Snapped: Women Who Murder - Patty James
Episode Date: November 3, 2024Investigators search for motives after a father is found strangled and battered in his driveway.Season 30 Episode 23Originally aired: Mar 20, 2022Watch full episodes of Snapped for FREE on th...e 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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After his family endured a heartbreaking tragedy, she stepped in to fill the void left behind.
She agreed to adopt us all and become basically our new mother.
And after years of turmoil, she finally felt she belonged.
She had a very noticeable and deep scar that she carried with her for the rest of her life.
He didn't see that. He saw the beautiful person on the inside.
But a terrible crime abruptly upends the life they built together.
The family found him inside of his vehicle.
He was struck blunt trauma right side of the head over the ear.
It didn't happen in the vehicle.
As an investigation launches, detectives must wade through a sea of lies and deception to catch a killer.
She pretends to be an entirely made-up flight attendant.
He seems confused and he says he's never even heard of the couple.
She was using me and a lot of her scams and cons.
Detectives quickly find that outward appearances can't disguise the monster within.
When a person closes the door at night,
nobody knows what goes on inside.
They would get into huge fights,
and they were all yelling fights, screaming matches.
She goes, I don't remember anything about this murder.
I don't remember being part of the murder.
If the word evil could be applied to a person,
it would definitely be applied to her.
In the late 1980s, Wilton Manors, Florida
had all the charm of a beach town without
the hustle and bustle of visiting tourists.
Wilton Manors has been a small, quiet area where people move to get away from Fort Lauderdale
and the noise that you would get from the beach area.
A quiet bedroom community for the most part.
Definitely a low-crime area.
But on March 24, 1987, at 9.22 PM, an urgent 911 call comes in from the family of 37-year-old Bernie James, reporting a dire situation outside the family home.
It was reported to us that the victim's wife found him inside of his vehicle with the front
seat, front passenger seat fully reclined.
He was slumped over to the side, he was unresponsive, and the family, as reported, removed him from
the vehicle and began CPR on him.
EMS responded along with Will Manus PD.
When the first unit responds on scene, the person was on the lawn being attended to with
CPR.
EMS determined that the victim was deceased.
Assessing his injuries, it's clear 37-year-old Bernie James didn't die of natural causes.
The first officer observed that there was some blood on the right side of the ear.
There was blood inside the car part of center console.
It was clear trauma to the right side of the victim's head.
The victim also had ligature marks around his neck.
That means that somebody was strangling him.
This was done to him and quite effectively because he was lifeless.
First thing the officer is gonna find out is how did he get there and what
happened. When detectives arrive on the scene they find three of Bernie's family
members outside. His brother-in-law Michael Michael, his mother-in-law, Jane,
and his wife, 36-year-old Patty James.
The family is shocked.
This is not someone you would expect to be murdered.
He's known as a man that everybody loved.
MUSIC
Born on July 1, 1949 in Washington, D.C., Bernie James was raised within a large family
in the Maryland suburbs.
Bernie was the eldest of nine children.
My father was really big into Boy Scouts and nature, and he loved to camp.
He loved to canoe, hiking.
After high school, Bernie enlisted in the Marines and ended up in Vietnam.
He served two tours,
was a Lance Corporal in the Marine Corps.
He wouldn't talk about Vietnam very much,
but I do know it had a profound impact on him.
In the 1970s, Bernie returned to Maryland and joined the fire department.
He became a firefighter because he did have a very protective nature and he loved to help
people.
He was a paramedic, which is how he met my mother, Lisa Jean Paul.
They were both paramedics and they actually met on a call.
They were both responding to a medical situation.
They kind of hit it off a little bit. One thing led to another, and they were married within a year.
My mom and dad just loved each other so much.
They had like a magnetic attraction to one another.
Bernie and his beloved wife, Lisa, welcomed three kids
in just over three years of marriage,
Michael, Irene, and Nicholas.
My brother is two years older than me.
My sister is one year older than me.
I am the youngest.
But the close knit family would be ripped apart just before Christmas 1980.
My mother Lisa had an aneurysm and collapsed.
Unfortunately, there was nothing the doctors could do for her.
And after the 12 hours, they had ceased life support.
With three children under three years old,
Bernie struggled to hold his family together.
My mother's death had a huge impact on my father.
He was completely distraught afterward.
He didn't know what he was going to do because he had raised three children who were all
very close in age.
I can imagine how difficult it must have been to be a single man with three very young children.
As the years passed, the single father yearned to find love again, and in 1982, yet another
chance encounter would bring him just that.
My father was working dispatch for the fire station and was working the emergency line,
this was the days before 911, and this woman named Patty called him up.
She was looking for a different person,
but he was the one on duty that day.
They struck up a conversation
and he told her about his problems.
They kind of build up a little bit
of a friendship over the phone.
They got to talking.
She would call every single day just to talk to him.
He'd been a widower for two years now and was having a hard time raising his children.
So a woman expressing interest in him was appealing to him.
She seemed nice.
She really seemed to like us.
Patty and her family were from Silver Spring, Maryland.
Her father was a police detective.
Her mother was a banker.
She was the mill child.
Despite her stable upbringing, Patty
struggled with her self-confidence.
She had the scar that literally dragged
a portion of her face down.
So that physically is the first thing that you really notice with her.
Patty developed a tumor when she was very young.
Had to have it surgically removed that left her with a very noticeable and deep scar that
she carried with her for the rest of her life.
It became like the focus of her life.
It was like, you know, I'm hideous, I'm deformed.
No one's ever going to like me, over love me.
In spite of her insecurities, Patty found love not once, but twice.
She had two prior marriages.
Previously, she had been married to Richard Manken, who was a Fort Lauderdale police officer.
Divorced in 1982, Patty was ready to put herself out there
again when she struck up her friendship with Bernie.
Things were going well with Patty and Bernie on the phone.
They just clicked.
But she was a little apprehensive to meet him
in person because, of course, she
didn't know how he'd react to that scar on her face.
Finally, Patty and Bernie agreed to meet.
He didn't see that scar on her face.
He didn't see that.
He saw the beautiful person on the inside.
As we speed up the relationship, she ends up
moving in with Bernie.
Patty ended up being the surrogate mom
to these three children of his because basically he was working all the time.
Patricia made it seem like she would be a loving devoted mother to us, that she would help him and
that you know like I could imagine that he saw it as a great weight lifted off of his shoulder.
The couple quickly married in 1982,
and Patty took steps to show her commitment
to Bernie's three toddlers.
She said, you know, she really loved us,
and she wanted to be our mother, you know,
legally as well as, you know, in name.
So, you know, she agreed to adopt us all
and become our, basically, our new mother.
About a year after their wedding, the James family made an abrupt move.
So we were living in Edgewater, Maryland.
Our father's family is there and Patty's family has moved to Florida.
So she decides to move us all down to Florida to be with her family.
Florida provided a fresh start for Bernie to pursue something he was passionate about.
He finally landed the Florida State Park job.
What affected his decision to become a park ranger and his love of the outdoors stemmed from his time in Vietnam.
I used to go with him on some of his ride-alongs.
He was charged with caring for the alligators.
So when we got down to Florida, you know,
everything is hunky-dory, this is gonna be good for us.
But three years later, things have gone terribly wrong.
Patty discovers him seated in her front seat of the vehicle, unresponsive.
Patty explains to detectives she is willing to help with the investigation as much as
she can, but first she needs to tend to her children.
She's got to focus her attention on the kids while the detectives are like standing outside
trying to piece together what happened out there.
While Patty and her family head inside to break the news to her children, outside a homicide investigation begins.
EMS and Wilton Manors PD then secures the scene,
and we come in to do our job.
We had motor oil off to the side
and some tools inside the vehicle.
The victim's wallet was a few feet from the vehicle.
It appeared to have been rifled through
and it was tossed over on the driveway area.
There was no cash, but his ID and credit cards
was still in the wallet.
In my experience, if someone's gonna commit a robbery and they take a wallet or a purse,
they're not going to inventory it right there.
They're going to run down the street or hop in the car and we'll find the purse or the
remnants of the wallet blocks away, not at the scene.
That's an inconsistency with a traditional type of robbery.
With Bernie's murder seeming less like a random act of violence,
investigators suspect something more sinister may be at play.
So police were asking the question now, was this personal?
Coming up, a potential suspect emerges. And now, was this personal?
Coming up, a potential suspect emerges. She came out there and he was talking to a black guy.
And a calculated scheme is revealed.
The scene was set up.
Somebody's not telling the truth.
MUSIC
March 24th, 1987, Wilton Manners, Florida. Investigators are inspecting a puzzling scene
outside the home of murder victim, Bernie James.
We have the wallet which was strewn about.
You also had the victim who was, out laying on the driveway, partially on the grass
outside of the vehicle.
We also have the vehicle, which is a significant piece of evidence because this is where the
crime is alleged to have occurred.
As the crime scene survey wraps up
and Bernie's body is sent to the medical examiner's office
for a proper autopsy,
reality sets in for Bernie's kids
who are just six, seven, and eight years old.
At that time, we were living with Jane Donahue,
Patricia's mom, and Patricia woke us all up,
and she brought us all into her bed.
And she had said, you know,
I have something terrible to tell you.
Your father's been murdered.
And I remember crying.
I started to shut down.
I'm in total shock.
I can't believe anyone would ever kill my father.
He was the nicest person in the world.
No one should ever have had a reason to kill him.
After settling her children, Patty heads back outside
to recap the chilling events that led to the 911 call.
Patty initially told the detectives on the scene
that they had just gotten home from the grocery store and she was put the groceries out.
Bernie told her that he initially had to do or take care of an electrical problem in the vehicle and also had to do an oil change on the car.
And she subsequently went inside the house and he stayed outside in the front yard with the vehicle.
and he stayed outside in the front yard with the vehicle.
Patty, she's in the house, and she decides to go outside and check on Bernie.
She came out there and he was talking to a black guy
who's looking for some matches.
He just wanted to light a cigar down the road.
Patty says, though she got a good look at the man,
she didn't recognize him.
He was approximately six feet tall in his 20s,
spoke with a French accent, was wearing a light-colored shirt and dark-colored pants.
Although she thought the situation was odd,
Patty says her husband told her to go back into the house.
She said she went back inside the house.
Approximately 20 minutes later, she'd come back outside the house,
and that's when she found Bernie inside the vehicle and the blackmail gun.
So she went back in the house and called the mother who came outside
and checked on him and found that he didn't have a pulse.
She then calls her brother Michael, who lives just a few houses down the street.
That's kind of houses down the street.
That's kind of out of the ordinary to call her brother before she'd call fire rescue.
In stressful moments, people react differently and sometimes panic.
And the first thing they do is they call somebody that they know to come help them.
After speaking with Patty, police turned to her mom and brother, who'd rushed to her side
after the discovery of the body.
Patty's mom, Jane, said that evening she was sick and she went to bed about 6.30 because
she wasn't feeling well.
And approximately 8.45, she was waking up by Patty screaming,
calling her, telling her to come outside.
And basically, her story is just the word Patty had said.
They cooperate everything that she's telling the police.
Her brother saying, yeah, my sister called me,
and she's crying.
She's screaming.
I couldn't understand the word, but she said,
get over here, something's happened to Bernie.
So he rushes over.
Our brother came over to the house
and removed them from the vehicle,
and then they began doing CPR.
With the immediate witnesses' stories all matching up,
investigators take a different approach.
Patty works with a sketch artist to give him all the details
and describe the man who she saw talking to her husband.
There's a quiet residential neighborhood in Wilt Manors,
so things like that don't usually happen,
and people know who's in the neighborhood.
So once the sketch is done, the police went around knocking
to knocking on doors of several houses in the neighborhood. So once the sketch is done, the police went around knocking to knocking on doors of several houses in the neighborhood,
showing the composite, and they got no response from anybody
that had seen this individual.
So the first night of search, basically nothing comes up.
There's no suspect located that night.
The next morning, investigators hope
the autopsy will help explain the horrific chain of events.
The victim was struck, blunt trauma, right side of the head, over the ear.
He had several ligature marks that were around his neck in an ascending position, which means
somebody was pulling up on his neck with some type of ligature,
whether it be a rope, whether it be wire.
He died of asphyxiation as determined
by the medical examiner.
Bernie doesn't have any defensive wounds at all,
which means he was probably surprised by his attacker.
So basically, he didn't know what was coming.
He just got hit.
Went down, ligatures applied, he's choked out,
he dies of asphyxiation.
And that could not have occurred in the car.
It didn't happen in the vehicle because there was no room in the vehicle
to be able to strike somebody in the head.
And with blunt force trauma to the head,
you're going to have tremendous amount of bleeding coming from the ear and that area.
So in this instance, when you observe the vehicle and the passenger side, you're not seeing that
amount of blood that should coincide with the type of injury that he sustained.
Now detectives know that the murder didn't happen in
that car, it happened somewhere else.
After reviewing the medical examiner's findings, investigators turned to the
victim's vehicle for more clues. We have a garage facility where we conduct
further investigation about the vehicle.
We take blood samples from inside the car.
We look for any other trace evidence that may be present.
One of the things that Patty had said was that he was going to do an oral change.
They checked the dipstick. They noticed the vehicle was at full.
So that's inconsistent to what she had said that he was going to do an oral change.
So that's inconsistent to what she had said that he was going to do, and it all changed.
The discovery casts doubt on Patty's initial story.
The lack of excessive blood within the vehicle,
the scene was set up with the oil cans when the car didn't need oil.
The fact that the wallet was rifled through within a couple of feet of the vehicle.
When you look at all the physical evidence, it is absolutely inconsistent with the report
to 911 and to the police.
Somebody's not telling the truth, and investigators begin to look at Patty.
We need the talk to her again.
Coming up, investigators learn things aren't all they seem in the James household.
I could see it in my dad's eyes and face
that he just wanted to get far away from possible.
And a stunning confession adds a new twist to the investigation.
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Two days after beloved father and park ranger,
Bernie James was murdered,
investigators in Broward County, Florida,
are beginning to poke holes
in his wife, Patty's, initial statement.
Patty implied that the murder
must have happened outside the house.
She had just seen him earlier with the blackmail,
and then 20 minutes later, she comes out again,
and then he's dead.
You know, it just didn't make any sense.
I think she totally made up the story.
Rather than tip Patty off with probing questions,
they begin digging into her relationship with Bernie
through other means.
We want to know what their personal life is about.
So we start talking to other people
to see if there's any issues with the two of them.
On March 27th, 1987, investigators question
Bernie's parents, Dolores and Bernard James Sr.
And they paint a troubling picture
of the couple's relationship.
Bernie's parents fly into town for their son's funeral, and detectives do meet with them,
and they discover that after Bernie married Patty, there was definitely some bad blood
within the family.
Patricia had told my dad, I'm the woman of the house now.
Care for me, care for your children, don't care for other people.
And so he kind of stopped helping out his parents.
He stopped buying them food, you know,
stopped doing all those things.
And she had somehow convinced my dad
to move down to Florida
because there was this rift in the family.
Bernie's mother, Dolores,
said she hadn't talked to her son very often.
One of the things that she did brought up
is that they left Maryland and moved,
and they lost contact with him.
Dolores kind of said that the reason that Bernie married
Patricia is to fill a void in his life
and have somebody who could take care of his children.
So in that capacity, he kind of rushed into this whole
relationship with her.
I never saw them kiss.
I never saw them hold hands.
I never saw them hug.
I saw it more of like a companionship
or a friendship type relationship.
Bernie's parents say that a lack of affection
wasn't the only issue plaguing Bernie and
Patty's marriage.
They would get into huge fights and they were all verbal yelling fights, screaming matches,
and she would make him leave.
As I got older and I started to see their dynamic, I could see it in my dad's eyes and face
that he just wanted to get as far away from her as possible.
Bernie's mother says that after years of silence,
she finally heard from her son in the fall of 1985.
Before my father's murder was the first time
he called his mother in years.
My father told her that he was coming home,
that he was going to leave Patty, that he had coming home, that he was going to leave Patty,
that he had had enough, that he was going to, you know,
leave her, divorce her.
But Dolores says Bernie never followed
through with the move.
And almost a year later, she received a disturbing
communication from her son.
Dolores had said approximately six months prior to the murder,
she received a typewritten letter supposedly coming from her son
that he had been drinking and that he had been abusing Patricia.
And she felt that was kind of odd that he was sent her a typewritten letter.
It was completely out of character for Bernie,
so the family started to wonder if Patty wrote that letter.
On April 8th, 1987, investigators confront Patty
with their suspicions about her story
and her strained relationship with Bernie.
So originally Patty was called down to the station
to look at some mugshots and she said
she couldn't identify anybody.
And from that they segued into some questions
that they wanted to clear up.
Her story just doesn't make sense.
I don't know who has an oil change that late at night.
You know? Whatever people say, from the first time they speak makes sense. I don't know who has an oil change that late at night.
Whatever people say from the first time
they speak to a law enforcement, they're locked into that.
If they change their story, they're
going to have to explain why.
As investigators push Patty, her demeanor suddenly shifts.
The detective's asked Patricia if there was anything else. She had to say. She poached for a second. As investigators push Patty, her demeanor suddenly shifts.
The detectives asked Patricia if there was anything else she had to say.
She paused for a second, she lowered her head and said that she knows who killed her husband.
Investigators press Patty for more details.
Patty says she knows who killed Bernie, but she didn't see what happened.
And she says the man that did it she met a few months ago at a bowling alley, and his
name is Tim Ott.
According to Patty, she, Tim and Bernie were in a bowling league together.
And Tim had witnessed firsthand the abuse she'd endured at the hands of Bernie.
One of the incidents she recalled is that one time
her and Bernie were at a bowling alley
and Bernie became abusive with her
and Tim had seen that incident.
Patty's new story is that a few weeks later
on the night of March 24th,
she and Bernie
went to Tim's house to discuss the bowling schedule.
Patty says when she gets there, she doesn't feel well, so she asked to use Tim's bathroom.
Once she went to the bathroom, Patty says things took a turn.
She noticed the volume of the TV was up.
She said when she tried to get out, the bathroom door was locked
and she was unable to get out of the bathroom.
Tim tells Patty to stay inside the bathroom.
After a while, he lets her out.
When she gets out, she doesn't see Bernie
in the living room.
Tim grabs her by the arm and takes her outside.
And that's when she sees Bernie inside of his car.
According to Patty, Tim drives her back to her home.
Tim then drives back home, gets inside Bernie's car,
and drives Bernie's car back to Patty's house,
and then leaves on foot.
Patty says, once she felt safe, she went outside and then leaves on foot. Patty says once she felt safe,
she went outside and she checked on Bernie,
but she says Bernie didn't have a pulse.
Patricia realizes that Bernie's dead.
Patty claims that she felt she had to keep
this horrible secret.
She was afraid of Timothy Ott, so she engineered this robbery secret. She was afraid of Timothy Ott.
So she engineered this robbery scenario.
To detectives, the idea that Tim would orchestrate
such an elaborate plot to save Patty
from Bernie's alleged abuse feels far-fetched.
The police asked her to take a polygraph test.
She says she couldn't take it at that time, that they would reschedule it.
Though Patty's story sounds extreme, without anything to hold her on, investigators release
her and immediately bring Tim Ott in for questioning.
He agrees to cooperate with the police and go down to the police station.
When they get down there, he's very soft-spoken
and very intelligent.
And he proceeds to answer all their questions.
Detectives ask him about his relationship
with Patty and Bernie, and he seems confused,
and he says he's never even heard of the couple.
They then show him a Polaroid picture of Patricia James.
And he goes and tells him, I know her by the name of Demi.
I don't know her by the name of Patricia.
Coming up, investigators unmask a master of deception.
She is pretending to be not one, but two different people.
She was using me and a lot of her scams and cons.
And a chilling plot is exposed.
They discussed several different ways
on how to kill Bernie.
They were gonna grind up apple seeds and apricot seeds,
along with some Valium.
apple seeds and apricot seeds along with some valium. MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
Investigators sitting down with potential murder suspect Tim Ott
are shocked to learn that the woman who accused him of murder
may be leading a double life.
They're presenting him with photo IDs of Bernie,
the victim, and Bernie's wife, Patricia.
And he's, like, confused.
And they go, wait, what?
He goes, that's Booth, and that's Demi.
That's how I know them.
They're on the bowling league.
Demi's a friend of my fiance, TJ.
Tim says TJ, his fiance,
is a woman that he's only met over the phone.
And he goes, Booth was married to my fiance, TJ,
and she told me he's an abuser.
He also says that TJ told him that Booth was a child molester.
On the night of March 24, 1987,
Tim says he and Demi, AKA Patty,
put a murder plot into motion
to stop Booth from hurting anyone else ever again.
Tim says that they show up in his apartment in Demi.
He goes to the bathroom, and Tim knows that this individual was
a child molester.
And sometime during the conversation,
he grabs a baseball bat and hits Booth on the side of the head.
He said that he didn't go down, so he grabbed some wire and began to strangle him.
And he said he had a hard time gripping the wires,
so he had to have several times
where he had to readjust the wires
and all that to strangle him where he had no breath left.
Ott went on to say that they then load Booth in his car,
and he drove him back to the house.
After listening to Tim's chilling confession,
detectives attempt to understand the roles of the other people
involved in the plot and their real identities.
At this point, they know that Patty is pretending to be Demi,
and they know that Patty brought Bernie to the apartment to get killed.
Now they're trying to figure out who is this mysterious TJ.
So I, after making the statement, produced a picture of TJ from his wallet
and chose the investigators
there's not somebody that the investigators knew at all.
Since Tim says he has never met TJ in person, investigators have a sneaking suspicion she
may not even exist.
Based on all of Patty's manipulations, police are now realizing that Patty is pretending to be not one, but
two different people.
She pretends to be TJ, an entirely made-up flight attendant.
And then when she realizes that TJ is going to actually have to meet Tim in person, she
creates Demi.
Demi is the one that actually goes and meets face-to-face with Tim
and puts the entire murder plot in motion.
Tim says he and Demi, aka Patty, had discussed several potential plots prior to the murder.
They discussed several different ways on how to kill Bernie.
One was they were going to grind up some Valium
and bake it into a cake.
They did that, but it only made him sick.
Then they talked about shooting him,
but they couldn't find a remote field
to make that plot happen.
Ultimately, the pair decides Tim's apartment
was the most secure location to commit the crime.
Right after the statement said that he tried to clean everything up,
but there were still spots of blood on the carpet.
Tim accompanies investigators to his apartment on April 8th,
15 days after Bernie's murder.
He brings the detectives to his house.
He shows them where the event took place.
There's still a little bit of blood there,
even though he said he had cleaned it.
It just came together.
When we did the follow-up investigation
at Mr. Ott's apartment with luminol,
we discovered a great amount of blood there.
We discovered a great amount of blood there.
Our discovery is consistent with the explanation that the incident, the blunt trauma, was initially induced in the bedroom of Mr. Ott's apartment. And this adds credibility to the confession that was obtained.
Detectives formally charged Tim Ott with first-degree murder.
But before they go after Patty, they circle back to Bernie's family
and uncover more evidence about the extent of her deceptions.
Patty was a manipulative con artist.
Her primary means of income was frivolous lawsuits
that she won.
If you start to look at her background and you go,
wow, you know, this was a culmination of a lot of years
of her going around and scamming people
and getting what she wants.
She was using me and a lot of her scams and cons.
I was the focus for her scams
because I was the easiest to manipulate.
One of the scams that Patricia did was
she went and told everybody her son Nicholas was deaf.
She tried to raise money for Nicholas and for the family.
We would go to the library and she would check out books
on American Sign Language.
And she would try to teach it to Nicholas
and have him do it back to her.
She used this as a way to scam churches out of money.
On top of using her children for financial gain, Patty isolated them from the outside world
as much as possible.
Neighbors were shocked to find out that Patty had children.
They said they had never seen them before.
We never really left the house.
We were allowed to go to the backyard,
but we didn't play on the street.
We didn't go outside, really.
People didn't really see us.
According to Bernie's family, Patty even We were allowed to go to the backyard, but we didn't play on the street. We didn't go outside, really. People didn't really see us.
According to Bernie's family,
Patty even kept them from their own family.
I know that she was trying to cause a rift,
not only just between him and his family,
but between him and us.
One of the stipulations working as a park ranger
is that you're on site
and she would hardly ever let him see us.
She was completely trying to isolate us three from everybody.
We were kids.
We absolutely trusted Patty implicitly.
We didn't really know any better.
It was clear that those children suffered years of abuse by Patty.
Her being so abusive to the children and involved in so many other scams,
the police come up with she was this person that could manipulate someone to commit a murder.
Someone to commit a murder.
Coming up...
A layered motive exposes the twisted mind of a criminal.
She had him take out a life insurance policy on himself.
She tells them that she has suffered abuse the entire time.
She knew how people were sympathetic to her and she knew how to manipulate them. After learning more about Patty James' capacity for manipulation and violence, investigators are nearly certain she's responsible for the murder of her husband, Bernie James.
At this point, realizing that she was capable of doing that, they think she is.
Now they're trying to figure out what her motive was to have him killed.
Investigators believe Patty felt forced to act when Bernie decided to leave her. In my opinion, she realized that her husband, Bernie, was going to divorce her
and she couldn't handle it. Patty couldn't stand rejection and this would
have been her third, if my father had successfully divorced her, it would have
been her third divorce. Investigators contact Bernie's insurance agent and
learn of another possible
motive. Before my father died, she had him take out a life insurance policy on himself
and had all three of his children declared non-beneficiaries. So Patty was the only
beneficiary to his policy. With the physical evidence, Tim Ott's confession, the life insurance policies, and the history
of abuse and manipulation, detectives now believe they have enough for an arrest warrant.
On June 8, 1987, investigators make their move.
Police were able to build a case and meet with the prosecutors.
That led to her arrest at the children's school.
The police go to the school.
She drops off the kids.
She sees police and they effect the arrest on her for first degree murder.
Now in custody, Patty says she is finally ready to come clean.
She tells them that she has suffered abuse the entire time she's been married to Bernie,
and she just couldn't take it anymore.
But according to Patty, it wasn't really her who orchestrated the plot.
She literally drops her head down.
It's quiet for a few seconds.
She pops up, and then she goes, I don't remember
anything about this murder.
I don't remember being part of the murder.
It must have been TJ who has another personality in me.
Investigators are not convinced, and she remains in
custody to await trial.
While Patty is ready to take her chances in court, her
accomplice isn't willing to risk it.
So rather than take his chances with the jury, Tim
decides to take a plea for second-degree murder
and testify against Patty.
On November 30, 1987, Patty's trial kicks off.
The prosecutor painted Patty as being the manipulative one
who set up the murder of her husband.
The defense came back and said this was all Tim Ott's dealing. as being the manipulative one who set up the murder of her husband.
The defense came back and said,
this was all Tim Ott's dealing.
He was the one who did the murder,
and Patty was the victim of the case.
When both sides rest,
it's hard to tell what the jury will believe.
There was one juror who stopped listening,
stopped looking at the evidence,
would not engage in discussions
when it went back to the jury.
And he refused to say guilty or not guilty.
He just refused to work.
And at that point, the court had no choice but to enter a mistrial. to say guilty or not guilty. He just refused to work.
And at that point, the court had no choice
but to enter a mistrial.
But in Patty's second trial, she is quickly convicted
of first degree murder and sentenced to life in prison.
I think they did a great job with building the case
against her, showing what a manipulative person she was.
If the word evil could be applied to a person,
it would definitely be applied to Patty.
She has no conscience, no compassion, no remorse.
She truly doesn't care about anyone else but herself.
I don't view her as human.
That's why I called her my evil step-monster,
is because she is pure evil.
If I could talk to my father right now, I would say, you know,
I wish you'd never married Patty. I wish you'd never met her.
I wish we'd been closer, because I do miss you.
I miss you tremendously.
I wish we'd been closer because I do miss you. I miss you tremendously.
Bernice's children were raised by their maternal grandparents.
Timothy Ott was sentenced to 20 years in prison and has since been released.
In 2018, Patty James died in prison after serving 30 years of her life sentence.
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