Dear Reader:
The book you are about to read is the latest bestseller from the St. Martins True Crime Library, the imprint The New York Times calls the leader in true crime! Each month, we offer you a fascinating account of the latest, most sensational crime that has captured the national attention. St. Martins is the publisher of John Glatts riveting and horrifying SECRETS IN THE CELLAR , which shines a light on the man who shocked the world when it was revealed that he had kept his daughter locked in his hidden basement for 24 years. In the Edgar-nominated WRITTEN IN BLOOD , Diane Fanning looks at Michael Petersen, a Marine-turned-novelist found guilty of beating his wife to death and pushing her down the stairs of their homeonly to reveal another similar death from his past. In the book you now hold, HER DEADLY WEB , Diane Fanning investigates a former nurse and the violent deaths of her two husbands.
St. Martins True Crime Library gives you the stories behind the headlines. Our authors take you right to the scene of the crime and into the minds of the most notorious murderers to show you what really makes them tick. St. Martins True Crime Library paperbacks are better than the most terrifying thriller, because its all true! The next time you want a crackling good read, make sure its got the St. Martins True Crime Library logo on the spineyoull be up all night!
Charles E. Spicer, Jr.
Executive Editor, St. Martins True Crime Library
To Ed Dossett, Dave Leath, and all who loved them
CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1
The humidity was rising and not a single speck of blue could be seen in the cloud-covered sky as Raynella Dossett Leath turned into the driveway of her farm near Knoxville, Tennessee, on March 13, 2003. She drove past the family vegetable patch, where newly planted onion sets thrust fresh green sprouts up through the dark soil.
She continued on past an outbuilding to the house shed called home for nearly twenty years. In the time she lived beneath its roof, shed lost a husband and a son; raised one daughter to adulthood and marriage; and now prepared for the high school graduation of her third child.
Stepping on the porch, unlocking the closed door and crossing the threshold, she entered a lifeless dwelling. David Leath, a barber who had been her husband of ten years, lay dead in the marital bed.
She picked up the receiver of the telephone on the table beside his body and punched in 911.
The emergency dispatcher answered the incoming call at 11:23 that morning.
County 911.
Help me! Help me! Raynella shrieked, choking on her words.
Maam, where are you?
Please help me! she yelled as she struggled to breathe.
Maam, whats going on?
Mymy husband shot himselfthreeuhthree-oh-three-one Solway. Hurry!
Okay, where is your husband?
Hes still in the bed. Please hurry!
Maam
Im going to vomit.
Maam?
Raynella uttered wordless shrieks and moans.
Maam?
Raynella gagged and made inarticulate sounds.
Maam, I need you to calm down so I can get some help to you. Okay?
The dispatcher sent units to the address to investigate a reported suicide attempt. Dispatch informed the emergency personnel: Shes called in, says her husband shot himself. The phones off the hook, the line is open, and the caller can still be heard screaming.
The first responder to the scene, Deputy Sergeant David Amburn of the Knox County Sheriffs Office, arrived at 11:32. He found Raynella lying facedown in the grass in the front yard. He thought that she, too, had been shot or injured. He bolted out of his vehicle shouting, Maam, maam, as he ran to her.
He knelt down and nudged her. She burst into unintelligible cries and wails then shouted, Help him. Help him. Hes been shot. She was, he said, a woman overcome with grief. He helped her onto the porch and went into the house with Deputy Chief Keith Lyons.
They found David Leath, age fifty-seven, dead in his bed. He had a black hole in his forehead over his left eye surrounded by copious gunpowder stippling, consistent with a shot fired from close range. He lay on his right side with his right arm extended straight out and his left arm bent at the elbow, with his wrist turned under and resting on the mattress. Beside that hand was an old blue steel Colt .38 double-action revolver with a black grip.
Investigator Perry Moyers arrived at the solid brick house at 11:51. Raynella was on the front porch now with a rag in her hand. At five feet eight inches and 170 pounds, with stark blue eyes and steel-colored hair, Raynella cut an imposing figure. She was wearing blue jeans, white Skechers tennis shoes, and a gray and white long-sleeved shirt layered with a gray sleeveless shirt. He looked her over but saw no signs of any blood transfer stains. He thought that was odd. Raynella was a nurse: surely she had attempted CPR on her husband.
Moyers went inside where Sergeant Robert Lee directed him to the left and down the hallway to the bedroom. He heard the sound of a clothes dryer running and made a mental note to follow up on that observation.
The deceased David Leath appeared to Moyerss trained eye as if hed been tucked into bed for comfort. A pillow in a green pillowcase was in between his head and shoulder, another between his legs. He lay on a blue sheet, and a white quilt with pink and green accents neatly covered the lower half of his body.
His position simply did not look right: Moyers thought it seemed unlikely for someone who had committed suicide. He wondered if the scene was staged.
A plate of foodoatmeal, toast, and jellysat on a table beside the bed. It had not been touched. It bore no blood evidence on its surface. There were neither lip marks on the drinking glass standing beside the plate nor any other indication that anyone had drunk a drop of the milk inside it.
Moyers saw early signs of lividity discoloring Davids skin. That in all probability meant his death could not have occurred in the last half hour. He pressed a finger down on the skins surface. Where he applied pressure, he observed blanching, suggesting that death could not have occurred much more than five hours earlier. The exposed parts of his body were cool to the touch, but under the covers the toes were still warm. Moyers estimated the time of death as between 6:00 and 9:00 that morning.
Three officers in training were on the scene, learning from their more experienced colleagues. Before lifting the weapon from the bed to demonstrate the proper handling of a gun at a death scene, Moyers noted that the holes in the blue bedsheet indicated there had been a fold in the fabric when the gun was discharged.
When you rotate the cylinder out, you need to be careful not to turn it, he said holding the revolver up so that all the new officers could see. Then you need to draw the cylinder as you see it on a piece of paper. Moyers made his drawing, but at the time he did not notice the most significant piece of evidence the gun contained.
Raynella came into the house with her married daughter, Maggie Dossett Connaster, and asked, Whats going on here, boys? Whats going on?
Moyers talked with Maggie while Detective Steve Webb spoke to Raynella. She informed Webb that it had been a typical morning. Katie was running a little late but she left home for school at 8:15. Raynella said shed prepared and served her husband breakfast in bed. He always tells me I bring it too hot to melt the butter. The detective thought that was an odd statement but didnt question her about it. Before leaving the house, she tuned the television to the Joyce Meyer show, a religious and inspirational program that aired at 8:30.