Snapped: Women Who Murder
Snapped: Women Who Murder

Sharon Hurt

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A loving father and husband is found shot to death in the passenger seat of his car.Season 33 Episode 12Originally aired: Jan 21, 2024Watch full episodes of Snapped for FREE on the Oxygen app: ht...

Transcript

EN

In the suburbs of Nashville, a singer's husband is brutal murdering.

He had two gunshot wounds, one to the ear canal, and one to the back of his ear.

He had been literally executed and left in the past to see the vehicle. Police learned this isn't the first attempt to take his life. He thought he had a blowout, and he started saying it's blood everywhere. It was a small red car, bit it pulled up the side and shot him with a shot of you. The investigation uncovers an adulterous affair.

She took a job as a secretary for him.

I think it was pretty obvious to everybody that she was sleeping with him.

But a sting reveals motives more complicated than a love triangle turned deadly.

She glanced never dangling you and I asked her.

I just needed to talk to you about that damn gun that I need you to help me. The lab insurance policy is increased to 250,000. I think she got dollar signs in her eyes and to help everything in. How can they do this? It's a crisp winter morning in the rural town of Goodlitzville, located 15 miles north of Nashville, Tennessee.

It's a small town that's been there since probably the 1850s. It was kind of a railroad stop.

The people are working class, church going, type of a boat.

On the morning of December 20, 1991, a commuter spots a man slumped inside a vehicle by the side of the road.

And immediately goes home to notify police. My sergeant in another detective responded to the site, which is on kind of a rural road north of Goodlitzville. Detectives approached the vehicle with caution and quickly realized they have a crime scene on their hands. It's fairly easy to say that there's a bad guy in the car. The body was left in the passenger seat of a vehicle.

The head tube gunshot runs one through the ear canal and one of the back of his ear to the left side. If someone is shot twice, obviously he did not commit suicide. He had not been there very long.

It was very little evidence inside the car over very little evidence on him.

There was nothing that would suggest that he had been robbed the victim. He had a wallet on him and had driver twice since that wallet. And he gave his address in Gillesville. The man's license identifies him as 52-year-old Charles Donald Hurt. Obviously someone had been in the car.

There was no indication that his body had moved or been jostled. And that led officers to believe that he was shot in the car at that location. We knew that from the location of the gunshot lives and the position of the body that Donald Hurt had not had a chance to move to fin themselves. Homicides and Gillesville are quite rare.

And particularly one where someone is apparently been literally executed. So this was from the very start, a whole hands-on dead. After Nashville police collect what evidence they can, detectives traveled to Don's home to speak with his wife, Sharon Hurt. They, of course, had contacted her off home and let her know that he had been found.

When she called me and told me that Don had been killed, I immediately went to her house. She was stunned. You know, accidents happen, carworks happen. Murder's intentional.

I don't know what would motivate somebody to want to do that to Don. Something did not feel right. Don Hurt, as he was known to friends, was born in Nashville on July 20, 1939.

On that evening born here, I think everybody was born right here.

He was a mom boy.

I always kept everything clean for his mom because his mom had five boys.

And he was kind of the one that took care of stuff in the house.

Don's love of family never went away.

And in his mid-20s, he got the chance to start one of his own. My mom was Nancy Kirby. I'm not sure when they really got married. But I think my mom was young. I had my sister and then she had me. We had just about anything you wanted, you know.

My daddy always makes sure we had something on table. And the most time he was cooking it. Don home was a happy man. He was jolly.

He was always carrying on and cutting up.

And I think he was just happy with life.

Unfortunately, the marriage only lasted little more than a decade. But the ending was amicable. Even though they had divorced, they had remained friends and talked. With a good job and a kind heart, Don didn't stay single for long. I was, I don't know, live and play when I got into divorce.

My daddy met Sharon. I reckoned I went together for about a month or two or three. And then I got married. My dad was, I think it was head over heels for him. Sharon Wiley was born on March 30, 1953 in Frankfurt, Kentucky. One of eight children raised on a family farm. I'm actually grew up at on Georgetown Road at the old family house.

She has half siblings from her mom and she has half siblings from her father. He had five children besides her and Marcy. Sharon and Marcy were just a year apart and their age and they were best days, you know. Marcy was very studious, very intellectual, very driven to succeed. Sharon was intelligent, but in a whole different ways she was people oriented.

As Sharon entered into adulthood, her larger-than-life personality made her a natural performer, and she loved to sing, especially gospel music. She loved to put little groups together, little ensembles and do different harmonies.

I remember before she got into church, she would sing in the dance halls.

Kind of a grand old, operative type of feel, her focus was on gospel music,

that she always wanted to make it.

While pursuing music came naturally to Sharon, matters of the heart did not. My father was between tours in Vietnam when they got together. He went back for his second tour and then a little later, I was born. My younger brother, a half brother, was from a marriage that she had to abandon Ron Deringer. They got together right after I was born.

Mom and dad met, she was a waitress, and she called dad's eyes all-in-oh, so anyone from there. I would say in between '72 and '73, somewhere in there is when they actually got married. Chuck E is three years older than me. I was born in '73. Ron and Sharon set out together to make her dreams come true. Music was her dream, but it was also her comfort.

Like '80s, they decided they were going to buy a bus and kind of hit the road. My mother talked to Amanda Quinn and moving to Tennessee. She's going to miss dog. But the realities of pursuing a music career put a strain on the marriage. We were living on the bus, and you know, you can't have a kid in the mom and dad living on the bus. It was rough, you know.

And then dad, he just come and asked me one night, "Do you want to stay here? Do you want to go with me?" And I'm going with you. Come back and tell you, so we left. I was still young, I was only 14, 15 years old. My other brother stayed down with her, Chuck E. The bus and the tension over all of the money.

That was the beginning of the end.

I had enough, and so I went into the army.

Eventually we heard that her and Ronnie had split.

After recording one gospel album, Sharon's dream began to fade.

She made an album, she worked harder than it, but it never went anywhere.

By her late 30s, Sharon's goal still seemed impossible to grasp, but she would get another chance at love. She was working as a cashier at a grocery store in Nashville. Don was a truck driver, and he made deliveries to that grocery store. And that's how they met.

Don was head over heels and loved with my mother. Everything I saw out of that man was complete devotion to her. He seemed like a great guy, really nice guy. He treated her well. Three years into their marriage in 1991, their happily ever after

comes to an abrupt end as Sharon learns of her husband's violent death.

There was a detective or maybe two that came to her house.

And I tell them that she was not in any shape to talk to them. And so they were like, "Okay, can we come back tomorrow?" And I was like, "Yeah, let her calm down, let her absorb this." And then come back. The next day, Sharon agrees to sit down with detectives and tell them what she knows.

She says the last time she saw a dawn was around 7 p.m. on the 19th. The night before his body was found. Sharon heard told the police that her husband had met up with someone at a flea market to purchase a handgun.

Sharon says, "Don never came home that evening."

Prompting her to report him missing the following morning. When he did not come back at the appointed time, she became worried over his absence. Police had just started processing the missing persons report when Don's body was discovered.

Sharon gives detectives one more piece of information that peaks their interest. When the police were interviewing Sharon heard,

one of the key things the police learned is that he had been shot before.

And apparently she had no details whatsoever about the shooting. And what might have caused someone to try to kill him. Sharon says they were just trying to move on from the incident, but detectives planned to dig into these claims further. At the same time, an officer is sent to the flea market

to gather intel. But comes up empty. It was such an unusual situation from the start. From there, the police focused on who had a motive to want Don her dead.

Coming up, detectives learn more about the previous attempt on Don's life. He knew if he didn't make it to the rest or on top of the hill, he'd probably dead. And his family suspects someone close to home. We're just trying to tell him that he looked like a smell of robes. None of this has up right.

Nearly 48 hours after 52-year-old Don hurts a body was discovered. Nashville police learned there was a previous attempt on his life. While police dive into their files for more details on the incident, they line up interviews with Don's loved ones and the autopsy becomes available. Based upon the autopsy report, the time frame that his time of death wouldn't be in fairly narrow.

The medical examiner estimates the time of death to be between 7.30 and 8.00 pm on the 19th. There was still one bullet inside of it, and then one partial bullet found inside the car. Both of which proved to be a 38 special. I've killed him instantly. According to Sharon, Don left the house alone, leaving police to speculate how he ended up in the passenger seat.

The shots had come from different angles.

It was as if the person had moved and/or possibly could have handed the gun to someone else who fired a second shot.

One of the wounds was a contact wound, which means it was placed literally against the skin. The other was a near contact, which literally means it was very, very close. If a killer gets that close to someone, that indicates that he knew who killed him.

So, who did Don hurt no? Did Don hurt have enemies? Did he have death?

Did he have anything that would have cost him his life?

The medical examiner's autopsy report confirms part of Sharon's story.

She did tell the police that he had been shot previously. As investigators tracked down the police records related to the shooting six months earlier, they speak with Don's family for their accounts. My dad was going across Tennessee River. He thought he had a blowout.

And he started seeing this blood everywhere.

So, he pulled over. This is like four o'clock in the morning.

He knew if he didn't make it to the rest or upon top of the hill, he probably didn't. He even drove him with one hand, shifting gears and steering. He lealed through that. They found out how to say my dad was at the hospital. When police spoke to Don at the time, he reported catching a glimpse of a vehicle just before he heard the shot. A red firebird.

There was a small red car that had pulled up the side and shot him with a shotgun. It knipped the top of the shoulder and it went between his jaw bone. This certainly gave us rise to try to find that red car and find out who it was. The police had investigated that matter and had determined that it was a targeted shooting. The last was from what was determined to be a sabot, a projectile fired from a shotgun as opposed to shotgun pellets.

At the time, the police pursued family, interviews, and an investigation into what was going on in Don Hurts' life. But Don Hurts said that he did not want to carry on with the investigation and that effectively ended the case. The wounds that Don Hurts suffered put him in the hospital for several days and caused him to be unable to work for quite a while. So that did place a financial strain on the hurt family. There was a bankruptcy filing that had occurred shortly before his killing. From their visit to the hurt residents, investigators find it hard to believe they had any money problems.

She seemed to really not have been lacking for anything. She had a new car. She had jewelry. She had essentially anything that she would want.

Don's family members also shed light on his relationship with Sharon. The road began with finding out what was her marriage like. What was their life like together?

According to his loved ones, Don was completely smitten by Sharon's beauty and talent, but her attraction to him seemed motivated by something else. This is how it sounds as bad as anything I'm going to ever say about my mother, I guess. But how I think that when she started the process of leaving Ron Dager, she was hunting for money. And Don made her really good at living. I think that she was using Don as a means to an end to support her music career.

Don's family tells investigators that their life together hadn't lived up to Sharon's expectations. I don't think she wanted to come back home with failure. She tried to be a star and she didn't make it, but she did find a rich man to marry. It's the way I take it.

Don's loved ones revealed to investigators that Sharon apparently found a new...

Sharon worked for clothes, and that's how she met Joe Row. He came in there to buy a lot more. And he had a better job for her being a bookkeeper. She took a job as secretary for Joe. He owned an electric company there in Nashville. The family tells detectives their relationship was not as professional as Sharon let on.

I think it was pretty obvious to everybody that was close to an even Don's children that she was sleeping with Joe Row.

There are times sometimes she wouldn't come home for two or three days a row. You don't stay all day long and I'll not allow me to work unless you're doing so. You know, it's crazy. Right in front of my father, right in front of everybody, it was like a big bail will ring in my head. During interviews with the family of shooting victim Don Hurt detectives learned the relationship between his wife Sharon and her employer Joe Row had crossed a line. The investigators learned he provided her with funds to buy a pink Cadillac and had really been a part of her financial life in paying her cash under the table.

Though investigators are hesitant to approach Joe until they know more.

We've been getting information from Don's family, but if you thought somebody was involved, somebody had to be a little careful questioning because you could step out of their family. So you really have to have your investigation put together.

When detectives take a closer look at the Hurt's finances, they discover Sharon made another questionable decision shortly before Don's first shooting.

The live insurance policies, the amounts initially began when Don and Sharon were married or shortly thereafter. The initial policy was $100,000 for Don and $50,000 for Sharon before the shooting in West Tennessee. The policy was increased to 250,000 for Don. Well, after my father got shot, he canceled it and what I was told Sharon went back, re-open his insurance or got it back going. And my father didn't know nothing about that.

Now that Don has been shot and killed, the family is convinced Sharon was involved in the first attempt on Don's life, confirming their suspicions from six months earlier.

My day was at the hospital. It took me about 45 minutes to get down to where he was at at the hospital. And lo and behold, Sharon's sister, Marcy, and her husband was there.

He's about three hours away from where I live in a severe veil, and I know the way in Don Grease and Hurt's a thing to get there before we could get there. I think they're the one who pulled the shot and honoured and shot him.

Now Hurt's mother had what I would call the mother's innocent, that they were not there because they cared about his well-being. She felt there may have been an attempt to kill him at that time to finish the job. You got this thing for morphine, they kept on pushing the buck, morphine, morphine, morphine. That's from my grandmother's heart, and Sharon Marcy, and her husband was asked to leave. He said that he's not for sure who shot him. And we were just trying to tell him that he looked like a smell of roses. I said, "You know, none of this has a crime."

With Don downplaying the incident, the investigation into the first attempt on his life was never solved.

And after reviewing the facts, detectives on Don's murder case suspect Sharon Marcy and James may have returned to finish the job, but have nothing directly connecting them to Don's murder.

However, a few days into the investigation, they receive a new lead from some...

She contacted us to crime stoppers and told us that she had what she had seen.

She recalled that when she had passed by earlier, there were two cars.

At the scene, it struck her odd as it was not a usual place for people to pull off in part, but the most striking thing was the car that was in front was in her recollection, a pink cat lag. The witness says that when she passed by the spot again at 845 pm, the scene had changed. When she came back, she noticed the pink hat lag was gone, but that the other car was still there.

Investigators asked the woman if she could identify the vehicle.

I put together a photo of Lana, Hotel X, one of which was Sharon Hurt's car. I subsequently showed that to women, and she did pick out Sharon Hurt's car. Armed with this new information, detective has spent the next two months bolstering their evidence against Sharon and her potential co-conspirators. This investigation took approximately 18 months because of the thoroughness of the police department.

It's circumstantial case. It's like building a brick wall is just one small piece of the entire puzzle that you have to look at in totality to end up getting an indictment and hopefully subsequently in the conviction.

Investigators put a tap on Sharon's phone line, but it only proves Sharon's anger of the situation.

I think either 11 or 12 calls on telephone, which were recorded, but perfectly legal in Tennessee. While investigators keep a close eye and ear on Sharon, Don's children take matters into their own hands and file a lawsuit against her. While investigators keep a close eye and ear on Sharon, Don's children take matters into their own hands and file a lawsuit against her. We're in my sister. We took it on herself to get a blow here and try to prevent her from receiving the insurance money. Coming up, investigators take a closer look at Sharon and her suspected lover.

He had filed for bankruptcy, and wasn't reporting hours income.

And the details of a murder plot begin to unfold. This is ridiculous. How can I do this? After Don hurts murder, detectives are heavily investigating his wife Sharon for her possible involvement, and Don's children have just filed a civil suit. The civil suit filed against Sharon hurt was ongoing at the time, and also was consistent with current Tennessee law

that provides that a person may not profit from their criminal actions. Given the circumstances surrounding Sharon's potential involvement, the life insurance payout is put on hold. As investigators take another look at their evidence, among their lingering questions, his why Don was in the passenger seat of his own car. A more extensive toxicology report becomes available and provides a possible answer.

Once they did a more detailed examination, they found out that he had dinner drill in his sister. A very large amount of been to drill. The level was such that he could have and would have been incapacitated as far as being able to essentially defend himself or be able to be in control. He would likely have been able to move with assistance.

The amount of been to drill and Don hurt system could really have only been placed in a drink by someone close to him.

That would have been Sharon hurt.

As suspicions surrounding Sharon continue to grow, detectives look further into Sharon's lover and employer, Joe Row.

It seems that in December 1991, he too was in financial trouble.

I got a call from the lady who was a bookkeeper over in Ohio, Hickory, Tennessee. And she told me that she was suspicious of Joe laundry money. He had filed for bankruptcy, and wasn't reporting his company income. We obtained a search warrant for his business. And FBI took it out and write it his business.

And determined he was, in fact, a hidden assets from bankruptcy court. Joe's in bankruptcy.

So he's strapped for cash.

So money would have helped him.

After concluding Joe Row had potential motive.

Police tried to question him, but discover he's fled the state and he's taken Sharon with him. She was running. There's no other way here to put it. She was running. At that point, circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt, the DAMSF boat thought that these were the only people

that had the opportunity and the motive and to commit this crime.

So therefore they were indicted basically on circumstances evidence.

And we got an arrest warrant. Fortunately, the civil case against Sharon provides detectives with an opportunity to apprehend the pair. They have come back to Nashville for a court hearing on the insurance money. What are the other detectives saw their car? They stopped them out there.

Hey, let me have your attention for a minute. Okay, I'm Lieutenant Hackett, homicide division. Yeah, the police are both over the under arrest for first-degree murder. That's a very murder. That's a little bit grossing. I think this is ridiculous.

How can they do this? I'm not guilty.

I don't think they were surprised. I didn't get any amazement. I think they kind of knew what was coming.

On September 12, 1993, Joe and Sharon are both charged with killing Don Hurt and held on $300,000 bail. His attorney, which is called Fender, approached me and district attorney Tharmun about Joe getting out of jail, because he'd been sick twice in the years about to kill him. Who is well? That's all well and good. We'll read it now. In exchange for a lower bail amount, Joe agrees to come clean.

Joe claims he has an air-tight alibi for the night of Don's murder, but admits he provided the weapon used in a shooting. Joe wrote testifies that they, Sharon and her sister, Marcy Murray, and brother-in-law, Jimmy Murray, plotted to kill Don. They get a handgun from him.

He knows they gave Don a drink laced with Benadriel, and that they took him, they being Sharon, Marcy and Jimmy. Took Don out, walked him out to the car, got him in, drove him out, and came back, and that Jimmy Murray at one point told him that he and Marcy at both shot, Don, with the same gun, so that each of them would be equally responsible.

Joe was willing to postpone, was to get $250,000. Joe also agrees to record phone calls with the Murrays that can be used against them in court. A damn man. You don't know, I'm pretty sure. I just needed to talk to you about that damn gun.

Guy name it, I mean, I need to need you to help me.

Better to come to gun despair.

Part of the information Joe was able to get on the phone.

By talking to Jim, was the fact that Marcy had purchased the Benadriel. Of course, being in a nurse, she had knowledge that Benadriel would incapacitate and die, that she had bought it at a specific drugstore in Hendersonville. Later on, we were able to contact that drugstore and establish that she had actually been in there and had purchased Benadriel.

That's a big deal. Joe's cooperation was important.

It told behind the scenes view that the jury needed to hear.

But we didn't know what was fixing that. In the months following Joe rose confession, prosecutors strengthened their case against his alleged co-conspirators, Sharon Hurt, her sister Marcy, and Marcy's husband, James Murray.

According to Joe, the Murrays were also involved in the first attempt on Don's Life.

The first shooting had been from someone firing a shotgun blast from a red firebird. Sure enough, the couple have a red firebird registered to James. And that's not all that connects them to the first shooting. With the assistance of the severe county law enforcement officials, they assisted in serving search warrant on the Murray property, obtaining the car, and the shotgun.

It was able to be matched as the gun used in the West Tennessee shooting. On August 28, 1994, Marcy and James Murray are arrested in Franklin, Kentucky, and charged with murder. The following year in July 1995, they stand trial alongside Sharon Hurt. They did not have any physical evidence at all. Wanking my mom to the crown. What they had was circumstantial and Joe Row.

That was it. I thought the trial was a lot of him telling what he thought. A lot of what went on down through there just didn't seem like mom. And I really don't believe she was there for most of it. The prosecution argues Sharon had every reason to want Don out of the picture for good.

Sharon's motive was to use the proceeds from this insurance to help with her singing music career in gospel music.

Marcy and Jim, I think they were broke most of the time, didn't have any money.

Anything that they could have got would have been beneficial to them, of course. Marcy Murray, I really believe her motivation was that she loved her sister. And if Sharon Hurt asked her to do something, she would do it. I believe Sharon Hurt told the police that Don had met some stranger at a flea market to buy a gun, because she would have known they were going to find out that he had been shot several months before.

And my speculation is that she was setting up essentially an alibi that he was trying to get a weapon for protection against this unknown person who was trying to kill him. The fact that Sharon Hurt had called to say that her husband was missing was one of those interesting things that the police weighed in on her appearing to be at times a grieving widow. But at the same time, making sure that her insurance agent knew that she wanted to collect on life insurance policy. The defense, however, maintains all three of the accused are innocent and believe Joe Row made up his story.

They tried to quote fingers and other people, anybody but they, of course, they weren't admitting anything. So, basically there the defense was, we didn't do it. Somebody else did.

After just two hours of deliberation, the jury returns with a verdict. The trial resulted in all three defendants being convicted of first-degree murder.

All three defendants being convicted of conspiracy to commit first-degree mur...

Four their actions that included the Benton County shooting.

Sharon Hurt's agents in life plus 24 were GM received a sentence of life plus 22. And all three are still incarcerated.

I think justice was served in this case, absolutely.

Don Hurt was by all accounts, a decent, hardworking family man who had done nothing to deserve being killed. The whole bunch were attaining to some degree, angry.

The most guilty person be Sharon, because I mean, she could always say, "No, I'll just divorce him."

I think she got lower signs in her eyes than to help with everything else.

It's amazing how all that turned around over money, but it did.

She's paying for it. She's sitting down there paying for it right now.

After his co-conspirators trial, Joe Roe pleads guilty to conspiracy and is sentenced to 18 years in prison. But for Don Hurt's loved ones, it's a hollow victory.

I think he'd be very proud of his grandkids.

It's very unfortunate that he missed out on those things. He was a good man and a bright, happy person and something we could use a lot more than the world. Nobody deserves what he got. Nobody. I'll for just 11 months. I like to say the world won't last up a good man. [Music]

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