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Welcome back to another episode of Post-Mortem.
“I'm your host Ann Marie Green and today we are discussing the case of Angela Pritchard,”
who was shot dead by her strange husband in 2022, following weeks of stalking and harassment, all of which she reported to the local police in Bellevue, Iowa. After the murder trial, Angela's family filed a federal lawsuit against the city of Bellevue, as well as three police officers for what they say was inaction and in difference, by not arresting Christopher Pritchard's sooner.
So joining me today to talk about this, to dig in a little bit more, is CBS News correspondent Jonathan Bigley, Audie, and 48 hours producer meet Stone. Welcome, guys. Thanks for having us. Good to be here, thank you.
So a reminder to everyone, as usual, if you haven't already listened to the 48 hours episode, the audio version of it, you can find it in your podcast feed right above this one. So go listen and then come on back so we can talk about it. All right.
“So I think what is particularly tragic about this case, guys, is that it really, really”
seemed preventable. It seemed like Angela really did all the things that you're supposed to do. She endured months of domestic violence and then Angela Pritchard obtained a no contact order against Chris Pritchard, meaning that if there was any contact that he made with her, it could result in a mandatory arrest.
Here's the question. If Angela's no contact order had been enforced in a better way, what should have happened with this case? Great question. Anne Marie, I've covered a number of 48 hours cases.
Usually, the who done it of these cases is the mystery. As it pertains to this story, the mystery was, why was it more done in time? Everyone we spoke with from prosecutors to David O'Brien, he's the civil rights attorney representing Angela's family, and that lawsuit against Bellevue police investigators. They all said more could have been done.
There were two no contact orders that were issued.
The first one, Angela actually lifted herself because she wanted to give her marriage a second
chance, but then it became very clear that the violence was only escalating. So she successfully requested a second no contact order. As you mentioned, no contact order means exactly that no contact of any kind. That means no text messages, no phone calls, no emails. And yet David O'Brien says in a 37 day window in that period of time, Chris Pritchard made 12
violations. Now he was arrested once. He's been a day in jail for that. He was released. He was supposed to appear in court failed to do so twice.
There was then an arrest warrant issued for him seven days went by. No arrest was made in time.
Angela was then killed and it would take 24 hours after that to finally arrest Chris Pritchard.
And that final week of Angela's life, the police apparently didn't do anything to try to find Chris Pritchard. According to their own police records, they were doing other things in the town, like chaparoning a prom and providing an escort for a funeral procession. There was a loud barking dog, apparently in the neighborhood of the Belvie police made notes
about these incidents, but nowhere in their records is there any mention of trying to find and arrest Chris Pritchard. And ready to give you some context, because this is what struck me when meet and I were in Belvie. You drive down that mainstream.
We're talking about a population of 2,500 people. There was not a single traffic lay. Me points out the police were responding to loud barking from dogs. They had time to respond to these calls. Indeed.
Absolutely. You know, I wanted to try to understand this case sort of in a greater context. And so kind of dug into the statistics about these types of protective orders, these orders to stay away from the victim. And one of the things that I found is it's really hard to get solid information, a lot
of the information about domestic violence is old.
“I think the kind of overwhelming conclusion, though, about these types of orders is that”
they can be very effective if they're enforced. I'm sure this came up in your reporting as you were talking to people. How did they feel about the weight of these types of protective orders? Yeah, and David Bryan put it very well. It still sticks with me.
He said a lot of people often look at these, no contact orders is not being w...
paper they're written on, but in his view they are very valuable as long as they are enforced as you so accurately mentioned, and where, and unfortunately, in this case, it just seemed like a lot of these violations were not enforced. And I mean, I know that you were really looking into this too, because there are ramifications with each violation comes more time spent in jail.
Is that correct? Yes, yes.
“I think that's one of the tragedies in Iowa for the first offense.”
It's one night in jail, a second offense, it goes to seven days in jail, and it goes up
from there, and had Richard been arrested each time he violated the no contact order. He would've eventually been spending a good amount of time behind bars, and one would think that would be a deterrent. You know, sometimes victims of domestic violence, they have been alienated from their support system, or they are embarrassed to share what they're going through.
This is not the case with Angela. Her family is very supportive, you know, they basically become a protective detail. Her sister Wendy is her shadow. This must have had a tremendous impact on the family.
“I mean, you've got to think about it, and it's something I've been thinking about too,”
and it's a really good point, victims of domestic violence oftentimes the hardest first
step is even recognizing you're a victim, and then trying to figure out what steps to take very early on, Angela with the support of her family, identified Chris Prytrade as a problem, and they took the right steps. They went immediately to law enforcement, thinking that they would be protected, but it wasn't enough.
They were living in fear, and you mentioned it, Wendy, buddy, who was Angela's sister was her shadow, even having Angela at one point live with her, unfortunately, the one time she was in by Angela's side is when Angela was attacked and killed, and on top of all that you also had Angela's sons who live in the area who also were dealing with their own issues with Chris Prytrade, one son saying that Chris Prytrade would drive by the house
in one case in just one hour, six times how he knew this, Chris Prytrade drove a very specific trucker Jeep with specific wheels that made a sound that was very easy to identify. Police were being called and included in all of this, but the family still had this real sense of helplessness.
The thing is that Chris Prytrade was not always like this, relationships don't typically
start off like this, right? In fact, Wendy liked him, Wendy introduced him to her sister, but then he starts to take this kind of downwards spiral and we learn in the hour that it seems to begin, once he is brought up on charges accused of stealing from his employer, it's $36,000, so it's
“not a little bit, but can you tell me a little bit more about that case?”
He rented equipment that belonged to the company he worked for, to customers, and he was requesting that they pay him for the rentals, so they apparently wrote Prytrade checks and he kept the money. It was a first-degree theft charge. When that was exposed, the family says that ultimately led to this downward spiral and
without a job and now having lost the respect of this very small community, he started to engage in drug use and abuse, methamphetamine, which then led to anger and it only continued according to those sticky notes, what we call a diary of domestic abuse that Angela documented so well that her sister Wendy shared with us. Too much was expected and put on Angela to protect herself and ultimately in the end, it
is her who identifies the suspect, right? Chris shows up with a gun at her workplace. We want to play that 911 call, but we just want to warn you that this is disturbing to listen to you know you can put yourself in her shoes, have that moment you know it's just you can't even imagine that sort of terror and she had the presence of mind.
To call 911 in that moment and she shouted his name in the last second of her life.
It wasn't just her identifying Chris in that moment that helped a few seconds...
hear Chris say an exploitive directed towards Angela as he is standing over her lifeless
“body, the profanity that he uttered helped convict him because as Angela's son Josh”
points out that's not a word you say after you accidentally shoot someone and of course Richard claimed that the shooting was accidental and that proved to the prosecutors that it was premeditated and intentional. Welcome back, so I want to talk a little bit more about why police were convinced that this was an accident or special agents in our our interviewed preacher three times and each time they did his story of the accidental shooting changed a little bit.
The first one was Angela pushed him, shoved him and he fell back and the shotgun hit a cabinet or something and went off and he had another story where he had kicked a backpack and the gun
“fell over and went off and shot her. The medical examiner testified that the shotgun”
blast had a downward trajectory and in preacher's examples most of them would have had an upward trajectory. The police tested the gun and it was in perfectly fine working conditions and the condition that preacher explained that the gun just went off would have been impossible.
And prosecutors did an incredible job showing premeditation. So really you had prosecutors really
detail and outlined how this whole plan really started to form the day before the murder took place. So you had Chris you borrowed a truck something very different than the car that he drove, which was very recognizable. Stashed that borrowed truck somewhere then tracked through the woods to access the kennels at around 4am and we know this because of security footage outside of the kennels and then late in wait. From that residence to the kennels it's about a mile and a half
couple of miles and he left in the middle of the night but this was what would have been a treacherous height. It would have been pitch black through very, very thick woods. I mean this
shows an incredible amount of determination and then yes he was just waiting for her for about four
hours to show up. He takes off into the woods but news of this spreads like wildfire because they'll use a small town so then he shows up at a friend's house. He shows up at Jeff junk and his girlfriend came Klein there at home. They already know what's going on and they just completely play it cool. And they invite him in and he has a drink. You spoke to them. I mean what was this
“like for them? I think they were surprised. I think they were in a state of shock and I think at that”
point they were in a state of preservation. Preserve that time so that cops when they felt safe enough to contact them could come and so what they did to make that place feel safe for Chris. They invited him in. They offered him a drink. I think they also hooked up some microevalble pizza sat down. The way that Jeff and Kim describe it they the entire time know he had just killed Angela Pritchard. But Chris didn't act like anything was off like it was just a normal night of
catching up with friends. And Kim was so she was so taken aback by how surreal this always. She secretly
snapped a photo on her phone just to document it as they also contacted police. At one point you had Chris Pritchard. I guess so exhausted from everything that had happened being on the run. He passed out in a lazy boy reclining chair and he was still asleep when police eventually made their way to the property and carried out the arrest. Yes and that was quite a scene. There was a lot of officers and from different agencies it was a SWAT team that came in and arrested him. And when they
get to the jail there's more body camp footage of Pritchard being processed and you just you sense that the gravity of what he's done has hit him. Right. He please not guilty to first to remurder
Robbery charges in February of 2024.
charges and then about a month later he is sentenced to life in prison without parole. But the hour
does not end there. There is a second court case in this hour. It's very fascinating to me. A federal
lawsuit that civil rights attorney David O'Brien who mentioned a little bit earlier filed against the city of Bellevue and three of the officers who work for the city work for the police department there for failure to arrest Chris Pritchard leading up to Angela's murder. At the end of the hour though we learned that the judge overseeing this case dismisses it. Can you tell us a little bit more about why this case was dismissed? You know that the judge didn't he didn't buy the argument of the
“state created danger. We had a student state created danger. Yes. That's what they had to prove.”
Right. That's what David O'Brien was arguing that there was a state created danger. That's a legal term which means that a police force in this case the Bellevue police actually made Angela's situation more dangerous because they didn't enforce the no contact order. So their inaction actually put Angela in greater peril. And that's what a state created danger is. The judge didn't agree. The judge also didn't agree that there was sufficient evidence to prove that the officers
and Richard had relationships. Dave O'Brien requested his hearing a couple of months later because
the officers in pre-trial filings said they two of them said they had never boarded their dogs
at the kennels. And it turned out that Angela's family had found receipts for the two officers showing that they had indeed boarded their dogs at the kennels. Now that by itself is not particularly important, what's important is that they apparently lied about this in an attempt says O'Brien to conceal their relationship with with preacher. The defense attorneys say that this information was not turned over in discovery because of a mistake that the defense attorneys had
made, not their clients. And this was considered and it did not change his decision. The judge in his ruling, he said there's no evidence to indicate that there are friends. And Marie police have what's known as its qualified immunity and long story short,
“that sets a really high bar to convict police. You need to show an action and in a situation”
like that, it almost comes down to having a text message where a police officer is saying, "We're friends with Chris. Let's not arrest him. Obviously, that did not exist." So, what's next for this case? Angela's family said they are appealing the case to the eighth circuit in St. Louis. It's a process that will lengthen their legal journey for about another year. What about Angela's family? How are they doing? When we spoke with
binding, there was still this tremendous sense of guilt for not being there to do more to protect. She said that she was really struggling to live with that guilt. Though she did say the one thing that she was proud of was that until the very end, Angela fought
“and fought. And she did not give up. And unfortunately, and why this case is so tragic,”
she was so vocal. She fought for herself for so many months. And it was only in her death that her words finally brought some amount of justice from that last word, Chris, and the 9-1-1 call to all of the written words on those sticky notes. She fought for herself. It wasn't enough to save her life, but it was enough to bring her killer to justice. Well said, Jonathan. Very well said.
As you guys know, we talked about justice. This has never really sort of just in a case like this,
but people should know that there are a ton of resources out there. Everyone should know about the National Domestic Violence Hotline. And if you go to their website, if you call the number 800-799-7233, there are all sorts of options available for you. So you do not have to live in terror. Jonathan Amida, want to thank you guys so much. Thank you for having us. Yes, thank you. Thank you. If you like this series post-mortem, please rate and review 48 hours on Apple Podcasts
and follow 48 hours wherever you get your podcasts. And you can also listen at free with the 48 hours plus subscription on Apple Podcast. Thanks again for listening.


