Murder With My Husband - 297. The Cape Cod Murder Mystery
Episode Date: December 1, 2025A quiet Cape Cod town is shaken when a young mother is found murdered, her toddler the only witness, and decades later the evidence still raises more questions than answers. Links: Patreon: https:...//www.patreon.com/murderwithmyhusband NEW MERCH LINK: https://mwmhshop.com Discount Codes: https://mailchi.mp/c6f48670aeac/oh-no-media-discount-codes Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/themwmh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/murderwithmyhusband/ Watch on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@murderwithmyhusband Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/into-the-dark/id1662304327 Listen on spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/36SDVKB2MEWpFGVs9kRgQ7?si=f5224c9fd99542a7 Case Sources: CapeCodTimes.com - https://www.capecodtimes.com/story/news/crime/2024/08/12/christa-worthington-murder-forensic-test-lost-evidence-truro-christopher-mccowen/74649241007/ CBSNews.com - https://www.cbsnews.com/news/christa-worthington-cape-cod-murder/ ABCNews.go.com - https://abcnews.go.com/US/murder-case-fashion-writer-christa-worthington/story?id=50595995 TheSun.com - https://www.the-sun.com/news/8724894/who-was-christa-worthington-and-what-happened-to-her/ SouthCoastToday.com - https://www.southcoasttoday.com/story/news/2006/10/21/grisly-murder-scene-described/50376221007/ Vassar.edu - https://www.vassar.edu/vq/issues/2004/01/class-notes-profiles/remembering-christa.html Wikipedia.org - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christa_Worthington Oxygen.com - https://www.oxygen.com/crime-news/christa-worthingtons-murder-by-christopher-mccowen-revisited People.com - https://people.com/crime/christopher-mccowen-abc-interview-christa-worthington-murder/ NYMag.com - https://nymag.com/news/articles/02/worthington/2.htm Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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You're listening to an Ono Media podcast.
Hey, everybody, welcome back to the podcast. This is Murder with my husband. I'm Peyton Morland.
And I'm Garrett Morland. And he's the husband. And I'm the husband.
It is currently Peyton's birthday. Happy birthday. By the time you're listening to this, it's not
pain's birthday anymore i'll be 40 yeah you'll be she'll be 40 um we're recording early we're going to
visit some family for the holidays so yeah that's that's what we got going on daisy also is now three
years old she had her birthday too heavy birthday daisy i think no other birthdays thank you for being
here before we jump into it a reminder if you want bonus content or if you want to add free content
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And for my 10 seconds, I don't know.
I don't know what to say.
Literally no idea.
I don't have anything.
Tell me got me for my birthday.
Oh, okay.
I got Peyton A for her birthday.
It's called a brick.
Just a solid brick.
It's just a brick.
just a red brick. I got her red brick. It's really sentimental. No, it's called a brick. And this isn't
sponsored, by the way. And it, we've never used it. But it helps you manage the time on your phone. It can
lock your phone, correct? Yeah. So you can sync apps with the brick and then say you're like,
I want 15 minutes a day, which yes, you can already do on your iPhone. But it's the app. This brick app is
what locks it. And in order for you to get back in, you have to go walk over to wherever your
brick is and touch your phone to the brick. So like, yeah, you could do it. I mean, sure. But I mean,
at some point, you got to have some self-control. Well, like, I've tried to do the like, oh,
time limit thing. And I think it's too easy. It's just too easy to ignore. And I know it sounds kind of
wussy to be like, oh, well, I have to go and lock the brick. But I've just seen a lot of people talk
about it. And they're like, no, like, genuinely, it just gives you that second to really think about
like, oh, okay, I'm actually, I don't, I'm just going to not get on. Yeah, so I don't know.
We'll see. Payton's been wanting it. So I got for her. I don't know anything about it.
But yeah, that's my 10 seconds. Sorry, I don't really have anything else. We're kind of just getting
ready for the holidays. So we just been running around. But we're here recording. And let's get into
today's episode.
Our sources for this episode are Cape Coddimes.com, CBSNews.com, ABCNews.go.com, the sun.com,
south coast today.com, bassor.edu, oxygen.com, people.com and New YorkMag.com.
Now, when a murder happens in a small town, things get handled a lot differently than they do in big
cities. I think we've seen this time and time again on the podcast. Oftentimes, the police
departments don't know how to handle a case, as well as, say, a larger department might.
And that can lead to botched investigations, forgotten clues, and trashed crime scenes.
And in a town where everyone knows everyone, anyone can really be seen as a suspect.
Being in a close-knit community can offer some perks to an investigation too, though,
like more access to the people you need to question, maybe even the ability to collect DNA from people in town.
kind of like you'll see in today's case.
But when the leads don't pan out,
there's usually one person who is left taking the blame in such a small town,
and that is the town outcast.
The one person who's different from the rest of the town,
maybe the town weirdo,
but does that make them the culprit,
or does it make them the scapegoat,
especially when they are proclaiming their innocence until the bitter end?
If anyone lives in a small town,
I'm not talking I'm talking small town like everybody knows each other there is an outcast
leave a comment I'm curious I didn't grow up in a small town Peyton did but not small enough
yeah it was small but not small enough anyways leave a comment I'm curious yeah so today we're
taking a trip to a sleepy little Cape Cod Massachusetts community called Truro it's basically
a seasonal vacation town that sees an influx of tourists by summer. But when the fall arrives,
it goes back to being home to the 2,000 or so residents that live there year round. It's the kind of
place where people feel safe enough to leave their front doors unlocked, where they trust their
neighbors with their kids, as well as their secrets, which Truro has a lot of. One of them being
the mysterious single mom from New York City, named
Krista Worthington. Now, Krista was born on December 23rd, 1956, just outside of Boston, Massachusetts.
Her dad, Christopher Toppy Worthington, people called him Toppy, was a Harvard-educated lawyer who gave
Krista, his only child, a lot of opportunities. But Krista worked hard to see them through.
She was a phenomenal student who graduated with honors and went on to attend
Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York. And after that, Krista moved to New York City to pursue her
dreams of becoming a fashion writer. Now, Krista did find a lot of success working for publications
like The New York Times, Elle Magazine, Cosmopolitan, and Vogue. She spent some time living and
working in Paris and London, even, and co-wrote a few fashion books throughout the years before she
kind of started to lose interest in this passion. So for a time, she pivoted making antiques and
collectibles her new focus before losing interest in column writing altogether. But those who knew
Krista said that was just kind of her. She was always chasing the next big fantasy, whether that was
in her job or relationships. Friends of Krista's said she was always dating someone handsome, smart,
well-to-do. For example, her roster included the heiress Gloria Vanderbilt's son, not Anderson Cooper,
but Stan Skowski. But these relationships never lasted very long. Like her work, Krista would inevitably
find herself getting bored, seeking a next adventure, the next rush. New romantic endeavors
were what seemingly brought her joy. However, this did worry some of her closer friends.
They said that over time, her chosen partners just sort of grew a bit stranger.
Like, the more relationships she had, the weirder the man kind of became.
Not like the men that she had used to go out with when she was younger.
But the truth was there was something missing from Krista's life, something she always wanted
and was told she would never be able to have.
and that was a child.
But the issue wasn't just finding the right person to do this with.
It was the fact that Krista was nearing 40
and had been told by her doctors
that she was unable to ever have a child.
It seemed to be the thing that just ate at Krista,
the one unattainable goal in her life.
At one point, she considered getting a donor, doing IVF.
She was fine with the idea of being a single mother
who raised a child on her own.
But as she was weighing this decision, she realized she just wanted to slow her life down first.
So she decided it was time to move out of New York City.
And she chose a quiet little town in Cape Cod where her father actually owned a few different properties.
And that is our small town where the case takes place.
Now, in 1997, the nearly 41-year-old Krista packed her bags and traveled.
North. Furrow wasn't a random spot on the map for Krista. She had spent some summers here as a kid,
so there were a lot of great memories. Of course, life year round would feel much different,
especially when the summer months passed and all the tourists fled the area. But at least she
was familiar with it. She knew it was a slow pace. In many ways, this was more Krista's speed now
anyways. Friends said that while she definitely occupied a glamorous little corner of the New York
social scene. Kristen never really felt like she fit in with the people there. She was more free-spirited,
less structured. And maybe Truro and Cape Cod would be more accepting of this. So, Krista moved into
this small little home on the harbor, one that was owned by her grandmother. She was just a stone's
throw away from an inlet where people went swimming and kayaking. There was a yacht and tennis club
nearby. It was everything Krista was wanting. Aside from the fact that,
people often parked their boats right in front of Krista's home, since she was right by the
parking lot for the harbor. And although this was like exactly what she was wanting, this move
also changed her life in a way that she never anticipated, because this is how Krista Worthington
met Tony Jacket. Tony was what the locals called the shellfish constable of
province, town, and Truro. But this wasn't just a nickname. That's literally what his job title was.
His role was to enforce fishing laws and make sure that fishermen had the proper licenses.
Well, one afternoon, as Krista was complaining to the harbor master about Tony's boat being parked in front of her house,
Tony walked into the conversation and the two were formally introduced. But the contentious conversation
quickly turned flirtatious instead.
The two actually took a liking to each other.
And before long, Tony was going over to Krista's house to help with a repair and then
coming over for tea.
Eventually one thing leads to another and soon Tony and Krista are falling in love.
That sounds like a hallmark movie.
Exactly.
Krista wrote in her diary at this point, quote, if there was a sweeter person on earth between
the hours of eight and nine 15, I would not believe it.
Tony became tender and we were made new spellbound.
Wait, what?
I love him.
Between 8 and 9.15 a.m. p.m. 8 a.m. to 9.15 p.m.?
What does this mean?
I think that this entry just means she is delusionally in love.
Okay. Got it.
Hallmarked.
She's been hallmarked.
Okay.
So it seemed like for the first time Krista had found someone she could actually settle down with.
There was just one huge problem.
Tony had been married for 26 years and he had six kids.
On top of that,
Truro was a tiny town where everyone knew everyone.
So it was only a matter of time before someone found out
about what these two were doing.
Hey, yeah, that's an issue.
Still, Tony and Krista cannot seem to call it quits,
which became even more complicated
when Krista went to Tony with some news
a year later in 1998.
She's pregnant.
Krista was pregnant with Tony's child,
which obviously came as a shock to Krista as well
because she'd been told by her doctors
she couldn't get pregnant naturally.
And here she was carrying her lover's child.
So Tony asked Krista what she wanted to do
and told Krista he wasn't willing
to leave his wife or her or the baby.
Fair.
Krista was fine with that.
So she wanted to keep the baby.
And if that meant keeping Tony's name detached from the baby, then so be it.
Sad at the same time, though, because the baby's going to grow up without a father for the most part.
It's, yeah, anyways, keep going.
But the father lives in the same town with six other kids.
Kind of sucky.
Small towns are just, I've always wanted to experience one.
Does that make sense?
Is that crazy?
No, I get it.
Like, I don't know.
And maybe it just sounds way better than it.
actually is.
I think, yeah.
I mean.
I think maybe better.
It's not there.
We're different.
I don't know, man.
There's something hallmark dreamy about a small town, but I think it's not all it's
cracked up to be.
I'm not saying like, oh, I'm going to go move to a ranch.
I'm going to become a cowboy.
I'm not talking about like that.
I'm just saying small towns.
So this is what she wants.
And after telling Tony she was pregnant, the two actually decide to call it quits on their
forbidden romance.
And Krista gave birth to a little girl named Ava in May of 1999.
And around that same time, Krista actually moved to a new property just a short distance away from the harbor.
And Krista was basically happy, living life as a single mom.
Though it seems she did want to find someone that Ava could eventually look up to as a father figure
since Tony wasn't exactly in her life anymore.
So Krista began dating again.
Though as the years passed
and Krista became more ingrained in this small town,
people started to whisper about the single mother
because she had never told anyone who the father of her child was.
And so people start gossiping.
Why did she have so many men coming and going from her life?
Which one was the dad?
Krista felt like she was kind of becoming,
the town pariah, a little bit wearing a scarlet letter, but she refused to let the people
of Truro drive her out. This behavior, she could totally get away with in New York City,
but she was having a harder time living like this in such a small town. Okay, yeah, that makes
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So it's now January 2002.
The 46-year-old Krista and her two and a half-year-old daughter, Ava, had just spent the
holidays in the city seeing old friends.
But after New Year's Eve, they returned back to their modest,
little bungalow in Truro. And on January 6th, the most recent ex-boyfriend of Krista's named
Tim Arnold planned to stop by her house to return a flashlight that he had borrowed. Tim was an author
himself, mostly of children's books. So he and Krista had a little bit in common because she did
used to be a writer. The two had dated for about a year. He'd even offered to help out with
Ava quite a bit during their relationship. But by that point, it seemed the two had just decided to be
friends. So that afternoon, Tim drove by the house with his father in tow, thinking it was just going
to be a quick drop off of this flashlight. When he pulled up to the bottom of Krista's driveway,
he noticed a few of her newspapers were sitting there. So he scoops them up and then walks up
her driveway towards the house. When he gets up there, he sees Krista's car sitting in the driveway.
So he knocks on the front door, but there's no answer.
And this is when he noticed, her side door to the kitchen was just sitting slightly open.
So he went over, he lets himself into the house and starts calling Krista's name.
But almost instantly, he spots Krista lying on the floor motionless.
And there's Ava, next to her mother, alive and completely uninjured, but clearly in distress.
Oh, crap. Okay.
Ava turns to Tim, who she knows, and says, Mommy fell down.
Now, Tim says he didn't notice the blood at first.
All he could think about was just getting Ava, like, Ava was clearly in distress, a little baby, a little girl.
And so he kind of scoops her up and gets her outside, hands her to his father.
It's like, hey, please, like, chill with her or watch her.
I need to go back inside.
He rushed.
Kind of crazy that she said, Mommy fell down.
Right.
Interesting.
Then Tim rushes back inside and searches for a phone in the house, but couldn't find any.
Remember, this is the early 2000s.
The cordless phones seem to have disappeared.
So Tim goes back out and rushes over to the neighbor's house and dials 911.
9-1-1-1-1-4-3.
It's Crystal Worthing, but I don't know what happens.
I think she fell down on.
I'm sure she said.
He tells the dispatcher because of what Ava said that she must have fallen down,
but he was pretty certain based on how she looked when he walked in, that she was dead.
Like he wasn't calling to say, hey, she's hurt.
Can you come help her?
He was calling to say, hey, Krista Worthington is dead in her house.
So minutes later, first responders arrived at the scene, and they quickly learned this was not an accident.
The front door to the house had been smashed.
Krista was half naked, covered in bruises, like she had fought for her life.
Yeah, okay.
There was a terrible wound to the left side of her head.
She had been stabbed through her left lung.
The blade was sent so forcibly through her body that it was lodged into the floor beneath her.
So obviously, Ava didn't see the murder then if she said mommy fell down.
I think that was just her assuming.
Which is good, though.
At least she didn't.
She's in trouble.
Yeah, at least she didn't see the murder.
That's horrible.
Police get here.
This is obviously a murder.
And from the state of the body,
they suspect that Krista had been dead for 24 to 36 hours by now.
What?
Which means...
Wait.
If you're putting two and two together,
Ava had been all alone during this time at the house with her dead mother.
Now, you have to remember...
Holy crap.
This is a tiny town.
It had been the first homicide Truro had seen in more than 30 years.
This kind of thing just didn't happen here.
So these EMTs and the police officers who responded were not accustomed to dealing with homicide cases like this.
Yeah.
So what does one of the EMTs do when they respond?
and realize there's no body to resuscitate and get to the hospital.
They take a blanket from the couch and they just lay it over Krista's body to cover it up out of respect.
And it's obviously not.
Not, I get it, but you're not supposed to do that.
Right.
But I understand where they're coming from.
I'd probably do the same thing, to be honest.
Not to mention on top of this, you have Tim Arnold and his father who had basically walked
through the crime scene.
And although the police did keep a crime scene login sheet that day, so basically, like,
if you enter the crime scene, you have to write it in.
It's incomplete.
Not everyone who was there filled it out.
They're just, they don't even really know what this protocol is.
Yeah.
There are other EMTs and officers who were first on the scene that didn't even sign the login.
So already, you have a pretty messy crime scene.
But there is some helpful.
evidence inside, like a cell phone police find that seemingly does belong to Krista, and it has
one number dialed in on the screen, and it's just a nine. So clearly, Krista was trying to call
for help, didn't get the chance to finish. They also found Krista's keys, glasses, and a sock
outside near her car. There also appeared to be two drag marks.
near her vehicle, and maybe one of the most heartbreaking details I've ever heard was there was
a sippy cup and some Cheerios next to Krista on the floor, along with like a child's play broom that
appeared to be bloody.
This is horrible.
There were also just small bloody footprints all around.
There was blood in the sink, which had a tiny stepstool, like sitting in front of it.
So police realized that during these days that Ava was there alone with her mother who wouldn't get up,
Ava had been trying to clean up.
She had been getting herself Cheerios and her sippy cup, like, but still sticking around her mother.
Which is just, it's so sad.
It's insane.
Also, can we just talk about, like, how doubly evil you have to be to not only kill someone, but kill someone and leave?
a toddler unattended, not knowing when, like, what happens next?
Like, that is horrible to do.
So around midnight that evening, Krista's body was taken to the chief medical examiner's office in Boston.
And it was determined that Krista had died somewhere between Friday afternoon, January 4th, and the morning of Saturday, January 5th.
There, they took fingernail clippings and photographs.
They also discovered that there were blue and white fibers.
in her pubic area, the autopsy revealed that Krista had engaged in intercourse before she died.
However, no sources mention whether they believe this was consensual or if she had been sexually assaulted.
We just know that this had happened before she died.
And as for Ava, she was taken to Cape Cod Hospital and they don't find any physical injuries on her of any kind.
It's going to be traumatized for the rest of her life now.
She had a diaper rash, obviously, and just an ear infection.
I mean, I'm sure we'll get there, but I also, this whole thing is a mess.
One, her mom died.
Two, her dad's hidden.
This whole thing is going to be a mess.
So, obviously, police are like, I mean, you kind of brought this up.
Did Ava see what happened?
And her brain just said, oh, she fell down.
Did she just find her mom like that and didn't actually witness the crime?
but did she see who might have been over before this happened?
Like, they're just wondering if Ava knows anything.
So police bring her to a children's advocacy center
where she was questioned by professionals about what happened.
And through the advocates,
it is determined that Ava didn't see or witness anything
that happened to her mother as far as, like, violence.
When asked when was the last time she was, like, changed or fed,
Ava can't tell them.
She doesn't give a response.
However, when a female state trooper spoke to Ava, she told the woman, quote, Mommy lying down, tried to get Mommy up.
Mommy dirty, tried to clean mommy.
So she just, like, was trying to, like, take care of her mom.
Yeah, I can't.
That's so heartbreaking, dude.
But also, my, I say, goes to show how she was probably loved and taking care of because children model.
And so what a good mom.
Krista was because that was her daughter's first response was to try to fix and take care and love.
And it's just heartbreaking.
So one of the incredibly frustrating parts of this case is a guy named Michael O'Keefe.
Okay.
He's the Cape Cod DA who led the investigation on Krista's murder.
And a lot of the comments he made about Krista after this discovery were absolutely vile.
Okay.
I've already told you the reputation she had in town.
And they do not try to hide what they felt and thought about Krista.
So the DA tells one reporter on record that the case was going to be difficult because, quote,
Worthington was an equal opportunity employer.
She'd F. the husbands of her female friends, the butcher, or the baker.
So he gets on and he's like, we're going to have a hard time.
doing this because she was easy is basically what he says so already there's issues with this
case when the people trying to solve it already think of the victim like this and no offense
this all has to do because of a small town sorry from a small town but i mean my opinion personally
i think that right there's more gossip gossip there's more judgment personally that's what i think
Also, who Krista runs around with might have to do with the investigation because you've got to track down everyone in her life.
But why does that have to do with her being killed?
Well, it's also not something that is like something you need to word to the public of like, well, we know this.
It's like, you can be like, hey, she talked to a lot of people.
So we're going to have to track them all down.
That has nothing to do with like how she should be treated.
Yeah.
Or how her death.
That's actually extremely weird.
Yeah.
To even say that.
Because you're supposed to be
representing this person.
Like you're fighting for justice for her.
I'm so sorry. You're a DA and you have to do your job and
like, okay, go get a different job or go somewhere else.
Especially if you think anyone who is murdered
like deserves to be talked to or talked about like that.
Yeah, that's strange. Good point.
So either way, the police seemed to feel confident it was a local
because it was the off season. There wasn't many out of towners.
So one of the first people they turned to is Krista's most recent ex-boyfriend, the one who discovered her body, Tim Arnold. And that mainly has to do with the blanket that was thrown over Krista's body because it turns out that blanket that an EMT had put on the body had some of Tim's semen on it. And so that DNA was then found on Krista. And after talking to people around town, it seemed like Tim was more into the relationship than Kirsta. And so that DNA was then found on Krista. And after talking to people around town, it seemed like Tim was more into the relationship than
Krista was. The two had lived together in her house for some time, but friends of Krista said she
didn't see the relationship as something long term. She never spoke about marriage or a future with
him. However, when Tim was questioned, he emphatically denied having anything to do with Krista's
death and seemed genuinely distraught over this entire thing. And he says, hey, well, I had a relationship
with her. It's not that shocking. You found my DNA on the blanket. Now, aside from his closeness to
Krista, there wasn't much to suggest him as a suspect, so please keep going.
And it wasn't long before they figure out their next person of interest.
And it actually ends up being Ava's father, Tony.
So you remember, Tony and Krista were having that secret affair for two years without his wife knowing.
Well, eventually, after Ava was born, Krista decided she needed some help from Tony.
So she had been asking if he would help her with child support, adding Ava to his family's medical insurance plan, things like that.
And when Tony was like, no, because my wife can't find out, Krista hired a lawyer.
I'm not sure what came of that, but I can tell you that eventually his wife finds out about this.
I don't know if he came clean or if, like, he was pressured to come clean.
And shockingly, it actually went better than anyone would have anticipated.
Tony's wife forgave him and not only that she was like you had a baby with this girl you
need to like take care of it take care of this baby and they had actually been like inviting
Eva and Krista over for dinner and family things and it was the wife who was like no you're
going to like man up and handle what you did and props couldn't be me but props honestly
So, Eva actually did know her father after all. And whether or not he did begin helping them out financially, I'm not sure. But in police interviews, Tony's wife is like, no, I knew it was me who was wanting him to have a relationship with her. Like, I wasn't leaving him because of what he had done. So there's no motive here. Like, there's no reason he would have needed to hurt her. In fact, everything was working out pretty well for them right before Krista died. She also said that Tony was home with her
the time that they believe Krista was killed.
And when he took a polygraph test,
Tony passed with no issues.
Interestingly, after that,
there was another unexpected suspect or two added to the list.
Krista's own 72-year-old father,
Christopher Toppy, Worthington, the lawyer,
and his 29-year-old girlfriend,
Elizabeth Porter, end up becoming suspects.
Look, a lot of ages, whatever.
it is what it is not my business doesn't bother me 2972 yeah this is pretty wild you you take what
you want from that but okay keep going so obviously christopher her father the former harvard educated
lawyer had been having different relationships since his divorce from christa's mother and the
newest one was 29 year old elizabeth porter apparently there had been a lot of bad blood
between Elizabeth and Krista, because Krista was like, Dad, she's just coming after your estate.
She's here for the money, obviously.
And there had been several heated exchanges, and Krista tried to prevent Elizabeth from accessing
any more of her father's funds.
She's like, he's 72.
You're taking advantage of him.
And when police learn all this, they're like, this is obviously a motive.
And frankly, the couple didn't do themselves too many favors when it came to the investigation.
For starters, Elizabeth lied about where she was during the time of the murder.
Jeez.
And Christopher seemed to ask a lot of really pointed questions about his daughter's death, referring to things about the crime scene that, like, wasn't exactly public knowledge.
Your own, your own dad?
Yes.
Though I will say, eventually Elizabeth and Christopher provide an alibi that police were able to confirm.
Don't believe it.
So it was more just like, wow, this is pretty crappy behavior, but we don't think that they murdered his daughter.
So let's just say, police are checking people off this list, but this list keeps growing.
Because there is one piece of evidence that might help them out, and it was DNA collected from Krista's body.
It takes nearly a year to get these results back, and it only complicates things further because the DNA was not a match for Tony, Ava's dad, or Tim.
Krista's ex-boyfriend, and with them being over a year into the investigation, investigators are
starting to get desperate. So they come up with a pretty wild plan. They say, hey, this is a small
town. We are going to ask every single man in town between the ages of 18 and 70 to come in and offer
a sample of their DNA so that we can rule them out in this case. So the entire town comes in.
I mean, honestly, not a bad idea. So around 2004, it's now two years after Krista's murder, they start
doing this. They get samples from the mailmen, the garbage men, the delivery boys, the grocery
store checkout guy. Regardless of whether they had any relationship with Krista or not, over a hundred
people come in and volunteer their DNA to clear their name. And by the end, they have over a hundred
samples to compare to the one found on Krista. And meanwhile, Ava is sent to live with a friend of
Christas who she had named as her guardian in her will. And Tony's allowed to visit Ava one day a week.
And while he tried to fight for custody of Ava during this time, it definitely wasn't helping that he had just been ruled out as a suspect.
However, by April of 2005, police finally realized their efforts had paid off.
One of the samples that had been volunteered ended up being a match.
Why would that person volunteer?
That seemed, okay.
Maybe not look guilty?
I don't know.
But his name was Christopher McCowan.
So we have Krista and Christopher, and Christopher is not her father.
Got it, yep.
This is a new Christopher, Christopher McAwen.
I'm just going to call him Chris to keep it clear.
Now, Chris was 33 years old at the time, and he worked as a sanitation worker in Truro.
According to Chris's dad, his childhood hadn't been easy.
He often had seizures as a kid, which required medication.
And perhaps as a result of his illness, Chris found himself struggling in school and ended
up in special education classes. He hated it so much, he ended up dropping out of high school
before his senior year. And this decision leads Chris to fall in with some bad crowds. He starts
getting in trouble with the law, mostly for theft. And then after a brief stint in jail,
Chris moved north from Florida to Cape Cod to be with his girlfriend. And it was around
1998 when he finally settled down in Truro and it wasn't easy, mainly because Chris was one of the
only black men in town. But after finding that job with the sanitation company, Chris began to
find a community with his co-workers. One co-worker said Chris got so close with him and his family,
he began calling his co-workers mom, mom. And the same co-worker said he never saw a violent side to
Chris ever in the entire time he knew him. They said he was respectful, he took his job seriously,
he was always up for the task, that he had a great rapport with the people.
along his route, he was generally well-liked and respected. And according to some of his friends,
he even had a few relationships with women around town after breaking things off with his girlfriend
that he had moved here for. Now, Chris was called in for questioning early on in the investigation,
primarily because Krista Worthington's home was one of the houses on his stop. And during those
first interviews, he said that he had been seeing Krista for the last two years since two, since two,
thousand and that he usually stopped by to pick up the trash on Thursdays.
When they asked if he ever went inside Christa's home around the time she died, he said,
no, he didn't even know she was dead until he saw it on the news.
So they didn't focus on Chris much early in the investigation.
And I want to point out, like Garrett said, he willingly handed over his fingerprints and DNA.
That just doesn't make sense.
I don't know if it's him because that just, that doesn't make sense to me.
So as the years had passed, police had circled back to Chris even before the DNA match came through.
They started looking deeper into his background.
They saw his history of theft.
And apparently, he had a restraining order from two former girlfriends who, one said he broke her car window and the other claimed he pushed her against a refrigerator.
So police had already been zeroing in on Chris when they discovered his DNA sample was a match in April of 2005.
So they waste no time getting an arrest warrant.
So on April 14, 2005, police pick Chris up at a rooming house he's living at, and they charge him with aggravated rape and the murder of Krista Worthington.
And this time when Chris speaks to police, his story changes quite a bit.
Now he says, okay, I did see Krista right before she died.
Interesting.
In fact, he said she had asked him that day to come inside and help her dispose of her.
Christmas tree. He said that's when one thing led to another. The two of them ended up kissing
and having sex. He said it was just once and then he leaves. But he had nothing to do with her
death. So he's explaining why his DNA was found on her body. He said he went and they had sex.
Yes. Was there any, like did they talk before? Was there a relationship with them before?
People around town seen them before together. They knew each other because he came
to her house every every week everyone knows each other in that town right yeah and he's like so yeah
i didn't tell you obviously before because that looks very suspicious for me to have had sex with her
and then she dies or is murdered right after however this interview becomes a six-hour-long
interview and they are just pushing chris prodding him and he begins changing his story a few
times throughout the six hours because later he says actually we were having a full blown
relationship we were often intimate on Thursday afternoons when I went by to pick up her trash
in fact he said I did this with a few women on my pickup route it wasn't just her police are like yeah
but we have your DNA we have a pretty strong evidence against you and we believe you did something
to her and he changes this story again he's like actually I did go back there Friday we had sex
I beat her, but there was actually someone with me, someone who killed her.
His 23-year-old friend...
What? Where did this escalate so fast from?
He says it was his 23-year-old friend, Jeremy Frazier.
He said that Friday, the two were out drinking and partying together when they decided to go over to Christ's house and rob her.
She ended up catching them. Chris beat her while Jeremy stabbed her to death.
I think it's insane that he just starts admitting all this.
So naturally, please bring Jeremy in.
And he's like, yeah, it was with...
partying earlier that night, but Chris left. And I stayed at the party before then crashing
at a friend's house. He's like, I don't know what Chris is talking about. And this is apparently
confirmed. So police are like, we think that Jeremy had nothing to do with this. We think
Chris lied and said Jeremy was there with him. And we believe Chris did it by himself. And here's
what's interesting about all this. Chris does not have a lawyer present during his interrogations.
He declines having the interviews recorded. We don't.
really know what happened during the six-hour confession. We're just going off of what police
said. But when Chris later talked to 2020 and was asked about why he said he went to the house
with Jeremy, he said, that's what the police said that I did. I didn't say that and I didn't
do that. So, did he actually say it? Or did police say it in the interview? Like, as a theory.
And then he said okay
And he doesn't fight it
And then the police are like yeah
We interrogated him and he said this is what happened
Again I want to mention
He's one of the few black men in town
And he was in special education growing up
So this is a very common target
It's very plausible I mean there was a case from Payton's hometown
Very similar
Very similar they actually ended up finding later
It wasn't him because they found the action
guy who did it because of DNA and he spent like 20 years wrongfully in prison anyways
curious to see where this goes this is not like we know this happens this is not inconceivable
it happens all the time we're not saying i'm just saying it does happen it is possible this could be
happening just happens so was he an easy target for investigators who don't ever really handle this
kind of case and are eager to close it is this an easy target could it have been hard for them
to believe that a black man was actually just having consensual sex with a wealthy white woman,
or was he actually guilty? Well, it's questions like these that start eating away at the case.
Once he gets a lawyer, they seem to believe that the confession was 100% coerced and that we don't
actually know anything that happened. And it happened so easily since when they arrested and
interrogated Chris, he had actually been high on painkillers and marijuana during this interrogation.
They also knew the crime scene investigation had been botched from the jump like we talked about, not to mention there was never any indication in the autopsy.
Like we never know whether she had been sexually assaulted or it looked like there had been consensual sex.
So the charges don't make sense to the lawyers, but the prosecution thinks, nah, we have a good case.
So when Chris's trial begins in November of 2006, the prosecution paints this picture.
That January night, Chris showed up at Christ's house wanting to have.
sex with her, she denied him. So in a rage, he sexually assaulted and then killed her. That's the
motive. You have to remember, they do have a confession course or not. And they do have Chris's DNA on
Krista's body. So his lawyers argue he and Krista had a consensual relationship. They had done this
before. But a friend of Krista's also said he didn't think that was the case. He mentioned that
when he saw Krista just a week or two before her death, she never mentioned anything about a
consensual relationship with a sanitation worker.
And this friend says Krista would have usually shared the type of relationship she was having
with people.
And that's what this case keeps hinging on.
Did Krista have consensual sex and a relationship with Chris or did he show up that night
and sexually assault her?
I don't know how you...
Both could be true.
Yeah, I don't know how you...
I just don't know how you 100% say he...
I don't...
This is confusing.
I don't know what else to say.
It's extremely confusing.
What are the chances that someone has consensual sex with a woman leaves and then she's murdered?
That is kind of hard to, like, not feel like that is your prime suspect.
And that's the other side is, that's true.
I mean, what are you supposed to?
But.
It's always like, right, is it, is it walk like a duck?
Yeah.
The quacks like a duck.
It's a duck.
Like, the coincidences can only be so strong sometimes.
sometimes. But then you have the evidence on the other side. Yeah. Being like, well, this feels like
coerce. This feels like target. This could be racially motivated. So like I said, the police were
desperate to close this case. They found the last person Krista had sex with. And they were like,
yeah, that's, that's our, that's our suspect. They got a forced confession out of him maybe while
he was under the influence of drugs. Now, unfortunately, they do have two pieces of solid evidence that
points in Chris's direction. They have DNA and they have a confession. But that's,
That's all they have. They don't have fingerprints. They don't have footprints. They don't have any
eyewitnesses. And as far as I can tell, they never even questioned Ava to see if she knew who
Chris was. But the jury had all they needed. And Chris McCowan was found guilty of first degree
murder, aggravated rape, and aggravated burglary. Wow. Okay. Now, before he was sentenced,
Chris said this, quote, this case here is a very horrendous case. I feel sorry for the victim's
family, her daughter and her.
I have never meant
for this to ever take place,
but your honor, all I can
say is that I am an innocent man
in this case. That's all I can say.
Christopher McCowan
was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility
of parole.
Man, I would enough.
I don't think
there's not enough evidence to say
he did it for sure. Well, even
Tony Jacket, Ava's father,
comes forward
and says, I'm not convinced Chris is the guy.
He says publicly, quote,
I feel that there was reasonable doubt all over the place in this case.
Now, shortly after this conviction,
several of the jurors said they felt there was racial bias
during their deliberations.
And Chris's attorney thought, okay, that's definitely grounds for a retrial
if some of the jurors are saying other jurors were racially motivated.
But after taking it all the way to the state Supreme Judicial Court,
they ruled against it feeling there wasn't enough evidence for a retrial, even though jurors have
publicly said they felt like race had something to do with everything. So in 2022, Ava graduated from
college. She has since maintained a relationship with her father, Tony. Both have tried to
kind of piece their life together after this. But in 2024, there was a development in this case. Remember
that during the autopsy, I mentioned blue and white fibers were found in Christ's
pubic area. Well, they never could figure out how these fibers related to Chris, but it
turns out as this case has been relooked at and people, well, no, people have been like
weary about whether he really did it. It has come out that Jeremy Frazier was found wearing a blue
and white sweater at the party
the night he went
to that party with Chris
he was wearing a blue and white sweater
the night Krista died
so it could have been transferred from him
to Chris and Chris to her
it could have been that Chris's story
was real and that him and Jeremy did it
together it could be that Jeremy did
it alone
I mean there's so many avenues
but people believe they have
found the source
of the blue light
You prove it was either just Chris.
How do you prove it was either just Jeremy?
How do you prove it was either both them together?
Like there's not enough.
Right.
Which it, yeah.
But here's the thing.
Police actually knew this back in 2005.
Okay, they knew about his blue and white sweater.
And in May of 2024, a superior court associate approved the order to have these fibers
tested against Jeremy's sweater because.
Like I said, police knew about it back in 2005, and he had turned that sweater into police back in 2005, which is why the court is like, yeah, can you test those fibers?
This should have been done when the case went to trial, but can you test those fibers?
And then the police are like, actually, we can't hand the sweater over because we lost it.
So we can't actually test those fibers now in 2024 when we should have tested them back then.
that's insane that's insanity man come on so eventually though this is all up and down because the sweater resurfaces in the custody of massachusetts state police so if these fibers are a match because they now have the sweater to test it could mean if they are a match that there is grounds for a retrial not grounds for exoneration yes grounds for a retrial now as of this recording there's not been any
updates on the results of this testing. But in the meantime, Chris McCowan is still in prison,
and to this day, he still claims to be innocent. And that is where this case is sitting.
Basically waiting for this testing to be done, his lawyer's fighting for a retrial, and the future
of the case is basically unknown. But that is the complicated murder of Krista Worthington.
well a couple thoughts one um my heart goes out to eva i'm sorry everything she's had to go through
um i don't know her thoughts on it maybe she doesn't speak on it maybe she doesn't talk about it
so i don't blame her i'm not going to say much about that i'll just speak to my thoughts i don't know
i don't know if there was enough evidence i but also i don't know if maybe for eva and some of
them this was closure i just i don't know this is so complicated i don't know i don't know
If there's enough evidence, there just has to be reasonable doubt. Without reasonable doubt,
if there is a shred of reasonable doubt, you cannot convict someone. I agree with the reasonable
doubt. But I also feel like there is some cases that we've covered where it's obviously someone.
Right. And you can still create reasonable doubt, right? The reasonable doubt gets hard in my mind.
But yes, I agree here. There's too, there's too much in the air that I don't think.
I think I would have sent him in the prison, but I don't know.
Listen, from what I could learn on the surface of this case, so not being there, not interviewing
family, I wish I could, but unfortunately, if you're releasing an episode a week, it's just not
possible.
But from what I learned, I don't think there is enough evidence to convict, and I also don't
think there's enough evidence to say he's not guilty.
Like, I don't think there's enough evidence to go one way or the other.
I cannot confidently say he's innocent or guilty.
I agree with that.
It's just from what I know.
I do feel like this case has the potential to be investigated, like, deeply.
To go and talk.
Because it just feels like there's a lot of mystery clouding it.
But that is what we know now.
if we hear any updates I will keep you guys updated but until then this is all we have on the case
and that is our episode for this week we will see you next time with another one I love it
and I hate it goodbye
