people. in aspen. we had a brutal murder in a small town. that house has the story to tell. are we going to be able to figure out what that story is? it s the playground of snow, and gold. and she was at its heart. beautiful, privileged. magnetic. whether it was a taxi driver or her movie star friends. she had a very genuine connection with people. but what happened one night in her secluded chalet sent shivers through this glamorous ski town. oh my god. no. i was going into shock. hyperventilating. murder in her sleep. it was a crime of rage. where would investigators start? an ex-boyfriend? there were some stories about a jilted lover. her new tenants? they were a couple that had been pushed over the edge. her old friend? [inaudible] there is no way that she saw what she said she saw. the real killer would stun them all. took my world and just flip it upside down. we were all wrong! everybody was wrong in this case. [inaudible] oh m
the renters were led away in handcuffs. but was it too quick, too easy? it looked fishy to me. fishy? fishy. keith morrison: nancy styler s attorney, beth krulewitch. fishy how? in terms of you ve got a very well-respected physician who s now being accused of murder. and it didn t it was inconceivable to me that he would have killed somebody. keith morrison: plus, the elderly man they led away wrapped in his wife s blue bathrobe looked far too frail and weak to bludgeon a woman to death, carry her body, wrap it up, flip a mattress. and then been stupid enough to take the murder weapon, some pill bottles with the victim s name on them, his vehicle registration and insurance, packaged it all up in one bag, and then put it in a dumpster that was close to the motel he was staying at. made zero sense to me.