Transcripts For KNTV Dateline NBC 20150511

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and who could they trust? >> i just remember her hair! >> there's no way she saw what she said she saw. >> it looked like a set-up. it really looked like a set-up. >> reporter: the real killer would stun them all! >> took my world and just flipped it upside down. >> i started praying the truth would be revealed. >> we were all wrong. everybody was wrong in this case. >> my, my friend, oh my, my friend, oh my god. my, my friend. >> reporter: a cold night. february, 2014. >> she's not. she's full of blood. >> reporter: 911 callers can often be hysterical this one was all but incomprehensible. >> i found my friend in the closet. she's dead. >> reporter: but then this sort of thing just doesn't happen to people like the one now lying dead in the closet. >> she's dead, full of blood, wrapped in a thing. >> reporter: and certainly not in the caller's zip code. >> we don't see many homicides. >> but there are moments when no place is safe. no person. not the storied victim. not her secure and pampered shangrila in the snow. >> there are no words for it, you know? when a childhood friend dies. >> reporter: yes, and nancy pfister? life of the party, confidant of bell hops and billionaires, who would want to harm her? and why?. aspen, colorado. the tiny municipal airport here tells a story in the long line of private jets, parked and waiting for their well heeled owners to come down from their mountainside chalets. their "beginner castles, as the late nancy pfister used to call them. half playfully, of course. these were her friends. as were the passing tourists, ski bums and busboys and just about everybody. mary conover met nancy when they were both teenagers. >> you cannot come to this town without meeting nancy. >> reporter: come on, really? >> everybody met nancy at one point or another. >> i'll be showing you all the rich and famous people that i know. >> reporter: including this french tv crew. nancy gave them a tour of aspen glitz. >> and this is where all of the rich and famous people come in their private jets. >> i've never known another person like her. as joyful and outsized personality and all of that that she was -- she had a very deep and soulful connection to the world. >> reporter: some special sauce in nancy pfister and when she smiled. >> it was just pure radiance, you know? it was just beaming. >> reporter: billy clayton was perhaps closer to nancy than anybody. almost like a brother. >> it was like she had a secret and she wanted to share it with you. and that secret was "let's all lighten up and have fun and enjoy life and be grateful." >> reporter: nancy had reason to be grateful. she was born to a legendary aspen family, a bit like local royalty. her father art pfister made a fortune when he turned his ranch into the buttermilk ski resort. and her mother betty was a w war ii pilot who in later years flew a helicopter and parked it in her driveway. and nancy? stories about nancy would fill a book. like the one about how she met jack nicholson. >> a convertible pulled up and asked them directions and nancy said, "well, i'll take you there but i want to ride in that nice car of yours." and the next thing you know she and jack are best friends. >> this is the house of jack-- >> reporter: nancy could and did live anyway she wanted. out loud. >> she could go let's go to saint bart or hawaii. okay. but an impulseive came with a price, your business was her business, your stuff was her stuff. sometimes she expected her friend to give her the stuff she wanted. >> it was quite a job to love nancy. >> reporter: quite a job to love nancy. >> yeah. she would do things she felt were okay at any time. >> reporter: so, after what happened to her, flies on a carcass, the tabloids feasted on the gossip and half truths that flew around town. she was a spoiled wild-child, they howled jack nicholson's party girl, hunter s. thompson's drinking buddy. an incucrable flirt once engaged to michael douglas. all very breathless, these stories about the, quote, "aspen socialite." and insulting, said her friends. didn't paint nancy's character accurately at all. >> reporter: some people collect famous people as friends. and it's important to talk about -- >> definitely not her. she had a lot of famous friends and friends who were not famous. she treated everyone the same way. she had a very genuine connection with people. >> she didn't have the entitlement that made a snooty little rich kid or something. she had an entitlement that every day of life was precious and should be lived to the fullest. >> reporter: nancy was a traveling philanthropist. a devoted environmentalist. she had a daughter, too, juliana. born when nancy was 29. and sometimes she took juliana with her when she traveled, but sometimes she didn't. >> nancy has a lot of very close friends and people who love juliana and, you know, we all raised our children together. >> reporter: unusual? oh certainly. >> she just truly, deeply loved juliana and did feel that this was her greatest role of her life, was to be a mother. >> thing is, nancy pfister trusted people. even with the care of her own daughter, with her house, with her money. like the teller she happened to meet in her local bank. >> she loved people, you know. all kinds. it didn't matter who you were. >> reporter: kathy carpenter was that teller. and one day seven years ago, out of the blue, nancy asked her to lunch. kathy accepted. and learned first hand another of nancy's hallmark traits. >> she was sometimes brutally honest. >> reporter: no edit button? >> no edit button. i like that, yes. no edit button. she actually, when i first met her, told me that i was very fat. >> reporter: what a thing to say to somebody when you first meet them though. hi, be my friend. you're fat. >> yeah. well, you're fat. you know, you're beautiful. but you're fat." >> reporter: so she was blunt, undiplomatic, but irresistable. by the time lunch was over nancy and kathy were fast friends. just how nancy was. like when she made plans to leave town for the winter she decided to rent her house to a retired doctor and his heart cult horticulturalist wife. total strangers whom she befriended in a heartbeat actually invited them to move in a month early. and so she, dr. trey styler, and his wife who also happened to be named nancy, they all lived together like roomates. >> she kind of said, "i'm going take you under my wing and have you meet all my friends, and i know a lot of people around here." >> reporter: but now, in february 2014, at just 57, nancy pfister was gone. murdered, apparently in her own bed. while the grief was still very fresh, much of aspen crowded into the storied hotel jerome which was more like a memorial that was more like a good-bye party. >> well, however she died, we need to celebrate her life. that's what she would've wanted, because her life was a celebration. >> reporter: except one person, notably absent from the overflow crowd in the jerome, wasn't celebrating. but certainly could hear the music and laughter that burst out of hotel windows that night, and drifted down the street. and into a particular cell in the county jail. >> oh, my god. no. >> reporter: what had happened to nancy pfister? the awful discovery that launched this aspen mystery. >> hard to get that image out of your mind. >> it is. that house has this story to tell and are we going to be able to figure out what that story is? >> reporter: aspen colorado, february 2014, any february is the center of the universe, for a certain crowd, that is. that year, as always an avalanche of skiers crowded onto lifts and filled the restaurants and bars and shops that line aspen's carefully tended avenues. a lovely, if pricey, skiing heaven. except, that is, for nancy pfister. >> it used to be really different in the old days. but now it has gotten more towards the champagne. >> did she ever think of leaving here permanently? i know she was away a lot. >> she thought of it all the time. she thought about -- because aspen's changed so much. it -- it's not that sleepy little town. there's traffic. i got stuck in traffic today, you know. >> reporter: with her daughter, juliana, grown and out of the house by then, nancy, at the peak of ski season, had no reason to winter in aspen. which is why she rented her house to that retired doctor and his wife from denver. while she sipped her champagne in warmer climes. that year, australia. so it was a surprise when, that february, she notified her friends she was coming home early. she arrived in aspen saturday the 22nd of february. kathy carpenter picked her up at the airport. >> i hung out with her that evening, helped her unpack, and to get organized. >> how was it to have her back? >> it was wonderful. it was fun. uh, she shared a lot of her video clips that she took on her trip. >> did you stay over the weekend or -- >> i did. she asked me if i would stay with her. um, so i did. >> reporter: on monday morning, february 24th, kathy got up early and left for work, leaving nancy and her dog gabe at the house. knowing nancy would need peace and quiet to get over her jet lag, she put a note on the front door asking would-be visitors to leave nancy alone. >> she did not want to be disturbed. nancy pfister did, never wanted to be disturbed when she slept. >> right. >> you do not call her. you do not wake her. and she always slept with her ear plugs and her eye mask, everything shut, close the door, and do not disturb. >> reporter: billy clayton also left nancy alone, but felt much better just knowing she was home. >> i worried about her constantly when she was away from aspen. but when she returned to aspen, i didn't worry about her. i would relax. i sent her an email there with a photo of my four-year-old son, "to -- to aunt nancy, we're so glad you're home. because when you're home we don't worry about you and everything's good." >> reporter: but billy didn't hear back. not a word. and then on wednesday, the people who'd been renting nancy's house called kathy. they'd moved out quickly on nancy's return and had been going back and forth to the house all week clearing out the last of their stuff. and they found it odd that they hadn't seen nancy. not once. >> so this is monday, tuesday, and then wednesday, and you still hadn't seen her. >> still hadn't seen her. >> reporter: but they did see nancy's dog, gabe. >> and then i went and called kathy and said, "this dog has been alone for two days. it's clear that she hasn't been back." >> i was concerned because normally that's not nancy's behavior. she would call me and ask me to pick the dog up. >> reporter: so after work kathy drove up to nancy's place on buttermilk mountain to check on her friend. >> what was it like when you went inside the house? >> i called her name out, and gabe was there. he was happy to see me. >> reporter: but nancy wasn't there. kathy checked her bedroom. >> you know, stuff that was there that i unpacked, you know, it was clear, cleaned up. and when i turned, went to the closet, it was locked. >> was it usually locked? >> no. not -- i mean, not with nancy pfister home. >> reporter: kathy knew that when nancy rented her house, she kept her personal belongings locked in a closet in the master bedroom. but she and kathy had unlocked it when she got home. >> at that point, i just -- i was not feeling comfortable. something was not right. >> reporter: kathy, who often house sat for nancy, had a spare key. but it was back at her house. she went home, got the key, returned. opened the closet door. >> when i opened that door, that odor is so overwhelming, it hit me in the face. and i looked down and -- i could see the shape. >> reporter: a shape hidden under a pile of blankets and coverings. but with one glimpse, kathy just knew, she said. it was nancy pfister. >> hard to get that image out of your mind. >> it is. >> kinda stuck there. >> it -- it is. >> reporter: kathy fled the house, got in her car, called 911. >> oh my god, no! it's pretty desolate up there so, i jumped in the car and i thought i'll just drive down the hill and get to the police department. i -- i -- i don't know. >> reporter: her hysterics made it very hard for the dispatcher to comprehend exactly what was to comprehend exactly what was going on. >> can you get near your friend? >> no! no, i can't. >> what is she, what is your friend wrapped in? >> reporter: then, finally understanding, the dispatcher told kathy to pull over, wait for first responders. >> i want you to pull over and put your flashers on. >> okay. when the police arrive, they -- you know, i stepped out of the vehicle. i think i was going into shock, hyperventilating. >> reporter: dash cam video shows a distraught kathy as she was taken to the hospital. and sheriff's deputies arrived on buttermilk mountain. to look in that room and confront a mystery. >> that house, and that room in particular has this story to tell. and are we going to be able to figure out what that story is? >> reporter: coming up -- >> they knew they were looking for a body. >> reporter: the discovery in the closet: who was behind it? >> hard to do that alone? >> it is awkward and difficult to move a body. >> reporter: more than one suspect. and maybe more than one killer? >> reporter: lisa miller, the d.a.'s investigator for the county that includes aspen, is a tall, rangy woman with an impish grin that looks like it's hiding a secret. investigator miller was in an unfamiliar situation up here on buttermilk mountain. murder, in aspen? just doesn't happen. or hadn't, at least, in more than a decade. >> i was a little surprised that we had a murder in aspen. >> reporter: and being called to a person's home like nancy pfister, i should think, especially so? >> correct. >> reporter: and yet here she was, in nancy's living room looking out the big picture window. >> the juxtaposition of arriving at that house and taking a look at this beautiful scenery and then knowing an act of terrible violence had occurred just down the hallway. >> reporter: though, in the bedroom, she saw surprisingly little evidence of it. >> there was a small blood smear on the headboard. there was -- couple small droplets of blood on the carpet and a little bit of spatter on the wall. >> reporter: and the body in the closet? well, when first responders opened the door. >> they knew they were looking for a body. and they open the door and they look inside and they didn't immediately recognize the body you just looked down and you saw white coverings. >> reporter: and underneath those coverings -- >> miss pfister had been bound with extension cord. she had multiple plastic bags over her head that had been bound and secured tightly. and then another large one of the tear resistant, darker colored bags over her body also. >> reporter: with blankets wrapped all around that. investigator miller could clearly see that the killer, whoever it was, had gone to a lot of trouble to hide what he or she had done but there was no hiding now. >> when the crime scene personnel started taking a look they flipped the mattress and found, uh, blood on the bottom part of the mattress. >> reporter: so it was clear, nancy was killed on the bed, dragged to the closet, stashed there, wrapped up like a mummy. then whoever did it took the extra trouble to flip the mattress, in an effort to hide the soaked in pool of blood. deputy district attorney andrea bryan started working the case on the night nancy's body was found. >> we learned that she had died from blunt force trauma to the head and it appeared she had had several blows to the head. >> reporter: any defensive wounds? >> no. >> reporter: so this appeared to come out of the blue for her? >> it did appear to be, yes, a pre-meditated crime that occurred while she was sleeping. >> reporter: it looked as if it happened early monday morning. and then the body lay in the closet, undiscovered, until wednesday evening. the investigators began compiling a list of possible suspects, a long list. >> none of us really lived like nancy, so open. i mean she was totally open to strangers. >> reporter: that openness made nancy friends everywhere she went, said billy. but, when nancy opened herself up, people didn't always like what came out. >> reporter: say whatever she thought? >> say what she thought when she thought. >> reporter: did she realize she was gonna may -- maybe make a negative impression sometimes when she did that? >> well she definitely pissed people off, there's no doubt about that. she, you know, many times i could just see people's, you know, steam coming out of their ears and they're thinking, "no one's ever talked to me like that before." >> reporter: yeah. >> but her thinking was, "someone should have a long time ago." you know? >> reporter: no question nancy rubbed some people the wrong way. spoke her mind a bit too often, maybe? treated friends a little like her personal servants, sometimes. like kathy, for example. >> reporter: did she treat you more like a friend or like she was your boss? >> you know, we were friends. and just depending on the day and some days, you know, she would boss me around. >> and i would express how i felt. and she always apologized. >> reporter: and, her friends forgave. because they loved nancy for who she was. but investigators now had to figure out if someone in nancy's life had stopped loving her. or, if she had simply opened herself up to the wrong person. >> we're working diligently at that point to follow up on other leads that were coming in. >> reporter: like? >> leads of other people in the community that may have had some resentment towards nancy pfister. >> reporter: like perhaps a jilted lover? might one of them have harbored some hidden rage? her friends knew that the irrepressible nancy was also a woman who fell in and out of love often. >> usually nancy's affairs or romances didn't last a long time. >> reporter: yeah. >> because there was some stories about there was a jilted lover somewhere, somebody i didn't know. so when i heard that i thought you know, there's crazy people out there and i said, "let's, let's follow it up 'cause you never know. could be, you know." >> reporter: but no. no actual jilted lovers in nancy's past, just rumor and unfounded innuendo. and besides, after taking in the bedroom crime scene, the investigators decided they were not looking for a killer. >> reporter: hard to do that alone, carry a body around like that? flip a queen-size mattress? >> the mattress is doable but it would be awkward for a single person to flip the mattress on their own. and they use the term "dead weight" for a reason. i mean it is awkward and difficult to move a body. >> reporter: but it seemed like a pretty clear indication of more than one person. >> yes, that was our conclusion. >> reporter: something else -- since there was no sign of forced entry, her killer, or, killers, as they now believed, must have had a house key. now, who might that be?? >> reporter: the new renters -- the doctor and his wife. >> she really likes these people. she felt that they had really great karma. >> with a did they see? that is to say the detectives investigating the murder of nancy pfister began looking at anybody who had access without permission to nancy's house. that is, people with a key. for example, the couple who'd been renting the place while nancy was in australia. dr. william "trey" styler, and his wife also named nancy were hardly likely suspects but, they had to start somewhere. >> mr. styler he's an anesthesiologist, mrs. styler from all accounts was an intelligent woman herself. >> reporter: trey and nancy met in the anesthesiology department at a denver hospital. he a resident and she an instructor. >> i heard him go up to a woman on a gurney and say "hello, i'm dr. styler. i'll take care of you as though i were taking care of my mother and i love my mother." >> reporter: the gentle doctor chaired his anesthesiology department by the time he retired. they lived in an upscale area of denver. their shared hobby was growing the gasp inducing giant victoria water lily. their unusual level of success at that or skill brought them world renown within the rarefied world of specialized botany. >> reporter: in fact you the two of you lived kind of a charmed existence for quite a while? >> we did. had 25 years of a life that i used to say i would never trade with anyone. >> reporter: but right around the year 2000, it all began to fall apart. trey got sick and had to quit practicing medicine. his attempt to start a medical support business failed. he sued his medical group and lost. he sued the lawyer who took his life savings and got nothing. he had to sell his house. he moved with nancy into a rental, where they were poisoned said nancy and very nearly fatally by carbon monoxide. again they tried to sue but were too broke to hire an attorney. >> and he was beside himself suicidal. just, you know, "i can't believe what i did to the family, losing all this income," and, and i said, you know, "we can do this." and so i thought of aspen, that we loved aspen. >> reporter: aspen. fresh mountain air, a fresh start. they could open a spa they decided. and that's when nancy styler picked up the phone to answer another nancy's real estate ad in the local newspaper. nancy pfister's ad. >> she said, "oh, excuse me, i was just watering my greenhouse." i said, you know, "i would love to have a greenhouse." and so we went up there and it just seemed perfect. >> reporter: it seemed perfect to nancy pfister too. her share of the family fortune was doled out in regular but limited allowances and by renting her multi-million dollar house with the billion dollar views she would have extra cash for her upcoming trip to australia. so, no formal lease just a handshake. the rent was $4,000 a month. >> it was a lot of money but not for aspen. >> reporter: nancy asked her good friend kathy to help the renters take care of her dog while she was away, collect the rent, and be her general go between. >> she really liked these people. she said that she felt that they had really great karma. >> reporter: and that's part of the reason why she invited them to move in a full month before she left. but it wasn't long before the stylers discovered that living with nancy pfister was not quite like they thought it might be. >> after the first couple of days she treated me like a slave. like, "get my cigarettes. get this. get my drink." and i was not used to being so disrespected. >> reporter: treated like a slave though? i mean. >> a slave. it was not pretty. >> you know, i told her, "that is how nancy is. don't take it personal. she comes off this way and that, you know. she, she really has a good heart." >> reporter: anyway, nancy left soon enough for australia, but then the stylers discovered the house wasn't so perfect after all. >> so when i went to clean out the master bedroom and bathroom, i realized the hot water was rusty. >> the dishwasher didn't work. the stove didn't work. >> reporter: once again, the stylers sought redress. they decided to withhold rent until those things were fixed. nancy pfister, half a world away, was not happy. >> reporter: what'd she say? >> that she felt that these people were cons, squatters, and she wanted them out. >> reporter: kathy was caught in the middle, she arranged the repairs. the stylers paid the money they owed. gave kathy $6,000 in cash that she put in a safe deposit box for nancy. but the relationship between landlord and tenants had soured to the point that no amount of karma could preserve it. >> and at that point nancy styler said, "i don't wanna stay. we will be out february 22nd." >> reporter: how did nancy pfister feel about that? >> she was fine with it. she wanted them out. >> reporter: unable to find new tenants now, nancy pfister was faced with doing exactly what she hoped to avoid when she went to australia -- spending peak ski season in aspen. she got home february 22nd. the very day the stylers said they'd be done moving their stuff out. the problem was they weren't. >> she was not happy. you know, she had a few choice words, but she accepted it. she was tired, jet lag. >> reporter: yeah. >> she wanted to come home, see her dog. >> reporter: the stylers ended up in a motel in basalt about 25 minutes away. they stopped by the house again a few times during the week to get their things. saw the dog but not nancy. and made that first alarming call to kathy that something seemed wrong. and when kathy found the body, knowing better than anyone about the tension between the stylers and nancy pfister, she made sure to clue in investigators. >> she had some people living there, she really pissed them off. and, um, she made threats to them about owing money. >> reporter: so time for investigators to visit that motel and meet the stylers. >> i said, "i haven't done anything wrong." >> reporter: from motel room to interrogation room. investigators were fishing. >> you did this, man. you did this. >> reporter: what would they catch? >> reporter: basalt, colorado is just down the highway from aspen. you can see the same mountains, breathe the same air. but when trey and nancy styler checked into their motel they were entering a world far beneath the rarified heights of nancy pfister's mountainside retreat. no billionaire starter castles here, this is where many of the people who work in aspen live. here the stylers thought they were done with nancy pfister. moving on. and then there was a knock at the door. 5:30am. it was sheriff's deputies. they had questions, they said, about a dead body. >> and i said "what dead body?" and he wouldn't tell me. "who died?" wouldn't say a word. >> reporter: the deputies escorted them to the back seats of separate cars, but said not a word as they drove down to the station. nancy listened to the chatter on the radio. >> i heard her sisters' names being mentioned on the police radio, nancy's sisters' names. and i thought, "well, it must be something to do with nancy." >> reporter: at the pitkin county sheriff's office, deputies put nancy and trey in different interview rooms. >> and he had read me my miranda rights beforehand, and i said, "i don't need an attorney." i said, "i, i haven't done anything wrong." i said, "i'll be happy to answer questions." >> reporter: which were, at least to begin with, pretty basic. >> where did you and trey come from? >> we're from denver. um, we met at the university of colorado medical school. >> they asked me if i knew any of the men that she, you know, had dated, if i knew anyone that would want her dead. >> reporter: she didn't think it was that sort of thing at all, said nancy. she told the detectives she was pretty sure she knew exactly what happened to nancy pfister. >> i said, "you're gonna find the tox report, you're gonna find out that she committed suicide." i was absolutely sure that that's what happened. >> reporter: but of course investigators knew nancy pfister did not commit suicide. they knew someone beat her to death, attacked her as she slept. and they knew all about the rental arrangement that started well and went to hell. and about the stylers rapid fall from success to ruination. >> their financial situation was dire. >> yeah. >> and he was tryin' to pawn a very nice ring. >> he was a desperate man? >> he was very desperate. >> reporter: they also knew, from kathy carpenter, how angry nancy styler was at nancy pfister. >> what kinds of things did she say? >> just that "i hate that woman." you know, nancy styler was upset. >> "i could kill her"? >> she did say that. i could just kill that woman. >> did nancy styler admit that she had threatened nancy pfister? that she had said, "you know, i -- i'd like to kill her." >> she was i -- i think pretty open about her feelings for nancy pfister. and she made some statements that were certainly consistent with that. >> i said, you know, i would like to wring her neck. because she is such a, a drunk, and making me so crazy. >> reporter: nancy styler's personal opinion of nancy pfister had soured to such a degree that she did not hesitate to speak ill of the dead, whether true or not. >> there's not one person who said a nice thing about her. >> uh-huh. >> not one person. >> reporter: investigators put dr. styler in a separate room. they'd put him in an orange jump suit, even though he wasn't under arrest, and they asked a few softball questions. >> and do you like william or would you rather have trey or -- >> frankly, i'll answer to anything. >> reporter: but it wasn't long before the tone changed, and the accusations began. >> why did you go in there and hurt nancy? maybe you don't even know but i know it's true. i know it's true. >> reporter: the sheriff himself, a close friend of the late nancy pfister, tried to get trey styler to admit that in a desperate rage, he killed nancy. >> you did this, man. you did it. and the quicker you start saying that, the better this is gonna be. >> reporter: but trey insisted they were going after the wrong guy. he was innocent. >> how can you know it's true when it's not true? >> reporter: over and over, trey stressed and demonstrated how his 65 year old body, ravaged by disease, was far too frail to have done what was done to nancy. >> as you can see i'd be a formidable adversary in a fight. >> reporter: but it had already dawned on detectives, the more trey claimed to be physically incapable. >> my condition is such that i don't think that i could beat up a kid. >> reporter: the worse it looked for his wife. >> we definitely had to look at the fact that, he had assistance, potentially. >> my wife does everything! i'm [ bleep ] disabled! i can't do [ bleep ]! >> reporter: trey, still insistent, took a polygraph. maybe he shouldn't have. >> he fails his polygraph? >> yes. he did fail his polygraph. >> you're smiling. failed it badly, or what? >> my understanding from the uh -- polygrapher that's ran the test, he did fail it badly. >> reporter: not admissible in court, but an investigative tool, they say. didn't look good for the stylers. but, desperation and anger do not, by themselves, a murder case make. and to make things a little extra difficult, investigators knew they couldn't count on dna at the scene to link the stylers to the crime. >> it could easily be explained because of where they were living. they were staying in that bedroom. >> reporter: so the investigators drove the stylers back to their motel, and went on with the hard work of a murder investigation. they'd have to find a piece of good solid evidence to tie someone, maybe the stylers, to the crime. didn't look, so far, as if such a thing existed. and then? >> occasionally something fortuitous happens to law enforcement. >> reporter: how's that old saying go? one man's trash is another man's treasure? >> this broke the case. >> reporter: it seemed like magic, a grab-bag of evidence, suddenly at their feet. what was this stuff? and where could it have come from? - i've got two great pieces of exercise equipment that won't suck up any electricity. ta-da! they're portable and waterproof and they come with their own power source. forget the treadmill and walk. the more you know. >> reporter: something was wrong with the equation. didn't add up. here in aspen, in the house on buttermilk mountain, the crime scene around nancy pfister's body spoke, in a way. it told a story. and what it said was that at least two able bodied people committed the murder. how else would a heavy mattress get flipped, and nancy's body get dragged across the room and into the closet and get packaged in bags and wrapped up in blankets? and yet their suspects, nancy's former tenants, were not able bodied spring chickens. anything but athletic. and besides, there was zero physical evidence that would tie either one of them to the crime. >> i think we -- we were faced with the reality in this case, this -- this was always going to be a circumstantial case. >> reporter: so that bedroom was keeping its secrets. and might be keeping them still. except for one total fluke, couple of days later. one of those little gifts that chance or fate or something just drops at a frustrated investigator's feet. all tied up with a neat little bow. >> what do you got here? this is not just a standard trash thing. >> no. um -- this broke the case. >> reporter: how weirdly flukey was this? the town of basalt, who knew, had a rule that you can't put personal garbage in public trash cans. and a city worker, a little extra diligent, happened to be poking around in the trash, just randomly checking for illegal garbage disposal. >> tell me what this guy did and how he came across this stuff. >> he pulls the trash and then he goes to another location. and he was gonna actually check it to see if there was any -- it --something stood out about it. >> he actually does this stuff? >> people check. >> opens the bag? >> yes, and he did. and thank goodness he did. because when he opened the bag, he looks inside and he sees a prescription pill bottle. and what was special about this prescription pill bottle is it had nancy pfister's name on it. >> reporter: of course the city worker recognized the name. aspen, and the towns around it were buzzing with the news about nancy pfister's murder. >> in addition to that pill bottle, after which he phoned the police, what did you guys find in that bag? >> well in addition to the pill bottle, the big one was a hammer. a bloody hammer. >> reporter: a bloody hammer? found in the same trash as medication belonging to nancy pfister? that simply couldn't be a coincidence. police were 99 percent sure they'd stumbled on the murder weapon. they sent it off to the crime lab to be tested. asap. but the trash bag wasn't done divulging its investigative gifts. >> another thing that we found that was -- um, concerning to us was the vehicle registration for william and nancy styler's jaguar. >> reporter: what's more, the trash bin was located just behind the motel where the stylers were staying, and that was miles and miles away from nancy pfister's house. again, as we say, a little gift. actually, a big fat juicy gift, dropped right into investigators laps. and it, no question, linked the stylers to the crime. >> i can not think of any other time, in any other case i've ever heard about where such obvious evidence is just kind of there. >> thrown out carelessly, so close to where suspects are staying? yeah. >> yeah. >> reporter: deputies hovered round the motel to keep an eye on the stylers. to make sure they didn't do a disappearing act, while they and the da waited for the lab to test the hammer. and then, three days later, another insanely improbable discovery. >> this key was found on the ground. it was right before the trashcan. >> reporter: right there, just a few feet from the door of the stylers motel room, was the owner's key to the closet in which nancy pfister's body was found. lying around as if the stylers intended to throw it in the trash, but dropped it by mistake. >> just lying on the ground? >> on the ground, on the -- the lighter portion of the concrete is where it was found. >> reporter: and then that very same day, as if to punctuate the whole strange affair, the dna results came back and? >> nancy pfister's dna was on the -- on the hammer, so we were able to pretty clearly say that that was -- was the murder weapon. >> reporter: the murder weapon. the key. and a motive. pretty much everything they needed to pin the crime on the stylers. it was march 3rd, 2014, not even a week since nancy pfister's body was found. >> they knocked on the door, i stepped out of the door. and they said, "we're arresting you for murder one." and slapped the cuffs on me, and took me away. they led my husband out in my bathrobe. >> what is it like for a woman who had led a very successful life, who'd -- who'd traveled around, doing lectures on victoria lilies to societies of like-minded horticulturalists? >> to be in jail? >> to be in jail for murder. >> it was a shock. >> reporter: it was a shock for some of nancy pfister's friends, too. like mary conover. the stylers? really? >> it was just a big surprise. and -- and not knowing anything about these people, it just seemed outrageous. why you would do something like that? >> reporter: but kathy carpenter, who pointed her suspicious finger at the stylers right after the murder, practically jumped for joy. >> when i heard that, i was joyful that they found the person who murdered nancy and, you know, i just felt that there was justice. >> reporter: and swift justice at that. what a relief to all those souls nancy collected, who loved her like family. >> i was relieved that, you know, this is done. >> reporter: but could one of the biggest crimes in aspen history really be solved that fast? with so little drama? of course not. >> looked like a setup to you. >> it looked like a setup. it really did look like a setup. >> reporter: coming up -- rethinking the case: something doesn't add up. >> oh my god! >> bizarre is the only way i can characterize that 911 call. >> reporter: a call, now becomes a clue/ where would it lead? >> she's dead, she's full of blood! >> there's no way she saw what she said she saw. >> reporter: it was a quick business, here in aspen, colorado. not even a week after nancy pfister's body was found dead in her own closet her renters were led away in handcuffs. but was it too quick? too easy? >> it looked fishy to me. >> reporter: fishy? >> fishy. >> reporter: nancy styler's attorney beth krul 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. >> reporter: 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. >> reporter: it also made zero sense that trey's accomplice was his diminutive 62-year-old wife, nancy. even though she did actually say she could just kill that nancy pfister. but then, lots of people around town said similar things about the outspoken ms. pfister at some point or other not meaning it literally. >> i could see where she could be sitting around with kathy carpenter, and they could be commiserating about, you know, what nancy pfister did or didn't do. or what she had said, or the way they had been treated. and she could have said something like, you know, "gee, you know, i'd like to kill her." but you know, listen -- that's -- that's not evidence of first-degree murder. >> reporter: besides, nancy styler was more than open about it. >> we've all said that about someone at some other, you know, "i'd like to kill him," or something like that. but not-- not ever thinking, you know, taking it that far. "yes, i did say that. but no i didn't kill her." >> reporter: and if it wasn't nancy, couldn't have been trey, either. because he was frail, yes, said nancy, but also because he was never alone to do it. >> reporter: you were never without him. >> yeah. >> reporter: you were always together. >> i said we were always together. >> reporter: what did make sense, said attorney krulwitch, is that someone else killed nancy pfister and planted the evidence against the stylersl in an attempt to frame them. >> the final piece of it was that the owner's closet key kind of magically appears on the sidewalk near the stylers' motel room the day they get arrested. >> reporter: it was a thought that crossed investigators' minds as well. >> we would've been amiss had we not looked at the possibility that someone was setting these people up. >> reporter: and so, even with the stylers' in jail, charged with murder, investigators were still quietly looking for other suspects, for someone with motive and means to kill nancy and the foresight to frame the stylers. someone close to nancy, someone nancy trusted, even loved. like the person who pointed the finger of blame right in the middle of that 911 call. kathy carpenter. >> she had some people living there and she really pissed them off. >> reporter: kathy carpenter. she said she was nancy pfister's dear friend. but investigators were hearing a different story. >> their relationship had been a roller-coaster. >> reporter: so we knew that there had been this cycle of the ladies having a good relationship, and then things would go south and they would have a bad relationship for a period of time. and so with all that in mind, deputy d.a. andrea bryan went back to that hysterical phone call from kathy to 911. >> reporter: what did you make of it? >> you know, i think bizarre is the only way i can characterize that 911 call. immediately identifying suspects, it was -- it was not getting help for nancy pfister, it was, "oh, you should be looking at these two people, immediately." so that was interesting. >> reporter: so it was. and just as interesting? what kathy told 911 about seeing nancy pfister's body. >> the fact that immediately the deceased is identified as nancy pfister would have been impossible to do. >> reporter: impossible, said investigator lisa miller, because nancy's body was completely covered, head to toe, when kathy saw it in the closet. >> she's dead, she's full of blood!" >> we're looking at photos of the crime scene and we knew there's no way she saw what she said she saw. >> reporter: there was more: kathy, of course, had keys to nancy's house including a key to the closet was the last person to admit seeing nancy alive. and when she left pinned up that "do not disturb" sign on nancy's door supposedly because her friend needed to get over her jet lag. >> she ended up making a statement to another individual that nancy would be sleeping and resting for the next three days. >> reporter: and it was three days later the body was found? >> correct. >> reporter: and the day that closet key magically appeared so close to the styler's motel room kathy carpenter was known to be in the very same neighborhood right around that time meeting with her therapist. so, next question, was kathy carpenter truly nancy's friend and helper? or her murderer trying to pin the blame on someone else? >> what did you see? >> the interrogation. probing questions, puzzling actions. >> i don't -- i don't remember. >> grab the kleenex. >> oh, yeah, for the tears? >> there were no tears when she was trying to portray herself as crying. looking for one of these? yoplait. smooth, creamy, and craved by the whole family. you have such a wonderful aura. of all the things that happen on your counters... dad? namaste. disinfecting should be one of them. clorox disinfecting wipes. we need snacks in here. do you have any? pretzels, granola bars energy bars, trail mix... nuts? cashews, pistachios, pecans, walnuts, almonds... cost a lot? peanuts. [laughs] maybe not your best. no... make on-budget happen. make break-time happen. staples. make more happen. >> reporter: ski season in aspen is a time to see and be seen. in crowded watering holes, beneath carefully groomed world class slopes. but in late winter, 2014, attention was diverted from the fashionable pursuits nancy pfister once described to that french tv show. >> we call aspen adult disneyland. >> reporter: now the subject was her. her murder, of course, but also, her free-wheeling life. and in death, her reputation, to the consternation of her closest friends, was gleefully amplified by some media outlets. not in a good way. >> why do we need to throw rocks at her, you know, just because she had too much fun, really? >> reporter: billy and the others defended their remarkable, departed, friend, and devoted their energy to plans for a special memorial event, which they decided would be a party. the sort of thing she would have loved. >> reporter: what did she mean to you, personally? >> she meant um duration and consistency. she was the godmother of my children and i was the godfather of her -- of juliana. um sorry. i'm trying. >> reporter: but while billy and the others worked through their grief, nancy's buddy kathy carpenter was at the pitkin county sheriff's office answering questions. >> what did you see? >> i just remember opening the door. >> okay. and i saw -- she wasn't -- she was covered. >> we were still giving her the benefit of the doubt. she thought something was up. she had been worried about her friend. >> reporter: so was there an innocent explanation for why kathy seemed to see things she could not have seen? why she knew it was nancy's bloodied body that was in that closet, even though first responders saw what looked like just a pile of blankets when they arrived? she could have lifted up those blankets. >> she could've. >> reporter: and seen -- >> she could've. and during the interviews, i specifically asked her, "did you step into the closet? did you lift any of the blankets? did you touch, did you manipulate, in any way?" and her answers, repeatedly, were, "no." she had not touched, she had not moved, she had not manipulated. >> i did not touch her. i ran out of there so fast. >> reporter: and yet, at the same time, kathy gave specific details about the body. >> i saw her -- the head. like i don't remember the position but i knew her. the blonde hair. >> she tells me she immediately recognized her friend because of the blonde hair and the length of that hair. "how much hair did you see?" i would ask miss carpenter. >> it seemed like maybe something -- >> so -- >> she had highlights. >> so how many strands would you say that you saw? so would it be like -- was it matted with blood? or just a little blood? >> i just remember the hair. >> if you've seen the crime scene photographs of how that body was found and that -- that body was in the closet, she did not see that. >> reporter: the more kathy talked -- >> how much blood did you see? how much blood would you say you saw? >> i saw her hair on the head. >> ok. >> i just remember on the head. >> reporter: the more suspicious the investigator became. >> she's describing, in the interviews, how where the injuries were to the forehead. i went and i reviewed the autopsy photos. and she was exactly, spot on to where she indicated the injury to the forehead. >> reporter: but it wasn't just kathy's words, said investigator miller, looked to her like kathy's grief was more act than real. >> i don't remember -- >> grab the kleenex. >> oh, yeah, for the tears? >> reporter: and a bad act at that. >> there were no tears during the time that she was trying to portray herself as crying. >> reporter: some people cry without tears, surely? >> oh, i'm sure some people do. >> reporter: what can you tell from a thing like that? >> it's just always interesting when, you know, someone is going to such lengths to act like they're emotionally distraught and the body doesn't respond. >> reporter: and then she discovered what kathy did the day after she said she found nancy's body. she went to the bank, where nancy had trusted kathy with access to her safety deposit box. and kathy took from that box the styler's last rent payment, 6 thousand dollars in cash and an heirloom ring nancy had inherited from her mother. >> within 24 hours, or actually it was a little less than 24 hours, of her friend being found by her, she's going into that safety deposit box, taking $6,000 and jewelry from it. >> reporter: so investigators now had an idea fast gathering strength. that kathy carpenter was far more involved than she claimed to have been. >> she just made some very detailed descriptions of that body that she couldn't have made unless she had seen her before she was put in that closet, meaning right after she was actually murdered. >> reporter: did she provide a rational explanation for the reason for being able to do that? >> no. >> reporter: they brought kathy back again and again for questioning. five days, almost 20 hours of questioning. during one interrogation detectives read back the transcript of the 911 call. >> you talked about, "my friend in the closet is dead." your impossible that you knew that she was dead. impossible. >> reporter: threw her owns words at her. the blood she reported seeing. >> in the dispatch you said blood on the forehead. >> reporter: and how she so quickly accused the stylers. >> she had some people living there. >> and they told her, they just knew she was lying. >> i believe that you know what happened and i am going to be able to prove that because that's my job. >> reporter: and kathy carpenter, like trey styler, submitted to a polygraph test. but if he failed his -- >> kathy carpenter failed hers worse. >> you absolutely bombed the polygraph. not only that, on the 911, on the 911, right here, here's all this documentation, of deceit and guilt. >> reporter: so for detectives the only question left was did kathy carpenter kill nancy and try to frame the stylers or were they all in it together? >> i don't know what they're saying. they're liars. >> i don't think anyone wanted that to be found. >> another look at the evidence and another turn in the case. >> this has been one of the more frightening experiences of my career. stipation and belly pain feel like a raging storm. i've tried laxatives but my symptoms keep returning. my constipation feels like a heavy weight that keeps coming back. vo: linzess can help. once-daily linzess treats adults with ibs with constipation or chronic constipation. linzess is thought to help calm pain-sensing nerves and accelerate bowel movements. linzess helps you proactively manage your symptoms. do not give linzess to children under 6, and it should not be given to children 6 to 17. it may harm them. don't take linzess if you have a bowel blockage. get immediate help if you develop unusual or severe stomach pain especially with bloody or black stools. the most common side effect is diarrhea, sometimes severe. if it's severe stop taking linzess and call your doctor right away. other side effects include, gas, stomach-area pain and swelling. bottom line, ask your doctor about linzess today. are you sending your kids to school with an allergy medicine that may make them drowsy? 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>> i just remember opening the door. >> ok. >> she was covered. >> reporter: she was alone with them. she could have asked for an attorney. she did not. she told the detectives she didn't need a lawyer, because she was innocent. but, as kathy went on and on, those detectives became more and more sure she killed her friend nancy, or helped, at least. >> so right now i'm telling you, everything is crashing down on you. every -- i kid you not, it's absolutely coming down. >> reporter: the question now was kathy trying to frame the stylers? at first blush it certainly looked that way. and yet the more they thought about it the more unlikely it seemed. why? well, the trash bag containing so much incriminating evidence for example. the one the diligent city worker just happened to stumble on. >> i really think that this was actually pure luck. i don't think anyone wanted that to be found, i think really the -- the simple explanation here is -- is really the right explanation, which is that we had a great break in the case and, you know, thank goodness for that. >> reporter: the only conspiracy theory assistant d.a. andrea bryan was buying was one that involved the stylers and kathy carpenter, all of them together committing the murder. the two women perhaps bonding over their shared frustration with nancy pfister's behaviors. >> it appears that they, um, almost built, at times, a bit of a friendship around that mutual anger toward nancy pfister. >> reporter: and trey, pushed to his financial and emotional limits, was most likely the one to wield the hammer. reasoned the assistant d.a., while the women helped hide the body and clean up the bedroom. but, if that theory was right, something went wrong after the murder. the conspiracy did not hold. >> when kathy carpenter realized the gravity of what she had gotten herself into she got worried and worried that she would be fingered. >> reporter: so kathy struck first, the d.a.'s theory went, called 911 and fingered the stylers' to deflect attention from herself. in the interrogation room, investigators had tried to get trey to turn on his wife or kathy. >> nancy your wife, do you want her to be involved in this? she's wrapped up in this man. we've had her here as long as you have. she's telling us a lot of good stuff. >> reporter: and they also tried to get kathy to flip on the stylers. >> somebody is going to come clean to say i did it but this is what she knew. but she didn't tell us that. now you are responsible for it just like them. but you're going to be the one left out that didn't tell the truth. >> reporter: but it didn't work. >> i just have my suspicions of. >> what you see, no, no, no, no no. okay, okay. >> but i didn't do anything to her. >> reporter: on march 14, three weeks after nancy pfister had been murdered, kathy carpenter, like the stylers before her, was charged with first degree murder and put in the county jail. the newest suspect arrested was katherine carpenter. she works -- >> reporter: billy clayton had been on the phone with kathy just the day before discussing nancy's memorial service. >> and i think i was supposed to get something for her to wear to the memorial. >> reporter: and now, she was behind bars. seemed crazy, but in a town that could barely believe one of its own had been murdered, anything seemed possible now. >> i should've been surprised or shocked or something. but at that moment i just -- i was like, you know, who knows? any -- anything could happen. i just -- it didn't make any sense at all why anyone would kill her. >> reporter: and so as billy and the others went on finalizing memorial plans, kathy, a bit late, got a lawyer. greg greer. >> this has been one of the more frightening experiences of my career to represent a person who is so totally and completely innocent. >> reporter: as greer and the lawyers representing the stylers waded through the evidence, trying to sort out who did what, it became pretty clear, to them at least, that the truth about what happened in that bedroom on buttermilk mountain, was still very much hidden. >> we were all wrong about what happened. >> i mean, everybody was wrong in this case. >> reporter: wrong about what? or about whom? >> i started praying that the truth would be revealed. that's what i wanted is the truth to be revealed. so you... you... and you, can be a morning person again. aleve pm, for a better am. how does it feel to lose the first 10 pounds on weight watchers? 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>> i just basically wanted to celebrate her life and her um spirit of adventure. >> reporter: billy clayton got up too, said what was in his heart. >> i said that if you've known me over the last 40 years or so, you know me because of nancy. when you see me, you think of nancy. she was a connector. that was her real, main role, i think, in everyone's life. >> reporter: and when you looked down there in that crowd, how were they reacting? >> a lot of tears. a lot of laughter. certain stories. and they were all just solidly there in that space at that moment. >> reporter: but at that very same moment, in a far different space just down the street from the fine old hotel jerome kathy carpenter wept in her cell at the pitken county jail, and listened. >> i could hear the music, the band. and um -- i just, i cried. i cried a lot. i wanted to be there. i should have been there. and um it hurt. >> reporter: how could they think she had anything to do with it? there was some suggestion that you had a motive to harm nancy. >> absolutely not. what was my motive? there is no motive. >> reporter: a shared frustration with nancy styler frustration with nancy styler about how difficult -- >> oh, heavens no. >> no. not at all. >> reporter: nancy was her best friend she said. >> i loved her. she was -- i loved nancy pfister. >> reporter: that's why she sat through all those hours of interrogation without a lawyer, she said. she wanted to help them understand the truth. like, for example, how it wasn't at all suspicious that she knew right away it was nancy in that closet. >> you know the odor just about knocked me over. and to me, it was very apparent that that wasn't just a pile of clothes in the closet. who else but nancy would be in that closet? >> reporter: you weren't a complete idiot. you understood- - that was -- had to be nancy. >> right, who else would it be? >> reporter: and when she so quickly fingered the stylers, she said, it was just common sense. >> they were in the house. >> reporter: you knew that they were pretty mad at nancy? >> they were mad they were upset with her. >> reporter: but what about those suspicious little details like saying she saw blood on nancy's forehead when nancy's forehead was completely covered up? >> in the dispatch you said blood on the forehead. >> reporter: that's easy to explain, said kathy, she never actually said that. >> they said that i saw her forehead. >> reporter: yes. >> i did not see her forehead. i saw blood on the headboard. >> reporter: headboard? in fact, crime scene techs did find blood on nancy pfister's headboard, but headboard is not the word that appears in the typed transcript of the 911 call. >> and on page three of that transcript it says, "i saw blood on her forehead." >> reporter: kathy's attorney, greg greer. >> i go home and listen to the tape, and i hear headboard. but i listen to it, i bet, ten times by myself before i told anybody else. >> god i don't know, i saw blood on the headboard. >> reporter: sure enough, kathy, in that 911 call, did actually say headboard not forehead. >> i saw blood on her headboard and i, the closet was locked. >> reporter: a transcription error. and though investigators said that made no real difference to them, kathy's attorney is sure that little error planted suspicion of kathy from the very beginning and started investigators off in an inaccurate, and inappropriate, direction. >> they used every technique in the book on her. and honestly, as i watched those interrogations, i started thinking i might've confessed to doing something just to make it stop. >> here's all this documentation of deceit and guilt. >> reporter: and they told you, you did it. >> yes. >> reporter: repeatedly? >> yes. >> reporter: and each time, what would you say? >> i did not do it. >> reporter: and even though it appears from the interrogation tapes that kathy did say some improbable things. >> i saw her, the head. like i don't remember the position but i knew her, the blonde hair. she was on doctor-prescribed anxiety medication the whole time she said. so in her confused fog, and prompted by the investigators, said kathy, her descriptions were unclear she may even have imagined things she could not have seen. >> reporter: is it possible that you were led into saying something like that? >> absolutely. um, absolutely. you know she was in a plastic bag, and i saw just what -- through the transparency of the bag, i saw a little bit of her hair. >> reporter: so why'd she fail the polygraph? >> i was very upset. i was very emotional. and they did tell me that in order for me to take this test properly, i could not feel any emotions. >> reporter: mm-hmm, mm-hmm. >> and that, just hearing the words, just hearing her name was very emotional. >> reporter: but it was true, she said, no denying it, she did take 6,000 in cash and an heirloom ring from nancy pfister's safe deposit box the day after she found the body. but it wasn't for her, she said. rather, it was to fulfill a promise to nancy. >> and she often would say, you know, if anything happens to me in my travels, you know, make sure you do this, can you do that? make sure you -- you know, my little to-do list. and on the to-do list, that ring. she inherited a family ring from her mother. and her sisters wanted it. and she had asked me -- you make sure that juliana -- if anything would happen to me, that she would get this ring. that was my intention, was to fulfill her wish. >> reporter: to give it to juliana. >> to give it to juliana. >> reporter: just as she had every intention of giving the money directly to juliana too so it wouldn't disappear into some disputed family trust. but then, she said, the investigators used everything she said and did against her. >> i just thought, "no, this is not happening. the -- how can they -- be so wrong. i had, i have, nothing to do with this. she was my dear friend. i loved her." >> reporter: kathy's attorney told her, don't worry, the case won't hold up in court. but even if he was right, the trial might be years away. and so she did all that was left to her. >> and i started praying, praying that the truth would be revealed. that's what i wanted, is the truth to be revealed. >> reporter: and then, suddenly, it appeared that it was. truth, that is. but would anyone believe it? a stunner from mr. styler. >> mr. styler, i'm going to have you right here, sir. >> reporter: the good doctor has something to say. stays on there like glue wow! look at that! ew! the tobin stance! that is totally what it is! your eyes get sunburned too just like your skin. at lenscrafters we can fit your prescription into nearly any pair of sunglasses. sunblock never looked this good. lenscrafters loves eyes. wait till you see what i've been doing. (laughs) i know, i, it just came to me. manscaping husband? get scrubbing bubbles. kill 99.9% of germs and destroy grime. with scrubbing bubbles for 100% problem solved. i'm really psyched subway is bringing the flavor with this new guacamole for a couple of reasons. first, people really love our guacamole. rich and creamy, made from hass avocados and just a hint of jalapeno to keep it interesting. the other reason is, it's just really fun to say. guacamole guacamole guacamole guacamole guacamole guacamole see? come in and try our new guacamole on sandwiches like the chipotle chicken melt. and discover how it turns up the flavor on all your favorite sandwiches. subway. eat fresh. >> reporter: it went the way it often does in criminal cases. a period of frenetic activity followed by a sort of calm stasis. and so it was with the murder case of nancy pfister. the flurry of action loosed from the moment her body was found in february, 2014 to the arrest of the third and final suspect, kathy carpenter in mid-march, dissipated with the spring thaw. the case now slouched towards summer. nancy's friend, billy, missing her more than ever. >> the last time i spoke with her all we talked about were plans. everything we were going to do this summer, all the different ideas she had. >> reporter: but the only thing on the calendar now was a preliminary hearing scheduled for late june. all three defendants had pleaded not guilty and their respective attorneys, beth krulewitch for nancy styler and greg greer for kathy carpenter, were deciding their strategies, analyzing the evidence. >> the evidence as i was seeing it suggested to me very strongly that kathy carpenter may have done this, and that she was setting up the stylers. >> kathy carpenter is innocent, innocent, innocent. i can't say that enough. >> reporter: but deputy da andrea bryan and her investigator lisa miller were preparing to argue it was a conspiracy involving allel three and then, less than two weeks before that hearing. >> in the process of getting all of your material together for the preliminary hearing, what happened? >> i got a phone call from my assistant district attorney one afternoon. >> saying? >> saying that he had spoken with a defense attorney, specifically william styler's defense attorney, and that william styler wanted to make a statement. >> reporter: now that could be interesting. the good doctor was wheeled into the interview room, where lisa miller was waiting. >> mr. styler, i'm going to have you right here sir. >> okay. >> reporter: oh, but it was far more than just a "statement." trey styler dropped a bombshell. and it blew the da's meticulously assembled case wide open. >> i lost my mind here, or at least i lost my rational mind. >> reporter: it was a confession. after months of strenuous denials, trey styler told them. >> it all was me. >> reporter: detail by detail, trey took them through the killing how he slipped out of his motel room while his wife was sleeping and drove tonancy pfister's house, intending to confront her. >> i stuck my head in the door far enough to ascertain that she was in fact in bed and i called out her name again. >> uh-huh. >> and she didn't respond. >> reporter: then, he said, as he stood over the still sleeping nancy pfister, all the rage that built up inside him during his dreadful physical and financial decline suddenly focused on a singular idea. there she was, vulnerable, helpless. and so he went down the stairs, got a hammer, climbed back up to the bedroom. >> i went, got the hammer, came back, um, and struck her in the head with the hammer. >> reporter: then, strengthened by a rush of adrenaline, he single-handedly wrapped nancy pfister up, dragged her into the closet, covered her up. >> i wasn't as strong as i used to be. um -- nonetheless i was able to do that. >> reporter: he then grabbed some of nancy's belongings to make it look like she was gone. >> he was very clear about what he did, how he did it, and when he did it. in -- in very specific detail. >> and so you do what? >> i hit her with the hammer. >> where? in the head. where? >> in, in, in, in what was, when she was in that position, the top of her head. uh -- which would have, if you don't mind. >> i do mind you touching me, quite frankly. >> this. >> reporter: as for his wife or kathy carpenter -- >> neither one of them were involved in any way. >> reporter: and until this moment, he insisted, he hadn't told either one of them a single thing about what he did. >> he not only limited his wife's participation in that statement, he said she wasn't involved at all and that kathy carpenter wasn't involved at all. that he did the whole thing himself. that he had a burst of energy and he was able to do all of those things on his own. you have a skeptical look on your face? >> that's what he told me, yes. >> what did you think? >> reporter: having heard that, investigator miller told dr. styler exactly what she thought. >> i don't want you to walk out of here thinking that i have believed you hook, line and sinker. 'cause i will be very frank. remember, i told you i call it like i see it. i don't buy everything that you're selling me today. okay? >> ok. >> reporter: by this time, investigator miller was convinced all three were in it together. she looked straight at trey styler and confronted him. he was a frail old man. surely he didn't expect she'd believe he did it all alone. >> and you tell me you can't stand up. however, you are giving me an accounting of a story where you were saying you were up and down stairs multiple times. moving dead weight is not easy work mr. styler. >> when i've thought about it since then, um, i'm reminded of the stories um, of women lifting cars off of their children. >> mr. styler, i will do a lot of things in an interview room, but i am not going to compare a mother saving a child with you murdering nancy pfister, so let's don't go there. >> reporter: but trey remained resolute. he was the lone killer. >> the -- the essential truths are that kathy carpenter really and truly had nothing to do with this. nancy styler really and truly had nothing to do with this. i have done my best to hide it from even myself, much less them and uh -- you know -- it all was me. >> how concerned are you that he decided, that he was going down anyway, he might as well get them off the hook and that's really what was going on here? >> that's a concern in any case like this. >> reporter: so now it was decision time. take trey's confession at face value and release both nancy styler and kathy carpenter, or send him back to his cell and proceed with the prosecution of all three. >> it took my world and just flipped it upside down. >> reporter: what was the truth? and whose story would prosecutors believe? >> i just hope that she would find forgiveness in her heart. >> what does she have to forgive you for? pneumococcal pneumonia. one dose of the prevnar 13® vaccine can help protect you ... from pneumococcal pneumonia, an illness that can cause coughing, chest pain difficulty breathing and may even put you in the hospital. prevnar 13 ® is used in adults 50 and older to help prevent infections from 13 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. you should not receive prevnar 13 ® if you've had a severe allergic reaction to the vaccine or its ingredients if you have a weakened immune system, you may have a lower response to the vaccine. common side effects were pain, redness, or swelling at the injection site. limited arm movement, fatigue, head ache muscle or joint pain less appetite, chills, or rash. even if you've already been vaccinated with another pneumonia vaccine, prevnar 13® may help provide additional protection. get this one done. ask your healthcare professional about prevnar 13® today. introducing light & fit protein shakes the new way to help make temptations shrink away. with 12 grams of protein, 5 grams of fiber and 0% fat. new light & fit protein shakes. taste the power of satisfaction. ♪ hey... hey! ♪ for kids having fun means getting dirty. and sometimes, really dirty. fortunately, all® oxi fights tough grass stains better than the leading value detergent. a lot better. so it's perfect for all the pig-pens out there. thanks, mom! waawaawaawaa. give us your worst we'll give it our all®. now? 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are you comfortable that that is the whole thing? >> i don't know if we'll ever know the whole thing. >> reporter: around the pitkin county da's office was a nagging worry. dr. trey styler demanded, and the da approved, a quid pro-quo. his full confession in exchange for his wife's unconditional release. >> and i have in good faith fulfilled my part of the bargain. >> reporter: but what if he was lying, how would they ever prove it? >> we had no facts to refute his, his statement to me. we weren't in that room that night that nancy pfister was murdered so we had no facts to refute what william styler was saying. >> reporter: so you're saying to me that kathy carpenter and nancy styler are both innocent? neither one participated in this crime? >> william styler said that. i'm not saying that. >> reporter: but inspite investigator miller's doubts on june seventeenth 2014 after three and a half months in jail nancy styler was released. >> and my attorney, beth, was there. and she said, "good news. you're getting out." and i said, "great. you know, they figured it out." and then she said, "but there's a catch." >> reporter: she gave nancy a letter. it was a private note from trey. >> and in this letter, he tells me about the plea bargain that he took. and one of the sentences that i've read a million times over said "i know you're innocent. and you should believe i am, too." >> reporter: trey wrote that was only pleading guilty to save her. he didn't actually kill nancy pfister he wrote. he was falling on his sword for love. >> i cried that whole day, even though i was getting out. it should've been a, a great time. i can't believe he's having to do this. this system is sick. it's, you know, messed up. >> reporter: three days later, june twentieth, dr. trey styler formally pleaded guilty to second degree murder and was sentenced to twenty years in prison. considering his health and age it was almost certainly was a life sentence. that same day the da dropped charges against kathy carpenter and she walked out jail. a free woman. >> i was very grateful, very thankful. and i felt god answered my prayers. and um but at the same time, it was still scary. i'm leaving jail after being locked up. what will people think? how will i be judged? >> reporter: she is grateful, scared, also sad. >> but there was sorrow for still thinking of the loss of nancy. and that he did something like this, that he did it, you know, that was still hurtful. >> reporter: but nancy styler added a bitter anger to her whirlwind of grief and relief. if trey was innocent, as he told his wife he was, then had the real killer just walked free? >> i had kathy carpenter pegged in my own little courtroom. and every little piece of evidence that was given to me corroborated that. >> reporter: and then it was just over two weeks later nancy took a call. trey had something to tell her. his letter wasn't quite true he said. in fact he and he alone murdered nancy pfister. kathy carpenter had nothing to do with it. >> it was, took my world and just flipped it upside down, felt like my whole life had been a lie. you know, my whole life with him had been a lie. >> reporter: she is trying to rebuild life now. has moved back to the east coast where she grew up and reclaimed her maiden name. filing for divorce from trey after 32 years of marriage. >> reporter: do you love him at all anymore? >> i love him. i love him, i love the man that was. i don't love this monster. >> reporter: it was then that nancy styler's attorney beth krulewitch had to admit that she ahd been completley wrong to think kathy carpenter was involved in the murder and set up the stylers. >> had trey styler not confessed, i think there's a very decent chance that kathy carpenter could have ended up convicted, and what a tragedy that would have been. >> reporter: or could still be for kathy, at least. is kathy carpenter completely off the hook? is there ever a possibility that she could face charges? >> there is still an investigation going. so, no, miss carpenter, at this point is, is not completely off the hook. >> reporter: and still i think they're a little suspicious of you, you know? >> i've heard that there's still some questions in people's minds. >> reporter: she knows, all too personally, what it's like to lose the trust of her community. she has also lost her job, her home. and she's lost her very best friend she said. and she told us she feels guilty. >> that's why i say i wish that i could have helped, her and have been there to help. what could i have done differently? talked her into staying there not coming home. >> reporter: nobody can know the future. >> right. but i do blame myself. you know, that's something that i'll have to work through. but -- >> reporter: one person with whom nancy has not spoken since all this happened is nancy pfister's daughter juliana. what would you wan to say to juliana? >> that i just hope that she knows the truth. i had nothing to do with the murder of her mother. i was never would steal and i just i was looking out for her and her mother's wishes. and that i just hope that she would find forgiveness in her heart and know that i love her and her mother very much. >> reporter: what does she have to forgive you for? >> i don't know. nothing really. but there's just, you know, what she's had to go through, and i don't know why i would even say forgive, but -- >> reporter: it's curious huh? >> yeah. >> it's just i've been portrayed as this thief, this bad person, untrusting and i don't know why. >> reporter: trust, somethng nancy pfister was known for. not so much of it these days. >> aspen will never be the same. my life will never be the same. >> reporter: so what has aspen lost? >> a lot of history, you know? nancy was part of aspen's history. it's a huge loss for the community. >> reporter: some members of which be telling stories about nancy pfister for a very long time. >> nancy lived a fantastic life. and i think we all need a little more dreaming like that, you know, a little, little more. >> reporter: little more nancy in us. >> little more nancy in us, yeah. . there will be no mercy! [ screaming ] joseph: my sister's only child hanging from a cross! joseph... we need this to end! caiaphas: we must govern ourselves so that we are never again subjected to roman justice. you did nothing of any worth whatsoever. man: make way for king antipas. your position is reliant on my endorsement. john, i'm poor and sick in my soul. i'm glad to give you this land. barnabas, it's perfect. god has a purpose for each of us. i'm meant to preach. be patient, stephen. the time will come. and didn't jesus say "i will rebuild this temple in three days" before he rose from the death you condemned him to? silence him. shut him up. lord jesus receive my spirit.

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