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00:00:00Some stories are unforgettable.
00:00:03This is one of them.
00:00:05We had heard something about a shot.
00:00:07The message that I left was,
00:00:09lock your doors, I love you, be safe.
00:00:12We immediately started calling every hospital,
00:00:14because we knew.
00:00:15In our heart of hearts, we knew what had happened.
00:00:18She was shot and killed by her husband,
00:00:21the FBI agent.
00:00:23Shot her four times.
00:00:24Shot her four times.
00:00:25He says she attacked him.
00:00:27The person has the right to defend themselves.
00:00:29And police did find a knife in her hand.
00:00:32This is the knife.
00:00:33Can you show us?
00:00:34This is it right here.
00:00:35I was spooked looking at the actual knife.
00:00:38It was impossible not to think about that violent confrontation in the kitchen.
00:00:42We believe the knife was placed in Julie's hand.
00:00:44She would never, ever be capable of coming at somebody with a knife.
00:00:49And there were questions about his love life, too.
00:00:52It's deeply creepy.
00:00:53It does have a very creepy feel to it.
00:00:56Was it self-defense?
00:00:57I think Julie lost it.
00:00:59She snapped.
00:01:00I would bet my life on it.
00:01:02Or something else entirely.
00:01:04Is this changing for you by the minute?
00:01:06It is.
00:01:07After three trials, we were finally waiting for justice to be served.
00:01:11And it was one of the most dramatic moments I've experienced in a courtroom.
00:01:14832 days comes down to one hour.
00:01:17I put my life in the hands of God.
00:01:19I put my life in the hands of God.
00:01:28This is Dateline Unforgettable.
00:01:30I'm Dennis Murphy with a fresh look at The Agent's Wife.
00:01:34They comprise America's elite law enforcement team, the men and women of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
00:01:46And their careers begin here at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia, where trainees are taught how to lead, how to survive, and how to shoot.
00:01:57In a kind of backlot movie set of a small town, a place called Hogan's Alley, agent recruits are taught that when they face a deadly threat, they need to eliminate it.
00:02:08Stimulus response.
00:02:10It's kill or be killed, with no time to overthink the situation.
00:02:17But back in April 2013, something happened just down the road from the Academy involving one of the FBI's own.
00:02:25A call to 911.
00:02:26I'm an FBI agent. Please, please hurry.
00:02:29This law enforcement community struggled to understand the ghastly thing that had happened here in just seconds.
00:02:35I remember dropping the phone, falling to my knees, and just crying.
00:02:40Friends and neighbors sat in disbelief.
00:02:43We know that that's not what happened. It just doesn't make any sense.
00:02:47While a family lay torn apart.
00:02:50You relive that moment every time you think about it.
00:02:55Soon you'll learn all about that moment and the federal agent behind it, Art Gonzalez.
00:03:00Just who was this FBI man?
00:03:02That was a big challenge in telling this story.
00:03:04Figuring out his human dimensions beyond the public figure with a badge and a firearm.
00:03:09What made Art Gonzalez tick?
00:03:11What was the marriage about?
00:03:13And most importantly, what exactly happened behind the closed doors of their home?
00:03:20Our story begins here in the leafy suburb of Stafford, Virginia.
00:03:24It's a quick commute to Quantico for the many FBI agents who live here.
00:03:31Safe and secure as a town can get.
00:03:33That's exactly why it appealed to Bureau Special Agent Arthur Gonzalez.
00:03:38Back in 2010, he and his wife, Julie, moved to this quiet, conservative community with their two young sons, Chris and Aiden.
00:03:46Terry Smith and her daughter, Taylor, were their neighbors across the street and became close to Julie.
00:03:51So how'd you come to know them?
00:03:53Well, we met at the block party right across from our house and it was like an old friend, even though I had just met her.
00:04:01The couple were devoted parents. Art coached soccer for the boys at their school and Julie was the dutiful soccer mom.
00:04:09Did she like being a mother?
00:04:10Oh, yeah. She loved her boys their whole life, everything.
00:04:14Julie's a lot like me.
00:04:16Art's sister, Arlene.
00:04:17We both have a really bubbly personality.
00:04:20I think that we're very friendly people.
00:04:22She was like my sister.
00:04:24Her and I were two peas in a pod.
00:04:27Julie and Art had been born and bred in New Mexico, where the two met cute in college.
00:04:33He's a three sports athlete, star, right?
00:04:36Right.
00:04:37Valedictorian of the class?
00:04:38Correct.
00:04:39Art's very focused, goal driven.
00:04:40And his biggest goal was a career in law enforcement. Out West, Art racked up 15 years service as an FBI field agent, covering his wall with awards.
00:04:51Then he got his dream job, recruited to be an instructor at the elite FBI Academy at Quantico.
00:04:57That's reaching high. That's as good as it gets.
00:04:59Yes. And I knew he'd succeed. Art always succeeded at what he put his mind to. That's who he is.
00:05:04Julie's dad, Ray Cerna, said his son-in-law took pride in that FBI badge and would carry his bureau issued gun just about everywhere.
00:05:14It went to church with him and he made sure that everyone saw him as an agent.
00:05:22So he liked the persona of being an FBI agent.
00:05:26Yes.
00:05:27For a time, Julie had joined the bureau too, as a civilian hire, working as an evidence technician on some high profile cases.
00:05:34One of them involved the takedown of a major Mexican drug cartel.
00:05:38She was good at the job.
00:05:39She was great at her job. She was great at everything that she did.
00:05:42But Julie's FBI days were behind her. She had quit to raise the boys.
00:05:46And when they moved to Virginia, she took a low stress job as a teller for their local bank.
00:05:52Here she is, rehearsing a speech for a training program there.
00:05:55I would like to take this opportunity to thank each and every one of you.
00:05:59It's not hard to love Julie.
00:06:01Coworker Tiffany Clark became a close friend.
00:06:04It took all of a couple of days to realize just what a great person she was.
00:06:08But as Tiffany got to know Julie, she sensed that her cheery disposition hid some trouble at home.
00:06:13During the summertime, she had lifted up her hand and showed me she was no longer wearing her wedding ring.
00:06:19No wedding ring. After 18 years of marriage, Julie and Art were going through some rough times.
00:06:26There was even talk of divorce.
00:06:28She came to visit me and the kids. She was crying more than I had ever seen her cry.
00:06:36Then came the day that would change everything.
00:06:39It was a Friday in April 2013.
00:06:43Art had gone to his instructor's job at the FBI Academy.
00:06:46Julie had the day off and spent the morning doing errands and grabbing some lunch with a neighbor.
00:06:52But that afternoon, a friend called Tiffany at the bank and said that something was very wrong in Julie and Art's neighborhood.
00:06:59She told me of a story where there was some kind of shooting.
00:07:03A shooting in the seemingly safe haven of Stafford.
00:07:05Tiffany called Julie and left a message to warn her.
00:07:09When I called Jules, I told her, you know, Julie, there's been a shooting in the neighborhood.
00:07:14Lock your doors.
00:07:16Go upstairs. You know, I love you. Be safe.
00:07:19Then the news got even worse.
00:07:22The shooting wasn't just in Julie and Art's neighborhood.
00:07:25It was in their very own house.
00:07:27What is your emergency?
00:07:28Coming up, what had happened in that house?
00:07:34Who'd been shot?
00:07:36And who'd done the shooting?
00:07:38But ultimately, the hardest question of all, the one that would take years to answer, was why?
00:07:43I just didn't want to believe it.
00:07:45There was still that shred, that shred of hope that, you know, this couldn't be happening.
00:07:49When Dateline Unforgettable continues.
00:07:52April 19th, 2013, 2.21 p.m., in this quiet tree-lined suburb of Stafford, Virginia, a frantic man called 911.
00:08:11What is your emergency?
00:08:13It was Arthur Gonzalez.
00:08:15The agent's wife, Julie, was lying on the kitchen floor with gunshot wounds.
00:08:17First responders rushed to the scene as the operator began talking Art through instructions for giving CPR.
00:08:22Now listen to me carefully.
00:08:24Pump the chest hard and fast 30 times.
00:08:25At least twice per second.
00:08:26She kept him on the phone with deputies moments away.
00:08:28Julie had been shot.
00:08:29But how?
00:08:30What had happened inside the Gonzalez home?
00:08:32En route to the scene, it was this man's job to do.
00:08:35The agent's wife, Julie, was lying on the kitchen floor with gunshot wounds.
00:08:37First responders rushed to the scene as the operator began talking Art through instructions for giving CPR.
00:08:40Now listen to me carefully.
00:08:42Pump the chest hard and fast 30 times, at least twice per second.
00:08:46She kept him on the phone with deputies moments away.
00:08:49Julie had been shot, but how?
00:08:51What had happened inside the Gonzalez home?
00:08:52On route to the scene, it was this man's job to find out.
00:08:56I'm running lights and siren myself over there.
00:08:59I was one of the responding officers.
00:09:01As soon as Detective Todd Nosal hit the ground, he knew this was no routine case.
00:09:06Did you know he was an FBI agent?
00:09:08When I got on the scene, I was immediately informed of that.
00:09:11And that FBI agent, the distraught husband who had called 911, had just walked out of the house,
00:09:17hands up, holster on his hip, as captured by dash cam video.
00:09:22Now he was in the back seat of a sheriff's cruiser.
00:09:25That's because Art admitted right away that he was the one who just shot Julie.
00:09:30The detective followed the cruiser and Art downtown to the sheriff's department for an interview.
00:09:36When I read him as Miranda, he was agreeable to talk.
00:09:39Obviously, you're an FBI agent, so you kind of know how this goes, and we have a job to do.
00:09:46Certainly, Art knew the drill, knew the camera was rolling as Nosal began to take down Art's story of what had just happened in that house.
00:09:54So how does this story come out?
00:09:55I just start asking him a very open-ended question, you know, why don't you tell me what happened?
00:09:58I went to eat lunch at Moe's with a friend. I took a friend back to the academy.
00:10:04And after that, I drove straight home. I drove up to the house and she was there.
00:10:08Art told the detective that he was surprised to see Julie's car in the driveway.
00:10:12The couple had recently separated. Art was staying in the house with the boys while Julie had moved to an apartment nearby.
00:10:18I said, what are you doing here? I said, you need to call me before you come here.
00:10:22So he was annoyed she hadn't called before stopping by, but said he saw an opportunity to talk about the relationship and get Julie to agree to a quick divorce.
00:10:32We were standing in the kitchen and I told her, look, it's over. You know, we need to complete this process.
00:10:39And then she said, well, I thought we were trying to reconcile. I said, no, Julie, we're not.
00:10:43I said I love her anymore. She said, well, I can't take this anymore.
00:10:47I turned around for a second. I guess there was a knife seen on the counter. She attacked me.
00:10:51Julie, he says, charged at him with a knife.
00:10:54The FBI agent told the cop that what happened next was pure reflex.
00:10:59She came at me. I put up my arm and I pushed her away.
00:11:04She came back at me again before I said stop. And at that time, I just reacted in my open fire.
00:11:10Art said his FBI training had kicked in to neutralize the threat with a weapon he had at the ready right there on his hip.
00:11:19A tragic case, he said, of self-defense.
00:11:22That's really the extent of what happened.
00:11:24Self-defense. She came at me with a knife.
00:11:26Self-defense. I'm trained to deal with threats.
00:11:28It's his estranged wife. He has exclusive use of the home.
00:11:31But Detective Nosal had law enforcement training, too, and his reflex to be skeptical of any situation where a husband shoots his wife.
00:11:40In fact, from the start of the conversation, he'd been watching Art very closely, even as he talked about Julie's condition.
00:11:47Is she OK?
00:11:49Well, obviously, she's not OK right now. She's been treated medically. Once I get an update on her, I'll let you know.
00:11:56Detective Nosal sounds pretty convincing, doesn't he?
00:11:59Well, the truth was he knew that 42-year-old Julie Gonzalez had been pronounced dead on the way to the hospital.
00:12:05Nosal told me his plan was to wait a good while before telling Gonzalez's wife was dead.
00:12:10The strategy, keep art talking before emotions potentially overwhelm the interview and gauge his reaction.
00:12:17Keep in mind, investigators have no obligation to tell the truth during the interview process.
00:12:24The detective asked Art another one of those open-ended questions, this one about their marriage.
00:12:30What kind of relationship did he have with your wife?
00:12:32Excellent. I've been up to the point that four years ago, I don't know what happened to her. Something happened.
00:12:40Art told the detective that the marriage had been unraveling for years.
00:12:43Julie, Art said was unstable and had a serious drinking problem.
00:12:48Four years ago, it was, it was nightmarish. I wasn't taking care of the boys.
00:12:53Just hours after shooting his wife, Art was recounting a litany of aggressive acts, things she'd done to him.
00:12:59She went to me. I got my shirt and just ripped her out of my back.
00:13:04I had to scratch from here, you know, down to my shoulder blade.
00:13:08It was another time when I, we had to call with deputies and, you know, they actually had her in actos before.
00:13:12Detective Nosal steered the interview back to that day's tragic shooting.
00:13:16He asked about the defensive move the agent says he made with his left arm.
00:13:20Do you have any injuries on you right now? I don't do that.
00:13:25A couple cuts right there.
00:13:27I asked him several more times to expound on things or just take me again from the top of, of what happened that day.
00:13:34Standard procedure, lock in a story, then check for inconsistencies in the repeat cycles.
00:13:39How many rounds do you think you're fired?
00:13:42Two or three. I don't know.
00:13:44What happens to her then?
00:13:46I think she takes a step back and falls on the ground.
00:13:48I have to go to phone call 911.
00:13:50My wife is the fact that I haven't had to shoot her.
00:13:52Does he tell you he's giving compressions and breath that he's doing the whole CPR regimen?
00:13:56He did. He did.
00:13:58About 40 minutes into their talk, Art again asked how his wife was doing.
00:14:02I got some, some bad news.
00:14:04Uh, she's, she's dead. She, she, uh, I guess, I guess passed on the way in the ambulance.
00:14:12Art put his head down and saw.
00:14:16Alright, I'm just gonna step out for a second, okay?
00:14:20Minutes later, he was back, a tough cop expressing his sympathies.
00:14:25Obviously, this is probably one of the worst situations, especially a law enforcement officer could be in when, you know, you're defending yourself as the mother of your children.
00:14:32After hearing multiple recountings of his story, Nossal looked across at his fellow lawman and told him it seemed like a case of self-defense.
00:14:42It's not making things better and it's not gonna change how today is.
00:14:47But, you know, I mean, you have to defend yourself.
00:14:53Back in Art's neighborhood, news of Julie's death had quickly spread across the street.
00:14:57A knock came at the door. It was a police officer and he asked me if I could go get the children from school because there was an incident at Art and Julie's house.
00:15:09Terry Smith, Julie's good friend and neighbor, could barely wrap her head around the awful news.
00:15:15I just didn't want to believe it.
00:15:16When Julie's work friend Tiffany started hearing the shooting involved Julie, she didn't want to believe it either.
00:15:23She started frantically calling the hospitals, hoping her friend had just been injured.
00:15:28There was still that shred, that shred of hope that, you know, this couldn't be happening, you know, this worst nightmare.
00:15:34But they confirmed that she had died.
00:15:36Julie, the only other person in the kitchen that April afternoon, was dead.
00:15:42But was there more to the story?
00:15:45Coming up.
00:15:47A husband's love life raises eyebrows.
00:15:50Her undies are upstairs.
00:15:52That is correct.
00:15:53And his story raises doubts.
00:15:55This is the first thing that doesn't jive with what I just heard in the interview room.
00:15:58When Dateline Unforgettable continues.
00:16:11Art Gonzalez had just told the detective his self-defense story.
00:16:15But now he braced himself for something even harder, telling his family that Julie was dead.
00:16:21During an interview break, Art phoned his dad.
00:16:23Dad, I said, I need you and Mom to get on a plane out of here tonight.
00:16:27Julie attacked me with a knife and I had to shoot her.
00:16:36I'm sorry, Dad.
00:16:38At her home in Texas, Art's sister's cell phone was blowing up with urgent messages from family members.
00:16:44She called her father back first.
00:16:46I said, Dad, what is wrong?
00:16:48And he said, Julie attacked Art with a knife.
00:16:50And he shot her and she didn't make it.
00:16:57And I said, what?
00:16:59And at that point, I just, I remember dropping the phone, falling to my knees and just crying.
00:17:07After Art broke the tragic news to his family, he called his boys, then ages 10 and 12.
00:17:13They knew something happened to their mom, but no details.
00:17:16Art decided not to reveal anything over the phone.
00:17:20Hey, are you okay?
00:17:22We'll talk about later, okay?
00:17:26Um, I might say, just know, whatever happens, I love you with all my heart.
00:17:31During another break in the interview, Detective No Sal had his own tough call to make.
00:17:36He had to tell Julie's father that she was dead.
00:17:40My first thought was that, uh, she might have suffered.
00:17:45I didn't want that.
00:17:47And he told me, I don't think so.
00:17:51And after the detective broke the terrible news, he gently asked Julie's dad a few questions.
00:17:56One concerned her drinking.
00:17:57She drank an occasional beer or an occasional glass of wine.
00:18:02So you wouldn't say she was a problem drinker?
00:18:05No, no, no, no.
00:18:07His response was immediate and it kind of took me back.
00:18:11I heard an hour and a half of Art telling me a story about Julie Gonzalez being an alcoholic.
00:18:16I go, okay, this is the first thing that doesn't jive with what I just heard in the interview room.
00:18:20So now, No Sal was starting to wonder if there were perhaps other contradictions or inconsistencies in Art's story.
00:18:28By nightfall, Art was still in the chair when No Sal began receiving reports from investigators at the house.
00:18:34One discovery in the master bedroom was big news to him.
00:18:38Some ladies' undergarments, uh, in there, as well as there was some male in the master bedroom and it had the name Cara Cast on it.
00:18:46And who was this Cara Cast?
00:18:48Suddenly, there's another woman in the picture.
00:18:52And her undies are upstairs.
00:18:53That is correct.
00:18:54And you've got the husband in the chair who has just shot his wife four times.
00:18:58So now the tone shifts a little bit here in the second pass at Arthur Gonzalez, doesn't it?
00:19:03It does.
00:19:04I just got a question or two for you.
00:19:07I guess in your bedroom, I guess in one of the hampers, there were some female panties or undergarments in there.
00:19:16Mm-hmm.
00:19:17Is that, were that your wife's?
00:19:19Or, who, who is it?
00:19:21Um, it's a friend of mine who's gonna stand over every once in a while.
00:19:24Okay.
00:19:26Detective No Sal, a trained interrogator, knew that words mattered.
00:19:29And this wasn't the first time Art had characterized Cara as just a friend.
00:19:34I went to eat the lunch at Moe's with a friend.
00:19:37That unnamed friend Art saw just before the shooting turned out to be Cara.
00:19:41And earlier in their interview, Art had mentioned Cara Cast to Nassau once in passing as someone who'd know how to reach the boys.
00:19:50Cara worked at the FBI alongside Art and was almost 20 years his junior.
00:19:56I'm not the morality police.
00:19:57You know, like, are you guys, you guys hooking up?
00:20:01We're good friends.
00:20:02You guys having sex and stuff like that?
00:20:04Okay.
00:20:05What's the importance of finding the lover's underwear?
00:20:08I think that hurt Art Gonzalez's credibility in the interview room, that I'm not hearing this.
00:20:13Why hasn't he offered it up?
00:20:14I'd figure, especially as a trained law enforcement officer and somebody working with the FBI, he would have probably volunteered that at some point during the interview.
00:20:23And then, of course, when I started talking to him about it, I felt he was being evasive and minimizing it.
00:20:28And Nassau noticed that when he asked what Julie knew about Cara, Art seemed to fumble around with his answer.
00:20:35Did she know about you two?
00:20:38Um, I think she'd seen us out before. I don't think it was a secret.
00:20:43Okay.
00:20:44I mean, did she know you guys were in a relationship or anything like that?
00:20:48I never hid it.
00:20:50Okay.
00:20:52Did she know she stayed there at times?
00:20:54At Tom's?
00:20:55Yeah, I'm sure. Yeah, because she'd say that a few times and I don't know if she knew her.
00:21:00Is this changing for you by the minute?
00:21:02It is. It obviously starts putting some chinks in Arthur Gonzalez's story.
00:21:07So this is topic number one?
00:21:08It is.
00:21:10Detective Todd Nassau had caught an unusual and difficult case to analyze.
00:21:15This wasn't a whodunit, no question about that, so much as it was a whodunit.
00:21:20Only two people knew what went down and one of them was dead.
00:21:23He says she comes at him with a knife and that he reacted and shot her.
00:21:27Shot her four times?
00:21:28Shot her four times.
00:21:30The mother of his two children?
00:21:31The mother of his two children.
00:21:32In what used to be her home.
00:21:33And then you have to wonder, is this self-defense or not? What's going on here?
00:21:36So you guys have to figure out, is this story true?
00:21:39Yes, sir.
00:21:41By the end of the first day, Art Gonzalez was a free man.
00:21:44Not under arrest, but under a cloud.
00:21:47So he doesn't spend the night in your jail?
00:21:48He does not, but we were going to continue with the investigation.
00:21:51Coming up, Art discovers some disturbing pictures of his lover and takes one of his own.
00:21:58It's deeply creepy.
00:21:59It does have a very creepy feel to it.
00:22:01When Dateline Unforgettable continues.
00:22:14To figure out what really happened in that kitchen, Detective Todd Nosal realized he needed to dig deeper into the lives of Art and Julie Gonzalez.
00:22:23In that interview, Art had painted a portrait of a woman with a drinking problem who was desperate to get back together with him.
00:22:30And then she said, well, I thought we were trying to reconcile.
00:22:33And I said, no, Julie, we're not.
00:22:36No, Sal and his fellow investigators now wanted to examine it from Julie's point of view.
00:22:42For starters, how did she regard their failing marriage?
00:22:45Terry, what do you think was happening?
00:22:47He was telling her she couldn't do anything right.
00:22:49Terry Smith, more than just a neighbor, told detectives she invited Julie to live at her home at the beginning of the separation from Art.
00:22:56She said Julie had complained that Art had belittled her constantly.
00:23:00Terry also said Julie characterized Art as a control freak and that ultimately she was glad to be out from under his thumb.
00:23:08She said, I'm just going to be happy to be able to watch a TV program and not be told I'm silly for watching it.
00:23:13And before the shooting, Terry's daughter noticed that Julie, now living in her own place, was really coming into her own.
00:23:20She never thought that she could be that happy alone.
00:23:23But it turned out that being alone was like this amazing thing that she had forgotten how to do, I guess.
00:23:29On what would be the last day of her life, Julie spent time with Terry.
00:23:33About 1030, she texted me, hey, I'm off today. You want to get together?
00:23:37Terry invited Julie over to her house for Chinese takeout.
00:23:41Was she talking about reconciliation, getting back together with Art no matter what it took?
00:23:46No. No, she wasn't.
00:23:48Tiffany Clark, Julie's pal from the bank, told investigators that she'd seen Art treat Julie in a demeaning way.
00:23:55And she said in the weeks before the shooting, Julie was finally over and done with Art.
00:24:00She didn't want anything to do with the relationship anymore.
00:24:03Was she in a good place, did you think, Tiffany?
00:24:05Absolutely, yeah.
00:24:07She was ready to move on.
00:24:08Yep, for sure.
00:24:10That all contradicted what Art had told Detective Nocelle, that the trigger for Julie's attack was his declaration that he didn't love her anymore and they'd never get back together.
00:24:20In fact, Julie's friends and family said nothing about Art's story made any sense.
00:24:25There's absolutely no doubt in my mind that she would never, ever be capable of, you know, coming at somebody with a knife.
00:24:35When you start talking to the family and you start talking to other people, they made it clear that there was a different version of Julie Gonzalez.
00:24:43This is becoming a very complex issue.
00:24:45It was.
00:24:46So, Nocelle then turned his attention to Art.
00:24:49What was his state of mind before the shooting that day?
00:24:52By that point, the detective's investigative team had grown.
00:24:55I got a call that afternoon from our sheriff's office.
00:24:58Eric Olson and Kristen Byrd were the Stafford County prosecutors assigned to the case.
00:25:02They were first intrigued by the way Art seemed to downplay his relationship with that young FBI employee, Kara Kast.
00:25:09We wondered whether it had anything to do with what happened inside the house that day.
00:25:13So, we tried to build up the timeline of that relationship.
00:25:17So, detectives headed to the FBI Academy with a search warrant and found something intriguing.
00:25:23In like an inbox on Kara Kast's desk, I find, I believe it's a nine-page letter.
00:25:28It was this rambling, romantic letter that Art had written to Kara four months before Julie's death.
00:25:34In it, Art wrote,
00:25:36Kara, the special connection between us is undeniable.
00:25:40We are two pieces of a puzzle that fit perfectly.
00:25:43Yin and Yang, Ricky and Lucy, SpongeBob and SquarePants.
00:25:47You complete me and I you.
00:25:50We belong together and I wish you could see that.
00:25:53To me, this was the moment the investigation headed south for Art Gunsville.
00:25:57Finding a goopy love letter to an FBI colleague, Art had another woman.
00:26:03And this didn't seem to be some small fling in his mind.
00:26:06In an unexplained death investigation about your estranged wife, that's never a good fact.
00:26:12None of us are psychologists, but what do you think is going on with a guy in his mid-40s writing this kind of document?
00:26:18It was described to us by one of the witnesses and one of the individuals who knew Mr. Gonzalez well and worked with him, that it seemed like it was an older man obsessed and in love with a younger woman.
00:26:27Detectives pulled the records from Art and Kara's phones and started to learn more about Art's behavior in the days and hours before he surrendered to deputies.
00:26:36Two nights before Julie's death, the couple slept together at his house and late that night, Art discovered something.
00:26:43He picks up Kara's phone while she's sleeping and goes through it and then he sees that there are photos in her phone of her and a FBI agent that she had been seeing.
00:26:55Another younger agent, a romantic rival for Art.
00:26:59He's snooping in her phone.
00:27:00He's snooping in her phone and the pictures are pictures of Kara undressed.
00:27:06This is graphic evidence, Detective, that she's got another guy.
00:27:09Yes.
00:27:10And he's very much in the picture.
00:27:11Yeah, that is correct.
00:27:12In the picture on the phone and in her life.
00:27:13That is correct.
00:27:14And Nossal says that after Art forwarded those nude selfies of Kara to himself, he then took this strange photo of his own.
00:27:22She appears to be sleeping and he appears to kind of be hovering over.
00:27:26So you want some pictures.
00:27:27Here's another picture for your collection, huh?
00:27:29It's deeply creepy.
00:27:32You could only, it does have a very creepy feel to it.
00:27:35Yes, sir.
00:27:36The investigators then talked to some of Art's colleagues at the FBI who saw him in the office the following morning.
00:27:42What was his demeanor at work?
00:27:44That Thursday, he was described as being unkempt, disheveled.
00:27:49And I believe at one point we were told that he even said, is it possible for her to love both him and me?
00:27:56And just far more emotional than his friends had ever seen him before.
00:28:03We end up hearing from Art's office mate that there was a confrontation with Kara over those pictures.
00:28:09To prosecutors, it all looked as though Kara had dumped Art for that younger man.
00:28:14Based on that, they now believe that if anyone had reason to be angry and unhinged in the kitchen that day, it wasn't Julie, it was Art.
00:28:23He was completely obsessed with miscast and completely devastated when the relationship ended.
00:28:29So, if Art had hidden the truth about his girlfriend and distorted facts about his wife, the investigators wondered what else might he be hiding about the shooting.
00:28:39Coming up, the knife Art says Julie was holding when he shot her.
00:28:44What makes more sense for an overhand kind of thrust?
00:28:46The old slasher movie, you know, psycho style.
00:28:50But that's not how a deputy remembers seeing the knife in Julie's hand.
00:28:54It was like this.
00:28:55Leaving detectives to ask, was she ever holding it?
00:29:00When Dateline Unforgettable continues.
00:29:03Days into the investigation, Todd Nosal now believed Art had been less than honest about the women in his life, Julie and Kara.
00:29:19So, the detective decided to take another look at his interview with Art from the day of the shooting.
00:29:24I got some bad news.
00:29:26Specifically, the moment when he told the agent that his wife was dead.
00:29:30And his reaction was what?
00:29:31He started sobbing.
00:29:34He didn't have tears.
00:29:35Is that a red flag moment for you?
00:29:37No, it's not at that point.
00:29:40Being on a lot of death scenes in my career, you see all kinds of different forms of folks grieving.
00:29:45But looking back at it, it's one of the red flags that go up.
00:29:49I put that in the negative boxes as I'm checking the list.
00:29:53Initially, the detective told Art he understood his need to defend himself.
00:29:58But now he was looking at everything in a new light, including the level of deadly force.
00:30:03A lot of people outside the world of firearms and law enforcement would wonder,
00:30:08can't you shoot her in the foot if you feel you actually got to produce your weapon, fire a shot into the ceiling?
00:30:12Something short of putting four around center mass, torso.
00:30:15Most use of force policies are to protect the officer's life or other human life and to stop the aggressive action.
00:30:25But the glaring difference is that this wasn't an unknown suspect.
00:30:30It was the mother of his two children, so why was it necessary for four shots?
00:30:35Art's story was that he was trained to react instinctively.
00:30:39Trained to pull the gun that was right there in his holster, he said, when faced with a deadly threat, i.e. the knife.
00:30:45This is the knife. Can you show us?
00:30:47This is it right here.
00:30:48Detective Nossal brought it along for a demonstration.
00:30:52It's the all-business blade that Julie had in her hand when the responding deputies arrived.
00:30:58But one of the officers noticed she was holding the knife in what he said was an unnatural three-fingered grip.
00:31:04The bottom three fingers were grasping the handle of the knife.
00:31:07What does that suggest to you as what kind of emotion that would be?
00:31:11Well, given the way that Arthur Gonzalez describes the attack, he basically acts like he's defending from an overhead blow.
00:31:19So the only thing you can envision is almost an awkward...
00:31:23What makes more sense in terms of a grip for an overhand kind of thrust?
00:31:27You want to go with probably the old...
00:31:30Slasher movies.
00:31:31Yeah, the old slasher movie, you know, psycho style.
00:31:34But that's not the way the deputy recalls the blade in her hand.
00:31:38No, sir. It was like this.
00:31:40The detective had to wonder, was the knife placed there?
00:31:44And if Art was lying about that, nothing in his self-defense instinctive reach for the gun story could be believed.
00:31:51So as he went about picking apart Art's account of the day, the detective pulled video from the restaurant where he said he had lunch right before the shooting.
00:31:59These freeze frames, notice Art's right hip, gave the detective his aha moment.
00:32:05The red flag was flapping in the wind as I'm going through the Moe's video and I realize he's not wearing a holster or a gun.
00:32:14No gun on his hip. Video proof, the detective thought, of another big lie.
00:32:19If Art wasn't wearing the holster out in public at lunch, he almost certainly wouldn't have it on when he stopped at his own house a short time later.
00:32:27The detective believes the FBI agent strapped it on after the shooting just to make it look like self-defense to the arriving officers.
00:32:35It's a very good story to say I came in, I had a holster on my hip when I was attacked.
00:32:42I just reacted, it was just from my training and experience that I was defending myself against a threat.
00:32:49So Nossal and the prosecutors developed a theory as to how and why the shooting went down.
00:32:54They believed Art was an emotional mess and ready to explode after he'd been dumped by his young girlfriend for a rival FBI man.
00:33:03I think the fuse was lit when he pulled up into the house.
00:33:06He doesn't expect to see his wife and yet there she is at the house. What do you believe happens next?
00:33:11He sees her vehicle in the driveway. He would have the thought of WTF, you know, what's she doing here?
00:33:17And then he goes, he goes inside the home.
00:33:20Carrying his bureau issued Glock in hand. Then in a rage and unprovoked Nossal beliefs, Art shot Julie in cold blood.
00:33:29You believe this wasn't self-defense at all? Oh no. This was murder?
00:33:32Our belief was it was murder, yes sir.
00:33:34Julie's dad had also become convinced his son-in-law was a heartless killer.
00:33:39He had promised to keep her out of harm's way to do whatever he needed to do to protect her.
00:33:46But he failed in that and he betrayed her and he betrayed us when he killed her.
00:33:53Prosecutors believe the shooting was not premeditated, but it was intentional and certainly not self-defense.
00:34:00Three weeks after the shooting, Art Gonzalez was indicted for second degree murder.
00:34:05The FBI man was now behind bars waiting to stand trial.
00:34:09Julie's people thought they knew what happened, so did Art's.
00:34:13But we the people, the criminal justice system, would have a much harder time deciding.
00:34:18Coming up, more questions about Julie's behavior.
00:34:24Julie liked to pick fights with Art when she was drinking.
00:34:28She knew how to push his buttons.
00:34:31When Dateline Unforgettable continues.
00:34:43FBI agent Art Gonzalez was released on bond, suspended from his FBI job without pay.
00:34:48His sister Arlene, Julie's close friend, remembers the first time they talked about the shooting.
00:34:54I said, did you shoot her in self-defense?
00:34:58And he started crying and said, yes, I did.
00:35:00I swear to you, I swear.
00:35:03She came at me early and there was nothing else I could do.
00:35:06And I believed him.
00:35:07And at that point, I chose to stand by my brother because I knew.
00:35:11As an FBI agent, we respond to the truth.
00:35:17Retired agent Doug Merrill stood by him as well.
00:35:20He's the man who first hired Art at the FBI Academy.
00:35:23Do you think they had enough to go on, the Commonwealth, to bring these charges?
00:35:27I was very, very surprised when an indictment was handed up.
00:35:33It's a clear case of self-defense.
00:35:36His former colleague and sister were by Art's side as his trial began in March 2014.
00:35:42They all listened as prosecutors made their case that Art Gonzalez was a liar and a murderer.
00:35:49He was trying from the beginning to paint a portrait of self-defense.
00:35:54And we knew a large part of that portrait was a lie.
00:35:56The prosecutors told jurors how on the day of the shooting, they believed the FBI agent was emotionally unstable, driven by that breakup with his girlfriend.
00:36:05It was an obsessive, deeply romantic relationship.
00:36:09And that was the context for what happened in the house that day.
00:36:12They laid out in court their theory of a man fueled by rage.
00:36:16One who murdered his wife, then staged the scene to look like self-defense, strapping on his holster and inventing the knife attack.
00:36:24We believe the knife was placed in Julie's hand.
00:36:27As proof, Olsen called experts who noted that gunshot residue was found on the handle of the knife, suggesting it was touched by the shooter himself.
00:36:36It's the only way that we could figure how the gunshot particles could get on the handle of the knife.
00:36:41And although Art had a few cuts on his body.
00:36:44There is no blood in the blade of this knife.
00:36:46It supposedly cut through the shirt and cut his arm three times.
00:36:50We don't believe that that knife was used to cut him.
00:36:53And the prosecutors believe they had final definitive proof that Art's story was a lie.
00:36:58They played that 911 call Art had placed after he had shot Julie four times in the chest.
00:37:04Jurors could hear the operator instructing him to perform CPR on his wife.
00:37:09We're gonna do this 600 times until I can get somebody to take over, okay?
00:37:13All right, I'm doing it, I'm doing it.
00:37:15We got CPR going again?
00:37:16Yeah, I'm doing it.
00:37:17You got it?
00:37:18Okay, okay, keep doing it.
00:37:19The visual image that one gets listening to that is the one that I got the next day is a bloody crime scene.
00:37:26So the prosecutor assumed that after Art performed CPR, blood would be all over that white shirt he was wearing.
00:37:33Except the evidence told a much different story.
00:37:36We take a look at the clothes and he has no blood on his clothes and he has no blood on his hands.
00:37:43But an arriving deputy who did perform CPR on Julie came to court and testified to what happened when he began compressions.
00:37:51He describes that the blood starts oozing from the wounds in the chest. His hands are covered with blood.
00:37:57Prosecutors told the jury all this could mean just one thing.
00:38:01Art Gonzalez never performed CPR on his wife.
00:38:04It's not just that he's not doing CPR, he's faking doing CPR.
00:38:08The state said it was the foundation lie for the case, completely flying in the face of the FBI agent's story.
00:38:15His story was that I didn't want to shoot my wife, but I did it because I had to do it.
00:38:20There would be no reason not to do CPR if that was the case, but there'd also be no reason to fake doing CPR if that was the case.
00:38:28None of it made sense to Julie's friend, Tiffany Clark.
00:38:31So you believe the prosecution's case?
00:38:32Absolutely.
00:38:33He shoots her in cold blood.
00:38:34Yeah.
00:38:35And once she's on the ground, puts the knife in her hand and stage the scene.
00:38:38Absolutely.
00:38:39I think that he walked in that house and probably had that gun in his hand for intimidation because that's, you know, that was him.
00:38:46And I think that he probably intended to scare her at first, but the rage brought him to, you know, even further and he just decided to kill her.
00:38:56Not at all the case, said the defense.
00:38:59The physical evidence supported Art's report of what happened.
00:39:04Art's attorney Mark Gardner told the jury what happened on that April afternoon and said it was the same story Art had been telling since that first 911 call.
00:39:13And there was nothing except speculation to counteract that physical evidence.
00:39:19Take that knife, for example.
00:39:21All of the talk about how Julie was gripping it was based on a single witness, one of the first responders on the scene.
00:39:28We know that the officer saw her hand lying down with the blade sticking up, but then the officer kicked it out of her hand.
00:39:35So we don't have a photograph of that.
00:39:38And experts testified that the gunshot residue on the knife's handle could have gotten there when it was kicked across the floor or.
00:39:45It's consistent with being found on the knife if the knife was in her hand at discharge.
00:39:51But the evidence also showed that it absolutely is possible for her to have gripped the knife and not completely covered the handle.
00:40:01As for the confounding lack of blood or DNA on the knife, a forensic expert testified that Art's wounds were minor.
00:40:08She could not rule out the possibility that that knife inflicted those wounds without leaving any blood on the blade.
00:40:14I wish we'd been allowed cameras in the court if for no other reason than that you could watch Mark Gardner go about his courtroom lawyering.
00:40:21As I watched him work his magic, I noticed he was soft-spoken, no theatrics, and very, very effective.
00:40:28He's in my personal Dateline Defense Lawyers Hall of Fame.
00:40:32In court, the attorney was determined to shift attention away from Art and his relationship with that young FBI employee and make sure the jury focused on Julie.
00:40:42That's a risky road to go down for you, right?
00:40:44Well, it is.
00:40:45On the other hand, it's absolutely essential to an understanding of what happened for the jury to have a clear picture of what was going on in her personal life.
00:40:54The defense presented evidence that in the months before the shooting, Julie had been seeing a psychiatrist for depression, taking medication.
00:41:02And while they can see Julie wasn't drinking on the day of the shooting, she had recently been treated at an alcohol rehab center.
00:41:09Art's dad says his side of the family saw the problem and had been trying to get Julie help for years.
00:41:15Were you worried about it?
00:41:16Yes, I was very worried about it.
00:41:18Matter of fact, I talked to Julie several times about her drinking and her behavior.
00:41:24But it didn't stop, did it?
00:41:25It didn't stop.
00:41:26And during their separation, a judge had given custody of the boys to Art.
00:41:31She was sad, she was depressed, she was lost, she was tired.
00:41:35And anyone who's gone through depression or alcoholism, a divorce, anything that emotional, you can just see it in their face.
00:41:44And it broke my heart.
00:41:46And Arlene says that over the years, Julie would confront Art, sometimes aggressively.
00:41:51Julie liked to pick fights with Art when she was drinking.
00:41:55When you say that, what do you mean?
00:41:56She knew how to push his buttons.
00:41:58She liked to poke at Art.
00:42:00But in the end, the defense's case would really rise or fall based on the testimony of one man, Art himself.
00:42:08No cameras were in court for his testimony, but he did sit down in front of ours.
00:42:13Coming up, the death of Julie Gonzalez according to the man who killed her.
00:42:19I had and still have nothing to hide.
00:42:21When Dateline Unforgettable continues.
00:42:36Not every jury in a murder case gets to hear from the accused.
00:42:40This one did.
00:42:42Why'd you elect to take the stand?
00:42:44I had and still have nothing to hide.
00:42:46Everything that happened is what I testified to.
00:42:51I believe that they needed to hear it from me.
00:42:55And Art Gonzalez wanted us to hear his story, too.
00:42:59I'd first gotten a sense of Art at his home, where he let Dateline shoot in the very kitchen where Julie died.
00:43:05That kind of access was unusual for us.
00:43:08As the day grew long, we ordered in pizza for everybody.
00:43:11When it arrived, Art set a brief grace over the food.
00:43:15We ate pizza by the kitchen island that was once a crime scene.
00:43:18When we eventually sat down for an interview, he seemed nervous as we began speaking.
00:43:23Start the clock there.
00:43:24You're coming in the driveway, Art.
00:43:26What do you see?
00:43:27As I drive down the driveway, I see Julie's car parked.
00:43:30And, you know, I'm kind of surprised.
00:43:33And I say, you know, if you're going to come here, you need to let me know or something like that.
00:43:38And she says, I know.
00:43:39I should have called you.
00:43:40And I say, hey, do we need to talk?
00:43:42And she says, yeah, let's talk.
00:43:44I follow her into the kitchen.
00:43:45She walks between the island and the counter where the sink is.
00:43:51Yeah.
00:43:52I stop just before the rain.
00:43:54So, I don't know, maybe five feet away from each other.
00:43:58We have a brief conversation.
00:44:00What's the conversation, Art?
00:44:01And, you know, Dennis, I can't remember verbatim.
00:44:05It was about speeding up the divorce.
00:44:07There was conversation about, you know, me not loving her anymore.
00:44:12And, you know, the final thing that I remember her saying is, I turn away and she asked, do the boys know her?
00:44:18And I look up at her and I say, yes.
00:44:21Do the boys know her?
00:44:24Art says Julie was referring to his girlfriend, Kara.
00:44:27It was a detail he mentioned on the stand, but one he never told detectives.
00:44:32Still, as Art described what happened next, his story was largely consistent.
00:44:37And at that point, I turn back to the counter.
00:44:39Out of the corner of my eye, I catch her coming at me.
00:44:41I see her with her arm raised.
00:44:43I put up my arm to block it.
00:44:46This kind of emotion?
00:44:47Right.
00:44:48I pushed her away.
00:44:49And as I pushed her away, I saw the knife in her hand.
00:44:52I pushed her away far enough, probably where she stepped back about three steps.
00:44:58And I remember vividly her first step was coming at me again.
00:45:01She raised her arm, her right foot stepped right in front of our dishwasher.
00:45:06And at that point, it happened.
00:45:10I drew my weapon and I fired.
00:45:12Four times?
00:45:13I didn't know how many times, but four times, yeah.
00:45:16I need someone with my wife to sit back here tonight and I have to shoot her.
00:45:19And Julie's down on the floor.
00:45:21Yes.
00:45:22Is she making any noises?
00:45:24Is there anything?
00:45:25Is she moving?
00:45:28She's not moving and I'm having the discussion with the 911 operator.
00:45:34What's going on in your mind at that moment?
00:45:37It was surreal.
00:45:40I was thinking about Julie, hoping that they'd be able to revive her.
00:45:45I was thinking about the boys.
00:45:47I was just praying that she'd be okay.
00:45:49You didn't know whether she was dead or alive as you left the house.
00:45:52No, I didn't.
00:45:53And then you're in the back of a car.
00:45:54Right.
00:45:55The FBI agent being detained.
00:45:58Right.
00:45:59You knew you were in trouble.
00:46:01If you could have stepped back and looked at the situation.
00:46:04Well, I don't know.
00:46:05I understand what they were doing.
00:46:08But ever since the day I walked out that door, I knew that what happened or what I was forced to do was justified.
00:46:19Art, and anybody looking over my shoulder at this point is going to say, couldn't he have deescalated that moment?
00:46:25Couldn't he have turned and backed out of the kitchen?
00:46:28If he drew his weapon, couldn't he have fired into the ceiling or maybe shot her in the foot?
00:46:32Could there have been some way without four shots center mass?
00:46:36Dennis, I've thought about this every day of my life since then.
00:46:42I had no choice.
00:46:44I didn't have time to consider any other alternative.
00:46:48She came at me so aggressively.
00:46:51Could you have done anything else?
00:46:53I couldn't have.
00:46:54There was nothing else I could have done.
00:46:56Nothing.
00:46:57And in the years of my training, we're never taught to retreat.
00:47:03We're never taught to back down.
00:47:08In court, Art told the jury about his multiple stints of firearms training in his 18-year career.
00:47:14In FBI speak, law enforcement speak, the assailant is called the threat.
00:47:18Yes.
00:47:19And the person being attacked has to, what, eliminate the threat?
00:47:23Right.
00:47:24They engage the threat until there's no longer a threat.
00:47:26You know, they're taught to shoot center mass, which is the biggest part of the body, of the target.
00:47:32That's the way that we're trained to address the threat.
00:47:35In fact, he'd been recertified in that training on the range at the academy just one month before he shot Julie.
00:47:42And yet, Julie wasn't a target on the range.
00:47:44She wasn't a home invader threatening you with a gun.
00:47:47She was Julie.
00:47:49She was your wife of almost 20 years, mother of your children.
00:47:52It's not the standard threat.
00:47:55No, but I do believe that the Julie that was in that kitchen that day wasn't the same Julie that I had known for the previous 20 years.
00:48:06You know, there was just, it was something different about her.
00:48:10All of that, Art says, is the truth.
00:48:16He believes the lies in this case are all those prosecution theories of what he did, beginning with his relationship with his girlfriend, Kara Kast.
00:48:24He says he wasn't distraught or angry with her, and that by that last night they slept together, he already thought a breakup was coming.
00:48:32Why are you going through her phone that night?
00:48:38You're snooping, right?
00:48:39Yeah, well, I had suspected something, and she was lying down, and I looked at it, and I found what I found.
00:48:48What's the word? Is it anger?
00:48:50No, it was disappointment. I wasn't angry, because I had suspected it. And with the person that I had seen, I had known that there was some history. So my disappointment was in the fact that she was...
00:49:03You knew who the guy was in the picture.
00:49:05Correct.
00:49:06Another agent.
00:49:07Right. So my disappointment came from the fact that she wasn't honest with me.
00:49:11And he says that when they had lunch on that day of the shooting, it was a calm and civil conversation to talk about that breakup.
00:49:17So that was what lunch was about?
00:49:19Yeah, pretty much.
00:49:20Are you volcanically angry with her?
00:49:22No.
00:49:23As for his holster, Art says it's true that he wasn't wearing it at the restaurant, but he says he holstered up right after lunch, stopping by the FBI Academy and then heading home.
00:49:34So let's tell the story of your arrival at the house in the kitchen from the prosecution point of view. They're saying, follow the holster. It doesn't make sense, jurors, that he would have this holster on when he's going home.
00:49:44He sees the car. What is going on? And brandishes the gun. He's got it out and with him as he goes through the front door.
00:49:53Mm-hmm.
00:49:55And there's not this dialogue about, you know, we need to speed up the divorce.
00:50:00Right.
00:50:01Does any of that happen so far?
00:50:03No.
00:50:04This is the prosecution's story of how this goes down.
00:50:06Right. However they developed that theory, I have no idea. When I walked in the house, my weapon was in my holster on my hip. I'm clueless as to how they came up with that, and I was surprised whenever they alleged it.
00:50:19But what about that cornerstone of the prosecution's case, that after the shooting, Art faked CPR?
00:50:26Keep pumping. Fast and hard.
00:50:28I'm going.
00:50:29I know you are. Keep on going.
00:50:31Did you do CPR?
00:50:32I did.
00:50:33Art says there wasn't much blood on his hands and shirt because he'd had little CPR training, and what he did know, he did badly.
00:50:40It was surreal to me when I was giving CPR. I was doing everything that she said, and I don't know if I was afraid to hurt Julie.
00:50:47I do remember every time I gave a rescue breath that it was wrong. You know, her lips were cold, and it just wasn't the same Julie.
00:50:56You did do it.
00:50:57I did do it. I don't know what else to say. I did it. I did CPR the best that I could, and I wish there was a camera in that kitchen.
00:51:09You know, so everything that happened could have just been, you know, put inside the DVD player, and they pressed play.
00:51:20Would that show you pulling your weapon, killing Julie in cold blood, and then placing a kitchen knife in her hand?
00:51:27That would show everything as I described it. That would show me with me facing the counter, Julie coming at me with a knife in her, with something in her right hand, me blocking it, pushing it away.
00:51:38Her taking a few steps back, coming at me again, and me drawing my weapon.
00:51:44The jurors had heard two very different stories of what happened in that kitchen. Which one would they believe?
00:51:53Coming up, a woman's life taken, a man's life at stake, not a decision to rush.
00:52:00We expected that it would take quite a bit of time. I don't think any of us expected as long as it took.
00:52:05But the biggest surprise was still to come when Dateline Unforgettable continues.
00:52:23In regards with murdering his wife, Julie, FBI agent Art Gonzalez had just told his story of self-defense to judge and jury.
00:52:30The prosecution's calling you a liar manipulator. Is that painful, that personal attack?
00:52:35Yes, it was. When they asked me difficult questions, I told the truth.
00:52:38And Arlene, who says she and Julie were so close, hoped the jury would see that Art was also telling the truth when he described that confrontation in the kitchen.
00:52:47What do you think was in Julie's head?
00:52:50You know, I think Julie lost it. I think her mind finally snapped when Art said there was no possible reconciliation between them.
00:53:02She was already depressed. She was already sad. And for Julie to think that she had just lost her entire family,
00:53:10and that another woman was possibly going to come into their lives, she snapped. I would bet my life on it.
00:53:19After an emotional two weeks, the jury retired to deliberate. Now, Art and his family awaited his fate.
00:53:26A conviction could mean 40 years in prison, separation from his two young boys.
00:53:31If he was found guilty, there was no goodbyes, no nothing, they would just take him.
00:53:37And that the hardest part for me with that was his boys.
00:53:42His boys wanted to sit there and they wanted to stand by their dad every single day.
00:53:48And I mean, that's not a place for them. But, you know, at the end when we were waiting for jury.
00:53:54Yeah, I chose to bring them and sit with their dad for the last few moments if they were going to come back guilty.
00:54:01They could come back any minute and you could be given the jumpsuit and put in the van and be gone.
00:54:07Right.
00:54:08You don't know.
00:54:09I was fully aware of that. And, you know, that weight was excruciating.
00:54:14Julie's family and friends focused on their hopes, praying for a conviction.
00:54:19It's a hard job for a jury. I remember watching people cry when the prosecutor was up.
00:54:25For prosecutor Kristen Byrd, it was only the second homicide case of her young career.
00:54:31As a prosecutor, I think the most important thing that you can do is give a voice to their loved one in that courtroom and tell the story, tell the true story. And we did that.
00:54:42One entire day passed without a verdict.
00:54:45And they're out and they stay out. What's going through your stomach and your brain?
00:54:49We knew that there was a lot of evidence, so we expected that it would take quite a bit of time. I don't think any of us expected as long as it took.
00:54:58On day two, the hours ticked away.
00:55:01What did you think was going on?
00:55:03I had to pull myself away from trying to speculate.
00:55:07The jury kept deliberating into a third day. Then it came, a note. The jury was deadlocked. The judge declared a mistrial.
00:55:17We were relieved, but disappointed.
00:55:20Julie's friend, Tiffany Clark, so convinced of Art's guilt, could not believe it.
00:55:25They couldn't come to a solution. They were hung, mistrial.
00:55:29For me, it's like any logical person could put two and two together, speaking with people, you know, that briefly heard the story.
00:55:37Every conversation that I had with them was, how does an FBI agent shoot his wife four times and there's a mistrial?
00:55:46How is there any question?
00:55:49Detective Todd Nosal, whose team had kept investigating even during the trial, knew more work lay ahead.
00:55:56It's hard to stomach, but, you know, it's one of those things is, it's a tie and you get to fight another day.
00:56:02There was no question about what we were going to do. We were going to try him again. There was not...
00:56:05No question, you were going to go for it again.
00:56:06There was not a moment's hesitation we were going to try Art Gonzalez again.
00:56:09Eric Olsen has been featured in multiple Dateline reports. His office's support for our reporting has always been very welcome, and this time was no different.
00:56:18Olsen told me he was eager to run this case through the courts again. But for Art, the decision to be tried again was a crushing blow.
00:56:26I was hoping that, that Mr. Olsen would have seen that, you know, maybe there was some error in his ways of thinking and he would have dismissed it at that point.
00:56:36He gets up within nanoseconds.
00:56:37Right.
00:56:38And says we're going for this trial again.
00:56:39Right.
00:56:40After that trial, Art was fired from his job at the FBI. A number of agents had testified against him, but Doug Merrill, the former agent who hired him, continued to stand by Art.
00:56:52I saw the arguments and I, my loyalty was not to Art, but to the truth, and I believe what Art had said was the truth.
00:57:05Self-defense, it's an awful incident, but we're done here.
00:57:07Exactly right.
00:57:08The judge later polled the jury and learned they'd been deadlocked 10 to 2, with 10 jurors in favor of an acquittal.
00:57:15Two votes short of getting the verdict you wanted to hear, not guilty.
00:57:19That's the official vote. What I had learned is the vote that the jury had taken as they walked out of the jury room was 11 to 1.
00:57:29So it was even closer than the official tally.
00:57:31Right.
00:57:32For the prosecutors, that near acquittal meant they had an uphill battle and needed a new strategy for round two.
00:57:39After the post-mortem, so to speak, on the jury trial, we realized that if we could better explain some of the forensic evidence that we had...
00:57:48More science.
00:57:49More science.
00:57:50More science, then we would be in a little bit better shape.
00:57:54So they turned to a new star witness, in fact, a world-renowned one, and she said that science told her the real story of what happened between Art and Julie Gonzalez.
00:58:07Coming up, she's the fact behind the fiction of a best-selling mystery series.
00:58:13Kay Scarpetta in the Patricia Cornwell novels was modeled after Dr. Fierro.
00:58:17And she dropped a courtroom bombshell.
00:58:20That Julie Gonzalez was shot on the floor.
00:58:22When Dateline Unforgettable continues.
00:58:37Stafford County Courthouse in Virginia, a bleak winter's day in January 2015, as parties arrived for the second murder trial of Arthur Gonzalez.
00:58:47Art was free on bond, so he could use the front door of the courthouse to arrive in the morning and leave at night.
00:58:53But that also meant he'd run into the people from Julie's side.
00:58:57People who used to sit together as family at Thanksgiving are now on very opposite sides here.
00:59:03It was a true ordeal.
00:59:05It all made for an uncomfortable scene when Julie's friend and neighbor Terry Smith would run into Art's side in court.
00:59:11How did it feel to be going into a courtroom in a murder trial?
00:59:15I thought I'd be all right, but I was not.
00:59:17I was very intimidated.
00:59:20There he is right in front of you.
00:59:22Yeah, I had a hard time looking over there.
00:59:24Art's sister helped him get past all those angry glares.
00:59:28I stood by my brother's side, literally.
00:59:30I would not let him walk in or out of that courtroom without me by his side.
00:59:34I guess I felt like his protector.
00:59:36Art and his defense attorney were optimistic after the last deadlock jury split 10 to 2 in their favor.
00:59:42We were both encouraged that we had come so close, and yet the other side of that coin is, oh my God, we came that close to an acquittal, and now we have to go through this all over again.
00:59:55I don't know what I'm expecting out of this next court, but hopefully they'll have new information that they can present in that courtroom to help convince those people there is no reasonable doubt.
01:00:06In the months between trials, prosecutors Eric Olson and Kristen Byrd believe they found just that, a new witness with new forensic evidence to bolster their case.
01:00:17Her name is Dr. Marcella Fierro, the former chief medical examiner for the Commonwealth of Virginia.
01:00:23But if you've ever read one of these hugely popular crime novels, you'd know her by another name, Kay Scarpetta.
01:00:30Kay Scarpetta in the Patricia Cornwell novels was modeled after Dr. Fierro.
01:00:35It's my understanding the author actually worked with Dr. Fierro.
01:00:38Impeccable resume.
01:00:39Absolutely.
01:00:40Now this was a kick for me. As someone who devours crime fiction, I knew very well Kay Scarpetta, the mystery-solving medical examiner, protagonist of more than two dozen books by Patricia Cornwell.
01:00:52And here was the real-life inspiration for that character testifying in a trial I was covering. Cool.
01:00:59Dr. Fierro came to court with her report, and it was a bombshell.
01:01:04Art Gonzalez had always maintained that he'd shot Julie four times while she stood facing him in the kitchen, coming at him with that knife.
01:01:12Examining the photos from the scene and the autopsy photos of Julie, Dr. Fierro noticed something.
01:01:18In CSI language, it's called a shored bullet.
01:01:22A shored bullet is a bullet that, as it exits, is met by resistance by something firm and hard.
01:01:30Dr. Fierro says she clearly saw a wound on Julie's back caused by a shored bullet.
01:01:36And in this case, the bullet couldn't even go any further, so it had to be a hard surface.
01:01:41Given the possibilities at the crime scene, to her, that could mean only one thing.
01:01:47She was down when she got that shot.
01:01:49She came to the remarkable conclusion, and the inescapable conclusion, that Julie Gonzalez was shot on the floor. She was not standing up.
01:01:57The prosecutor saw a game changer.
01:02:00What it means is that Art Gonzalez is not telling the truth when he says that Julie Gonzalez, all four shots, she was still coming at him with a knife.
01:02:07She was on the floor for at least one of those shots.
01:02:10So, if you believe Dr. Fierro, this is clearly a murder.
01:02:13We believed at all times.
01:02:14Her science, her narration of this.
01:02:15We believed at all times that it was a murder, and Dr. Fierro's opinion and testimony certainly confirmed that.
01:02:22If the jury believes her, you're done.
01:02:24Right.
01:02:25She's saying she's on her back, he's above her.
01:02:27Right, yeah, she creates that.
01:02:28Threat is over.
01:02:29I think that's what she was trying to infer.
01:02:31And, you know, when that came out, it was heartbreaking.
01:02:34I was dumbfounded.
01:02:35It never happened.
01:02:37Art's sister says that given the trajectory of the bullets and the tight space where Art and Julie were in the kitchen, Fierro's theory just won't work.
01:02:45If you've seen the kitchen and you've seen the positions, my brother would have had to have been standing in his sink, literally, to do what she said was done.
01:02:58And, I mean, it was absolutely absurd.
01:03:01And Art's defense attorney believed he had the evidence to refute Fierro's findings.
01:03:06The doctor who performed the autopsy did not agree with Dr. Fierro's conclusion.
01:03:12It was stressful to have an opinion that went against the grain.
01:03:15Dr. Jennifer Bowers is the medical examiner who performed the autopsy.
01:03:19She said Dr. Fierro's testimony surprised her.
01:03:22If that's her position and she's comfortable with it, it's fine, but I happen to disagree.
01:03:27The M.E., a prosecution witness, ended up helping the defense.
01:03:32She told jurors the shored bullet wound could be caused by any number of things, not just the floor.
01:03:38It can be a brassiere or something hard and flat up against the skin, such as a wall.
01:03:44Until you're able to rule all these possibilities out, you have to consider them all.
01:03:48And even though she's a prosecution witness, in effect, she is at odds with the prosecution on this pivotal issue.
01:03:54Yes.
01:03:55Then the defense called its own expert, who told the jury there was no way the floor could have caused that short exit wound.
01:04:02In this case, I believe it was her brassiere.
01:04:05Dr. Donald Jason said definitively that the bullet was stopped by the bra Julie was wearing, not the floor.
01:04:11The bra was made of fairly hefty material. It was elastic. It caught the bullet like a catcher's mitt would.
01:04:19As Art's defense team fought back, Art himself may have been wearing down.
01:04:25He testified again in his own defense, although his own lawyer said he may not have gotten better with time.
01:04:31He had lost weight. He was not as strong. Every day of his life, he had this hanging over him and the uncertainty of it.
01:04:39And I think that took a toll on him and affected how he testified.
01:04:44And during cross-examination, the prosecution hammered at that extra detail he first gave on the stand and later told us.
01:04:51And she asked, do the boys know her? And I look up at her and I say yes.
01:04:56That led the prosecution to another theory in this why-done-it, a possible motive for Art wanting his wife gone.
01:05:03They speculated that Julie, armed with information about the other woman, may have threatened to use it against Art in a custody battle.
01:05:10For a man that was meticulous about making sure that he got custody of these boys, the potential for danger was very, very real, that she had some ammunition for custody now.
01:05:24After eight tense days of trial, Julie's dad was even more convinced.
01:05:29The second time made me a stronger believer that he did it on purpose, that he murdered her.
01:05:35Would the jurors agree? The decision was now in their hands.
01:05:42Coming up...
01:05:44For the second time in less than a year, Art Gonzalez and his sons wait to hear his fate.
01:05:49Both of them said, hey, Dad, we read this and we thought about you.
01:05:52God saves his toughest battles for his mightiest warriors.
01:05:56When Dateline Unforgettable continues.
01:06:11When the jury is out deliberating your fate for the second time, there's not much a defendant can do but pace and be nervous again.
01:06:19It was difficult. I would say my prayers and just finding ways to pass the time. It was excruciating.
01:06:26And every time the door opened, we'd jump. Every time. We would think, oh, the jury's back.
01:06:32But you also knew that you might not see Art again.
01:06:34Right. We tried not to talk about that. We tried to stay positive.
01:06:39And we needed to remain strong, not only for ourselves, but more for his boys and for Art.
01:06:44Art said his sons, 11 and 14 years old, when the second jury was deliberating, kept him going.
01:06:50Both of them said, hey, Dad, we read this and we thought about you.
01:06:55God saves his toughest battles for his mightiest warriors.
01:06:59And those two boys, for everything that they've been through, have been one of my greatest sources of strength.
01:07:13The two trials have been no less hard on Julie's dad, Ray, such a long way from his home in New Mexico.
01:07:20He sat in the Stafford County Courthouse and waited for the conviction he hoped was coming.
01:07:25It's kind of like ping pong. You get your hopes up that it's going to be resolved.
01:07:31And you hope the resolution is favorable. You hope for justice to be served.
01:07:37But then, after only a few hours of deliberations, Julie's dad and everyone else was hearing once again that the jury was struggling.
01:07:46Did you take a stroll vote just to see where you stood? Yes, we did.
01:07:49This man knew exactly what was going on behind closed doors.
01:07:53Juror Paul Brastrom recalled for us the debate as they went around the table, laying out their choices.
01:07:59Guilty of second-degree murder, guilty of the lesser charge of manslaughter, or not guilty at all.
01:08:06And one thing was clear right away. They were sharply divided.
01:08:10So we had some work to do, yeah.
01:08:12To this juror, the critical evidence wasn't the scientific dispute whether Julie was standing up or lying on the floor when she was shot, but another issue.
01:08:20Had Art, in fact, really tried to do CPR to save Julie's life? He didn't think so.
01:08:26If that part wasn't factual, that I could really believe that, what else couldn't I believe?
01:08:33He even thought Art was capable of staging the whole scene.
01:08:36He's an FBI agent. He's probably had cases like this.
01:08:39And so you can't just discount his abilities. And that's what I told other jurors.
01:08:45But not everyone agreed. Some made the case for reasonable doubt, not guilty.
01:08:50After a few more hours of going back and forth, they sent a note to the judge.
01:08:55They'd hit a brick wall. The lawyers could only guess the cause of the impasse.
01:09:01One of my concerns was that there was a debate within the jury between second-degree murder and manslaughter.
01:09:08We didn't know what the debate was. We had already gone through one mistrial, and we didn't want another one.
01:09:13So, what to do? The judge convened a closed-room conference of prosecution and defense.
01:09:18Hoping to break that logjam in the jury room, the prosecutors agreed to have the judge dismiss the murder charge.
01:09:25Well, that essentially acquitted Art of Murder, leaving the jury to deliberate only on the manslaughter charge.
01:09:31Did you have to hold your nose to come to that conclusion?
01:09:33It was not taken lightly. It was a very, very difficult decision, because if I was wrong about that assessment,
01:09:40then if it ended up still being hung, we couldn't try him again on a second-degree murder.
01:09:45Ironically, it didn't matter to the jury. The prosecutors, it turns out, did guess wrong.
01:09:51They didn't know the jurors on their own had already rejected the murder charge, but were still divided on manslaughter.
01:09:58Some refused to convict Art of anything, but they all kept talking, and then...
01:10:03We wrote another note to the judge and said, we're stuck.
01:10:08Another hung jury.
01:10:10Your second mistrial here.
01:10:12Second mistrial.
01:10:13Years of work at this point.
01:10:15It had been a long haul.
01:10:17How'd you handle that?
01:10:18It was devastating.
01:10:19But the prosecutors, with their new star medical witness, felt they were headed in the right direction.
01:10:25Last trial, it was 10-2 for acquittal, this time a complete 180.
01:10:3010 of the 12 jurors voted guilty.
01:10:32We put on a very compelling case, and the evidence was there.
01:10:36But for Art, an even split of 24 jurors over the course of two trials meant an abundance of reasonable doubt.
01:10:44I was cautiously optimistic that they would just dismiss the entire case and not go for a third trial.
01:10:51But without any hesitation, prosecutors said they were going forward again.
01:10:56But trial number three would be different.
01:10:58There'd be no hung jury.
01:11:00That's because there'd be no jury at all.
01:11:03The defense and prosecution had agreed to what's called a bench trial.
01:11:07The judge hearing the evidence, the same one from the previous two trials, would decide for herself whether Art Gonzalez was guilty or not.
01:11:15The third trial was going to be directed to the judge, there'd be no jury, and it's going to be resolved.
01:11:21And there has to be a result.
01:11:22That's right.
01:11:26Coming up, there would be a result, but would there be a resolution?
01:11:32When she started speaking, you know, it was a roller coaster ride.
01:11:37When Dateline Unforgettable continues.
01:11:49By the summer of 2015, two juries had hung in the previous murder trials of Arthur Gonzalez in the shooting of his wife, Julie.
01:11:57Now the decision on the FBI agent's fate would be up to Judge Sarah Dennecke, the same judge in the earlier trials.
01:12:05And this time, she would permit cameras in her courtroom to record portions of the trial.
01:12:10All right, Mr. Olson.
01:12:12The second-degree murder charge had been dropped in the prosecution's 11th-hour gamble the last time around.
01:12:18Now it would only be a matter of manslaughter.
01:12:21Still, Art faced a potential 10-year prison sentence.
01:12:25Tiffany sat in court and prayed for a conviction.
01:12:28You're not going to have a hung jury. This is going to be a decision.
01:12:30Yeah, you're going to have a decision. It's going to be done and over with.
01:12:33But is it going to be the decision that we've wanted for these last two and a half years?
01:12:37The crucial questions at trial three remained the same.
01:12:41Did Julie attack Art with that knife? Or had he placed it in her hand?
01:12:46Was Julie an unhinged alcoholic? Or was Art enraged over his breakup with his girlfriend?
01:12:52Tiffany took the witness stand one more time to say that Julie was nothing but a gentle soul.
01:12:58Did she ever, in your experience with the two of them, get aggressive with Mr. Gonzalez?
01:13:02Not at all.
01:13:03In your experience with Mrs. Gonzalez and the time that you knew her, did she ever get aggressive with anybody in your presence?
01:13:08Never.
01:13:09Thank you. No further questions.
01:13:11As they had in the last trial, those three medical experts each came to court to answer that other key question.
01:13:17Was Julie standing up when she was shot? Or was she on the floor?
01:13:22But the prosecution's case really hinged on how the judge viewed Art Gonzalez.
01:13:27What I hope to show is that he simply can't be believed when he's the only one saying that Julie Gonzalez came at him with a knife.
01:13:35Again, prosecutors argued he lied about performing CPR, lied about his girlfriend, Kara Kast, and lied about when he holstered up that day.
01:13:45And they added still another layer of doubt about Art, calling some of his former FBI colleagues from his days out west to testify against him.
01:13:54Are you aware of whether or not he has a reputation for truthfulness in the community out there?
01:14:00Yes, ma'am, I am.
01:14:01And do you know whether it is good or bad?
01:14:03It's bad.
01:14:04FBI agent Janet Johnson also recalled a conversation she says she had with Art about his plan to move to Virginia.
01:14:11One prosecutors believed further showed him as a controlling, manipulative husband.
01:14:16He told me that he was going to lure Julie out here.
01:14:21He said, I'm going to buy her a good house.
01:14:24She has no job.
01:14:25She has no money.
01:14:26She has no place to go.
01:14:28He told me that his plan was to file for divorce and that the custody laws here were more favorable.
01:14:35And Prosecutor Olson had another tidbit to chip away at Art's character.
01:14:40This photograph, one Art had taken for his attorney to demonstrate Julie's position in the kitchen that day.
01:14:47Have you seen this picture before?
01:14:49We showed that picture to one of Art Gonzalez's good friends who knew his son Christopher,
01:14:55and he identified without question that that was Christopher.
01:14:58To prosecutors, it meant Art had used his son to help illustrate the shooting scene.
01:15:03When Julie's dad heard about it, he was so furious he had to leave the courtroom.
01:15:08I was so upset that I wanted to jump over that rail and punish him because he's a narcissist that will use anyone,
01:15:18manipulate anyone, including his own children, to get what he wants.
01:15:24Art admits his son did stand in for a moment in the photo,
01:15:28but he says he was appalled that the prosecution would try and use his own children against him.
01:15:33If I had thought it would have been harmful in any way to anyone, I would never have done it.
01:15:37In his closing statement to the judge, the prosecutor said that she should believe nothing Gonzalez said in court.
01:15:44Art Gonzalez is dishonest. He is just a liar.
01:15:47And it's so frustrating for him to wrap himself in the cloak of the FBI that so many of us have such respect for him,
01:15:54and to just be such the liar he is.
01:15:56Art's attorney appealed to the judge's assessment of the law and the evidence.
01:16:01ART, Judge, Judge, I maintain that there's no real evidence to contradict Art's claim about what happened in that kitchen.
01:16:11If it does not contradict him, then he's not guilty.
01:16:16With closings complete, the judge said she would take an hour-long break to prepare her decision.
01:16:22Those on both sides of the Gonzalez case now face a very tense lunch hour.
01:16:27The first thought that I thought was, you know, 832 days, 832 days comes down to one hour.
01:16:33What did you do during that hour?
01:16:35What I did every hour since this happened, spend as much time with the boys as I possibly could.
01:16:42Then it was back to court.
01:16:45I don't think I've ever been more scared in my life.
01:16:48What came next was an extraordinary scene.
01:16:51The judge would deliver her verdict in the case, but only after she ticked through the evidence, what she believed, what she didn't.
01:16:58I gotta say, the minutes that followed were some of the most intense I've ever spent in a courtroom.
01:17:03The judge laying out her thinking about all the evidence and theories presented.
01:17:08It was both fascinating and nerve-wracking.
01:17:11I don't think I have to tell anybody here that this is a difficult case.
01:17:15First, that knife Art said Julie used to attack him.
01:17:19Prosecutors argued its position in her hand when she fell meant Art had staged the scene.
01:17:24There's something unnatural about the position of that knife in that hand, but that's the best that I can say about it.
01:17:30There's something unnatural about it.
01:17:32A point for the prosecution.
01:17:34But that wasn't all she had to say about that knife.
01:17:37The knife, when viewed in person, is a scary-looking knife.
01:17:42There is no question that if this knife was in her hand as she came at Mr. Gonzalez, that that knife constitutes a deadly weapon.
01:17:51And not just that.
01:17:53The judge weighed in on the gunshot residue evidence.
01:17:56The Commonwealth's position is that the gunshot residue on the knife must have occurred when the defendant touched the knife while planting it in the hands of the victim.
01:18:06But the more likely explanation is that the knife was in the path of the firing range of the gun, as were the hands of Julie Gonzalez.
01:18:17A score for the defense.
01:18:19But what about that question that had loomed over so much of the case?
01:18:23Did he or did he not perform CPR to try and save Julie?
01:18:28I find that very doubtful, given the evidence that I've heard here.
01:18:31I can't conclude that he did certainly perform CPR.
01:18:34It looks most likely that he didn't.
01:18:36With that, the prosecution might have sensed victory, but the judge had other surprises.
01:18:41We have to address the issue of Kara Kast.
01:18:44The prosecution had presented hours and hours of testimony about Kara Kast, the other woman in Art's life.
01:18:50The Commonwealth's presented a theory that upset over that relationship may have contributed, but I don't find evidence to support that.
01:18:59The judge basically threw it all out the window.
01:19:02Still, she wasn't revealing her verdict just yet.
01:19:05She had another shocker.
01:19:07Evaluating the work of those three medical experts and that question of whether the floor or Julie's bra had stopped that bullet.
01:19:15The judge made her call.
01:19:17I'm not sure we'll ever know exactly what happened, but I do find that under all of the evidence that I've heard, that the most likely explanation for that shored exit wound is the floor.
01:19:29The floor. That alone could make the difference between an acquittal and a conviction.
01:19:34I put my life in the hands of God at that point and just waited.
01:19:38I was holding hands with friends and family and I hear, you know, well, I agree with the Commonwealth on this. The evidence proves this.
01:19:45But on the other hand, this happened. So, you know, we're squeezing hands going, you know, she's about to say it.
01:19:51After 33 minutes of explanation, the judge was about to deliver her verdict.
01:19:57I have considered all of the evidence in this case.
01:20:02Coming up.
01:20:04After three trials, finally, justice.
01:20:07But for whom?
01:20:08Have you ever had a more traumatic moment in court?
01:20:10No.
01:20:11When Dateline Unforgettable continues.
01:20:16The only thing that I'm 100% sure of is that Julie Gonzalez should not be dead.
01:20:30Her even-handed analysis completed. Judge Denecke had finally gotten down to the nitty and the gritty.
01:20:36After one statement, I said, OK, I'm OK. After another statement, I'm like, oh, no, I'm in trouble.
01:20:41I felt positive that it would be our way.
01:20:43I was hoping for a conviction.
01:20:45We will proceed to the decision.
01:20:48Have you ever had a more traumatic moment in court?
01:20:51No.
01:20:52It is the conclusion of the court that the Commonwealth has proven beyond a reasonable doubt the crime of manslaughter.
01:20:59Art gulped and blinked. Was it over? Had he lost?
01:21:02She said that the prosecution had proved manslaughter. I mean, my heart just sank.
01:21:08But the judge wasn't done talking.
01:21:10But it is also the opinion of the court that the defendant has met the burden of raising a reasonable doubt as to whether this offense occurred in self-defense.
01:21:22Meaning she found the defense had raised reasonable doubt, and that trumped everything else.
01:21:27I have no choice under those circumstances but to find the defendant not guilty of the crime of manslaughter.
01:21:35And this court is adjourned.
01:21:37Free trials, two and a half years, and it was finally over.
01:21:40I looked to God and I said, thank you.
01:21:43An emotional Art Gonzalez was whisked out a side door to freedom.
01:21:47On Art's side of the aisle, there were hugs.
01:21:50You know, I had called Christopher and I told him that, you know, Daddy's coming home tonight.
01:21:54And to hear my brother tell him, Daddy's coming home, are the most beautiful words I've heard in such a long time.
01:22:04That God gave Art back to his boys.
01:22:09They had already lost their mom and I couldn't even imagine them losing their father.
01:22:13On the prosecution side, tears of disappointment.
01:22:17I think, as a young prosecutor, you try to figure out how you deal with that.
01:22:22How you look at the victim's family and essentially say, I'm sorry.
01:22:25We tried as hard as we could.
01:22:27Todd Nosau, the detective who lived this case since the very first day in April 2013,
01:22:33tried to console a distraught prosecutor, Kristen Byrd.
01:22:37He felt her pain and his own.
01:22:39I respectfully disagree with the judge's decision.
01:22:42So it's got to be a tough day for you?
01:22:44Tough day. Horrible.
01:22:46There are going to be a lot of people who think he got away with murder here.
01:22:49I think he got away with murder.
01:22:52Are you going to be okay with that kind of innuendo and whisper following you around, Art?
01:22:57You know, I have no choice, Dennis.
01:22:59But what I've learned over the past two years is the people who know me know that all the allegations that have been made against me aren't true.
01:23:07And that's where I place my faith and my hope.
01:23:11In the end, did I figure out what happened that day in the kitchen?
01:23:14Not really.
01:23:15Art Gonzalez remains an enigma to me.
01:23:18As a footnote, during the 18 years Art served in the Bureau, he never fired his gun at anyone until the day he killed his wife.
01:23:26In April 2018, Art was successful in getting the Virginia courts to expunge his record of any mention of the shooting of his wife.
01:23:35On official records, it never happened, not involving him anyway.
01:23:39Do you have remorse that you can share with Julie's family?
01:23:42Absolutely.
01:23:43You know, from the bottom of my heart, I just want to say that I'm sorry.
01:23:46If there was something that I could have done differently, I would have done it.
01:23:50You know, they lost a daughter and the boys lost their mother.
01:23:57But the boys won't ever forget their mother.
01:24:00I won't ever let them.
01:24:02In honor of Julie, Tiffany Clark gave her son a meaningful middle name, Julianne.
01:24:09When I'm looking at my children, you know, she'll never get that chance again to hug her boys, to tell them how much she loves them.
01:24:18Ray Cerna passed away in 2022.
01:24:21When we last spoke, it was clear he was forever changed by the loss of his daughter, a tragedy no parent should ever have to experience.
01:24:29Ray, when do you miss Julie the most?
01:24:31I miss her all the time.
01:24:33We get up in the morning and we're doing things and it hits me that she's gone.
01:24:43Birthdays, Christmas, Thanksgiving, she's gone.
01:24:52She's gone.
01:24:53She's gone.
01:24:54She's gone.
01:24:55She's gone.
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