Murder With My Husband - 314. The Trap She Never Saw Coming - The Murder of Bonnie Woodward
Episode Date: March 30, 2026On this episode, Payton and Garrett dive into the case of Bonnie Woodward. When her daughter runs away and suddenly goes missing, concern quickly turns into panic. But just as the search begins, Bonni...e herself vanishes, leaving behind more questions than answers. Links: Netflix Video Every Monday @11am PST, 12pm MST, 2pm EST 1pm CST https://www.netflix.com/murderwithmyhusband 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: ABCNews.go.com - https://abcnews.go.com/US/killed-husbands-words-crack-decade-murder-missing-nurses/story?id=122348751 TheTelegraph.com - https://www.thetelegraph.com/news/article/bonnie-woodward-case-2020-facts-20351564.php GoodMorningAmerica.com - https://www.goodmorningamerica.com/news/story/killed-husbands-words-crack-decade-murder-missing-nurses-122348751 KSDK.com - https://www.ksdk.com/article/news/crime/bonnie-woodward-murder-man-sentenced-illinois/63-c0b2920d-f332-48e8-832b-39c0e205aca0 MyJournalCourier.com - https://www.myjournalcourier.com/news/article/Defendant-in-murder-case-told-wife-he-was-15128368.php Fox2Now.com - https://fox2now.com/news/illinois/jerseyville-man-sentenced-65-years-for-2010-cold-case-murder-testimony-from-suspects-son-proved-critical/ Medium.com - https://medium.com/@grantbjork92/illinois-missing-person-cold-case-ends-with-homicide-conviction-3dcee363c44f TheCinemaholic.com - https://thecinemaholic.com/bonnie-woodwards-murder-where-are-heather-woodward-and-roger-carroll-now/ UnionBulletin.com - https://www.union-bulletin.com/8-years-later-charges-filed-in-woman-s-disappearance-death/article_300fa467-0225-521b-ba4f-0a72fcc1aeb1.html Belleville News-Democrat - https://www.bnd.com/news/local/article209696309.html Pod.wave.co - https://pod.wave.co/podcast/2020/i-have-killed-for-you ABC.com - https://abc.com/episode/b499c793-9eda-4875-9b93-554edd573540/playlist/PL551127435 ILCourtsAudio - https://ilcourtsaudio.blob.core.windows.net/antilles-resources/resources/cdb9a4a2-bfb1-40c8-a6e5-cad2192b781a/4200491_R23.pdf Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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You're listening to an Ono Media podcast.
Hey everyone, 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.
Happy Monday.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you for listening.
Thank you for watching.
I guess that's it, right?
Listening, watching.
That's all we got.
We don't really have any announcements this week.
So I think I'm going to get right into my 10 seconds.
And if you want to skip it, you can skip it.
It won't be too long.
but we had take Daisy to the vet.
And it was pretty scary and we thought she was dying.
He's alive and she's well.
And we're still trying to figure out what's going on.
So we need to make a vet appointment to, I don't know, like dig further into what's happening with her.
A quick little summary is that I was in the room.
Daisy came running in and she was, what we now figured out is like a form of inward.
sneezing.
Like she was inward sneezing,
but it sounded like she was gasping for air.
We thought she was choking on something.
We weren't sure what was happening.
We took her to the vet and it was kind of getting worse and worse.
You know, we took her to the ER.
Yeah, sorry, we took her to the 24-hour ER.
It was late at night.
We didn't get home to like 1 a.m.
But she was doing things she's never done before.
She was like pawing at her face, pawing at her ears.
She was doing the inward sneezing.
I would, I don't even know how to mimic it.
It was crazy.
And she was in distress
She was freaking out
Complete distress
Her whole body was shaking
I think she might have been having an allergic reaction to something
At first we thought she was choking
Because it's like
It's like a
Yeah
Over and over again
Don't replay that
Which I guess
It is a form of them trying to like
Clear their airways
Yeah it was
We took her to the ER
We had them do a bunch of different tests
They didn't
They honestly didn't know what was
on either, which didn't make me feel great.
Now that I look back, I'm like, how did...
Yeah, they were kind of just like, well, she's...
She's breathing now.
I'm like, okay. I'm being so am I, but...
But then we took her home, and then the next night, it happened.
Happened again. No, it happened again at 8 p.m. and then again at 3 a.m.
The same exact thing.
She, like, woke us up in a panic.
But this time, she was super itchy.
And this is what's so sad is, like, it's not like she's just doing this.
Like she's so clearly in distress.
She's waking us up.
Yeah,
she doesn't,
she doesn't do this normally.
Like,
this isn't something she wouldn't just wake us up and cry.
And when she came,
she was sitting in the living room alone.
And when she came running into Garrett the first time,
she had her tail in between her legs.
And she was freaking out.
Yeah.
It's more the way she's acting that.
Yeah.
And then when it happened again,
like she was super itchy this time.
She was clearly uncomfortable,
not happy.
It took about eight,
It took about two hours for it to go away.
And then when it happened again at 3 a.m.
It took about 30 minutes.
And then it hasn't happened since.
So it happened for two days.
Hasn't happened again.
The only thing we can assume is it was an allergic reaction.
And, yeah, she's okay right now.
Anyways, this is alive.
We're figuring it out.
I don't want to ramble too much.
But it was pretty scary.
So that's what I got for my 10 seconds.
So I'll have my hair.
I haven't buzzed it yet.
Right.
It's crazy.
I got this hair.
transplant because I like my hair a lot and I was losing it really fast and it made a huge
difference crazy for those who don't know I got a hair transplant for those who might be new to the podcast
my hair lines crisp even amazing I recommend it if you want to get a hair transplant go for it
don't see why not but yeah but now I'm at the point where like I have a lot of hair and I want to
buzz it just because it's getting hot also if you're watching that's his natural his hair naturally goes like
Yeah, my hair naturally just puffs up like this too. It's crazy.
Sometimes, like, we've had a couple comments of people being like, why is Garrett doing his hair like that?
That's how he wakes up. That's how his hair naturally sits. He has no product in it.
I literally get out of bed and my hair, look, my hair just looks like this. I don't know. I don't know. What can I do? Anyways.
Anyway, so I have my buzz. I don't know. I just need a, I just need a shorter for a second.
And I want to see how good my hairline looks, you know?
Yeah.
I got a hair transplant.
That's what I'm rambling about today.
We have a case for you guys.
So we're going to hop right into today's case.
Our sources for this episode are ABCNews.go.com, the telegraph.com.
Good morning America.com.
KSDK.com.
My Journal, Courier.com.
Fox2Now.com.
Medium.com.
Thecinemaholic.com.
Union bulletin.
com.
Belleville News Democrat.
Pod.
Wave.co, ABC.com, and I.L. Courts Audio. We say that we would do anything for the ones that we love,
whether that's a pet, a partner, a child. Now, luckily, most of us have never had to test the limits
of what that really means. But when you're in a situation where someone or something you love is in
danger, I think most of us would find that we're capable of a lot more than we ever thought possible.
because there's just something instinctual, even primal, inside each of us,
something that takes over when a loved one is threatened.
So today, I want you to ask yourself,
how far would you go to save a loved one that might be in danger?
Would you walk straight into the lion's den,
into the hands of another predator,
and would you be willing to risk your own life to save someone that you love?
I...
It's a good question.
because I feel like
I feel like I do some crazy shes.
I feel like I'd be nuts.
You know?
Like John Wick, like I'd be nuts.
But maybe not.
I don't know.
Anyways.
I don't know.
Let us know what you would do on Instagram or somewhere.
Today, I want to take you to a little town
located on the Mississippi and Illinois River.
A place with a lot of history and a vibrant
social scene called Alton, Illinois. And it is here in 2010 that a 47-year-old grandmother
named Bonnie Woodward is quietly living out her life. Now, Bonnie's had quite this story
so far to the year 2010. She has two grown children from her first marriage, Joseph and Jennifer.
And Jennifer actually still lives with Bonnie, with her two two.
little girls. Bonnie is also the mom to two stepkids from her third marriage. And those stepkids are
17-year-old Heather and her brother, Aaron, who is living with a disability. And plus, Bonnie herself
is a breast cancer survivor. So just to recap, it is 2010, 47-year-old Bonnie is living in Illinois,
and she has a lot of people living in her home with her,
her daughter Jennifer and her two little kids,
and then also her two stepchildren,
17-year-old Heather and her brother Aaron.
Bonnie is pretty used to putting her own needs aside
and being the caretaker because she came from a family of nine siblings.
So she always knew what it meant to rely on herself.
But that also taught Bonnie how to stand out.
Those who knew her said she had to.
huge larger-than-life personality, that her house was the place the extended family always congregated,
that she loved to host, she loved to nurture, which makes even more sense when you hear what
Bonnie did for a living. She had worked for the past 27 years as an aide at a nursing home in town.
So both her professional and her personal life was all about taking care of other people.
And luckily, she did have one person that she could lean on in times of need at this point,
and that was her living boyfriend, Gary Wilmuth, which was important because things weren't all smooth sailing in their pretty packed home.
So this sort of piece together family had been struggling with how to manage the 17-year-old who lived with them, Heather.
See, Heather's dad, this is Bonnie's third husband, had passed away suddenly back in July of 2000
when Heather was just eight years old.
So by that point, Heather wasn't in touch with her biological mother, so for most of her life,
Bonnie had played that role.
And she actually adopted Heather and her brother Aaron not long after their father, her third husband, passed away.
But those who knew the family said Bonnie treated Aaron and Heather no different than her own two kids.
She worked hard to give them the same opportunities, the same life, and she really dedicated herself to taking care of Erin, who, as I mentioned, was living with a disability.
But like any teenager, Heather at 17 had been unhappy living in this packed house for some time.
She had run away from home on a couple of occasions.
She always came back, at least until around June 10th, 2010.
It was this time, after another argument, that Heather stormed out of Bonnie's house and said she was going to stay with a teacher, a woman named Christine Sheffle.
And by June 25th, Heather still had not come home, so she left on June 10th.
15 days later, she still had not come home. And this was very clearly wearing on Bonnie. Still, she put on a brave face. She continued to go to work to care for her patients. And then that Friday afternoon on the 25th, Bonnie had a staff meeting from 2 to 3 p.m. Then she was planning to leave right after to head home for the weekend. So she punched out around 3 p.m. that day. And coworkers saw her go to the parking lot to, to,
her red Chevy avalanche. Now, usually from there, Bonnie was home around 3.30. But that day,
the clock kept ticking. Again, 17-year-old Heather has run away. She's been gone for 15 days.
Bonnie is at work. And in the time from getting in her car to being home by 3.30, more and more time is
passing. And she's not showing up. And so her boyfriend, who lives at the house, Gary,
is starting to get worried.
And by 4 p.m., he begins trying Bonnie's cell phone.
But his calls are going right to voicemail,
which is more than enough to set off alarm bells for Gary.
Because not only is Bonnie the kind of person who does everything on a schedule,
since she has Aaron,
she would absolutely let someone know if she was running late
or wasn't going to be able to make it home to take care of him.
That alone is enough to say that this just random disappearing is very uncharacteristic of her.
So the rest of the day and into the night, Gary is calling around to people to ask if anyone has seen Bonnie.
And when she still isn't home the following morning, Gary calls work to see if she showed up for her shift.
Her coworkers are like, no, she's not here.
We haven't heard from her, but also her car, her red car, is still in the parking lot at work.
So this is when Gary goes to the police to report Bonnie missing, which means from walking out of work to getting into her car.
She somehow disappeared.
Oh, my gosh.
Now, when police show up to Bonnie's workplace on June 26th, they obviously immediately search her car and find a few strange things.
For starters, it hasn't been moved from its parking spot that it was initially parked in yesterday,
but now the windows are rolled down and the car is unlocked.
So it's almost like Bonnie or someone got in and back out after she left.
left work. So someone has been in this car since she walked out of work. So to the family,
this feels like a bad sign because if Bonnie had just run away or needed a break, there's no way
she's just going to leave her truck behind. She loved the car and had worked hard to buy it.
She wasn't just going to leave it. But after looking closer at the truck, police don't find anything
suspicious. There is no damage to the vehicle. There's no evidence of a struggle having occurred
inside. However, they do notice her paycheck is still sitting on the seat. This is the one that she
had received the day before. And her family said the first thing Bonnie always did when she got her
paycheck was just take it right to the bank and deposit it. Yet, there it is. So this is when the police
decide to look a little closer at Bonnie's digital footprint. And they find there has been no
online activity from her. There's no bank withdrawals or deposits, no use of her cell phone since the day
before. And unfortunately, there's also no security footage of the parking lot to show where Bonnie
might have gone after she walked out of work. But luckily, there are a few eyewitnesses that spotted
something interesting. When police are talking to Bonnie's co-workers, one of them, a woman named
Wanda Bossley says she saw Bonnie during her 2 p.m. meeting. And to her, something about Bonnie was
definitely off. She said she wasn't acting like her usual upbeat self. She was quiet, internalizing.
Something was clearly bothering her. But then Wanda also went to the parking lot around the same time
Bonnie did. And she said when she was in the parking lot, she saw Bonnie standing behind her red truck,
talking with someone. Was a guy maybe in his 40s? One she'd never seen before. She says he was maybe
5-8 or 5-9. He was white. He had a medium build with salt and pepper hair. Wanda wasn't the only one
who saw this guy lurking in the parking lot, though. Other co-workers said, actually, I saw a man
in a silver sedan, like a Chevy Malibu, waiting in the parking.
lot during the staff meeting.
A few of them said they also saw Bonnie and him talking afterwards.
And then other coworkers say, no, we didn't only see her talking to this guy.
We actually saw her willingly get into his car and the two of them drove away.
I feel like I used to trust eyewitnesses a lot and now I don't.
You know what I'm saying?
I mean, they aren't the most reliable.
Like we've come to realize eyewitnesses are great, but they mess up a lot.
I do think there are a lot of eyewitnesses in this case.
So like, yeah.
Versus one.
Like a one off or something.
Mm-hmm.
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So naturally, the first place investigators start is with those close to Bonnie,
which in this case happens to be.
her boyfriend, Gary. They need to figure out who's this mysterious guy, what was going on in Bonnie's
life? How, why would she disappear? The two, Gary and Bonnie, have been in a relationship on and off for about
seven years by this point. And they also learned that Gary has a bit of a rap sheet. He's a convicted
felon. He's had some domestic issues in the past. But Gary says Bonnie knew all about his checkered history.
It didn't bother her. The two were on good terms. So the police.
have him take a polygraph and he passes it with no problem. Plus, he obviously doesn't fit the
description witnesses gave about the guy that Bonnie was last seen talking to in the parking lot. So
they do move on from Gary pretty quickly. And eventually, they start looking into Bonnie's exes.
And they discover a former boyfriend named Chester McAdams. Now, Chester's father owns a 2009 Chevy in
Paula, which could be confused for a Malibu, which according to eyewitnesses is the car, the mystery
man was driving. So police are kind of leaning into this. They also discover he has his own
criminal history. Apparently, Bonnie had seen Chester during one of those off periods with Gary.
And at one point, the two guys had some heated exchanges, actually once or twice over Bonnie.
So investigators start to think,
Is it possible that Chester was jealous
that Bonnie had picked Gary
and he wanted Bonnie back in his life
so he kidnapped her?
Maybe she even ran away with him willingly.
So police look Chester up
and they find that
he also doesn't match the description
the eyewitnesses gave.
Chester has a ponytail and a beard.
The guy they described was kind of clean cut.
So police bring him in for questioning.
He fully cooperates with them.
He also says, okay, I don't have that car.
That's my father's car and I don't drive his car.
Like, he would never let me borrow his car.
So they check out his alibi and sure enough, his boss says he was at work during the time Bonnie disappeared, which means now both Gary and Chester, her two like recent love interests.
Yeah, the main suspects.
Are cleared of suspicion.
But there's one thing that sets off alarm bells, which I've already informed you guys of.
And it's the fact that Bonnie is not the only person
who's technically missing from her household recently.
They still have 17-year-old Heather,
who ran away from home who is still MIA.
Now, Bonnie's family had actually filed a missing person's report
to a different police station about a week earlier,
just saying like she said she ran away to her teacher's house.
like she willingly left, but we haven't seen her, and now we're going to file a report.
And so when police respond to Bonnie's missing person's report, they're like, okay, what are the chances that not one but two people in the last week have been reported missing from the same like household?
Yeah.
A mom and her stepchild that she's adopted.
So the police seem to think this isn't really a coincidence.
The investigators on Bonnie's case start comparing notes with the investigator.
working Heather's case.
And they find that, as her family had said,
Heather's last known location was at her teacher, Christine Sheffield's home,
which is why police then pay Christine a visit.
So they've now almost merged these two investigations.
They're looking for Bonnie, but now they're also interested in finding Heather.
When they get there, they realize Heather is no longer there.
Her teacher, Christine, says Heather stayed with her starting on the 10th the night she ran away.
But she actually left on the 17th, and she didn't know where the teenager was headed.
Christine also tells the police the reason that she even helped Heather out, because like, why would a teenager run away to a teacher's house?
According to Christine, she tells police that according to Heather, she had been suffering a lot of abuse at home.
Heather told Christine and other teachers that she would be slapped or thrown against a wall or woken up in the
the middle of the night to do chores.
Heather apparently called Christine around the 10th to say she was being kicked out of
her house and had nowhere else to go.
But around the 16th, Bonnie called Christine and said, hey, Heather said she was going to your
house and she needs to come home.
So Bonnie had talked to the teacher and then the teacher Christine told Heather, hey,
you need to go home.
Like your mom called, you need to go home.
It's just kind of weird that both the mom and daughter are missing.
Like, it's obviously tied to someone that knows them.
Why are you looking at me like that?
I'm not looking at you like anything.
Okay, keep going.
Apparently, when Christine told Heather this, she spent the night crying.
And then when Christine left to do something the next morning on the 17th,
she returned to find that Heather had just left her house.
And Christine assumed, okay, she just went back to Bonnies because that's what I told her to do the night before.
But now we know she didn't go back to Bonnies.
and no one knows where she is.
That was when Bonnie filed a missing person's report.
Heather had been missing ever since.
And then Bonnie disappears.
What the freak?
Okay.
So now Bonnie's disappeared.
This is where police have caught up to the investigation.
But then eight days after Bonnie's disappearance,
there is a wild turn in this case.
On July 3rd, 2010, police get a phone call from a local library.
They say they have a woman there who says her name is Heather Woodward and she'd been reported missing.
What?
So police drive to the library.
I'm so confused.
Pick her up.
Bring her into the station for questioning.
There's nothing clearly visible on Heather that would be of concern.
She doesn't look bruised or injured or even unkempt for that matter.
She just turned herself in after being missing.
And when officers are like, hey, what's your birthday?
She's like, it's today.
I'm 18, which is why she claims she finally came forward to put this missing person's case to rest because now she legally doesn't have to go back to Bonnie's house if she doesn't want to.
She's 18.
She's an adult.
Okay.
But she doesn't want there to be a missing person's case on her.
So she's turned herself in and said, hey, I'm fine.
I'm good.
Take me off the list.
Okay.
But I do have to say her behavior is a little weird in this interview.
she's not really acting like an 18 year old.
Do 18s ever, oh, wait, are you saying older or younger?
Younger, because hear me out.
During this interview, she is holding a teddy bear,
like clutching it and she's acting more like a little girl.
Like the thing she's saying, quote,
Like these small cluster filming moves.
I named my daddy.
I'm tired, I'm ready for my nap,
I want my daddy.
Does she look like an 18 year old in the interview?
Yes.
Yes.
And so police are a little weird because she's coming in being like, I'm 18, I don't need to go home.
But then she's also acting really young, like, in an odd way.
Yeah, yeah.
And so this is when they're like, yeah, Heather, okay, like you don't have to go home technically.
You're 18, but we need to talk to you about Bonnie because she's been like she's missing.
No one knows where she is.
And we need to know if you know where your stepmom is.
but Heather doesn't act that alarmed that her stepmother's missing.
She says she has no idea what happened to her,
but she's just guessing that maybe Bonnie went into hiding to try and draw her out.
She's like, maybe my mom wanted me to come home.
And so she went missing in hopes that that would bring me forward to look for her.
And when police ask her about the situation at home with Bonnie,
they're like, okay, well, you know, how was it at home with Bonnie?
She doesn't mention anything about abuse.
like she's told her teachers.
She just tells police that she ran away from home
because she was forced into doing free labor,
like chores and babysitting,
the types of things most teenagers do around the house.
So now the police are realizing,
okay, we think Heather lied to her teachers.
We don't think she was abused.
We think she's acting young on purpose.
We think she's being manipulative.
Like police decide this.
They're like, we think that this is all enact,
especially after they find a report from the Department of Children and Family Services
that said they had been called to Bonnie's home regarding Heather in the past.
They found claims of abuse to be totally unfounded.
And eventually they asked her, okay, you left, you went to your teacher's house.
Where did you go after that?
Because it's still been a while.
And Heather says, oh, I went to a friend's house, but she doesn't want to get them in trouble.
She claims that the person she was with doesn't like Bonnie
And that it's all her fault that Bonnie went missing
Now finally after a bit of more pressure from the police
Heather gives them a name
Well actually three people's name
So this whole thing with Heather is just a mess
Police are like what?
I'm just confused
Is going on here
Yeah
So either way Heather ends up telling police
Here's three names you need to know
A 16 year old boy named Nathan
Carol and his parents, Monica and Roger.
She says this is where I was.
They don't like my mom.
And they probably had something to do with her disappearance.
Why did she come back?
Like, why come back?
I mean, you and they're just like, this is so odd.
She says she came back because she didn't want to have a missing person's report on her when she was fine.
Okay.
So obviously, police are like, okay, Heather.
and they began looking into the 16-year-old Nathan Carroll and his parents.
They find that his parents, both Monica and Roger, were in the medical field.
They went to the same church as the Woodward's.
So they did somehow know Bonnie.
They had no criminal history, no records of police involvement.
And to detectives, it seemed like,
they were really just opening up their doors to Heather,
who also told them stories about being abused at Bonnie's house.
So police decide to pay Roger and Monica a little visit,
visit, they go to this giant 60-acre property near Jerseyville, Illinois. And when they get there,
one of the first things they realize is Roger, the dad, sort of fits the description of the man
the eyewitnesses say Bonnie was talking to in the parking lot the day she went missing. He's in his
40s. He has brownish gray hair. He's clean cut. He's about 5'10. And he drives Silver 2005.
Interesting.
Chevrolet Malibu.
Which it would also make sense why she got in his car willingly.
Because if he's like, hey, your runaway daughter is at my house.
Then she would get in.
So police are like, okay, we thought Heather was just a little cuckoo, but maybe she was on to something.
Like, she knew more than she was, she was just being weird about it.
But it does sound like, not that she's cuckoo, but she's lied about all this abuse and stuff.
But they were just confused about Heather.
They were confused about Heather.
but now they're like...
They're understanding what's happening.
Yeah, they're like, okay, wait.
Heather clearly knew more.
She was hinting that these people might know something.
She clearly knew they knew something.
Also, I'm just confused.
How do...
How does one of your friends and then their parents
hate your mom enough to...
Right?
...to hurt them?
Like, that also is...
That's pretty outlandish.
Again, going back to the fact
that police fairly quickly decided
that Heather was pretty manipulative.
that a lot of her behavior was manipulative that day, which could be leaving.
I'm curious to see where this goes.
Like if she told them, my mom's hurting me.
My mom's a bad person, you know?
Like, this will be interesting.
So that day, police show up.
They're like, hey, you know, we have Heather.
She came in.
She said she's been staying with you.
She also said you might have something to do with her mom, Bonnie's disappearance.
We need to take your car in for evidence.
And not only that, they sit down and talk to the car rolls.
And they're pretty cooperative.
the investigation.
But they say that while they were helping Heather escape,
what they thought was an abusive household,
they claim they never actually met Bonnie.
They just knew of Bonnie.
So after this brief discussion with the carols,
the police do some more digging and they learn,
there is more to the story here.
Heather didn't just stay with the family
while she was waiting for her 18th birthday
so she could cancel her missing person's report.
she went on vacation with them.
Four days before Bonnie's disappearance,
this family, plus Heather,
took a trip to Gorville, Illinois,
to the Carol's Lakehouse.
So the next day, police call Heather back in for round two,
and they're like, hey, we found out that you didn't tell us,
but you went, like you left the city
and you went to their lakehouse for vacation.
What happened there?
And Heather offers something useful.
She admits, yeah, I did go with them, but says on the day Bonnie disappeared,
Nathan, the 16-year-old, and Roger, his dad, left the lakehouse to go home early.
They left at 7 a.m. that morning because, quote, Roger just wanted to go home and he wanted Nathan to go with him.
Now police are starting to think, okay, did they go to this lake house, plan this out,
and then Nathan and Roger go home and lure Bonnie away from the parking lot with a promise of delivering Heather.
Did they ask for money? Was it a bribe?
If Roger and Bonnie didn't really know each other,
why would she've just gotten into his car?
Unless she was promised,
she would finally be reunited with her missing daughter.
Police decide to strategize using this.
They think they're in the right direction.
They're just really confused.
Like they have all the puzzle pieces.
They just don't know how to fit them together.
They don't have enough evidence to suspect Roger
or his family did anything to Bonnie.
But they can arrest Roger
and Monica for harboring a teenage runaway, which they do.
And this allows them to get fingerprints and photographs, put them in a lineup.
And meanwhile, Roger and Monica both plead not guilty to the charges.
Still, police start passing Roger and Monica's mugshots around Bonnie's workplace.
But unfortunately, none of her co-workers ID either of them as a match for who Bonnie was
talking to that day.
Oh, interesting. Okay.
Not concretely, at least.
However, in September, the prince from Bonnie's truck come back from the parking lot.
And guess whose prints are on the truck that was left in the parking lot at work?
Yeah, I mean, you have the father.
Roger Carroll.
So it turns out he definitely knew Bonnie.
And if he didn't know her, he touched her truck.
But still, Roger denies it repeatedly.
He's like, no, I have no idea how my fingerprints could have got there.
I'm probably being framed.
Oh.
But now the police are more suspicious of him than ever.
And he has to say this because remember, they told police they'd never met Bonn.
They'd never seen her in person.
They'd never had any contact with her.
Oh, yes.
They had to deny everything then.
So when police are like, well, your fingerprints are on her truck, he then has to deny it or change his story.
So police are suspicious and they get a warrant to search the 60 acre property.
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Now equipped with a huge team,
including cadaver dogs and helicopters,
police execute that warrant that same September.
Because again, they're pretty sure they're on the right track.
They find about 30 guns in the home
along with 200 rounds of ammunition.
And while the cadaver dogs do hit on a few areas of the property,
after digging those areas up, they don't find anything.
In fact, they conduct a couple searches of the property that fall,
and it leads them nowhere.
But they also search Rogers Silver Malibu.
Shockingly, though,
they don't find anything proving Bonnie ever sat inside.
No fibers, no DNA, no fingerprints.
the car is actually immaculate.
So at that point, detectives are kind of reaching a stalemate.
They're pretty sure Bonnie has been killed.
There's been no activity on any of her accounts.
She would never leave her family like that so unexpectedly.
But they don't have a body.
They can't prove it.
They think they have the right family or people.
But there's zero evidence to show that Bonnie ever went to the Carol's property,
let alone got in Roger's car,
even though his fingerprints were on her truck.
So right now, the only thing they have
is Roger's prints on Bonnie's car.
And a few other just strange, random things, Heather told the police.
Which is hard because it doesn't mean you've killed someone.
Is it extremely weird?
Yes.
And should you be convicted of killing someone?
Is there enough evidence?
Probably not.
Probably not. I don't know.
So as police are still talking to Heather,
she's just like dropping information here and there that's not really in like tied to anything
specifically but when you put it all together just is a little confusing she says that when she ran
away to stay with them Roger the dad wouldn't let her use phones or computers or anything
in fact she said she couldn't make contact with anyone outside the house while she stayed with
them and that she wasn't allowed to tell the police that she had been staying with them on their
property, which is why it took her so long to say it during her first interrogation, but she obviously
did tell them. This is certainly alarming. Again, not enough for an arrest warrant, so eventually
police move on. And then five years later in 2015, the charges against Monica for harboring a
runaway are dropped. Rogers' charges remain, and Bonnie's missing person case runs cold. Then,
2018, eight years after Bonnie's disappearance, a domestic dispute turns this case on its head.
Yeah.
By this point, Monica and Roger are no longer a united front.
Roger's been cheating on Monica.
Frankly, she's had enough.
Here we go.
He's mentioned divorce to her.
She figures he won't be shocked once she finally serves him papers.
Turns out she's wrong.
On March 2nd of 2018, Monica's getting ready for one.
work when Roger corners her in the laundry room of their home.
He grabs her by the hair, starts dragging her around the house, hitting her with a taser gun.
Oh my gosh.
Monica starts screaming for Nathan, who's no longer a 16-year-old kid.
He's now 25, but still lives with them.
Except Nathan's already left for work, so Monica's alone with Roger and she's on her own.
Now, apparently this wasn't out of the blue.
Monica claims she'd been afraid of Roger for some time.
She'd been sleeping in a separate bedroom, putting a dresser in front of the door at night.
But this, this confrontation was next level.
Monica tries to talk Roger down from this fit of rage, hoping she can rationalize with him.
But he tells her he's not the same person he was.
He's a lot of anger.
He can no longer control.
He's a monster.
The devil is living inside of him.
Oh, give me a break.
At some point, according to Monica, she says, he says to her, quote,
I have killed for you.
Now, the second Monica is out of the house, she rushes to her car, she drives to the courthouse to get a restraining order, but this makes its way to the police.
So obviously the police are like, wait, these two suspects in this cold case that we were pretty sure we had the right people, but we can never put anything together.
Nothing made sense.
Now hate each other?
Now she's filing a restraining order against him.
So police find out that she had also said that he had.
killed for her during this dispute and they're like, wait, he's in our suspect list and he's
telling his wife while beating her that he's killed for her. So they're starting to be like,
wait, is this tied to our case? Also, well, I'm just curious where this goes, because what does
killing someone else's mom have to do with killing for her? Right. So after this incident,
Monica knows that she has to tell police everything she can.
about her husband.
Like, she's now turned fully against her husband.
So she's going to talk to police.
And while she says that, you know,
her and Bonnie or Bonnie and Roger never had a close connection that she's aware of,
there were a few things that stood out to her.
Keep in mind, this is her story.
She claims her husband, Roger,
had taken a weird interest in Bonnie's day-to-day life before she disappeared.
He had asked Heather,
who was staying with them,
about where she worked,
what her schedule was like,
what days of the week she was there.
And at this same time
that they're learning all this,
police are trying to locate Roger.
And that day,
they find him in the woods around his home.
In the woods.
Yeah, so they go to find him
after this dispute
and they discover him
with a bag of syringes and insulin.
He claims he's trying to die by suicide
because he, quote,
hurt his wife bad.
Police are like,
okay, calm down. Yes, there's been a domestic dispute. Yes, your wife is talking to police,
but you need to like put the things down. He is arrested on charges of domestic abuse. But now
prosecutors, when all of this comes to a head, they're determined to get Roger on first degree
murder charges too because now that they have Monica in their back pocket saying like, no,
he was being weird. He was talking about Bonnie. He was doing all of this. They think
that they can get him for this.
So on March 29th, 2018,
a grand jury hearing takes place.
And the star witness
is someone the prosecution made a deal with,
a promise of immunity
in return for their confession.
The one person who, according to Monica and Heather,
because remember, a long time ago,
Heather told police,
I was with Monica at the lakehouse
when Bonnie disappeared.
Who went home, though, Roger
and their 16-year-old son of that?
the time. Nathan. So police decide to give Nathan immunity in return for his testimony against his
father, Roger, who they are claiming killed Bonnie Woodward. So this- It's just so hard. There's
no body. They haven't found anything. Right. So this is Nathan's story, which, I mean, he is a huge
part of this. This is what he tells the court. On the morning of June 25th, 2010, Roger told Nathan,
They were leaving early from the lakehouse, leaving the girls there, to head to the nursing home where Bonnie worked.
When Nathan asked Roger why, he told Nathan she was, quote, a bad person.
She was mean and aggressive and abusive, and she needed to go away and never come back.
Nathan says he also explicitly told him he was going to kill her.
So it just fills out of the blue.
And even when they're like, what's the motive here, Nathan?
He's like, I don't know.
He said that she was a bad person.
What?
So he says when they get back to town, they scoped out the nursing home.
Roger drove Nathan home to their house near Jerseyville, grabbed a gun, and went back to the nursing home.
So now Nathan's like, yeah, I was home.
Later that afternoon, Nathan remembered hearing eight or nine gunshots in the yard.
And when he went outside, he claims he saw his dad, Roger, standing next to Heather's mother, Bonnie, who was now shot to death.
Roger told Nathan that he used Heather as bait to get Bonnie to come with him from work
because what mother wouldn't take the opportunity to rescue their runaway daughter if they could.
And unfortunately, Bonnie never got the chance to even see or say goodbye to Heather
because Heather and Monica at this point are still back at the lakehouse.
Roger moved Bonnie's remains under a pile of brush.
He lit it on fire.
And meanwhile, Nathan was instructed to keep raking the coals to make sure the body was fully burned.
For nearly the next week, Nathan claims he would come outside every couple of hours to stoke the fire and make sure nothing was left of her body.
This is insane.
He says after this, they disposed of any remaining ashes in the creek.
And then Nathan was ordered to mow the lawn where the blood had pooled from Bonnie's bullet wounds.
Even weirder.
Holy shh.
Yeah.
Did you imagine having experienced that at 16, 17 years old?
And like.
What?
No one questions your dad and so you're just doing what he says because this is who he is.
And now she also just doesn't have a mom anymore?
Yeah.
What is happening?
Nathan said after that day, he wasn't encouraged to forget about Bonnie.
And this is weird.
He said his father talked to him every night about it for years.
Oh my.
He's nuts.
So following the grand jury hearing, authorities returned to the Carol's 60-acre property
once more. That April, Nathan led them to the exact spots the crime occurred. He took them to the
place Bonnie was shot, where her body was burned, where her ashes were dumped. And through that process,
police found 27 pieces of human bone fragments, along with shell casings from a 9mm
revolver. This is the same gun Nathan told the court his father had used to kill Bonnie.
Wow. So again, this is just like the pre-true, like this is the grand,
jury. And so Roger is now charged with first degree murder. The case against him was bolstered even
further when the DNA testing on those bone fragments found on his property came back. Twenty-five of
them were proven to belong to Bonnie. Why? Like no reason. I mean, maybe he says there was a reason,
but he just wanted to kill somebody. Yeah. I think that he wanted to kill someone and when Heather
came to them, this was the perfect excuse. He was going to look like the hero for rescuing a teen
age girl from an abusive household.
And he gets to kill someone.
He seems like from the way it's described to be the leader of this house.
Which is very ironic because he's also abusive himself.
Right?
Yeah.
So you killed someone for supposedly being abusive?
Mm-hmm.
So by the time Roger's trial came around in March of 2020, Heather and Monica had also
made a deal with authorities.
Neither one of them were facing charges due to their willingness to cooperate.
with the investigation.
Okay.
Monica testified against her husband at trial and talked about his abuse towards her,
his obsession with tracking Bonnie back in 2010 before the murder, and how she did see the fire
and the cleanup after the murder.
So.
Yeah, I mean, it's a little suspect, right?
Like, that's, I mean, it's a little suspicious.
I mean, this is why she's not, this is why she's even getting, if you're innocent, you
don't need anything in exchange for testifying.
Yeah, it's a little hard because there's a very good chance that she knew exactly what
was happening and just turned a blind eye.
Even if it didn't come out of her husband's mouth.
All I can say is that it's, we'll never know and allegedly because she was never tried
for anything, but it just seemed a little suss to me.
And interesting enough at testimony when Monica is testifying against Roger, she also
mentions how Roger and Heather
Bonnie's stepdaughter,
17-year-old daughter who was staying with them
after running away, took
a long walk together
just the two of them
the day before he left the
lake house to kill Bonnie. So Monica's
like, yeah, he went and killed
her mom, but the day before
that, my husband
and this 17-year-old
girl went for a really long walk
together. I think she's
implying at trial that
Heather was told during that walk before this happened that he was going to kill Bonnie and save her.
That's what Monica's implying at trial.
This is nuts.
Also, a lot of, I just, I'm trying to think about the daughter's psyche, the son's psyche.
Right.
There's just so much involved that I don't know what to really think.
Between the witness testimony, the physical evidence found at the scene and a forensic wood anatomy expert who confirmed their
was a significant fire on the property back in May or June of 2010.
There was more than enough for jurors to deliberate on,
and they found Roger Carroll guilty of first-degree murder.
Okay.
I mean, obviously.
That October 2020,
Roger was sentenced to 40 years for first-degree murder
and 25 years for gun enhancement in connection to the murder.
Okay.
During that hearing, Bonnie's son offered up these words, quote,
my mother was a good-hearted, dedicated mother, grandmother, sister, aunt, friend, and co-worker.
Since Roger Carroll senselessly took her from our family, she's missed the birth of two grandchildren, countless holidays, birthdays, homecoming, my discharge from the Army and my wedding.
I was unable to dance with my mother at my reception, and now, because Roger Carroll destroyed my mother's remains in an attempt to avoid prosecution, he's also robbed us of the ability.
to properly lay her to rest.
Roger Carroll doesn't deserve to spend one more day
enjoying the freedom I defended while in the army.
Good point. 100%.
But as everyone is currently screaming,
and as I can tell it's bothering, Garrett,
there's one part about this case that's probably eating us away.
Yeah, and I feel like it's just...
The motive.
You're just...
Oh, I was thinking something else.
What were you thinking?
Like the daughter.
Oh, yes, yes.
Like I'm just
Anyways
You can go
Maybe I'll address my
Is there manipulation there?
Yeah like what like what's happening?
What's going on?
I
And I
It's hard because she's young and she still has a life
So I don't want to call her out
If the police didn't address anything
And they moved on past it
Yeah
I mean she was
Like what's going on?
Here's the thing
Sometimes we have cases that are just so
open and shut, you have all the evidence, the motive makes perfect, perfect sentence.
I don't mean that in that it makes sense, but at least to us, we can like apply a motive
that we can somewhat understand. You can put a bow on it. They go to prison, blah, blah, blah.
In this case, we have the people, we have the answers of what happened. We have the answers of
how he got her. We have the bow on the case of him going to prison and serving time.
but the thing we don't have is like the main thing people listen to true crime for, which is why?
Why do people do this?
Why would he do this?
If he didn't even know Bonnie, why would you kill someone?
And sometimes that happens in true crime cases where the motive truly is bewildering and it's going to leave you unsatisfied because you're like, what?
Yeah.
Why would this happen?
What is the motive?
Now, all of the sources I read have inferred the same thing about Roger.
He was told by Heather that Bonnie was mean, aggressive, and abusive,
and he decided to kill Bonnie to protect Heather and his own family.
But I can't help but wonder if there's more to the story here,
which is where Garrett's stepping in.
Is Heather that convincing?
She got people.
She just barely met to fall in love with her and kill for her.
It's none of it makes sense.
She also lied to her teacher.
I just, it's also hard to bring it up because I know she was a minor.
during this and it's like, do I want to open that?
If the police never even opened that can of worms, maybe it just was, it didn't matter.
And maybe they went over it and didn't address it.
Well, here's the thing.
The state doesn't really have to prove a motive.
They just have to prove that someone killed someone.
And that's all they were going for which I get, but.
Which they did.
But we believe no one in their right mind would meet someone and then go randomly kill someone
for that person days after meeting them.
Correct.
I mean, yeah, you could say that, but also we're nuts.
And weird stuff happened
So maybe he did just want to kill somebody
That is kind of the
Feeling I'm getting from all the sources
And everything is that
He was aggressive
He was dominant
He had a god complex
And wanted to kill somebody
Wanted to kill someone
So when Heather came in
And he felt like
Oh I can kill someone
Which I've wanted to do
But also claim myself to be the hero
And protecting everyone
That's probably what happened in
Yeah
Nuts
sad, very sad.
The son doesn't have a mom, the daughter doesn't have a mom.
That's just horrible.
And again, anyone else's involvement in this case is alleged, besides Nathan, who admitted
to helping at 16, but received a...
Which is also why I'm just not going to address it because it sounds like they have it
figured out.
I mean, they, yeah, I mean, they put away the person who pulled the trigger.
That's what matters.
All right, you guys, that is our episode for this week, and we will see you next time with
another one.
Love it. I hate it. Goodbye.
Welcome to National Park After Dark. We're your host, Cassie and Danielle.
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