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48 Hours

The Peggy Hettrick Case - Part 2

Thu, 20 Feb 2025

Description

Part two of the investigation into the murder of 37-year-old Peggy Hettrick. Her body was discovered in a field near the home of Tim Masters, and over a decade later, Masters was sentenced to life in prison for Peggy's murder. But Masters always maintained his innocence. Because of advances in forensic science, his new lawyers requested to test the DNA found on Peggy's clothing, revealing critical new evidence. “48 Hours" correspondent Susan Spencer reports. This classic "48 Hours" episode last aired on 12/24/2011. Watch all-new episodes of “48 Hours” on Saturdays, and stream on demand on Paramount+. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Transcription

Chapter 1: What is the background of the Peggy Hettrick case?

00:01 - 00:07 Unidentified Speaker 2

This special two-part edition of 48 Hours continues. Drawn to murder.

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00:08 - 00:27 Tim Masters

February 11, 1987. I was walking through a field on the way to catch a school bus. I saw a body. I didn't believe it was real. I thought it was a mannequin and that someone was playing some kind of sick joke on me.

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00:34 - 00:51 Unidentified Speaker 2

Peggy Hetrick, a woman who lived in Fort Collins, was found brutally murdered in a field. When the Fort Collins police began to investigate the case, they looked at a number of suspects. One of those suspects was a 15-year-old, Tim Masters, who lived next to the field. He had gone up to the body that morning, hadn't reported it.

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Chapter 2: Why was Tim Masters considered a suspect?

00:53 - 00:56 Eric Fisher

Tim was very introverted and very shy and very quiet. Didn't have a lot of friends.

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00:59 - 01:04 Unidentified Speaker 2

They went to his house, and they found very graphic drawings and writings, as well as a large knife collection.

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01:05 - 01:07 Interrogator

Would we bring you in here without some kind of proof?

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01:07 - 01:14 Tim Masters

Right away, they started saying, I know you did this. She's dead. We thought the right thing to do was to cooperate with the police.

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00:00 - 00:00 Eric Fisher

Tim was branded the lead suspect in a horrific sexual mutilation and murder at age 15. Tim has not had a life since age 15.

00:00 - 00:00 Unidentified Speaker 2

Through the years, they focused on Tim Masters.

Chapter 3: How was Tim Masters convicted without physical evidence?

01:32 - 01:44 Eric Fisher

I think that the lead detective, Detective Broderick in this case, was so obsessed and so convinced of Tim Masters' guilt, he was willing to do anything to get a conviction of Tim Masters in this case.

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01:46 - 01:56 Detective

The real hope was that there'd be some physical evidence. There'd be a fingerprint. There'd be something that we'd come up with that would match up with him. And that just didn't happen.

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01:57 - 02:00 Eric Fisher

He works for 10, 11 years.

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02:01 - 02:05 Unidentified Speaker 2

There were obviously other avenues that should have been explored that were not.

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00:00 - 00:00 Unidentified Speaker 2

They got an arrest warrant for Mr. Masters and charged him with first degree murder of Peggy Hetrick.

00:00 - 00:00 Eric Fisher

I really did not think Tim Masters could pull this off and leave not a single shred of physical evidence.

00:00 - 00:00 Unidentified Speaker 2

Much of the prosecution's case is expected to come from a psychologist.

00:00 - 00:00 Tim Masters

The doodles are the evidence. I never thought there was a chance in the world that they would convict me without evidence. But they did. It was just totally surreal. How could this happen? How could I end up in here for something I didn't even do?

00:00 - 00:00 Susan Spencer

After being pursued for years, Tim Masters now was in prison for life without parole.

Chapter 4: Who is Maria Liu and how did she get involved?

03:46 - 03:57 Susan Spencer

Then 36-year-old court-appointed attorney Maria Liu says that when the gigantic master's file landed on her desk in 2003, she had no idea what to think.

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03:57 - 04:03 Maria Liu

So you sort of have to unravel the mystery, basically, as to whether or not this person deserves a new trial.

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04:04 - 04:13 Susan Spencer

she hunkered down and started reading. And I didn't think he was innocent right off the bat. Then she watched those police interrogation tapes.

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04:14 - 04:22 Maria Liu

You shot the hell out of everybody. I believe it was five different police officers tag-teaming him, doing everything, good cop, bad cop, military cop, nice cop.

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00:00 - 00:00 Interrogator

You did it?

00:00 - 00:00 Interrogator

What the hell did you do?

00:00 - 00:00 Selma Eichlenbaum

I don't know what I did. I didn't do anything.

00:00 - 00:00 Maria Liu

That's when I was like, oh my God, he is innocent. And then when I met Tim in the prison, he was more focused on us proving his innocence than he was on getting out, which to me says a lot.

00:00 - 00:00 Susan Spencer

You're pretty much Tim Master's only hope at that point.

Chapter 5: What role did Dr. Richard Hammond play in the case?

07:23 - 07:28 David Wymore

When you're looking into Dr. Hammond, you're looking into a sex offense, right? Yes, sir. Okay.

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07:28 - 07:37 Susan Spencer

Dr. Hammond, a neighbor of Tim's, was arrested some years after the Hetrick murder for secretly videotaping women in his bathroom.

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07:41 - 07:53 David Wymore

This guy set up a studio to get close-up of vaginas and nipples. and you have a body in the field missing those parts.

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07:55 - 08:01 Susan Spencer

A great alternate suspect, the defense says, but his name was never mentioned in the original trial.

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00:00 - 00:00 Eric Fisher

Gotta give me the biggest sexual pervert in the history of South Fort Collins.

00:00 - 00:00 David Wymore

He is a superb suspect. Geez, that's funny. One guy was a doodler and the other guy's a sex offender. Did anybody say that?

00:00 - 00:00 Susan Spencer

And David Wymore argues that Dr. Hammond's very existence so close to the crime scene defines reasonable doubt.

00:00 - 00:00 David Wymore

They have the same alibi. Tim Masters' dad says that he's home all night in his trailer. Dr. Hammond's wife says he's home all night in the house. The difference is that Tim Masters doesn't have 300 videotapes of people's vaginas and nipples at his house, and he's also not an eye surgeon. The court has to impress on the Fort Collins police.

00:00 - 00:00 Susan Spencer

It's over. In court, Wymore presents a long list of other crucial evidence he says was withheld from the defense, and as it turns out, from prosecutors as well. It includes Broderick's notes on conversations with a former FBI profiler.

Chapter 6: How did new evidence and theories challenge the conviction?

10:07 - 10:13 Susan Spencer

And that big question of surgical skill came up with yet another expert police consulted.

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10:14 - 10:18 Maria Liu

Dr. Choi basically said it would be a hard cut for him to make, and he was a plastic surgeon.

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10:19 - 10:32 Susan Spencer

But the views of Dr. Richard Choi never surfaced in court either. Not, says former cop David Michelson, that it takes all these experts to see the obvious.

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10:32 - 10:49 Barry Goetz

It wasn't done by a boy with a D-cell flashlight in his mouth and a pocket knife. Crawl out of his window, stab a lady, circumcise her. Didn't happen. Impossible.

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00:00 - 00:00 Susan Spencer

The defense says police never revealed to either side exactly how far they went to get Masters to incriminate himself.

00:00 - 00:00 Maria Liu

Planting newspapers suggesting that they were close to finding the killer. They were actually planting his mom's obituary on his friend's truck.

00:00 - 00:00 Witness

They schemed and planned this elaborate psychological experiment on him, and he passed it.

00:00 - 00:00 Eric Fisher

This is outrageous. I strongly believe that this police department framed Tim Masters.

00:00 - 00:00 Susan Spencer

but this was equal opportunity withholding. Material wasn't turned over to the defense, but not to prosecutors either. Broderick concedes it may not look very good. So you're just sitting there listening to them say, there's this, this, this, and this, and this looks like a frame job.

Chapter 7: How does DNA evidence factor into reopening the case?

20:37 - 20:55 David Wymore

There's nothing accurate about his drawing. I think the footprints alone deserve to give him a new trial. I thought Dr. Hammond alone deserved to give him a new trial. The psychological experiment alone deserved to give him a new trial, the nondisclosure of all these things. But I never count my chickens before they hatch. You know, I got to hear it from the courts. They gave him.

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20:56 - 21:14 Susan Spencer

Because as damning as that list sounds, these hearings are far from over. The prosecution has yet to present its answers to the defense's many charges. This is, at the end of the day, a search for the truth. The bar for granting a new trial is very high. It's so hard to undo a conviction.

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21:14 - 21:15 Maria Liu

I just want them to confess.

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21:16 - 21:23 Susan Spencer

Wymore and Lew would love some new evidence to lower that bar a bit, and modern science could provide it.

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00:00 - 00:00 Tim Masters

The two individuals that carried her would have transferred their DNA onto her clothing as they carried her into the field.

00:00 - 00:00 Susan Spencer

But can investigators retrieve DNA after all this time?

00:00 - 00:00 Tim Masters

We're one month shy of 20 years, so are we still going to find the DNA? We don't know, but we're going to try.

00:00 - 00:00 Susan Spencer

With Tim Master's future hanging in the balance, the defense team is about to go halfway around the world and risk everything to find out.

00:00 - 00:00 Maria Liu

This was a very emotional case, I think, on so many levels.

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