final strike against
him, he had something to gain financially from Patty's death.
The detectives arrived at James' house, but his wife Virginia came to the door and told
them James wasn't home. In fact, she had no idea where he was and she was starting to
worry that he might have just left town or something without telling her.
And now the detectives realized they might be looking at a fleeing suspect. They told
Virginia to contact them if she heard from her husband and to please keep her phone close by in case they needed
To follow up with her and Virginia said she would
Noll and hack got in their car and headed right back to the station
It was late and they were both very tired
But now this was starting to feel like a case they could close before sunrise. They just had to find James.
Detective Nall walked into his office and called James' main phone, not the burner
phone.
There was no answer, but Nall was relentless.
He just kept calling over and over and over.
And finally, after a bunch of tries, Nall heard James answer.
Before James could say anything other than hello,
Nall introduced himself and told James why he was calling. But James cut him off, saying
he'd already gotten the news of Patty's death, and so this would just have to wait,
because he was out of town. Nall couldn't believe how arrogant and dismissive James
sounded, and he was not convinced James was actually out of town. But either way, the
detective knew he could not let James off the phone and risk having
him disappear for good.
Usually Nall liked to interview his primary suspects in person, but he knew he could not
wait for a face-to-face meeting with James.
So Nall just launched into an interview right there on the phone.
He told James that police knew all about the burner phone and his affair with Patty.
There was no point in trying to hide those things.
James immediately went silent and there was a long pause.
And then when he started talking again,
all of the arrogance and all had sensed just minutes ago was gone.
James sighed and admitted that he and Patty were romantically involved.
He only had the burner phone and the different name in her contacts to protect
Patty's reputation.
After all, he said, you know, people in this town don't look too kindly upon adultery
and the other woman often gets blamed in these situations.
So he just never wanted any of this to get out to protect her.
Detective Nall doubted that it was really Patty's reputation James was trying to protect and
not his own or his marriage.
He asked James if Patty had ever demanded that he not his own, or his marriage. He asked James
if Patty had ever demanded that he leave his wife, but James said she hadn't. In fact,
he said Patty pleaded with him specifically to stay with his wife.
Finally, Null asked James where he was on the morning Patty had been killed. James said
he'd been in Florida, where he still was, and so he was a thousand miles
away from Texarkana when Paddy died.
Knoll knew that there was an easy way to either prove or disprove this, and that was by getting
the location data for James' mobile numbers and seeing what cell towers they pinged.
So he told James one more time that he needed to get back to Arkansas right away.
As soon as Knoll hung up, he and Detective Hack put in a request for a subpoena
so they could get James' cell phone records.
They knew that request would take a little time to be fulfilled,
so in the meantime, they reached back out to James' wife, Virginia.
They said they knew it was late, but they needed to talk to her.
And not long after the call, the detectives drove back to James' and Virginia's house,
picked her up, and brought her back to the station.
And by the time they arrived there, detectives Nall and Hack weren't even sure if it was
considered late at night or early in the morning.
They just thanked her for coming in at such a strange time, and they led her into a large
office with a conference table.
Virginia sat down across from them, and for a second, neither of the detectives spoke.
This was not a situation
that either of them wanted to be in.
But finally, Hack looked across the table at Virginia and asked her if she was aware
that her husband James had been having an affair with Patty. Virginia gave a little
smile and said she knew it might sound strange to them, but she knew all about the affair.
Hack and Null shared a quick look like what was going on here,
and then Virginia told them that she and Patty were friends
and there were no problems between them at all.
Now, neither of the detectives had expected this response,
but they knew there were all different kinds of marriages out there.
Maybe Virginia and James had an open marriage,
or maybe James' affair with Patty somehow made his and Virginia's marriage stronger.
They were not there to pick apart the exact nature of this relationship, but they did think there was a chance Virginia might have information that could directly
connect James to Patty's murder, even if she didn't know it. And so Hack asked if
Virginia remembered where her husband was when Patty was killed. Had Virginia seen James or
even called or texted with him?
Virginia said she hadn't seen James at all. She had woken up around 8 a.m. that morning, and she drove straight to a fast food restaurant to buy breakfast for her mother,
who lived in a nursing home. After spending some time with her mom, she had gone home.
And she said James had already been gone when she woke up, and he wasn't home when she got back.
And they hadn't talked on the phone at all.
The detectives excused themselves and stepped out into the hall. They had some new information, up, and he wasn't home when she got back, and they hadn't talked on the phone at all.
The detectives excused themselves and stepped out into the hall. They had some new information,
but nothing that would enable them to close the case or prove if any of their potential
suspects were actually where they claimed to be at the time of the murder. They needed
James' cell phone data. If his phone had been picked up by one of the cell phone towers
near Patty's house on the morning of the murder, they would know he'd lied to them about being in Florida at the time of the
murder.
Luckily, it didn't take long for the phone company to come through yet again.
Now, almost exactly one day after Patty's murder, Detectives Hack and Nall received
James' cell phone tower data, which showed his location and movements throughout the
morning of the murder.
They also obtained surveillance footage from multiple locations around town,
and that footage was the final piece of evidence they needed.
It had taken just 24 hours, but the detectives now knew who had killed Patty Wellington.
Video footage, cell phone data, interviews conducted, and other evidence gathered
throughout the investigation, the following is a reconstruction of what police believe
happened to Patty on the morning of December 3, 2013. Just before sunrise, the killer got out of bed after yet another sleepless night, and
they told themselves there was only one way to find peace again.
They had to kill Patty Wheelington.
They went to their closet and collected their.38 revolver.
As the sun began to rise, they slipped the gun into their pocket, marched out to their car, and began driving towards Patty's house on the outskirts of the city.
The killer pulled into the long driveway leading to Patty's house, and as they approached,
they saw Patty sitting on the porch, smoking a cigarette and talking on her phone.
The killer got out of their car and began walking toward Patty, who quickly put
her phone down and greeted the killer. But the killer was not interested in talking.
Instead, they drew their revolver and aimed it at Patty. Patty saw the gun and tried to
reason with them, but the killer just fired off a shot.
The bullet missed Patty and went through the bedroom window behind her, and Patty jumped
up with her cigarette still in her hand, but before she could even turn, the killer had fired again, and this time the bullet hit
Patty in the chest, puncturing her lung.
Patty clutched her chest and struggled to breathe, she lurched toward her front door,
but the killer kept on firing, hitting Patty four more times, including a bullet that struck
Patty right in the heart.
Patty's legs buckled and she collapsed on the porch,
still clutching her cigarette in one hand
and her chest in the other.
And as the killer watched Patty fall,
a sudden sense of peace did come over them.
The killer walked back to their car,
started the engine and drove away
as Patty lied at the foot of her front door dying.
A little while later, the killer stopped along an isolated road, disposed of their gun, and
then continued on home.
Over an hour later, at about 9.15 a.m., the killer drove to a fast food drive-thru and
ordered a sausage biscuit.
And at 9.42 a.m., the killer walked into a nursing home to see their mother and give
her the
fast food breakfast.
And later that day, the killer returned home and waited for the sun to set, looking forward
to their first good night's sleep since they discovered that their husband was having an
affair with Patty Wheelington.
James Hyatt, who had been a strong suspect at the beginning of the investigation, did
not kill Patty.
His wife, Virginia, did.
James' cell phone data proved he was in Florida at the time of Patty's death, just like he
had told the police.
This information led investigators to immediately turn their focus on Virginia, who they had
considered a suspect from the moment they learned she knew about James and Patty's affair. So investigators obtained
surveillance footage from the McDonald's drive-thru and the nursing home, places Virginia told
detectives she had visited on the morning Patty was killed, and those videos showed that Virginia
had visited both of those places, but she lied about the times that she was there. And surveillance
footage from a convenience store along the route between Virginia's
house and Patty's showed Virginia's car heading towards Patty's house right around
the time it was believed Patty was killed, and then also driving back to her own house
not long after.
With that information, police served a search warrant on Virginia's house.
Although they didn't find the revolver, they did find a box of.38 caliber ammunition,
and they found the blouse that Virginia was seen wearing in the surveillance footage from
that morning.
They sent the blouse to the crime lab, and it came back positive for gunshot residue.
It turned out, ever since Virginia began to suspect that her husband was having an affair
with their good friend Patty, Virginia became increasingly possessive and unstable. And James, who had been married to Virginia for 41 years, had begun to
grow afraid of his wife, to the point where he began sleeping in a separate bedroom and even
began locking his bedroom door at night to keep his wife out. At Thanksgiving dinner with her in-laws,
a week before Patty's murder, Virginia had taken James' sisters aside and told them she was concerned that James was going to commit suicide.
But James' sisters knew him well enough to know that they did not believe this, and when
they talked it over with James, the family became convinced that Virginia was actually
planning to kill James and cover it up by the idea that he had killed himself.
So as a result of this, James had left town to
stay with his sister in Florida, and while he was down there, he filed for divorce. And
by coincidence, Patty had just happened to leave town around the same time as James left
for Florida, which led Virginia to believe that Patty and James had run away together.
So Virginia began calling Patty repeatedly, leaving voicemail after voicemail, begging
Patty to return her husband to her.
On December 2nd, Virginia was served with the divorce papers.
And then that night, she was at the Square Dance Club, where she knew the other club
members were whispering and gossiping about her husband's affair with Patty, and so she
decided it was time to kill Patty.
And the following morning she would.
Virginia was found guilty of capital murder and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility
of parole.
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