Snapped: Women Who Murder - Sharee Miller

Episode Date: March 25, 2026

The Internet's first murder trial; revealing a twisted seductress with a skill for manipulation.Season 33 Episode 17Originally aired: May 12, 2024Watch 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 In 2005, a twisted case was featured on the second season of SNAP. This was the first internet murder case. Back in 1999, our department was in the infancy stage of learning about the internet. This captured the nation's attention. It begins with a mysterious shooting. The money was missing, Ms. Wallet was missing. But the investigation unearths a simple thing. unearths a sinister plot, orchestrated by a master manipulator using the internet to lure in victims.
Starting point is 00:00:40 The first chats that they had, pretty mundane, but they quickly turned sexual. Her screen names included Just Hot to See You, Horny 7249. It blindsided us. We're going, oh wait, where did this come from? That was part of her game playing on his emotions. Now, nearly 20 years later, there is more to the fascinating story of the Internet's first murder case, an investigation that helped usher in the modern age of true crime. I watched a lot of snap.
Starting point is 00:01:14 There was something in her eyes. I thought she was innocent. Her conviction was appealed. The court ruled she should get a new trial. She had a hookline and sinker, and she just kept. getting away with that. She's diabetic. She's probably the most evil person I haven't met.
Starting point is 00:01:35 It's the fall of 1999, and residents of Flint, Michigan are hoping the new millennium will bring positive change to the area. Flint was coming out of a recession. There was a lot of people that were struggling at the time. General Motors had just picked up and moved. There was a lot of poverty in our area. There was a lot of drugs. When you have the drugs, comes to violence and the robberies.
Starting point is 00:02:13 There was a lot of that at this time in the Flint area. And early November of 1999, the deputies received a call about a man down at the salvage yard. The 911 call comes in just after 9.30 p.m. on November 8th. A woman named Judy Miller is on the line. When officers arrive, Judy and her husband Chuck rush them inside. them inside. Lying behind the counter in a pool of blood is 48-year-old Bruce Miller. One of the deputies that he was there was a paramedic and he quickly assessed him and determined that he had passed away. He's very cold to the touch. It is obvious that Bruce had been laying there for more than a short period of time.
Starting point is 00:03:40 We were talking hours at that point. His chair had been tipped over and actually broke a wheel off. off. The telephone was sitting next to him. The way the blood pulled around the head and the chest area, at first it looked like he might have smacked his head on the cement floor having a heart attack. As officers begin documenting the scene, closer inspection reveals the true cause of his injuries. There was numerous pellet holes in him. It was obvious that it was a gunshot with a shotgun. Chuck and Judy obviously were very upset. At first, they had no inkling of what had occurred. They stayed there that night so they could be interviewed.
Starting point is 00:04:27 They were the ones that kind of gave us the background on Bruce Miller. Bruce Miller was a lifelong resident of Flint, Michigan. Born in 1951, his early years were a testament to his blue-collar roots. Bruce grew up north of Flint. He married his high school sweetheart in 1970. They had two kids together. They had a good life. Bruce worked at General Motors, which is very common in this town.
Starting point is 00:05:01 And the people that work there work hard and they're honest, decent people. And that's what Bruce was. Bruce was quiet, kind, didn't spend a lot of money, didn't need a lot of frills. While Bruce enjoyed success as an auto worker and a father, the same couldn't be said for his marriage. About six years into that, things went sideways. They divorced. Bruce tried again with a second marriage in the 1980s, but that relationship also ended in divorce. By the time he was in his 40s, Bruce had embraced life as a bachelor. He became enamored with NASCAR and wrenching on cars.
Starting point is 00:05:57 He was the kind of guy that would buy a junker to fix up and just that would be his hobby. That's why he ended up buying B&D Auto Salvage. People would want to fix up a car. Maybe the auto parts store didn't have it, so they would go to salvage yards like Bruce's. Bruce's salvage yard was soon doing well enough for him to take on employees. One of his first hires was 26, six-year-old bookkeeper Cherie Tribby. Sheree was well-liked by her group of friends.
Starting point is 00:06:32 She was super personal, easy to get along with. She was a go-getter. Sheree was born and raised in the Flint area. She moved out when she was about 16, was on her own, got married, started having kids, ended up being married once more before she met Bruce Miller. After her second marriage ended in divorce, Sheree was ready to move on.
Starting point is 00:06:58 Despite their 20-year age difference, Bruce and Sheree found they had a lot in common. She was kind of enamored with him. He was the kind of guy that she'd been looking for, somebody that was steady, stable, the kind of person that would be good to her and her kids. I think Bruce was drawn to Sherry because she's young, she's vivacious, she's charming.
Starting point is 00:07:25 Also, she may have complimented him better, because she was talkative, he was not. What began as a working relationship quickly grew into something more. They were just like school kids. They were in love. Within a very short period of time, they were talking marriage. He moves her into his house, moves the kids in.
Starting point is 00:07:51 Sherry and Bruce started dating in late 1998, and then very quickly thereafter, and he April of 1999, they were married in Vegas. Bruce's family was a little bit surprised, but they were gonna let him live his life. And they saw that he was pretty happy with her. In addition to bookkeeping, Cherie supplemented their income
Starting point is 00:08:23 by selling Mary Kaye Cosmetics. In early 1999, Cherie turned to chat rooms on the emerging World Wide Web to expand her network of customers. Sherea had had a computer who's bought for her. She got into it. AOL was really what she was using at that time, and she was into it.
Starting point is 00:08:45 Computers were not new, but they were just making it to the homes. So it was fairly new technology. Up until that point, we tend to forget, but we didn't have a lot of communication on the internet. Chat rooms were new, so we were new. it was a whole different ball game back then. By late 1999, Bruce and Cherie found themselves doing well enough for Bruce to start making plans
Starting point is 00:09:18 for retirement. Bruce was on the end of his General Motors career. He had a small business where he could engage in a hobby that interested him, yet make some money, still be involved. and he had a young, somewhat good-looking wife. Things were looking up for him. But just seven months into their whirlwind marriage, their love story would come to a sudden and violent end.
Starting point is 00:09:52 Bruce has been found shot to death at his salvage yard, and Michigan police are at the scene collecting evidence. The crime lab was called. The on-duty detectives were called, and they headed in and started to. the timeline of everything and the interviews of those people involved so far. The detective started with Chuck and Judy that were there. Why were you here?
Starting point is 00:10:16 How did you get in? What circumstances led you to come here in the first place? They were super cooperative. They opened up everything in their lives that we asked him about. This crime occurred between six and about eight o'clock at night. Chuck Miller had been called by Sheree Miller saying that Bruce hadn't come home. yet. Chuck Miller and Judy Miller got in their car, drove out to Klaus, opened the gate, went
Starting point is 00:10:48 back there and Chuck discovers his brother. He instructs Judy his wife to call 911. As detectives take in the scene, they observe telltale signs of a potential motive. Just on its face, it had all the airmarks of an armed robbery. The reception desk is right at the front door. and he didn't have a chance to tell anybody what was going on, or called 911. So it looks just looked like they came in, shot him, and robbed him.
Starting point is 00:11:21 The money was missing, his wallet was missing. Bruce was known to carry about $2,000 in his shirt pocket. He used that to buy parts and whatnot, and that was missing. So your clientele for that type of business is usually lower income. So you had people that were of low means financially coming out there on a regular basis. It was an all-cash business.
Starting point is 00:11:51 And if you're a guy that's just scraping by and you know that you can go get two or three grand in one shot, that's a pretty good what we call a lick. But as compelling as the robbery theory sounds, there's a problem. It wasn't like a 7-Eleven where people can come off the street and rob them of cash. This was off the beaten path.
Starting point is 00:12:17 You had to know where this business was at. They start processing a scene and find that there was no signs of a struggle. It appeared that the person maybe standing on another side of a counter. It seemed like they may even had some knowledge of the building. See, it almost seems that he would have recognized his person robbing him. So we wanted to see if maybe this was someone who had known how the business operates that maybe even had been in there before. We needed to investigate that further.
Starting point is 00:12:48 Coming up, a grieving widow provides detectives with a potential suspect. They had dated and had sexual relationship. Here, look, Mr. Long person. Well, I don't think so, but I've been wrong before, my letter. You're wrong now. But just when it seems the case is nearly solved,
Starting point is 00:13:10 bombshell revelations launched the investigation, investigation into cyberspace. They were like teenagers playing, building this relationship, having a ball. They're having online sex. She's frequently coming back. But to separate the truth from the lies, investigators must root out a duplicitous swindler. She sent photographs of sonograms.
Starting point is 00:13:37 She said that he was part of the mafia and was abusive. He did what she wanted him to do, and then dropped him. and then dropped him like a hot potato. Authorities in Flint, Michigan are investigating the murder of 48-year-old Bruce Miller. They've already spoken to Bruce's brother and sister-in-law. Now, police need to pay a visit to his widow. Early November 9th, after midnight, officers went to the house.
Starting point is 00:14:13 Shri had family already there. They knew something was wrong because Judy and Chuck had told him something was wrong, thinking that it was a heart attack. However, they informed her that the death was a homicide. Upon hearing that news, Sheree Miller started screaming, falling on the floor. Family kind of rushed in and got around her, but she was unconsolable. She was very upset, crying. Everyone felt that her reactions were normal of someone that had lost a husband to homicide. Once Shari regains her composure, she agrees to tell detectives everything she she remembers before the shooting took place.
Starting point is 00:15:01 Shree had been home with the kids. She had a friend over Laura Ewald. They were supposed to have a Mary Kaye Cosmetic Meeting, 6 o'clock, which would be Bruce's normal time of getting off work. She called him, they talked on the phone. She tells him that she's gonna order food from Big Brutus, which is a business
Starting point is 00:15:19 that would be an easy stop on his way home. But Shiree says that in the middle of their conversation, Bruce suddenly cut the call short. Bruce told her that there was a car pulling in the lot. Bruce thought it was one of his employees returning to work the money that forgot something. He was going to hurry up and deal with it and told Cherie that he would pick up the food. Sheree became concerned when two hours passed and Bruce still wasn't home.
Starting point is 00:15:58 Sheree was in a panic that she couldn't find Bruce. He wouldn't answer the phone. She told Lori that she was going to go check and see if he picked up the food at the restaurant. Laura Ewald had actually blocked in Sheree Miller's car, and so it was just more convenient for Sheree to take Laura Ewald's car. It was a restaurant that he frequented, so they knew Bruce. He said, no, your order's still here. Now she's becoming nervous. Sheree decided to check on Bruce herself by driving to the auto shop, less than 10 minutes away.
Starting point is 00:16:35 She drives up to the B&D auto parts, observes that the gate next to Saginaw Road was secure. But she didn't have her keys with her because those were on her car key ring, which was back at the house. The gate was locked when they got there, which would indicate that Bruce had probably left the building and locked when he left. Cherie gets home with Laura Ewald's car.
Starting point is 00:16:59 Then some more calls are made. She had actually called 911, the local hospitals. local police departments to see if something had happened to Bruce. But she's also calling Chuck Miller at the time, almost demanding that he goes check on him. She knew at that point that something was wrong. Laura confirms Cherie's timeline, leading detectives to question who else may have had access to the salvage yard after hours. We started questioning Sheree Miller about, is there anybody that had a problem?
Starting point is 00:17:37 with him. At that point she started pointing out suspects. She worked up at the salvage yard. The day of Bruce's murder, she said that a couple fellas come in that she'd never seen before, made some comments about her and about her wedding ring, looking expensive, to the point that she was very uncomfortable and asked them to leave. She gave us a brief description of them and a description of a van they might have been in. She didn't know who they were and did not get a license plate. The lead fits the theory of a robbery gone wrong. But when investigators suggest that Bruce may have recognized the shooter,
Starting point is 00:18:24 Cherie offers up a different name, Bruce's former employee, John Hutchinson. There was one other person, John Hutchinson, who had worked with Bruce that Sherry Miller had kind of pointed the finger at. Sheree told us that her aunt John Hutchinson had dated and had sexual relationship several years earlier. According to Shari, even though the relationship ended before she got together with Bruce, there was still bad blood between the two men. But her past with John wasn't the only source of tension. Shri mentioned that John had borrowed $2,000 from Bruce, and it was slow to pay it back.
Starting point is 00:19:10 Cherie says Bruce also resented John for jeopardizing his business. The police had been there to the salvage yard prior to the homicide concerning some stolen parts or stolen vehicles. We actually talked to the auto theft team, and they did advise that there was a vent-switching investigation going on there, that John Hutchinson was their primary suspect at that time. A vent-switching scheme is where you go get a car that's wrecked. You pay two or three hundred dollars for it.
Starting point is 00:19:44 You get a title, and you get the actual VIN plate with the vehicle. Then you go out and steal a car that's similar, maybe a couple years newer, maybe less miles. You take the VIN plate off the junk car. You put it on the stolen car. You have a title to that VIN plate. And sometimes these are luxury cars. They take their $70,000 cars, and they can get it for $1,000. And then they sell it for $40,000.
Starting point is 00:20:11 It's all profit. John Hutchinson actually wasn't working for Bruce anymore, but his brother Harold was still there. So the logical place for the auto theft team was to go to the business, start checking the books. We thought maybe Bruce was mad at John Hutchinson and we're saying, hey, I'm trying to run a clean business here. I don't need any of this. There was a theory that maybe Bruce was about ready to call the police, I don't even turn him in. We had to obviously go down that road and see it, well, maybe the motive wasn't the the $2,000.
Starting point is 00:20:47 Maybe he wanted to silence him. So we set out to find John Hutchinson. Less than 24 hours after the murder of Bruce Miller, his wife, Cherie, has handed investigators their first solid lead, a former employee named John Hutchinson. When she started mentioning John Hutchinson owing money, and he was a suspect in a VIN switch, and we don't know at that point if the murder was robbery,
Starting point is 00:21:24 was robbery in addition to silence in or witness. Since the shooting occurred around closing time, detectives need to determine if any of the salvage yard employees saw John arrive before they left work. We know who the last person to talk to Bruce was on the phone, but we didn't know who the last person was to see Bruce that night. The last name written on the schedule catches everyone's attention. The last play that left for the day was Harold Hutchinson.
Starting point is 00:21:58 We found out that Harold was John Hutchinson's brother. On November 9th, myself and another detective, we went out to Harold's location. We got there, knocked on his house, he led us in. When investigators tell Harold they want to talk about Bruce Miller's death, they get another surprise. When we talked to Harold Hutchinson in early morning of the 9th of November, which was probably about 10 o'clock in the morning, he already knew. So that our first inclination was, well, how do you know this happened when it's not been out there? Harold said he had talked to John, and John had said that he had taken care of Bruce. And then that's when he starts to go into the story about how his brother disposed of him.
Starting point is 00:22:51 He explains that the word disposed to him means homicide. Harold Hutchinson had said that his brother told him something, you know, kind of ambiguous, where Harold didn't have to worry about getting his tools or a new job or something like that, and that Bruce wasn't going to be a problem. We're liking what we're hearing, but we had to take all that with a grand assault. We didn't know what we had at that point. Despite the vagueness of John's wording, Harold tells investigators what he thinks his brother was implying. It means that he was gone.
Starting point is 00:23:33 And gone means what? Dead. Did your brother tell you how he killed him? No, he did not. Did he allude to how he killed him? No, he did not. The company had been being investigated for vins switching vehicles, right? Yes.
Starting point is 00:23:50 And your brother was the one actually doing it. Yes. The only was your brother working for, Bruce, or he's also stealing from Bruce. Yeah. Obviously, you know, oh, that ties in with what Sheree told us. It all makes sense, but it wasn't enough to run out and arrest John Hux. It was enough for us to go out and grab him and conduct an interrogation. When police arrive at John's house a little after 12 p.m., he seems unnervingly calm.
Starting point is 00:24:25 By the time we get to John Hutchinson, now. it's later in the day. It had already been on the news and saw he already knew that there had been a murder. His reaction wasn't appropriate. He was a good friend of Bruce's and he just didn't seem to be that concerned about it. John agrees to talk to detectives and accompanies them back to the station. Once we got him downtown is when we started asking him more poignant questions about the vent switching investigation.
Starting point is 00:24:57 The bad blood over this was Bruce mad at you for it? That you know him? He might have said a few things, but not as far as being physically mad, no. He said it wasn't worth killing Bruce over. John also confirms what Cherie told them about the money he owed Bruce and their past relationship. However, John claims they already cleared the air. Tell about your affair with Sheree Miller. Oh, I f*** you one time.
Starting point is 00:25:32 How long ago? Oh, we slept together a couple times, and then my wife split up, went out to eat out of motel, played hooky. How long ago was that a year and a half? Before or after she got with Bruce, before. Nothing happened since she's been with Bruce. Nope. John's account of the affair continues to line up with what Cherie told police.
Starting point is 00:26:05 He was straightforward with his answers. He remained confident. However, John's easy answers seemed suspicious to detectives. I think that there was a couple of the detectives that thought, this was the guy, you know. This looked real good. Anytime you're being questioned by the police for a murder, you're going to be nervous.
Starting point is 00:26:28 And he wasn't. And he had an answer for everything that come along. At that point, we started talking about him. the murder we just let him tell us you know that he's not involved and everything. And after I took a shower, kid was still watching TV, wife went to the store, came back. So you never left the house again? Nope.
Starting point is 00:26:52 We call it locking you into a lie, and now we start hitting them with, hey, Harold's saying that you called them. There's a few phone calls in between here too. I talked to BDC, I got to Harold. Do you know what Harold told us? I haven't got a clue. Carol told us that he said that Bruce was taken care of. So could you have said something like that or no?
Starting point is 00:27:14 This is pretty serious stuff. I could have, but like I said, if I did, what I meant by taking care of is he's already been paid. Because he wanted me to pay him back. You're looking at the wrong person. I don't think so, but I've been long before, my life. You're wrong now. His denials were super, super weak. Like you were talking to a six-year-old about stealing a cookie,
Starting point is 00:27:38 and there's cookie dough on their face. Weak like, oh, I didn't do it. John admitted to owning three shotguns. His home was searched and those guns were found and taken into evidence. It didn't look good for him. With all the other information, it was coming about him. John tells investigators he's willing to do anything to prove his innocence. He said, listen, I'll take a polygraph.
Starting point is 00:28:06 We kind of hollowed the interview at that point and set up the polygraph for him. You strike why the irons happen. That evening, the polygraph operator leads John through a series of questions. They start out with, what's your name? How old are you? You know? So they get a baseline of when he's telling the truth.
Starting point is 00:28:29 And they ask him, did you kill Bruce Miller? Do you know who killed Bruce Miller? Were you there when Bruce Miller was killed? He's answering them no, but he's shaking his head, yes. which sometimes means that the person's subconsciously trying to tell you the truth. After an assessment, investigators receive the test results. The operator felt that he failed to polygraph. I think it was some excitement for the detectives that are working on.
Starting point is 00:29:01 Hey, we're on the right track here. We've got the right guy. John Hutchinson was no doubt our number one person, and he was the person we had focused on at that point. Coming up, a funeral becomes a funeral, comes the sight of a volatile confrontation. Sheree went crazy, screaming, that's the guy who murdered my husband.
Starting point is 00:29:24 And a tragic suicide leads to a stunning piece of evidence. You told him if something should happen to me, look underneath my bed for a briefcase. Less than two days into the investigation of the murder of Bruce Miller, detectives believe they have a prime suspect. However, they fear a rough The rushed arrest might weaken their case against John Hutchinson.
Starting point is 00:29:59 Polygraph is maybe one of the last things you want to use in investigation because they're not admissible in court. The way the business was set up were numerous people coming and going. There wasn't a lot of forensic evidence to take. There was no shell casing left. We have Harold's statement, and that's it. We have no physical evidence. We can't physically prove that he's there. So there's just no advantage.
Starting point is 00:30:26 There's just no advantage to law enforcement to arrest him at that point until we gather more evidence. We ended up taking John Hutchinson home. As investigators continue building their case, Bruce's loved ones gather for his funeral. There's hundreds of people coming to the funeral home, pay their respects. Bruce had all his friends from the shop, from the business he ran. It was a small town. Everyone kind of knew Bruce. As the day goes on, John Hutchinson and his wife show up to pay their condolences.
Starting point is 00:31:06 Bruce's widow, Sheree, is none too pleased with the surprise guest. Sheree went crazy, screaming, mommy, mommy, daddy, daddy. That's the guy who murdered my husband, screaming in a group of people at her funeral. Screaming it out. With emotions boiling over, Sheree's brother-in-law asked, and his wife to leave. His group of friends all knew that we had interrogated him, we'd interviewed him, we'd polygraphed him,
Starting point is 00:31:38 so all these people that were close to Bruce are starting to push John away after the funeral, thinking that he really is a killer, it's just a matter of time before he's arrested. However, detectives struggled to find any physical evidence to connect Hutchinson to the murder. It's difficult to do ballistics with a shotgun. You're going to be able to tell the gauge, and that's probably the extent that you're going to know.
Starting point is 00:32:09 We secured weapons from John Hutchinson's house. None of them were 20 gauges. None of them had been fired. It was a dead end. Investigators follow up on the alibi John provided in his initial interview, hoping it might provide a window of opportunity. Anytime you try to validate an alibi and confront a guy, guy, got to go back, track that, and see if you can validate those things, see if he's telling the truth.
Starting point is 00:32:39 He, you know, gives us an account of what he did that evening, where he had been who he was with, and it was confirmed by his wife, and his alibi checked out. You can't ever eliminate anyone 100%, but we stopped pursuing him at that point, because we knew where he was at at the time of the murder, and we also was able to confirm everything. When things with John went cold, the whole case kind of went cold for a while. It becomes frustrating when you know you have a grieving family and you have no answers. You take it personally when you can't help. That's why you get into police work is to help people through life.
Starting point is 00:33:19 And it's like you have a personal failure if a case goes nowhere and you can't solve it. Three and a half months into the investigation, the only other lead, the two men who harassed Sheree Miller on the day of the murder, has gone nowhere. There was concern that we may not find out who killed this, especially with some of the information we had about the two men that could have been people passing through town. And when the argument took place, they killed them, got in a car, and drove away. Have no tie to the community, we'll never see them again.
Starting point is 00:33:57 Four investigators at that point, they were back to square one. They had no leads, no suspect, no known motive. Most definitely, it's frustrating. We were four months into the case before we actually got a break. In February of 2000, we get a call from Missouri, an attorney down there, John O'Connor. He basically called and said, did you have a homicide involving Bruce Miller? And I said, yeah. He says, well, I've had a suicide here, and it has some evidence for you.
Starting point is 00:34:35 And once we got the information that we needed, we immediately formulated a plan. We flew detectives down to Kansas City, and that started the whole ball rolling with things starting to fall into place. The investigation into the murder of Bruce Miller had seemingly stalled out until a surprise call breathes new life into the case. John O'Connor was the attorney for a man named Jerry Cassidy. Jerry Cassidy, they committed suicide and left a note that he should go to authorities with this information. Jerry Cassidy didn't exist to any investigators in Michigan. They're like, what information do you have? He's like, I have a briefcase that details directions and information and perhaps a motive
Starting point is 00:35:31 for why Jerry may have driven out and killed Bruce. On February 18, 2000, Flint detectives meet with Jerry's family, including his brother Michael, his brother Michael at O'Connor's law office in Kansas City. We learned that Jerry Cassidy had committed suicide in the basement of a home in Missouri, shot in the head and with the Bible sitting in his lap. He left this briefcase with a note for John O'Connor to make sure it got through the authorities. And in that briefcase was information about the murder of Bruce Miller. Jerry Cassidy grew up in a well-loved family in Kansas City.
Starting point is 00:36:23 He decided that he wanted to be a policeman, then got hired by the Cass County Sheriff's Department, because he was so smart he was quickly promoted to lieutenant in charge of homicides. He loved the job. It was what he really wanted to do. That was his life's ambition. He was married, he had a child, then life kind of hit him. He fell at work, and at that point got addicted to. prescription medication.
Starting point is 00:36:52 Then, in 1995, 34-year-old Jerry fell on even harder times. During that time also, he believed a sheriff of the Cass County was committing a fraud in a homicide investigation. The hardest thing in the world is the go tell on a powerful sheriff. And he went, told the authority, stood up to the sheriff, and eventually he loses his job. That was the job that he always
Starting point is 00:37:26 wanted. But he knew that he couldn't go back out because he couldn't guarantee that anyone would have his back. That was kind of his identity. You know, that and being a husband and a father that, you know, that really defined who he was as a person. And when that part went away, it's like, oh, okay, now what do I do? He kind of just spirals out of control until he talks to an ex-FBI agent that he knew from working for Cass County. And he was a big wig at Harris Casina and hired Jerry to do security there. He'd moved his family to Reno, but his wife didn't find it as appealing as he did.
Starting point is 00:38:19 And she just said, our relationship is done. Jerry was very lonely. His wife divorced him. You know, he was having a hard time seeing his kids, and he just drank, drank. Drake, drank. In 1999, Jerry came back to Missouri seeking the support of his family. But on November 9th, his downward spiral
Starting point is 00:38:42 came to a dramatic climax. Jerry calls his brother. Says, listen, I'm going to the hunting cabin. I just got to have some time to think. Jerry told him if something should happen to me, you should look underneath my bed for a briefcase. Michael Cassidy's curiosity was up, like what happened, what saying, what was going on? Jerry tells him, at that point, I've done something that can't be undone.
Starting point is 00:39:15 On February 11, 2000, Michael got tragic news that his brother was found dead from an apparent suicide. After jury was found from his suicide, Michael knew to go get that briefcase. There was a note on the outside of the briefcase. It said it called John O'Connor. Michael followed the instructions and called John O'Connor Jerry's lawyer. Nothing could have prepared them for what they found inside. There were three letters with the briefcase. One was to Jerry's biological son. One was to his ex-wife, and one was to his mother and father.
Starting point is 00:40:08 The one to his mother and father detailed why he was doing what he was doing. Jerry Cassidy left a suicide note and basically said that he had killed someone in Genesee County named Bruce Miller. Cassidy said that he'd done it and he'd done it in conjunction with a girl named Shiree Miller. It blindsided us. We're going, oh, where did this come from, you know?
Starting point is 00:40:37 He was concerned about his own welfare because being a former police officer going to prison, what would happen to him when he was there. And it was evident that this is why he had committed suicide. He basically wanted the family to tell the authorities that he believed that there was enough information in that briefcase to convict Sherey. Jerry Cassidy knew what he wanted to do when he ended his life. That was to make sure Shree Miller didn't get away with this.
Starting point is 00:41:13 Still to come, an explicit tape offers a crucial connection. She's masturbating on camera. She just absolutely twisted him up emotionally to the point where he didn't see any other out. And new evidence reveals a mastermind who'll stop at nothing to get what she wants. She said everything's from me and screw everybody else. She had thoroughly convinced him and anyone else that she had the money. I want my car and I want to leave because this is nuts. You guys have completely lost it.
Starting point is 00:42:03 Authorities in Flint, Michigan have spent just over three months investigating the murder of junkyard owner Bruce Miller. Bruce had been shot in the chest by a shotgun. This crime occurred on November 8th, 1999, between 6 and about 8 o'clock at night. Sheree Miller gave us two or three suspects right off the bat that made sense in the context that we saw the crime scene. No leads panned out and the case nearly went cold. But now, a posthumous confession has led to a stunning revelation. A suicide, 800 miles away, would fall right into their laps as a solution to the unsolved murder. In his suicide note, the self-proclaimed killer, Jerry Cassidy, implicates Bruce's bereaved wife, Sheree Miller.
Starting point is 00:43:06 It basically said that he actually did the killing, but Shri set him up to do the killing. The note is attached to a briefcase full of evidence. It was full of computer printout messages and hard drives and letters that Jerry had written and apologies that he had written. As a former investigator himself, he had everything laid out perfectly. That briefcase was a treasure trove of information. The contents describe an apparent murder-for-hire, beginning with an online chat log. The instant message found in the briefcase was probably about three pages long, and it was printed out. That instant message kind of stepped out everything that happened on November 7th and November 8th,
Starting point is 00:44:04 and when he was leaving to come to Flint. It was line by line how to get to Flint, what roads to bring into the junkyard. She told him where to park, she gave him directions of how to get there. It also said for him to get out of there quickly and about the gunshot, not being too loud. That's a damning. I mean, that's it right there. Right in a nutshell, the planning of the murder of the conspiracy. Once we started getting all this information from the instant message,
Starting point is 00:44:39 it's like we've taken something with probably one of the best alibis of a homicide that I've ever had, and now making that person our number one suspect. It was crazy to think about that a person 800 miles away had been talked into coming up here, committing a murder, going back, and leaving no evidence. How did you get him to commit this murder? Investigators must now piece together how a former cop could have been convinced to commit such a heinous crime.
Starting point is 00:45:15 It was pretty shocking to the whole group of guys. The information that was in the briefcase was a massive amount, and there was many, many pieces. You know, I understand, nobody had a lot of knowledge of how computers worked in 2000. Apparently, yes, the instant message could be faked. If you had some computer knowledge, it wouldn't be that hard.
Starting point is 00:45:35 So we had to prove that the incident message was true. With such serious claims made against Sharii, investigators must be certain of her involvement before moving forward with an arrest. They get permission to go back and search the residents of where Jared Cassidy killed himself. They find two tapes in the garbage. Back then, if you wanted to send somebody
Starting point is 00:46:01 a video of yourself, you had a physical Basically, make it, put it in the mail, and send it. When detectives play the tape, they find more than they bargain for. One was Sheree Miller, showing Jerry the house, her kids, saying, you know, can you live with these kids? These kids are rumbuchious. I love you so much. And the other one was called for Jerry's eyes only.
Starting point is 00:46:30 And it's Shree masturbating on camera. Now we have a direct connect from this Jericho city to actually show. Sherey Miller that's without question, they know each other. We would have never been able to put this connection together that 800 miles away was our suspect who now is deceased without this briefcase. Coming up, Shari's true colors emerge. And it turned to her husband about how abusive he was. She was in a dark place in her life.
Starting point is 00:47:07 Police get to the heart of what could make an honest man kill. She said she was pregnant with his child. And in the modern age of online scammers, investigators zero in on a conniving culprit. That is not even right. I did not write that stuff. I did not write that stuff. Every time she bamboozled him, lied to him,
Starting point is 00:47:34 manipulated him, it worked. Michigan authorities have discovered evidence that Sheree Miller, used the internet to seduce a casino pit boss named Jerry Cassidy and convinced him to kill her husband. Their printed online correspondence reveals how the deadly affair began. When the detectives had gone out to Missouri, they also had seized Jerry's computer and then processed it
Starting point is 00:48:12 for information about what could have possibly led to this crime being committed. And what was the connection? What was the connection? As they search the laptop, a digital narrative unfolds through a string of electronic communications and photos. Our department was in the infancy stage of learning about the internet back in 1999. There was only about 28% of the people that had a computer. So this was new to us.
Starting point is 00:48:45 Chat rooms then were what we have today, texting on our cell phones. It was instant messaging. There was somebody that moved to town and knew no one. And working graveyard, it's kind of tough to meet someone. What else are you going to do? During the time that AOL and you've got mail and all of this was just starting to be available to people, Jerry had somehow stumbled into some sort of a chat room and had been talking to this woman.
Starting point is 00:49:24 From the timestamps on the messages, it appears that Jerry and Cherie began their correspondence and met in the summer of 1999. Just three months after Bruce and Cherie were married and four months before Bruce's murder. Jerry's computer contained all of the discussions that he had with Sherry. The courtship was a fast and furious one. We're talking less than six months. So it contained months and months of daily emails that we had to take to prove that in fact these were the two parties communicating with each other over the computer.
Starting point is 00:50:16 So we had to do some cross-checking on whether or not the parties were even on the computer at the time. So again, that required search warrants, subpoenas, and a lot of investigation. We were cross-referencing what the phone numbers were that they were using. We were looking into whether or not certain phone calls were actually made that were mentioned in those documents. We were able to bring in a representative from AOL, and he was able to say everything matched up that they were on together at the same time.
Starting point is 00:50:56 The first chats that they had was pretty mundane, you know, but they quickly turned sexual, and the leader, and this was Cherie. Sherry's screen names included Just Hot to See You, Horny 7249, I Want to Be Laid, Love Me Slowly, Sexy Kitten only for you. There was a lot of playfulness between these two that came out of these chats. They were like teenagers playing, building this relationship, having a ball. Jerry would sign off his messages, Your Fool for Life, Big Daddy. Sheree would sign off, love your brat, Sheree.
Starting point is 00:51:45 Before long, they turned their fantasies into reality. Jerry got a message from Sheree that she would fly to Reno under the premise. of a Mary Kay cosmetic conference. There was apparent to us that she was going out there to see and visit him, not for a Mary Kay conference. It gets to the point where now they're having sex. She's frequently coming back. They're having online sex.
Starting point is 00:52:19 We know in this time frame she sends them the video. As detectives continue reviewing the messages, they observe that by the late summer of 1999, Cherie's messages took on a different tone. All of a sudden it turned to her husband about how abusive he was and how he's a member of the mafia. How was she going to get out of this? She attracts him with her looks. She attracts him with her sexuality, with her communications.
Starting point is 00:52:52 But then she really needs him to become her savior. And so she feeds him these awful stories about Bruce being abusive. and hitting her, bruising her, and sends him the pictures. In August, just one month into their courtship, Sheree dropped a bombshell. Sheree told Jerry that she was pregnant with his child. She went on to tell about how Bruce had found out about it. She tells him the beating caused her to miscarry the child.
Starting point is 00:53:37 We found pictures of her tummy all bruised up and stuff like that. All of this convinced Jerry that this woman he loved was in deep trouble. She was in a dark place in her life. He needed to act and he needed to act now. With Jerry hooked, their conversations turned to plotting Bruce's murder. It was why somebody could be compelled to kill him. for another person. It was proof of the manipulation in order to draw them in.
Starting point is 00:54:18 Everything's adding up that Shari's involved in this. Police begin to home in on Shiree as suspect number one. When detectives look into her personal life after her husband's death, they find even more suspicious behavior. We continue to talk to Shuri Miller's friends. She was on our radar at that point, but it wasn't clear what we were looking at. We're gathering information. We're being told that within days of the funeral, Shrew Miller is seen at a small bar in Otisville.
Starting point is 00:54:57 And we also come to find out she's going to get Social Security for herself and for the three minor kids, which was quite a bit of money. It was close to $3,500 a month, that alone. Then we knew that there was a life insurance policy that she was going to get. Shortly after that, she's already got people coming over remodeling the house, taking everything of Bruce's out of the house. Then it's quick that they want to hurry up and sell the business. It's more than enough to bring Cherie in for questioning. But when police go to her home, she is nowhere to be found. She had flown to Reno, and we found out when Shiree would be returning home.
Starting point is 00:55:40 So we figured we'd just meet her at the airport. On February 22nd, 2000, when Cherie's flight lands, investigators are waiting. They tell Cherie they need to ask her a few questions. She's cool as a cucumber. She's relaxed. Okay, let's go. I've got nothing. I've got nothing that I just go. She voluntarily comes down to the Sheriff's Department where Captain Koppel takes her into the interview room and starts talking to her. He's throwing out softball questions, nothing accusatory at that point. It finally gets to the point, do you know of Jerry Cassidy? You developed a relationship with Jerry?
Starting point is 00:56:23 No. Isn't it true that you and Bruce were having a real difficult time? No, we weren't. Okay. Did Bruce ever get physical with you anyway whatsoever? No. We learned that she moved in a new boyfriend shortly after his death and turned out to be the Swan Delivery Man that was delivering food to their home.
Starting point is 00:56:47 And that raised a red flag too, that quickly moving on to someone new. She denied sending any new pictures to Jerry. She denied that she told him that she was pregnant. She denied that she was beaten. Every question that was asked her, she denied it. So we'll let her do that. And then we brought out each piece of evidence. Did you send these chats?
Starting point is 00:57:18 She said, well, I might have met a Jerry cast. They meet a lot of people when I'm out from my Mar-Kay cosmetics. What about masturbation videotape? Now she's trying to backtrack. Oh, he was trying to blackmail me. He was trying to do this, but I didn't do it. Do you know Jerry Casson? Yes, I do.
Starting point is 00:57:34 I met him out there, talked to him online, along with the rest of the people out there. That is always a turning point in any case when you catch someone in a lie and they know They've been had. They've been caught. After admitting that she didn't know Jerry Cassidy, she went on to say that Jerry became obsessed with her. It wouldn't leave her alone. But he, very likely, could have killed Bruce,
Starting point is 00:58:07 but didn't involve her. But Sheree doesn't have an explanation for the messages she sent. The only response that she could give was that someone had manipulated and changed all the sentences in the chat from AOL. to make her look guilty. That is not even right.
Starting point is 00:58:29 I did not write that stuff. I did not write that stuff. I don't know who changed that stuff, but I did not write that stuff. No, I didn't. No. This is crazy. No.
Starting point is 00:58:42 My car and I want to leave. Because this is nuts. You guys have completely lost it. She asked, can I go? He says, no, you're under arrest. She's real angry. She was just over the top, almost like she was when she was crying at the house,
Starting point is 00:59:04 but now mad at us. The investigation wasn't over yet. We still had to fill in the blanks. But she was charged with murder then. From there, we had to build a case, basically just checking and cross-checking every fact in there to show that she was knowingly lying to Jerry and that her goal in this whole process
Starting point is 00:59:30 was to basically just use Jerry and kill her husband. But why would they do it? Why? What is the motive? Investigators have poured through hundreds of pages of emails and instant messages detailing a murder plot between Sheree Miller and Jerry Cassidy. But with a confessed gunman dead,
Starting point is 01:00:05 they still have their work cut out for them to make the charges stick. Shari claimed that anybody could have done that and printed it out and faked it. So we had to come up with some more proof. Three weeks after Jerry's death, investigators decide to fly to Reno to speak with his coworkers and learn more about his relationship with Shari. Anyone that worked with him closely was aware of her. and said that Cherie was saying that it was by sheer happenstance that they met in Reno,
Starting point is 01:00:45 that she was there on a Mary Kay convention and just happened to meet him and I'm like, oh, uh-uh, no, no, no, no. Jerry's former colleagues at the casino say it all began seven months earlier in the summer of 1999. His self-esteem was not so good, you know, losing his dream job and then losing his dream job and then losing his wife. And, you know, I think he was just, he was ripe for the picking, in my opinion.
Starting point is 01:01:18 Jerry's chats with Cherie seemed to give him a new lease on life. He told us she was just beautiful, and she looked like the woman of his dreams, and that she was accomplished, and she had several businesses. Soon enough, Sheree showed up at the for a visit.
Starting point is 01:01:46 Jerry was all scrubbed and shined up and had his best suit on, and I'm sure he ironed his shirt five times. He was so excited to walk her around the casino floor and introduce her to all of us. She was all dolled up, and her hair was perfectly positioned. The makeup was perfect, a ring on every finger,
Starting point is 01:02:13 finger. Shri told us that she was a Mary Kay consultant and that she owned a string of like nursing homes for the elderly and that she had quite the cash flow. But we really didn't know who she was. All we knew is what she showed us. Her first trip to Reno was two or three days. She stayed in the hotel. would have the next two nights off. And we didn't see hide nor hair of Jerry or Cherie. But once she left town, he was back at work. Rumors fly quickly in the casino business. We all knew that they had spent the night together and they'd had a wonderful time in bed. I'm not sure they ever left the hotel room. After that, the relationship appeared to heat up even. more. She was telling Jerry that, you know, he deserved an upgrade and that she was going to make that happen for him.
Starting point is 01:03:30 And she was dangling all these wonderful things in front of them, like options or opportunities, or when we get together, we can have this fabulous life. When she came back the second time, they were house shopping, you know, three, for $500,000 homes. Well, there's no way that Jerry could afford that. She had thoroughly convinced him and anyone else that she had the money. There was like no big deal.
Starting point is 01:04:07 When investigators follow up with acquaintances from Cherie's past, they learn that this was a common pattern of behavior for her. Everyone that we talked to said she was attentive to you, got along with everybody. In fact, I couldn't find it. anyone in her personal life other than relatives that she didn't have some type of sexual affair with. All her friends, male or female.
Starting point is 01:04:32 When Cherie was first dating Bruce, she tried to portray to him that she had a comfortable life, that she was a businesswoman, that she owned a nursing home. In reality, that turned out to be fake. Everywhere they look, investigators find further evidence of Cherie's lies. We did check into the claims that Shereem made to Jerry that Bruce was part of the mafia and was abusive and we couldn't find anything to confirm that. The photographs that she sent Jerry showing how she had been beaten were pretty good. I mean, they actually looked like some bruises.
Starting point is 01:05:19 But we believe that Cosmetics came into play in this case because you got to have the different shades of green and brown. And we figured that she probably used her knowledge of cosmetics to make it look like bruises. And as investigators keep digging, they uncover something even more shocking. She couldn't have kids. She had her tubes tied.
Starting point is 01:05:49 That was part of her game playing on Jerry's emotions to get him to do what she needed and wanted him to do. The whole life is a wine. She was the master manipulator, and she'd been working on this plan for quite a while. It all paints a portrait of a woman willing to do anything to get what she wants. Shree was poor when she was brought up.
Starting point is 01:06:19 So when she meets Bruce Miller, he has the semblance of money, stability, and she's got a job that she goes to in the morning, She's got a house to go home to at night. That was not enough for her. She wasn't in the spotlight. She was in a salvage yard. She was taking care of three children. She wanted the razzle-dazzle.
Starting point is 01:06:42 She wanted to mix things up. Bruce was a stepping stone for her. She probably plotted out, I'm going to get this guy, I'm going to kill him, I'm going to get all of his money and go on and live my life without him. Being set for life. In the late 90s, the Internet was largely untamed and unregulated, and Sheree used that to her advantage.
Starting point is 01:07:15 Sheree knew how to push the buttons on the computer. She was a master at chat. But what we saw is she became a master at manipulation in person, reinforcing what she said in the chat. It was a plot that seemed like it was forming with her to suck Jerry in. I don't think for one minute Jerry would ever willingly just go murder someone. She just absolutely twisted him up emotionally to the point where he didn't see any other out than to defend the woman that he loved. But once Jerry did her bidding, it seemed like Cherie had no further use.
Starting point is 01:08:01 for him. Jerry came all the way to Flint, Michigan to commit this murder. Everything's to plan. He goes back. She's kind of blowing him off. Now, they went from 50, 60 emails a day to talking on the phone, to being in this chat room, to now nothing. He did what she wanted him to do. And then she dropped Jerry like a hot potato. It was like she wouldn't converse with him online. She wouldn't answer the phones for her to drop him. I think he just... That was the last straw for him. He just completely fell apart.
Starting point is 01:08:43 He realized with more and more intensity to read played him. And he thought he had only one option at that point. With probably intense, humiliation, was to end his life. He left behind a note which led us to the briefcase that had all the information that we're going to need for a conviction of Sherry Miller.
Starting point is 01:09:11 It's a compelling theory, but prosecutors don't know if it will be enough to get a conviction. While they still have this woman in custody and a mountain of evidence against her, they still have to prove it in court. Coming up, the Internet's first murder trial. This trial was carried coast to coast on court TV. I was way worried about losing. She didn't pull the trigger. Cherie takes the stand, compromising her own defense.
Starting point is 01:09:49 The emails were wrote. And they were exactly as written? Yes, they were. And she sets her sights on a new man. Everything was about money or sex. And I was just smart enough to pick up on it. In the fall of 2000, growing fascination with the World Wide Web, fuels the publicity surrounding Sheree Miller's murder trial.
Starting point is 01:10:23 The Sheree Miller case was the first internet murder case. This case caught people's attention because someone actually used the internet to persuade someone else to kill their spouse. On December 12, 2000, people across the country tune in to watch the proceedings. This captured the nation's attention. This was carried coast to coast on court TV.
Starting point is 01:10:56 It was so new, so unique. It was kind of a sad tragedy playing out in the courtroom. We had two families. One family was Bruce's family. He was just an innocent guy. They lost a good man, but you can also say that about the shooter, which is unusual. They subjected themselves to their son being portrayed as a killer,
Starting point is 01:11:24 but yet he's dead because of Sherry too. They're both victims, in my opinion. But as public as Cherie's misdeeds have become, prosecutors still have their work cut out for them. I was way worried about losing. It was a circumstantial case. She didn't pull the trigger. it was a hard road.
Starting point is 01:11:53 The prosecution had to prove to the jury that this woman sitting in front of them was the real killer. She mastermind, plotted the whole thing. But for her, Bruce would still be alive. The task is complex because the case hinges on technology unfamiliar to many in the courtroom. Honestly, when this case started,
Starting point is 01:12:20 I had never been on a computer. and so I had to go to AOL, experience what it was like, emailing, shopping, doing ordinary things. At the time that I was part of the jury, I didn't know anything about chat rooms. I didn't know anything about meeting people online. And I learned a lot about the Internet and how it works by being in that trial.
Starting point is 01:12:53 To connect the dots of her sinister plan, sinister plan, prosecutors carefully walk the jury through months of communication between Cherie and Jerry. Although the legitimacy of the emails is still contested by the defense, the story they tell is scathing. When you read the emails between the two, she had him hook, line, and sinker. And every time she bamboozled him, lied to him, manipulated him. it worked and she just kept on getting away with it. When it was all said and done, the most bizarre thing that we saw in this was Shree's manipulation.
Starting point is 01:13:38 We believe that she faked her body as being bruised. How she sent photographs of sonograms with the actual dates on them, but those sonograms were five and six years old. They were from her previous kids. The most day of those sonograms were five and six years old. The most days. The slamming messages are the one sent the night before the murder. They literally wrote out the exact directions in how they were going to murder Bruce Miller.
Starting point is 01:14:04 They wrote it online. I think she had got away with it had she not dumped her boyfriend a month later. She dumped him and wouldn't talk to him, wouldn't call him back, and that's when he committed suicide and the briefcase was found. But according to Cherie's defense team, prosecutors have it backwards. They admit the affair took place, but claim Jerry is the one who framed Shiree. One of the arguments that was brought up by the defense during the trial is that this instant message was made up. We had an excellent expert, and he was like, all you've got to do is do this, that, and the other.
Starting point is 01:14:49 It could be changed. In reality, it's not that hard at all. In fact, Attorney Nicola made up an instant message using Sergeant I's Pratrafka's name. his name, just to confuse the jury. The defense was flinging stuff up against the wall, see what would stick. Because all he had to do was make sure we could think that anything else could have happened other than Sheree doing this. And there's a lot of reason for us to have reasonable doubt. She never touched a gun.
Starting point is 01:15:19 She wasn't there that night. There was nothing connecting her to that, really, in a physical sense, other than the Internet. the emails. Several days into the trial, Cherie stuns the courtroom by taking the stand in her own defense. Against my advice, she took the stand. She was just too stubborn to listen to my advice, and she wanted to roll the dice. She would have a chance. So Sheree went for that chance. Sherry got on the witness stand. She thought her charm was going to get her out of it. The gamble backfires when a slip-up costs the defense their argument. One of the first questions she was asked under cross-examination,
Starting point is 01:16:09 are all these exhibits true and accurate? Yes, they are. Okay, including the emails? The emails were wrote. Okay. And they were exactly as written? Yes, they were. The mistake was on her. Once again, that significant
Starting point is 01:16:28 just her hubris. She thought she could get anybody to believe her. She thought that she was going to sell that whole jury on her little innocent act. On December 22nd, after two days of deliberation, the jury finds Sheree guilty. She was ultimately convicted of second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder. She was sentenced to life without parole, just as if she had pulled the trigger herself. I was very relieved at the verdict. I think we all were. I think we may have lost the case if Sherry had not testified.
Starting point is 01:17:21 However, Cherie's prison sentence does little to curb her behavior. Sherry started communicating with somebody when she was in prison and this person wanted to marry her. He could have been the next victim. I mean, that's what you think when you hear something like that. And honestly, I felt like somebody needed to go out and forewarn him. Watch your back. After four years behind bars, Sheree Miller's story is told again. In 2005, the salacious story is featured on the second season of Snap.
Starting point is 01:18:08 Bruce had so many friends with unreal. I just couldn't believe why someone would, you know, murder my brother. Bruce was just totally fine-sided by it all. You know, here he thought he'd found somebody, you know, the perfect wife. Two days after the death, the murder of her husband that she loved supposedly, she's dancing in a bar in Otisville, Michigan. I mean, that's not a grieving widow. Sheree would, as far as I've understood, do absolutely anything in the bedroom.
Starting point is 01:18:44 We found videos of Sheree Miller following herself. They had this briefcase that had a suicide note from Jerry Cassidy in it, explaining that he had killed Bruce Miller. Jerry Cassidy, in one last desperate act of a life that he had flushed down the toilet, he sought to take Sheree down with him. The broadcast forever changes one man's life. I watched a lot of snap, and the show by Sheree Miller came on. There was something in her eyes or wait.
Starting point is 01:19:20 I thought she was innocent. She looked lonely and sad. So I reached out and wrote a letter. And within a couple of weeks, she wrote me back. She said she would like to be pen palettes and, you know, to communicate with somebody on the outside. And maybe I'd grow up and visit it from time of time, you know. Their jailhouse correspondence quickly turns into a romance.
Starting point is 01:19:50 There was a five, six-hour drive from Illinois to Michigan, where the person was. You can hold hands from that spot in. Just sit there for four or five hours talking. She was lovey-dubby and personable, and made you feel like you're special. You got serious very quick. So she tried to ask for money, by the way. So I sent it to her. On one of his visits, they decide to make it official.
Starting point is 01:20:29 I proposed to her. She said yes. She sent a picture to Michigan paper announcing it. We talked about when she got out, we get married, and she would move down to Illinois, and had this whole life plan out together. In July 2009, it looks like those plans might come to fruition sooner than expected.
Starting point is 01:20:59 Her conviction was appealed on the grounds that the evidence from Jerry and his suicide should not have come in at trial, that that was an error by the judge and prejudicial to the jury. That set her free. Then there was another ruling that said she should get a new trial.
Starting point is 01:21:25 But as soon as she's released, Sheree drops her new suitor. When she got out, she started to tell me how much he couldn't have another relationship because she's still in love with her husband. She never once mentioned Bruce Miller until she got released. And then it was, I missed him, I love him. Bells went off of my head that said, oh my God, she did this. I was wrong.
Starting point is 01:21:57 She's guilty. That changed everything. I went back to read letters before I burnt them. She said, everything's from me and screw everybody else. I usually get everything I can from you, and I'll move on to the next person. With fresh eyes, he sees all the red flags he ignored throughout their courtship.
Starting point is 01:22:26 Everything was about money or sex, and I was it smart enough to pick up on it. I was sent her, you know, 50, 60 bucks. I couldn't tell you how much. I'm afraid to say I'm a total. She's diabetic. She's probably the most evil person I ever met. Within weeks of the release from her nine-year prison stint,
Starting point is 01:22:54 investigators discover that Cherie is back to her old tricks. When Sherry got out of prison, she lived with her daughter, and it wasn't a surprise that she started a Facebook page, That concerned law enforcement. Was she going to be able to recreate her experience with somebody else? After Cherie won her appeal to set aside the verdict and order a new trial, the Genesee County Prosecutor's Office immediately appealed that judge's decision. It went to a higher court.
Starting point is 01:23:29 That higher court ruled that the lower court erred on the appeal, and her conviction was now reinstated, and she was sent back to prison. Back behind bars, and with her original sentence reinstated, Cherie finally seems ready to come clean. Her whole life is about getting attention. Her appeals had run out. How do you become relevant again? I may as well admit I did it,
Starting point is 01:24:00 and then, again, get the focus on me. She admitted it in a letter to judge that the prosecution Marcy Maybury had been right all along. It was jaw-dropping. Sheree also said she wanted Bruce to be killed because she was afraid he would find out about her online secret relationship. He would divorce her, leave her high and dry.
Starting point is 01:24:27 But some believe the letter is just another one of Sheree's manipulations. There's givers and there's takers, and she is a Class A taker. And she doesn't care who she destroys to get what she wants. And so no, it's like crocodile tears. I don't believe it for one second. She's exactly what she should be. I think she should never get out of prison. I think she comes out of prison. She's not, she's going to be the same as always. She's going to look for people to use.
Starting point is 01:25:07 Even though Sheree Miller is going to spend the rest of her life in prison, I still feel for the victims that she left behind that was unnecessary. The Bruce Miller family are victims that will never forget this. Jerichassidy, she killed too, left behind his family, his kids, and she ultimately, I believe, ruined John Hutchinson's life also because he never was able to get back into the circle of friends that he had made all those years because he was always out there as the pariah that had killed Bruce. But if she just would at some point in her life told the truth in the beginning, she could have been could have maybe come out a better person than she did.

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