In December of 2007, Jocelyn Earnest was found dead from a gunshot wound in her Virginia home. Beside her was a revolver and a suicide note. But investigators believed that the scene was staged and found fingerprints on the note that matched her estranged husband, Wesley Earnest. Amidst a divorce, it was the lake house they fought over: Jocelyn wanted it sold and Earnest didn’t want to let it go. Investigators charged Wesley for murder, and then fifteen months after the death, another bizarre twist: the lake house burned down while Wesley was out on bond awaiting trial. “48 Hours" correspondent Tracy Smith reports. This classic "48 Hours" episode last aired on 6/2/2012. Watch all-new episodes of “48 Hours” on Saturdays, and stream on demand on Paramount+.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Bedford County is very rural in places. If you were driving through, you would think this is a very beautiful place.
I arrived on the scene on December the 20th. Immediately when I went in the door, I noticed to my right was a female laying on her back.
And there's a weapon laying beside her.
And at that time, I looked down, I saw a sheet of paper lying on the floor.
There was typing on it that appeared to be a suicide note. It was not signed Jocelyn, it was typed Jocelyn.
When you lose a child, it changes who you are. It leaves a gaping hole in your soul.
We found out that she was married and was separated at the time. She was married to Wesley Ernest.
The most athletic person I've ever met. Could do anything she wanted, successful. Master's degree, great job, working for a great company.
They had built a lake house that was worth a lot of money. We're talking multi-million dollar homes all over this lake. Was there romance?
Very little. She kept telling me I needed to go sleep with other women and come home to her.
He seemed to adore me. The way he would look at me, it would always just make me get those butterflies.
We asked Mr. Earnest if we thought his wife could be suicidal, and he told us yes. I was there for the autopsy. I thought the bullet wound was to the left temple, and it turned out being that the bullet wound was to the back of the head back here. I received a phone call from the guy in fingerprints in the lab, and he stated that he had found prints on the note.
They were Wesley Ernst's fingerprints. What'd the note say?
Please forgive me. Wes has put us in such financial bind that I can't recover.
I'm a public school administrator. I'm that guy who's making it safe for kids to go to school, and I'm in this situation. That's pretty scary.
Do you think Wesley's capable of murder? No.
He wanted that lake house. He wanted that millionaire image. And there was one thing standing between him and that image.
Oh, my word. The roof just fell in.
I'm at home and get a phone call. Wesley Ernest's house is burning down right now.
Oh, my word. It's actually an age-old story of greed and lust, sex and money.
I have been charged with the most heinous crime. I'm an innocent man who's been charged with the murder of my late wife.
Secrets of a marriage, tonight's 48 Hours Mystery.
In March 2010, in this scenic southern community nestled near the Blue Ridge Mountains, 37-year-old high school assistant principal Wesley Ernest is on trial for his life. So how are you feeling heading into this trial?
Everything from nervous to anger, frustration, scared about things, but excited. And I'm looking forward to getting my life back.
On December 19th, 2007, six days before Christmas, Jocelyn's close friend, Marcy Shepherd, who'd been texting with her all day, became concerned when Jocelyn never responded to messages she sent that evening. The next morning, Marcy drove over to Jocelyn's house. She let herself inside with Jocelyn's spare key, discovered her body, and called police.
When investigators Mike Mayhew and Gary Babb stepped inside Jocelyn's home, they found a shiny revolver beside her, a bullet wound to her head, a note by the front door. What'd the note say?
It was addressed to Mom. I'm sorry for what I've done. Please forgive me. Wes has put us in such financial bind that I can't recover. My new love will not leave the family. Love, Jocelyn.
Financial problems, a new love. The notes seem to raise even more questions than answers. Did it seem like a suicide note?
Not to me. I've worked a lot of suicides through the years, and most people, it's a little more personal.
The note contained 83 typed words and those two fingerprints that authorities say matched Jocelyn's estranged husband, Wesley Earnest.
How did they get there? Well, there's only one way they got there. He touched that note.
But Wesley Earnest had been living and working in another city more than three hours away.
My first thought was impossible. But when you think about it, I lived in that house for 10 years. I guess it could be possible.
And you're confident it's not your fingerprint?
I'm very confident it's not mine.
Ernest hired a well-known and rather unusual defense team from Lynchburg, Virginia. Joey Sanzone and his daughter Blair are firmly convinced this case is not what it seems.
Wesley was a suspect mainly because he was the estranged husband. And that's always a difficult position for anybody. I'm gonna go check that out.
Sanzone says forensic tests determined Ernest's fingerprints were not on the gun, and his DNA was nowhere to be found at the scene. Investigators believe she was shot sometime between 7.30 and 9 p.m. the night before, and her body had been moved. And there's no way that she could have moved herself.
There's no question this body had been moved by someone, and a pretty strong someone. Whoever shot this lady moved her at that time.
We found a couple items in the bedroom. We found a condom package lying by the bed. We found a condom unwrapped in the trash can. It's almost as if someone had attempted to make it look like a sexual assault or some kind of love affair gone wrong. And the other end of the house, it was made to appear like a suicide.
The heat inside her home was overwhelming. The thermostat had been jacked up to 90 degrees. Jocelyn's home appeared untidy, but there were no signs of forced entry. Her faithful black lab, Rufus, was discovered locked in his crate in her bedroom without food or water.
She would never, ever lock her dog in there, turn the heat up, shoot herself, knowing her dog could be in there and die in that cage.
a package of condoms there in the bed lane. Are they attributed to Mr. Earnest? No. Where did they come from? We're here because we believe in Wesley.
We're gonna show that he's the only person linked to that fake suicide note. That he's the only person linked to that murder weapon.
Prosecutors Wes Nance and Randy Krantz believe the murder scene was set up to deflect attention away from the killer.
When you have a staged crime scene, that immediately makes it a whodunit. And by definition, a staged crime scene indicates premeditation. And so we have to follow the evidence back to that source.
So I have to ask you, did you kill your wife?
No.
Who did?
Hopefully we'll be able to find something out.
It turns out the words on that mysterious note would reveal even more clues about a husband, a wife, and their very troubled life.
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Jocelyn, a 38-year-old financial services manager, had a playful sense of humor on the job and at home with her dad, Bill Branham.
I loved to make her laugh. That always made me feel good to hear her laugh.
You knew when you talked to her that you had her attention. And I think that's pretty special.
A devoted daughter to mom Joyce and a big sister to Laura. My parents divorced when I was two. My sister was six. She was like a second mother. She'd get me off the school bus and make sure I did my homework, cook me some ravioli.
On the high school basketball team, she was number 21, a star shooting guard, team captain, and all-state honorable mention.
Number 21, Jocelyn Branham. Branham pulls up. Makes the shot.
She was a shooter. Here comes Branham. Banks it in. You can't tell Jocelyn Branham not to shoot.
At West Virginia University, Jocelyn was praised as one of the Mountaineers' best three-point shooters ever. Then, her junior year, Jocelyn, a business and economics major, met Wesley Ernest, a mathematics student.
We just met outside of calculus class. She walked by and I introduced myself. And said, hey, you want to go out sometime or what? Let's go play some basketball. I know a little something about basketball myself.
What kind of couple were they? Cute. Ernest's mother, Patricia Wimmer.
Both of them would be laying on the middle of the floor watching the ball game together. Wherever you saw one, you saw the other.
Jocelyn's sister saw it differently. I remember seeing Jocelyn after she had gotten off the phone with him. She was crying on the bed. Did Jocelyn tell you why she liked Wes? It was kind of the standard excuse, I love him. I just, I never understood it. They were like polar opposites. But in the summer of 1995, they got married. I had mixed emotions about the wedding.
I didn't think it should happen. I didn't think he was right for her.
The newlyweds moved to Bedford County, Virginia. Jocelyn began working at Genworth Financial in Lynchburg. Ernest was the assistant principal at a high school.
It was a fantastic relationship as far as Great friends. We were great friends.
Was there romance?
Very little.
Very little. Was that part of the problem?
That was the problem. I'm a little uncomfortable talking about the negative things because she's a wonderful person. And I don't want to talk negatively about somebody.
Makes you emotional. Why's that?
You care about somebody.
Despite their marriage troubles, they would start a new venture together. They built a luxurious weekend getaway on Smith Mountain Lake. Wesley Ernest had loved the lake since he was a boy.
What's that house like?
7,000 square feet. Seven bedrooms, six and a half bathrooms. Every bedroom had a lake view, sunset view. Designed it myself.
Their combined salary was nearly $200,000 a year, but this new second home would be expensive, a multi-million dollar project.
He wouldn't let her make a lot of the decisions, and it was a control thing. Did he see it as Wesley's house, not Wesley and Jocelyn's house? This was his baby, kind of a status symbol, bigger the better.
The Lake home seemed to be on solid ground, but the couple's nine-year marriage was crumbling. Wesley Ernest says Jocelyn had an unconventional proposal.
She kept telling me I needed to go sleep with other women and come home to her.
Did she tell you that?
Yeah.
Jocelyn told me about that conversation. Wesley had said that he wanted it multiple times a day from her, and she jokingly said, well, if you need it that much, then you better go find somebody else who can provide it that much. Kind of a ha-ha joke type thing.
It was no joke to Wesley Earnest. He began seeing this woman, Shemeika Wright.
He was handsome, good-looking, tall. And what did he tell you about his wife? He just said that they were friends, and he really did not like the situation, but he felt like he didn't have any other choice. He told me that he was separated. He wanted to be upfront and honest, and I appreciated that.
Upfront and honest? Not exactly. He was still married and living with Jocelyn.
Did you really think that everybody could get along? That you could have a girlfriend and have a wife and everybody would be okay?
You make it sound in a way that I was trying to be this circus act juggling things, but it wasn't like that.
Did you think eventually you two would get married? That was my dream.
As soon as Jocelyn learned her husband was cheating, they separated and she filed for divorce. It was a nasty split. According to prosecutor Randy Krantz, to get through it, Jocelyn had been seeing a therapist.
She had recently seen her counselor within hours of her death. In the counselor's assessment, this lady was not suicidal. In fact, was the opposite, was upbeat.
Defense attorney Joey Sanzone disagrees.
Jocelyn is a sad person to me. She's someone that had obvious difficulty with her social relationships.
I'm sure you've looked into what she was like in the days leading up to her death.
Well, she was certainly on medication. What about the idea that her medication was increased?
That's understandable. I mean, you're getting ready to go into a divorce. That's been nasty. And I think that that would be natural to increase your medicine, either for depression or anxiety. Could that mean that she was depressed enough to take her own life? My sister would never, never do that.
These are Jocelyn's journals, 17 spiral notebooks authorities believe hold the key to her life and her death. After his split with Jocelyn, Wesley Earnest took a job three hours away as an assistant principal at Great Bridge High School in Chesapeake, Virginia.
Working with kids, just there's no other more satisfying career that I can think of.
To teacher Tim McGovern, Ernest was a boss and a friend.
When Wesley walked down the hallways, he commanded respect just naturally because he got along with kids.
It seems Wesley Ernest was a man of many faces. At trial, teacher Sonya Stevens says Ernest told her he was well off. He did not have to work for a living.
Is that something he told you?
He did.
He did.
Teacher Molly Sullivan said Ernest told her he wasn't just rich, but single, and even refused to accept her condolences after Jocelyn died.
And I said, oh my God, I'm so sorry to hear about your wife. And he said, what the are you talking about? How many times do I have to tell you I'm not married?
He told people that he was independently wealthy, he was unmarried.
Who is that Wesley Ernest? That's a Wesley Ernest going through midlife crisis. And yes, he did have a lot of money. He had that lake house. Realtors had valued it at close to $3 million.
As Wesley and Jocelyn started divorce proceedings, it was the lake house, his prized possession, they fought over. She wanted it sold. He, investigators say, didn't want to let it go.
He wanted that big lake house. He wanted that millionaire image. And there was one thing standing between him and that image, and that was Jocelyn Ernest.
He had tried to sell the lake house for about $2.9 million, but couldn't. It was 2007, and the housing bubble had burst. Ernest, in charge of the couple's finances, was in a fix with loans, credit card debt, and that more than $6,000 a month lake house mortgage.
I had plenty of money.
When you say plenty, what do you mean?
Thousands, plenty of money to take care of everything.
It turns out the math major and assistant principal, Wesley Earnest, was more than $1 million in debt.
Wesley was living on credit cards, borrowing from this car to pay this car to pay the house, and he couldn't carry that load.
But after Jocelyn died, the bill collectors kept calling, and another person pitched in to bail Ernest out of debt, his new love, Shamika.
How often were there collection agency calls? Regularly. And what did you do?
I actually paid them. So how much money were you paying Shamika? I don't remember the exact number of how much. Hundreds? More than that. Thousands? Mm-hmm.
Investigators thought they had their motive. Wesley Earnest killed his wife Jocelyn for money. But there was that puzzling phrase in the purported suicide note, Jocelyn's new love.
Jocelyn was a wonderful person. She was somebody people aspired to be. There was definitely an emotional attachment where we both felt it.
Jocelyn's coworker and friend, Marcy Shepard, thought she knew who the new love was and stunned the courtroom with her answer. We kissed maybe three times.
Did you love Jocelyn?
Yes. Had you met this woman before and thought she was just a coworker?
Never met her.
And there were no rumors?
I'm living a couple hundred miles away. Who would bring a rumor to me?
Prosecutor Wes Nance described their relationship as little more than a crush Marcy had on Jocelyn.
Her private life did not lead towards her death that night.
What do you make of their relationship between Marcy and Jocelyn?
I think that only Marcy and Jocelyn knew that answer. And if my sister was happy, you know, she deserved to be happy. And Lord knows she spent the last three years unhappy.
Unhappy and afraid of Wesley Ernest, according to her best friend, Jennifer Kearns.
She just wasn't sure anymore what he was capable of. She on more than one occasion expressed the fear to me and the worry that he would kill her.
Even more revealing, Jocelyn chronicled her feelings in these spiral notebooks she used as journals.
If I die, Wesley killed me, and he probably shot me.
What'd you think when you read that?
I thought she got it right.
It was explosive information. But the prosecution had a problem. Because Joslyn couldn't be questioned by the defense, her journals were considered hearsay. The judge ruled they couldn't be used as evidence.
She had decided to stand up to him as far as the divorce and the finances go. But on a personal level, she was scared to death of him.
And you see that in her journals?
Absolutely.
Then, 15 months after Jocelyn's death, another bizarre twist.
I get a phone call as I'm traveling from one of our investigators on the homicide case.
It happened while Assistant Principal Ernest was out on bond, awaiting trial.
And he says, Mr. Krantz, you're not going to believe what is occurring.
Look, oh my God, look, there's flames right down at the shoreline.
The multi-million dollar lake house was burning to the ground.
and what is being described as the 40-foot flame.
Oh, the roof just fell in.
And it is burning hot and fast.
Oh, my word.
And it is Wesley Earnest's house, and Wesley Earnest cannot be found. There's now been two major incidents. This man's wife has died a traumatic death. The house burns down, and so you have to start thinking this is the most unluckiest individual in the world. or his absence from these major incidents are not coincidental.
Couldn't he just be a really unlucky guy?
Certainly. But as we continue to investigate the fire, certain things start to emerge. Wesley Earnest is due a huge insurance payoff and plus retains the land. Now the debt that burdened that house is eliminated, plus the land is still there, which is worth millions. Problem solved. Problem is solved.
The cause of the fire was inconclusive. The judge ruled it could not be used as evidence in the murder trial because the fire could not be linked to Jocelyn's death. But, according to prosecutors, Ernest's behavior that day was suspicious.
At the time of the fire, Mr. Earnest was allegedly in Northern Virginia with Shameka Wright. He had maintained a rental website, renting this lake house out surreptitiously behind Jocelyn's back. Within minutes of the fire, the website goes down.
Suddenly the house isn't for rent anymore.
Suddenly the house is not for rent anymore.
You know the scuttlebutt is, Wesley burnt down the house, couldn't afford it anymore, set it on fire.
Wesley would have taken pride in being able to go by sometime and say, I designed and I built that house. Do you think he's capable of burning down that house? I wouldn't think so, no.
Prosecutors were confident Wesley Earnest was the trigger man. But without the journals, without the fire, could they prove it?
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Ernest believes justice is on his side.
Keep an open mind. Realize there's more than one side of the story.
Bring the jury here. Thank you. He claims he never had any money problems and that he didn't know about Marcy Shepard.
Did you develop a friendship with Jocelyn?
I did. Or the journals, or that Jocelyn was frightened of him.
In the end, make a decision when you have all the information.
The women who stand by Wesley Earnest believe the evidence against him does not add up.
A partial fingerprint in a place he called home for over 10 years. Excuse me. Where's his DNA? Yes, he committed adultery. Okay. Being an adulterer does not make him a murderer. Do you think Wesley's capable of murder?
No. Is there any chance that he's put one over on you? That you've fallen under Wesley's spell?
I don't think so. I feel like I'm strong enough to know when someone has pulled the wool over my eyes.
Jocelyn's father, Bill, was now face to face with an alleged murderer who used to be his son-in-law.
First time in a long time that I had seen Wesley was in the courtroom. I was thinking, that is the son of a bitch who killed my daughter.
If it's not you, do you want to find who did this?
Certainly.
Are you making an effort to do that?
I've got the best defense team in the state.
The defense won't be easy. The prosecution painted the assistant principal as a manipulative, desperate, and greedy man who executed his wife. A few days before her death, Ernest borrowed a co-worker's pickup truck. He was on the highway for hours, they say. driving from Chesapeake to Jocelyn's home on Pine Bluff Drive.
By the time he got there, it was dark. Wesley Earnest either snuck into an unlocked door or forced his way in when Jocelyn was at the door. She had time to run, and he pulled out the .357 and shot her in the back of the head. Because the evidence of guilt is overwhelming.
It was Wesley Earnest, prosecutors say, who cranked up Jocelyn's thermostat to 90 degrees to make it appear she had died much earlier in the day.
I think that Wesley Earnest not only thinks that he's smarter than everybody else, he believes that he is smarter than everyone else.
They insist the note was not a suicide note, but a homicide note Ernest typed to stage the murder scene. Do you think that Wesley's capable of writing a fake suicide note?
Wesley would never end sentences in prepositions. Some of the punctuation in there is wrong. No, he would not write a suicide note.
And that truck Ernest borrowed a few days before Jocelyn died? Oddly enough, he borrowed it again two weeks after her death.
He goes to a Kramer tire station, speaks to the manager.
It was a Chevy Silverado, maroon color.
And if you're the next witness, come forward, please. Tire store manager Rick Kuhn remembers that truck and Wesley Earnest.
And the gentleman picked the least expensive tires that we had in that size. I said, you sure you want to replace those tires? I said, I don't see a thing wrong with them. Because the tires were almost brand new. He says, yeah, I don't like those tires. They give me a bad ride. Please take them off.
I can't speak for that tire expert, but all I know is Wesley, if he thought that they were damaged and needed to be changed, he would change them. Changing the tires does not make him a murderer.
Then, on April 1st, 2010, April Fool's Day, the star witness, Assistant Principal Wesley Earnest, would finally tell his side of the story.
Did you then learn about Jocelyn's death? I did.
Earnest told the jury when he learned of wife Jocelyn's death.
It was devastating.
And he testified about the weapon found near her body.
Do you recognize this gun, Mr. Ernest?
Yes, sir. Looks like the... Yes, sir, I do.
And tell me, who purchased this gun?
I purchased it.
It was a gift, he says, for Jocelyn so that she could feel safe.
Did you kill Jocelyn Ernest? No, sir. Did you return to this area on the 19th or the 20th and do anything that caused harm to her in any way? No, sir. What was it like watching him testify?
Sometimes it was hard to keep my lunch down. It was very fake, very rehearsed.
Mrs. Arlington was shunning your affection. True.
Shunning seems awfully harsh.
My goal on his cross-examination was to let his real personality emerge.
Prosecutor Randy Krantz grilled him about his lies and deception.
You lied to your friends and your co-workers about your marriage status, didn't you? You misled them.
I was trying to move on.
The questioning was heated.
You misled them, didn't you, Mr. Ernest?
Yes, sir.
But Ernest seemed to keep his cool.
Are you having any difficulty understanding my question?
No, sir. Wesley Ernest has a goal of success that he wouldn't allow anyone to get in the way of. And we believe that it's his frustration over her unwillingness to give him that goose that lays the golden egg is ultimately what drove him to kill her.
When asked about his whereabouts on the day Jocelyn died, Ernest testified he left work around 4 o'clock in the afternoon.
I considered going to the wrestling match, but because my throat was hurting, I decided to go catch a nap instead.
Between 4 o'clock and the next morning, no one can vouch for your whereabouts, can they, Mr. Ernest?
I suppose not.
Prosecutors believe the assistant principal's sore throat story was just one more lie, one more piece of his premeditated murder plot.
After 10 days of testimony, When you have reached your unanimous decision in this case, if you'll knock on the door to let us know, the jury would finally get the case.
Are you prepared if the verdict comes back guilty? Have you thought about that?
I have.
What do you do?
Stare at the walls in a six-by-eight cell.
Three hours and 35 minutes of deliberations, and then... If they do have a verdict, defendant, sir, if you would stand, please. We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of first-degree murder... Assistant Principal Dr. Wesley Earnest was guilty of murdering his wife, Jocelyn.
It was like a two-edged sword. I had to feel what his mother must have been feeling.
A heartbreaking defeat for Earnest's family. He was now a convicted killer. But one month later, while waiting for sentencing...
It was like we'd been punched in the stomach.
A bombshell that could change Wesley Earnest's fate.
A prosecutor has a duty to make sure that justice is done for Jocelyn Earnest, but also Wesley Earnest.
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The guilty verdict was a victory for prosecutors. But it wouldn't last long. A posting on the local newspaper's website was about to turn this contentious case upside down.
The postings essentially said that the jurors had read the journals. That they weren't supposed to read. That they weren't supposed to read. To whatever extent they had evidentiary value, there was a strong risk that if these journals had been allowed in, that it could have created all sorts of issues on appeal that would require us to try the case over.
Turns out those journals, Jocelyn's handwritten heartfelt thoughts, had been placed in the wrong box and taken to the jury room.
And it came to my attention that there were media accounts of the journals of Jocelyn Earnest been in the jury room during deliberations.
A special hearing was called and the jury admitted to reading the journals. The jurors said they based their guilty verdict on inadmissible evidence, Jocelyn's very own words.
It made us physically ill. We did not want those journals in for that very reason. And then a simple human error created that situation.
the judge had no choice but to declare a mistrial.
The court orders that the verdict in this matter is set aside. A new trial is ordered.
Ernest would get a second chance, and Jocelyn's family would have to face their nightmare all over again.
I think that he's happy to be in a situation where he's no longer convicted of an offense in Virginia.
We're disappointed for the jurors, but most of all for the family. We know the judge did the right thing today.
And you have to pick yourself up and realize that life can kick you in the stomach sometimes. But in the back of my mind, there was Jocelyn. And we can do it.
We can do it for Jocelyn. Defense attorney Joey Sanzone believes a new jury will see reasonable doubt.
Nothing is ironclad, and nothing is 100% certain in this case.
Nearly seven months after the first trial, more than two and a half years after Jocelyn's death, assistant principal Wesley Earnest would once again face a jury for the murder of his wife. There were no TV cameras allowed at the second trial.
The prosecution focused on the purported suicide note, Jocelyn's fear through the voices of her friends, her relationship with Marcy Shepard, and Earnest's debt and deceptive ways. The defense hammered on the unreliability of the fingerprint evidence and Ernest's alibi. And once again, the assistant principal, Wesley Ernest, would take the witness stand.
The question that I ask him, isn't it true, Mr. Ernest, that you will lie and deceive people when it is in your best interest? And even then, he eventually conceded, yes, I will.
Same judge, new jury. But this time, Ernest would be given more leeway to explain his answers, and it seemed the defense was gaining ground.
We left the courtroom that day. I felt someone defeated. Did you think I could be losing this? I felt that, personally, that I had let down the team.
They desperately needed a new approach. Prosecutor Nance came up with an idea at 4.15 in the morning.
A piece of evidence that we had sort of set aside throughout the first trial and all the way through the second trial could be a key component to put Mr. Ernest in a corner that he would have a hard time backing out of.
The plan was to confront Earnest about a very unusual timeline handwritten by Jocelyn, a detailed history of her life she'd been keeping as part of her therapy. It was discovered inside her home, and prosecutors were certain Wesley Earnest had altered it.
Mr. Earnest had written entries as if he was Jocelyn Earnest writing those. He would either have to deny writing that, or he would have to admit that he had done this before. He had assumed her identity, just like the killer had in the fake suicide note.
Jocelyn's mother will never forget the question Prosecutor Nance asked her former son-in-law.
Well, if you wrote on the timeline, how did you get in the house to write on it? He was looking at prosecution and he just kept talking.
He turns to the jury and with a smile on his face indicates that she had a broken window on her home. And he pantomimes with his hands how he could move that window up and enter into it. Frankly, I was shocked to, quite frankly, have a Perry Mason moment for the first time in my 15 years of prosecuting.
Could you tell, looking at the jury, that they got it? You know, I'm just hoping and praying, I'm like, please, hear every moment of this, because, you know, he's nailing his own coffin.
The second time around would be swift and deliberate.
When it came time for the verdict, we sat there holding hands, and I felt just this peace come over me. I got this, sis, don't worry. It'll work out.
Once again, Wesley Earnest was found guilty of first-degree murder. The jury recommended a sentence of life in prison plus three years, and the judge agreed.
I think it's an overwhelming sense of relief. A lot of dedicated people worked very hard to come to this day, and we're glad to see it finally here.
All the faces of Wesley Earnest hardened into one defining image, pale and resigned. Still, to his mother, he's a victim.
When you look at him now, what do you see? I see an innocent man that's behind bars that was convicted by a jury that I feel had preconceived ideas.
There's an old photo of Ernest, a joke from his days as an assistant principal that seems like an eerie prediction. The prisoner for a day is now locked away for life.
Wesley Ernest is a killer. He's a person who attempted to manipulate his wife and did so for many years. But when that stopped working and when she stood up to him, he had to remove her. And he did it in a very deliberate way. He's where he belongs.
You have to pay for it. It doesn't bring Jocelyn back. And that hole in my heart will take a long time to heal. But we'll make it. We'll make it. We'll be fine.
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