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Dateline Sunday: Freddie and Sherry Chason

Medicine Drug Pills on Platephoto © 2010 epSos .de | more info (via: Wylio)
Freddie and Sherry Chason were happily married couple by the accounts of all those who knew them. They were married for more than twenty years, and Freddie was known to call his wife “Ms. Sherry.”  His friends said they never heard him raise his voice to her…so what happened in 2008 was a big mystery.  Sherry was a nurse and worked 12 hour shifts in a Tennessee hospital.  Because Freddie snored, they slept in separate bedrooms.

Sherry Chason tells Dateline NBC Sunday night that she last saw her husband watching TV on Thursday night before she retired to bed. She said she clearly remembered him eating onion dip and drinking a soda as she said goodnight and retired to bed.  On Friday morning, Sherry says she hollered to Freddie as she was “fixing to go out the door”.  I hollered and said, “I’m gone, Freddie.  He didn’t answer, I heard Freddie snoring, but I heard the alarm turn on right before I went out the door.”

Read moreI immediately find it odd that she is talking to Freddie without knowing if he is awake or not.  What kind of relationship did these two have?

Sherry worked a 12 hour shift Friday, and Freddie was again in his own room according to Sherry, and she said when she came in at 8 PM, “Freddie was asleep… to my knowledge.”  Kate Snow asked, “Did you go in and say hello.”  Sherry says he was snoring and “I didn’t go wake him up or anything.”

“To my knowledge?”  Notice the pause?  Why didn’t she tell us the first time, “When I came home, I heard him snoring.”  Snoring appears as an afterthought, doesn’t it? It’s notable.

You would think Freddie would be up at 8 PM, wouldn’t you?  He wasn’t sick or dying, and he was only 52 years old, so why was he in bed all the time?  It oddly doesn’t seem to phase Sherry.  From what I gathered on Dateline NBC, Freddie even owned a business, so how come it was so normal for him to be sleeping all the time?  This flags me.

On Saturday morning, Freddie hadn’t gotten up and she says, “… he had not gotten up and I didn’t hear an alarm or anything…. which seemed a little unusual to me. I was going across the dining room to his bedroom, and I hollered, ‘Hey Freddie, I thought you were going to get up’ and when I rounded the corner into the room, that’s when I found Freddie, and I called 911.

Yet to 911, Sherry says, “Yes ma’am…I just went in to check on my husband because he sounded funny, and he’s all swoll up and he’s got something coming out of his mouth and…I don’t know what’s wrong with him, but he’s got something wrong.”  Dateline cuts the call and then you hear Sherry in a totally different demeanor say, “Can you hear that–that’s him breathing!”

She is a nurse, mind you, and she wants the 911 dispatcher to hear how he is breathing? I find this very odd.  I also find her change in demeanor striking.

When Kate Snow says, “You’re a nurse (Sherry laughs and says “Yeah, “), when you saw that, what went through your head?”  I thought he had a stroke, maybe or something because of his high blood pressure. I didn’t really know.”

I would think it is not common for something to come out of your mouth if you had a stroke, and a nurse would know that…

Yet in the 911 call Sherry continues, “I come out of the bathroom and I ran in there and I was going, ‘What’s wrong with you?'” It’s a completely different story than what she told 911.

In Sherry’s account to Dateline, she said she didn’t hear the alarm go off, and she was “going across the dining room” when she hollered at Freddie, “I thought you were going to get up.”  She doesn’t talk about hearing anything “funny”.  Yet in the 911 call, Sherry says she came out of the bathroom and ran in there going ‘what’s wrong with you’? because Freddie sounded “funny.” 

These are two very different accounts, and strongly suggests she doesn’t have a true memory that morning or she wouldn’t give us to very different stories.  This is very telling to me.

It was later discovered through toxicology reports that Freddie died from taking a diabetes drug that put him into a coma, and he wasn’t known to have diabetes.  He was on life support and it didn’t take but a couple of days before Sherry wanted it removed.

Sherry said, “I was afraid he was going to die…and I was afraid he was going to live……..and be a vegetable.”  Notice the pause in her speech?  And how the thoughts trail after that?  If you are afraid someone is going to be a vegetable, you can take time to make the right decision, can’t you?  This statement bothers me.

Sherry says, “Anybody would know there was something really badly wrong, but I didn’t ever suspect what was really wrong come to find out.” This is a very odd statement.

I do not believe Sherry Chason’s story.    She seems to have no care in the world to figure out what happened to Freddie, either.  If he ingested these diabetes drugs that were found in his system, was it her error?  Did she ever bring that drug to her house from her mom’s house (as we know that is the drug her mom took)? Could she have messed up his drugs as she was the one who dispensed them?  

Most people would be devastated and would have recounted their steps 1000 times. They would have questioned if they did something by accident, but not Sherry.  Yet we know she had access to this drug because her mom took it for her diabetes.  And if she didn’t do it, what on earth happened?  You would think Sherry would want to know, but we don’t see that side of Sherry. If she didn’t do it, and he didn’t have access to the drug, she should wonder if someone ELSE tried to murder him, but she doesn’t care about that, either, apparently.  She seems quite content accepting that she doesn’t know what happened.  Most wives wouldn’t rest until they figured out what went wrong.

Sherry also is missing anger. If you are accusing me of killing my loved one, I am going to be angry and upset that you think I violated someone I loved, but we don’t see any of that either.  Nothing from where I sit makes sense.

Something is very fishy, if you ask me!  A jury, however, did not convict Sherry Chason.  She is a free woman still trying to clear her name…

Expression of the Day

Brian Gets Scared of the Cameraphoto © 2004 Kevin Lawver | more info (via: Wylio)

James Henslee 911 call

Police released James Henslee’s 911 call. In the call, James tells police that he called home on his break and continued calling for 40 minutes before he left to go home to find out if his wife was okay because she didn’t answer.

Read moreI find this tidbit interesting. How many people have called home to a loved one who didn’t answer? Do you often panic and leave work within 40 minutes? Most people will typically wait a couple of hours or call neighbors. I find James time period of concern quite short.

There had to be other days where she was doing something where she couldn’t hear the phone ring and didn’t answer. One plausible scenario is that she went to get the dog off the chain and started talking to a neighbor. That could easily happen, couldn’t it? Why did he rush home this day?

In this interview with WNDU, James says, ““My first initial thought, someone she knows must have stopped by and she must have gone to town or something real quick and she figured she’d be back because she knows I’m home by lunch.”  

He doesn’t think about that until after he comes home? Obviously, from that statement, he believed Amy left the house at times when he was at work, so why the concern so instant on this day?  Why couldn’t he wait until lunch time? 

In the 911 call, I am surprised James doesn’t stress to the dispatcher that Amy has been missing for 6 and a half hours when he calls. This is notable. Most people would say, hey look, I’ve looked everywhere. I’ve called all of her friends, I’ve driven to town. I’ve waited 6 hours! Something is wrong. Instead when the dispatcher says call her friends, the first time he says, “Alright…” The second time he tells dispatchers that Amy doesn’t associate with many people.  There are two oddities here.

First, James doesn’t tell the dispatcher that he drove down to town to look for Amy.  Why?  This is notable. In his WNDU interview, he said, “I took a cruise up town and still nothing and that’s when I came back and she still wasn’t here and I was starting to get a little worried.” 

Second, James says his wife didn’t “associate with many people” to the dispatcher in the 911 call, yet in this interview he told us how outgoing and well liked Amy was.   He said, “Everybody loved me and my wife.”

You can’t have it both ways…

Listen to how James inflects his voice when he says, “I don’t know if she left with somebody….”   I find his inflection odd…It’s a hot spot for me.

When the dispatcher says, “Does she have a cell phone you can try calling her on?” James says “No”.  Why doesn’t he say to the police, and oh yeah, she left her purse?  Did he not know it at this point, or did he discover that right away?  I’d be curious to ask family if they knew at that point because that is critical information for the police. If she doesn’t have her purse, she likely won’t have much money to go or do anything, which if James is worried about her, I think he’d want to share this, if he knew at this point.

Essentially, he should be saying, “Don’t tell me to go look for her — I already did!”  But we don’t hear this from James, ironically.

In this video, James just said something that really flags me.  His wife has been missing for three days. The reporter asks James why he wants to take a polygraph and he says, “To rule me out and to get the person…or to find out whatever happened to the wife and the mother of my kids.”

To get “the person”?  How did he know that a person was involved?  How come that was his first conclusion when he knew she left the house, locked the door and took her coat–which all seems voluntary.

Right now, there are many red flags in James’ behavior that need further investigation in my eyes… He is not being forthright with people, but what he is hiding, it could be a multitude of things.

Amy Henslee Laid to Rest: James Speaks at Her Funeral

I notice a particularly odd behavior of James during the speech he gives at his wife’s funeral yesterday, and I can’t help but wonder, does James have a cold? 

If you watch James speak, he has a rhythmic pattern of saying a sentence and then sniffling — from the first sentence he says to the very last. I’ve never seen this before.

I watched closely to see if he was having trouble reading his eulogy, because of tears, or if he wiped away any tears, but neither happen.  Tears would likely cause the eyes to well up and would make reading a eulogy difficult, but I don’t see James struggling with that.  Also, with tears, you can’t hold sniffles back so precisely as to wait to finish each sentence, can you? They congest you up, cause you to drip and pause at inopportune times. Most people use a kleenex, or sniffle, but the sniffle isn’t so perfectly timed.

Do you think this is odd behavior?

Furthermore, I don’t see any stress in James’ forehead. I don’t see oblique eyebrows either. If anyone sees any close-up photos of James from this service, please let me know. I would like to see if there are truly tears…or if he has a cold…

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What was the worst lie someone told you this week?  Are most lies you encounter benign or hurtful?