Snapped: Women Who Murder - Judith Nix
Episode Date: May 11, 2025A father is found dead in his home by his ex-wife, so police must unpack a complex family dynamic.Season 32, Episode 2Originally aired: February 26, 2023Watch full episodes of Snapped for FRE...E on the Oxygen app: https://oxygentv.app.link/WatchSnappedPodSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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A surprise late night visit leads to a horrifying discovery.
My ex-husband, he's passed away.
There were two bullet holes.
He has a revolver in one of his hands.
We start questioning exactly what we had.
If it was a suicidal homicide.
To get to the truth, investigators must make sense of a complicated dynamic.
It's very clear in this family, these women are very close to each other. There appear to be a weird and very close nexus between them. But will this
tangled loyalty come undone from the inside out? He starts to relay that
there's more going on here that you need to be aware of. She had foreclosure on
her house, her cars were being repossessed. This is out of desperation.
He said, if you do not give me the money,
he said, I will kill you and hide your money.
The only narrative we have left
is one of premeditated cold-blooded calculated murder. March 21, 2016, Broken Arrow, Oklahoma.
At 9, 11 p.m., 911 operators receive a frantic call from 69-year-old Judith Nix.
My ex-husband, he's passed away. operators receive a frantic call from 69-year-old Judith Nix. What's he out in the house? He's in the master bedroom. OK, and you had a key to let yourself in?
Well, I've got a garage door open.
I dropped by to bring him some chicken for supper,
and I'm his ex-wife, really.
Sure.
Been suicidal at all?
Yes, he's got so many health issues
that neuropathy is getting so painful that he just
can't deal with it anymore.
Officers with the Broken Arrow Police Department arrive at the rural home of 69-year-old Ken Nix.
When they arrive, they find Judith Nix in the front yard.
She looks distraught.
Judith directs the officers towards Ken's bedroom
in the back of the house.
Upon arrival, there was Mr. Nix deceased
in the master bedroom
with what appeared to be a gunshot wound to the head,
and there was a gun underneath his hand.
Mr. Nix had an injury to the left temple,
blood running down his face.
There was blood on his shirt that he was wearing.
After seeing that it was a suicide,
they call out to detectives to come out and investigate.
As investigators arrive, a tearful Judith tells them
that she feared this day would come.
Judith says he suffered from this chronic medical condition.
He was in a tremendous amount of pain.
He was very unhappy.
My dad was on methadone because he has neuropathy
and a lot of pain issues.
According to her, he had talked about shooting
and killing himself.
And initially, you know, it looked like a suicide.
But questions are clicking in your mind that, you know, it looked like a suicide, but questions are clicking in your mind that, you know,
is this really a suicide or is it something else?
Ken Nix was born on September 19, 1946,
to Belton and Betty Nix in Lake Charles, Louisiana.
He had six siblings.
My father was the oldest.
During his childhood in Lake Charles,
he loved to restore cars as a hobby
and tinkered with vehicles and motorcycles in general
because he was very much into motorcycles.
After high school, Ken followed his love for mechanics and attended technical school, where
he honed his skills before opening up his own service station.
My dad was a very good mechanic.
He was the youngest Texco gas station owner in Lake Charles, Louisiana.
Ken was hoping to find someone to share his success with. And in his 20s, he met Monita Moriarty and fell in love.
My dad told me that when he first met my mother, Monita,
it was at an apartment complex.
My father and my mother were married in 1966.
And then I was born February 20, 1967.
And then a year later, had my sister.
Just a year right after that, we moved to Tulsa
to be closer to my grandmother.
After that, they had my brother.
I remember seeing a lot of videos of us as young children.
And my father and mother just looked happy.
Eventually, there were some issues,
and I know that they got separated.
So me and my brother and my sister
were living in an apartment with my mother, Manita.
Unfortunately, on August 29, 1974, tragedy struck the family.
And during that separation, I was age seven.
My mother called my father and said
that she was going to commit suicide.
And my mother did commit suicide.
I remember my father being there.
And he took us home.
And we never saw our mother again.
Over the next 10 years, Ken married and divorced three more times.
I asked my father, I said, Dad, why do you keep getting married all the time?
And he said, son, I want you guys to have both a mom and a father figure, and I'm going
to try it until I get it right. While his marriages may have failed,
Ken's professional life flourished.
In 1980, he started his own business.
He opened up Inland Divers business,
a commercial scuba diving business.
Inland Divers had salvage capabilities
so they could pull vehicles out of the water
or boulders near a dam. He could do anything and make money. Inland divers had salvage capabilities so they could pull vehicles out of the water
or boulders near a dam.
He could do anything and make money.
But even with all that success, Ken never gave up searching for love.
And in 1984, he met Judith Bailey, a divorced mother of two daughters, 16-year-old Angela
and 12-year-old Shelly.
My sister Kim was going to go to a sleepover.
When my sister was being brought home, Judith met my father, and I guess there was an attraction
there.
When Judith met Ken Nix, she was not looking for romance.
Growing up, Judith spent most of her life in church and studying, kept to herself.
She was born and raised in Texas, and then she moved to Tulsa near her parents.
As a young woman, Judith caught the eye of the preacher's son.
Their lifelong friendship turned into romance,
and they married in the late 1960s.
Judy and her husband lived out in the country,
30 minutes outside of Tulsa.
And she was an accountant for Amaco at the time.
Shortly after having two kids, Judith and her husband divorced.
There was drinking and infidelity,
and, well, Judith just couldn't take it anymore.
There was drinking and infidelity, and well, Judith just couldn't take it anymore.
Judith was reluctant to commit to anything serious,
but Ken pulled out all the stops.
Ken introduced Judith to scuba diving,
and it became a shared passion between them.
They were very much into diving.
Judy was wonderful. I never heard them fight.
But in my previous moms, there were fights, you know,
around us.
But with Judy, I never noticed any issues.
A year after meeting, they married in February 1985.
And shortly after, Judith married in February 1985.
And shortly after, Judith moved in with Ken and his kids.
I was probably 13 by the time she moved in.
Her two daughters, Shelly and Angela,
chose to stay with their father who lived nearby.
They had another high school they went to and friends.
So it just was good for their rhythm.
Once the newlywed phase ended, Ken and Judith got down to business.
They focused on the growth of inland divers.
She became part of the business with the administrative side and then going to the sites with him.
For years, both their business and family life were thriving.
But after almost three decades of marriage,
the couple found themselves unable to meet on common ground.
My father raised me and my brother to be able to be on her own and not dependent on anybody.
But Judy coddled her kids, financed her kids anytime they had a problem,
and that caused turmoil between my father and Judy.
So communication between the two was diminishing.
was diminishing.
Judith and Ken divorced in 2011, ending 26 years of marriage. But even after five years of being divorced,
the couple had a hard time letting go.
She had went and bought her own house,
but Judith was still staying at my dad's house sometimes.
And they spent a lot of time together after the divorce.
Judy would come over and they would eat dinner.
But their family's world is shattered on March 21, 2016,
when Judith calls 911 to report that she's just found
Ken dead from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Judith says, last time I was here
was the night before, between 4 to 5 PM
and left because he got kind of grumpy and tired.
She says she tried calling Ken several times earlier that day, but he didn't answer.
Ultimately she went to the store to get some chicken for dinner and came back to the residence
that evening.
Judith says she arrived around 9 p.m.
That was when she went back to the bedroom and found him on the bed.
She just noticed the gun laying next to him.
So she just assumed that Mr. Nixon shot himself.
Judith says, I found him like this. Without further information, and at this point in time,
we don't know what does or doesn't add up.
Before investigators get a chance to ask more questions, they notice she seems unwell.
She appears to be physically distraught.
She complains of chest pain.
He asked her if she was feeling okay and she said that she wasn't EMS who came out to the
scene and determined that she needed to go to the hospital.
Coming up, a seemingly straightforward case takes a twisted turn.
The medical examiner found that there were two bullet holes.
And investigators uncover family secrets.
There's a lot of bitterness. There's a lot of ingrained rage.
They viewed him to be somebody who was mean
and just someone they absolutely did not have a good relationship with.
In March of 2016, police in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma are investigating a reported suicide
after Ken Nix is found dead inside his home with a gun in his hand.
While giving her statement to investigators, Ken's ex-wife Judith begins experiencing
chest pains.
So they're wanting to take her to the hospital.
In doing so, they're asking, is there anything that they can do to help her or help make
sure the house is okay?
And she said, yes, call Shelly.
Shelly was her daughter.
She wanted Shelly to come take care of her dog.
Less than an hour after officials responded to the scene, Judith is transported to the hospital
while detectives head back inside.
Once we got to the bedroom, we found him.
The gun was laying next to him.
And initially, you know, he looked like a suicide.
The medical examiner joins detectives,
and they take a closer look at Ken's injuries.
The blood on the side of his head was dry,
and I could see levitity.
Levitity is the pooling of blood.
It takes hours to develop.
We were able to deduct that he'd been there quite a while.
But we had a general idea that it had been early in the morning
that he supposedly had shot himself.
The medical examiner determines Ken died around 730 AM,
approximately 14 hours before Judith called 911.
We knew that there had been a delay in the call to 911,
and that could have been just because
there was no one there to find him.
But then the medical examiner makes a startling discovery.
He was able to move the body and clean off some of the blood and found that there were
two bullet holes approximately an inch apart. Investigators are immediately suspicious of
Judith's story. Who commits suicide and is able to shoot themselves twice in the head.
able to shoot themselves twice in the head.
And upon closer inspection of Ken's body, investigator Jackie Smithson catches a new clue.
I saw that the blood stain on the shirt that Mr. Nix was
wearing at the time didn't align with the injury
and the position in which he was in.
Blood flows with gravity, the laws of physics.
So the injury was to his left temple,
and the blood should have ran straight down,
but the shirt was in a position in which the blood ran at an angle
from his left side to his navel instead of straight down.
So there was movement after he was shot.
At that point, we realized that we have a homicide.
After the suicide theory falls apart,
the homicide investigation goes into full swing.
The team starts to comb the house for clues.
There was nothing knocked over.
There were no signs of a struggle.
The house was just normal.
No signs of forced entry.
In the kitchen, investigators spot the dinner
Judith reported bringing for her ex-husband.
On the kitchen island, there was a container
that was holding fried chicken.
And they find something else of interest.
We did observe that there was a security-type camera that was pointing toward the master bedroom.
We went ahead and seized the camera system, security system.
We sent that away to a lab to look at it.
As investigators continue processing the scene,
they get word that Judith's youngest daughter, Shelley,
has just arrived at Ken's to pick up her dog.
When Nixon's daughter Shelley came to recover the dog,
she made a passing comment that caused some of the officers
to perk up.
Shelly is talking to officers and says, oh, yes,
I was here earlier this morning when my mom was here.
Judith told us that she hadn't been at that house
since the 20th, the day before.
Could there be an explanation?
Sure.
Lady just found her ex-husband's dead body.
That could make anybody distraught.
But it's going to give them things they need to follow up on.
Her statements, timeline-wise, are not linking up with Judith's.
They asked Shelley to come back to the police station and give a more thorough statement.
Judith is held at the hospital overnight for observation.
The following morning, on March 22nd, detectives sit down with 47-year-old Shelley Davis.
Investigators question Shelley about her mother's relationship with Ken.
We started getting a lot more information on the relationship between Kenneth and Judith,
that it wasn't a great relationship.
Shelly claims that Ken was hostile towards Judith.
Shelly, she made accusations that he had abused her,
pushed her around, threatened her, and stuff like that.
You got very quickly a sense that they did not
like Kenneth Nix, and Kenneth Nix did not like Shelley
or her sister, Angela.
They viewed him to be somebody who was mean, somebody who
was abusive.
They absolutely did not have a good relationship with him.
Next, detectives ask Shelley for her whereabouts the day prior.
She tells police she went to Ken's house
around 11 o'clock that morning.
She said she went to the house,
and she was met at the front door by Judith,
and they exchanged money there.
She never went inside the residence.
With the estimated time of death at 7.30 a.m.,
investigators now suspect Ken was already
dead when Shelley stopped by the house.
Now we have a problem because if Judith's been there all morning, then it's clear she's
known about his death for a lot longer.
At this point, they don't think that Judith or Shelley are being completely honest here.
They already know Judith lied.
It's a homicide.
And if you have information, you need to release that information.
They were trying to be secretive about it.
In an effort to pin down the truth, investigators make a bold move.
We charge her with accessory to murder.
We're not looking to, you know, put everybody in jail.
We just want to find the right person.
We thought that we could put pressure a little bit on Judith that, hey, we arrested your
daughter, Shelly.
We're coming after you.
You're next.
But before they get a chance to pay Judith a visit, a call comes into the Broken Arrow Police Department
from Todd Moore, her daughter Angela's ex,
claiming he has information on Ken's murder.
Todd Moore makes his own phone call to the police to say,
hey, there's more going on here that you need to be aware of.
What's happening is not the way that it's being portrayed.
Coming up, a family insider brings forth a shocking claim.
He's thinking, oh, my goodness.
Are you coming to me with this and telling me this?
Leaving investigators with more questions than answers.
There's nothing really to tell us who did or didn't
actually pull that trigger.
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Authorities in broken arrow Oklahoma investigating the
shooting death of Ken
Nix are getting ready to question his estranged wife Judith when they receive
a call from her former son-in-law Todd Moore. Angela's ex-husband Todd winds up
calling police himself trying to give them the information about what he had
at least heard or seen about what actually took place inside the home.
Todd tells detectives that around noon
on the day of the murder, his ex Angela and her sister
Shelly showed up with quite a story to tell.
Shelly and her sister Angela actually
ended up going to Angela's estranged husband's house,
where they tell him that Judith has shot Kenneth.
He's thinking, oh my goodness, why are you coming to me with this and telling me this?
Todd says Angela and Shelly were desperately
trying to figure out how to help their mother cover up
the crime.
According to Todd, they had discussed her
fleeing to the Philippines. At to Todd, they had discussed her fleeing to the Philippines.
At one point, they had discussed staging the scene as a robbery.
Refusing to participate in their brainstorming session,
Todd urged the women to take a different course of action.
Todd actually encouraged them to self-report,
which caused Angela, I believe, to leave.
She just walked away, obviously distraught.
Todd tells authorities he has not seen or heard from Angela since.
Todd's crucial because he's the first person who doesn't have a vested interest in seeing her get away with it necessarily.
Todd makes it clear to detectives that Judith and her daughters are unwavering in their loyalty to one another.
It actually puts the picture together completely because you have to understand people lie for reasons.
It's very clear this family, these women, are very close to each other. In the case in regards to motive for why this happened,
investigators start looking at the animosity
between both Shelley and Angela and Kenneth Nix and Judith.
But there's nothing really to tell us one way or the other
who did or didn't actually pull that trigger.
Before detectives make their next move, they hear back about the security cameras found
in Ken's home.
They found there was no memory to recover.
There was no videos to recover.
Unfortunately, they were never able to determine what exactly happened to the security footage.
But again, this is another red flag.
Something else that adds to the pile of, this doesn't make sense.
Still hoping to get to the bottom of what happened
inside the Nicks' home that morning,
investigators head to the hospital to speak with Judith.
Once Shelley was arrested, Judith Nicks in the hospital
tells one of the officers,
I'm ready to talk to the detectives now.
Judith starts to describe Kendis deteriorating physical health and his mental health,
again, that he was angry and uncomfortable.
But then Judith admits that she hasn't been completely honest with police.
She presents them with a very different chain of events leading up to Ken's death.
He was lonely and he had somebody there, but he was just impossible,
impossible to live with because of all those health issues.
Plus the money situation.
Ken's been on a binge ten years about me owing him money
or what he's spent on my kids.
We don't have any kids together.
From what I understand of him, from what I know of him from previous,
he's got plenty of money.
He always has money.
This never seemed to be enough for him.
This never seemed to be enough for him. Judith also tells investigators what Shelley already reported,
that she had long suffered domestic violence at the hands of her ex-husband.
He's threatened me all the time. He's hit me.
Um, verbal abuse has been absolutely out of this world.
You know, it's easy to say you can just leave.
But I love the guy.
You said he's been violent in the past.
Yes.
Right in June, that's right.
Yes.
And he wants me to give him money that he spent on my kids.
He said, well, I'll take $21,000.
And I said, well, I don't have $21,000 candy candy for you.
The morning of Ken's murder, Judith
says Ken confronted her in the bedroom,
this time with his gun in hand.
He said, if you do not give me the money, he said, I will kill you and hide your body. Fearing for her life and acting on instinct, Judith lunged at him and a scuffle ensued.
I grabbed the gun because I was trying to turn it, wrestle it away from me.
I didn't know what the hell I was doing. Then I managed to get it away from him somehow,
some way, twisted it.
And then the guy went off.
How many times did the gun go off?
Twice, I believe.
Judith Nix said she panicked after what occurred, went to her daughters for support and direction
as to what she should do and created a worse situation.
There's only one problem.
Judith's account doesn't match up with the evidence found at the scene.
There does not appear to be really any evidence of a struggle.
Signs of a fight, a physical or verbal altercation that led to somebody losing it.
And we have a man with two bullet holes in his head where she said,
I had to shoot him.
Those facts don't line up whatsoever.
The investigation is far from over, in his head where she said, I had to shoot him. Those facts don't line up whatsoever.
The investigation is far from over,
but they aren't letting Judith leave
the hospital a free woman.
Judith Mix was charged with murder,
so she was arrested there and transported it immediately
from the hospital to the jail for booking.
There is one person alleged to be involved who police haven't talked to yet.
Judith's daughter, Angela.
Shelley and Angela may have been involved in this, either planning it or the very least
and helping clean it up and conceal it after the fact.
We went looking for Angela.
We knew where she lived in Tulsa,
and we went to her residence a couple of times
and couldn't find her.
In the meantime, detectives put in a request for phone records
for Angela, Shelly, and Judith.
Police are talking to Shelly.
They're starting to get some statements from Judith,
but they haven't heard from Angela yet. They're leaving voicemails like, you need to Shelly. They're starting to get some statements from Judith. But they haven't heard from Angela yet.
They're leaving voicemails like, you need to come in.
When they have no luck finding Angela,
they issue a material witness warrant for her arrest.
Coming up, investigators reach for a bluff.
In confronting her with the camera or the possible footage, she got a little spooked.
And a well-hidden motive emerges.
He was always getting his pills taken.
I believe it was to fuel her drug habit. It's been 48 hours since the murder of Ken Nix, and investigators have his ex-wife Judith
and her daughter Shelly in police custody while they work to track down her other daughter,
Angela. We needed to find her because we're trying to get
the three pieces together just to get the right story.
Finally, three days after Ken's murder, Angela Moore turns up.
It takes days of trying to communicate with her
to get her to come in to where the police almost have to issue a warrant to get her to come in.
She finally comes in and provides a statement.
Despite her ex-husband Todd's claims,
Angela says that she knows nothing about Ken's murder.
Angela made statements that I was in the house,
but I didn't go into the bedroom.
I just kind of stayed in the front area.
Angela told police she didn't help cover anything up, and I didn't go into the bedroom. I just kind of stayed in the front area.
Angela told police she didn't help cover anything up,
and she didn't help stage the suicide.
Investigators don't believe her.
They reach for a bluff, telling Angela
that the security camera in the kitchen was in working order.
There was no memory on that camera, so we had no access to anything that happened inside
that residence.
But instead of getting her to talk, when investigators bring up the camera, Angela shuts down.
In confronting Angela with the camera or the possible footage. Angela got a little spooked. She lured up on us, and we really didn't
get any information from her.
And looking at Angela's, Shelly's, and Judith's
statements, none of them appeared really
to match one with the other.
At the very least, investigators believe
Judith's daughters tried to help her stage the suicide.
When looking at Kent's clothes, you know, they appear to be bunched somewhat under the armpits like his body had attempted to be moved.
The blood trail doesn't add up or make sense.
And there's no other reason for her daughters to go into that house unless she's going to help her mother try to set the scene up and make it look different.
To get to the truth, investigators take a deep dive into Judith and Ken's marriage,
starting with Judith's claims that Ken was abusive.
When Judith Nix raises the flag that I'm a victim of violence, we want to make sure I'm not further victimizing her by prosecuting her for defending herself.
So we take it very seriously.
Investigators do uncover a few domestic disturbance calls to the Broken Arrow Police Department over the last six years.
In looking at Judith and Kendis's relationship, we could tell things started
to deteriorate more towards the end to where there were a couple of 911 calls placed between
them. There had been several incidents, but ironically, some of those calls actually involved
Kenneth calling the police and saying that Judith was threatening to kill him. We had been out there, but nobody had been arrested.
Nobody wanted to arrest anybody.
Investigators gain more insight when
they receive phone records for Judith, Shelly, and Angela.
Once we get into her phones, we get
into some heart-stopping communications
that Judith was having with
her own daughters.
For weeks prior and days prior, she's texting about how much she dislikes and loathes Kenneth.
When you look at these texts, there's a lot of bitterness.
There's a lot of ingrained rage.
As Judith's hatred for Ken comes into focus,
so does a complicated financial dynamic.
There appeared to be a weird and very close nexus
between Judith Nix and her daughters
and their financial status.
Judy and my father would talk, and they would agree,
we can't keep supporting our adult kids,
but Jesus kept feeding money to them.
In a disturbing turn, on March 15, just five days
before the murder, Judith texts her daughter Angela
about a gun.
There's a lot of discussion with her and her daughters.
One of the conversations that comes up involves a gun. There's a lot of discussion with her and her daughters. One of the conversations
that comes up involves a gun. He discusses a.22. The murder weapon in this case was
a.22 caliber Ruger. And here she is days before the homicide talking about a.22 caliber
gun. To detectives, that comes out as intent. You know that she's thinking about getting a gun
and shooting Ken.
Investigators reach out to Ken's sons, Keith and Kevin.
They confirm that the relationship
between Judith and Ken was marred by distrust.
Judith stole money from Ken at every turn.
Ken was on to her and was fed up with the stealing.
The stealing with his money was prior to their divorce.
And it was even after she was coming back over to my father's house.
The stealing was just a constant thing.
But Ken's sons tell investigators that wasn't the only thing she stole.
He had neuropathy and he was always getting his pills taken by Judy.
And when he would confront her about the stealing,
she would say that he was crazy and that he just took too many pills and forgot.
But she still would steal.
I believe it was to fuel her drug habit.
Kevin explains that's what led his father to install the camera in the kitchen.
He caught her on camera and she'd say sorry, sorry, sorry.
And he's like, I need that for my neuropathy.
He'd say, sorry, sorry, sorry. And he's like, I need that for my neuropathy.
The weekend prior to his murder, Judy was there
and talked to my dad.
He was like, things aren't good.
He was like, she needs to leave.
My father was telling my wife, it ain't good.
Kind of said the same to him and me, but he's a man.
It's his house.
We can't say anything.
Following the interviews, investigators look into Judith's finances,
and they find she was under a mountain of debt.
Not only is she in financial distress,
but you have some very specific statements from Kenneth,
of, get me this money by this day.
Get out.
So you have that clock that's slowly ticking down
to where she feels like she has no other choice
but to kill Kenneth next.
But investigators wonder, if Ken was Judith's gravy train,
wouldn't he be worth more to her alive than dead?
Investigators discover that a condition of their divorce
agreement may hold the answer to that question.
After their divorce, at that point in time,
Judith Nix owned her own home.
And there was the marital home of Kenneth and Judith,
where she had a partial interest.
At the time of their divorce,
Ken Nix was the sole tenant of the house.
However, according to financial records,
Judith maintained the right of survivorship.
It's kind of a perfect storm to where, if Kenneth is gone,
Judith receives the house in its entirety.
So her deal was, I kill him, I get the whole house.
So she would sell that, be out of debt easily.
But you can't kill somebody and gain.
So she tried to make it look like a suicide.
somebody and gang. So she tried to make it look like a suicide.
Coming up, Judith maintains her defense.
They hired an expert to try to come in and talk about battered
woman syndrome.
But who will a jury believe?
Judith Nix did not seem like she would hurt a fly.
Judith Nix remains in custody for her alleged involvement in the murder of Ken Nix.
Investigators believe they have uncovered her true motive.
The house and the property that would have gone to her,
that appeared to be to us a driving motivating factor for Judith committing this homicide.
With the evidence against Judith getting stronger by the day,
prosecutors and investigators are ready to move forward with their case.
The only narrative we have left is one of premeditated cold-blooded calculated murder.
The decision was made to ultimately bring a murder first-degree charge against Judith Niggs.
As prosecutors prepare for trial, they attempt to bring two unlikely witnesses on board,
Judith's daughters, Angela and Shelly.
Judith's daughters, as far as we can tell, we didn't find any evidence they were involved
with trying to plan this or set it up.
In this case, priority number one, if somebody is shot, is making sure that the shooter, if they've committed a crime,
is held accountable.
Oftentimes, that means that people who are ancillary to,
or in some ways after the fact, assisting, their testimony
is so necessary that we use that testimony
as part of our prosecution.
When you charge a defendant, they can't testify.
In the end, Angela and Shelly are not
charged in Ken's murder.
Well, we might have our personal opinions about what happened.
Without some of that actual evidence to be able to charge,
we felt that it was far better to use their testimony
in the light of witnesses.
It was far better to use their testimony in the light of witnesses.
Judith Nix stands trial in March of 2017.
The defense was trying to establish that Judith was a victim, that she was defending herself, that she had been consistently assaulted and battered by him.
Judith Nix was a very sympathetic defendant in the sense that she did not seem like she would hurt a fly. She doesn't seem to be a threat to the community.
These are all pinpoints that the defense focused on.
Prosecutors argue that it was Judith who terrorized Ken. And on the morning of March 21, 2016,
motivated by a mix of anger and greed,
she snuck into his bedroom as he slept.
The evidence was not consistent with Judith's story
about a struggle over a gun.
But it is consistent with her having approached him
while he was asleep, pressing the gun to his face
at very close range.
while he was asleep, pressing the gun to his face at very close range.
The first shot was non-lethal, would have been very painful.
And then the evidence would have been consistent with Judith
then taking the second time to press the gun closer
to his head in firing.
The lethal shot was the second shot.
The lethal shot was the second shot. Prosecutors call Angela and Shelley to the stand.
The women testify about the panic that ensued in the aftermath of the murder.
Judith's daughters said what we needed them to say in the sense that they told the bare
minimum facts to line up the case.
They helped us establish a timeline.
They helped us establish when things were said
and what things were observed.
Their testimony helped us knock out
a bunch of different alternative possibilities.
They did testify against their mother,
and I know that wasn't easy,
and they knew what they were saying,
the parts that were true, were going to be hurtful for her.
On March 10, 2017, it takes the jury less than two hours
to reach a verdict.
Jury deliberated about an hour and a half
and returned with a verdict of guilty
and sentenced her to life in prison
No matter how sympathetic she was no jury was gonna side with her her decision to murder him in his sleep
Today Ken's children and grandchildren are a living legacy of the man Ken was.
I want everybody to know he was a great dad.
He built three great kids that could stand on their own and take care of themselves.
The legacy Kenneth left behind was of a family that loved him deeply,
of sons that miss him very much,
of great grandkids who are never going to get to meet him.
His sons essentially give him credit for everything that makes them who they are today.
In 2018, Judith Nix filed an appeal and the judge upheld her conviction and her sentence.
Judith Nix is eligible for parole but would be 108 years old before she would qualify
for release. Angela Moore and Michael Davis' initial charges were dropped,
and they have never been convicted of any crime
related to Ken Nix's murder.
Navigating family matters can be tough.
At Learners, we understand the challenges you face.
Whether you need help drafting a prenup,
filing for divorce, or making support arrangements,
at Learners, our team of experienced family lawyers are here to guide you every step of
the way.
These are life-altering events that come with many questions and concerns.
Trust Learners to help you move forward.
Visit LearnersFamilyLaw.ca.
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