On this date, October 24, 1996
Summary: In October 1996, Trisha Stemple’s body was found
near Highway 75 in Tulsa County, Oklahoma. Her death was briefly investigated
as a hit-and-run accident, but as the investigation progressed, the Tulsa
Police Department began to suspect that Timothy Shaun Stemple had orchestrated
the death of his wife.
Stemple was ultimately charged in her death with
First Degree Malice Aforethought Murder, Conspiracy to Commit First Degree
Murder, and Attempted First Degree Murder. At trial, the prosecution put forth
evidence that Stemple concocted a plan to murder his wife, mother of his two
children, then ages 11 and 6, and collect the proceeds of her life insurance
policy, worth almost $1,000,000.
Stemple was having an extra-marital affair with Dani
Wood. Dani Wood had a sixteen year old cousin, Terry Lee Hunt. According to
Hunt, Stemple offered him $25,000 to $50,000 to help kill Trisha (if they
collected the insurance money). Hunt recruited another person, Nathanial Helm
to assist in the plan. Helm and Hunt went to Wal-Mart where they purchased a
baseball bat and plastic wrap. The plastic wrap was wrapped around the bat to
keep the bat from getting bloody. On October 10, 1996, Hunt and Helm went to
the designated location on highway 75 and waited for Stemple and his wife to
arrive. A while later Stemple drove up and told Helm and Hunt that Trisha was
ill and he could not get her to accompany him.
Two weeks later, Stemple arranged for Hunt to drive
Stemple's pickup to a particular location on highway 75 and leave the hood up.
Stemple and Trisha arrived in their black Nissan Maxima. Stemple began working
on the truck and Trisha stood next to the truck. Hunt came up behind Trisha and
hit her in the head with the bat. The blow did not render Trisha unconscious,
so Stemple took the bat and hit her several more times. Stemple and Hunt then
placed Trisha's head in front of the front tire of the pickup and attempted to
run over her head, however, the tire would not roll over Trisha's head so her
head was pushed along the pavement. After this, Trisha tried to get up. Stemple
grabbed the bat and hit her several more times. The pair then placed Trisha's
body under the truck and drove over her chest.
After this Trisha rose up on her elbows, so Stemple
hit her again several times with the bat. Stemple then went back to the black
Nissan and drilled a hole in the front tire to make it look as if Trisha's car
had a flat. One expert testified that the hole in the tire had spiral
striations consistent with drilling. Stemple and Hunt left in the pickup, but
decided to turn around to make sure Trisha was dead. When they got back to the
spot where they left Trisha, they noticed that she had crawled into the grass
beside the road. Stemple then sped up and ran over Trisha as she lay in the
grass. Trisha's body was found later that morning, after Stemple called
reporting that she was missing.
The autopsy evaluation revealed that Trisha had
fractures to her arm, ribs, pelvis, vertebrae and skull. The medical examiner
concluded that Trisha died from blunt force trauma to the head. While in the
Tulsa County jail awaiting trial, Stemple made numerous notes including
confessions, lists of witnesses, etc. Inmates testified that Stemple tried to
get them to arrange the death of several witnesses. The inmates also testified
that Stemple gave them a copy of his confession. Included in these writings
were sample letters for witnesses Terry Hunt and Dani Wood, detailing their
involvement and exculpating him from the crime. Hunt and Wood were to be
coerced into rewriting and signing the letters by persons hired by the other
inmates.
Stemple claimed that he was at home when Trisha
left during the middle of the night. Stemple testified that he believed that
Wood was responsible for the murder of Trisha. Additionally, the prosecutor
introduced a five-minute long videotape of an interview Tulsa police officers
conducted with Stemple prior to his arrest, during which Stemple stated that he
knew “how ugly this looks for me,” summarized the evidence which he believed
the police would use against him, and eventually invoked his right to counsel.
Ultimately, the jury convicted Stemple on all three
counts. During the separate penalty-phase proceeding, the jury found the
existence of two aggravating circumstances: (1) Stemple committed the murder
for remuneration or the promise of remuneration; and (2) the murder was
especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel. The jury therefore recommended that
Stemple be sentenced to death on the murder conviction. The trial court
sentenced him in accordance with the jury’s recommendations. Hunt pled guilty
to first-degree murder and was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility
of parole.
QUOTE 1: “Today is not about
Shaun,” said Trisha’s little sister Deborah Ruddick-Bird. “Today is about justice and finality and closure for my
gorgeous sister Trisha and my family.”
Trisha’s father was out of the country on a missionary trip but a lifelong friend wrote a statement on his behalf. A portion of the statement: “Before the judgment seat of Christ the Lord will determine the eternal outcome for his soul,” wrote Morris Ruddick.
QUOTE 2: Stemple will be a man they never have to face
again.
“Today
we put a period at the end of a chapter that has held us captive for far, far
too long,” said Trisha’s sister.
QUOTE 3: They have a future without a woman they loved but
also without the man who took her from them.
“Today
we say all is well,” said Trisha’s sister. “Today
we say it is finished.”
AUTHOR: Deborah Ruddick-Bird whose sister, Trisha Jane
Ruddick Stemple was murdered by Timothy Shaun Stemple on October 24, 1996.
Timothy Shaun Stemple was executed by lethal injection in Oklahoma on March 12,
2012.
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