• Re: Convicted North Dakota woman speaks publicly for 1st time about hus

    From Mark@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 18 09:41:33 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.journalism.newspapers, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    On 27 Jan 2022, "1.AAC0832" <[email protected]> posted some news:ssvkls$o1uk$[email protected]:


    Republican Party puts fat Democrats in jail.

    The obese sow.

    <https://s.abcnews.com/images/US/last-strike-3-ht-gmh- 230316_1678987986135_hpMain_16x9_992.jpg>

    During a thorough investigation into her husband's murder, police
    repeatedly heard Nikki Entzel's ever-changing story about what happened to
    her husband, often contradicting the evidence they had collected.

    "20/20" was granted exclusive access to a one-on-one conversation with the woman recently convicted of conspiring to kill her husband, Chad Entzel,
    to ask her about details from the case. During the interview, Entzel
    maintained her innocence.

    A new 20/20 episode titled, "The Last Strike," set to premiere Friday,
    March 17, at 9 p.m. ET and streaming on Hulu the next day, will explore
    the case.

    "Do I eventually want to figure out what happened? Yes. I wish I had every resource in the world to figure out what really happened? Yes, I do,"
    Nikki Entzel told ABC News' John Qui�ones. "Do I have every resource in
    the world to figure out what happened? No. Nobody does."

    On the evening of January 2, 2020, authorities were alerted to a report of
    a fire at the home of Chad and Nikki Sue Entzel.

    When the fire department reached the Entzel household that fateful day,
    they were met by more than just a smoky home � they found Chad Entzel
    himself, dead in the bedroom.

    Friends and family remembered Chad Entzel as an avid bowler, darts player,
    and stock car racer, and they said Nikki Entzel enjoyed owning a baking business. They lived with Nikki Entzel's two sons from previous
    relationships on the quiet outskirts of Bismarck, North Dakota.

    For a time, authorities couldn't quite put their finger on how Chad Entzel
    had died. After finding two gunshot wounds and traces of fire accelerant,
    they concluded foul play was involved.

    An in-depth investigation led to the trial and conviction of his wife �
    and another person, Earl Howard, a married man from Canada with whom she
    had recently started an affair, police said. Authorities theorized they
    hoped to abscond with the insurance money and move to Texas together.

    Howard ended up pleading guilty to various charges, including conspiracy
    to commit murder and arson. In making the plea deal, prosecutors agreed to
    drop a murder charge. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison in February
    2022.

    Nikki Entzel, however, faced a trial. She was convicted in October 2022 of conspiracy to commit arson, conspiracy to commit murder, and conspiracy to tamper with physical evidence, and in February 2023, she was sentenced to
    life in prison with the possibility of parole.

    Authorities were unable to determine which of the two defendants shot Chad Entzel.

    When asked if Howard pulled the trigger, Nikki Entzel told Qui�ones she
    "wasn't there" and "can't say that for one hundred percent." Howard denied
    to authorities that he pulled the trigger.

    Nikki Entzel claimed to Qui�ones that she was out on a walk when the
    trigger was pulled � in the middle of the night � at a hotel across town,
    in freezing temperatures. Nikki Entzel said she left for a walk from the
    hotel room around 1 a.m., and "did not stop continuously stepping until
    2:42 AM."

    However, when police questioned Nikki Entzel in the days after Chad
    Entzel's murder, she offered an entirely different scenario. Nikki Entzel
    told police in early 2020 that she was at the house and heard gunshots on
    the night of the murder.

    Nikki Entzel acknowledged in her interview with ABC News that her various alibis over the last two years don't always align.

    "My story changes so many different times," she said, "that none of them
    are really consistent."

    Julie Lawyer, the Burleigh County State's Attorney who prosecuted the
    Entzel case, described to ABC News Nikki Entzel's various stories
    throughout the investigation.

    "There was no telling [the investigators] what they wanted to hear,"
    Lawyer said. "It was telling them what she thought she could get away
    with."

    Aaron Silbernagel, former Sergeant with the Burleigh County Sheriff's Department, described his method of breaking down Nikki Entzel's many
    stories.

    "I didn't correct her on them always," Silbernagel told ABC News. "I would
    just keep pointing out that I know more, and then have her explain it."

    Among her denials was Nikki Entzel's characterization of her relationship
    with Howard. Authorities said they had clear evidence that Entzel lied in
    her interrogations about their relationship. Investigators discovered surveillance video that showed Nikki Entzel and Howard kissing publicly
    before leaving a local Walmart, days before the murder was committed.

    When ABC News asked about this romantic entanglement, Entzel denied it and claimed Howard was "not my type."

    "I didn't see no kiss given at all," she initially told ABC News, though
    she later seemed to concede in the same interview that a kiss could have happened. "I don't know, he leaned down, I leaned up," Nikki Entzel said.
    "Have I kissed many friends on the cheek? Have I kissed my kids on the
    cheek? Have I kissed exes on the cheek? Yeah."

    "20/20" also acquired never-before-seen footage of Howard speaking with investigators, where he told authorities his version of events.

    Howard is seen in the video claiming that he did have a romantic
    relationship with Nikki Entzel.

    "I took a trip to Minnesota," Howard said, "and she met me in Minneapolis.
    We went to the Mall of America. And that's where the affair started."

    Howard claimed to authorities that Nikki Entzel went into the house and
    shot her husband, but that he later offered to "take care of it" for her
    by burning evidence.

    Nikki Entzel's attorney, Thomas Glass, has filed the initial paperwork to
    start the appeals process.

    <https://abcnews.go.com/US/convicted-north-dakota-woman-speaks-publicly- 1st-time/story?id=97912264>

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