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Lieutenant Bryan Singer
If you get a case that draws a lot of media attention and draws a lot of, like, urgency, like, hey, we've got this person that was brutally murdered in our community and this doesn't happen. So there was a lot of pressure to get some answers to this.
Scott Weinberger
I'm Scott Weinberger, investigative journalist and former deputy sheriff.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
I'm Anna Sega Nicolasi, former New York City homicide prosecutor.
Scott Weinberger
And this is Homicide 360.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
What happens when the simplest answer is not the right one?
Scott Weinberger
Often in a homicide investigation, the goal is to strip away the wild theories and the remote possibilities and focus on the evidence at hand and the most probable scenario. The result that very often the killer is exactly who you thought it would be.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And that may mean an unfaithful spouse, an abusive partner, or someone close to the victim with nefarious motives.
Scott Weinberger
But sometimes expectations and the evidence just don't match up. And that can result in false leads, premature arrests, and dramatic investigations with unexpected twists and turns. Investigations just like this one.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Lieutenant Bryan Singer has been a sworn deputy at the Brown County Sheriff's Office outside Green Bay, Wisconsin for over 25 years.
Scott Weinberger
25 and a half to be precise. And as a former member of law enforcement, I can tell you that when you start eyeing a retirement, that half a year is critically important.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
As it was in the summer of 2016 when Brian was called to a crime scene located in a town, small, small, semi rural town called Bellevue, about 15 miles southeast of Green Bay.
Therese (911 Operator)
Brock County 911. What is the address for your emergency? It's just about on the corner of Bellevue and. Is that Alloway Avenue where they crisscross? We just found a human body laying in.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So the first call we received was actually from a farmer and his grandson and his grandson's friend were out in a field nearby here in the village of Bellevue. And they located what they believed to be was a deceased female in the farm.
Therese (911 Operator)
Is it a male or female? It's got long hair, but I didn't go near it.
Scott Weinberger
Deputies from the Brown County Sheriff's office immediately responded, following a gravel path to an area just out of sight off of the main road.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
The victim was laying face down in a little ditch, ravine area in between the field and the road, kind of with her arm underneath her head, completely naked, except for she had a pair of socks, one on each foot that was partially off. And then she had an orange or pink colored bracelet that you would see that you get at like a rock concert or a music venue.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Her bruised body showed evidence of serious injuries consistent With a terrible assault.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Because she was face down, you couldn't really see the extent of the injuries on her face, but the back injuries were pretty severe with bruising. And then there appeared to be, like, a shoe print marking on her back, which would be like that herringbone pattern that you see on the bottom of athletic shoes.
Scott Weinberger
Just from a superficial observation, it appeared that the unidentified woman had been kicked and stomped. But the full extent of her injuries had not yet been revealed, because when they turned the body over, Deputies observed multiple lacerations and evidence of blunt force trauma to her face and her head.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And on closer look, there was also discoloration around her neck, Indicating that she may have been strangled with some kind of ligature, a binding of some sort.
Scott Weinberger
An official cause of death would be determined by the medical examiner, but clearly her injuries suggested that her death was intentional and vicious. This was no accident. This was murder.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
It was pretty apparent that the body had not been there for overly long. The weather conditions weren't overly warm or overly cool, so you wouldn't expect any major decomposition or anything slowed down due to the temperatures. It was pretty evident that it was somewhat recent, like within 24 hours, which
Anna Sega Nicolasi
in all likelihood meant that the woman's killer could not have gotten far. But to most effectively start looking for suspects, they had to first identify their victim.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Initially, we had no idea who this person was or where they came from or how they got there, because we did not have any similar missing person reports in the area.
Scott Weinberger
The woman had no clothes, no wallet or purse, and no id. So the search for her name would have to start With a meticulous search of the immediate area.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
We did a large grid search of that area to try and determine if there was any other evidence that we may be missing, to see if there was any objects that would have been used to do the blunt force trauma. We were looking for, you know, like, large boulders, large rocks, things of that nature that may have some blood on it or may have indication that it was used in the assault.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
But unfortunately, they didn't find any weapon nor her clothes or anything else that might have helped identify her. They also didn't find anything that indicated that this savage assault had even taken place at that location.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
There was no other signs of blood. There was no other signs of evidence. And then, of course, the body itself,
Scott Weinberger
the lack of blood around the body, either in the form of pooling or spatter, was, Remember, she had multiple lacerations, Likely indicated that this was not where the victim was killed. It was more likely that she was killed somewhere Else transported by car. And then her body was dumped in this location. Out of the sight of passing cars,
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
we were able to locate what appeared to be some fresh tire tracks that were in the field area a short distance away from where the body was located. We had spoke to the farmer, and we had spoke to other people that would have access back there. And we were quickly able to determine that that not have been from one of their vehicles. They only use ATVs and off road type of vehicles back there. And this was clearly based upon the distance of the wheels and the tread pattern and all that was definitely a passenger vehicle, small truck that would have made those marks.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
So already, investigators knew that they would be dealing with as many as three potential crime scenes. The spot where the body was discovered, the car or truck that had transported her, and. And wherever the murder had actually taken place.
Scott Weinberger
And they also could conclude that they were dealing with a perpetrator who had made some effort to cover up the crime and get away with murder.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And that became part of the suspect profile. But so did the fact that this woman's killer, out of haste or panic or just an unfamiliarity with the actual area, had also failed to do a very good job.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
The little street or the little gravel road that leads into the field is pretty recognizable from the road. It's about a half mile away from our sheriff's office, actually on the same street. So the person that would have put the body there didn't even realize that they drove right past the sheriff's department
Scott Weinberger
twice, which was either a brazen type of taunt or a really stupid mistake.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
But unfortunately, no cameras at the sheriff's office or along the stretch of road caught sight of any suspicious vehicles. And in their canvas, police turned up no witnesses from the immediate area. So the make and model of the killer's car was still a mystery, and so was the identity of the victim
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
once the medical examiner got there. We're looking for any tattoos or any other marks or indications that we can enter into our local reporting database here to see if we can identify who this person may be.
Scott Weinberger
The only clue to her identity. The disturbing evidence that the woman, likely in her early 30s, was, was also a recent mother who was still breastfeeding an infant child.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
We could tell that the person had likely just had a child because of the size and inflammation of her breasts, but outside of that, we really didn't have a lot.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
But that would soon change. Detectives were still at the crime scene when the sheriff's office now got another call. This one on the Non emergency line,
Therese (911 Operator)
Brown County Public Safety. This is Therese. Yes, how do I go about, I guess, missing person. Wanting to report a missing person. Yes. Who's missing? It's my girlfriend and she does live with me. And she's never done this before. What's her name? Nicole Vanderheiden.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
A few hours into the investigation, we had received a call in through our911 center that a subject by the name of Doug Dietrich was reporting that his girlfriend, Nicole Vanderheiden was missing and that she had not come home from their night out the night before.
Scott Weinberger
Doug Dietrich and 31 year old Nicole Vanderheyden lived together with their newborn baby in a house not far from the crime scene.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
He lives in close proximity to where the body was located. When I say close, I mean within a few miles. And the description that he had given us of her matched exactly what we had in the field. So at that point, we were fairly confident that this was the person that he was reporting missing.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Detectives did not immediately disclose that the body of a young woman had been found in the nearby field. She hadn't yet been positively identified. But they also did not treat his call as a simple missing persons report either. They knew it just might be part of a homicide investigation.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So we sent a detective to the house to interview him. Whereas normally, obviously, if you have a missing person report or if someone wants to call in someone, you wouldn't see a detective at your door. You typically see it as a patrol officer.
Scott Weinberger
But obviously, if the victim did turn out to be Doug's missing girlfriend, then he was not just a concerned loved one, he could be a potential suspect. So they wanted to be sure to take advantage of this first contact to gather as much intel as they could.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So one of our detectives went over there with a hidden camera, audio video recorder, where they're invited into the house to sit down with him, talk to him, get information, which was beneficial because obviously we knew what he didn't know.
Scott Weinberger
So normally a case like this starts with a uniformed officer responding to a standard missing persons call. And to be clear, this wasn't a juvenile and it wasn't an elderly person because that would trigger something like a silver alert. This was an adult of age with no immediate signs of foul play on paper so far. But from the jump, investigators felt this one was different. There was an opportunity here to bring in someone with investigative experience early, someone who could read the room, listen past the answers, and make real time judgments about what was being said and what wasn't. And the detective could document the Interview and preserve it and flag any inconsistencies. Anasega with something that just didn't sit right.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And of course, any officer, just like any person, might see things that might be meaningful in a later investigation, right? Is there something that looks like maybe blood or some evidence of a fight, things knocked around, something that would warrant them coming back to take a closer look. But also, I love this idea. If this case ends up ultimately at a trial at some point, so often these photos or videos later become important. There's this innocuous thing in there that means nothing at the time. It doesn't look suspect, it isn't an obvious anything. But later, when you look at it, when you have all the rest of the pieces in place. Now, it is sometimes that piece that puts you over the top in front of a jury. So here it is, detectives. They're meeting Doug at the door and at this point it was the late afternoon, early evening maybe. And detectives first impression of him, honestly it wasn't a great one.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
You could tell he's clearly not feeling the best from the night before. Probably, you know, hungover and got some cobwebs going on up there.
Scott Weinberger
Which also strikes detectives as kind of odd. Typically someone who had called the police to report the mother of your child is missing, you may demonstrate a little more obvious concern, maybe even panic. But this was not so in Doug's case.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
According to him, he and Nicole, who her friends called Nikki, had hired a babysitter the night before so they could go out to a local bar with friends and watch some live music.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Well, Doug had stated that this was the first time after the child was born that they were able to get a sitter and get together and go out. So that was their night out. It was a concert, a band, Steel Panther, that is pretty popular and a lot of people like to go out to. So they went out as a big friend group. And then Doug basically explained that towards the end of the show, him and his friend Greg ended up running into some other people that they knew and they were going to stay at the watering hole for a little bit while the rest of the group, including Nicole, made their way to the next bar, which was the Sardine Can.
Scott Weinberger
Also, according to Doug, the night sort of got away from him. When he went looking for Nicole, he just couldn't find her.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Doug just kind of explained that, you know, the night got away from him and they were drinking, they were having fun, and you know, next thing you knew it was midnight and they're like, crap, we really better get going to get over to this other sardine can and meet with Nicole and the rest of the group.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
When he couldn't find her, he headed home with his buddy Greg, figuring that Nicole would either already be at home waiting or would show up sometime later.
Scott Weinberger
Now, Doug was pretty forthcoming with investigators, telling them that Nicole was not happy with him for getting separated, and he had been treated to a barrage of angry texts from her. But those texts had stopped around midnight. Timing is important here. So when he got home, he saw that she wasn't there, and he figured perhaps the best thing to do was to just go to bed and sleep it off.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
But morning came, and he still hadn't
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
heard from Nicole prior to him calling law enforcement. He had been reaching out to all sorts of people to try and find out if they knew where she was, because times in the past when there'd be arguments, there'd be disagreements, she would either go to a friend's house or go to a family's house just to kind of, you know, cool down or whatever the case may be. I don't think anyone was, like, overly concerned because this was a pattern of when they'd get into arguments and stuff. She'd go stay at a friend's house or whatever. But when it become later in the day and no one was able to get a hold of her and her phone was clearly off, that's when all the concerns started, like, hey, you need to call her in is missing.
Scott Weinberger
It all sounded pretty plausible. But considering what detectives suspected about Nicole's fate, that delay before calling police, it was starting to sound suspicious.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
It was odd because it took so long for him to make that initial phone call. Like, I can't imagine if I had a pregnant girlfriend or that just had my child that I was living with, that I was out with the night before, that didn't come home that night, that I would be able to go to sleep and not really wonder, where is she? And then the next morning, you wake up, and there's still a bunch of time that's passing before you make that phone call.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Given Nicole's physical description, including the fact that she was still breastfeeding, and she would have likely have had on a pink bracelet from the crack the night before. Detectives were pretty confident that the woman they had found in the field was Nicole, but they still had not made that official ID which meant that they still couldn't tell Doug or anyone else everything they already knew.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
We're trying to work still on identifying the body because the way that her head and her face were battered. It was obviously we weren't going to be showing them a picture of it and saying, hey, is this your girlfriend? Is this your daughter? Daughter is your sister. But we were like 99% sure that it was her, based upon the totality of everything and the bracelet on her hand that he had verified they had both gotten the night before.
Scott Weinberger
Now, the definitive clue to identifying the victim came later that night.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
One of the guys from night shift was on his way home and he was driving up the ramp from a county highway which runs near where this was, up onto a local interstate. And he had saw a pile of clothes scattered around and some other personal items off to the side of the on ramp and put two and two together and was like, man, I wonder what the odds are that those belong to this person that was just found with no clothes on.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Detectives responded and collected the bloody clothing and were soon able to verify that they did belong to the victim.
Scott Weinberger
Nearby, they also found a purse, a cell phone and an ID, all belonging to 31 year old Nicole Vanderheiden. A blood test at the lab would later confirm that ID.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
The autopsy revealed that the young mom of three had well over 200 injuries to her body, primarily focused on her head and neck. It also concluded that she had been sexually assaulted and strangled.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
She had ligature marks around her neck that was a contributing cause of death. And the medical examiner had stated that the injuries to the neck were of the worst they had ever seen as far as how tight the person would have had to pull that cord.
Scott Weinberger
Obviously, with the sexual assault and the strangulation, this was a brutal and very personal kind of attack. And in most instances, investigators would presume that it has all of the indications of being perpetrated by, by someone who was full of rage.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And this is where it can really go both ways. Sexual assault control coupled with brutal violence can absolutely be a stranger. But on the flip side, that overt need to assert dominance is too often also seen in intimate partner violence or also some sort of deep seated vendetta as well. But when you looked at Nicole, according to those who knew her, she was not someone that had any obvious enemies or whose lifestyle might have been expected to put her in danger.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Well, the information we got from, from her friends and family is that Nicole was a fun, loving, very outgoing person that enjoyed physical activity, enjoyed spending time with her family. She had two other children from a previous relationship that she enjoyed spending time with and being a great mom. She was a part time school teacher at a local Green Bay school. District. So she clearly enjoyed kids, enjoyed helping kids, enjoyed being around kids and friends. From all accounts, was a very good family person.
Scott Weinberger
So let's establish this. Nicole did have an ex husband who was the father of her two older children. But according to Brian, their relationship was amicable and they had no history of any conflict.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
They got along as far as what they needed to to take care of the kids and transfer custody, things like that. There was no issues.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Now, detectives like True Crime podcast listeners know that the majority of homicides against women are the result of intimate partner violence. So it was critical to eliminate any potential suspects that were closest to Nicole, and that meant her current boyfriend, Doug.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So then we just wanted to get him to the sheriff's department, get a more formalized locked in statement from him as far as, like, who they were with last time he saw her, and then, you know, identifying other witnesses that we needed to get in contact with right away. That would have been the last people to actually see her.
Scott Weinberger
Whether those witnesses would corroborate Doug's version of the night remained to be seen.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Another mystery. How Doug would react when police revealed that Nicole was no longer missing. She had been murdered. In May of 2016, a woman's body was found on the side of the road outside Green Bay, Wisconsin. Nicole Vanderheiden had been stripped, beaten, strangled, and sexually assaulted. And police were prepared to question the man who first reported her missing, her live in boyfriend, Doug Dietrich.
Scott Weinberger
Now, to his credit, Doug agreed to go to the sheriff's department willingly to give his account of the night before, a night that started with drinking and ended with an exchange of angry texts before he claims he and Nicole got separated and he returned home alone.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And Brian mentioned that he could see Doug's whole body language change the second he mentioned that Nicole was dead, which I think is potentially really telling and could go towards this reaction being real.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So.
Scott Weinberger
So let me also say he didn't break down crying. He doesn't respond back with a flurry of questions, which you may expect, like, you know, what do you mean? Where? How he was almost like he really wasn't surprised. A detective in the room's gonna look at those responses and formulate his or her's own opinion.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
My impressions are it was genuine, a genuine response of the news that he had just gotten. I catch myself oftentimes, you know, you learn that people handle shock differently and people handle bad news differently. So I try not to put too much stock into people's initial reaction just because I feel like through the course of my career it's always different. Like, some people think they're supposed to, like, start bawling and screaming and crying and banging on the walls, you know, and other people are just kind of like, just in shock and they don't know how to. How to react to it.
Therese (911 Operator)
It.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
So while he didn't break down, Doug didn't get defensive either.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
I. I thought it was appropriate, and at the time, there was nothing really that stood out to me, that it was like, wow, this guy really doesn't seem to care.
Scott Weinberger
In fact, Doug was cooperating with police, answering all of their questions, and even offering them full access to his phone.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
We were able to go through his phone, do a phone extraction on us, to go through text, text messages, communications, because obviously that was important to try and help us with our timeline and to help us see the nature of their relationship, like where they're having problems. What was the background? He acknowledged that, you know, there were some disagreements, some fights, like any boyfriend, girlfriend, husband, wife is going to have. He kind of downplayed the, the significance or the. The severity of the argument that night and just kind of chalked it up as just kind of like she was drunk and that's just kind of how she gets.
Scott Weinberger
But there was one text in particular that really caught detectives attention because it seemed to imply that there may have been a history of abuse in their relationship.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
There was some stuff in the text messages that would indicate that there may have been some abuse going on or some mental control and that she was concerned about his infidelity and the fact that he was, you know, likely cheating on her. And that's kind of what caused this argument this night.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Infidelity, control, potential abuse. That definitely leans towards circumstantial evidence against a potential murder suspect. But the fact remained that he appeared to be otherwise honest and cooperative, which left detectives kind of scratching their heads initially.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
A lot of the facts he was giving us were checking out, so it's seemed as if he was being truthful. He was being extremely cooperative, allowing us into his house, then coming down here on his own, providing us with his phone, providing us with a DNA sample. So there was a lot of things saying, yeah, this guy is completely cooperative, no concerns. But then you back up to some of the other factors, like why did it take so long to call? You didn't really seem to care too much that she was missing that night. There were these issues that we had seen in your phone with some allegations of abuse in the past. There was clearly a fight that night,
Scott Weinberger
and those seemingly minor little Details, they start to add up, and taken together, they start to look a lot like circumstantial evidence that Doug may have had something to do with Nicole's murder.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
And then also, statistically speaking, what does it tell you when someone is murdered? It's someone close to them, an intimate partner. The severity and the types of these injuries would lead you to believe that this was, you know, not some random act, that this was anger, that this was something that was taken out on her. You know, obviously, as detectives, we follow the evidence and follow what we have. And at that point, what we had was a dead body and a boyfriend that delayed calling this in and has a history of physical abuse to her, allegedly. You factor in those things, and. Yeah, I mean, that's. That's where everything is pointing.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
A deep dive into Doug's criminal background did not do him any favors.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So in our records management system, there were a few documented incidences of alleged abuse between him and previous girlfriends. And then also through the course of some of our interviews, we had former girlfriends, former associates that were reporting that there were allegations of violence which only
Scott Weinberger
served to add credibility to. To Nicole's texts the night she was killed. That implied Doug had been abusive in the past, but was he capable of that kind of extreme violence displayed in her fatal assault?
Anna Sega Nicolasi
It was a question detectives posed to Nicole's family because if anyone was expected to know if she had ever been in any physical danger, it would likely have been her sister, with whom she was really close.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
We had contact with the family right away. We were put into contact with them through Doug. We were communicating with them and getting statements from them and kind of trying to figure out, you know, how was Nicole relaying how she felt about the relationship back to her family.
Scott Weinberger
The family confirmed that Nicole and Doug had some issues in their relationship, and arguments were not uncommon. But at no point did they suspect she had been in physical danger from him.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
I mean, everything wasn't perfect. She wasn't necessarily happy all the time. She did feel like she was being isolated and kind of removed from the normal life that she had. I think there were some concerns because she just was isolated and not. Not spending as much time with family, not communicating as much with family. But again, that could be for a lot of different reasons.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
So there's just still a lot of uncertainty about what Doug was capable of. So investigators switched focus to trying to verify his alib. For the night of the murder.
Scott Weinberger
Doug provided names of some of their friends that he said could vouch for his whereabouts and his timeline. Of events, A night that started at a bar called the watering hole.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
We were able to verify that they were there, and then that people left. That was about it. And that Doug's vehicle was, in fact, left at that watering hole all night, which was important because we were able to rule that out as a vehicle that would have been associated with this crime at all.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
While Doug stayed with friends at the watering Hole, video cameras captured Nicole entering another bar down the street with a group of friends. Details that so far matched with Doug's story.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
And then the video from the Sardine can, which was the second bar that they had went to, proved beneficial in a lot of ways because we were able to show her movements, her behaviors throughout the night. You know, for a while there, she was dancing, she was fun, she was interacting with people. And then when they move to the outside portion of the bar, you can actually see her on her phone, which we're then able to show is when she was trying to reach out to Doug, try to get in contact with him, and he was not responding to her.
Scott Weinberger
Video of Nicole on her phone matches up with the timestamps and texts sent to Doug's phone. Text demanding that he join her, even accusing him of. Of being unfaithful.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
The cameras weren't the best, so you couldn't see exactly what they were typing, but it matched up what their story was.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
So this was around 11:30pm and in the video, Nicole does look visibly upset, which goes a pretty long way, establishing that she and Doug were involved in what appeared to be an escalating argument
Scott Weinberger
Based on that video. She looked so upset that she eventually stormed out of the bar, followed shortly after by a friend. Friend of hers named Aaron.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
She got upset. She got up, she walked out, and then kind of walked to the west, away from the bar, outside a camera view. And then that's when Aaron is seen kind of walking after her and then coming back a short period of time later.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Nicole's friend said that he tried to convince her to come back or get a taxi home, but that she refused. And he then went on to report that that was the last time he saw her.
Scott Weinberger
Now, this all happened on the sidewalk outside of the camera's view, so police were not going to just take Aaron's word for it. But it turned out that several witnesses and the cameras in the bar could vouch for the fact that he returned just a few minutes later and then rejoined his friends.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
And we have them on video then getting into an Uber or a taxi after the fact. They actually went to another bar closer to their house and had more drinks. And we were able to verify that. So he was ruled out right away.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
The cameras at the Sardine can were also able to verify another part of Doug's story because video showed him and his friend Greg arriving at the bar around 12:15 and then staying until after
Scott Weinberger
2am so many of you may be thinking this, and I'm going to ask it of you. Ana Sega, didn't that still leave a window between when Nicole left the bar and when Doug arrived, where both of their locations were unaccounted for? Now, was that enough time to kill Nicole, dump her body, and return back to the bar like nothing happened? What do you think?
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Maybe. Except there's this video footage showing that his car never left the parking lot. So if he did assault Nicole in that small window, he would have needed help. At least it seems that way.
Scott Weinberger
So thinking about this, the location where Nicole was killed and where her body was left would have to be, you know, in a distance wise, pretty close by.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Obviously, one of the things you want to do is try and identify your crime scenes. We knew we had where the body was located. We knew we had where the clothing was located. We treated the house as a crime scene just because that's her residence.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Investigators obtained a warrant to search Doug and Nicole's home. So far, there had been no indications that Nicole had ever made it back to the house. But their search did uncover some pretty startling pieces of potential evidence.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Their initial search warrant was done at his house, where there were some things found that were of interest, not necessarily glaring, but when you add everything together with what we had. So there was like, what appeared to be drag marks of blood in the garage, on the floor. Nicole's vehicle was in the garage. Inside her vehicle, there was what appeared to be blood drops in the back seat, on the back rest, and then in the rear hatch area, there was some bloody, like paper towels or Kleenexes in one of the bathrooms. There was appeared to be maybe dried blood or some staining on the floor in the master bedroom. And then there was the shoes in the garage that had a similar herringbone pattern on the bottom of them that we had observed on Nicole's back. So those are the initial things that we saw at the house.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
It was not definitive, but if the blood evidence turned out to be Nicole's, it could be proof that the assault had at least started right there at the couple's home.
Scott Weinberger
Which also means there might have been witnesses. So detectives started knocking on doors throughout the neighborhood.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
No. No one heard anything. We canvassed. It's a very, very nice subdivision. Not a lot of traffic, not a lot going on. So there would be the likelihood that someone would hear something if it was outside.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
But then one of their neighbors approached the detectives, saying that he had found something that seemed a little weird.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
The neighbor across the street, kind of kitty cornered, obviously knew what was going on, saw the police presence out there, saw the tape. Later on in that day, after we had left, he was cutting his grass and located what he thought was just like an animal kill or something. So he didn't think anything of it at first until he sees some more blood in his grass. And he runs over what he describes as like a phone cable or a charging cable.
Scott Weinberger
And remember, Nicole had been strangled using some type of ligature. Could this cable have been the murder weapon?
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And shortly after, the neighbor pointed out an even more disturbing discovery, something he at first mistook for roadkill. A clump of hair and a pool of blood on the concrete curb in front of his house. Police were quick to confirm it was human.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
The theory at that point was is that clearly she made it home somehow, and then that there was some sort of disturbance or argument or something in the house that then worked its way outside. I kind of envisioned it being. They get into this argument. Doug's potentially being abusive to her. She tries running away. He, you know, tracks her down across the street, and then that's where this, this incident happens. And then, you know, obviously he would have to use a vehicle to transport the body. So her car is right there in the garage. That vehicle would have been used, and then drive back home. That was the. The operating theory at that time.
Scott Weinberger
Detectives believe they had found where the murder had taken place right in front of the house Nicole shared with their prime suspect.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Not only that, but the timing of it seems to fit as well.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So this is what really, really, really helped us in the case and lock the case down. So we had two joggers in the neighborhood that had come forward and said, yeah, we were out for a run that morning around 5, 5:30. And we remember having to jump over this, like, puddle of blood or puddle of red substance in the road. So now we have a really good timeline of, okay, Doug at home, babysitter left at like, let's say three o'. Clock. These guys are out jogging at like, five something. So now we're able to narrow that timeline all the way down to, like, okay, something happened between, let's say, three and five.
Scott Weinberger
A short time later, police received A call from another neighbor who said her son was driving the same road on the night of the murder.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
And lo and behold, he's driving home. And A, he passes the joggers, and B, if you slow the video down and you look real close, you can see the blood and you can see the discoloration of the concrete in that same area that we were reported to. So then that locks our timeline in even better.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
It seemed to answer one of the major questions surrounding Nicole's murder. Did she ever make it home after she was last seen leaving the bar?
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Now we have verification based on DNA and blood evidence and hair, that, yeah, she did make it home. And it was at this time, approximately
Scott Weinberger
a time where Doug had already admitted he was also home.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
An argument, a history of abuse, and now blood evidence at the shared home of the victim and the prime suspect. Detectives decided it was enough to make an arrest.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Arrest.
Scott Weinberger
But would it be enough to prove the truth behind Nicole's brutal murder?
Anna Sega Nicolasi
In Brown County, Wisconsin, detectives had collected a substantial amount of circumstantial evidence in the murder of Nicole Vanderheiden that they believe pointed to one thing, that she had been killed by her live in boyfriend, Doug.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So after that second scene was called in and we started doing that processing, it was at that point that I made the determination at the time with my supervisor that we had probable cause to make an arrest on Doug. My thought process on it was as well, this is going to be the chance to try and get him to get a confession or to try and put provide information like, tactically speaking, this is going to be our chance.
Scott Weinberger
Doug was arrested without incident, but not without an unusual reaction.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
The reaction wasn't what you'd think if. If you're innocent and you're being handcuffed and told that you murdered your girlfriend.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
According to Brian, Doug didn't act shocked or angry. He appeared to be more resigned, as if he'd been expecting the police to show up at his door any minute. And this just kind of added to that feeling that they had the right guy.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So he was arrested, transported to the jail. During the transport to the jail, I had kept the recording device on, and I kept replaying him in my head how he kept saying he really wished he could help us, but he couldn't. He was saying that I'm like, what does that mean? Like, does that mean you can't because your attorney told you to? Or is it you can't because you just don't know?
Scott Weinberger
And up to this point, Doug had been quite cooperative with Investigators. But now that he was under arrest, he was exercising his right to no longer speak to police without his attorney present.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
With Nicole's suspected killer in custody, Brian shared the news of Doug arrests with Nicole's family.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
They were in shock. I mean, a lot of them knew that there was problems in the relationship and knew that everything wasn't going perfectly. But obviously, no one envisioned that, that this was going to lead to a violent death of their daughter or sister, loved one.
Scott Weinberger
So you would think this resolution would come as a big relief for detectives and for the family. But there was only one problem. The evidence against Doug was not totally adding up.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Shortly after the arrest of Doug, we started getting information back. None of it was corroborating our thought that it was Doug.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
First onboard GPS data obtained from Nicole's car showed that it hadn't been used at all on the night of her death.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
And it proved that that car didn't move the whole weekend.
Scott Weinberger
So if Doug's car was still at the bar and Nicole's car wasn't used to transport her body, how did her body get to the farm? And that's a pretty important question.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Well, one possibility could be that Doug had help, perhaps from his friend who had driven him home from the bar after their night of drinking.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
We were very, very, very focused in on Greg because Greg and Doug were very tight, and Greg was obviously the last person that we knew that was with Doug. We set up a meeting at a park with him and one of our detectives who had kind of formed a good relationship with him. And we wired up our detective, and we were really thinking that, you know, we may be able to get him to admit to some knowing something or slipping up on the story that they had come up with or slipping up on their timeline, anything. But we were never able to do that. And we pressed Greg really hard.
Scott Weinberger
But Greg was adamant that neither he nor his friend Doug were involved in Nicole's murder, insisting that when Nicole left the watering hole was the last time either of them had seen her alive.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And, in fact, even the babysitter would vouch for the fact that the two men came back together and without Nicole.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
She was there when Doug and Greg got home from the bar A short time later, Babysitter left, never reported seeing Nicole.
Scott Weinberger
Okay, but what about all the blood evidence found at Doug and Nicole's home?
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Well, it turned out that the blood on the garage floor, it wasn't human at all. It likely came from a wild turkey that Doug had butchered in the garage.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
And then the biggest thing for me, was just the lack of DNA on her. And on any of the other items we had, like the cord, there was no DNA of Doug's at all. There was a small amount of touch DNA that was located on one of her brains, breast areas that was consistent with Doug's, but that was likely their child's from breastfeeding, because obviously the male DNA would be consistent.
Scott Weinberger
And considering the way Nicole was assaulted, the lack of Doug's DNA on her body was pretty compelling evidence that he was not the one who killed her. But there was also some convincing digital evidence as well.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
One of the issues that we had seen once we kind of got to the point where, you know, you're trying to follow the evidence, you're trying to build a case, was we recognized that he was wearing this Fitbit device or some sort of tracking device on his wrist at the time that our detective went out there and spoke with him.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Detectives knew that if they could secure the data from Doug's Fitbit, there might be a good chance that they could track his movements on the night Nicole was killed.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So there's a couple different ways that we. We went about getting the data and getting the information off of the device. You have the device itself that you can write a warrant for to get the extraction off of, and then you also have the backup of that, which would be where this data is going, which would be an app or an application that someone would have on their phone, which historically tracks that stuff. So we were able to go with subpoenas and search warrants, search warrant for the device, and then a subject subpoena for the records from the application itself.
Scott Weinberger
The data they retrieved not only matched Doug's version of the night, it showed that he was actually sleeping between 2:45am when he arrived at home and 6:30am walking only 12 steps in those hours when he got up to feed their baby. And that is compelling digital evidence.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Considering police had narrowed down the time of the murder to between 3 and 5am this new information ruled out the possibility that he could have killed Nicole, dumped her body, and then returned home during that window.
Scott Weinberger
So given this new evidence, Doug was released from custody, and detectives had to admit they were wrong all along. Never an easy thing to do for investigators.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
And that's one of the tough parts about these cases. If you get a case that draws a lot of media attention and draws a lot of, like, urgency, like, hey, we've got this person that was brutally murdered in our community, and this doesn't happen happen. So there was a Lot of pressure to get some answers to this, but
Anna Sega Nicolasi
there was still reason to be hopeful because there was still unknown male DNA that was found on both Nicole's body and her clothing.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
The only consistent we kept getting back was this unknown Y profile that the crime lab is like, we don't have enough to enter this into codis. All we have is we can tell you it's why. So it's a male, and B, it's not Doug. So start getting us other sample. Then it's like, okay, who all had contact with her that night? So we went back through all the surveillance video from Sardine Cam. We went back through all the contacts, the people that she knew. We went back to her ex husband. We went back to like some guy she had a shot with at the bar that was like a friend and took all sorts of DNA samples, samples at that time. And then now it's just a matter of who's this unknown DNA. And the biggest question is, how did she get back to the house?
Scott Weinberger
Now, I can tell you from experience that collecting DNA and creating viable profiles to compare to possible suspects is not as easy as it sounds and can take some time. And one thing that is often overlooked is having a really solid relationship with the lab.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
The guy at the Crime Lump was just amazing. Like, he was so invested in this case. And I was in contact with him all the time, just talking through everything that we had, just trying to get his input on what we should send in.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And that lab worked tirelessly, testing everything from Nicole's discarded clothing to her recovered purse to her wallet. But only partial samples of touch DNA were recovered. Not enough to get a viable match with any known profile from CODIS. But finally, in August of 2000, 2016, they got a hit.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
And sure enough, they had enough touch DNA off of one of the socks to enter into codif. So then it was, I think, like the next day that we actually got the official notification with this guy, George Burch, from the state of Virginia.
Scott Weinberger
George Burch had a criminal record, and his DNA was in the known offenders DNA database. But his connection to Nicole or even Wisconsin, that was still unknown.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
We had saw that he had quite a lengthy criminal history from the East Coast. There was a homicide case from like 98, I believe it was, in the state of Virginia, where he was ultimately acquitted. The first thing I did was plug his name in and see if I hopefully have a contact with him recently. And sure enough, Green Bay Police Department had had a contact with him just after this homicide. It was like in June and it was a motor vehicle hit and run crash that they investigated, or he was a suspect.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And in the course of the investigation into that hit and run, Burch had actually surrendered his phone to try and prove he wasn't involved. A decision that would prove to pay dividends for Brian's homicide investigation.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So he does a consent phone download, and then within that phone download, we obviously had his phone number. Then we also found his Gmail address that was associated to that phone. And that was the key right there.
Scott Weinberger
Investigators now had a record of Burch's entire Internet search history for the days immediately surrounding Nicole's murder.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So the search history was basically limited to pornography. And this case and the arrest of Doug and the follow up of the investigation, all the news stories, like the local news channels, of all the coverage he was going googling, like, you know, Doug Gucci, Nicole Vanderheiden murderside homicide. Following the developments of that and the porn, that was it.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Not only that, but detectives were able to use his phone records to pinpoint his movements as well.
Scott Weinberger
Those records place Burch on the night of the murder at a bar called Richard Cranium's, which is just down the road from the sardine can where Nicole was last seen.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
But even more disturbing, the data then put him outside Nicole and Doug's house from about 3am until 3:15, then at the farm where Nicole's body was found just before 4am and then at the spot where her clothing was later recovered about 4:05.
Scott Weinberger
Now, at this point, there was little doubt that this had to be their guy. And given his violent history and loose ties to Wisconsin, they knew they had to get him in custody as soon as possible.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
We had gotten information of where he was working. He was working for a guy on the side, kind of doing plastering and drywall. We knew who he was living with, we knew who was picking him up. We sat on it for a while, maybe not a couple days, just to see his pattern of movement. So the plan was to set up on the house early in the morning and get him on a traffic stop a short distance away from the house after he left.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
That plan hit a snag when Burch suddenly changes routine on the day of the planned arrest, and he left his residence before dawn. But Brian and his team were ready,
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
so we had to scramble everyone. But he was pulled over, traffic stop, taken into custody, no incident at all.
Scott Weinberger
On September 7, 2016, the muscle bound Burch, who stood six foot and covered in tattoos, was brought in for questioning. And by all accounts, he Was playing it very cool.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Super polite, not aggressive. No signs of any issue. I mean, luckily, because he towered over the top of me.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Now, as you'll recall, this wasn't Burch's first time being a defendant in a murder case. Now, that case resulted in an acquittal, but it did make clear he had familiarity with the system. And when arrested for Nicole's homicide, he exercised his rights and refused to answer any questions. But the evidence against him, from his DNA found on Nicole's sock to the digital evidence putting him at the crime scene, well, that was overwhelming.
Scott Weinberger
Burch was arrested and charged with first degree intentional homicide. His trial would begin on February 19, 2018, a trial in which prosecutors anticipated he would attempt to. To prove his innocence by trying to prove that Doug was the actual killer.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
And in Wisconsin, that's more often than not done by what's called, like, the Denny defense. It's based on a case, State v. Denny, which just basically means that a defendant is allowed to introduce evidence of a third party having committed the crime. But to use that defense, well, the defendant has to demonstrate some sort of legitimate connection between the third party and the crime. So you're basically not allowed to just make irrelevant accusations with nothing behind it.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
So the judge basically said, yes, yeah, okay, you can. You can do the Denny defense. You can point the finger back at Doug, but you need to have evidence in order to do that. So the only way for him to do that was his testimony, because that's the only evidence that he had that that's what happened. So he was basically forced to take the stand if they were to allow that Denny defense.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
So by pointing the finger at Doug, the defense was attempting to use Brown county detectives own work against them. Circumstantial evidence that at one time they thought was enough to have Doug arrested.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
The trial was unique because you shouldn't have to, but we did. We had to basically prove Doug's innocence and prove his guilt at the same time. We did a good job all around, and we did a good job against Doug. So we knew that they were going to use this stuff against us. But every single thing that we had thought we had on Doug was explained on the stand.
Scott Weinberger
Burch claimed that he did, in fact, meet Nicole, and after some type of flirting, he had offered her a ride home. And on that ride, he claimed it ended in a consensual sexual encounter in the front seat of his car.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
But then, according to Birch, they were suddenly and violently interrupted when somebody approached the car and hit him on the head. With a gun, knocked him unconscious. And then when he woke up, he claimed that he was forced at gunpoint to help Doug transport and dispose of Nicole's body.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
He wasn't nervous. He was adamant. And, I mean, he is clearly a pathological liar that had himself convinced that this is what happened, and I'm going to tell my story, and it is what it is.
Scott Weinberger
But in the end, the jury just didn't buy it, Especially when the prosecution laid out exactly how they believed the events on the night of May 20, 2016, really went down clearly.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
Nicole was at the sardine can with some friends. She walked off into the night, as I call it. At some point, she ended up at a bar called Richard craniums. Her phone was dead. She did not have the ability to call anyone or text anyone. George burch was a known regular at Richard craniums. Everyone at the bar knew him. They knew that he hung out there. They also knew that he liked his women, that he was a smooth talker. He met her somehow, whether it's inside or outside, Offered her a ride home, and gave her that ride home.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
A few minutes later, Burch pulled up in front of Nicole's house, Where he must have made unwanted sexual advances, Advances that quickly turned violent.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
She fought back. He didn't like that. And he took it to the extreme, Sexually assaulted her and. And she tried getting away. She's a fighter. Everyone that we talked to said that she would never be one to shy away from somebody. She would fight for herself.
Scott Weinberger
Broken fingernails indicated that Nicole fought for her life, but ultimately, she was overpowered.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
It escalated when went outside the vehicle, at which point he curb stomped her head into the side of the road and murdered her. Loaded her up into his truck and drove her to where her body was found, and then drove off and discarded the clothes on the highway on his way home.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Burch's google dashboard data placed him near every key location. The bar, Nicole's home, the field where her body was dumped, and the site where her clothing had been discarded and then recovered.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
There's no indication at all that Nicole knew George or that there's any interaction between them at all before this.
Scott Weinberger
A night of partying with friends and then an argument with her boyfriend, then a phone gone dead, had led Nicole being alone and vulnerable and a man with a violent past Took the opportunity to prey on her and do the unthinkable.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
This is one of those cases of don't get in the car with strangers. You know, we say it a million times, and especially with someone that may Be intoxicated, a female in particular, you know, getting into a vehicle with someone you don't know and not making a notification to anyone that you are going with this person. Happens very rarely, thankfully, but it's another reminder of just making sure that people know where you're at.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
George Burch was ultimately found guilty of first degree intentional homicide on March 1st of 2018 and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Scott Weinberger
Doug Dietrich no longer lives in Bellevue since the murder investigation that almost cost him his freedom.
Lieutenant Bryan Singer
I got asked a few times, you know, do you feel bad if you had to do all over again, would you do anything different? And that's a tough question because clearly, you know, you. You feel bad about a guy sitting in jail for two weeks or 10 days or whatever it was. But at the end of the day, the system worked.
Scott Weinberger
So what really stays with me is how many different directions this early investigation could have gone, how easy it would have been to lock onto a story, a simple theory and never let that go. Late night people drinking, an argument, a boyfriend. All the usual ingredients that can push an investigation in a certain direction if you're really not that careful. But this case reinforces the fact that fact why? As an investigator, you have to slow things down. You have to listen, document, and then check what people are saying against what the actual evidence shows. And in this case, the evidence didn't come from one dramatic moment. It came from all the quiet stuff. Phones, movement, timing, little details that themselves don't have opinions. It is also a reminder about those early decisions and why they matter, who shows up, what questions are asked, and whether you preserve those first conversations that could change everything. Because once a narrative sets in, it's really hard to unwind. And the truth doesn't care what felt right in the moment. It only cares, as Anesiga has always said, is what can be proven.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
There's a lot to unpack in this case. Nicole lost her life on a night that should have been full of fun and a moment to relax in those days, difficult, exhausting early days of parenting. Her live in boyfriend and father of her infant went to jail because he seemed to fit the part. And there were multiple circumstances that seemed to lead down that path. Police ultimately realized their conclusions had been wrong for Doug or anyone. Even a day accused for someone who is innocent is one too many. But to the credit of investigators and the system, he they realized the truth and then quickly set out to right the wrong. Doug was released, undoubtedly scarred by the accusations. But in the end, here, Nicole did receive justice. The man who brutally attacked her and then murdered her was identified, charged and convicted. The criminal justice system is a system run by people. And, you know, I'm a firm believer that they usually get it right. But, yes, they do sometimes get it wrong. The big dividing line for me is that if they get it wrong and don't care, or if they set out for a frame or engage in some sort of purposeful, bad policing, and that in no way seemed to be what happened here. And the transparency Brian and his team demonstrated by righting the wrong as soon as they realized it and even talking about it here, that says a lot to me. But let's leave off on Nicole, the young woman, the teacher, the mom to three, those three who now live forever without her. Murder takes a life and forever impacts and sometimes even destroys many more. We hope Nicole's children have found solace in each other and in the memory of their mom and the knowledge of how much she loved them that nothing and no one can ever take away. Tune in next week for another new episode of Homicide 360.
Scott Weinberger
Homicide 360 is created and produced by Forsetti Media and Weinberger Media.
Anna Sega Nicolasi
Supervising producer is Walker Lamond. Managing editor is Kate Mack. Sabrina Sarai is production manager. Edited by Ali Sierrawa and Phil Jean Grande. Original theme music by Trey Anderson. This episode was researched by Jessica Lauren.
Release Date: June 2, 2026
Hosts: Anna-Sigga Nicolazzi & Scott Weinberger
Guest: Lieutenant Bryan Singer (Brown County Sheriff’s Office)
Focus: The investigation into the 2016 murder of Nicole VanderHeyden in Bellevue, Wisconsin—a case marked by tragic loss, investigative misdirection, digital evidence, and eventual justice.
This episode of Homicide 360 explores the brutal murder of Nicole VanderHeyden, a young mother whose body is found discarded outside her Wisconsin home in May 2016. Hosts Anna-Sigga Nicolazzi and Scott Weinberger, accompanied by lead investigator Lieutenant Bryan Singer, take listeners through the twists and turns of the investigation: initial suspicions of intimate partner violence, the pitfalls of circumstantial evidence, the evolution of forensic techniques (from digital footprints to DNA), and the difficult but necessary shift in police focus away from the victim’s partner and toward a stranger whose brief, chance encounter with Nicole turned deadly. The story is both a cautionary tale about investigative tunnel vision and a powerful testament to the importance of following the evidence, no matter how surprising the conclusions.
Brown County, WI, is shaken when a farmer and his grandson find a young woman’s body in a ravine.
The scene: Nicole is found face down, naked except for socks and a pink/orange concert wristband. Her body shows evidence of severe assault, including lacerations, bruising, ligature marks, and possible shoe print impressions on her back.
“The victim was laying face down in a little ditch... completely naked, except for she had a pair of socks...and then she had an orange or pink colored bracelet that you would see...at a rock concert or a music venue.” – Lt. Singer [02:42]
Investigators quickly realize:
“We could tell that the person had likely just had a child because of the size and inflammation of her breasts…” – Lt. Singer [08:16]
Doug, Nicole’s live-in boyfriend and father of her child, is immediately a person of interest:
Police approach the missing persons call strategically:
Send a detective (not a patrol officer), equipped with hidden cameras, sensing more than a routine disappearance.
Assess Doug’s demeanor: subdued, “clearly not feeling best from the night before,” but not overtly distressed [12:12].
Quote:
“It was odd because it took so long for him to make that initial phone call…that I would be able to go to sleep and not really wonder, where is she?” – Lt. Singer [15:10]
Early forensic evidence at Doug and Nicole’s home is concerning:
Timeline narrows:
Doug’s cooperation (phone, DNA samples) and background are scrutinized:
History of relationship troubles, some records of alleged abuse.
Nicole’s family describes her as feeling isolated, but not physically threatened.
Quote:
“A lot of the facts he was giving us were checking out... but then you back up to some of the other factors, like why did it take so long to call? ...There were these issues... with some allegations of abuse in the past.” – Lt. Singer [23:45]
Doug is arrested on probable cause based on circumstantial evidence.
His reaction is resignation, not outrage—another “odd” element.
However, further analysis rapidly undermines the case against Doug:
GPS from Nicole’s car shows it was never moved.
Doug’s Fitbit data shows he was asleep during the critical window.
Very little of Doug’s DNA on Nicole; what was found, likely incidental.
Blood at the house is from nonhuman sources.
Quote:
“The biggest thing for me, was just the lack of DNA on her. And on any of the other items... The cord, there was no DNA of Doug’s at all.” – Lt. Singer [40:26]
Doug is released promptly; evidence compels detectives to “slow down and listen” rather than cling to their first theory.
Undetermined male DNA found on Nicole and her clothing becomes key. Multiple samples taken from people she interacted with that night.
Partial DNA from her sock eventually yields a CODIS match: George Burch, with a violent record from the East Coast, recently in Green Bay.
“Every single thing that we had thought we had on Doug was explained on the stand.” – Lt. Singer [50:11]
Burch’s phone records and Google account reveal disturbing patterns:
“He was googling, like, Doug... Nicole VanderHeyden... following the developments of that and the porn, that was it.” – Lt. Singer [46:18]
Burch is arrested following intensive surveillance.
Burch invokes Wisconsin’s “Denny defense,” attempting to shift blame back onto Doug by testifying that Doug, not he, was Nicole’s killer.
He claims he met Nicole, gave her a ride, had consensual sex, then—at gunpoint—helped Doug dispose of the body.
Jury does not find him credible; overwhelming digital and physical evidence contradicts his story.
“He is clearly a pathological liar that had himself convinced that this is what happened, and I’m going to tell my story, and it is what it is.” – Lt. Singer [51:02]
The prosecution’s reconstruction:
Nicole, upset and alone after leaving the bar, encountered Burch at Richard Cranium’s bar.
Burch offers her a ride, assaults her when she tries to fight him off.
He kills her, dumps her body and evidence, then obsessively follows the news coverage of the murder and investigation.
Quote:
“This is one of those cases of don’t get in the car with strangers…making sure that people know where you’re at.” – Lt. Singer [53:33]
Burch is convicted of first-degree intentional homicide and sentenced to life without parole (March 1, 2018).
“It would have been so easy to lock onto a story, a simple theory and never let that go…This case reinforces…as an investigator, you have to slow things down. You have to listen, document, and then check what people are saying against what the actual evidence shows.”
—Scott Weinberger [54:33]
“The Fitbit data...showed that he was actually sleeping between 2:45am...and 6:30am, walking only 12 steps in those hours when he got up to feed their baby. And that is compelling digital evidence.”
—Scott Weinberger [42:02]
“Murder takes a life and forever impacts and sometimes even destroys many more. We hope Nicole's children have found solace in each other and in the memory of their mom and the knowledge of how much she loved them that nothing and no one can ever take away.”
—Anna-Sigga Nicolazzi [55:42]
The hosts maintain their signature thoughtful, empathetic tone, blending procedural details with the palpable sadness of Nicole’s loss. They emphasize the importance of objectivity, careful analysis, and the willingness to adapt when the evidence leads in an unexpected direction. The episode is also a sobering reminder of the devastation that such crimes bring to entire communities—and the imperative to get it right, for victims and those wrongly accused alike.
For those who haven’t listened:
This episode captures both the chilling details of Nicole VanderHeyden’s murder and the redemptive arc of an investigation that nearly went catastrophically wrong but ultimately brought the right perpetrator to justice. It’s a must-listen for fans of true crime and anyone interested in the evolving realities of forensic investigation.