
The Mansion on Ocean Boulevard
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Visit gcu.edu. I know my sister would have fought.
We used to tell each other that if somebody ever tried to hurt us, that we would do everything we can to leave something behind so the other one can figure it out. I believe she was murdered.
They located a female on the property who appeared to be deceased. Her hands were tied, her feet were tied, she was naked.
You found her hanging. I did.
I guarantee you, my heart started racing. There was a message painted in black paint on the door leading to the room.
It was intriguing from the beginning. The writing on the door is the key to the case.
Max had too many injuries to be explained with a simple fall. Something happened at the top of the stairs.
You have a famous mansion and two weird and saying nothing bad could ever happen here. Here is Coronado, California, just over a bridge from San Diego.
A town of beautiful beaches, people, and homes, like this one on Ocean Boulevard. Except that since the summer of 2011, this mansion has been ground zero for a mystery.
This is a very bizarre death. There's no doubt about it.
Well, actually, there's been plenty of doubt and plenty of theories. My sister was dead.
And did a lot of things go through my mind? Yes. Secrets, both suspected and imagined.
Is it possible that other people know more than they're saying? Yes. It's certainly possible.
Beyond that, it's hard to say for sure, especially when it seems everyone has a story to tell. And those stories lead to accusations, often with zero proof.
People are going to believe what they want to believe with no evidence. Paradise Valley, Arizona was home for the Shackney family.
But the summers they spent in Coronado were special for Dina and her son Max. Max loved the beach.
He loved the water. And he used to tell me on the way to Coronado, Mommy, this is our place.
She and Max's dad, Jonah, met in 1997. We had an instant connection.
It's very rare you meet someone like that. They married in 2001, a second marriage for Jonah, who was already the father of two.
He'd gotten rich, owning a pharmaceutical company called Medicis. She went back to school to get a PhD in developmental psychology.
And then along came Max. And then along came Maxie.
He's almost to the edge.
Oh my, he did it!
How do you feel, Max Shackney?
He was an active kid who loved sports and performing for his mother and her camera.
During one of those summers in Coronado, the mansion on Ocean Boulevard was on the market. And I said, well, let's just go by and look.
They bought it in 2007. But soon there was trouble in paradise and a bitter divorce in 2009 when Max was four.
They shared custody and worked to be civil. And it wasn't long before Jonah met someone new.
Max, he told me about it, and I said, well, well, maybe I should meet her. And he said, that would be great, Mommy.
Rebecca Zahau was 32, born in Myanmar. She'd moved to the U.S.
in her 20s. You were okay with her spending time with Max? Well, Max said he had feelings for her.
He liked her. At that time, I had no concerns because I trusted that Jonah, based on our history, Max would be safe there.
And safe in Coronado, where nothing bad is supposed to happen. Tell the operator what's going on.
Hello? July 11, 2011, Max was staying with his dad and Rebecca. Dina was in Coronado 2 at a home just down the street.
That's when Jonah called her. He said, Dina, you've got to get here right away.
As Rebecca explained it to police, Jonah had been at the gym. Six-year-old Max was home with her.
Rebecca said she heard a crash and found Max on the floor near the staircase. The mansion's heavy chandelier had fallen to the floor next to him.
Rebecca said Max wasn't breathing, and she started CPR. Rebecca's 13-year-old sister, Zena, who was visiting, called 911.
My sister is trying to read yesterday a boy. I'm sorry, she can't breathe.
Police and paramedics arrived within minutes. Jonah called Dina from the hospital.
And he tells me, thank God that she was able to give him CPR. I think to myself, thank God, thank you, thank God.
He's going to be okay. He's going to be okay.
Max was unconscious. Dina and Jonah took up a vigil at the hospital.
Jonah's brother, Adam, flew in from his home in Tennessee. You came out to support Jonah? Correct.
How well had you known Max? I knew Max well. He was a really wonderful kid.
At Max's bedside, Jonah asked one of the doctors for his prognosis.
Dr. Peterson looked at him and said, well, I don't know.
I don't know.
I'm not sure if he's going to walk or talk.
That sounds like about the worst news you can get.
But it wasn't real.
I would have bet my life on it at that time that Max was going to be okay.
There was more bad news on the way.
My honor, emergency. What are you reporting? Yeah, I got a girl hung herself in a guest house.
What had happened in that house? They located a female on the property. The victim's hands and feet were bound.
I guarantee you, my heart started racing. Who was this victim?
Soon, detectives would be investigating not just one puzzling death here,
but two.
It was the worst shock
in probably my
life. The early morning hours of July 13, 2011.
As family members kept a vigil by the hospital bed of six-year-old Max Shackney,
a breathless man called 911.
My honor, emergency. What are you reporting? Yeah, I got a girl on her cell.
A breathless man called 911.
Once again, police raced through the streets of quiet Coronado Island.
And once again, their destination was the mansion on Ocean Boulevard.
Jonah's girlfriend, Rebecca, was staying there.
Jonah's brother, Adam, had spent the night in the guest house. You wake up, you walk out.
Tell me what you see. A woman hanging.
At the time, I didn't necessarily think to myself, oh my goodness, she's bound or whatever, but just Rebecca's hanging.
Naked, bound hand and foot, Rebecca Zahau was hanging by the neck from a second floor balcony.
I said, I guarantee you, my heart started racing. This is actually happening.
Okay, how old is she?
I'd say about 30.
30? Okay. When was the last time we saw her?
Last night. Even as he called 911, Adam says he thought she was dead.
But you tried to do something. I tried to do something, absolutely, and it was not, never even occurred to me that somebody would look at this as like a crime scene or something like that.
I mean, that was the furthest thing from my mind. So you cut her body down? Yeah.
And? Started CPR. To no avail.
To no avail. When the coronary units arrived at the scene, they located a female on the property who appeared to be deceased.
Rebecca's sister, Mary Zahau Lohner, was hundreds of miles away in Missouri when her husband Doug came to her work to bring her the awful news. I remember him saying, Rebecca's gone.
And I said, what do you mean? I just talked to her last night. In that phone call, Rebecca told her sister about what happened to Max.
It was the same story she told police. She said she was in the bathroom and she heard a loud noise, a loud crash, and when she came out, Max was there on the floor and the chandelier was close to him and he was unconscious.
How'd she describe Jonah during those days? That he was upset and it broke her heart to see him upset. They'd met when Rebecca worked for an eye doctor, and Jonah was a patient.
He came in for an appointment, and they started talking, and next thing you know, they're going out. Apparently, yes.
You are making an expression that makes me think that you thought that wasn't a particularly good idea. I never approved of the relationship, if that's what you're asking me.
Because? First of all, he is almost twice her age. Her free-spirited sister fell for Jonah anyway.
They seem happy. They seem in love.
I think my sister loved him in her way. To her, she was somewhat in awe of him, I think, to a certain extent.
Mary says that while Rebecca and Max were close, Rebecca gave the impression she didn't get along well with Max's mom. And when Max had his fall, Mary said, Rebecca worried how Dina would react.
She was upset about it, and she said, Dina is going to kill me. She said, Dina's going to kill me.
That's correct. Rebecca seemed upset, stressed.
You get any sense that she blamed herself for what had happened? She seemed stressed, but not inappropriately so. Because everybody was stressed.
Everybody was stressed, and I actually sympathized with her, and maybe even mentioned that of of just it's got to be tough on you. How terrible.
Soon, Rebecca's death became national news, in large part because of details revealed by sheriff's investigators. The victim's hands and feet were bound and she was completely nude.
It has yet to be determined if this will become a criminal matter or will remain as a death investigation. In other words, did Rebecca hang herself, or was someone else involved? A neighbor reported hearing screams the night before.
Was that Rebecca? There was a scream that somebody heard. You hear that? Well, my windows were closed.
I did not hear a scream. Meanwhile at the hospital, Dina says she was only focused on Max.
She kept watch by his bedside, willing him to open his eyes. It was Saturday, July 16th, five days after Max's fall.
And I I noticed that his EEG was just flat. And I thought, I thought the machine was broken.
And I'm shaking the machine. And I'm thinking, it's not working.
It's not functioning. I'm shaking.
And then I'm saying, you know, the EEG machine's not working. The EEG is not working.
But it was working. Six-year-old Max was gone.
And Dina was devastated. I mean, it was the worst shock in probably my life.
A mother in shock and in mourning, but also questioning. How exactly had Max's fatal fall happened? Others asked what led to Rebecca's hanging.
The mystery at this mansion was only getting deeper.
A rope, knives, a curious phrase at the scene. There was a message painted in black paint on the door leading to the room.
To some, the most curious thing of all, the police theory of what really happened.
This is a very unusual circumstance. AMC Plus.
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Just a few days later, Rebecca Zaha was laid to rest in Missouri. Back in Coronado, the mansion on Ocean Boulevard was the focus of overflowing numbers of both questions and rumors.
There's roughly 200 years of experience in the Sheriff's Homicide Unit. They all agree this is a very unusual circumstance.
Rebecca was found hanging, naked, bound hand and foot. If it was suicide, it looked like a highly unusual one.
And remember, Rebecca was in the house when Max Shackney fell. Right now we don't see any connection between the two incidents.
The Sheriff's Department investigated for two months. Coronado held its breath.
Then, at a news conference, Sheriff Bill Gore laid out the facts as his investigators saw them. Was Max's death a homicide? The answer is no.
It was a tragic accident. Was Rebecca's death a homicide? Again, the answer is no.
it was a suicide. Sergeant Dave Nemeth said the evidence told a sad tale, in which one tragedy led to another.
When Rebecca checked her voicemail just before 1 a.m., Sergeant Nemeth said she heard a grim message from her boyfriend, Max's dad, Jonah. That message that was left on her phone was to inform Rebecca of Maxie's grave condition and imminent death.
Did Rebecca blame herself for the child's severe injuries? And then take her own life? The sergeant showed photos from inside the bedroom
where Rebecca spent her final moments.
There was a rope tied to the bed.
The other end had been looped around Rebecca's neck.
There were also two knives in the bedroom,
apparently used to cut the rope.
Everything was swabbed for DNA.
DNA profiles were only from Rebecca.
So what about Rebecca's hands and feet being tied? Didn't that show another person was involved? Sergeant Nemeth said it did not. We conducted an experiment to determine if it is possible for a person to secure their hands behind their back in the fashion we found.
They even showed a video demonstration. And while tying one's hands in a suicide is uncommon, the medical examiner said it's not unheard of.
People do it. The thinking is that they bind themselves so that they won't change their mind midway through.
It's unusual at first glance, but it does happen. The location of the apparent suicide note was also uncommon.
There was a message painted in black paint on the door leading to the room. I am going to show you a picture of the door.
We will not be revealing what the message said. The investigation left some people unsatisfied.
None more so than Rebecca's family. I know in my heart she did not commit suicide.
Also unsatisfied, Dina Shackney. Sheriff's investigators illustrated their findings with this graphic.
They said Max was riding his scooter on the second floor landing, somehow fell over the railing, then hit or grabbed the chandelier and took it down with him. That sounds to me like, is Maxim sort of a stuntman, Bruce Lee?
That's ridiculous.
Why is that ridiculous? He's six years old.
Kids that age do crazy things.
When I was seven years old, I jumped off the roof of the garage
holding an umbrella as a parachute.
No, no, I'm absolutely positive.
He was a very smart six-year-old.
He was very athletic. He was very coordinated.
And he was a very careful person, a thoughtful person. Dina didn't just insist something wasn't right.
She opened her checkbook and hired her own experts, including Dr. Judy Mellinek, a respected forensic pathologist who reviewed the autopsy report and photos and who also disagreed with the official conclusion.
Max had too many injuries to be explained with a simple accidental fall. Dr.
Milinek thought Max's injuries indicated he'd been assaulted before he fell. What's more, she questioned whether the fall itself could have happened, as the sheriff's department described it.
Measurements showed the railing was
32 inches high. Six-year-old Max was only 45 inches tall.
His center of gravity was too low. Even on the Razor scooter, his center of gravity is too low to go over that banister.
It all pointed to a chilling alternate scenario. According to Dr.
Melanick, someone assaulted Max, and then he somehow went over the banister. In other words, this was a homicide.
I would much rather have them to say, you know what, this was an accident, and here's why. No mom wants to hear that her son was a victim of a homicide.
And if someone killed Max, Dr. Mellanek's theory focused on one person.
I think Rebecca was somehow involved, but how much she was involved and to what degree she took that to the grave. That alarming suspicion was only the beginning, because it wasn't just Dina who was investigating.
Rebecca's sister Mary was equally convinced Rebecca would never hurt Max or kill herself out of guilt. Two women coping with terrible tragedies, neither willing to accept the sheriff's department's conclusions.
Mary was about to make some incredible accusations, and she wouldn't back down. Could Rebecca have been murdered? Some deep bruising and internal bleeding,
which couldn't be explained by the hanging.
But could be explained by what?
A struggle.
A twist was coming.
Did you have anything to do with Rebecca's death?
Absolutely not. The official investigation was over.
The crime scene tape and evidence markers long gone. That said, an unofficial search for clues was just beginning.
Online message boards buzzed with theories from the far-fetched to the implausible. Through it all, Rebecca's sister Mary didn't buy the official finding of suicide.
Was she fragile? Was she easily upset? Is she the kind of person who would fall apart after a crisis? Not at all. So when detectives said that voicemail, the one Jonah Shackney left for Rebecca with the grim news about Max, may have caused Rebecca to hang herself, Mary wasn't having it.
I was not about to have my sister's name smeared and the world remember her as this crazy woman who committed her suicide because of a phone call.
Was all this just about how Rebecca would be remembered?
After her death came some revelations, things even Mary hadn't known about.
Like in 2005 in California, when Rebecca didn't show up for work and just vanished.
Her boyfriend reported her missing to the local police department. Rebecca turned up a few days later, saying it was just a misunderstanding.
You're persuaded that if she did sort of mysteriously disappear back then for a day or two, it was something that she willingly did and not some sign of mental fragility. I really don't know what happened at that time.
Now she said she needed to know how Rebecca died. She had Rebecca's body exhumed, and media-friendly forensic pathologist Dr.
Cyril Wecht performed a second autopsy. His conclusion? Homicide.
Was Rebecca murdered? Her family thought so,
and eventually the case found its way to this man. It was intriguing from the beginning.
San Diego attorney Keith Greer. Dr.
Weck did identify some deep bruising and internal bleeding,
which couldn't be explained by the hanging. Wait one sec.
It couldn't be explained by the hanging, but could be explained by what? By somebody knocking her down from behind and hog tying her. Something along those lines.
A struggle. A struggle.
Plus, Greer says, the force of falling nine feet from the balcony should have caused more severe injuries to Rebecca's neck. Greer, like Dr.
Wecht, believed someone killed Rebecca and then placed her body at the end of the rope. And he began to develop a theory as to who.
The writing on the door is the key to the case. Remember the message painted on the bedroom door? Sheriff's investigators initially declined to reveal what it said.
Greer eventually found out. The message scrawled in black acrylic paint read, she saved him.
Can you save her? Greer believed the message was not written by Rebecca. It was written about her.
What did she say? She didn't save Max. She saved Max.
She did save Max. At the time, you have to look at this in context.
Remember, Rebecca said she did CPR on Max after he fell.
So at the time those words were written, Max was still alive.
Max was alive.
And maybe because of her efforts.
It wasn't maybe because of her efforts.
It was exactly because of her efforts.
And that's why it's the key to the case.
Because I know whoever committed the murder knew that Rebecca had saved Max.
It was, he said, a small circle, mostly family.
I had an eyewitness who put Dina Shackney at the scene of the murder that evening.
Dina, the grief-stricken mom.
Could she have blamed Rebecca and then sought revenge?
Remember, Mary recalled her sister saying, Dina's going to kill me. Where were you when Rebecca Zahau died? I don't know what time Rebecca Zahau died during that time, but I was the hospital all night.
In 2013, Keith Greer filed a civil wrongful death lawsuit on behalf of the Zahau family. Based on his eyewitness, he named Dina as a defendant, along with her twin sister, Nina.
There was also a third defendant, the man who called 911, Jonah's brother, Adam Shackney. Did you have anything to do with Rebecca's death? Absolutely not.
Greer disagreed. He pointed to those knots tied around Rebecca's wrists and ankles.
Figuring them out in the first place is really hard. Tying them, almost impossible.
Greer believed whoever tied the knots had to be an expert, possibly a sailor. And Adam Schackney worked on the Mississippi River as a tugboat captain.
When he ties things off, he uses a figure eight and then closes it with a single hitch or two. Guess what knots are tied on both her legs and her hands? Figure eights tied off with a single hitch or two.
Sheriff's investigators had questioned Adam extensively after Rebecca's death.
You didn't hold anything back from investigators?
Nothing.
You helped them to the extent that you could?
Yeah, exhaustively.
You thought you had nothing to hide?
I knew I had nothing to hide.
And when investigators determined there was no evidence placing Adam at the scene. They cleared you.
They did. Did you think this was over at that point? Yeah, I did.
It wasn't over. Rebecca's sister was determined to hold someone accountable.
I'm guessing that somebody said to you that filing a lawsuit, a civil lawsuit,
to find answers in a criminal matter is generally an extremely unsatisfying way of pursuing justice. That may be, but my only recourse was the lawsuit.
Soon they would start to get answers, just not the ones they expected. Where was Dina?
The night of Rebecca's death? Powerful new video evidence and the DNA evidence. Where was it? Adam Shackney admits he cut Rebecca down.
And there's no DNA? Zero. Own a 2020 or newer car or truck that's been in for repairs under warranty.
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Cancel anytime through Apple under Profile Settings. Seven years after the death of her son, Max,
Dina Shackney lived alone in the Arizona home
she once shared with her family.
How are you even standing upright today?
Max, my son, my love for him was so great.
We were a perfect fit. We were lucky.
I still feel lucky. Even though he's gone? Yeah.
In the years following Max's death, Dina continued to investigate and hired a woman named Tara Schneider. You're convinced that Max died not as the result of an accident, but a murder? Yes, homicide.
Tara has no law enforcement background. She calls herself an intelligence analyst.
She and Dina have floated several theories over the years. The current theory? Whoever killed Max, it was not Rebecca Zahau.
These days, their suspicion is focused on information from a neighbor that's never been verified. A story of a wild party at the mansion the night before Max's fall.
He has not been interviewed by the police and he has not come forward. But what connection it might have to Max's death, you have no idea what that is.
I don't, but I think it should be explored. She said police never spoke with the neighbor, but we did.
And he doesn't remember anything about a party. And Max's dad, Jonah Shackney, who was in the house that night, told us there was no party.
Jonah says he never doubted the official investigation, but wanted to rebut the theories offered by Dina and others. His lawyers hired the highly regarded investigative firm Kroll.
The resulting report says, The evidence is consistent with an accidental, tragic fall. And there is no evidence of foul play, malice, or other non-accidental occurrence.
How many people said to you, you need to let this go and move on? Many. So many.
Even if she'd wanted to move on, it really wasn't possible. Because Dina, remember, was being sued by the family of Rebecca Zahau, who blamed Dina in part for Rebecca's death.
Through it all, Dina stuck to her story that she'd been at Max's bedside at the hospital the night Rebecca died. Even though the Zahao's attorney, Keith Greer, had an eyewitness willing to testify that he saw Dina outside the mansion that night.
And this eyewitness was adamant. He was very clear, no doubt about it.
And turned out to be dead bang wrong. And turned out to be wrong.
In April 2017, after four years of litigation, this security camera video came to light. It's from the hospital where Max Shachnai was being treated, the same night Rebecca Zahau died.
Clearly visible, Dina Shachnai. At some point you look at that footage from the hospital and you realize I'm wrong and
my witness is wrong. Dina wasn't there.
She was at the hospital provably. Absolutely.
I got mad.
I got really mad. Greer called a press conference to publicly eat some crow.
When these pictures
come out though you can't refute them. He removed Dina from the lawsuit along with her sister Nina.
And the Zahal family attorney apologized to you. Was that enough? He made a public apology
Thank you. Was that enough? He made a public apology, and I would say that not as many people saw the public apology as who saw continuous accusations against us.
Greer pushed forward anyway, with just one defendant, Adam Shackney. That says to me, this is some scattershot attempt, and you are suing everybody that comes into your line of sight looking for a sympathetic jury.
That's it. And a lot of people looked at it that way.
Why shouldn't that shatter the credibility of the rest of your case? I think the reality of it is that we always had Adam involved all through the process. In the lawsuit, Greer outlined quite a detailed and unsubstantiated narrative.
He argued Rebecca was killed not to avenge Max, but instead during a sexual assault. Greer's theory is that it began when Rebecca stepped out of the shower and found Adam in her bedroom watching her.
She then gets uncomfortable and tries to escape.
She screams for help about 11.30 that night.
Greer says that explains the screams heard by a neighbor.
Right after that, to silence her, Adam hits her on the back of the head,
knocks her at least partially unconscious. Then he has time to think and he grabs the black paint and he paints this phrase on the door.
She saved him. Can you save her?
It's not a good thing. unconscious.
Then he has time to think. He grabs the black paint and he paints this phrase on the door.
She saved him. Can you save her? If I'm going to kill somebody and try to make it look like a suicide, I'm not going to write a cryptic phrase behind.
I'm going to write a phrase that says, I'm sorry, I'm guilty, I did it. It wasn't staged to be a suicide.
Even Greer says evidence placing Adam at the scene is weak. Adam Shackney have any marks or scrapes or cuts on him that would suggest he'd been in a struggle with someone? None.
None. Same with Adam's DNA.
It's pretty hard to get rid of your DNA. Hard to get rid of DNA.
All right. Adam Shackney admits that that morning he cut Rebecca down.
He loosened the ropes on her wrist to check her pulse. He gave her mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
He gave CPR pumps to her chest. And there's no DNA.
And how much DNA and how many fingerprints are found on the knife, the rope, her body? How much? None. Zero.
Zero. Zero Adam's, that is.
Rebecca's DNA and fingerprints were everywhere. According to Greer, that means Adam, who had no criminal history, knew exactly how to wipe down the scene, somehow removing his own fingerprints and DNA, but leaving just Rebecca's.
Of course, it could also mean that Adams simply wasn't there when Rebecca died, which is exactly what law enforcement came to believe. I'm guessing that if you walked into court on any case, an opposing counsel said, there is no evidence here, there is no fingerprints, and there is no DNA, and that is the proof of the case that I am bringing.
You would think to yourself, I got a ground ball here. The absence of evidence isn't the evidence of absence.
And so we know it's murder because it's wiped down. We know it's not suicide.
Would a jury agree? Greer had to prove Adam Shackney was somehow responsible for Rebecca's death, that his own actions made him liable. In a wrongful death civil case, the standard is more likely than not, a significantly lower bar than beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the standard in a criminal case.
It is, however, still a challenge, and when the case went to trial, Keith Greer would be up against a top-notch defense team.
Do you feel overmatched?
I was so outgunned, it was pathetic.
Did you attack her?
No.
Did you sexually assault her?
No.
Did you tie those knots on her body?
No.
Would a jury believe him? The plaintiff's attorney, he's got a good imagination. Adam Shackney says it's simple.
He had nothing to do with the death of Rebecca Zahau. Were you present when Rebecca died? No.
Did you attack her? No. Did you sexually assault her? No.
Did you tie those knots on her body? No. Are those the kind of knots that only a sailor or somebody who worked around boats in the water would know? Uh, no, those are common knots..
Sheriff's investigators found no evidence Adam was present when Rebecca died, and they cleared him. That didn't stop Rebecca's family from suing in civil court.
The lawsuit, the long string of accusations. What do you think is going on here? It's denial.
It's they don't want it to be seen that their sister committed suicide. We ask Rebecca's sister Mary about that.
A lot of times families do not want to admit that someone committed suicide because they blame themselves for not maybe having seen the signs. Is that what you're doing here? Nope.
And I have been accused of that multiple times, including the sheriff's department. Is it possible that Rebecca was depressed and you missed it? No.
In March 2018, the wrongful death lawsuit began in San Diego. Defending Adam was Dan Webb, a former U.S.
attorney and a veteran of many courtrooms. There'll be no evidence that shows that Adam Shacknaugh had anything to do with the death of Rebecca Sahal.
In particular, no DNA or fingerprints from Adam were found at the death scene. Plaintiff's attorney Keith Greer called several experts, who testified that the lack of physical evidence could show Adam had cleaned up after himself.
There was nothing on the doorknobs whatsoever, as far as prints. Again, that's consistent with it being wiped down? Yes.
And a handwriting expert who looked at that message on the door. The writing on the door is more comports with Adam than it does with Rebecca.
Greer also claimed Rebecca had been sexually assaulted with a knife prior to her murder. His expert testified a steak knife found in the bedroom had her blood on the handle.
Greer said the sheriff's department overlooked that evidence. That's nowhere in any of the sheriff's records.
They never considered that. They never analyzed that.
The defense called a forensic technician who testified she did find the blood on the knife and with it a simple explanation. A recent cut on Rebecca's right hand.
And when Greer asked her if the blood could have come from a sexual assault. I didn't see any evidence of that.
No evidence. A point the defense hammered home.
I saw no fingerprint evidence that was identified or directed towards Adam Shacklin. Of all the items I tested, he was excluded on all the items.
Adam's brother Jonah took the stand. He called Rebecca's death unfathomable, but said Adam was not responsible.
Is there anything that Adam's ever done in his life that would cause you to believe that he ever would have done the acts that he's accused of in this case? Never anything. It's inconceivable.
Adam took the stand, too. Did you hit Rebecca on the head? I never hit Rebecca on the head, or anywhere else for that matter.
And then did you devise this scheme to try and cover up your wrongdoing
by painting the saying on the door and making it look like she had been hanged by someone else?
Absolutely positively not.
The case went to the jury.
Do you feel confident as deliberations began?
I felt we could possibly win very convincingly. went to the jury.
Do you feel confident as deliberations began?
I felt we could possibly win very convincingly.
Less than four hours later, a verdict.
I sat down next to Mary and said, Mary, I'm sorry, this is probably not good news.
This was it, a decision.
And even Keith Greer would be in for quite a plot twist.
Number one, did Adam Shackney touch Rebecca Zahow before Rebecca Zahow's death?
With the intent to harm her, the answer is yes.
Number two, did that touching cause the death of Rebecca Zahow?
The answer is yes.
Yes, meaning that the jury found Adam Shackney responsible for Rebecca Zau's death. I just broke down.
I was just like, okay, I'm not crazy. I'm not the only one who believes that Adam murdered my sister.
That's not quite what the jury said. Finding someone liable in a civil case is not the same as finding them guilty of murder.
What's more, the verdict in this case did not have to be unanimous, and it wasn't. Nine jurors found Adam responsible, three did not.
The jury did award the Zahau family $5 million. Courtrooms are supposed to be a place where justice is dispensed.
Was this about justice? No, it wasn't. Since this wasn't a criminal case, Adam didn't go to jail.
He returned home to Tennessee and filed a motion for a new trial, which was denied in January 2019. Then in February, Adam's insurance company and Rebecca's family reached a settlement of $600,000, and the case was dismissed.
After the civil trial, the sheriff's department took a fresh look at Rebecca's death. Eight months later, that review also concluded that Rebecca died by suicide.
Dina Shackney would like to see authorities reinvestigate her son's case.
I think it's the right thing to do. Do I think it will happen? I really don't know.
How does a mother ever truly accept the tragic loss of a child?
The ripples keep on spreading to this day, in a place where nothing bad was supposed to happen. Deadline is sponsored by Capital One.
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