The Deck - Kelly Dee Wilson (10 of Spades, Ohio)
Episode Date: March 2, 2022Our card this week is Kelly Dee Wilson, the 10 of Spades from Ohio. R&B radio fans in Dayton, Ohio knew Kelly Dee Wilson as her on air name Nikki Brooks. When Wilson turned up murdered in her apartme...nt after her show in March 2000, the community was shocked. If you know anything about Kelly Wilson’s murder in Dayton, Ohio in March 2000, please call the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office at 937-225-6479 or you can email Detective Phelps directly at PhelpsM@mcohiosheriff.org. To learn more about The Deck, visit www.thedeckpodcast.com. To apply for the Cold Case Playing Cards grant through Season of Justice, visit www.seasonofjustice.org
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Our card this week is Kelly D. Wilson, the 10 of spades from Ohio.
Kelly D. Wilson was a young woman whose life and career as a rising star in radio was
tragically cut short, with few clues left behind to piece together the mystery.
What happened to Kelly at the start of the new millennium shocked her fans, it horrified
her family, and it left detectives baffled to this very day.
Telling her story to a wider audience
might be the spark investigators need to kickstart their work
and to bring whoever took her life to justice.
I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is The Deck. . Monday, March 25, 2000 was the start of a new week at U92 Radio, also known as WROU in
Dayton, Ohio.
Just three months after worldwide Y2K, fears had calmed, and people in the entertainment and broadcast industry realized the world was not going to end.
The vice president of the station, Stan Boston, spent most days buzzing around the office, feeling really good about the channel's programming.
U92 was known as R&B station, so back then the channel played bands and artists like Boys to Men, Destiny's Child, and Missy Elliott, who were all topping the R&B in contemporary music charts.
And singers like Mariah Carey and Jaila were helping blur the genre lines between Pop
and R&B, and because DJs at Stan's station were also playing those artists all the time,
the channel just kept gaining more and more in popularity with listeners across Ohio.
Stan credited a lot of U-92's recent success
to one of his biggest disc jockeys, Nikki Brooks.
Nikki was just an on-air name though.
The real woman behind the name was 29-year-old Kelly D. Wilson.
Kelly hosted a weekday evening show called Jammin A.8
and listeners loved her.
U-92 had scooped up Kelly from a station
in her nearby hometown of Cincinnati about
a year earlier, and from the moment she hit the airwaves in Dayton, listeners tuned in
regularly for any programming she was a part of.
People were just drawn to Kelly's on-air energy and confident voice.
Fans could tell she genuinely loved her job in the music she played.
Kelly was dedicated to her work in building the
station's branding around her DJ personality, Nikki Brooks.
So that's why Stan, her boss, was confused around 7pm on Monday when Kelly hadn't shown
up for her shift yet. She was never late and she usually got to the station right at 7
to prepare for her show, which went on air at 8. Now, stand in panic right away. He figured maybe she was just having car trouble or had gotten stuck in traffic.
So he waited.
But by 720, he really started to worry.
Tons of questions were swirling around in his mind. Did Kelly have an unforeseen family emergency?
Why would she be flaking?
But no matter what, stand new the station would need to be prepared to fill her show's airtime with, you know, a rerun, maybe
a syndicated program, or worst case scenario calling a substitute host last minute to keep their
programming going. Stan looked up the phone number for Kelly's apartment landline and gave it a
ring, but no one answered. Next, he called Kelly's mom Charlene, who lived in Cincinnati. He knew that Kelly was super close with her mom, and he figured she might know where her daughter
was, or at least be able to explain why Kelly had just ghosted her shift. But when Charlene
answered, she told Stan that she had no clue where Kelly was, or why she failed to show
up to work. She also said that Stan's call made her very worried, because she'd actually
been trying to call Kelly the day before on Sunday but hadn't been able to reach her. Stan tried to keep Charlene calm and said,
you know what, I'll just go over to Kelly's apartment to check on her. This was actually no big deal
for Stan because coincidentally, he lived in the same apartment complex as Kelly and knew exactly
where her unit was. The community they lived in was called the Meadows and it was in a part of the
city known as Harrison Township.
The Meadows complex is still there today, and it's one of those apartment building layouts
where there's several residential buildings sprawled around a pool with an office and
a clubhouse, which are sort of the hub of everything.
And it also has an on-site bar and social hub.
When Stan drove over to Kelly's place after talking with Charlene, he arrived by like 7.30pm.
And the first thing he saw was her car parked in its space, which he thought was kind of weird,
because that seemed to indicate that Kelly was home for some reason, and just had not been answering her phone.
He went up to the door, jiggled the knob, and realized it was locked.
So he knocked a few times, but Kelly didn't answer.
And there weren't any sounds coming from inside that indicated she was making her way to
the door or anything.
Stan went to the front office, but no one was there working, so he decided that his only
other option to try and get someone on staff to help him was to go to the onsite bar and
see if the bartender could get a hold of someone.
The bartender called a maintenance man who agreed to come over, but he said there was
no way he was going to be able to just let stand waltz into Kelly's unit and look around
that would be way against policy.
Stan explained to the bartender in maintenance guy that he and Kelly's family were really
worried about her because no one had heard from her in two days.
So they came to a compromise.
In order not to break their company policy and just let stand take peak, the staff ended
up calling the police who offered to come by and do a welfare check at Kelly's unit.
A few minutes later, among Gummery County's sheriff's deputating him, Johnny Campbell heard
the call coming over his patrol cars radio and he headed over.
Just like when Stan had knocked on Kelly's door, when deputy Campbell wrapped on it a few
times, no one answered.
So he used the maintenance man's key to open the door and go inside.
To help explain what happened next, our team went to Dayton and interviewed Montgomery County Sheriff's
Detective Melanie Phelps. Detective Phelps is currently in charge of Kelly's case and sometimes
you'll hear her switch between calling Kelly by her real name and her on-air name Nikki throughout
this episode. He let himself in with the key and announced, you know, Sheriff's Office, you know, anybody here,
Sheriff's Office, anybody here.
It's not a very big apartment.
So as he went through, he then located Kelly
on the floor deceased and made sure that everybody got,
you know, stayed out, secured the scene
and called the supervisors and the detectives.
According to what Phelps knows from reading through
the case file, Kelly lived in a one-bedroom apartment.
And her living room, dining room, and kitchen were all in an open floor plan.
There weren't walls separating those rooms.
But to access the bathroom, you had to actually walk through Kelly's bedroom.
And that is where Deputy Campbell found Kelly's body, about halfway off the side of her
bathtub.
She was laying on her stomach in the bathroom,
and she had on just a robe and her bra and a t-shirt.
She didn't have anything on below the waist.
According to crime scene reports filed at the time,
there wasn't much blood on or around Kelly's body,
so it wasn't immediately clear to the police how she died.
But one detail the investigators noticed right away was Fiekelmatter.
It was on Kelly, it was around the bathroom, and back in her bedroom on her bed.
Now Fiekelmatter being in the bathroom itself wasn't super strange, I mean, it's a bathroom
after all.
But the fact that it was also found on the bed indicated to authorities that they may
have been looking at a scenario where Kelly had originally been killed on her bed.
Then Fiko matter from either her or her killer became present there, and then she was moved
to her bathroom.
They also had to consider the possibility too that the Fiko matter may have originated
in the bathroom, and then the killer left traces of it in the bedroom post-crime.
The sequence of events couldn't be determined for sure, just by where the matter was found, but it gave police the ability to theorize.
Another glaring clue police found near Kelly's body were residues from cleaning supplies,
which appeared to be an attempt by someone to cover up the crime. During her interview
with us, Detective Phelps wouldn't say specifically what kind of cleaning products had been used,
but she said it was likely something Kelly had under her sink and not a chemical that the killer had brought with them to the scene.
We just know there was cleanup at the scene, or attempted cleanup at the scene.
After discovering Kelly's body, detectives collected some of her clothes and other items from her
room and bathroom as evidence, and were able to lift fingerprints from surfaces in those areas.
as evidence and were able to lift fingerprints from surfaces in those areas. One of the big things that puzzled investigators was that there seemed to be no signs of forced
entry or like a break in, no broken windows, no damage locks, nothing.
The absence of those things caused police to think two things.
Either, the killer had a key to get in, or Kelly willingly let them in.
And nowhere in the apartment had things
been viciously tossed around or turned over.
But there were a few little things
that authorities had a hard time deciphering the meaning of.
It was definitely not ransacked.
There was one cupboard door that was open.
Her purse was on the counter in the kitchen.
And it looked as though somebody had picked her purse up and kind
of shaken it because there were coins that had gone on the counter and on the floor. She had a very tall
jewelry arm war and that was not opened. She still was wearing jewelry so I don't believe it had
anything to do with robbery. Nothing seemed to be missing of value from the partner.
anything to do with robbery. Nothing seemed to be missing of value from the partner. When Stan and another radio station employee who joined him at the
scene were told Kelly was dead, they were shocked by the news. They confirmed for
investigators by looking at a photo that it was in fact Kelly who had been
found in the apartment. So pretty much from our one-of-the-investigation,
detectives never had a question about who their victim was,
but they did have a bizarre mystery to unravel about how she died.
While this was all happening, Kelly's mom Charlene sent her son Craig up to Dayton from
Cincinnati to see what was going on with Kelly.
Cincinnati is only about a half hour south of Dayton,
so it didn't take Craig long to get there.
And when he got to Kelly's apartment building,
he saw police everywhere and quickly learned
that his sister was gone.
He went back to Cincinnati and had to break
the heart-wrenching news to his family.
I think it was probably hard for her mom,
it was probably hard for her because her baby now
had, you know, it wasn't super far away,
but her daughter was, you know, had her own place now and had moved up there for a new job and it was kind of
exciting. So, you know, she just wanted to make sure that her baby girl was going to be okay.
It didn't take long before the news of Kelly's death spread through the community,
and people who were avid listeners of her radio program began to publicly mourn her loss alongside
her loved ones.
Fans in Dayton idolized Kelly, and according to Detective Phelps, the crime affected hundreds,
even thousands of people who felt like they had a personal connection with her, even
though they may just listen to her over the radio for a few hours a day.
So back then, the radio celebrities were actually like a celebrity here in Dayton.
And people would, it was like they would see an actress or something.
If you were out and about and somebody, they said, oh, it's so, so, so, so, it was like
building them up or they were on some kind of pedestal or something.
So it was very high end to be that well known on the radio here in Dayton at the time.
The day after Kelly's body was discovered,
92.1 FM got flooded with phone calls from fans
who wanted to share their grief.
Other show hosts sat in on Kelly's show
and dedicated it to her, playing calls from fans
and airing songs that they knew Kelly liked.
Listeners could hear her co-workers choking up on air
as they played one sweet day by Mariah Carey
in honor of Kelly. It would take some time before the coroner in Montgomery County would have the
results of Kelly's autopsy. So during the first 24 to 48 hours of the investigation
they couldn't technically call her death a murder. But in their hearts just due to
the certain factors that they'd observed at the crime scene they knew that they
were dealing with a highly suspicious death which more than likely would end up being a homicide.
The first thing Detective started to do to get a better idea of what Kelly had been doing
the week and she died, or who'd last seen her, was to check her work records and interview
her friends and family.
They learned that Kelly had for sure gone to work on Friday, March 24th, and she had hosted
her R&B show Jammin 8-8 until midnight.
Nothing out of the ordinary happened while Kelly was at work on Friday.
As for Saturday, according to a man detectives track down who'd been casually dating Kelly
at the time, he said that he'd been over at her apartment that night to have a few drinks
with her and one of his buddies.
After drinks, he said the group left Kelly's place and went to a party at a woman named
Tammy's house.
Tammy was a co-worker of Kelly's and people who attended that house party were mostly
employees of the radio station and their friends.
According to several witnesses who were there and two guys who'd arrived with her, Kelly's
fun at the party didn't last long.
She was not there very long. She showed up with two individuals and they kind of hung out at the party. Apparently she had been drinking prior to going to the party and the two guys went downstairs
into the basement and they were watching some football or sports. I'm not sure exactly what they
were watching. And then I guess she maybe became a little too intoxicated and so they decided that they were going to take
her home. So she didn't want to go home at first, but they were kind of like, you know,
we really don't want to be here any longer. So they went ahead and took her on back to
her apartment. According to police reports, it was at about 11 p.m. when the two men said
that they left Tammy's and drove Kelly back to her apartment.
After that, these two guys told police that they decided to hit up some bars.
The bars they wanted to go to were fairly close to Kelly's apartment, so for them it was
an easy decision to just drop her off and then head out for more drinks on their own.
Back in 2000, the two popular nightclubs nearby were Tiffany's and then another dive
called Frogs.
Both of these places were known for late night dancing, drinks, and music.
They first went to Tiffany's, and when they arrived, they ran into Tammy, Kelly's coworker
who'd thrown the house party.
By that time, the house party had moved to the clubs, and guests were bouncing between
Tiffany's and Frogs.
According to Tammy's statement to police, when she saw the two guys who'd been with Kelly,
she checked in with them to find out if Kelly had said anything about maybe sobering up some and trying to
come back out to join the group.
That was a coincidence. When the girl who threw the house party said, oh, is Nikki here
with you? It was very loud in the club and he was like, she's not here and then kind
of kept walking. They didn't have much interaction other than the fact that he mentioned
no, she was not with them.
Sometime after midnight, after Tammy talked to the guys at the bar, Kelly started
blowing up Tammy's pager. Data from Tammy's pager showed that Kelly paged her
several times using the landline at her apartment. Tammy told police that she
had used a phone at one of the clubs to call Kelly. When Kelly picked up, she
insisted that Tammy or one of the men she'd been hanging out with earlier
come back to her apartment and get her
because she wanted to keep partying.
Tammy said she didn't feel super comfortable
with sending those guys back to get Kelly
because she didn't know them all that well.
She had spoken to Kelly around the same time
that she saw those two gentlemen at the club.
So she said she had been a little leery
of the two individuals because she didn't know who they were. But when she saw them out and talked to Nikki,
she felt better because, oh, okay, I know that she's home and I know they're here.
Police were faced with a big gap in their timeline. As far as they knew, the last people
to physically see Kelly were the two guys who dropped her off at home at around 11 p.m.
But the last person to actually talk to Kelly was Tammy.
The detectives at the time start talking to all of her friends and trying to make a timeline
who was the last person that saw her or what did she do?
How intoxicated was she?
Did she see anybody else after she got home from the party?
Clearly something else happened.
What that something else was, we don't know.
It doesn't seem as though anyone knows exactly who stopped by or would have gone to her house or
she let somebody in. Based on everyone they talked to, detectives learned that Kelly was a welcoming
person, especially to people she knew. Everyone just says that everybody loved her. They don't know why anybody would have hurt her.
She was, you know, up and coming and very social.
And she was friends with everybody.
So she wouldn't have been like, no, you can't come over
or something along those lines.
She would have probably anyone
that she actually knew would have led into the apartment.
When detectives inventory the evidence
they'd processed from the crime scene,
they realized they'd never found Kelly's keys
in her apartment.
That only reinforced investigators theory
that whoever killed Kelly had taken her keys with them
when they'd left the crime scene.
The door was locked, there was no force entry.
So that individual somehow re-locked the door.
Now, her keys were not located, that individual somehow re-locked the door.
Her keys were not located, but you couldn't lock it from the inside and pull it shut, so
it had to be locked from the outside.
That says that she knew who it was.
She let them into the apartment.
By late Monday night, into Tuesday morning, police had assembled a fairly clear picture
of what Kelly's weekend had looked like, leading up to Sunday morning.
But they still felt like they needed to get more from the two men she'd been with before
and after leaving Tammy's house party.
Now police knew from talking with Tammy that the guys had been at Tiffany's club late
into the night Saturday and early Sunday morning, and Tammy herself knew that Kelly was
alive and well when she talked to her shortly after midnight.
So the men clearly had alibis for the hours of 11 p to roughly 12.30am, but investigators just needed to pin down their whereabouts
for after that point in time.
According to Detective Phelps, law enforcement's thinking at the time was that when these
men dropped Kelly off, either they or Kelly had access to her keys to get inside her apartment.
What they had to figure out is if either the men had kept Kelly's keys or perhaps remembered anyone else lurking around the unit when they left her.
She kind of had known everybody from about the same amount of time,
but the people from the party had never seen those two individuals before. So they right away were
thinking, okay, there's two guys we've never seen before, so this is a little shady. So of course
that they were two that they wanted to talk to you right away.
Both men, one of which again was someone Kelly was sort of dating at the time, agreed to
cooperate with the authorities and answer whatever questions they could.
They both admitted once again that they were with Kelly before, during, and after the
house party.
But they insisted that when they dropped Kelly off at her apartment shortly after 11pm on Saturday, she was very much alive.
The guy who had kind of been dating Kelly at the time, who were going to call Joe, said
that earlier on Saturday, he and Kelly had consensual sex before being joined by his friend
to hang out.
To police, Joe seemed genuinely distraught when he learned Kelly had been killed, and he
even reached out to Kelly's mom saying how sorry
he was for her loss. He said even though he'd only gotten to know Kelly for a short period of time, he really liked her.
Joe and his buddy were both able to provide police with solid alibis for early Sunday morning.
They told detectives that after they dropped Kelly off and went back out to the clubs,
they each ended up going home with other girls. When investigators interviewed
those women to corroborate the men's stories, the women vouched for them. So that was kind of
the end of that as far as looking at them as suspects. With not much else to go on, when the
results of Kelly's autopsy came in, it was a welcome bit of information for investigators in order
to keep the case from stalling. The Montgomery County coroner had examined Kelly's body and found some critical clues that allowed detectives to finally label Kelly's death a homicide.
And they noticed several blunt-force trauma injuries. Now, it was not anything
horrific. It wasn't any kind of bloody scene or anything along those lines. But they make note of
every little mark that is on her, all of the different cuts or whatever
inside her mouth.
She had bitten the inside of her cheek and had some injuries on her face, like the
side of her mouth.
She had a little bruise on the side of her temple.
And you could see on the back of her neck there were some red marks and a little bit of
bruising on her neck as well.
The consensus between the pathologist and police was that more than likely Kelly's killer
had strangled her to death, sometimes Sunday morning.
But as far as what time, they weren't exactly sure.
Investigators believe the killer used his bare hands because there was no bruising or
ligature marks on Kelly's neck that indicated a rope or any kind of binding had been used.
Something particularly frustrating was that the coroner was unable to determine if Kelly
had been sexually assaulted before she was murdered.
Now authorities knew, based on what Joe had told them, that he and Kelly had had sex
at some point in the 24 hours before she was killed.
But based on the autopsy findings, there was no way to tell for sure if she'd been sexually assaulted at the time of her murder.
And Detective Phelps said she couldn't provide any information
about that to protect the integrity
of the act of investigation.
In the end, the coroner listed Kelly's official manner
of death as homicide, with a cause of death as a fixation.
When officials confirmed Kelly's death was, in fact, a murder,
it sent another ripple of shock and fear through the date and community.
It also ratcheted up the pressure on police to identify and arrest whoever was responsible because people in the area were terrified that a monster was out there, on the loose, able to strike again if they wanted.
On Saturday, April 1, six days after Kelly was killed, her friends and family held a memorial service for her at Omega Baptist Church in Dayton.
150 people showed up to share stories and memories of Kelly.
According to an article on the Dayton Daily News, the radio station president was there
and talked about how Kelly had a natural ability to connect with listeners.
You could hear her smile through the radio, she said.
Another coworker told a story about how when she'd first started, Kelly had to tape the
name Nikki Brooks near her microphone in the studio so she would remember her tag out.
She had gone by a different on-air name in Cincinnati so she didn't want to slip up and
accidentally use her old moniker.
Detective Spent the rest of that year collecting DNA samples from people who are with Kelly
prior to her death, most of which consented to giving swabs for investigative purposes.
They wanted to compare those individuals' genetic profiles to items of evidence from
the crime scene, specifically Kelly's robe, t-shirt, and the brush she was wearing.
Detective Phelps said the results from the comparison testing on DNA samples taken at
the time didn't point to anyone they didn't already know had been in Kelly's apartment.
In other words, there were no unknown DNA profiles found on the items.
There were also no DNA profiles of known suspects whose DNA was in a place it shouldn't have
been, like in blood, for example.
Phelps couldn't provide our team with additional information she had regarding the DNA.
Like if the fecal matter came back to someone else other than Kelly, and you can spiral
on this one all day, I did.
I went around and around thinking about what it would mean if it were Kelly's, or more
what it would mean if it wasn't since no unknown DNA was found.
But the truth is, only the investigators know.
In order to keep things moving at the time without much forensic evidence to work off of, police
had to rely on tips from the community.
They worked a handful of leads that came in from people calling saying stuff like, so-and-so
was acting weird when someone brought up Kelly's murder, and just other general community
rumors.
But by the start of 2001, nothing had materialized.
Police couldn't find anyone who disliked her or had any problems with her, so without suspects
or emotive, the case stalled.
The Montgomery County Sheriff's Office preserved evidence and storage, and detectives continued
to investigate, but not much happened with the case until 2004.
That year, a tip-led police to get a search warrant for a man's DNA in Georgia.
Sheriff's detectives had never publicly said what information specifically led them to
pursue this warrant, or even who the man was.
But in the end, investigators compared his profile to their evidence and didn't get a
match.
After that fizzled out, a lot of the people in Dayton who were still hoping the case would regain traction began speculating that perhaps Kelly had fallen victim
to someone who had been a little too big of a fan of her on her radio show. Essentially,
a stalker. Some of her co-workers said she was very friendly and there were people that
flirted with her a lot because she's absolutely beautiful. So nothing that seemed out of the ordinary
or extreme. So she hadn't made any like complaints to police about any particular person?
No, she had not.
The stalker theory never really took hold with investigators because they felt strongly
that whoever had attacked and killed Kelly actually knew her. Or at the very least,
had been familiar enough to her that she would have left them into her apartment, dressed only in her robe, a bra, and a t-shirt. She didn't have anything
on below the waist when she was found, but we don't know, based on what police have shared
with us whether or not they think that's because Kelly had been partially undressed by
her killer, or if she'd been in that state prior to her murder.
But the fact remained, she was clearly in a comfortable state of dress when whoever
killed her got inside her apartment.
The next update in the case didn't come until 2006, when a sheriff's office detective
told the Dayton Daily News that there was a, quote, real big lead in the case.
But he wouldn't provide specifics.
Kelly's mom Charlene was interviewed for that same story and told the reporter that
she just wanted to know who killed her daughter and why. According to Detective Phelps,
despite the hype around that announcement, nothing significant developed in the case over the next
several years. It was in 2012 that Detective Phelps decided to start investigating Kelly's murder
in her spare time, and she immediately felt a sense of burden
to take it on full time.
One of our other detectives had been talking about the case,
and I was like, oh, that's very interesting.
When I was a beat cop, just an in Harrison,
that was in my beat, and then that was my beat
when I was a detective.
So it was my area, very familiar with it,
and I just think you can't give up on these kind of cases. Families
need closure. So whenever I could sneak one of the cases out and start looking into it and taking
some notes and becoming more involved, I would anytime I could. Sometimes I love to go through and
look at pictures over and over again. There's been several other cases that I've worked that after
looking at the pictures for the 50th time, I'll notice something that I never noticed before. That I'll go, oh,
oh, I'm going to have that sent to the lab. So then I'll get back out, you know, and have
evidence technician send that over to the lab. So I go over them and over them and over them.
So I really get every last little speck of the picture in my head.
In recent years, Detective Phelps has sent old DNA samples
to undergo newer, more targeted testing,
with the hopes that her department can get a match
on some DNA found on Kelly's clothing.
If a DNA match doesn't come back,
Detective Phelps said it will take a tip
from someone who saw something noteworthy
in Kelly's apartment complex,
the night of the crime to help law enforcement solve the case. Even though a long shot like that seems like a
pipe dream, Phelps hasn't lost hope that just one small detail could change
everything, even 22 years later. That's why we're hoping maybe somebody saw
something in the parking lot, or I mean they're big buildings over there. You know
maybe a neighbor thought, oh I heard something and I looked out and I saw,
you know, somebody, you know, get into a blue car
or something along those lines.
Just a little bit of something more
is kind of what we're looking for.
Any variable suspects?
There are, however, I think that we need to rely
on some more technology,
because we didn't have it as well back in 2000.
There's always new technology coming out so I'm always resending things to the lab to try to be
tested again and again and again or try a different method or something along those lines to just try
to spark a new lead but it's totally solvable. Every faith in this one. And I think it's coming.
I really do.
I think that somebody somewhere is going to say, you know what?
Remember she used to live next door to me,
or she used to live here.
And I remember when that happened, and this guy was being weird
or something, you know.
Though they can't say for sure, police
lean toward believing that the suspect is a man,
because the case lacks any other strong motive, meaning it was likely sexual.
The hardest thing for Phelps is knowing that year after year Kelly's family has endured
continual heartbreak over losing Kelly and has never had any answers surrounding the circumstances
that led to her murder.
In 2017, Dayton TV station, WHO, interviewed Kelly's sister Jamie Powell.
Here's a clip of what she had to say regarding what a whole Kelly's absence has left in her life.
Thinking what may have become of her, you know, she would have saw my children grow up and how much she would have adored them.
And the new grandbaby, I mean, that's when it really hits home, that nothing's been solved. Nothing. It's still like an open wound.
That's why detective felps keeps pushing, keeps trying, keeps turning over every leaf in the
case.
She realizes the deafening silence and dead ends that surround Kelly's case is just too
much to bear for her family.
I mean, if that was my daughter, if that wasle with, is the fact that Kelly was home alone. It was late. one thing Phelps and the other investigators who have worked this case continually
grapple with is the fact that Kelly was home alone. It was late. She'd been
drinking and was in her bathrobe. All of those things tell police that Kelly was
comfortable when her killer came over. The fact that the door was locked meant
whoever had killed her took the time to manually lock the door as they were
leaving because detective Phelps says that Kelly had one of those locks that locked, meant whoever had killed her took the time to manually lock the door as they were leaving.
Because Detective Phelps says that Kelly had one of those locks that you can't just easily
lock from the inside before leaving.
Like you couldn't lock it before shutting it and then leave, you had to shut it and then
put a key in the knob and turn the lock once you were outside.
So was her killer someone she knew?
Someone she felt so comfortable around that she would let them into her apartment after midnight while wearing her bathrobe. Or did someone have a
key to her apartment? Police said they cleared the maintenance employees of the
apartment complex early on in the investigation. So it's unlikely the killer was a
worker at the Meadows. Police believe that whoever killed Kelly took her keys,
locked her apartment door on their way out,
and that person still has her keys, or they could have disposed of them after the murder.
The tough thing about this case is that finding the answers to all of those questions
hasn't been easy, and it may never be easy, especially because challenges always present
themselves as more and more time passes. For example, when our
team was on the ground reporting in Dayton for this episode, a reporter had a hard time
even finding clips of Kelly's old radio shows. We wanted to share more of her voice with you,
but the station that she worked for was purchased by a different media company in 2004,
and executives there told this that shows prior to 2004 were wiped from the archive.
That little bit of audio that we could get of her was from an archived news package for
WHO that just happened to have a snippet of Kelly's voice as a DJ in it.
Despite Kelly having one of the most popular voices on radio and date in that one time,
it's sad there's nothing out there commemorating her legacy as a budding radio star and a
beloved young woman in the Dayton community.
Please, if you know anything about Kelly D. Wilson's murder in Dayton, Ohio in March 2000, call the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office at 937-225-6479, or you can email Detective Phelps directly at Phelps-M at mcohiosherif.org.
The Deck is an audio chuck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis.
To learn more about the Deck and our advocacy work, visit the DeckPodcast.com.
So, what do you think Chuck, do you approve?
visit thedeckpodcast.com.
So, what do you think Chuck, do you approve?
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