Brian Buckmeyer
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
We found out during the trial that he co-owns the business.
I think he is worth $2.6 million, so doing fairly well, right?
Meets this beautiful young lady, they hit it off.
Years later, they end up having three sons, and by all intents and purposes, at least from the outside looking in, looks like they're doing fairly well.
His background is a little bit different than hers, right?
She comes from more humble beginnings, as the prosecutor described it.
He comes from a family of cattle ranchers, but they get married and it seems to work out.
His business blows up.
They have three children.
She decides to get into flipping houses and seems to be doing successful in some regards, at least in terms of types of property that she's able to acquire and then flip.
but clearly we hear about the debts and things of that nature.
He is described as an outdoorsy guy.
He's coaching his son's basketball and baseball and soccer team.
From the outside in, it's like, hey, this is like a hallmark movie, right?
Because the heart of this all, of course, to the prosecution is that she was bad with the money.
The theory the prosecution had was he was killed because she wanted to start a new life with this Josh Grossman, her paramour, and that the way that their prenup operated, because again, going back to how they come from very different backgrounds, there's a prenup before they got married, that she knew that she had to get out of this relationship in a certain way to be able to keep the money and keep the kids and keep this new boyfriend of hers.
Yeah, so with most of her homicide cases, you'll see the person is charged with homicide, like a murder, and then also attempted murder, because it's like a lesser included.
That's not the case here.
Because here, she tried to kill him on Valentine's Day, and then two weeks later, she actually killed him.
On Valentine's Day.