cover of episode Internal Affairs - Ep. 6: Star Witnesses

Internal Affairs - Ep. 6: Star Witnesses

2023/12/19
logo of podcast Dateline Originals

Dateline Originals

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
G
Greg Lammons
J
Josh Mankiewicz
P
Paula Woodward
S
Shauna Nelson
旁白
知名游戏《文明VII》的开场动画预告片旁白。
Topics
旁白:本案讲述了Shauna Nelson对Ignacio Garris的痴迷之爱如何演变成一场谋杀案,以及Shauna Nelson如何一步步走向犯罪深渊。Shauna Nelson与Ignacio Garris的婚外情持续近三年,最终导致了Heather Garris的死亡。案件的关键在于Shauna Nelson的痴迷程度是否足以让她犯下谋杀罪。Shauna Nelson承认婚外情和错误选择,但她否认谋杀。本案涉及多起针对Heather Garris的骚扰、恐吓和谋杀阴谋。Ignacio Garris受益于Heather的人寿保险,Shauna Nelson向陪审团讲述了Heather Garris死前夜的情况。 Josh Mankiewicz: Michelle Moore是案件的关键证人,她最初隐瞒了部分事实,但在多次与侦探会面后,最终决定坦白。检察官为了获得她的证词,愿意给她免于牢狱之刑的机会。Michelle Moore的证词成为指控Shauna Nelson的关键证据,填补了案件中的一些空白。Michelle Moore坦白的原因可能是良心不安和害怕被发现更多信息。Shauna Nelson将Michelle Moore视为谋杀方面的专家,Michelle Moore帮助Shauna Nelson制定谋杀计划并逃避惩罚。Shauna Nelson的审判开始,证人回忆了谋杀案的经过。Ignacio Garris作证讲述了与Shauna Nelson的婚外情以及Shauna对家人的骚扰。案件证据主要为间接证据,包括轮胎印记、DNA证据和枪支。在案发现场发现的子弹与Ken Nelson的警用枪支相符。检察官认为Shauna Nelson试图嫁祸给她的丈夫Ken Nelson。Ken Nelson被指控篡改证据。检察官传唤Michelle Moore出庭作证。Michelle Moore在法庭上宣誓作证,描述了Shauna Nelson如何利用她的执法经验来策划谋杀。Michelle Moore称Shauna Nelson在2007年1月制定了杀害Heather Garris的计划。Michelle Moore讲述了Heather Garris被杀害前一天发生的事情,以及她和Shauna Nelson当天的活动。Michelle Moore按照Shauna Nelson的指示,在Ken Nelson的咖啡里放了安眠药。Ken Nelson的手机在案发时间拨打了Heather Garris工作的信用社的电话。Michelle Moore称Shauna Nelson之后把Ken Nelson的咖啡倒掉了,并表示Heather Garris不在她应该在的地方。Michelle Moore回忆Shauna Nelson当晚很生气,并表示Shauna Nelson当晚表示她必须除掉Heather Garris。Shauna Nelson告诉Michelle Moore,如果她接到她的电话说她在洗澡,那就意味着她杀了Heather Garris。Shauna Nelson的辩护律师试图诋毁控方证人的证词,质疑Michelle Moore的证词的可信度,暗示Michelle Moore和Shauna Nelson之间存在不正当关系,试图质疑Ignacio Garris的可信度,并质疑Ignacio Garris是否被Shauna Nelson控制。Shauna Nelson出庭作证,否认她想破坏Ignacio Garris的婚姻,解释了她发送的威胁短信,否认她策划了谋杀Heather Garris,讲述了她与Michelle Moore关系破裂的经过,否认与Michelle Moore有不正当关系,讲述了她与Michelle Moore关系破裂后的情况,对Heather Garris被杀当晚的记忆出现断层,解释了在她的车里发现的面具,否认她想射杀Heather Garris。检察官认为Shauna Nelson与Ignacio Garris的婚外情是导致Heather Garris被杀害的原因,认为Shauna Nelson有作案动机、手段和机会。辩护律师认为案件证据不足,无法证明Shauna Nelson有罪,认为案件证据薄弱,证词前后矛盾,认为检方没有达到举证责任。陪审团经过短暂的商议后,认定Shauna Nelson有罪。Shauna Nelson被判犯有一级谋杀罪,被判处无期徒刑,不得假释。Shauna Nelson在判决后接受了采访,对判决结果感到震惊,并认为自己是被陷害的。Shauna Nelson认为Ignacio Garris或Michelle Moore是真凶。Michelle Moore因协助谋杀被判刑。Ken Nelson的篡改证据指控被撤销。Greeley警察局在Shauna Nelson案件后改变了其文化。 Greg Lammons: Michelle Moore的证词填补了案件中的一些空白。 Shauna Nelson: Shauna Nelson否认她策划了谋杀Heather Garris,并对一些关键证据提出了解释。她声称与Michelle Moore的关系破裂是导致Michelle Moore作伪证的原因。 Michelle Moore: Michelle Moore提供了关于Shauna Nelson策划谋杀Heather Garris的关键证词,她详细描述了Shauna Nelson的计划和行动,以及她自己参与其中的一些细节。 Ignacio Garris: Ignacio Garris讲述了他与Shauna Nelson的婚外情,以及Shauna Nelson对他的家庭进行的骚扰和威胁。 Paula Woodward: Paula Woodward采访了Shauna Nelson,并对案件进行了评论。

Deep Dive

Chapters
Shauna Nelson's obsessive love for Ignacio Garris leads to a murder case where she claims innocence, despite her past actions and the accusations against her.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

The line between love and obsession can be gossamer thin and easy to cross. We here at Dateline have seen what can result when passion becomes a compulsion to manipulate, to influence, to possess. I didn't know that her interest in me would become an obsession. No, no one ever does. No one thinks a lover's smile, once all sunshine and summer freckles, could become a weapon.

No one imagines a voice, once soft as spring rain, could now spit hard words like a nail gun. This is a case about an obsessive love that Shauna Nelson had towards Ignacio Garris. That Shauna Nelson's nearly three-year affair with Ignacio Garris had crossed a line at some point was no longer a question. The issue now was whether her addiction to the attentions of a married man

was so powerful that a former police dispatcher and law-abiding mom of three would feel compelled to commit murder. She said, I'm guilty of a lot of things as far as the affairs and bad choices. She said, I am not guilty of murder. If not her, who? An angry bank customer? One of Shauna's friends? Or was a man's hand behind all of this? I completely think that he's capable of something like this.

In this episode, you'll hear about multiple plots to harass, intimidate, and ultimately kill Heather Garris. But she asked me to go cut her brake line on her car. You'll hear Ig Garris answer tough questions under oath.

You were the beneficiary of life insurance policies on Heather's life? Yes. And you will hear what Shauna Nelson told the jury about the night before Heather Garris died. I was driving Michelle home and told her that I no longer could have a sexual relationship with her. Truth or lies? Well, I'm not being honest. I just hope the jury of 12 can see that.

I'm Josh Mankiewicz, and this is the sixth and final episode of Internal Affairs, a podcast from Dateline. In those brutal, perplexing days after Heather's murder, one can only guess at what Michelle Moore was thinking. Haunted, perhaps, by memories. Day and night. Maybe not a lot of sleep. Memories of what she'd seen. What she'd heard. What she'd done. Michelle knew things about Sean and Elson.

Things Michelle had not told anyone, including the cops. She had made reference to poisoning her. Oh, Michelle Moore had had her chances, plenty of them. Three times she'd met with detectives after Heather Garris was murdered. Each time, she'd told the same story, which was, essentially, she knew nothing about it, and she wasn't involved. Problem was, that wasn't the whole story.

So maybe this was the tipping point of conscience. Or maybe a deep and abiding fear of serious prison time. But whatever it was that Michelle Moore knew, by November 2007,

It was too hot to hold onto. - What was your motivation to come over today? - Why not? Why not? - Were you struggling with the fact that you hadn't provided? - This time, Michelle Moore said she was ready to come clean and in return for the full skinny on what she knew about Shauna Nelson's plans to kill Heather Garris. Prosecutors were willing to essentially give Michelle Moore

a get-out-of-jail-free card. There was just one catch. There could be no lies, no omissions, no half-truths, anything less, and Michelle risked prosecution as an accomplice. I never, ever, ever thought she would do it. In that fourth meeting with detectives, Michelle was sedately dressed in a black scoop-necked sweater with her sunglasses perched on top of her head.

She looked more like one of the real housewives of Orange County than an accessory to murder. She always said she hated her. Always said she hated her. Instead of repeating her claim that she'd rarely heard Shawna Nelson utter a negative word about Heather Garris, this time Michelle said Shawna frequently spoke of killing the woman. She saw as denying Shawna what was rightfully hers. She told me why I could just shoot Heather in the head.

It was just what prosecutors had hoped for, a new star witness against Shawna Nelson. So I think there was a lot of value to that testimony. That's the voice of Greg Lammons, one of the Larimer County DAs tasked with prosecuting Shawna Nelson.

after it was determined that the Weld County District Attorney's Office might have a conflict of interest in trying this case. It filled in gaps that we could argue about and things that we thought the evidence would logically show. Michelle Moore could have kept mum after that, could have gambled that nothing new would come out and gone on with her life. She did not.

A week after her last sit-down with Detectives Prill and Tharp, she volunteered to come in for a fifth interview. There were things she'd forgotten to say before. And you think she changed because, what, too many sleepless nights, guilt eating away at her? That, I'm sure, played a role. Detective Mike Prill says there was likely much more behind Michelle Moore's sudden candor than just a guilty conscience.

She was afraid of what we were going to uncover eventually, what information we would get. And so she essentially tried to get out in front of it before we came across. Michelle says that because she'd been in law enforcement, Shawna seemed to regard her as an expert on the best methods and practices for planning a murder.

and escaping unscathed. She was a former deputy for a hiccup, you know, just enough time to probably learn what you could learn on Dateline in a month, but offered suggestions on how to avoid DNA blowback, blood spatter, how to screw the crime scene, disguise yourself. Fair to say that Michelle was essentially Shauna's murder coach or more than that?

You know, it's hard to separate these two. I think where Shauna was lacking, Michelle filled the gap, and vice versa. In late February 2008, a little more than a year after Heather Garris' murder, Shauna Nelson went on trial for it. The witnesses came first, some tearfully reliving the moment an assassin dressed in black

murdered their friend and coworker right in front of them. As we were heading to our cars, someone came up dressed all in black and told Heather to get on the ground. Then she was shot. Next, the victim's husband, Ignacio Garris, took the stand. Ig told the now familiar story of his feeling trapped in an illicit affair, held hostage, he claimed, by a jealous and spiteful woman.

who'd harassed his family with threatening emails and text messages after he'd broken it off. Ig read some of those in court. It's directed to my wife, Heather. Okay. And what does it say? It says, Heather, if you're reading this, you're a psycho bitch. And what does the next one say? It's to my wife's cell phone again. And it's anytime, anywhere, bitch.

It was a largely circumstantial case, one buttressed by experts who'd examined the physical evidence. There were the tire impressions in snowy slush near the murder scene that matched the tires on the truck Shauna was driving when she was stopped. And there was Shauna's DNA on both the mask and the shoes. And that matched clothing eyewitnesses said the killer had been wearing. And then there was the gun.

What type of weapon is contained in the box marked People's Exhibit 26? It is a Glock 40 Smith & Wesson caliber Model 22 semi-automatic pistol. Although the single 40 caliber bullet recovered from the scene could not be tied to a specific gun, a firearms analysis did show the two spent shells matched the gun in that box. It was Ken Nelson's service weapon.

Prosecutors could only offer theories as to how Ken Nelson's gun could possibly be linked to that murder. But Cliff Riedel, one of the lead prosecutors, theorized that however those shells got there, it had been Shawna Nelson's intent to implicate her husband. Yes, she was trying to frame her husband. And the reason is, is if he's out of the picture, she gets all of the kids. Heather Garris is deceased, so Ignacio's available.

As it turned out, Ken Nelson really was in serious trouble. Months after the murder, he'd been charged with evidence tampering. Police and prosecutors were convinced Ken Nelson had tried to cover for his wife by removing the murder weapon from the truck she'd been driving minutes after Heather Garris was murdered. Under oath, Ken Nelson insisted he'd removed nothing from that truck his wife was driving on the night he stopped her. Do you ever recall...

leaning in to the driver's side and retrieving any items. I never went to the driver's side of the vehicle. On the fourth day of testimony, prosecutors called their star witness. Call Michelle Moore, please. Michelle Moore had not looked at Shawna Nelson as she entered the courtroom, but if looks were knives, she surely would have had one planted in her back.

by the time she passed the defense table. You solemnly swear on the penalty of perjury, testimony about to give, she be the truth and the whole truth? I swear. With her honey-colored hair pulled back in a ponytail, Michelle Moore took her seat in the witness box. She was primly dressed that day, black and green checked slacks, a black jacket over a black blouse. Would you please state your name? Michelle Moore.

After confirming for the court that she had signed a plea agreement with prosecutors for a reduced sentence in return for her testimony, Michelle Moore proceeded to paint a damning portrait of her former partner in crime. I believe she was utilizing the fact that I was in law enforcement and she watched CSI all the time and she would engage me in different scenarios and circumstances and ask me questions.

about crimes and murders and what to do, what not to do. Michelle Moore says Shauna was like a sponge, soaking up every tip and tidbit of lethal information. By mid-January 2007, Michelle says, Shauna had a plan to eliminate her romantic rival, Heather Garris. She hated her and that she was standing in the way of what she wanted, the man she wanted.

What did she tell you that she was thinking about doing? She had said that she wanted to get rid of her. Was there any doubt in your mind what she meant when she said, "I wanted to get rid of her," at that point? Not now. Monday, January 22nd, was the day before Heather was murdered. Michelle told the jury that was to have been the last day of Heather Garris' life. She then asked me if I could plan on babysitting her children on that day.

Did she indicate why? She said she had something to do. Was there any discussion about whether or not you would be given details about what she had to do? She had said that, for all I knew, she was upstairs taking a bath and I was watching the kids downstairs. That Monday, Michelle says, everything worked according to plan. They picked up Shauna's daughter from school, took her to Girl Scouts, got happy meals for the kids...

and stopped at Starbucks for a couple of coffees. Michelle says Shauna told her one of those coffees was for Ken, who happened to be off duty that day. She handed me a small baggie that had some crushed up substance in it. She said it was Ambien, and she asked me to put it in Ken's coffee. She didn't want him to bother. What did you do when she handed you this baggie? I put it in his coffee.

Back at the Nelson house, Michelle says she pitched in to help Ken, who was trying to sync up his new iPod with his computer. Michelle says Shauna set Ken's coffee on the counter and walked to another part of the house. Michelle assumed Shauna was getting the kids settled. Phone records show that at about that time, multiple calls were made from Ken Nelson's cell phone to the credit union where Heather Garris worked. A few minutes later,

Michelle says Shauna reappeared. She had come out from whatever she was doing, and I believe she dumped that Kent's coffee down the drain. And then she had told me privately, she said, well, she's not where she's supposed to be. And who did you believe she was referring to? Heather. No, Heather wasn't at the credit union, where she usually was at that hour.

because she'd not been feeling well that day and went home early, maybe prolonging her life for another 24 hours. Michelle says she and Shauna went to dinner with a cousin of Shauna's that night and had a few rounds of margaritas. Michelle recalled that Shauna seemed to be very angry as the waitresses served them a Mexican meal. She was very upset about Egg being with Heather. Did she...

Do you recall what words she used or what she was expressing about that anger? Yes, she had said that evening that she just had to get rid of her. She had to do it. That she was in hell and she didn't want to live like this anymore. When Shawna drove Michelle home that night, she says Shawna told her something she will never forget.

She then said to me, "If you get a phone call from me tomorrow saying I'm taking a bath, then you know I did it." Michelle says it was 3:21 the next afternoon when her cell phone rang until it went to voicemail. After staring at the phone for a few minutes, Michelle then says she pressed play. It was Shawna. She was taking a bath. At that moment, we know Heather Garris was still alive, but she only had three hours to live.

Michelle Moore says she pressed delete and did nothing. As Democrats unite around Vice President Harris, they'll gather in Chicago to endorse their presidential ticket. A new era is here. It is go time. Stay with MSNBC for insights and analysis. The race is going to be close. Everybody should prepare themselves for that. Plus reporting on the ground from the convention hall.

extraordinary levels of enthusiasm from Democrats for the fight ahead. The Democratic National Convention, special coverage this week on MSNBC. They are the families of the missing in America, and they're desperately searching for answers. Somebody knows something. I'm Josh Bankles. Join me for season three of Missing in America. Listen carefully.

Because just one small detail might allow you to solve a mystery. We have seen miracles happen. Dateline, Missing in America. All episodes available now, wherever you get your podcasts. For six days of trial, Shawna Nelson sat quietly as she heard herself described as an unhinged homicidal stalker, a sex-starved adulteress,

who became obsessed with possessing and controlling a married man. She hardly looked the part of a femme fatale, her once blonde hair now a long tangle of mousy brown. The smile was still there, though, the easy laugh when chatting with her lawyers during breaks. Much of Shauna Nelson's defense depended on cross-examinations, where her public defender, Kevin Strobel, tried to discredit her accusers.

Michelle Moore, who'd gotten a plea deal in exchange for her testimony, was repeatedly hammered for having changed large portions of her story. Was she telling the truth now, they asked, or was she sacrificing her friend to knock some years off her stretch? You have every reason in the world to try to convict Shauna Nelson in this case. I have every reason in the world to tell the truth.

At one point, the defense team implied that Michelle may have turned on Shawna because the two had been lovers who'd had a falling out. We're not angry with Shawna Nelson because she wanted to terminate a sexual relationship with you. There wasn't a sexual relationship. When Ignacio Garris was on the stand, the defense team sought to undermine his credibility.

and cast doubt on the prosecution's theory that Shawna had been a jealous stalker who'd threatened Ig's family. After all, Ig had lied to his wife, they said, and he'd misled the police. You told Sergeant West that it was your decision to come clean with Heather. Well, yes, I kept on lying. You didn't tell Sergeant West, the first person who interviewed you,

that the reason you had told your wife about the affair was because she had caught you? Yes. Ig Garris was a large and imposing-looking man, a cop. How could such a man, the defense seemed to say, without saying it, be kept essentially in a state of sexual bondage? We told Investigator Mlosnik...

that Ms. Nelson wanted to have sex with you, but you did not want to have sex with her. That is correct. Had he not returned to her bed after previous breakups, her defense lawyer asked, had he not snuck out of his house, climbed through windows like a rebellious teenager to be with her? Had he not taken her to resorts for romantic weekend getaways? And did you spend a weekend or an evening with Chyna Nelson at Grand Lake? Yes.

And did you do that because you felt you were being held hostage? Yes. It may have been Shauna Nelson's trial, but at times it seemed it was Ig Garris who was being judged. In the defense's telling, Shauna Nelson might have been a boisterous, hard-drinking serial cheater, but she was no killer. There seemed to be only one way to prove that. Does the defense have any evidence to present? Yes, Your Honor. We've called Shauna Nelson.

On the stand, Shawna Nelson was personable and direct. She easily fielded the leading questions her lawyer lobbed at her, and then turned and spoke directly to the jury when answering. Did you ever make a statement to the effect of, "Heather has ruined my life"? No. Shawna spoke at length about her Rocky Mountain melodrama with Ig Garris. She insisted she'd never wanted to break up Ig's marriage to Heather, and she didn't want to leave her husband Ken either.

We had talked about divorcing in the past and being together. And we had both always come to the conclusion that we did not want to leave the life that we had. As for those nasty text messages after Ig finally broke it off with her, well, she said those were just drunken venting. Did you also, during this time period, send by text a photograph of Christian with the

Words, eggs, flesh, and blood. I did. Why did you send that to the Garrises? I believe I sent that actually to Heather's phone, and it was just out of spite, just to create drama, I guess. Drama? Oh, yes. Shauna admitted there had been plenty of drama. But murder? No. Did you develop a plan to kill Heather Garris? No, I didn't. So why would Michelle Moore say she did?

Well, Shawna implied it was something personal, something about hurt feelings, and perhaps a desire for revenge. According to Shawna, the turning point came the night before Heather Garris died, the night she and Michelle had gone out for drinks and dinner. I was driving Michelle home and told her that I no longer could have a sexual relationship with her, that I had been thinking about it, and that...

Since I was trying to actually maybe finally be loyal to Ken, that I needed to completely fess up and that I was going to go home and tell Ken also about my relationship with Michelle. What was Michelle Moore's reaction to that? She was very upset. Had there really been an affair between Shauna and Michelle?

If so, was a bad breakup reason enough for Michelle to turn on Shauna and try to put her away for life? Hard to say. It's a truth only they know. But in Shauna's telling, Michelle Moore had suddenly turned cold toward her after that night. I had tried to call Michelle. I just got her voicemail. I did leave a voicemail. I tried to call again, but...

There was no answer. She wouldn't answer it. The two former besties never spoke again. As for the night of Heather's murder, Shauna's memory seemed to have a gap the size of the Continental Divide. She remembered getting the kids settled in the basement. She remembered running a bath. She remembered grabbing some dirty clothes out of the hamper to put on and rushing out of the house to buy a bottle of wine. She thought that was around 6 p.m.,

After that, nothing. The next thing I remember is my phone ringing and kind of jolting me out of a daze. And I was in front of College Green Liquor. Shauna says it was then she realized she'd rushed out of the house without her purse. So she says she turned the truck around and headed for home.

And she was almost there, just a block or two from her drive, when suddenly she says she saw her husband standing in the road in front of her, blocking the street and screaming, What have you done? When it came to the most damning piece of physical evidence, the mask recovered from the truck she was driving.

Shawna had a ready explanation. Did you own the mask that has been produced as an exhibit in this case that was found in your truck? Yes. When had you acquired that mask? I had had that clear back since before Halloween. Had, to your knowledge, Michelle Moore seen that mask? At least on three separate occasions.

After a week of listening to the prosecution's case, Shawna Nelson had come to the stand with an explanation for almost everything. It had been an exhausting three-hour performance. It had also been her last best chance to make a connection with at least one juror to convince one of 12 that she was not a killer. Did you ever have the desire to shoot Heather Garris in the head? Never. Never. No further questions? No.

As Democrats unite around Vice President Harris, they'll gather in Chicago to endorse their presidential ticket. A new era is here. It is go time. Stay with MSNBC for insights and analysis. The race is going to be close. Everybody should prepare themselves for that. Plus reporting on the ground from the convention hall. Extraordinary levels of enthusiasm from Democrats for the fight ahead. The Democratic National Convention. Special coverage this week on MSNBC.

Hi, everyone. I'm Jenna Bush Hager from Today with Hoda and Jenna and the Read with Jenna book club. There's nothing I love more than sharing my favorite reads with all of you, except maybe talking to the exceptional authors behind these stories. And that's what I'll be doing on my podcast, Read with Jenna. I'll be introducing you to some of my favorite writers. These conversations will leave you feeling inspired and entertained. To start listening, just search Read with Jenna wherever you get your podcasts.

The final act of Shauna Nelson's murder trial was closing arguments. Prosecutors opened by proposing that the timeline of Shauna Nelson's affair with Ignacio Garris was essentially a roadmap leading to only one destination, the killing of Heather Garris. Heather Garris was becoming less and less of a human being to the defendant. She was an object. You don't think of the person as a human being, it's easier to end their life.

From the breakup in December straight through to the murder a month later, prosecutors argued only Sean and Nelson had had the motive, the means, and the opportunity to put two bullets into Heather Garris. And the defendant said, you ruined my life. And in the split seconds Heather Garris had to remain on the subversive, she knew that she was going to be murdered by the defendant.

And the evidence shows, ladies and gentlemen, that Heather Garris was right. When it came time for the defense to make its closing arguments, defense attorney Kevin Strobel told the jury Shauna Nelson was on trial because of a rush to judgment based on an assumption, an assumption that was immediately broadcast on police radios the night of the murder. Four minutes into this case, they reached a conclusion that

The evidence was thin, he said. No DNA linking Shawna to the crime scene. No murder weapon. The witness statements? Inconsistent. The Greeley Police Department hopelessly conflicted. The victim in this case, Heather Garris...

It's the wife of an officer that has served for a long time in their department. That officer has lots of friends in that department. The prosecution, he said, had simply not met its burden of proof, had not proved the case beyond a reasonable doubt. It's not a matter of weighing the evidence, deciding which side has more. If any of it causes you to hesitate to have a reasonable doubt...

It was mid-afternoon on a Friday when lawyers finished making their final pitch and jurors got the case. When deliberations resumed the following Monday morning, it seems a consensus had already been reached. 90 minutes after entering the courthouse, they sent a message to the judge.

We, the jury, finally defended Shauna Louise Nelson guilty of count number one murder in the first degree. Shauna showed no emotion when the verdict was read. Out in the gallery, Shauna's sister Deb shook her head while Heather's co-worker sobbed softly. Sitting alongside the co-workers, Heather's sister Wendy wiped tears from her eyes as Ig sat awkwardly, grim-faced. He looked almost unsure of his place now.

in the company of such happy grief. There's a photo taken just after the verdict. Heather's friends are hugging each other, and you get your hands in your pockets and you're looking down. You look like a guy in hell, and I guess you still are. Heather got justice, but Heather's still not here. I don't have Heather. Heather don't have me. Victoria don't have Heather. It's an empty victory. By prior agreement with the defense team,

The judge proceeded immediately to sentencing. Well, the jury certainly has determined that you killed Heather Garris. You carried out this crime with great planning and deliberation, and Heather Garris did not deserve to die as a result of your acts. You deserve to serve every day of the sentence I am about to impose.

and I send you to Colorado Department of Corrections for the remainder of your natural life and without the possibility of parole. Good luck to you, and that concludes this matter. With life without parole ringing in her ears, Shawna Nelson was led from the courtroom. Minutes after she'd changed into her prison orange, she was ushered into a spare storage room off the courthouse garage for an interview. The interview was with Paula Woodward,

She was the Denver TV reporter that Deb Smith had admiringly called a pit bull. As it did for a very successful career, Paula's persistence had again paid off. Did you expect it, the verdict? No. You were ice cold on camera. No reaction. I was like a thumbed bug. I still can't believe it, Paula. Twelve people delivering four hours Friday afternoon.

They probably decided Friday afternoon, and then they, for an hour and a half, Monday morning. There wasn't a lot of doubt in their minds. How can you explain that? I can't explain what they were feeling. All I can think is that they didn't look. There was reasonable doubt in this case. I know it looked bad. Through the whole thing, it's looked bad. And why is that? Somebody did a really good job.

of framing me, of putting me here. If you didn't kill Heather Garris, who did? I can give you two choices. All right. I think either Ig had something to do with this or my ex-girlfriend Michelle. A lot of time has passed since that interview. Shawna appealed her conviction and was denied. Paula Woodward retired and became an author. She still remembers that courthouse basement encounter with Shawna Nelson.

She is used to talking her way in and out of situations. And she thought by taking the stand that she could get that jury to believe her that she was innocent. And it didn't work. And you ask her what's left and she says, "Well, my faith." Which is something you hear a lot from people who have been convicted of crimes. I'm sure that she still professes to have faith in her God.

And I wonder what she would say to her God about what she's done in her life and the pain she's caused other people. Because forgiveness requires acknowledgement of what you've done. Yes, it does. Shawna Nelson would not be the only person checking into the Crossbar Hotel as a result of this. Because of the way her story evolved and then dribbled out, prosecutors revoked the get-out-of-jail-free card for Michelle Moore.

She pleaded guilty to being an accessory to murder and was sentenced to nine years in prison. She ended up serving a little more than half of that before being paroled in 2013. Shauna Nelson did not respond to Dateline's request for an interview. Neither did Michelle Moore. Ken Nelson did get back to us. He said, no comment. The evidence tampering charges against Ken were dropped in 2011 for lack of evidence.

He now lives in another state. The two children he had with Shauna are grown and on their own now. As for the baby boy Shauna had with Ig Garris, well, he's in his teens now, and he still lives with Ken. In the wake of the Shauna Nelson case, the Greeley Police Department changed its culture. Officers were told immoral or inappropriate behavior would not be tolerated. They were encouraged to police themselves and one another.

It's been 15 years since I last laid eyes on Ig Garris. We were near his new home in Florida, thousands of miles from Greeley, Colorado, the city where his life careened out of control. Back then, he was tanned and rested, but still tormented. You're ashamed of yourself? Oh, yes. I loathe. I gotta hide it so my kid doesn't see how bad I loathe myself.

Because a beautiful woman's dead for me having an affair, a chain of events that I had no way of foreseeing. Ig did not respond to our request for another interview. But it's easy to imagine that a part of him is tormented still, particularly when he thinks of the old days in Colorado and that time before the fall, the time when he and Heather and Victoria were a family.

Bye, guys. Bye. Say bye to Daddy. He's off to work. Go to work. Love you. You see, Ig and Heather's daughter, Victoria, grew up to be the very image of her mother. A beautiful smile, long black hair, dark sparkling eyes. She might be thinking of starting a family of her own about now, except for one terrible thing. Victoria Garris was killed in a car accident in Michigan in 2015.

She was 17 years old. A woman scorned, a woman mourned. So much tragedy, so much wreckage, and so much of it traceable to unintended consequences spawned from a string of bad decisions. Internal Affairs is a production of Dateline and NBC News. Tim Beecham is the producer. David Varga and Jonathan Moser are audio editors.

Matt Sullivan is assistant audio editor. Susan Nall is senior producer. Adam Gorfain is co-executive producer. Liz Cole is executive producer. And David Corvo is senior executive producer. From NBC News Audio, Bryson Barnes is technical director. Sound mixing by Bob Mallory. Nina Bisbano is associate producer. ♪