title Deadly Swagger

description After a couple is shot in their home on Lake Tahoe, investigators work to find a masked killer seen on camera at the house. The man convicted of the crime speaks exclusively with Keith Morrison.

Lester Holt and Keith Morrison go behind the scenes of the making of this episode in 'Talking Dateline'

Listen on Apple: https://apple.co/4twMR32

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pubDate Tue, 21 Apr 2026 09:00:00 GMT

author NBC News

duration 4951000

transcript

Speaker 1:
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Speaker 2:
[00:59] Tonight on Dateline.

Speaker 3:
[01:00] She was this tall, beautiful, blonde. They were always joyful together as a couple.

Speaker 4:
[01:08] They were worth quite a bit of money.

Speaker 5:
[01:10] A multimillion dollar fortune that they made.

Speaker 6:
[01:14] The news is on and I heard murder in Lake Tahoe.

Speaker 7:
[01:18] There was blood on all the mirrors, on all the vanities, on the bathtub.

Speaker 4:
[01:21] This was a very personal, targeted attack.

Speaker 8:
[01:24] It wasn't shocking to me that they had a list of enemies.

Speaker 4:
[01:28] She was in 22 lawsuits.

Speaker 1:
[01:30] Good Lord.

Speaker 2:
[01:31] Who would gain from this?

Speaker 4:
[01:33] Well, clearly the two daughters. Samantha was a big part of their life.

Speaker 9:
[01:38] We always joke around that we're like a cripple.

Speaker 8:
[01:41] Reading all about it, I was like, whoa.

Speaker 4:
[01:44] It was middle of summer and I watched a male run up the street, wearing full sweats with a hood on. He was hiding in the house for about three hours.

Speaker 3:
[01:55] I see these people who look like they have it all, but you never know what your fate is going to be.

Speaker 7:
[02:01] A charismatic couple living a life of luxury. Turns out they were also rich in enemies. I'm Lester Holt and this is Dateline.

Speaker 10:
[02:20] Here's Keith Morrison with Deadly Swagger.

Speaker 1:
[02:29] Lake Tahoe.

Speaker 5:
[02:31] It's one of those bucket list destinations for people around the world.

Speaker 1:
[02:38] As setting so sublime, Mark Twain wrote, To breathe the same air as the angels, you must go to Tahoe. He knew whereof he wrote, If any place can be equated with heaven on earth, then surely it is Tahoe, snow capped mountains above, crystal clear waters below.

Speaker 11:
[02:57] It is where people go to find peace.

Speaker 1:
[03:00] The lucky ones call this home never want to leave.

Speaker 4:
[03:07] Though once upon a time, he was waiting inside that house. In the very heart of this paradise, then multiple gunshots firing.

Speaker 1:
[03:22] The question of leaving wasn't a choice. It was June the 5th, 2021. The 911 call was recorded at 9:26 p.m. 911, what's the address of the emergency?

Speaker 7:
[03:45] Hello, 911. All the dispatchers could hear was moaning in the background, or they could hear someone gasping for air. But there was no words.

Speaker 1:
[03:57] What was that? Who was that? The 911 operator just couldn't tell, but it didn't sound good, so they dispatched the fire department. Gary Nelson was a captain and paramedic.

Speaker 7:
[04:10] All we know is there's a possible medical or some type of situation happening, but we don't know what it is. We pull in front of the house, you see behind me with lights on.

Speaker 1:
[04:20] Here, the home of a retired couple named Gary Spore and Wendy Wood. The front door was unlocked. The first responders walked upstairs to the living area.

Speaker 7:
[04:33] The dogs are moving back and forth. They're just wound up. So we yell, fire department. We get no response. And there's a gentleman laying on the couch. It looked like he was sleeping. His arms were crossed, his legs were crossed, his feet were up on the table or ottoman. And the TV was on like he was watching the news. And we come over behind him not to startle him, and we'll like tap him on the shoulder of the sir and yell it loudly. Fire department, sir. No response. And that time we look over and my partner looks at him and goes, I don't think he's breathing. At that point, we check a pulse. We don't get a pulse. We look across at another section of the couch, and we notice there's blood. And there on the floor behind the couch, shell casings and we notice a blood trail leading around the back of the couch. And the dogs that were very agitated, they kept coming between us and back into a master bedroom. They'd go back and forth and back and forth. So we're like, okay, this doesn't seem right. We work into the master bedroom. In the master bedroom, we turn on the lights in there. Nothing obvious. So we go around the corner and we turn on the light in the master bathroom. And that's where we find a female patient.

Speaker 1:
[05:43] It was Wendy, Gary's wife, covered in blood. As were the mirrors, the vanity, the bathtub. An iPhone speckled in blood was by the sink. Wendy had held on to it long enough to call 911. She was alive, but barely.

Speaker 7:
[06:01] She would only give one word answers. She would say yes, no, and she was, I believe, the paramedic when he asked her name. She was able to give her name, and that was it. He was asking, were you assaulted? Were you shot? You know, does she have, you know, obviously bleeding from the head, obviously bleeding from the arms?

Speaker 1:
[06:18] They called in a helicopter, flew her to a trauma center in Reno, 50 miles away, did all they could to keep her breathing. And, still middle of the night, Placer County Detective Daniel Meyer got the call. It was going to be his day off, not anymore. What's it like for you and for the family when, I mean, presumably, you make plans for when you're off. And, sorry, I've got to go.

Speaker 4:
[06:46] It's really hard. My kids are older, a little bit older now. They're teenagers, so now they understand it. My wife's really good with it. She knows the kind of when it happens, it's something we have to go do.

Speaker 1:
[06:59] With a thing like that, all days off and all bets are off, right?

Speaker 4:
[07:02] All days off, all sleep is off, and we go pretty much all in on it until we're finished.

Speaker 1:
[07:10] Investigators at the scene filled him in when he arrived.

Speaker 4:
[07:13] We had a male that had been shot in the head, and we had another victim, the wife, the female that was found, also shot. We still didn't know the status if she was gonna make it through the surgery or if we were gonna have a double homicide at the time.

Speaker 1:
[07:31] And then Detective Meyer tried to work out what must have happened.

Speaker 4:
[07:35] It appeared that after her husband was shot and killed where he was sleeping, that she was most likely woken up during the shots and had put her arms up in a kind of a defensive kind of posture, trying then try to get herself into safety.

Speaker 1:
[07:53] No surprise, a search of the house and property turned up. No suspect. Long gone, of course, but whoever it was clearly had one purpose in mind.

Speaker 4:
[08:04] There was no sign of forced entry. There was no sign that a fight or anything had ensued. It looked eerily normal minus obviously the personal destruction to Gary and Wendy.

Speaker 1:
[08:17] Now, who in this paradise on earth would want to do a thing like that? You knew the whole damn crime. And yet you knew nothing.

Speaker 4:
[08:27] Exactly.

Speaker 1:
[08:27] Strange.

Speaker 4:
[08:28] We had absolutely no idea who this individual could be.

Speaker 1:
[08:32] So she must have had a reputation around town.

Speaker 4:
[08:36] And not a very good one.

Speaker 9:
[08:38] We're like a throuple because he always complains that he has two eyes.

Speaker 1:
[08:42] I've got to be challenging because we don't have much time, I have to tell you. The fear spread at the speed of news, neighbor to neighbor, around the wealth-encrusted shores of Lake Tahoe. Murder, execution style. That Wendy survived the neighbor's herd was something of a miracle. Though as the doctors told investigators, continued survival was no sure thing. Did you think maybe she can tell us what happened?

Speaker 4:
[09:24] We were praying she would. We had all of the nurses waiting to give us a phone call from the moment she woke up. And we were praying, but not hopeful. We knew the severity of her injuries, the likelihood that she would be able to was probably not very high.

Speaker 1:
[09:42] Everything about this seemed against the odds, starting with the location of the shooting, a multimillion-dollar lakefront home in one of the safest neighborhoods in Lake Tahoe. Michelle Bandour covered the case for KCRA, the local NBC affiliate.

Speaker 5:
[09:57] You don't hear about murder at Lake Tahoe. You know, you may be hear of someone falling to their death while hiking, you know, or a boating accident, but a crime where someone kills another person, it's just unheard of in Tahoe.

Speaker 6:
[10:12] I was standing in my kitchen making dinner and the news is on.

Speaker 10:
[10:16] Detectives identifying the victim as...

Speaker 6:
[10:18] And then the next word they said was Gary Spore. Stopped me dead in my trucks.

Speaker 3:
[10:22] I just couldn't believe it. Just shock is all I can remember of just what, you know? These people meant a lot to me.

Speaker 1:
[10:28] Judy Muir and Lisa Fernandez once worked for Gary and Wendy, were with them almost a decade, years and years ago.

Speaker 6:
[10:37] Gary and Wendy were my favorite owners of that place ever.

Speaker 1:
[10:40] The place was the copy house at Print Shop in Sacramento. Gary and Wendy bought it in the 1990s. And Gary and Wendy were more than just bosses. They were better.

Speaker 3:
[10:54] Wendy was such a presence. She made such an impression on me as a female. She was Wendy Wood. She was not Wendy Spore. And at that time in the 90s, that made an impression on me of like, wow, she's so independent.

Speaker 1:
[11:07] There's attitude for you.

Speaker 3:
[11:08] And she was this tall, beautiful blonde and she was so confident.

Speaker 1:
[11:14] And Gary, absolutely dashing.

Speaker 3:
[11:18] He drove a cool little Porsche, which again in my 20s, I thought that was so neat.

Speaker 6:
[11:22] It was very friendly.

Speaker 3:
[11:24] And he was a very good looking man.

Speaker 6:
[11:26] Yes, he was.

Speaker 1:
[11:30] Here they were brimming with charisma.

Speaker 3:
[11:33] And yet, I never felt like she looked down on us or treated us like the hill. I always felt like they just treated us like we were part of their family.

Speaker 1:
[11:43] Gave them presents, perfumes, steak dinners, free weekends at their ski house.

Speaker 6:
[11:49] They would do things like that for all of us.

Speaker 3:
[11:52] For all of us.

Speaker 6:
[11:53] They were so generous.

Speaker 1:
[11:54] With their employees and especially their daughters, Erin and Adrienne.

Speaker 12:
[11:59] Are you having fun yet, Gary?

Speaker 6:
[12:01] There was horse lessons and the different things the girls liked to do.

Speaker 1:
[12:06] But Gary and Wendy could afford to be generous because they were rich. As John Ward, who acted as their local attorney a few times, knew well.

Speaker 13:
[12:16] Wendy and Gary had real estate holdings in California and I believe in Washington.

Speaker 1:
[12:22] By 2021, their time was their own and they loved skiing and boating and spending time with grandchildren. In fact, the very day Gary was shot, they had gone boating with the grandkids and their daughter Erin. She lived in nearby Reno with her husband, a former Major League Baseball player.

Speaker 5:
[12:40] Erin was an equestrian and had a stable in the Reno area.

Speaker 1:
[12:45] Younger daughter Adrienne and her boyfriend lived about three hours away from Tahoe. Life had been good to Gary and Wendy, but picture perfect? Well, maybe not. The family didn't always get along. There was tension between the sisters, and Wendy, with her strong personality, often fought with her daughters. Around the lake, Wendy also butted heads with neighbors, so much so that local prosecutor Christopher Catran was already familiar with Wendy.

Speaker 4:
[13:17] She was either named as the plaintiff or the defendant in 22 lawsuits.

Speaker 1:
[13:23] Good Lord. So she must have had a reputation around town.

Speaker 4:
[13:27] And not a very good one.

Speaker 1:
[13:29] Gary often backed up his wife in these disputes. Have the couple's neighborhood battles made them a target? Or their money? Or was there something in their past? Because this certainly wasn't some random violent thief, as Detective Meyer could plainly tell. One of the first things that they say is, was it a burglary? Did somebody, you know, go in to steal something and encounter the owners and shoot them and then flee?

Speaker 4:
[13:58] That was our first, one of at least my first thoughts. That there was no signs of any burglary. The normal things that we'll see in burglaries, with the drawers being pulled or things being disheveled inside of bedrooms, none of that was present during this.

Speaker 1:
[14:14] And the fact nothing was taken, nothing of any significance you could figure out anyway.

Speaker 4:
[14:19] Nothing was...

Speaker 1:
[14:19] Or the first responders could.

Speaker 4:
[14:21] There was even a very high-priced tennis bracelet that was not taken, that was left, right where Wendy was shot. Burglary wasn't the motive.

Speaker 1:
[14:32] They'd pissed somebody off and that was that. They got killed.

Speaker 4:
[14:34] It was a very, very personal and very intentional act.

Speaker 1:
[14:40] Detective Meyer was about to get some help with his investigation.

Speaker 4:
[14:45] There were security cameras inside and outside of the house. And when he rolled that tape, I knew that at that point, that was going to be our shooter.

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Speaker 1:
[17:26] What a difference a bit of tech can make. Those little front door cameras, common as clover now, like a gift for a detective in need of a break. You must have thought, hey, this will get our guy.

Speaker 4:
[17:41] Pure excitement.

Speaker 1:
[17:43] Especially when they spotted one with the perfect angle.

Speaker 4:
[17:46] Kind of up above the garage, pointing towards their vehicles and their kind of their driveway area.

Speaker 1:
[17:53] So, if the shooter came in that way, they might be able to see him or her. They started watching the video from that morning and nothing happened for hours. Things picked up when daughter Erin arrived with her two boys at 2:24 p.m. That's Wendy in the driveway as Erin backed in. Bit later, Gary pulled in, looked like an outie, blue. There was a pause for almost an hour and then Gary headed out, followed by the rest of the family, down to the lake by the look of it. But then, then something very peculiar showed up on that surveillance tape.

Speaker 4:
[18:34] It was middle of summer, so it was obviously warm up there even for Tahoe. I watched a male run up the street wearing full sweats with a hood on, a mask on and a backpack.

Speaker 1:
[18:49] I would think you'd think looking at that video, oh, oh, there's our shooter.

Speaker 4:
[18:53] I was very hopeful that it was.

Speaker 1:
[18:56] Especially when the masked man turned into the driveway.

Speaker 4:
[19:00] I knew that at that point, that was gonna be our shooter.

Speaker 1:
[19:03] Did you happen to think at that moment, all right, this is not gonna be so hard after all?

Speaker 4:
[19:09] I did for a little bit until you saw how close he got and then saw we couldn't see his face. He covered every aspect of his skin, of his face.

Speaker 1:
[19:22] But surely there were more cameras around the neighborhood. They went hunting.

Speaker 4:
[19:27] We were out here canvassing the full area for several days. We were looking up and down the roads from the Spores residence all the way up to the, what we call the Y, up here up in Tahoe City.

Speaker 1:
[19:41] Did it show you anything more about where the shooter came from or where he went after?

Speaker 4:
[19:47] It did. Thankfully, we were able to find several cameras along the pathway.

Speaker 1:
[19:53] It was enough to start piecing together some kind of timeline anyway. Which the detectives laid out for the prosecutor, Christopher Catrine. The first sighting of the apparent shooter was at 5:02 PM, almost a half a mile from Gary and Wendy's house, walking along the main road towards them. By then, Gary, Wendy, Aaron and the kids were out on the boat. The last person left the house at 3:56 PM.

Speaker 16:
[20:20] They walk out the driveway and down the street, and you can see out in the lake, we're fairly close to the lake here.

Speaker 1:
[20:27] Then, 5:06 PM, a neighbor's security camera recorded the probable shooter walking along the lake.

Speaker 4:
[20:34] On the other side of the roadway, there's a bike path, which is used for bikes and pedestrians and things like that, so he's approaching.

Speaker 1:
[20:41] Minutes later, the masked man jogged into the view of the outside camera.

Speaker 16:
[20:46] He comes up this hill, you can see the driveway right here.

Speaker 1:
[20:51] And, like he knew just where to go, he turned towards the house. And then, no mistaking what that was, the sound of the garage door opening. After which, a pause. And then around 30 minutes later, the family returned. And at 7:45 p.m., Aaron left the house with the kids and drove away. An hour and six minutes later, at 8:51 p.m. No mistaking that sound either. Gunshots, five of them. Silence, five minutes passed, and out he came, same way he went in, through the garage and away. At 9.02, another glimpse, faintly in the gathering dark. It's like you're seeing the whole play from these security cameras.

Speaker 4:
[21:53] Fortunately, we were able to watch the entire thing, knowing that he was inside the house while the whole family was in there, and they had no idea.

Speaker 1:
[22:04] Well, and this guy hid in the house for three or four hours. Well, the family was out on the lake, and he waited all that time.

Speaker 4:
[22:12] He waited almost the time enough to let them get comfortable.

Speaker 1:
[22:16] Were you able to find a place inside the house where the shooter hid for a period of time?

Speaker 4:
[22:21] We found a place where we believe that he was hiding. They had a very large closet on the bottom floor, and in the back of it, almost a little hidden room that was off there, that somebody could stand up, move around in, lay down.

Speaker 1:
[22:37] I mean, you knew a whole lot. You knew the whole damn crime, and yet you knew nothing.

Speaker 4:
[22:44] Exactly.

Speaker 1:
[22:44] Strange.

Speaker 4:
[22:45] We saw everything, we heard everything, but yet we had absolutely no idea who this individual could be.

Speaker 1:
[22:53] Who was this masked intruder? Was he a hired gun, an enemy from around the lake, or was the shooter's motive one of the oldest of them all?

Speaker 4:
[23:03] They're worth a lot of money.

Speaker 2:
[23:05] And as the old adage goes, follow the money, right?

Speaker 1:
[23:20] Days passed, and the masked shooter who took Gary's life with a single bullet and left Wendy for dead was still out there somewhere. Desperate for leads, the Placer County Sheriff's Office posted a video of the gunman on social media.

Speaker 10:
[23:35] Placer County Sheriff's Detectives releasing this video from home surveillance cameras.

Speaker 1:
[23:40] What made you decide to appeal to the public for help?

Speaker 4:
[23:42] Because we needed all the help at that point we could get.

Speaker 1:
[23:46] Tips came in, flooded the phone lines. Reporter Michelle Bendure.

Speaker 5:
[23:51] They continued to ask for help, even asking people in the area within so many mile radius of checking their security video. Do you see a figure like this or what do you see on June 5th between these hours?

Speaker 1:
[24:05] Did it help much?

Speaker 4:
[24:06] Unfortunately, it didn't.

Speaker 1:
[24:07] It scared the hell out of them though. This is an affluent community and they hear that some guy was sneaking into houses and shooting people. I mean, that's pretty scary stuff.

Speaker 4:
[24:17] The community was terrified. But the way that it was done and let us feel a little safer, to let the Tahoe community know we don't believe that somebody is out there. We really felt that this was a very personal targeted attack. As the old adage goes, follow the money, right?

Speaker 1:
[24:35] Yeah, sure.

Speaker 17:
[24:35] Who would gain from this?

Speaker 4:
[24:38] Well, clearly the two daughters.

Speaker 1:
[24:43] Adrian and Erin were the beneficiaries of parents estate worth $25 million. They would split the inheritance equally. Both agreed to talk to detectives. How were they taking it?

Speaker 4:
[24:55] They were very stoic, very composed. They were obviously upset like any child's going to be, but they were very much into trying to figure out what had happened.

Speaker 1:
[25:07] You showed them the video, I'm assuming, right?

Speaker 4:
[25:09] Absolutely.

Speaker 1:
[25:10] Could they identify them at all?

Speaker 4:
[25:11] Neither of them were able to identify them.

Speaker 1:
[25:14] Of course, they had to check the daughter's alibis anyway, even though they were sure the shooter was a man. When you talked to Erin, what could she tell you?

Speaker 4:
[25:23] She was unaware of what could have happened, and she was there with the kids and in genuine shock that that person could have been inside the house with her while her kids and her were present. She was very, very upset at that time. Remember, the shooter came in at 5 o'clock while she, Erin, and the boys are on the boat with mom and dad.

Speaker 1:
[25:45] The driveway security camera also showed her leaving her parents' home before the shots were fired.

Speaker 4:
[25:51] So she clearly has a good alibi.

Speaker 1:
[25:55] And what about her husband? Erin told detectives he was out of town when the shooting occurred. Dan Serafini was his name, ex-Major League baseball player, Minnesota Twins, Cincinnati Reds, Pittsburgh Pirates, et cetera, et cetera. He was an ex-bar owner too and now a miner.

Speaker 4:
[26:15] I believe he was a heavy equipment operator in a mine about three and a half hours east of the Reno Sparks area.

Speaker 1:
[26:26] They went to see him and he had alibis too. Day before the shooting, he said he attended a training class at the gold mine where he worked then met up with coworkers.

Speaker 4:
[26:36] He was going to have a couple drinks with some friends that night from work.

Speaker 1:
[26:41] He spent the next day in Crescent Valley, Nevada, where he had a trailer he used when working away from his family, never left. Phone records showed him in Crescent Valley when Gary and Wendy were shot, just as Dan told them he was. So his alibi looked pretty good.

Speaker 4:
[26:57] His alibi was looking really good.

Speaker 1:
[26:59] Did Adrienne have an alibi?

Speaker 4:
[27:00] She did. She was at work and we were able to verify that she was working. During the time of the murder.

Speaker 1:
[27:08] But detectives did wonder about Adrienne's boyfriend, a guy named Taylor Hatton. Didn't he have a record, that guy?

Speaker 4:
[27:15] He did.

Speaker 1:
[27:16] Taylor was a convicted felon, confessed to robbing a bank, then ultimately pleaded guilty to a weapons charge.

Speaker 4:
[27:24] He was one of the first individuals that detectives were very interested in.

Speaker 1:
[27:30] During the commission of that armed robbery, Taylor was covered from head to toe, wore a ski mask, sunglasses, and had a backpack on a hot summer day. Just like the guy who shot Gary and Wendy. Again, maybe solving this murder wouldn't be so hard after all. Was that Taylor on the surveillance video?

Speaker 4:
[27:54] We did look into him extensively, and we were able to determine he was actually in Petaluma, California during the time of the homicide. He was working out there as a contractor, constantly working on his cell phones, and he's significantly smaller than the shooter was.

Speaker 1:
[28:13] It couldn't have been him. So there were other possibilities, remember? Angry neighbors, potential enemies. And just about then, less than two weeks after the shooting, Wendy woke up and started talking.

Speaker 4:
[28:32] It was a genuine excitement throughout the entire unit that we might finally have that huge break we're looking for.

Speaker 1:
[28:53] Around Lake Tahoe, lots of people knew Wendy Wood, and perhaps for all the wrong reasons.

Speaker 13:
[29:01] After the murder, there were a number of people who said that the suspect list was gonna be at least four or five pages.

Speaker 1:
[29:10] Family attorney John Ward figured Wendy was the killer's target.

Speaker 13:
[29:14] I think my knee-jerk reaction was that Wendy had pissed off somebody.

Speaker 1:
[29:20] So, how would she have done that?

Speaker 13:
[29:23] There were two ways to do things, Wendy's way and Wendy's way.

Speaker 1:
[29:28] Ha, ha, yeah.

Speaker 13:
[29:30] She had a mind and will of her own.

Speaker 1:
[29:33] And that she did. Less than two weeks after she was left for dead, the detectives got a call, she was awake and talking.

Speaker 4:
[29:42] It was a genuine excitement throughout the entire unit that we might finally have that huge break we're looking for.

Speaker 1:
[29:50] Yeah. But...

Speaker 4:
[29:52] She was struggling coming in and out of consciousness. She made a quick statement of it was Rick, the water guy, and she passed back out again. The nurses had told us that she had said it was Rick.

Speaker 1:
[30:06] Well, that was something, because Rick, the water guy, was certainly a person of interest.

Speaker 4:
[30:13] Wendy and Rick had had a lot of easement issues, because Rick would access his water access from her property.

Speaker 1:
[30:21] Rick owned a water well that sat on Wendy and Gary's property, and Wendy had issues with that. Things escalated, and then Gary sent Rick an email to let him know that Wendy had a permit to use a gun and would, if needed. So did Rick use a gun on them?

Speaker 4:
[30:39] We were able to look at him and compare him to the camera, and we knew at that point he was definitely not our shooter.

Speaker 1:
[30:47] And then, weeks later, more good news.

Speaker 4:
[30:51] Wendy has made a surprisingly miraculous recovery.

Speaker 1:
[30:55] Amazing.

Speaker 4:
[30:56] The detectives hear that she's made this miraculous recovery, and of course now they want to get a statement from her.

Speaker 1:
[31:02] Of course, yeah. So eyewitness to the murder comes back from the dead to tell the story, right?

Speaker 4:
[31:08] Can't have it any better than that, I would think.

Speaker 1:
[31:11] Wendy struggled, but remembered that she and Gary had gone to the lake with Erin and their grandkids, and at the end of the boating trip, she recalled covering up the boat.

Speaker 4:
[31:21] That's the last thing she remembers of that day, was putting the tarp on, and then the next thing she remembers is waking up in the hospital.

Speaker 1:
[31:31] Ward sat in on this. Did they ask her who she thought it might have been?

Speaker 13:
[31:35] They did, and she was quite certain that it involved the incident with the paddleboard.

Speaker 1:
[31:40] Different guy now, Dave the Fisherman.

Speaker 4:
[31:43] So, one day she was out paddleboarding, and there was a gentleman who was a caretaker of one of the lakefront properties, and he was an avid fisherman.

Speaker 13:
[31:52] So one day he had his minnow trap out.

Speaker 1:
[31:57] As Dave watched from shore, he saw Wendy yanking his traps out of the water.

Speaker 4:
[32:02] So while she's on her paddleboard, she starts hauling them up.

Speaker 1:
[32:06] Now, why would she do that?

Speaker 4:
[32:09] Keith, I have no idea.

Speaker 1:
[32:11] And Dave?

Speaker 4:
[32:12] He apparently got in a boat, went out to go talk to her, stop her from doing it. And while he was out there, she hit him in the head with the oar or the paddle.

Speaker 6:
[32:22] And it kind of went south from there.

Speaker 1:
[32:25] Dave suffered puncture wounds and abrasions to his head. The cops were called. Wendy was charged. Catran prosecuted Wendy for assault with a deadly weapon. She pleaded no contest, got probation and was ordered to stay away from the fisherman and his property. That was 2018, three years before the shooting. Was Dave getting his revenge? I mean, there seemed like that might have legs.

Speaker 4:
[32:50] That had legs for a little while. We looked into him. We were able to go through all the cell phone data, including the GPS locations, and found out he wasn't present, he wasn't there. His digital alibi, so to speak, was very good.

Speaker 1:
[33:10] So maybe Wendy wasn't the target after all. But Gary? Well, lovely house along the lake, looks very genteel and sweet, and there's grandparents taking the grandkids out on the boat. It looks so idyllic. But when you dig a little bit, what did you find out about Gary's past?

Speaker 4:
[33:30] I found out a little bit he did have a past with narcotics. I believe it was a federal case that was brought against him, and that he had kind of worked with the federal government to kind of right the wrong that he had done, so to speak, of the crimes that he had been caught for.

Speaker 1:
[33:50] Long ago, mind you, and no records to be found, but some things aren't forgotten. Well, that opens up all kinds of possibilities though, doesn't it?

Speaker 4:
[33:59] It opened an amazing amount of possibilities. It kind of gave me and my partners a giant moment of pause.

Speaker 1:
[34:06] Yeah.

Speaker 4:
[34:07] This could span.

Speaker 1:
[34:10] Oh, Lord, yeah.

Speaker 4:
[34:11] For, I mean, we could be down into anywhere. We have no idea how far this rabbit hole could go.

Speaker 1:
[34:18] Meanwhile, they were confirming alibis, like where Dan Serafini, Wendy and Gary's son-in-law, said he was night before the murder. Detectives learned that after drinks with his coworkers, Dan left to relax in a hotel in Elko, Nevada. When they drove out there, the desk clerk said he was there all right. Security cameras proved it. But then, a bit odd, a woman checked out for Dan and checked herself in to the same room. Her name was Samantha Scott. Interesting because Dan's phone record showed he had received a call the morning of the murder from the same woman.

Speaker 4:
[34:57] They do their cop stuff, you know, they get her driver's license, they get a picture, you know, and they find an address for her.

Speaker 1:
[35:04] Samantha lived in Reno, Nevada, in an apartment complex about 45 miles north of Tahoe City. A detective drove out there and when he pulled up, he saw something that caught his attention.

Speaker 4:
[35:16] There's an Audi sitting in the parking lot. And he thinks he's seen the car before and then it dawns on him that the Audi was Gary's, the victim of the murder.

Speaker 1:
[35:31] Who was Samantha Scott? Why did she have Gary's car?

Speaker 18:
[35:41] Take the exit, turn right, into the dry-through.

Speaker 19:
[35:44] Nope, I'm making dinner tonight.

Speaker 10:
[35:46] You don't have time, Josh has practice.

Speaker 19:
[35:48] Oh, that's right. I'll just get a salad. And fries? No, just the salad.

Speaker 18:
[35:52] But salad cancels fries.

Speaker 19:
[35:54] Salad only.

Speaker 18:
[35:55] Fries.

Speaker 19:
[35:55] Salad.

Speaker 18:
[35:56] Fries.

Speaker 14:
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Speaker 19:
[36:03] Hey, can I get the- Salad. Sorry.

Speaker 14:
[36:06] Learn more at joinmochi.com. Mochi members have access to licensed physicians and nutritionists. Results may vary. And now, the next chapter of the Serta Counting Sheep.

Speaker 20:
[36:14] Hey, Uncle Number One, why aren't we counting anymore?

Speaker 19:
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Speaker 20:
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Speaker 19:
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Speaker 20:
[36:35] We'll never get counted again.

Speaker 19:
[36:37] Uh, nope.

Speaker 21:
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Speaker 15:
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Speaker 6:
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Speaker 1:
[37:20] You've heard it here before, sometimes luck is the best detective. While checking Dan's alibi, detectives came across a woman named Samantha Scott, who checked into Dan's room. And just weeks after Gary's murder, was driving the dead man's car.

Speaker 4:
[37:38] It was very, very weird that presumably the girls or somebody within the family structure had given the okay to give her that vehicle, either permanent or a temporary use of the vehicle.

Speaker 1:
[37:52] I mean, it could happen, just a little unusual.

Speaker 4:
[37:55] Absolutely. It was enough to make us start asking more questions, to start looking a little bit more.

Speaker 1:
[38:02] And that is exactly what they did. Hello.

Speaker 17:
[38:06] Hi, Lester Kennedy. Hi, how are you? Samantha.

Speaker 1:
[38:08] Yeah. Detectives showed up at Samantha's apartment in Reno, Nevada, about an hour away from Lake Tahoe.

Speaker 17:
[38:15] You obviously know why we're here to see you.

Speaker 9:
[38:17] Um, I mean, I'm assuming I can go see him.

Speaker 17:
[38:21] Yeah. Sure. What do you think?

Speaker 9:
[38:23] Um, I mean, it probably has something to do with my friend, Eric.

Speaker 17:
[38:28] Yeah.

Speaker 9:
[38:29] Yeah.

Speaker 17:
[38:31] And what can you tell me about that?

Speaker 9:
[38:38] I'm not really sure why I would be involved in it.

Speaker 1:
[38:42] Involved in it? What was Samantha referring to? Exactly.

Speaker 9:
[38:48] So I'm not sure what you're talking about. Okay. More than happy to join.

Speaker 17:
[38:53] That's very much okay.

Speaker 1:
[38:55] Samantha said she met Erin about five years earlier when she was looking for a trainer who specialized in equestrian triathlons.

Speaker 22:
[39:03] She's the only one in town that does it. Outside, Erin. Bring her around.

Speaker 1:
[39:07] Erin became her trainer, and she would let Samantha board her horse in exchange for some work.

Speaker 17:
[39:15] What can you tell me about Erin's husband, Danny?

Speaker 9:
[39:21] Erin's husband, I've known her for about five years.

Speaker 1:
[39:24] Okay.

Speaker 9:
[39:26] I mean, therefore, I've known him for about five years as well.

Speaker 1:
[39:29] Okay. Then, without being asked, she launched into her and his whereabouts on Friday, June 4th, the night before the shooting.

Speaker 9:
[39:40] I went with him to Elko, I think, that Friday. That's kind of the first time we've ever hung out.

Speaker 1:
[39:49] Why? Because, she said, Dan needed help with a surprise purchase for Erin.

Speaker 9:
[39:56] Went to look for a truck for Erin, a new board, and I had just broken up with someone, so he's like, hey, come, we're having a party. He's like, okay, cool. And then, we did look for a truck for them.

Speaker 17:
[40:11] What did you end up doing?

Speaker 9:
[40:13] We just spent the night up there.

Speaker 1:
[40:15] After a night out in Elko, she said, she and Dan went back to the suite he had booked, and she slept in the bedroom. He slept in the living room, so she said.

Speaker 17:
[40:26] So no sexual relations or anything like that?

Speaker 9:
[40:28] No. No. No.

Speaker 1:
[40:31] Not at all.

Speaker 17:
[40:33] Ever.

Speaker 9:
[40:33] Ever.

Speaker 1:
[40:35] And when she woke up in the morning, Dan was gone.

Speaker 17:
[40:39] Did he tell you that the night before he was going to be leaving early?

Speaker 9:
[40:41] No.

Speaker 1:
[40:42] She assumed Dan had left for work, she said, and so she decided she would extend her stay for a little R&R.

Speaker 9:
[40:49] I was getting ready to go and then kind of wanted to stay because I'd just never been in a suite before.

Speaker 1:
[40:58] She said she checked out the following day, and on her drive home, a friend called to let her know what had happened to Erin's parents. So Samantha said she reached out to Erin and offered to help any way she could.

Speaker 9:
[41:11] She doesn't say it, but I've known her long enough how she handles things too.

Speaker 17:
[41:18] How does she handle things?

Speaker 22:
[41:20] She's pretty structured when it comes to things.

Speaker 9:
[41:24] Right now, she seems pretty adamant about getting her house prepared so her mom can live there too when she's released.

Speaker 1:
[41:34] And all of that story, all of it could have been quite true, except.

Speaker 4:
[41:40] We could see there was a crack in the armor of fear.

Speaker 1:
[41:43] Really?

Speaker 4:
[41:44] She was nervous at points when there shouldn't have been nervousness.

Speaker 1:
[41:49] If she was an innocent person or didn't know anything.

Speaker 4:
[41:53] Correct. If there was nothing that she didn't know, I mean, we understand and expect a certain degree of nervousness. But when the fear continues and the oddities continue, that kind of puts some of the alarms up that something was wrong.

Speaker 9:
[42:09] I'm not super involved with anything but the horses. Can I ask why I'm involved besides me having been in Elko?

Speaker 17:
[42:23] Well, we're-

Speaker 9:
[42:25] Seems like Dan's interest.

Speaker 17:
[42:29] It's an investigation. And so we have to make contact with folks that we come across in the investigation. We're just trying to get the facts. That's it. Obviously, it's a death investigation. You also have his car here. So, I mean, can you understand why we're here talking to you? And that's based on that? Yeah.

Speaker 22:
[42:56] No, I do understand.

Speaker 1:
[42:58] Simple explanation, said Samantha. Erin let her borrow the Audi because Samantha's sisters were in town and they were using her Subaru. In fact, she had taken the day off to meet up with her sisters, who were at a hotel in Lake Tahoe, all perfectly innocent. The detectives wrapped up the conversation. All right, have a good day. Thanks, Samantha. And drove to the hotel in Lake Tahoe. They watched and waited. And there was Samantha, not with her sisters, but with Erin and Dan.

Speaker 4:
[43:32] It started to raise a lot of questions of how deeply are they all connected and who's connected to who and what are they doing up here?

Speaker 1:
[43:41] Someone held the answers to those questions. Tell me about your relationship with Samantha.

Speaker 8:
[44:01] I idolized her, I thought she was the coolest person.

Speaker 1:
[44:04] Sarah Ross was barely a teenager when she met Erin Spore.

Speaker 8:
[44:08] I was like, whoa, I was a bit starstruck.

Speaker 1:
[44:10] Erin had built her career on riding feral horses, and had become a bit of a celebrity in the event-writing community.

Speaker 8:
[44:18] She was really, really brave. I think that was her biggest quality, and it didn't really dawn on her to be afraid. In her mind, she could out-muscle it. She could make it do what she wanted to do.

Speaker 1:
[44:28] Sarah lived across from Erin and Dan's barn. In Rideau, Nevada, when she joined Erin's training program.

Speaker 8:
[44:35] She was almost more of a big sister type coach, so she was funny, she wanted to engage, but she also was pretty firm when she had to be.

Speaker 1:
[44:46] To help with the cost of the sport, Sarah often worked at Erin's barn, and it's how she met Samantha Scott.

Speaker 8:
[44:52] So I'd go shmobbing on the hay cart, and we'd load bales and we'd just chit chat, and that kind of was our bonding.

Speaker 1:
[45:00] Sarah also saw the bond that developed between Samantha and Erin.

Speaker 8:
[45:05] It started just like a client, like anything, and then over time, when that's kind of your circle, then you all kind of become friends, and so they were quite close friends.

Speaker 1:
[45:14] Dan was part of that circle too.

Speaker 8:
[45:16] He'd come to the horse shows when he could. He'd, you know, be out there fixing fences. He really cared about the horses themselves.

Speaker 1:
[45:23] Together, Dan and Erin were a good time. Everybody gravitated towards them.

Speaker 8:
[45:28] They were just fun to be around, and they had these massive personalities.

Speaker 1:
[45:35] Was that what was going on when detectives saw Samantha with Erin and Dan at that hotel in Lake Tahoe? Friends just hanging out? Little less than a month after the shooting? Detectives watched from a distance, saw them walking around the property.

Speaker 4:
[45:52] It started to raise a lot of questions of how deeply are they all connected, who's connected to who, and what are they doing up here?

Speaker 1:
[46:00] So they asked Dan to come in for another round of questions. This time he brought his attorney. Detective Meyer confronted Dan about being with Samantha the night before the murder.

Speaker 4:
[46:10] We went to the Red Lion and you were there with Sam.

Speaker 22:
[46:13] Oh no?

Speaker 4:
[46:14] But you didn't tell us that that night. You said you were off with coworkers, you were doing your thing.

Speaker 23:
[46:18] But that's not a lie, that's my personal lie.

Speaker 4:
[46:20] He was indignant, didn't feel like it was a big issue, kind of like it was my business, you don't need to know about it. Okay, I'm not saying it's a lie, but it's when you kind of sell it one way, and then we find out it's another, and like I told you that day, I am not the marriage police.

Speaker 11:
[46:39] You can ask me any questions at all, and I would have told you more if you asked more.

Speaker 4:
[46:44] But my personal life is that point.

Speaker 23:
[46:46] Sure, but my personal life is my personal life.

Speaker 4:
[46:48] Just so I know, are you and Sam in a relationship?

Speaker 11:
[46:51] Absolutely not.

Speaker 4:
[46:52] Was that an affair that was up that night? What was it that was up there?

Speaker 23:
[46:56] Sam and I are not having an affair at all.

Speaker 4:
[46:59] Okay.

Speaker 1:
[47:00] Just like Samantha said, they were going to buy a truck for Aaron, and that was it. And the day of the shooting, he insisted he was long gone, miles and miles away in his trailer in Crescent Valley.

Speaker 24:
[47:13] All I did then passed out pretty much the whole, the whole night.

Speaker 17:
[47:18] Okay.

Speaker 11:
[47:19] I'll tell you even what I took. I took two Vicodin, a shot at Nyquil Z and two Tylenol PMs.

Speaker 24:
[47:27] Then I laid them, vegged out on my bed.

Speaker 1:
[47:30] Of course, that phone of his backed him up, put him a four and a half hour drive away from where his in-laws were murdered. So that was that. They let him leave. And months went by until, in the fall of 2021, Samantha's phone records came back and, our phones can reveal a thing or two, which is why detectives invited Samantha for another talk.

Speaker 24:
[47:58] I'm happy to answer your questions. There's a lot of details that we would like to know, things that only the people in that inner circle will know.

Speaker 1:
[48:06] Like, for example, her actual relationship with Dan.

Speaker 9:
[48:11] I'm very close with Erin and I'm very close with Dan. We didn't, well, there's a recent flirtation going on.

Speaker 22:
[48:22] I'm sure you'll see it on my phone.

Speaker 7:
[48:24] With Dan? Okay, not Erin?

Speaker 22:
[48:27] No, not with Erin.

Speaker 9:
[48:29] And we always joke around that we're like a throuple because he always complains that he has two wives.

Speaker 1:
[48:35] By now, detectives had told Samantha they had her phone records, and maybe that's why her story about the day of the murder was about to change.

Speaker 22:
[48:45] We left the Red Lion, I went to Crescent Valley.

Speaker 1:
[48:48] Well, well, she didn't spend the day at the hotel after all.

Speaker 24:
[48:52] And what did you do there?

Speaker 9:
[48:54] In Crescent Valley. I was just there momentarily, and then I left and went to Tahoe.

Speaker 23:
[49:00] Okay, and you were by yourself?

Speaker 18:
[49:01] No, I went with Dan.

Speaker 23:
[49:04] Danny, I went with you to Tahoe.

Speaker 1:
[49:07] There it was. She confirmed what her phone record showed, that her cell phone traveled from Dan's trailer to Lake Tahoe, and Dan was with her.

Speaker 2:
[49:17] Okay, so you guys drove together?

Speaker 1:
[49:19] Correct.

Speaker 24:
[49:19] Was he ever out of your sight?

Speaker 1:
[49:21] Yes. Samantha said she dropped off Dan in the afternoon, near the shops in Tahoe City, about four miles away from Gary and Wendy's house. And she waited for hours until Dan returned. He just said to wait and pick up his package, and I said, okay. She believed, she said, that he was there to pick up cocaine.

Speaker 24:
[49:43] So the digital evidence doesn't support what you're saying, unfortunately.

Speaker 1:
[49:47] Her phone put her much closer to the crime scene.

Speaker 24:
[49:50] Did you see him with a gun?

Speaker 1:
[49:51] I didn't know. Samantha said she didn't believe Dan had anything to do with the shooting, to which the detective replied, I don't buy that story whatsoever.

Speaker 24:
[50:01] You are in a lot of trouble. This does not make sense.

Speaker 1:
[50:05] And something else that didn't make sense.

Speaker 4:
[50:07] Did he tell you to turn your phone off?

Speaker 12:
[50:09] No.

Speaker 9:
[50:10] Yes, he did tell me to turn my phone off.

Speaker 12:
[50:12] Okay.

Speaker 9:
[50:14] I'm sorry.

Speaker 4:
[50:14] I know.

Speaker 24:
[50:16] We're not judging you. This is scary, but you have to be honest.

Speaker 1:
[50:19] Samantha said Dan told her to turn off her phone hours before they made it into Tahoe, and she did or thought she did.

Speaker 4:
[50:29] She made the mistake of presumably just killing off the screen on the phone, and did not turn power off the entire phone, and it left a digital breadcrumb trail from beginning to end.

Speaker 1:
[50:45] Detective Meyer and his team watched the interview on FaceTime. Well, they stood by with a search warrant near Dan's trailer in Crescent Valley.

Speaker 4:
[50:53] We were hopefully going to switch from just doing a search warrant out there to maybe we're going to be able to make the arrest.

Speaker 1:
[51:01] But Samantha didn't give up anything more. How did that change your thinking about the case?

Speaker 4:
[51:08] We knew at that point, we were on the right track that we had them. We knew that she had just put him there, she had just put Danny there, but now we had the finish line in sight. We were ready to finish it.

Speaker 1:
[51:19] That finish line was further than it seemed.

Speaker 21:
[51:27] Look at him, eating whatever he wants, never gaining a pound, while I'm stuck with the boring special and can't lose an ounce.

Speaker 16:
[51:34] How's your lunch, man?

Speaker 21:
[51:35] Amazing. Yours?

Speaker 18:
[51:36] So good.

Speaker 2:
[51:38] Oh, I'm so happy for you.

Speaker 21:
[51:40] Cool, buddy.

Speaker 14:
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Speaker 16:
[51:47] So same time next week?

Speaker 18:
[51:49] No!

Speaker 21:
[51:50] Definitely.

Speaker 14:
[51:51] And your friends. Learn more at joinmochi.com. Mochi members have access to licensed physicians and nutritionists. Results may vary. And now, the next chapter of the Serta Counting Sheep.

Speaker 20:
[52:00] Hey, Uncle Number One, why aren't we counting anymore?

Speaker 19:
[52:03] Let me tell you a story. Long ago, Serta invented the Perfect Sleeper mattress.

Speaker 20:
[52:08] Oh, no.

Speaker 19:
[52:09] Oh, yes. It says the all-new Serta Perfect Sleeper with the Q4 support system has four in one perfectly interlinked coils that help relieve aches and back pain for perfect sleep night after night.

Speaker 20:
[52:21] We'll never get counted again.

Speaker 19:
[52:23] Uh, nope.

Speaker 21:
[52:25] Serta, we make the world's best mattress.

Speaker 15:
[52:28] You know that thing where you get an amazing pair of shoes at a really great price and want to tell everyone about it? Yeah, so do we. Here at Designer Shoe Warehouse, we'll give you something to brag about, like the latest styles from brands you love or the trends everyone's obsessing over or shoes that make you feel like, well, you. So go ahead, show off a little. Find shoes that get you and prices that get your budget. Let's go to the DSW store or dsw.com today.

Speaker 6:
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Speaker 1:
[53:07] Well, investigators worked on building a stronger case against Dan and Samantha. Wendy was trying to rebuild her life. She had survived multiple gunshots to the head, and now she was doing all she could to regain her strength and her memory. Did it seem to you as if she would make a full recovery, physically and mentally?

Speaker 4:
[53:26] I was very hopeful. It had that feeling that she was getting better by the day.

Speaker 1:
[53:32] Wendy's rehabilitation was long and strenuous.

Speaker 9:
[53:36] There's Miracle Wendy.

Speaker 1:
[53:37] Her daughter Adrienne released video of her progress. Reporter Michelle Bendour.

Speaker 5:
[53:42] Video of her riding a bike, learning how to walk again, learning how to speak again. Like she had this fight to live.

Speaker 1:
[53:50] Amazing she survived it, really.

Speaker 5:
[53:52] Amazing.

Speaker 1:
[53:53] And she kept up with the investigation.

Speaker 4:
[53:56] I spoke to her almost every day.

Speaker 1:
[53:58] Oh, really? Okay.

Speaker 4:
[53:59] Me and Wendy, we developed kind of a friendship.

Speaker 1:
[54:02] Wendy told Detective Meyer quite a bit about Adrienne's sister, Erin, and brother-in-law, Dan, and their financial issues.

Speaker 4:
[54:11] They were taking more from Gary and Wendy than Adrienne ever had.

Speaker 1:
[54:15] During a recorded phone call with detectives, Wendy described her frustration.

Speaker 12:
[54:21] They were very needy for money and all the time. And there was always something. And then, you know, we would help them out.

Speaker 1:
[54:31] In fact, on the day of the shooting, Gary and Wendy forked over a rather hefty sum.

Speaker 4:
[54:36] I believe it was a $90,000 check that Erin was given prior to leaving the residence. So the money was absolutely flowing in.

Speaker 1:
[54:45] Detectives learned that sometimes the money was a gift and other times alone. Either way, it was a lifeline for the couple.

Speaker 4:
[54:53] At one point, Danny had one failed business venture, a bar in the Reno Sparks area that fell through.

Speaker 1:
[55:01] By the time of the shooting, Dan and Erin owed hundreds of thousands of dollars to her parents. There had been intense fights and sometimes estrangement.

Speaker 5:
[55:11] Her mother cut her off so many times throughout her life, you know, would cut her off and then bring her back and...

Speaker 1:
[55:17] Did those heated arguments lead to murder? Wendy started to believe they did. She began to remember things, right, gradually?

Speaker 4:
[55:25] She was trying to.

Speaker 1:
[55:27] Like maybe she saw Danny.

Speaker 4:
[55:31] Yes.

Speaker 1:
[55:32] This is Wendy, almost a year after the shooting, on the phone with a detective.

Speaker 12:
[55:37] I had some memory come back. I felt that someone was in the house. And I looked up and thought Danny was a hoodie on.

Speaker 25:
[55:46] How clear do you remember it?

Speaker 12:
[55:48] Very clear. I remember him walking over and seeing him shooting Gary and then pointing to the thing.

Speaker 1:
[55:57] It sounded credible, but given her brain injury, were her statements actual memories or a mixture of things she had heard from friends and family? Wendy herself wasn't sure, but she was suspicious enough of Dan and her daughter that she revised her will and disinherited Aaron.

Speaker 4:
[56:17] The more lucid she had become, the more involved she had become, the more engaging, also the more frustrated she had become.

Speaker 1:
[56:23] Equally frustrated was her daughter Adrienne, who'd also become suspicious of Dan and her sister. Sergeant Tyler Neer, a new supervisor of investigations assigned to work with Detective Meyer, spoke with her.

Speaker 4:
[56:37] She wanted something done, and she wanted justice for her parents.

Speaker 1:
[56:41] And life was not easy. Wendy had improved physically, but mentally she was struggling. And nearly two years after the shooting, Detective Meyer received a call from Adrienne.

Speaker 4:
[56:56] She said, my mom killed herself and I blame you for it.

Speaker 1:
[57:04] To be accused of being responsible. She's dead, she killed herself, it's your fault.

Speaker 4:
[57:09] It was my fault because we didn't solve the crime and she felt that it was never going to be done.

Speaker 1:
[57:15] What was that like physically, emotionally to get that call? It hurt.

Speaker 4:
[57:23] It made me angry. I was sad because I had gotten to know Wendy and to know that she had taken her life, that hurt.

Speaker 1:
[57:32] Took it pretty hard, huh?

Speaker 4:
[57:34] It hit. Yeah, it hit really hard.

Speaker 1:
[57:40] A few months later on the second anniversary of Gary's murder, Adrienne filed a wrongful death lawsuit alleging what she had come to believe, that both Dan and Erin were responsible for the shooting. Placer County District Attorney Morgan Geyer. Did you believe that Erin was involved in this in a substantial way?

Speaker 11:
[58:01] I do.

Speaker 1:
[58:01] What things stand out for you?

Speaker 11:
[58:04] Well, the most obvious being the timing of the murder of Gary Spore in the shooting of Wendy Wood. Erin was there that day. Erin went out on the boat with her children and her parents.

Speaker 1:
[58:16] Almost a two-hour window, the shooter used to slip into Gary and Wendy's home and wait. Erin responded with her own lawsuit, denying any involvement with the attack against her parents. She alleged that was a lie Adrian used to turn Wendy against her. Erin is accusing Adrian of cutting them out of the will and of taking advantage of her mother.

Speaker 11:
[58:39] The allegation was essentially that she had manipulated her mother into disinheriting and she filed a lawsuit to get to the bottom of it.

Speaker 1:
[58:47] How did all this complicate your investigation?

Speaker 4:
[58:50] For me, I treated it a lot as kind of noise, but I wasn't allowing it really to influence the investigation or influence any direction.

Speaker 1:
[58:58] By then, they'd found a key piece of evidence. It was video of Samantha on the day of the shooting, walking to her parked Subaru at 8 p.m., a mile and a half from Gary and Wendy's home. She waited there until dark.

Speaker 4:
[59:13] And then, 24 minutes after the shooter left the crime scene, headed in her direction, we could see the dome light turn on and presume that's when he had gotten in the vehicle and they drove away.

Speaker 1:
[59:27] The last piece of the timeline puzzle. But before detectives could make an arrest, there was still something they needed to do.

Speaker 4:
[59:36] Really closing those doors on other people that could have been suspects or named as potential suspects to really paint the picture beyond a reasonable doubt that it couldn't be anybody else responsible for this.

Speaker 1:
[59:48] Seven months after Wendy's death, they believed they had done just that.

Speaker 5:
[59:51] Today we arrested 39-year-old Danny Serafini and 33-year-old Samantha Scott.

Speaker 1:
[59:57] The case was finally ready to prosecute. Detectives called Adrienne to share the news.

Speaker 4:
[60:04] And we called her and told her, it's done, we got him. And she just screamed. She screamed in excitement and told her boyfriend who was with her that it was done, that they finally got him.

Speaker 1:
[60:18] Why did you never arrest Erin or charge her?

Speaker 4:
[60:22] There was no evidence that pointed at Erin or showed Erin had any culpability.

Speaker 1:
[60:28] After the arraignments, Adrienne talked to reporters about her brother-in-law.

Speaker 9:
[60:32] I think he is violent. I think he is greedy. And I am just so thankful that Placer County has taken him into custody, because that's where he should be.

Speaker 1:
[60:44] The former Major League Baseball player was about to face a jury. And an unexpected star witness would take center stage. Dan Serafidi and Samantha Scott were in jail, accused of murder and attempted murder. By January 2025, they had been there 15 months, and Samantha, she had had a change of heart, and sat down with investigators to tell them everything. What did she say that was different than what she'd said before?

Speaker 11:
[61:28] Most importantly, she told us what instructions she had received from him to keep her phone off, to keep her mouth shut, and she indicated that he had a gun with him that even test fired that gun and silencer on their drive from Nevada to Lake Tahoe.

Speaker 1:
[61:43] And then, after Dan shot Gary and Wendy, said Samantha, as they were driving back to Dan's trailer, she saw him throw the gun, the silencer, the backpack, and some shoes out of the car. By the time investigators looked for that evidence, it was gone, but Samantha's sworn statement would be enough.

Speaker 11:
[62:04] We were already preparing to try him without that testimony because the evidence showed that he did it. But this provided corroboration to a lot of other pieces of evidence.

Speaker 1:
[62:15] Samantha agreed to plead guilty to being an accessory after the fact and she got to go home. Well, with a new accessory of her own, an ankle monitor. Four months later, May, 2025, Dan Serafini went on trial and prosecutor Rick Miller opened with something Dan told his brother.

Speaker 6:
[62:35] I'll pay $20,000 to have them killed.

Speaker 5:
[62:39] That is how the trial started.

Speaker 1:
[62:40] Well, he certainly didn't bury the headline, did he?

Speaker 5:
[62:44] No, he did not. He got everyone's attention.

Speaker 1:
[62:48] The prosecutor said Dan's hatred toward his in-laws started years earlier.

Speaker 5:
[62:52] There are these very contentious emails that the jury heard.

Speaker 1:
[62:56] One exchange was from 2016 when they were arguing over a multimillion-dollar ranch they had helped purchase for Erin and Dan. The prosecutor quoted from Dan's email to Wendy.

Speaker 16:
[63:08] Take the f***ing house.

Speaker 4:
[63:09] But if Gary ever says f*** you to me again, I will knock him the f*** out.

Speaker 1:
[63:14] Three months before the shooting, there were more. This one after a disagreement over the couple's kids. Wendy wrote to Erin, Danny's disdain for us is right at the surface, so he enjoyed berating us. They fought a lot.

Speaker 5:
[63:28] They fought a lot. They did. A lot of fighting.

Speaker 2:
[63:31] This was way more than just keyboard warriors.

Speaker 1:
[63:36] Dan said he wanted them killed and then set out to do that very thing, said the prosecutor.

Speaker 11:
[63:41] He would have stood to inherit quite a bit of money with his wife, but he didn't want to wait. He wanted it now and he didn't want any strings attached.

Speaker 1:
[63:51] And it all came to a head on June 5th, 2021, the day Wendy and Gary went boating with Erin and her boys. The prosecutor showed that video of a figure walking toward the house and told the jurors to focus on the person's gate. What was it about the walk?

Speaker 5:
[64:07] Well, it was described as a sort of swagger with maybe a little bit of a limp.

Speaker 1:
[64:12] Sure.

Speaker 5:
[64:13] And then they had another video of Dan Serafini in the lobby of the Red Lion in Elko, Nevada the day before the shootings.

Speaker 1:
[64:22] Was the walk the same?

Speaker 5:
[64:23] Well, you'd have to look for yourself, but the prosecution said the walk was the same.

Speaker 1:
[64:28] Had to be Dan, the prosecutor said, because anybody else would have seen the SUV in the driveway and would have thought somebody was home. No one was home, of course. So Dan entered the garage code and walked right in. Then, just over an hour after Erin drove off with the kids, the jurors heard the five gunshots. Before leaving, Dan put a bag of dog food out because he thought the bodies wouldn't be discovered for days, said the prosecutor. It was all carefully planned, he told the jury. Dan purposely left his phone in his trailer 300 plus miles away, so there wouldn't be a digital trail.

Speaker 16:
[65:10] His phone has a really good solid alibi.

Speaker 12:
[65:14] That phone never moved.

Speaker 16:
[65:16] Zero steps, zero outgoing communication.

Speaker 4:
[65:20] Everything goes to voicemail.

Speaker 1:
[65:22] Then the prosecutor called his star witness, Samantha Scott. She described what she saw on that drive to Lake Tahoe, the gun, the silencer, the backpack, and something Dan later revealed about that day.

Speaker 5:
[65:38] He allegedly confessed to Samantha that he shot Wendy.

Speaker 1:
[65:42] She also told the jury that Dan threatened to shoot her family if she said anything to anyone. By the fall of 2021, months after the murder, Samantha said, they were having an affair that continued even after they were both arrested.

Speaker 5:
[65:59] He told her he was in love with her while they were in jail and sent her what they call kites in jail. This is a slang term for sending messages between inmates.

Speaker 1:
[66:10] And that, said the prosecutor, was part of the plan.

Speaker 6:
[66:14] He knows she's loyal.

Speaker 16:
[66:17] He knows she's in love with him.

Speaker 4:
[66:21] Everything he's, that she has done indicates that.

Speaker 16:
[66:26] And yeah, even as I'm talking right now, the flame on that candle has not even begun to flicker.

Speaker 5:
[66:34] She still admitted she was feeling guilty for testifying because she was still had feelings for him.

Speaker 1:
[66:40] Then the prosecutor called Erin and asked her about Dan's relationship with Samantha.

Speaker 5:
[66:45] Erin said she knew of the sexual relationship. That didn't make her upset, but she was more upset that there were emotional feelings that she was finding out about. That's what upset her.

Speaker 1:
[66:56] She had once considered Samantha a friend, but now she said she no longer trusted her. And unlike Samantha, Erin had not turned on Dan. She testified for the prosecution and defended Dan.

Speaker 5:
[67:10] Correct. She defended her husband at the trial, saying there is no way that was her husband in that video.

Speaker 1:
[67:19] Samantha and Erin on the stand, the two of them. I'm interested in knowing from your observation of them, how they came across.

Speaker 11:
[67:26] They painted two separate pictures. Samantha had accepted defeat, both legally and existentially, and understood that her job now was to connect the dots. Erin was still in defense mode. She was still actively trying to thwart the truth, so you couldn't have two different perspectives in one courtroom.

Speaker 1:
[67:47] Or maybe three perspectives? Dan's defense attorney was about to paint an entirely different picture, and Dan Serafini wasn't in it.

Speaker 16:
[67:59] The person in the video is built differently than Danny, because the person in that video is not Danny Serafini.

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Speaker 1:
[69:34] The state had called Dan Serafini a killer. That, his attorney David Rappman said, was flat out wrong.

Speaker 16:
[69:44] Danny Serafini did not shoot Gary Spore. Danny Serafini did not shoot Wendy Wood.

Speaker 1:
[69:51] That masked man in the video? That wasn't him, said the defense.

Speaker 16:
[69:56] The statue is different, and the person in the video is built differently than Danny because the person in that video is not Danny Serafini.

Speaker 1:
[70:05] The height was wrong, the weight was wrong, the walk was wrong, not the same at all. And anyway, remember those phone records? He was many miles away in Nevada when that masked man shot Gary and Wendy.

Speaker 5:
[70:18] The defense suggested he could have been binge-watching something on his phone, shopping, sitting in his trailer in Crescent Valley.

Speaker 1:
[70:25] And remember, counsel the defense attorney, there was no physical evidence, not a scrap tying Dan to the Tahoe house on the day of the shooting. Besides, his wife Erin testified that Dan had no financial motive to kill her parents.

Speaker 16:
[70:39] These people were quite generous with Danny Serafini and his wife, their daughter Erin.

Speaker 1:
[70:47] And if Dan killed them, he'd get nothing, not a cent.

Speaker 16:
[70:52] The evidence will also show that Danny Serafini was not a beneficiary of their will. He was not someone that was going to inherit.

Speaker 1:
[71:04] As for Samantha's testimony, she lied, said the defense, to save herself.

Speaker 16:
[71:11] That story is fantastic. That story is a story. It is a really great leap of faith here that the prosecution is asking you to believe.

Speaker 6:
[71:28] It's like, why would you kill the Golden Goose?

Speaker 1:
[71:31] Before jurors got the case, prosecutor Rick Miller left them with this message.

Speaker 2:
[71:36] You know why he did it. You know how he did it.

Speaker 4:
[71:41] You know his motive.

Speaker 20:
[71:42] You know his opportunity.

Speaker 4:
[71:44] You know his ability.

Speaker 16:
[71:45] There's a murderer in this room. He's sitting right there.

Speaker 1:
[71:52] And then they were sent away to deliberate.

Speaker 20:
[71:56] I've never experienced or been through anything like this before.

Speaker 1:
[72:00] Karen Schroeder, the jury foreperson, and two other jurors, Allie McKibben and Gracie Buttrick, took page after page of notes as they listened to the testimony and watched Dan.

Speaker 9:
[72:11] I spent the majority of the trial just watching him to try to see how he reacted to each and every witness and evidence and just try to get a read on him, but he seemed very stoic and disconnected.

Speaker 1:
[72:26] They paid attention to every word from Samantha Scott.

Speaker 20:
[72:29] Her recollection on the stand and compare that to what she had already told law enforcement, really trying to pick through, is she telling the truth? What is she lying about?

Speaker 1:
[72:41] And found Dan's wife Erin to be, well.

Speaker 9:
[72:46] For lack of a better word, frustrating. It was clear the second she got on that witness stand that her loyalties lied with her husband. And you had to think, he's up there accused of murdering your parents.

Speaker 1:
[73:03] That first day, the jurors talked. No verdict.

Speaker 20:
[73:07] We didn't take a vote until the end of our second full day of deliberations.

Speaker 1:
[73:13] The vote was not unanimous. Were you surprised they kept going on and on and on?

Speaker 4:
[73:19] I really thought it was going to be a very quick verdict, and had to keep reminding myself the amount of evidence that they had to go through and the complexity of the case. So it gave me that moment of peace to know we're going to get there. It's just going to take a little while to get to where we need to.

Speaker 1:
[73:33] Do you hope?

Speaker 4:
[73:34] I hoped.

Speaker 1:
[73:35] The jurors took a closer look at the surveillance videos from the Red Lion and the Tahoe House, and they took screenshots.

Speaker 20:
[73:42] There was parts where you could zoom in, and so then we did side by side and looked, could it be the same person?

Speaker 1:
[73:49] They looked at the shoes, the pants, the walk.

Speaker 20:
[73:53] We were like investigators in that.

Speaker 1:
[73:55] And finally, on day four...

Speaker 25:
[73:58] I understand the jury has reached a verdict...

Speaker 1:
[74:00] .and years of grief and anger and tension gathered in the courtroom that moment.

Speaker 25:
[74:07] We, the jury, in the above entitled action, find the defendant, Daniel Joseph Serafini, guilty.

Speaker 1:
[74:13] Guilty of first degree murder and attempted murder. The jurors were certain the figure in the video could only have been Dan Serafini.

Speaker 22:
[74:24] I felt 100 percent that's him. No one was able to convince me it wasn't, and nothing in the evidence could tell me that it wasn't.

Speaker 9:
[74:34] Today, I wore my mom's engagement ring, and my dad's ashes are around my neck, and I knew they were here with us today.

Speaker 1:
[74:44] Outside the courtroom, Adrian Spore was grateful.

Speaker 9:
[74:48] Placer County District Attorney's Office and Sheriff's Office never gave up, and today, finally, justice was served.

Speaker 4:
[74:57] The court ruled that Lester Don Holt, Jr., Lester Don Holt Jr., and Keith Morrison, Lester Don Holt Jr., were to be sentenced to life imprisonment. The court ruled that Lester Don Holt, Jr., Lester Don Holt Jr., and Keith Morrison, were to be sentenced to life imprisonment. The court ruled that Lester Don Holt, Jr., and Keith Morrison, were to be sentenced to life imprisonment. The court ruled that Lester Don Holt, Jr., and Keith Morrison.

Speaker 12:
[75:53] The vision of the shooter.

Speaker 16:
[75:55] The DA said, where'd you get that?

Speaker 1:
[75:57] Watch out. You know how it is. The jury pronounces guilty, and it's done, cooked, finished.

Speaker 18:
[76:20] We begin with breaking news. A jury has found former MLB pitcher Dan Serafini guilty of murder.

Speaker 1:
[76:25] Except this time, it wasn't. Dan Serafini, one-time Major League baseball pitcher, now convicted murderer, simply refused to accept the verdict. What the hell happened?

Speaker 16:
[76:38] I think what happened, unfortunately, for everyone, is that due process never happened.

Speaker 1:
[76:45] Or you could say, this guy is what happened. Dan swapped out his old lawyers for Barry Zimmerman. And Zimmerman had a whole new play in mind. Throw out his conviction and get Dan a new trial. Why? Two reasons, he said. Reason one, jury misconduct. What did the jury do that was so terrible?

Speaker 16:
[77:10] They decided on their own dime to go through the video of the surveillance at the house and the video at the Red Lion and make screenshots. And then compare screenshots to screenshots to see if they could match who they knew to be, Danny Serafini at the Red Lion with the perpetrator.

Speaker 1:
[77:33] That, Zimmerman said, was outside the scope of the jury's role.

Speaker 16:
[77:37] I was shocked. I thought, this is absolutely misconduct.

Speaker 1:
[77:43] And reason two? Zimmerman argued that Dan's trial attorneys had failed him, given him a poor defense. For example, Dan was pushing to go to trial, but Zimmerman said his lawyers should have taken a pause and regrouped, especially after learning that Samantha Scott had flipped.

Speaker 16:
[78:00] The responsible thing for his trial lawyers to have done at that moment was to say, breaks on, we're not ready. The cards have changed. The table is now different. We have Samantha Scott to deal with.

Speaker 1:
[78:14] Was Samantha Scott the key to it all?

Speaker 16:
[78:16] Yes, absolutely.

Speaker 1:
[78:18] Zimmerman claimed Samantha was more involved than she let on.

Speaker 16:
[78:22] I don't view her as being some naïve person who just happened to say, I'll do whatever Danny Serafini tells me to do and I won't ask any questions. I don't buy that for a second.

Speaker 1:
[78:34] Also, said Zimmerman, Dan's attorneys should have let him testify.

Speaker 16:
[78:38] He's not a fool. He knew he had to testify, especially when Samantha was going to testify against him.

Speaker 1:
[78:47] He's his own agent. He could testify if he really wanted to.

Speaker 16:
[78:51] He could, but when the pressure's on, let me just put you into this. You're facing life without the possibility of parole. You have two lawyers you've paid $400,000 to. They're both telling you, you can't testify it's a mistake, you're going to lose.

Speaker 1:
[79:05] And Zimmerman argued the defense didn't call a single witness, but should have called a neighbor who told investigators she saw Dan in Crescent Valley the day of the murder, and a secret lover who told detectives she spent the day with Dan.

Speaker 9:
[79:21] I was with them all day Saturday and then went to work.

Speaker 4:
[79:25] Okay, what did you guys do on Saturday?

Speaker 24:
[79:29] Drank a bunch of disgusting wine.

Speaker 1:
[79:33] So Zimmerman got a hearing and they all assembled in the court room, and Dan Serafini shuffled in his garish jail jumpsuit punctuation for a very unusual proceeding. For several days he testified about Samantha Scott and his complaints about his attorneys, and with Dan on the stand Zimmerman revealed evidence the jury never heard.

Speaker 12:
[79:57] Danny, it's Wendy. I didn't get to tell you that I've been doing this electric therapy that allows me to recall visions, and I have a vision of the shooter and it's not you.

Speaker 1:
[80:10] This was Wendy saying Dan was not the killer.

Speaker 16:
[80:14] That was powerful stuff. The DA said, where'd you get that?

Speaker 1:
[80:17] Dramatic. Or, maybe not. During his cross-examination, the prosecutor played that other Wendy tape.

Speaker 12:
[80:27] Someone was in the house, and I looked up and saw Danny with the hoodie on.

Speaker 11:
[80:33] He was able to show that Wendy knew exactly what Danny had done, and at some points were keeping them close and making them believe that she didn't think that so that she could remain safe. She still remained fearful for her life up until the end.

Speaker 1:
[80:49] As for Dan's alibi witnesses, the prosecutor said his neighbor had the date wrong, and Dan told his lover to lie.

Speaker 11:
[80:57] The alibi witnesses would have ultimately provided more incriminating evidence against Mr. Serafini and arguably would have sped up that guilty verdict that he so justly deserved.

Speaker 1:
[81:06] So his original defense attorneys were right in withholding those people.

Speaker 11:
[81:09] They were absolutely right in withholding any evidence of the alibi.

Speaker 1:
[81:13] The prosecution argued Dan was simply having buyers or moors, and the jury did nothing wrong. Dan watched it all unfold, one more shot at another chance, and he had a lot to say about it.

Speaker 23:
[81:27] I think you need to stop with those questions because you keep implicating me and it's not me.

Speaker 1:
[81:44] From Pitchers Mound to Jail Cell, Dan Serafini's fall was as steep as they come. I thought about this case of loss. I wondered how somebody with all the talent and the advantages that you've gotten, like, this wound up here. I'd love to understand it. Do you understand it?

Speaker 23:
[82:01] No, I don't understand it at all. I believed in the justice system, and the justice system failed.

Speaker 1:
[82:07] Well, the justice system would say it didn't fail at all, that it was a good circumstantial case, and when they laid it out, there was a lot of circumstantial stuff there. Some prosecutors say that's the best kind of case.

Speaker 23:
[82:18] Circumstantial case, and I believe the circumstantial stuff that they had was just making up a story. They had no proof, no anything.

Speaker 1:
[82:25] This Dan decided would be his only network interview. There was a time limit, and jail rules required this somewhat awkward arrangement through a thick layer of glass. Dan told us he's behind bars because his trial attorneys did not mount a strong defense. And the jury...

Speaker 23:
[82:43] They just didn't like me. They didn't like my lifestyle. They didn't like the way I acted in court, which I didn't act anyways. I sat there like I was supposed to, because my lawyers told me to. Don't react, don't respond. Sit there like nothing's bothering you. You got crucified for it.

Speaker 1:
[83:03] And then there was the woman who turned against him. Tell me about your relationship with Samantha.

Speaker 23:
[83:09] Samantha was a very close family friend. We ended up kind of falling into a fling with each other. My wife and I live a certain lifestyle to where we do our own things when we're apart. Our rule was not to bring any drama home. So I left Dona lot for work. I was allowed to do what I wanted to do. I screwed up and made a horrible decision by being with Sam because I broke the rules and brought the drama home. She was too close to home to have that kind of relationship.

Speaker 1:
[83:44] She told detectives that you would shoot her family, you told her, if she spoke up.

Speaker 23:
[83:51] Of course not. I would not do that. Sam was a big part of my life. Sam was never in danger. It all makes for a really good story.

Speaker 1:
[84:01] Dan's story was this. He partied with Samantha the night before the murder and then went back to his trailer the next morning. And Samantha came over later that day to pick up $25,000 as arranged for what he called an investment. Samantha left with the money, but he didn't go with her and he didn't shoot anybody. Why would Samantha say, you did it? You committed the murder?

Speaker 23:
[84:28] Well, because they scared her with 120 years in prison. I think anybody in this room would do the same thing.

Speaker 1:
[84:34] So you're saying she's lying now? You're saying that the authorities encouraged her to lie, to get a case against you because they didn't know who else to charge?

Speaker 24:
[84:43] I mean, who else would it be?

Speaker 23:
[84:44] I have no idea, but that's not my job. My job isn't to prove who did it. My job was to prove that I didn't do it, and there's nothing there to prove that I didn't.

Speaker 1:
[84:54] The state argued it was Dan who was lying. The prosecutors would say you knew the way into the garage, and you did. I mean, you had been there before. You knew the way into the house. You knew where you could hide while they were out doing whatever they were doing before they came back and it was time to act. You knew a lot of these things that nobody else would know. What do you say to those allegations?

Speaker 23:
[85:14] I'd say again that they're just guessing. I mean, how hard is it to walk through a garage door? I mean, they're saying that I knew how to get into the house. Of course, everybody knows how to get into a house. No one can even prove that the garage door was open or closed. Understand?

Speaker 1:
[85:30] And then there was the man in that surveillance video.

Speaker 23:
[85:33] They can't say it's me. There's no way they can say it's me.

Speaker 1:
[85:36] They can't prove it to you, but they've got this guy who looks kind of like you, with your sort of walk, walking on a surveillance camera. And then they've got somebody who knows how to get into the... No, I've got to be challenging because we don't have much time. I have to tell you.

Speaker 23:
[85:50] I think you need to stop with those questions.

Speaker 1:
[85:52] Well, why?

Speaker 23:
[85:53] Because you keep implicating me and it's not me.

Speaker 1:
[85:56] As for telling his brother he'd pay someone 20 grand to kill his in-laws, that brother testified, said Dan made the offer in jest.

Speaker 23:
[86:05] That was made up. My brother was throwing daggers at me because him and I had a falling out after my mom passed away. I never mentioned that once, Dan. And that's on my kids, that's on my wife.

Speaker 1:
[86:17] And speaking of Erin, Dan said any suggestion that she was involved in some plot to have her parents killed was ridiculous.

Speaker 23:
[86:25] Erin didn't hate her parents. Erin didn't want her parents dead. I didn't want her parents dead. None of us did. And I think for people to believe that, that's the kind of society we're in. People want to think that I was broke. People wanted to think that I was a washed up baseball player that didn't have any money. I didn't need anybody's money. I paid my own bills. I did my own things. And I'm proud of the person that I am and that I became. I didn't have a superstar baseball career. I was, I've been very successful.

Speaker 1:
[86:56] And I'm proud of that.

Speaker 23:
[86:57] And I won't hide from it.

Speaker 1:
[86:59] That was it. Our allotted time was up. And Dan Serafini went back to his cell where he will remain in one cell or another for the rest of his life. Because the judge denied his motion for a new trial. At his sentencing, Adrienne called Dan evil and a monster.

Speaker 9:
[87:20] For 10 years, Dan Serafini and Aaron Spoor treated my parents like a bottomless ATM. Between loans and gifts, my parents provided them with well over $2 million. But it was never enough. At one point, Dan's attorney asked, why kill the golden goose? And the answer was simple. They got tired of asking.

Speaker 1:
[87:45] Detective Meyer was in the courtroom watching Adrienne deliver the words. She had waited so long to say. Adrienne gave you a hug at the sentencing, didn't she?

Speaker 4:
[87:54] She did. I'm sorry.

Speaker 1:
[88:02] That's okay.

Speaker 4:
[88:03] She did with, she actually did with me, and my wife and kids were there, and she ran over to them, and gave them a hug as well. She got to meet my family that sacrificed all their time while trying to bring conclusion for her family. So it was kind of almost like we came full circle.

Speaker 1:
[88:26] Sure, and maybe that went some way toward repairing the terrible pain you felt about what she said.

Speaker 4:
[88:33] It absolutely did.

Speaker 1:
[88:35] One person not in attendance, Erin Spore, she filed for divorce, though she still stands by Dan. Dan's attorney read a statement Erin wrote on Dan's behalf.

Speaker 16:
[88:48] He may be imperfect, but he is one of the most caring and generous people I have ever met in this world.

Speaker 1:
[88:55] The civil suits between Erin and her sister have been privately resolved. Adrienne's lawsuit against Dan is ongoing. As for Samantha Scott...

Speaker 22:
[89:06] I am deeply sorry to the families affected by this case, especially the investigators who are trying to find the truth.

Speaker 1:
[89:12] She was sentenced to two years probation for aiding Dan.

Speaker 7:
[89:37] And that's all for this edition of Dateline. Don't forget to check out our Talking Dateline podcast, in which we'll go behind the scenes of tonight's episode, available Wednesday in the Dateline feed, wherever you get your podcasts. We'll see you again next Friday at 9, 8 Central.

Speaker 6:
[89:55] I'm Lester Holt.

Speaker 7:
[89:56] For all of us at NBC News, good night.

Speaker 2:
[90:04] I'm Craig Melvin. Cheers. Cheers. I've always been a glass half full kind of guy. And now, I'm talking to some people who look at the world that way too. Some really fascinating folks who share their defining moments, their triumphs, their challenges. Their stories are funny and quite candid. So I hope you'll join me each week. And who knows, you might just come away with your own glass half full.

Speaker 21:
[90:28] Search Glass Half Full with Craig Melvin from today on YouTube and wherever you get your podcasts.