Dream Killer
A Young Man Dreams He Murdered A Man
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Play CBS Video Video Police Interviews Watch excerpts of the police interviews with Chuck Erickson, who dreamed that he killed a man; and Ryan Ferguson, whom Erickson also implicated in the crime. The tapes play a major role in the case.
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Video Reporter's Notebook "48 Hours" correspondent Erin Moriarty talks about the case of Chuck Erickson, a young man who dreamt that he murdered a man.
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Chuck Erickson also implicated his friend, Ryan Ferguson, pictured, in the murder. (CBS)
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Kent Heitholt worked late into the night on Halloween 2001. After leaving the newspaper's offices, he was slain in a parking lot. (CBS)
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Two years after the murder of Columbia Tribune Sports Editor Kent Heitholt, Chuck Erickson, pictured, told friends he dreamed he was involved in the killing. (CBS)
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Columnist Tony Messenger still has some doubts about Ryan’s guilt, but has come to believe the essence of Chuck’s story.
"I just ultimately don’t believe he made it up," he says. "I think he’s a troubled kid. And I still think he doesn’t know everything that happened. But I believe those two boys were in the parking lot of the Tribune and killed Kent Heitholt."
Messenger admits he is still bothered by the lack of evidence. "I’m more bothered by the mistakes that I think the prosecution and the police made in their early rush to judgment."
Meanwhile, Ryan Ferguson began his sentence in a Fulton, Mo. prison. More than a month after he was convicted, Ryan was still showing no emotion.
"I really thought I could prove my innocence and be with my family," he says.
Asked why he didn't show any emotion when the verdict came down, Ryan says, "I was devastated. What are you gonna do, cry? I mean, I did not have anything to do with this crime."
Ryan knows that some people may have a hard time with his lack of emotion.
Ryan says is "beyond" him why Chuck said he was involved and was also willing to go to prison. "If I knew the answers to that, I would love to explain it."
As for Ryan’s family, the trial has stunned them but not stopped them.
"We’re gonna appeal. And we’re gonna reinvestigate and we’re gonna try to start gathering information," says Ryan's father, Bill.
As Ryan marks time, they say they’re more determined than ever to prove that both he - and his accuser - are innocent.
"We’ve just begun to fight," Bill told reporters. "One day Chuck’s going to wake up in his cell and say, 'Oh my Gosh, what have I done?'"
Ryan Ferguson's appeal is scheduled to be heard in June.
Prosecutor Kevin Crane is now a circuit court judge.
Talk show host and columnist Tony Messinger is now a reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
By Gail Zimmerman
© MMVIII, CBS Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reserved.



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See all 65 CommentsKent left work and was feeding the stray cat. The Janitor hated it. They had words. The janitor lost it and went postal on Kent. When he saw all the blood realized that he killed the guy he decided to make it look like a robbery. Then - probably knowing the ineptitude of the police department - he figured he'd cover his tracks if he pretended to be an eyewitness and report the body.
The jurors admitted that they had already decided Ryan's guilt before hearing the evidence. Bad Jurors!!! Idiots.. I guess that's proof you don't want to live in a town full of imbeciles!
I hope Ryan's Dad reads this and gets a private investigator to look into the Janitor's DNA, and get it compared to the evidence!
I don''t think Chuck was trying to be malicious. I think something about this case got to him mentally and he had a dream and the dream freaked him out. At that point, he TRIED REALLY HARD TO REMEMBER and actually convinced himself there were memories to be retrieved. Then, armed with details spoon fed by the investigators, he filled in the gaps (errors) in his mind with the details and became utterly convinced the whole thing happened.
I see this for what it was. The sad part is that neither the jury nor the DA/Prosecuter thought anything was amiss and that Chuck was accurate. Chuck didn''t lie (intentionally deceive) he''s just sorely mistaken... to the tune of costing him and his old friend their lives.
Second, the prosecuter had idiot stamped across his forehead throughout the show. He demonstrated a complete lack of understanding of simple investigative techniques and had no understanding of cognition. Further, the jury made me want to vomit. I don''t know where this crime occured, but I''m wondering if the collective IQ of the town is over 100.
I know what I''m talking about. I learned cognition from one of the best in the WORLD, and she appeared on the show (and testified in the trial). In a lecture I attended several years ago, I watched as she planted a false memory into the class and they all believed it was REAL. Memories are far more fragile than the average person realizes.
I just can''t belive that this jury found this young man guilty of a crime when there was so much evidence at the scene and none of it was linked to the suspect. I just pray that he gets a new trial and that he is set free on the facts that he wasn''t linked to this crime.
It is hard to believe that someone can say that you did a crime and that a jury of 12 people would believe the word of one person with no other link to you. It really scares me that someone could be so angry at a person that they would give up part of their life just to hurt that person. And it is harder to believe that 12 people would believe that person over the evidence.
This is the first time one of your shows has touched me so much that I needed to post a comment.
God bless Ryan and his family while they seek to justice for himself and their son was a miscarriage of justice.
Police and prosecutors don''t always care about facts.
Once you''re indicted there is a presumption of guilt rather than a presumption on innocence. Many defense attorneys and Judges are incompetent. Prosecutors coach their witnesses and have no problem suborning perjury. The testimony of anyone cooperating with the government for a reduced sentence should be discounted greatly. The government often makes a deal with the party who takes a plea in order to punish someone who will not take a plea and who insists on their constitutional right to a jury trial.
After a jury verdict for the prosecution it is not uncommon for the prosecutor to have his tie cut off and hung on a wall like a trophy. "Good Job" it doen''t matter that you''ve destroyed a young mans life for personal gain or caused a respected family untold grief. The prosecutors reward for this victory was a position as a judge and who knows maybe even someday a lifetime appointment to the bench.
Why do I know these things? Because I refused to accept an 18 month plea agreement for a crime I did not commit. My reward was to be convicted by a jury and sentenced to 60 months.
I lost my direct appeal (Harmless Error). The supreme court chose not to hear my case.
I can only hope and pray the Ferguson''s will have better luck.
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