Crimesider
June 19, 2009 6:15 AM

Erin Moriarty Blogs: Murder Dream Sent Young Man To Jail

"48 Hours" Correspondent Erin Moriarty Blogs About The Case Of Ryan Ferguson

(CBS)
Photo: Ryan Ferguson

NEW YORK (CBS) Ryan Ferguson is not getting out of prison anytime soon. His latest appeal was turned down by Boone County, Missouri Circuit Judge Jodi Asel, in a decision that was released this week.

If you watch 48 Hours Mystery regularly, it is hard to forget Ryan Ferguson or his 2005 trial in Columbia, Miss. Ferguson was convicted, along with a high school friend, of the 2001 murder of Kent Heitholt, the Columbia Daily Tribune sports editor. What makes this young man’s case so memorable is that there was so little evidence against him other than a dream of his co-defendant, Chuck Erickson. Really. A dream that Erickson had two and a half years after the murder which led him to confess to the Columbia police.

Kent Heitholt was killed in the early morning hours on November 1, 2001 as he was leaving the newspaper office. He was brutally battered, beaten, and left to die in the parking lot after stopping to feed a stray cat. There was plenty of physical evidence left at the scene, yet none of that evidence connects either Ferguson or Erickson. In fact, neither of the boys, who were 17 at the time of the murder, were even suspects until early 2004 when Chuck Erickson was questioned by police. Erickson had been telling friends that he had suddenly “dreamed” that he and Ferguson had killed Heitholt after drinking and reveling on Halloween night, but he could not remember any details.

In the initial interviews, Erickson, a slight, large-eyed young man with often a lost expression on his face, appeared confused and unable to recall any of the specifics of what was a horrific event. When the police asked what weapon was used to strangle Heitholt, Erickson offered a few options including a bungee rope. He seemed to be shocked when the police told him that, in fact, the weapon was Heitholt’s own belt.

He had that same “deer-in-the-headlights” look when police drove him around the crime scene and asked him for more details. He had to be told which way the killer or killers fled, based on a trail of blood and footprints that led away from the crime. (Blood and footprints that don’t match either young man.)

Erickson was a very different witness by the trial. After numerous interviews by the police and prosecutor, Kevin Crane, Erickson was a self-assured witness who was the star witness at Ryan Ferguson’s trial and whose critical testimony put Ferguson behind bars. The prosecutor also produced a couple of eyewitnesses at trial who identified the teens as the killers, one of whom now says she was mistaken. Her change of heart was part of Ferguson’s latest request for a new trial.

Are Ryan Ferguson and Chuck Erickson killers? The shocking lack of evidence and inconsistencies in the case make me wonder. Yet, at the same time, I understand why the jurors were so persuaded by Chuck Erickson. Even after I watched police seemingly coach and feed Erickson details, I was struck at trial with his confidence in the story and his own willingness to go to prison for that crime! Would you go to prison for a story you dreamed up unless you truly believed in it?

Ryan Ferguson will continue to appeal his conviction. An attorney told me this week that it can take 15 years or more to get a new trial, even in cases where there is clear evidence that the defendant was innocent. If that is true, Ryan Ferguson, now 24, has a long way to go.

We’ll keep you updated.

Click Here To Learn More About This Case.
For More On This Story Watch The Full Episode on 48 Hours Mystery


Erin Moriarty is an award-winning correspondent for CBS News and has been with 48 Hours since 1990. Drawing on her training as an attorney, she has examined some of the most important issues of the day, including DNA testing in death-row cases, the abortion controversy and battered women's syndrome. She covered the Oklahoma City bombing, the Columbine High School shootings and the 9/11 investigation, overseas. Moriarty has won nine national Emmy Awards and a 2001 Press Club Award, among others.






Tags:
Dream Killer ,
Ryan Ferguson ,
Chuck Erickson ,
Kent Heitholt ,
Columbia ,
Missouri ,
Erin Moriarty
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by lalaw23 July 5, 2009 2:26 AM EDT
I also just watched this on TLC and cannot sleep after watching this. I am heartbroken for both the victim's family and the Ferguson family. Prosecutors and police can be quick to close cases and punish people with little regard for the truth and that seems to be the case in this situation. The thing that troubles me the most though is the jury. As a colleague of mine once asked me, would you like your fate to be decided by the 12 people who were too dumb to get out of jury duty? Maybe Ferguson did it and maybe he didn't, but the prosecution clearly did not carry its burden in this case and the result was a complete abomination.
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by Darrin Bodner July 4, 2009 11:57 PM EDT
Wow. I just watched this on TLC and am chilled by it. How do those jurors sleep at night? How can you say that you made up your mind before you even heard Ryan Ferguson speak? There's so much science about memory and how eyewitnesses repeatedly get it so wrong.

I recall watching something recently where a rape victim and the man she identified as her assailant now travel the country together speaking. She was absolutely certain he did it, she would "never forget his face" but yet after serving years in prison DNA evidence proved it wasn't him.

I'm not surprised by his lack of emotion. It must be surreal. I can't believe how cold the jurors were.

This is a very scary scenario. Basically, as long as you can get someone to confess to something, someone will go to prison even without any evidence. That's not justice.

My heart goes out to the Ferguson family. There son is innocent.
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by fairnessinlaw July 4, 2009 11:00 PM EDT
One juror said that the janitor on the witness stand sealed the verdict for him for Ryan, when the janitor was asked who he saw the night Kent was murdered and then pointed to Ryan.

Did they play the audio tape of the janitor calling 911 the night of, and saying he could not physically describe what the people looked like????

Now, how can he not know what they looked like within minutes after the crime when that's when you memory would be most fresh, but years later on the stand be able to identify someone?
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by fairnessinlaw July 4, 2009 10:54 PM EDT
If the bar closed at 1:30pm and Kent punched his timecard after 2am, why would the boys be looking for more money for more drinks? They would not have any reason to because the bar was already closed.

I fully agree with the comment above that the police supplied all of these details. And the boy that implements that he and Ryan had anything to do with this, gets a deal?! He will get anywhere from 10 to 15 yrs. less than Ryan. Unbelievable! How did a jury convict on such little evidence? Pretty scary!

I know they are not used in court cases, but do we know if either boy ever took a lie detector test?

I guess there was no video footage from any of the surrounding businesses, the parking lot, etc. or we would have heard about it.

I fully believe that Ryan did not deserve to be convicted, they simply did not have enough evidence.
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by FoolsGold June 19, 2009 5:15 PM EDT
A dream from a troubled youth, facts galore supplied by the police (including certain facts previously withheld from the press), a skilled prosecutor untroubled by such a confession and untroubled by letting a witness who gave "good" testimony slide on a sex-related charge involving a child leads to 40 yearss in a maximum security prison for a slightly built youth who supposedly attaced a 6'3" 300 pound football player! That is not justice and don't try to tell me that the cops or DA or judges really think it is justice!
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by mcintoshlou June 19, 2009 6:46 AM EDT
AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL? OR AMERICA THE REPUBLI''CON'' POLICE STATE?
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