Truth On Trial
Who Killed A Doctor's Young Beautiful Wife?
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Play CBS Video Video More From David Tipton Dr. David Tipton talks about the murder of his wife Karen, his daughters' reaction, and how he feels about Daniel Wade Moore's new trial.
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Video 3D Crime Scene Tour Crime scene analyst and defense witness Bob Tressel discusses the Tipton crime scene using a 3D model.
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Video Truth On Trial Who killed a doctor?s young, beautiful wife? Erin Moriarty reports for 48 Hours Mystery, Saturday, Nov. 15, at 10 p.m. ET/PT.
But in two days' time, Daniel's case would quickly change from a shoplifting charge to murder. It all started when, out on bail, Daniel went for a ride with his uncle, Sparky Moore.
"He said 'You know the Tipton murder? The doctor's wife that was murdered on Chapel Hill road?' And I said 'Yeah.' And he says 'Well, I was there.' He said 'Me and two other guys broke into a home and the guy that was with me had stabbed her and killed her,'" Sparky remembered.
Sparky couldn't believe what he was hearing, but wanting to do the right thing, he got word to police, who found Daniel in a motel room littered with drug paraphernalia. They brought him in and were questioning him, when suddenly during a break Daniel pulled out his penknife and stabbed himself 16 times.
Daniel admits to Moriarty he was trying to kill himself.
While he recovered from his wounds, police decided they had the perfect suspect. They believed Daniel was driven by guilt over Karen's murder. The case seemed to get stronger when police searched the apartment Daniel rented and found an alarm company toolbox. Investigators discovered that Daniel had previously met David and Karen Tipton.
As it turns out, he had serviced the alarm system at the Tiptons' house just six months before Karen's murder.
Asked how he thinks it happened, David tells Moriarty, "He came and knocked on the door and said, 'Hello, I work for the alarm company.' He had been there just a few months before. He lied his way in the house."
Police believe the attack began downstairs. "The first injury was being cut or stabbed on the back left aspect of her neck. Her shirt was forced off of her. And then she was forced upstairs with a blood trail going the whole way," David says.
The attack - David says - continued upstairs in the bedroom, where police found Karen's clothing on the floor and blood on the bed. "I think it's very likely that after that prolonged period of sexual and physical torture she managed to actually escape from that and got to the top of the stairs before she was finally killed there - somewhere in the range of 28 stab wounds. Probably last thing cut was her throat," David says.
To David, it was an unimaginable nightmare, an open and shut case of a drug addict killing for money. "Daniel Wade Moore confessed to involvement Daniel Wade Moore is an absolutely 100 percent profiled match for somebody who would do a crime just like this. That's what crack heads do," he said.
But by October 2001, when Daniel was charged with capital murder, he had changed his story: he denied having anything to do with the murder, and considering the brutality of the crime, there was very little evidence against him.
Daniel says his fingerprints weren't found in the home, and that none of Karen's blood or other hairs and fibers were found on him or his clothing.
But there were two hairs found at the scene of the murder. Their poor condition would make precise DNA testing problematic. All that could be confirmed was that they could have been Daniel's.
Daniel's attorney Sherman Powell, a second generation country lawyer, got set for the toughest case of his 32-year career. It was November 2002, three and a half years after the murder, when Daniel went on trial for the first time.
As one of the biggest trials the county had ever seen got underway, those who loved Daniel continued to believe he was incapable of murder.
Assistant State Attorney General Don Valeska thought he had the case against Daniel sewn up.
But defense attorney Sherman Powell believed this was a crime of passion. Powell suggested that the wrong man was on trial, and that the killer might even be Dr. Tipton himself. The motive? The oldest one on earth: jealousy. "There is some indication of extramarital affairs that were ongoing at this point in time," Powell said.
On the stand, David admitted that just weeks before the murder, his best friend Mike Ezell had e-mailed Karen suggesting they swap spouses. "I was offended by that. I was offended not only by Mike but by Karen as well," David admitted. "That she had carried on a silly conversation with a friend of mine."
And Karen may have had her own reasons to be angry at her husband: at trial, a defense expert testified that authorities had found pornography on the home computer. Karen had been using that computer the day she died.
"The majority of the stuff in there was gay men interacting, and I have never seen a lady yet that would sit down and look at that kind of stuff," Daniel's attorney Sherman Powell said.
Produced by Jamie Stolz and Susan Mallie
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See all 41 CommentsThe two hairs that have been mentioned are not two hairs found anywhere. These are hairs found with blood on them in the bloody bed and found in the bloody wash clothe the killer used to cleen up. That absolutely without a doubt places Daniel Moore at the crime scene when the murder took place on that day. With the testing on the hairs being 1 out of 7.5 million it is injustice to the victom and victom's family to not find this killer guilty.
Also I have refused to watch another episode of 48 hour mystery because of their coverage. They have built this to be a movie and have slanted the TRUTH. Because of this all of their reports are tainted and is not worth watching.
GET YOUR FACTS STRAIGHT.
Hard evidence outweighs rumors and speculation everyday ... unless this is Decator, AL
Also not that only a defence motion can change the venue (location) of the trial. This is so that a "fair" trial can be heard. In this case with the small town local boy mentality the only fair trial would to move it out of that area. The victom's family has rights also and deserve to have a fair trial. This case needed to be moved out of that county.
Good for Daniel that he has a supportive family.
He was not found guilty during a fair and unbiased trial.
The trial where he was voted guilty was thrown out because of the acts of the prosecution. All the evidence and wittnesses were not heard/presented. In a trial where all the evidence was submitted, we had a hung jury.
Meg have you ever watched real murder interrogations on tv. The intensity. The badgering to get a confession. He was a drug addict. He wanted a fix. They were holding him there and hammering him with accusations of murder. That's what interagators do. They torture suspects to get a confession. Deprive them of sleep, make threats, rough them up a bit sometimes.
What about the wet shower at the Tiptons. What about the neighbor that saw her at the mailbox. What about the drugs found in the Tipton home. What about no trail of blood going down the steps. What about the paver saying Daniel was not the person he spoke to. What about the paver saying Tipton got home 90 minutes before the police. What about no blood on Daniels clothing, car, house, motel room. Nothing on his tools.
How about no finger prints at the scene. How bout the "wrong" facts Daniel made when he talked about being there when she was killed. Even the wrong city.
How bout Daniel had been to the house previously which would explain hair at the scene or where they planted. If it was a sexual assault, why was there no *****...or was there and it wasn't Daniels.
Sloppy investigation is the problem....it is not the fault of the defense attorney or Daniels family or the majority of the people in Deatur who say they do not have a case to convict Daniel. It is not the fault of the judge who threw the first trial out. It is that there is too much reasonable doubt to believe this man should be in prison.
I also believe the prosecution "finding" the missing hard drive will be another problem for the prosecution as well as Daniel being put in jail for a positive marijuana drug test the day the trial started only to have a "hair" sample prove he hasn't done any drugs for as long as the hair as grown on his head. I am sure the defense attorney will say...oh tests on his hair are good enough to be used to put him to death but not good enough to prove he didn't violate his probation.
How about the defense motive for murder. Sure makes sense to the majority of the people.
I live in the area and I am afraid of that killer Daniel Moore. He is guilty as sin. He admitted it and stabbed himself while being interviewed.
His has a large, very vocal family who have screamed to anyone who will listen that he is innocent trying to get him off, but his guilt has been proven. If the woman had not been beautiful and living an unconventional lifestyle, he would be in prison.
i have often wondered what happen to her computer hard drive. the prosecutors didnt think her hard drive was important? so it sits somewhere for 10 yrs. after all that has transpired concerning the mishandling of evidence and we are suppose to believe this was lost.
daniel was jailed for marijuana use before the trial began. testing his hair proves he has not used mj or another drug but he is still in jail.
Pleaseeeeeeeeeeeeeeee. give it up prosecutor. you guys screwed up. big time. and you think a conviction of daniel will vindicate you, wrong
CBS chooses to leave out much of the evidence against Moore, but he provided detailed of slashing and stabbing Karen Tipton that had not been made public. Police also have a DNA match that is 99.8% certain to be Moore, and cannot be the husband.
Moore worked for the alarm company that maintained the Tipton home alarm, malfunctioning the week of the murder, so Karen Tipton would have let him in to fix the alarm. He told a relative that he was in the Tipton home robbing it when she was killed, and his hair was found on the scene.
He''s the killer. And he''s walking the streets free.
The first jury, back in 2002, convicted him, but the conviction was overturned because the judge ruled the defense did not have proper access to some files. The second trial, nine years after Mrs. Tipton''s murder, ended in a mistrial. Of course, this favors the defense. The longer they can drag this out, the more witnesses may die or have less clear memories, and the more lies the defense can spread.
This case has so much evidence pointing to Daniel Wade Moore that it is scary to think of this man out on the streets. There is no doubt in my mind at all that he is guilty.
Like Bundy, Daniel Wade Moore has a cult-like following of people who cannot believe his did this murder, though the evidence is clear.
I think the authorities wanted an easy target and easy conviction. So, they went after the local crack cocaine druggie. He was stupid to confess though.
Interesting how a certain woman saw the wife alive on the afternoon when she was supposedly murdered.
What''s with the GAY PORN on the good doctor''s home computer? Hmmm....
if he didn''t ''volunteer a confession'' to his uncle perhaps the police would have put more of an effort into finding the actual murdered.
due to mr moore''s own actions, the police are refusing to back down. to do so will cause them to look like fools and possibly open them to a lawsuit from mr moore.
i hope the third trail does not end in a hung jury. but i also hope mr moore is barred from suing the state.
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