Audible ignites your next action-packed adventure with thrills of every kind on your command. Dive into The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides, a psychological thriller that will keep you guessing until the very end. Massfully narrated by Jack Hawkins and Louise Brealey. From electrifying suspense and daring quests to spine
tingling horror and romance in far off realms. Unleash your adventurous side with gripping titles. Discover exclusive Audible originals, hotly anticipated new releases, and must-listen bestsellers that hook you from the first minute. Because Audible knows there's no greater thrill than the one that speaks to you. Discover what lies beyond the edge of your seat. Start your free 30-day trial at audible.com slash wonderypod. That's audible.com slash wonderypod.
Watch Bravo on Peacock.
A loving father is gunned down just steps from his daughter's bedroom. An individual walked in the room, pulled a handgun out and shot him. His girlfriend was in bed with him at the time. It was just unbelievable. And in such a ferocious way too. It was horrific. Investigators search for a killer and uncover a deceitful past filled with possible suspects.
They lived a lavish lifestyle. They always had a boat, nice cars, nice houses. She believed that it was a Puerto Rican hit squad that came up to kill him. Or was the real danger much closer to home? His daughter said she had been a witness to a fight that her father and a neighbor had had earlier in the day. He said to me, I don't want to die. And I was like, why would you ever say that to me?
He had asked her, what's going to happen? And she said, you're better off if you don't know. All she could see was a figure, and she heard a click, and the shooter said, this is your lucky day. May 12, 1997. It's a quiet night in Middleburg, New York, a small rural town nestled roughly 45 miles west of Albany. ♪
At 11.50 p.m., the peace is shattered when 911 operators receive a shocking call. A 911 call was made stating that the subject had been shot. The call came from a neighbor of 31-year-old Nicole Braun.
Nicole Braun said she had just witnessed the murder of her boyfriend, Frank Arroyo. She wasn't alone with Frank that night. She had Frank's 13-year-old daughter. His girlfriend, who was in bed with him at the time, had left the house in her nightgown. Nicole ran out of the house, and down the street, she ran to some neighbors' houses, and 911 was called.
She said someone walked in the room, pulled a handgun out, and shot Frank, turned around, and walked out. With no time to lose, New York State troopers race to the scene. Upon arrival, they are met by Frank's 13-year-old daughter and his 31-year-old girlfriend, Nikki. His girlfriend, Nikki, is a bit hysterical. First responders, when they get there, they have to clear the house, make sure that this person left.
They have to be sure that the house is clear and safe. The door was unlocked. We didn't find any evidence of forced entry. Troopers enter the home, checking each room before finding Frank. There was a victim shot multiple times. There was no pulse, no breathing, no heartbeat, anything to indicate that he was alive at that point.
The police found some casings, some bullet casings, but other than the body and blood splatter, there was no evidence of a struggle. There was no evidence of a robbery or burglary. This was a straight-out shooting, and that was it. In a homicide like this, the background of the victim becomes important. Who had a motive to hurt him? Who had a motive to kill him?
To his family, Frank Arroyo always seemed larger than life. He was just awesome. He was just always making you laugh, always cracking a joke. Born in Puerto Rico in 1948, at age three, Frank moved to Queens with his parents and three sisters. My aunt got really sick. There was a really good doctor in New York, so they sold their chickens and their cows, and they all moved to New York.
and they struggled a little bit, you know, they weren't wealthy, but they were very loving. Then when he graduated high school, he went to the army. He was cool. He was a great guy. He loved life. Very skilled, talented. Family was everything to Frank, and he couldn't wait to start one of his own. And in 1971, at the age of 23, he fell in love and married fellow Puerto Rican Gladys Rentis.
Though Gladys had a six-month-old son from a previous marriage, Frank welcomed her child with open arms. And by 1977, they had grown to a family of five.
I was born in '74 and then Amy came along in '77. Frank embraced fatherhood and loved taking family adventures. My dad loved going camping, hiking, going to the beach. He always loved playing his music. He was always with his guitar and playing his songs. Family man. His kids, his daughter, he was raising his kids, taking care of the family. That was his life.
Frank worked as a handyman to make ends meet and eventually landed a job as a building superintendent. He told me I put up ceiling fans, installing air conditions, buffing the floors. Frank and Gladys seemed to have the picture-perfect life together. But that all changed when Frank met Donna Salerno, a spirited New Yorker 11 years his junior. ♪
My dad was superintendent of a building and she worked for the management company that was in charge of the superintendents. There was a lot of flirting going on. Donna came into the picture. When I first met her, I told him, I said, she's wild, bro. I'm like, she did what she want. Didn't care. She wanted to have fun. She's going to have fun. He was unfortunately so madly in love with Donna and taken by her for some reason. She tore our family apart.
By 1982, Frank had divorced Gladys and married Donna. My mother was very resilient. It was hard for her. But she bounced back and she raised three kids. She did what she had to do. And she did it on her own. My mom and dad were fighting for custody of us. I wanted to go home to my mom. I was a little girl. Frank and Donna relocated to Florida, where they started a successful real estate venture.
They were like selling properties. They were basically flipping properties. They lived a lavish lifestyle. They always had a boat, nice cars, nice houses. Frank and Donna eventually had a daughter and son of their own. And Frank loved getting all of his children together. We just visited them. We didn't live the everyday life with them. It was mostly fun whenever we got to see him. We didn't really see him much. Not as much as I would have liked to.
When the couple traveled to Puerto Rico for real estate ventures, they would bring the children along. We went to Puerto Rico with him a few times. I remember he told me how to do the merengue dance. In 1996, Frank and Donna's lavish life went up in smoke when they found themselves in legal hot water. Frank and his wife Donna had been involved in some sort of scam in Puerto Rico in regards to some phony mortgages.
Donna and Frank were extradited from Sarasota, Florida, back to Puerto Rico and placed under arrest. Frank was in jail for a short period of time. That's when the marriage really went south, when he got out of prison. Frank was released after seven months in prison, and shortly thereafter, he and Donna separated. ♪
He moved back to New York with the couple's 12-year-old daughter, while Donna and the couple's 4-year-old son stayed in Florida. My dad ended up back upstate New York in Middleburg. He was coming around to our house a lot in Staten Island, thinking about moving there. So we were excited. I was just so happy that he was around again.
By 1996, Frank and Donna's divorce was pending, and both seemed to be moving on with their lives. Donna was living on a 40-foot yacht in Florida with her boyfriend, Carrie, and her 5-year-old boy. My dad finally moved on. He finally met someone. He found a pretty girl that he was happy with. He would go to her house and play his guitar, and he was happy as could be.
But Frank's third act is snuffed out in an instant when he is gunned down on May 12, 1997. While a forensic team searches for clues inside, New York State investigators speak with Frank's girlfriend, Nikki Braun. She just witnessed her boyfriend murdered right before her eyes. She was extremely upset.
Nikki said she was in bed with Frank and Frank was on the phone with his mother at the foot of the bed sitting up and she noticed someone come in through the bedroom door which was backlit so all she could see was a figure and she heard a click and the shooter said this is your lucky day. At that point she thought this was a joke and I guess Frank did as well and then she heard metal which was the shooter pulling back the slide on the automatic and chambering around
and fired off four shots, which all of them hit Frank. Frank's daughter did hear the gunshots and came out of the bedroom to see what that was. An individual unknown to them shot Frank four times, three times in the chest and one time in the head, turned around and walked out. It's a haunting story, but investigators can't take it as gospel just yet. When you have a murder like this, pretty much everybody's a suspect.
Coming up, investigators look into Frank's new girl. She just witnessed a homicide. Could she have set this up? And they uncover a number of dangerous enemies. He said he had gotten into a fight that day about money. May 13th, 1997. Puerto Rican native Frank Arroyo has just been gunned down in his girlfriend's home by an unknown assailant.
New York State investigators study the crime scene. He was shot multiple times, so there was a lot of blood. He was found lying on his back like he had been sitting on the end of the bed, talking on the phone. Amidst the grisly scene, investigators are also able to locate four shell casings. The forensic team let us know what we were looking for. In this particular case, it was a .40 caliber weapon.
The casings are bagged and sent for processing. There was nothing to suggest that this was a robbery or burglary. We didn't find any evidence of forced entry. The house was not broken into. Door was unlocked. It seemed to be just a cold-blooded murder. And the obvious question is why someone would want to murder him. And the next question, of course, is who.
Investigators circle back to Frank's girlfriend, Nikki Braun, the only eyewitness to the shooting. We've got to handle her with kit gloves, so to speak. She just witnessed a homicide, but she's also a suspect. You know, could she have set this up?
She said she saw the outline of a person, so she couldn't really see the shooter's face. He was on the shorter side, you know, between five and six feet tall, slender, but she couldn't tell colors in terms of hair color or dress. She was the only one in the room besides the shooter and Frank, so you have to look at her pretty closely. One way to do that was with a GSR test.
The shooter's going to have residue on his or her hand. We did do a residue test on her hands and clothing and actually found no residue on her hands and nothing on her clothing either. Because of her immediate cooperation with the police, Nicole was dismissed quickly as a possible suspect. Next, investigators turn to Frank's daughter.
Frank had custody of the 13-year-old unofficially. She was in the house at the time of the shooting, and she was asleep in another bedroom. Nikki and the daughter were cooperating with each other. She tells police that her mother, 37-year-old Donna Arroyo, lives in Florida, but is currently visiting her grandmother in Yonkers, New York.
During the daughter's interview, she said that her mom came up from Florida to try to visit or see her daughter and tried to ask her daughter to come to Florida with her. But she wanted to stay in upstate New York. She had a very good relationship with her father, Frank, and had friends in Middleburg and relatives and just did not want to go to Florida. Police take down Donna's phone number from the teenager and they ask if she knows of anyone who would want to hurt her dad.
She points to a neighbor, John Giacomacus, a family friend to both Frank and Donna. John Giacomacus, a friend of Donna's and also knew Frank. Frank's daughter said she had been a witness to a fight that her father and John had earlier in the day. Detectives immediately head across the street to try and question John. The police went and spoke with John and he gave a statement to the police.
He said he had gotten into a fight that day about money that Frank had lent to John, and John basically had told Frank that day that he didn't intend to repay him, and it was worth about $5,000. So they got into it, and there was a bit of a tussle. When they ask John for his whereabouts at the time of Frank's murder, he tells them that he was at home all night with his girlfriend.
John Giacomacus had a girlfriend named Tiffany. Tiffany gave John an alibi, and she said he was with her. But in any criminal investigation, the police are going to take everything sort of with a grain of salt until they get the full facts. Detectives make a note to come back to John once they have more information.
Officers escort Nikki Braun and Frank's young daughter to the police station, while investigators break the news to the rest of Frank's family. And I remember being asleep and my phone rang. And I remember just jumping out of bed and right away we were in shock. It was just unbelievable. And in such a ferocious way, too. He was murdered. Like, you know, they didn't shoot him once. They shot him multiple times. It was horrific.
Next, investigators call Frank's estranged wife, 37-year-old Donna Arroyo, who had been visiting her mother in Yonkers three hours away.
She is shocked to learn of the shooting. When we interviewed her, she said that her relationship with Frank was pretty good. They just grew apart. She immediately denied any involvement in this. She just said she came up to visit her daughter and drove to Middleburg, tried to ask her daughter to come to Florida with her. She said her daughter, by choice, did not want to go to Florida, did not want to leave with her and wanted to live with her father, Frank.
Donna's statement supports what her daughter told police earlier, and she's able to provide an alibi for the shooting. Donna was pretty adamant that she's at her mom's during the homicide, and her mother did corroborate that. One of the key pieces of information was that the shooter was a male. We know this because Nikki heard him say, this must be your lucky day, and it was clearly a man's voice.
When asked about John, Donna doesn't hold back. She was saying that John and Frank did not get along, and she thought that John could possibly have been the one who did it. When asked who else might want Frank dead, Donna says the list of Frank's enemies is quite long.
Frank got involved in this land scheme in Puerto Rico, for which he did get arrested. But during that, he had made off with some significant money. And she believed that it was a Puerto Rican hit squad that came up to kill Frank over the money that he owed them. Not only that, Donna claims that Frank recently became involved with the Puerto Rican drug trade.
Because the shooting occurred without another assault involved, without a burglary, police looked at the possibility that this could be a drug hit, some other type of retaliation for some other activity that Frank may have been involved in. Coming up, did Frank's criminal past make him a target for murder? I don't want to disparage the dead, but Frank wasn't an angel.
And later, bizarre details emerge about Frank and Donna's tumultuous relationship. Donna made her relationship with Frank look a lot rosier than it really was. They were riding over to daughter. Something had to be done with him.
Spring cleaning means getting rid of the clutter that keeps you from being your best self. And I'm so serious when I say a great place to start is with your socks. You can't put your best foot forward in all aspects of your life if you can't find a matching pair of socks in the morning. And Bombas is the best way to keep your sock collection fresh.
Whether I'm trying to reach my running goals, which right now honestly is just making it to the gym at all, get more time in the sun with walks as the weather gets nicer, or feel confident with my outfit for a day at work, socks can make or break my day. I stay refreshed and cozy with Bombas. Plus, who wants to sacrifice style for comfort? Bombas offers pops of color in socks that get the job done. I can run errands or a marathon and I feel my best thanks to Bombas.
The best part of all of this, for every pair you purchase, Bombas donates another pair to someone facing homelessness. Bombas is going international. Enjoy worldwide shipping to over 200 countries. Head over to bombas.com slash snapped and use code snapped for 20% off your first purchase. That's B-O-M-B-A-S dot com slash snapped. Code snapped for 20% off your first purchase. Bombas dot com slash snapped and use code snapped.
Welcome to the Captain's Lounge. Bravo's Emmy-nominated Below Deck Down Under is back for a new season in the Seychelles. I can't believe it. And there's a boatload of reasons to get on board. Oh, my God. Customer service is on point. Is this the kind of place where we all wind up in a hot tub? Workplace drama makes waves. So I'm going to let you go. And the captain? Is it hot in here? Or is it Captain Jason? A new season of Below Deck Down Under every Monday at 8, 7 central on Bravo and streaming on Peacock.
It's been 24 hours since 48-year-old Frank Arroyo was murdered in his Middleburg home.
While awaiting forensic and autopsy results, investigators dig deeper into Donna's allegations about Frank's criminal past. I don't want to disparage the dead, but Frank wasn't an angel. I would describe Frank as a small-time drug dealer, drugs being marijuana, but nothing that would rise to this level of a drug deal going bad or murder someone over a couple ounces of marijuana.
We also learned early on that Frank and Donna had been involved in some sort of scam in Puerto Rico in regards to some phony mortgages. However, investigators find nothing to connect Frank's murder to his time in Puerto Rico. We did look into a land scam in Puerto Rico, and they all came up dead ends pretty quickly.
On the evening of May 13th, detectives circle back to John Giacomacus, the neighbor that Frank argued with on the day of his death. John apparently didn't give a full statement the first time. That's not unusual in a criminal investigation, especially one where there's a killer still out in the public somewhere. John confirms that he argued with Frank on the day of his murder, but reveals he wasn't the only one.
John gave the police information about a fight with Donna that Frank had had as well that day on the street. And he says she clearly knew that Frank had a new relationship and he was intending to move to Long Island with their 13-year-old daughter. And it became evident quite early on that Donna was very unhappy about that.
Donna feared that Frank was so-called abducting their daughter, and she did not want that to happen. John said Donna was just beside herself, I mean, swearing and yelling and expletives and threatening Frank's life. She was very, very angry at him. Donna kept repeating that she was going to have her husband Frank killed.
John says that Donna eventually left. Unable to shake the incident, he called Donna later to check on her. He had asked her what's going to happen, and she said, you're better off if you don't know. He heard in the background a male voice saying, Frank's going to get his effing brains blown out. The call ended. He didn't hear from Donna again.
When the police get information like what Giacomacus gave to them, they have to make the assessment whether was it just that he was being maybe afraid to come forward with everything at once, or was he trying to get the spotlight taken away from him and put on somebody else. Investigators turn to Frank's family for more insight. And they don't hold back when it comes to Donna.
She wasn't a good person. She was cheating on him for forever, for the longest time. She was bringing guys around in front of his face. She had him like under her spell. It was crazy.
Frank's family says when they heard that Frank and Donna separated, it didn't come as a surprise. I stayed with him when he finally moved away from Florida. And he was upset, very upset, and said to me, I don't want to die. And I was like, why would you ever say that? He said, well, I don't trust her. She's very manipulative and calculating. He told me he thought Donna's going to kill him. He told me outright, like, I think she's going to try to kill me.
It's clear to investigators that it's time to pay Donna a visit. On May 14th, two days after Frank's murder, investigators track her down at her mother's house in Yonkers. We sent state police investigators there to the mother's home to interview Donna. Investigators confront Donna with their suspicions, and she shares some alarming new information about her estranged husband.
Donna says she heard that Frank was jealous because she had a boyfriend. Donna believed Frank was putting a hit out on Carrie. She said Frank was connected to different things and he had the connections to have somebody kill him. According to Donna, in a desperate move to save her boyfriend's life, she hired two men to teach Frank a lesson.
She said, I didn't tell them to shoot him. I told them to just come up and beat him up a little bit. Despite Donna's stated intent, someone did kill Frank that night. However, Donna stopped short of naming her accomplices. She was arrested for criminal facilitation based on what we knew at the time. She was subsequently transported back up north to Middleburg, New York, where she was remanded to the Skahari County Jail.
Just as investigators begin looking into Donna's past associates, a call comes in that blows the case wide open. The command post received a call from an attorney out of Orlando, Florida. He said, I have a client here in my office that was there. He did not take part in it, and he's looking for immunity, but he can tell you who did it and how it all happened. Coming up...
Who really killed Frank Arroyo? I think he was in love with Donna, but realized he had been manipulated. She convinced him that the only way around it was that Frank had to die. And later, shocking details emerge about the master plan. She said, now remember how I told you to do it? I want it to make look like a Puerto Rican hit. After Frank Arroyo's estranged wife is arrested for facilitation of murder...
New York State investigators receive a tip about a potential informant in Florida, Donna's home state. We enlisted the help of the FBI and the FDLE, Florida Department of Law Enforcement. Within 24 hours, New York State investigators touched down in Florida and set up a meeting with the attorney and his client, a frightened man named Steve Hannum.
Steve was horrified in what had happened. His words, he started to name names, in particular Donna's boyfriend, Kerry McKinley, and Daniel Edwards as being the participants in the murder. Steve says he and Kerry worked together at a refrigeration company. Steve knew a little bit about Kerry's relationship with Donna and knew that they had gotten engaged.
Kerry said he had to take a few days off to go to New York to settle some affairs that he had going on up there involving his fiancée, Donna. Steve offered to drive him up to New York. He said, I've never been to New York. I'd like to see it. On May 11, 1997, Steve arrived to pick Kerry up. On the way out of town, Kerry said, listen, my half-brother Daniel is going to come with us too. Is that all right? He goes, sure. He can share the driving and et cetera.
They picked up Carrie McKinley's half-brother, Daniel Edwards, and the three of them drove nonstop from Florida to New York. Steve said that McKinley was getting phone calls from Donna Arroyo stating that things had gone sour, that she was fighting with her ex-husband. Steve says they arrived in New York on the evening of May 12th. The three of them got a motel room about 40 minutes from Middleburg.
And then Donna shows up about a half hour after they're at this hotel. That's when Steve meets Donna for the first time. And she's telling Carrie that Frank had been abusive, that they were fighting over the daughter, something had to be done with him. And she wanted Carrie to go up to Middleburg and to beat him. According to him, he wasn't privy to a lot of the conversations because they would go into a different room
As the night wore on, they said, we're going back to Frank's house. And since Steve had rented the car, he said, I'll drive. The idea when they got there was for Carrie to go in and confront Frank. And he was supposed to intimidate him to leave Don alone, to let her take the daughter, Jamie, back to Florida. But Steve says on the drive over, everything changed.
That's when the guns came out, in particular the .40 caliber murder weapon. He said that Kerry had handed it to his half-brother Daniel and Donna said, "Now remember how I told you to do it? Shoot him in the head. I want it to make look like a Puerto Rican hit." Steve tells investigators when he realized what was going on, he felt sick. When he was driving, he got so upset he couldn't drive and Kerry took over the wheel.
According to Steve, once they arrived at Frank's house, Daniel got out of the car and went towards the house with the gun. The three of them went and drove away and drove around the block once or twice. And eventually, once they came around, Daniel was out front by this time. And he got in the car and they asked him what happened. He said, it's all done. I took care of it. Steve says the four of them then went their separate ways.
Carrie McKinley and Donna Arroyo went to Yonkers, and Steve and Daniel drove back together in the redhead car to Florida. Steve tells investigators as he and Daniel crossed the Hudson River, they made a pit stop. Daniel said to Steve, "Slow down, pull over, I'm gonna throw the gun out, the murder weapon, over the bridge," which he did do. That location on the Hudson, it's a few miles wide, big current. There's no way they're gonna put divers into that kind of situation.
Now investigators need to determine if Steve really was an unwitting witness, or is he just trying to save himself?
Within a week of the murder, they go down to Florida and they find Daniel Edwards. Steve told us where we might find Carrie and Daniel. We actually went to a work location that Daniel was doing, an HVAC install. When we arrived at the convenience store to arrest Daniel, he made a spontaneous statement. I was expecting you guys to show up.
Authorities locate Carey next. We arrested Carey in his motel room where he was residing in Florida. Both men are arrested and taken to a temporary field office where they are separated and interviewed. First, investigators speak with 29-year-old Carey McKinley. He was very emotional. He was, I think he was in love with Donna, but realized he had been manipulated.
Kerry tells investigators he met Donna in Florida only six months earlier. She was there near a job site that he was working at, and they became friends, and then next thing you know, they became lovers. Kerry says Donna always told him that her ex was dangerous. Donna provided him with a lot of information that concerned him, to say the least, that Frank was going to abduct the 13-year-old daughter and take her away.
She wanted Carrie to come to New York and intimidate Frank, scare him and try to force him into allowing the daughter to go with her. Carrie admits that he asked his friend Steve and his half-brother Daniel to come along. But when they got to New York, things spiraled out of control. She told Carrie that Frank had ordered a hit, in other words, a contract on Carrie's life. She was saying the only way you can
Getting out from underneath that contract is that he has to be killed. Kerry says he had brought his .40 caliber handgun for protection. Kerry did everything but pull the trigger. He was up to his ears in this. He just couldn't do it. Kerry tells investigators his friend Steve is completely innocent. Kerry's interview was substantiating what Steve had told us, that he had no part in the planning of what they actually did.
Next up, investigators speak with Carey's half-brother, 26-year-old Daniel Edwards. He said he wanted to watch his brother's back, and he was led to believe there was an actual hit on his brother Carey. Donna convinced him that the only way around it was that he had to be killed. So Carey couldn't do it, or wouldn't do it.
But Daniel said, I'll take care of it. I'll do it. He was just there for the ride and there to pull the trigger and didn't get too emotional about the whole thing. Pretty cold. According to Daniel, on the night of May 12, 1997, they drove to Frank's house with one intention. After Daniel shot Frank, Donna said, did you do it as I told you? And he said, yes, I think I shot him twice. I can't remember exactly.
Everybody in the car said Donna was happy, relieved, like a weight off her shoulders. After Daniel and Carrie's interviews, Steve is officially cleared of any wrongdoing. We felt that he was there solely as an unwitting participant and would be better served as a witness. Carrie McKinley and Daniel Edwards are charged with murder and transported back to New York.
Donna's charge of facilitation is officially bumped up to murder in the first degree. Once you arrest someone for murder, the work doesn't end there. In fact, you've got to put as much effort into the prosecution in proving it and beyond a reasonable doubt.
As predicted, the murder weapon is never found. However, investigators are able to verify that Carey purchased a .40 caliber firearm March 2nd, 1997, just two months before Frank was killed. We did a search warrant on his 40-foot Bayliner boat, which was essentially his residence, and we found .40 caliber ammunition. We didn't find anything of relevance other than ammunition.
Investigators find no evidence that Frank was abusive toward Donna or that he had taken out a hit on her new man. That was a lie. I don't think there was any thought in Frank's mind to kill anybody. And Carrie believed it because he was in Donna's web. Coming up, more details emerge about Donna's deadly scheme.
Money had been mentioned that Donna would give them $100,000 each from life insurance. And one of the alleged killers walks free. I thought that was disgusting. I don't think any of them should have gotten off. New York State investigators have charged Donna Arroyo, Carrie McKinley, and Daniel Edwards for their roles in the murder of 48-year-old Frank Arroyo.
With trials quickly approaching, Donna decides to take a plea deal. When she pled guilty to murder in the second degree, that took off the table her going to trial and being convicted of murder in the first degree. Custody can be and is a motivating factor to crime. And in this particular case, I think it led Donna to have her husband killed.
She knew what she was doing and she had a mission and she was going to see that mission through. And she did. Donna concedes that she had even offered the brothers a share of her husband's life insurance policy as payment. Money had been mentioned that Donna would give them $100,000 each from life insurance, which there was no life insurance that we're aware of. Donna was giving them lies and false information.
Donna is sentenced to 25 years to life. 25 years to life, which means after serving your 25 years minimum, you'd be eligible for parole. I don't feel like justice was served, to be honest, because she gets to come out and enjoy her children. My dad didn't get to see his children grow up.
Daniel Edwards pled guilty to murder in the second degree for intentionally killing Frank Arroyo. Daniel Edwards is also sentenced to 25 to life. They think that he's a terrible, horrible person, and I wish he would have got more time also. As for Donna's boyfriend, Kerry, in November of 1998, he takes his chances at trial.
He was charged with conspiracy in the second degree, criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree as an aider and abettor. His lawyer was crying, saying his man, his guy, his client was innocent. He didn't know what Donna was going to do. Carrie takes the stand and renounces his earlier confession with law enforcement.
Not only that, but Carey denies being in the car during the crime and says the murder weapon wasn't even his. Since we don't have the gun, we couldn't prove it either way. And on December 7th, 1998, the jury comes back with a shocking verdict. Not guilty. I was disappointed, to say the least.
I think one of the contributing factors to Carrie's acquittal was the fact that the jury did not think much of Donna's credibility and they were placing most of the blame on Donna. I thought that was disgusting. I thought that they should have all been held accountable for what they did. I don't think any of them should have gotten off. Donna and Frank's two children are placed in the custody of Donna's mother.
The sad thing about this is the kids lost both the mother and the father, one going to prison from 25 to life and the other being dead. Roughly 25 years later, in the spring of 2022, Donna is released on parole, along with her co-conspirator, Daniel. It's horrible. It's not fair. You know, he's gone and she gets to walk around.
She gets to go come out now and stay with her daughter and her son and meet the grandkids and live this happy life at only 60-something years old. And my dad never got that. How is that justice? In spite of everything, his daughters do their best to keep their dad's memory alive. He's going to be remembered by... He was just so happy-go-lucky. He was so fun to be around.
He was always singing with his guitar and just the life of the party. He was so kind and he was just a great guy and he didn't deserve to go out like that. Think of him often. We do get together every year for a family reunion in his memory to honor him.
Donna Arroyo was released from prison in May of 2022 at the age of 62. Daniel Edwards was also released in May of 2022. He was 51 years old. Following his acquittal in 1998, Kerry McKinley lived the rest of his life as a free man until his death in 2008.
In the early hours of December 4th, 2024, CEO Brian Thompson stepped out onto the streets of midtown Manhattan. This assailant pulls out a weapon and starts firing at him. We're talking about the CEO of the biggest private health insurance corporation in the world. And the suspect. He has been identified as Luigi Nicholas Mangione. Became one of the most divisive figures in modern criminal history. I was targeted.
premeditated and meant to sow terror. I'm Jesse Weber, host of Luigi, produced by Law & Crime and Twist. This is more than a true crime investigation. We explore a uniquely American moment that could change the country forever. He's awoken the people to a true issue. Hurry! Hurry!
Finally, maybe this would lead rich and powerful people to acknowledge the barbaric nature of our health care system. Listen to Law and Crime's Luigi exclusively on Wondery+. You can join Wondery in the Wondery app, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts.