Chapter 1: What gruesome discovery did authorities make in Burke County?
Hi, park enthusiasts. I'm your host, Delia D'Ambra, and the case I'm going to tell you about today takes place in Burke County, North Carolina, in a stretch of woods in the western part of the state, close to the Pisgah National Forest.
I first discovered this case while researching another incident from this region, but the available reporting on this crime was pretty slim, so I knew that in order to cover it thoroughly, I was going to have to connect with the people closest to the investigation to get the inside scoop. The perpetrator in this case didn't just take one life.
He took several, all within a time span of just a few days. The story involved a lot of moving parts, car crashes, foot chases, and an officer-involved shooting. So getting a hold of the firsthand accounts and documents related to all those elements was critical.
It's been more than a decade since the crimes took place, but for many residents and law enforcement officials in Western North Carolina, the saga of events I'm going to dive into today is still quite fresh.
According to a tourism website for Burke County, it's known for being, quote, nature's playground, unquote, and a destination where you can catch beautiful sights, enjoy a small-town atmosphere, and learn about the area's rich history. If you're familiar with Grandfather Mountain, that landmark is less than an hour from Burke County.
However, in the spring of 2014, the idyllic and inviting image of the region was tragically shattered when one ruthless predator tore through the community on a violent rampage. The fracture effect of his actions on the people there was immeasurable. But it was the brave sacrifice of one Forest Service officer and his canine partner that ultimately led to the perpetrator's undoing.
This is Park Predators.
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Chapter 2: Who were the victims of the double homicide in North Carolina?
Around 8.45 on Wednesday morning, March 12, 2014, Burke County Sheriff's deputies received a call from a concerned member of the community. The caller said they worked with a woman named Rhonda Wisnett, and they were pretty worried about her because she'd missed several days of work and wasn't picking up the phone.
Rhonda's co-worker asked the sheriff's office to send a unit out to her house to do a welfare check, you know, just to see what was going on. Where Rhonda lived with her husband Levi was on Fish Hatchery Road in Morganton, North Carolina. The area was densely wooded and mountainous, and Fish Hatchery Road itself is a two-lane road where the homes are spread out.
So definitely not your typical layout for a residential community. On the way to the couple's house, the responding deputy noticed a vehicle pass him going in the opposite direction. Inside was a man that the deputy recognized as Rhonda's adult stepson, Troy Wisnett.
38-year-old Troy was a troubled guy who'd had run-ins with the sheriff's office before, so the deputy clocked him the moment he saw him. During this brief interaction, the deputy didn't think much of seeing Troy, though, because he knew that his dad and stepmom lived just down the road. So doing what he was asked to do, the deputy continued on towards the Wisnitz house to conduct a welfare check.
A few minutes later, though, everything changed when the deputy made a disturbing discovery after pulling up to the family's home and knocking on the front door. The entryway seemed to be locked, but on the front porch, there was what appeared to be reddish brown traces of blood. When the deputy peered inside a door window, he saw what looked like a trail of blood winding through the home.
After forcibly entering the house, the deputy followed the blood trail down to Rhonda and Levi's basement, where he found the 55-year-old and 60-year-old dead from gunshot wounds.
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Chapter 3: What led law enforcement to suspect Troy Wisnett in the murders?
Additional investigators and personnel responded to the crime scene and quickly determined that both victims had been deceased for at least a few days and had likely died sometime between Sunday afternoon, March 9th, and Monday morning, March 10th.
Based on the evidence gathered at the crime scene, which included a rifle and several spent rifle cartridges, it seemed Levi had been shot first while in the basement. And when Rhonda had seemingly gone to investigate the disturbance, she'd been killed outside the house near the porch while trying to flee. After being shot, her body was then dragged down to the basement.
The rest of the home was in disarray with stuff strewn everywhere and a television set missing from a wall. Authorities quickly noted that the front door of a neighbor's home had been kicked in and several firearms, including a 12-gauge pump-action shotgun, were missing. Investigative reports state that from the jump, law enforcement's prime suspect was the couple's son, Troy.
The vehicle the responding deputy had seen him driving belonged to his dad, and it was later found abandoned in nearby McDowell County. In addition to that, Troy's extensive prior criminal record for offenses including assault, drug possession, breaking and entering, larceny, fraud, DWI, and manslaughter put him at the very top of authority's suspect list.
And the assumption that he was responsible for his parents' murders was spot on because over the course of the next four or five hours, word got out that authorities were looking for him. And during that time, he went on the run.
He stole and crashed several vehicles, including a tow truck, which he eventually wrecked off a private road after passing by an investigative command post that had been set up to apprehend him. Shortly before bailing out of the crashed tow truck, he'd hit an NC Department of Transportation vehicle in the area.
After abandoning the tow truck, Troy ran off into a densely wooded piece of property that housed an outbuilding, broke into it, and holed up there before fleeing again. The homeowner who saw him run back into the woods dialed 911 and reported to authorities that he'd been spotted in the general area.
Meanwhile, as many as 150 officers from various law enforcement agencies organized a manhunt for him and pieced together the string of car thefts he'd committed earlier that morning. The best outcome was to precisely pinpoint his location and take him into custody without incident.
So shortly after noon, additional resources were called in to help find Troy, and some of those resources included tracking dogs. At the time, the city of Morganton had their own canines, but those dogs had only recently wrapped up their training and were really new to the job. So authorities asked a local U.S.
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Chapter 4: How did Troy Wisnett evade capture during the manhunt?
When they arrived at the command post during the Troy Wisnett manhunt, Maros signaled to go one direction while two tracking dogs from Morganton went in another direction. For a bit, the Morganton canines followed what the team suspected was the suspect's scent. But then, seemingly because the dogs were so new to the job, they lost the scent.
Meanwhile, Officer Jason Crisp realized Maros had locked onto Troy's scent trail and wanted to follow it. So he notified everyone in the group that Maros was on the move. Shortly after 2.50 p.m., with Maros leading the way at a brisk pace, Jason followed his dog further into the woods and down the side of a hill into a thick grove of young white pine trees.
As they worked their way through the thick brush, several North Carolina State Highway Patrol troopers trailed behind them about 10 to 15 feet away. But in the blink of an eye, Jason and Maros dipped out of sight of the troopers, and just a few seconds later, a shotgun blast rang out.
According to Jason's former partner, Wade Keener, and some official incident response documentation he provided me with, unbeknownst to Jason, Troy Wisnett had tucked himself behind a large poplar tree directly in Jason and Maros' path and was laying in wait. When Jason and Maros got within 15 feet of Troy, he shot Jason at close range in the side of his head, killing him instantly.
In the thick brush, Maros became entangled in his leash and was unable to run and attack Troy. So, a few seconds after Jason was shot, Maros was shot too. According to Wade, Troy unintentionally jammed the shotgun he'd used to shoot Jason. So, to kill Maros, he pulled out a handgun and aimed it at the dog's head.
Then, right before fleeing the scene and going further into the terrain, he approached Jason's body, unholstered his handgun and extra magazine, and stole those items. While that was happening, the state troopers who'd been behind Jason and Maros ducked for cover and called out for Jason, but didn't get a response.
His silence combined with the fact that Maros was no longer barking indicated to everyone that the tracking pair were likely mortally wounded. Right away, authorities continued to look for Troy in the woods, but didn't immediately find him.
Poor radio communications between members of law enforcement and spotty cell phone reception made it challenging for anyone to really know what was going on or where Troy might be. Meanwhile, a small group of officers and troopers led by a sergeant who personally knew Jason assembled and cautiously approached the section of the forest where they believed he and Maros had gone down.
When that group arrived, they found the pair's bodies on the ground and it was clear they were gone. Investigators quickly set up a perimeter and made note of the fact that Jason's service weapon was missing, which I imagine only heightened their concerns that Troy might use it against another member of law enforcement if he was cornered again.
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Chapter 5: What role did tracking dogs play in the search for Troy?
NLZiet, smartly watched.
According to my interview with retired US Forest Service law enforcement officer Wade Keener, when state troopers and a deputy from an area sheriff's office approached an old farmhouse in the search radius of where law enforcement suspected Troy was hiding, they saw a man's tennis shoe move on the ground next to a large fallen tree.
The group was about 15 to 20 yards away from the shoe, but they were confident it was Troy. And sure enough, just moments later, after failing to comply to the officer's commands, Troy showed himself, turned towards the group, and pointed a gun. The officers fired, and when the dust settled, they found Troy motionless, lying on the ground, barely clinging to life.
He'd suffered a single gunshot wound to his buttocks area and a self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head, which appeared to have come from the Glock handgun he'd stolen from Officer Jason Crisp's body. Not long after that, Troy died on scene, and it was later confirmed that the firearm which had caused his fatal injury was in fact Jason's service weapon.
When news of Jason's, as well as Rhonda and Levi Wisnitz murders, reached people in the community, folks were shocked and devastated. On the evening of the crime, a family friend of the Crisp visited Jason's wife Amanda at home and notified her of what had happened. Meanwhile, relatives and friends of the Wisnitz were horrified to hear how they'd been found.
Rhonda's nephew told WSOC-TV, "...they didn't deserve to go through this. They just had their dream house built a few years ago. They built it all by hand and paid for it all by cash. They worked for what they got." One of the couple's neighbors told the News Herald via the Hickory Daily Record that he'd known Troy for all his life and did not think the 38-year-old was an upstanding citizen.
The neighbor stated, "'He's a dangerous man. Let's put it like that.'" He later continued, "'His daddy and stepmom are two of the greatest people in the world. They didn't deserve this.'" According to the couple's obituary, Levi was retired and usually spent his mornings with Rhonda puttering around the house drinking coffee while watching birds and wildlife.
Rhonda was still working as a nurse, but they both shared a dream of one day opening a petting farm on their property. Jason's partner and fellow Forest Service law enforcement officer Wade Keener was not in North Carolina when the murders happened. He'd been sent to Virginia earlier in the week to assist with a timber audit at another district office.
It wasn't until around 3 o'clock on the day of the crime that he began hearing reports of an officer-involved shooting in Burke County. And by 6 p.m., he learned the sad news that Jason was gone. He described that moment to me as a gut punch and said that Jason was truly like a brother to him.
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Chapter 6: What tragic events unfolded during the pursuit of Troy Wisnett?
So they asked Wade to keep an eye out for him in the Pisgah National Forest. Wade told me that this kind of request was normal because oftentimes fugitives would use the National Forest to evade capture. So while out on routine patrol, Wade happened upon a remote campsite and found two men there who eventually provided him with their IDs.
One of those guys was Troy Wisnett, and because he had an outstanding warrant for his arrest, Wade took him into custody. At the time, though, Wade had no idea what Troy was capable of, or that just a few years later, the young man would be back out in society and responsible for a series of murders.
Wade told me he still feels a lot of regret about not being in North Carolina when his partner Jason was killed. His hands were tied because he was required to be out of state for work, but he still can't help but wonder if maybe he had been on the call, he could have done something to save his friend.
A frequent characterization I heard from Wade about Jason was how fiercely dedicated he was to training Moros and becoming the best dog handler he could be. It's not surprising to Wade to know that even until Jason's final breath, he was doggedly pursuing a suspect. But even as much as Jason loved his job, he always made time for his family.
He was a husband and father to two boys, Garrett and Logan. In 2014, Garrett was a teenager and Logan, who is 10 years younger, was just a kid. Their dad was described as soft-spoken, understanding, a conversationalist, a prankster, and a dedicated Christian.
Garrett told me that his father loved the outdoors and would frequently take him fishing and camping at different spots he discovered while working in the woods. In addition to being coworkers, Jason and his partner Wade were literal neighbors.
Several years prior to the murder, Jason and his family moved into a home next door to Wade and his wife, but that wasn't where the Crisps wanted to be forever. In 2009, Jason and his wife had purchased a 30-acre tract of land in McDowell County near Mount Mitchell.
The plan was to eventually build a forever home there, but until they could save up enough money to pay down the mortgage on their current home as well as the acreage, their dream of having a homestead was a work in progress.
In the interim, Jason bought a mobile home and kept it on their acreage and worked diligently to make the structure livable so his family would at least have a place to stay when they visited. In early 2012, Amanda had discovered she had breast cancer and underwent treatment.
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Chapter 7: How did the community react to the murders of Jason Crisp and the Wisnetts?
The only thing he loved more than his job was his family and friends. He died a hero. However, he was a hero well before. Maros was also our family member, and he was loved like a child." Rhonda and Levi Wisnett's funeral took place at a church in Burke County, and they were later buried in Morganton.
A brief obituary for Troy indicated a private funeral service was held for him after the murders as well, but it's unclear who attended. At the time of his suicide, he had a surviving sister, grandmother, and a son and daughter. I imagine even though he'd made some terrible homicidal decisions in his final days, Troy's family members still grieved his death in their own way.
But there was another family connected to his violent history who felt a strange sense of deja vu about everything that had unfolded in March 2014. And those folks had not kept silent about how they felt.
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According to the coverage in this case, in early February 1996, so 18 years before Jason Crisp and Levi and Rhonda Wisnett's murders, Troy, who was just 20 years old, walked into the Burke County Sheriff's Office with his dad and stepmom and confessed to murdering a man.
He claimed that he'd shot his best friend, 21-year-old William Shane Newton, in the head the night before while the two of them had been hanging out inside William's trailer. Now, from what I read in the source material, William seemed to go by his middle name, Shane, most often, so that's what I'll be referring to him as from here on out.
Anyway, after confessing to Shane slaying and turning himself in, Troy was charged with murder. But at his arraignment in late May 1996, he pleaded not guilty. In February 1997, after the one-year anniversary of the crime came and went, the case had still not gone to trial, and Shane's mother, Shirley, was frustrated by that.
She took it upon herself to gather nearly 800 signatures petitioning the district attorney's office for the case to move forward to trial. She specifically did not want Troy to be offered a plea deal because she was worried he would receive a very low prison sentence. She and the rest of Shane's family could not understand why Troy had done what he did.
According to Shirley, Shane had sort of taken Troy under his wing and been a person who'd stood up for him when others wouldn't. There had been times when Troy had stolen from Shane, but Shane didn't make a big deal of those incidents because he believed Troy had no one else in his life to turn to.
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Chapter 8: What was the outcome of Troy Wisnett's previous criminal history?
He never turned up his nose to nobody. If he saw somebody he knew, he'd grab them around the neck and hug them.'" The thought of the DA potentially offering Troy a plea deal was incomprehensible to the Newton family. They wanted Troy to answer for his crime and face the penalty of his actions, plain and simple.
Initially, detectives told the press that drugs and alcohol may have been a factor in the crime, stating that Troy was possibly drunk when he killed Shane, and that he'd claimed to have consumed a mixture of hard liquor, Xanax, and a dozen beers before the shooting.
But inebriation had not been an issue for Shane because his autopsy revealed there were no drugs or alcohol in his system at the time of his death. And on top of that, his autopsy also showed he'd been shot point blank in the back of his head, which to me points to a scenario that Shane probably never saw the attack coming, or if he did, he had no chance to fight back.
In the nearly 13 months after the crime, Shirley, Shane's mom, said her life had been made unbearable thanks to strangers taunting her about Shane's death. For example, she told the News Herald that on Shane's birthday in October 1996, someone had phoned her home three times and never spoken a word. They just played funeral music on the line.
I know, how horrible and creepy to do to a person who'd already been through so much. But the big sticking point with the case hinged on the DA's opinion that Troy had been unaware of his actions at the time of Shane's murder due to being under the influence of substances. So by early 1997, prosecutors were very much leaning towards letting Troy plead down to manslaughter.
But in a letter to the editor of the News Herald, the Newton family contested the state's theory that Troy was so inebriated that he couldn't be held criminally liable for his actions. The family pointed to the fact that Troy had used Shane's own gun to commit the crime. Then he'd stolen the firearm and Shane's car and taken it joyriding for several hours without damaging it.
Then, after all that, he'd traded Shane's gun for money and brought his car back to the crime scene. Which, to Shane's family, did not sound like behavior someone who was unaware of his actions would be capable of. They wrote in part in their letter to the newspaper, quote, "'The family feels that Wisnett needs to do his time and be punished for his actions.
The loss of Shane has left an empty place in our hearts and all we have are our memories of Shane. We have less than one week to try to prevent this injustice from happening. Who can say that Wisnett won't go out and take another innocent life? Who knows? It could be a family member slash friend of yours.'" We must try to prevent this from happening, end quote.
On February 28th, 1997, the Newtons presented their petition, which by that point had garnered more than 2,100 signatures to the district attorney's office. All of the supporters who'd signed it were opposed to Troy getting a plea deal, but the effort did not sway the DA's mind.
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