A husband has shocked himself and the world by trying to use a
bizarre method to kill his wife. The estranged husband tried to murder
his wife by putting poison into her toothpaste.
Staci Wortman who cleaned her teeth with the paste everyday began
to notice little changes which prompted her to make the stunning
discovery. The toothpaste caused a burning sensation in her mouth and
she quickly spat it out.
It left Staci with a bad headache and her young daughter, who had
also used it, complained of the same reaction. Staci told her parents,
and her mum kept the tube – not really understanding why at the time.
But when the truth came to light, it would prove to be vital evidence.
Someone had sneaked into Staci’s family home and spiked the paste
with a deadly poison. When that attempt on Staci’s life failed, they
tried two more times to kill her.
Staci had three children under 10 with her husband Fred Auston
Wortman, 39 – two girls and a boy. They’d met at university and Staci
had been bowled over by the charming football player.
Fred was smart, generous and kind – perfect husband material.
He went on to be a lawyer and Staci taught at a pre-school before
becoming a stay-at-home mum in Collierville, Tennessee. But in April
2014, after 14 years of marriage, Staci filed for divorce. She claimed
Fred had been unfaithful and had cheated several times throughout their
marriage. That was how the problem started.
Deadly divorce
Fred moved out and they tried to keep things amicable for their
kids. Fred saw them regularly and Staci took on a part-time teaching job
to support her new single life. She thought Fred was coping well with
the divorce, but he was making his own plans for a much more final
separation.
Fred’s perfect life was slipping away and he was losing control.
Staci later said he was a man who ‘thought he was above the law’. After
so long enforcing it, it seemed Fred was about to break it.
In January 2015, a few weeks after the toothpaste incident, there
was a knock at Staci’s door. It was the police with shocking news. They
had been tipped off that Fred had used computers at his work to research
how to hire a hitman using the digital currency, Bitcoin. He’d also
looked up various poisons. With a picture of Staci on the computer, they
concluded she was the target.
When officers mentioned the poison, a distraught Staci remembered
the toothpaste and handed it over for testing. It came back positive for
a plant-based toxin called Aconitum.
Staci survived the horror of many attempts to murder her
In small quantities it can cause headaches and the burning
sensation Staci experienced. In a larger amount, it can fatally paralyse
the heart. Fred must have crept into the house and poisoned the
toothpaste – endangering the children too.
As the investigation continued, Staci took out an order of
protection against her husband but police needed more evidence to charge
him. They arranged a ‘sting’ operation to get the proof they needed and
an undercover agent posed as a hitman willing to help Fred out.
Fred fell for it completely. He handed over money and instructed
him to kill his estranged wife, even telling him where to find potential
murder weapons around the house and when she’d be home. Fred also said
it didn’t matter if the kids were there at the time of the attempt.
It enabled police to put Fred behind bars with a £10 million bail.
Finally, Staci thought she was safe, but in July there was another blow.
Fred tried to have her killed for a third time. He’d approached an
inmate and offered him £7,000 to murder his wife.
Eventually Fred made a plea agreement on the attempted first-degree
murder charges. He pleaded guilty to poisoning the toothpaste, to
trying to hire a hitman and for attempting to recruit an inmate to kill
Staci.
The pleas are known as ‘best interest’, which means he’d accept 30
years in prison with the chance of parole after 10 years without
formally admitting guilt.
But in court in November last year, Fred surprised everyone with a
statement admitting ‘full responsibility’ for his actions and apologised
to Staci and his children.
"No apology which I offer will be sufficient to all who I have
disappointed, let down and hurt. I do apologise to Staci, the Joneses
[her family], my parents, my family, most of all, I apologise to my
three precious children," he said. "I hope they know my unfailing love
for them. I am truly sorry."
The prosecution advised he serve the full 30 years of his sentence and described his actions as a ‘pattern of darkness’.
Living in fear
Staci gave an emotional impact statement saying she hoped Fred
serves the full 30 years because it would enable the children to reach
18 and decide for themselves whether they want to see their father. She
admitted she constantly asks herself ‘Why?’, but knows she’ll never get
an answer.
"My children and I pray for you daily that your heart will change,"
she said to Fred through tears. "I still struggle, but my children are
the greatest victims. They know he’s in jail. They know he wanted me not
to be alive anymore. They know he has to face the consequences."
Outside court, Staci was still reeling from the whole plot. "It’s
just unbelievable that the person I’ve known for 18 years could do
this," she said, adding that there was never any abuse or domestic
violence in their marriage.
With the Wortmans’ divorce almost finalised, some might
question whether the bizarre case will ever really be closed. Even while
waiting for his conviction, Fred tried to have Staci killed.
Can she believe her husband’s remorse and live without fear of
another attempt on her life? There have been suggestions that she should
change her identity and move away.
"I don’t want to live my life running like that," she’s said.
Only time will tell whether she will remain safe.
Source: The Mirror.
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