ABC NEWS ANNOUNCES TWO-HOUR '20/20' ON THE BLACK WIDOW KILLER
11 YEARS AFTER CONVICTIONS FOR MURDERING HUSBAND AND ATTEMPTING TO MURDER THE DAUGHTER SHE TRIED TO FRAME
Prime-Time Event Features Exclusive Prison Interview With Stacey Castor From ABC News Archives and Interviews With Investigators, Defense Team and Family Members of Victim David Castor
'20/20' Airs on Friday, Feb. 21 (9:00-11:00 p.m. EST), on ABC
With two husbands dying within five years of each other, Stacey Castor appeared to be a victim of terrible misfortune and circumstance. In a bizarre twist, the mother of two from upstate New York became the prime suspect in the sensational case of secrets and lies that made national headlines for the murder of her second husband by poisoning him with antifreeze, and the attempted murder of her daughter whom she tried to frame for the deaths of both husbands. Eleven years after Stacey's conviction, ABC News announced a two-hour "20/20" on the central question - could a mother really be capable of these unspeakable acts against her own family? The prime-time television event on the Black Widow killer digs deeper into how this terrible set of crimes altered lives and this community forever. The program features interviews with investigators, Stacey's defense team and family members of her second husband and victim, David Castor, as well as the exclusive jailhouse interview with Stacey with Anchor David Muir from ABC News' archives. "20/20" airs Friday, Feb. 21 (9:00-11:00 p.m. EST) on ABC.
The program includes interviews with Onondaga County Sheriff's Office Detective Dominick Spinelli and Sgt. Michael Norton, who were the detectives on the case; Onondaga County District Attorney William Fitzpatrick and former Onondaga County Chief Assistant District Attorney Christine Garvey, who prosecuted the case; Chuck Keller, Stacey's defense attorney; David Castor's sister Linda Horzempa, son David Castor, Jr., and first wife Janice Poissant Farmer; Gabriel Ramos, Keller's private investigator; WSYR News Channel 9 anchor Christie Casciano and senior reporter Jeff Kulikowsky, who reported on this case extensively and more. The program also features the exclusive interview from ABC News archives with Stacey Castor from prison by anchor David Muir, in addition to Stacey's mother Judie Eaton and daughters Ashley and Bree Wallace.
In 2000 doctors determined that Stacey's first husband, Michael Wallace, died from a heart attack, and in 2005 the coroner initially ruled that her second husband, David, killed himself by ingesting antifreeze. Detectives were suspicious about David's death because of forensic evidence and inconsistencies in Stacey's story, and as a result, placed wiretaps on her phones and monitored her movements. In 2007 investigators exhumed Michael's body, and the medical examiner determined he died, not of a heart attack, but from antifreeze poisoning. When Stacey called 911 claiming her daughter, Ashley, had poisoned herself with pills and vodka, and that there was a typed suicide note claiming responsibility for killing her dad and stepdad, authorities became suspicious that Stacey tried to kill her daughter and frame her for the deaths. Soon after, they arrested Stacey at the hospital, where Ashley was recuperating. "20/20" and Muir followed the case and trial for 18 months, obtaining exclusive access to both sides of the case as they prepared for trial. In 2009, the jury convicted Stacey of murdering her second husband, attempting to murder her own daughter, and filing a fraudulent will to inherit David's estate. The judge sentenced her to the maximum penalty of 51 ? years to life in state prison. She died in prison in 2016 from what officials ruled to be a heart attack. (Rebroadcast. ABC OAD: 2/8/19)
"20/20" is anchored by David Muir and Amy Robach. David Sloan is senior executive producer
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