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Our card this week is Jeffrey Dale Nichols, the 6 of Diamonds from Utah.
Early one June morning in 2004, Jeffrey Nichols told his girlfriend he was meeting his ex-wife in a shopping center parking lot to buy a set of golf clubs. But his ex-wife told police they were getting together at a McDonald's for a family meeting. No matter which version is true, one thing is for certain: After the morning of June 8th, 2004, Jeff was never seen again. And not only does his story include an honest-to-god, real-life burn book – we also found a clue that had been sitting in plain sight for the past 20 years that just might prove someone is lying
* A previous version of this episode incorrectly stated the address of a parking lot. The correct address is 4500 South State Street.
View source material and photos for this episode at: thedeckpodcast.com/jeffrey-dale-nichols
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Hi everyone, I'm investigative journalist and park enthusiast Dilya D'Ambra.
And every week on my podcast, Park Predators, I take you into the heart of our world's most
stunning locations to uncover what sinister crimes have unfolded in these serene settings.
From unsolved murders to chilling disappearances, each Tuesday we dive deep into the details
of cases that will leave you knowing, sometimes the most beautiful places, hide the darkest secrets.
Listen to Park Predators now, wherever you listen to podcasts.
Our card this week is Jeffrey Dale Nichols, the six of diamonds from Utah.
Early one June morning in 2004, Jeffrey Nichols told his girlfriend that he was meeting his
ex-wife in a shopping center parking lot to buy a set of golf clubs. But his ex-wife told police
that they were getting together at a McDonald's for a family meeting. No matter which version
is true, one thing is for certain. After the morning of June 8th, 2004, Jeff was never seen
again. And not only does his story include an honest to God, real life burn book. We also found
a clue that had been sitting in plain sight for the past 20 years that just might prove someone
is lying. I'm Ashley Flowers and this is The Deck.
On the morning of June 8th, 2004, Carla Eddie was up early. Her boyfriend, Jeff, had asked her to
give him a 5am wake-up call so he could go meet his ex-wife Shelby about a set of golf clubs that
she'd gotten to lead on. She had a client that was needing some extra cash and had a set of golf
clubs. And Jeff was an avid golfer. And whatever these clubs were, I knew nothing about golf,
so I don't know. But they were this fancy set and they were super expensive, but they were
going to sell them to him for $200 or $300. So I called him and he says, Carla, I am so tired.
Could you call me back in 15 minutes? And you know, it's kind of like a snooze on my alarm
cock. I said, sure. Well, I forgot to call him. So it was half an hour later, I called and I'm like,
oh my gosh, Jeff, sorry, I forgot to call you hurry, get up and you know, you got to get up.
So obviously he got up in a panic because I forgot to call him. And that is the last time I
actually spoke to him. Of course, Carla didn't know it would be the last time. She just thought
Jeff would call her on his way to work after he met up with Shelby in the parking lot at 4,500
South State Street in Murray, Utah. When Carla didn't hear from him that morning, she thought maybe
he'd gotten a little too excited about the new clubs and played hooky so he could test them out.
But with every call to him that went unanswered, she questioned that conclusion.
So I called him and I said, hey, where are you? Did you leave and go golfing instead? You
don't go to work and never heard from him. So later in the day, I don't know how many times I
text and called and they never got through. So then later in the day, I went to the gym and I
thought, okay, when I get out of the gym, he'll call. Never heard from him. So of course, I'm calling
again and don't hear from him. And then probably nine o'clock that night, I started just getting
the creeps and I thought, you know what? Something's wrong, something's happened to him.
Carla got in her car and drove about 60 miles from her house in Brigham City, Utah to Jeff's place
in Salt Lake City. She had a key to his duplex so when Jeff didn't answer the door, she let herself in.
And I went in and nothing was misplaced. All these clothes were there, all of these
medication was there, all of this. I mean, everything was there like he'd left in a hurry.
His bed wasn't made, which was unusual. His lunch box was still sitting on the floor
because obviously he didn't have time to make his lunch because I called him late and I just
walked around looking at everything going, where is he? What happened to him?
That's when Carla decided to look for Jeff, the last place she knew he was going, that parking lot
where he was supposed to pick up those golf clubs. I actually drove down to that parking lot
and drove around and looked and I started getting the HBGB and I think, you know, you're
dumb girl all by yourself down here. There was no sign of Jeff or his truck, a 2000 Ford Ranger
super cab. So Carla called a friend in another county who worked with search and rescue. That friend
told her that she couldn't file a missing person's report until Jeff had been MIA for at least 24
hours. So while those hours ticked by, she hit the phones. Carla called local hospitals,
police departments, even more to see if anyone had made contact with Jeff, but there was nothing.
The next morning, Carla called Jeff's boss and when she learned that he hadn't seen or heard
from Jeff either, that's when she called Salt Lake City PD to file a missing person's report.
Carla's memory of what the officer told her on the phone is fuzzy, but she remembered going to
the police department and speaking to Detective Carl Moreno. That is a meeting that she doesn't remember
fondly. He was just arrogant and almost like, I had no right to be there. Like, this is stupid,
what are you doing here? And I said, you know, he's missing. This is uncharacteristic of him. He
would not do this. His boss even said, you know, that this is weird and and the guy is just looking
at me like, come on, come on, get it over with. Like he couldn't wait to get away from me.
And he said to me, you are a jilted girl friend. Would you just get over it? He's a big guy,
he's just fine. He'll be back when he's ready to come back. People do this all the time. Just get
over it. I was shocked to say the least. Carla couldn't just get over it. And she didn't know where
this jilted lover stuff was coming from. She and Jeff had been together for nearly a year after
meeting on a dating website in August of 2003. When they met, Jeff was separated from his wife,
Shelby. Their divorce was finalized later that year. And by the following March, Carla and Jeff
were talking about living together or even getting married. Jeff was fun. Jeff was a breath of
fresh air. He was happy, full lucky. Just a good guy and very giving, very loving, very affectionate.
He was really just kind of a dream. Now, it's not to say everything was easy for them.
Jeff and his ex Shelby shared custody of their seven-year-old son Sam, which meant Jeff wasn't
willing to totally sever communication with Shelby even after their post-diverse relationship got
contentious. Sometimes, Carla would hear Shelby scream at Jeff over the phone. But he just had to
put up with it for his son. And his son is the reason Carla knew Jeff didn't just take off.
He would never leave Sam. So when she checked with Sam's school and found out that he'd been
attending classes as normal, she knew she needed to start notifying his family.
So she called Jeff's sister from his duplex and left word with Jeff's brother-in-law.
And when Jeff's phone rang later, it wasn't his sister calling, but his ex Shelby.
I answered the phone and Shelby was acting like this also concerned mother.
And oh my gosh, I hear Jeff's saying, do you know where he is? What happened to him? And I'm like,
how do you know? And she says, well, the school called me. They told me that you'd been there
looking for Sam and Jeff. Shelby didn't mention anything about the plan meeting with Jeff
or ask Carla when she last spoke to him, which is odd considering Jeff was the father of her son.
And in the back of Carla's mind, she remembered something Jeff had said to her just weeks before
at the end of May. He told her, if he ever went missing, Shelby and her father Vernon Brown had
something to do with it. The day after Carla's initial report, SLCPD detective Carl Marino was
officially assigned Jeff's case. Col case consultant and former detective Gordon Parks told our
reporter that one of the first things Detective Marino did was give Shelby a call. He made an attempt
to contact her to find out if she was present at this meeting that she was supposed to be involved in.
And she immediately invoked her rights to an attorney would not answer Marino's calls or contact him.
While Shelby was dodging police, Carla was joining a search party organized by Jeff's co-workers.
The co-workers and I all got together and we plotted the whole grid of Salt Lake around 4,500
South and we each took a grid and drove through every parking lot and every street we could
to see if we could find his truck and we never found it.
Jeff's family was involved too. They flew into Salt Lake City and hired a private investigator to
push for answers and concerned that Jeff could have driven off the road or into a ravine his brother
a pilot flew a private plane to search the area. Now we were obviously interested in what the
private investigator Richard Romano was able to find out but sadly he passed away in 2022.
Lucky for us though, Jeff's sister Wanda Schmidt still had the report that he wrote and she gave
us a copy. The first thing that caught my attention was that the private investigator, unlike
police, was able to get Jeff's ex-wife Shelby on the phone. According to Richard's notes,
Shelby told him that she was supposed to meet Jeff the morning of June 8th at McDonald's for a
quote, family meeting. But Jeff never showed. When Richard tried to talk to Shelby for a second time
in person at her house on June 10th, that's when he had about as much luck as police. She refused
to speak to him. Carla remembers Richard describing the interaction as troubling. She only opened the
door crack and when they asked her about Jeff or anything, she sticks a business card through the
door and says, I've got nothing to say about this. You need to call my attorney and you need to
leave me alone. You're harassing me and slams the door. Well, they look at the card. It's a
murder attorney in Salt Lake. Why did you hire a murder attorney? Like, what?
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Marino a few weeks later, she showed up with her criminal attorney.
This was on June 24, over two weeks after Jeff's disappearance. And Shelby's account of the
morning of June 8 was very different from Carlos. Shelby said they were required to have a
quote, family meeting every month with Shelby and Jeffrey and their son. And usually that took
place in a dinner setting. But for some reason, this meeting was arranged for early morning hours,
6 a.m. on the 8th of June. And her statement is that the meeting was supposed to be at a McDonald's
at 7200 South and 700 East in Midville. This is the same story Shelby gave the PI. And of course,
is not what Jeff told Carla he was doing that morning. I looked this McDonald's up and it's
almost five miles from where Jeff told Carla that he was supposed to meet Shelby. We're talking
about two completely different locations. And Shelby's account didn't include any mention of
golf clubs. Now, Shelby went on to explain that Jeff just never showed up. But she did say that she
spoke to him. He called her early 6 o'3 a.m. I believe. And he said, where are you? You know,
and she told him over the McDonald's waiting. And he said, oh, I'm in the wrong place. And then
they hung up him. He was supposed to be in a route to the McDonald's from 4500 South State and
Salt Lake. He never arrived. And so she called him back some minutes later. About half an hour later,
he called her back. Or she called him back to see where he was. And he said, some evening to come
up and he wasn't going to make the meeting. And that was the last contact anybody had with Jeffrey.
During the meeting with Detective Marino, Shelby also whipped out a giant binder. And we have
copies of some of the documents that she had saved in there. And it reads as kind of a burn book.
On the first page, Shelby included a letter to the detective explaining that the documents in it
were all gathered as part of her divorce and custody battle with Jeff, which explains why they're
so explosive. She made a lot of claims about Jeff. And one claim that she made was that he was
a drug user. He liked cocaine. And he used cocaine to reduce his stress. And she described in
detail how he beat the regular routine drug tests that the FAA gives their employees. She also
insinuated that he was a closet homosexual. She's made statements in the binder that she had caught
Jeffrey lying about going out of town to one location when in fact Jeffrey actually went to San
Francisco on frequented gay bars. And she made another statement about Jeffrey. And that was that
he was being inappropriate with their son. And not sexually, but that he was trying to poison
the son's mind against Shelby. We can't say for certain what police did to verify or dispute
any of these claims. But we do know that Jeff's family independently tried to get to the bottom
of some of them. Our reporter spoke to Jeff's sister, Wanda Schmidt, at length. She's essentially
done her own investigation into her brother's disappearance. She said her interactions with law
enforcement didn't leave her with a lot of hope. My interaction with the police was it was like
an argument. I was trying to convince them that something was wrong. And this is already two to
three weeks after. Wanda told us that she went so far as to contact both Sam's school and the Utah
Department of Child and Family Services to see if any claims, complaints or concerns had been
filed about Sam or his father. She found nothing. But Wanda was well aware of how contentious Jeff
and Shelby's communications had become. In an interview with our reporting team, Wanda shared
a number of documents that paint a troubling picture of the months leading up to Jeff's disappearance.
Vicious emails back and forth about their custody battle and sometimes just personal attacks.
Additional records show that Shelby and Jeff had been fighting about money since the divorce.
And when I say fighting about money, I don't mean just gripping about child support.
I mean possible fraud. Wanda told us that back in February 2003, this is 16 months before Jeff's
disappearance. Jeff found out that two checks had been cashed against his home equity line of credit.
But Jeff hadn't written them. One was for $5,000 and one was for $50.
What Jeff learned was that in December 2002, a man had called the bank and requested that checks
for the account be rushed delivered. This man correctly answered all of Jeff's security questions
and four days later, voila, UPS delivered the checks to a woman at the address the man had provided.
About a week later, those checks were written and cashed against the line of credit.
So he filed a complaint because he knew it was Shelby and her dad that did it. Someone
a male called the bank got the checks on the equity line and Shelby was really good at
fortune's name. On Jeff's end, nothing ever came from the complaint. But within a week,
Shelby filed a protective order against Jeff. In a four and a half page letter, she accused
Jeff of abandonment, violent outbursts, death threats, substance abuse, and causing Sam to have
nightmares. Similar to the claims that were in her binder when she talked to Detective
Marino in 2004, she requested that any contact with Sam be supervised by her father.
Within a week of that, Jeff had hired a lawyer and responded to the protective order.
In his almost ten page response, Jeff flat out denied Shelby's claims, saying that he never
abused or threatened her and that he financially supported her and Sam even after their marriage
dissolved. In fact, he countered that Shelby and her parents Vernon and Barbara Brown were the
ones that could be engaging in fraud and manipulation and said that he intended to fight for custody of Sam.
In lieu of the protective order, a mutually agreed upon restraining order was issued the first
week in March, and it prevented Shelby and Jeff from committing any kind of abuse against each other.
It also barred them from contacting one another unless it was about Sam. And, Shelby and Jeff
had to stay away from each other's homes and workplace except to pick up and drop off Sam.
Their divorce finalized in November of 2003, and the court ordered granted Jeff joint custody of Sam.
The order stated that neither parent was allowed to move Sam more than an hour's drive away
without the other parent's permission, which brings us to the next pressure point for Shelby.
March of 2004, that is the month that Shelby filed for bankruptcy.
Now, I'm not going to go into all the details of all of this. The important part is that those
bankruptcy proceedings show that Shelby neglected to report a significant amount of money that she
received from Jeff as part of the divorce settlement the month before. Court records showed that
she allegedly concealed more than $39,000 by moving the money to an account under an assumed name,
and the whole situation gave Jeff some hope. He thought that she could go to jail and then he
thought maybe he could get custody of Sam. Jeff wasn't wrong to be optimistic. The $39,000
Shelby hadn't reported ended up being a bit of a sticking point. At the end of March 2005,
Shelby was eventually indicted by the federal government, and the charges included concealment
of assets, fraud transfer, false bankruptcy declaration, false bankruptcy documents, and last but not
least, false bankruptcy oath. But that's getting a little ahead of the story. Back in the summer of 2004,
Wanda just knew that her brother was missing, and that the person he had been having the most
trouble with was his ex-wife. Wanda shared all the details that she had with the police,
and when we spoke to Detective Parks, he acknowledged that law enforcement was aware of Shelby's
bankruptcy case. But from the records that we reviewed, we weren't able to see much movement
that focused on investigating her. I mean, they didn't have much physical evidence to go on.
Detective Moreno did check Jeff's credit and banking records, and discovered that there was
no activity on Jeff's accounts after June 8th, and phone records that police subpoenaed
actually did line up with Shelby's account of that morning. The subpoena's cell phone records
showed just a few phone calls on June 8th in the morning. At 603, it showed Jeffrey called Shelby,
and then at 6.34, half hour later, Shelby called Jeffrey, and then at 6.52 a.m., the victim called
Shelby again, and that was sort of go along with Shelby's version of events that Jeffrey had
arrived at the wrong place and called her to see where she was at 603, and then she waited for
half an hour and called him to say, well, you're not here, where are you? And then at 6.52,
the victim called Shelby back and said, something has come up, and I can't make the meeting,
we have to reschedule. The document police shared with us show that Jeff's first call to Shelby
at 603 a.m., connected to a cell tower in Murray, Utah. Then the calls at 6.34 a.m., and 652 a.m.,
both hit towers in Salt Lake City. Within five minutes of the last call, Shelby's home phone
registers an outgoing call on the landline at 6.57 a.m. Wanda believes this timeline is super significant,
because if Jeff had gone to that state street location that Carlos said he was headed to,
and then he realized he was in the wrong place, it should not have taken him 50 plus minutes to drive
from the state street location to the McDonald's where Shelby was waiting. Those two places are
about four and a half miles apart, and Wanda pointed out something else that doesn't make sense.
That landline call from Shelby's home at 6.57. Again, if her story is correct,
how could she place a call from McDonald's at 6.52 a.m., and then have her home phone be making a call
five minutes later? Now she could get home to use the landline, it was only about a mile away,
but not that fast. And it's unlikely that it would have been anyone else using it,
because Shelby told police that her parents had moved, and she and her son were the only ones in
the house. And there were even more strange things in the call logs from that same day.
Jeff's records show that there was a single outgoing call at 1.10 p.m. that afternoon.
It lasted for 18 seconds and was placed to a car dealership in Sandy, Utah. That call pinged off
a tower in the South Salt Lake area almost 10 miles from the pings that morning, and that call was
the last one from Jeff's phone. His phone was never active after that.
Detective Moreno did try to get in touch with that car dealership, but he couldn't establish
a reason the call was placed. Jeff's phone has never been recovered by police,
even though they were eventually able to track down his truck. That turned up at an apartment
complex around mid-July near the parking lot where Carla believed that Jeff planned to meet
Shelby. The manager of the complex had the truck towed, and unfortunately it sat in an impound
lot until the company set notice to Jeff's address, and it was intercepted by his family.
Immediately the family notified the police and the police went out and seized the truck from the
impound lot, and it was brought to our impound lot, an evidence storage facility, and later it was
processed for evidence. By the time police searched the truck, there wasn't much to find.
They didn't find any forensic evidence, and they weren't able to determine if the truck had been
left unlocked while it sat in the lot. So without physical evidence or witnesses,
there was nothing to push Jeff's case forward, and in the family's opinion, the investigation
took a back seat. It's worth mentioning that there was a really high profile missing person's
case in Salt Lake City that happened right after Jeff's, Lori Hacking. The pregnant 27-year-old
went missing in July of 2004, and that story took over local news.
Carla actually told us that she had tried to get local outlets to cover Jeff's disappearance, too,
but everyone was focused on Lori, whose remains were found that fall, and the trial of her husband,
who was eventually convicted of her murder. So very quickly after Jeff disappeared,
the investigation stalled, but not just because of the Lori Hacking case.
Perhaps it was also because police didn't really talk to many people.
Carla was not interviewed by detectives, for example, even though she was the person who had
reported Jeff missing. There was barely any canvassing of Jeff's neighborhood or the areas
around where he was supposed to meet Shelby. And by the way, that lag in the case also had a lot
to do with Shelby. About one week later, after her one interview with Detective Marino,
she moved to her parents' house in Phoenix, Arizona. Of course, she took her son Sam with her,
which meant Sam has never been available to the police for an interview. And then,
within months of that, the whole family, Vernon, Barbara, and Shelby all moved to Ireland.
So it appears that Shelby had scotted from the investigation in late June 2004, and then as
soon as they could arrange it, they moved to Ireland. And with the families move, the only people
of interest in this case were now on foreign soil. Carla didn't get many updates after that.
Not that police were talking to her much before. But then, out of the blue, in June 2010,
years after Jeff disappeared, the phone rang. It was Detective Charles Anderson with the SLC
PD. And I said, oh my god, did you find Jeff? And he said, no, but that's what I'm calling you for.
He said, okay. He said, I'm looking through all these records, and I'm not finding anywhere
that they interviewed you. And I said, well, they never did. He says, what do you mean they didn't?
Didn't you turn in the missing person? And I said, yeah, I did. He said, well, there's no interview.
He said, no. And he said, would you be available to come down to Salt Lake and talk to me?
So the next day, I went to Salt Lake, and they put me in this great padded cell room. So he and I
were in this room. And all the areas of the table and behind all these walls are a bunch of microphones.
Carla said she learned from Detective Anderson that when they'd been reviewing missing person's cases,
Captain Marino said that this case haunted him, and he wanted someone to look at it again.
Detective Anderson had two citrus crates of four inch thick binders containing various records
and photographs. Anderson showed the pictures to Carla, some of which included the inside of Jeff's
duplex. So the guy showed me these pictures, and he's like, well, you know, there's these pictures,
and I said, well, that's not Jeff's house. And he went, what? What do you mean? I said, that's
the one next door to Jeff. Jeff's kitchen is on the other side. That's not the same rug Jeff has
in his house. And that's not his couch. Those aren't his dishes on the counter.
We've tried to confirm this with Salt Lake City PD, but there aren't any notes about this in
the documents that they have. And since Detective Parks wasn't involved in the case at the time the
photos were taken, he hasn't been able to confirm one way or the other if Carla is correct. However,
we've seen some of the evidence photos. And to anyone who knew Jeff, it seems reasonable that
this wasn't his house. I mean, one photo has a child's play pen and a bassinet. Sam was seven
at that point. And it just so happened that the couple that lived on the other side of the duplex
had just had a baby that spring. And Carla and Jeff visited them to give them a baby gift.
And the guy goes, what do you mean? He said, this is where we found all the drug paraphernalia.
And I said, yeah, the guy was a drug addict and got put in prison. That was not Jeff's house.
So when Shelby told them that Jeff was a drug addict, they used these pictures and believe that
for all those years to find out, no, that was not Jeff's house. And the guy was like, oh my gosh.
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Now that Carla finally had the detective's attention, she told him what she never got the chance
to share back in 2004. Namely, that Jeff had been afraid of Shelby and her father Vernon.
Jeff told Carla that they'd been watching him. He was even worried that they would shoot him,
and this went back years before he'd gone missing. All of this seems to be backed up by emails
between Jeff and Shelby, along with the 10-page letter Jeff sent to his lawyer.
In one email from Shelby to Jeff dated February of 2004, she wrote,
My father hired a private investigator on you quite some time ago, and he already has a book
about 1.5 inches thick on your comings and goings with Sam. And he has nearly finished investigating
your finances for the last three years. End quote. Based on what Jeff told Carla,
he thought all this came down to their custody agreement. He thought Shelby wanted to move away
from the Salt Lake City area, but per the divorce order, neither parent was allowed to relocate Sam
more than an hour's drive away, at least without the other's permission.
Carla specifically remembered talking about this on a trip that she took with Jeff a few weeks
before he went missing. Jeff and Carla actually had done a little detective work of their own.
They called Shelby's property rental company from the car as they drove.
I remember the road we had run, everything. And the person that answered the phone with
the rental company said, as a matter of fact, I've got one coming available July 1st.
Well, this would have been May 27th that we were calling. And I'm like, oh really,
which one is it? You know, and he gives the Shelby's address. Sure. Shelby might have been just
moving apartments, but to Jeff, it didn't feel that way. And Jeff's concern made Carla concerned.
Now little did Carla know, but when Detective Anderson brought her in, he'd already been suspicious
of the same thing. He'd already searched the family's former rental property with a cadaver dog.
The dog didn't alert on anything, but detectives did learn something interesting while they were
there. The property owner had told Detective Anderson that Vernon and his wife had given notice
that they would be moving out by the first week of June 2004. And at the time, apparently Vernon
was very upset that Shelby couldn't move with them because of custody issues.
According to the homeowner, Vernon was, quote, on the edge of a threat towards the guy.
Over the years, Wanda has wondered if Shelby and Vernon were more of a team than Shelby and
Jeff were. And as she's gone back through her memories, there were a number of different interactions
that all seemed strange in hindsight. She just always had like a front like really tough.
And I remember her telling us about a revenge book that her and her father shared.
This was at a family gathering, not long after Jeff and Shelby got married.
It was Wanda's first time really getting to know Shelby, so obviously this was insane.
Our reporter asked Wanda to describe the book.
It was just a small little book. I mean, it wasn't really thick, it was, and I don't remember if
it was her copier paper, I think it might have been a paper bag. Wanda remembers Shelby saying,
this is where she kept dirt she collected on an ex-husband. Someone she'd been married to before
Jeff. And that some of the dirt was gathered by a private detective that Vernon had hired.
Her ex-husband had cheated on her and her dad hired a private detective to follow him around and
that he was in the shower and she removed him from the house, naked at gunpoint,
is what she told us. Then she said she'd they took animal urine and had injected it through the
rubber in the in this car. And this was in Arkansas. And so in the middle of summer, 90 degrees,
the guy had to drive around with all of his windows down because of the smell.
But perhaps the wildest part. Years later, Wanda tracked down Shelby's ex-husband and found out
not everything Shelby said was true. It turns out she lied about the whole thing. I actually got
a hold of him and he said none of that happened. Detective Park says that Shelby is and was
a suspect, as is Vernon, although finding opportunities to talk to them hasn't been easy with the
whole international move of it all. In July 2009, Shelby came back to the US and when she returned,
she was taken into custody on charges related to the false bankruptcy filing. The judge ordered
that she was a flight risk and held her without bond. She eventually pled guilty to one count
of falsification of records and ordered to pay $10,000. She also spent five months in jail and was
released in December 2009. You'd think that would have been the perfect opportunity for the Salt Lake
City investigators to sit down with her, maybe even explore the possibility of working out a deal
with federal authorities. But that didn't happen. Salt Lake PD has not talked to Shelby since that
very first time and they never interviewed Vernon. Detective Park believes that the family
is living in Ireland now. Our team tried to get in touch with Shelby and Vernon to ask for
comment on this story, but we couldn't reach them. Neither Vernon nor Shelby have ever been charged
in connection to Jeff's disappearance. But lack of cooperation doesn't mean detectives have been
totally out of options. In 2010, Detective Anderson and the forensic team searched a warehouse
where Vernon had once owned a business looking for DNA evidence. According to the police report,
Vernon had sold that business in 2001, telling the new owner he had cancer. Now this was several
years before Jeff disappeared, so Vernon no longer had access to the property around the time in question.
But a note from 2010 in the files says that the location where Jeff was supposed to meet Shelby,
the apartment complex where his car was found, and this warehouse that they eventually search,
were all within less than a mile of each other. So the proximity alone made it worth a closer look.
As you've probably guessed though, they didn't find anything. So now it is Detective Park's turn
to take a stab at this case with fresh eyes. But he feels a bit hampered by the era in which this case
took place. If this case were reported today, I think this very likely would have a different outcome.
And that's because there's so much more available to police now than there wasn't 2004.
Now we have license plate readers put up all over town. We have video everywhere in our society.
If Jeffrey were parked in the parking lot of 4500s off in state today, very likely there'd be a
video camera that covered him. There's more that's done with cell phone technology. Cars have GPS
locators in them now. I mean, it's very, very likely this case would have been solved at what
happened today. While all of that may be true, I can't help but wonder what might have happened.
If back in 2004, detectives had slowed down, taken a closer look at everything,
especially the call logs. At the 11th hour, our reporter Regina Wright took a fresh look at the
call logs from Jeff and Shelby's phones on June 8th. And she was trying to make sense of each one,
the duration, what cell tower it pinged from, and she looked closer at the coding on the
Verizon logs. And she realized that there was an important piece of information that had been
hiding in plain sight for 20 years. Standard outgoing calls were all coded MO, short for mobile
origination. That would be a call from Jeff's phone to someone else. His cell records also have
another code, MF. That is short for mobile forward it, aka an incoming call to Jeff going to his
voicemail. So quick question, why does the call from Shelby at 6.34am say MF? This is the call
where Shelby says she's asking Jeff where he is. She told SLCPD that they actually spoke,
but that is not what the call log says. Now we've confirmed this with a telecommunications expert
Ben Levitton, who has three decades of experience in the industry, including at Nextel Sprint
and Verizon. He actually worked at Verizon back in 2004 when this case took place.
Regina took this information back to detective parks to see what he had to say.
Well that would mean that Shelby lied then wouldn't it? Yes it would. So any idea on how that would
impact the investigation? Well would it give us a twist to use on Shelby if we ever managed to sit
down and talk with her again? We've also shared this news with Wanda, though I'm not sure it
changes much for her. Just further confirmed suspicions that she's already had.
Our family misses him terribly. It was devastating. I mean I told you we have a blended family.
Our natural dad, Doug, he never recovered from Jeff's disappearance. Ever. He
he's since passed away. It's been hard on everybody.
This is for the deck, right? I was trying to figure out what card he would be and I said that to
my mom. But I got to tell you what she said first. She goes he's the Joker.
Because he just he was always like telling jokes and corny jokes and
Carla remembers Jeff's sense of humor too. What I want them to remember about Jeff.
Fun love and happy go lucky man that absolutely adored his little boy. Samuel Nichols,
I if you ever see this, you know that your dad loved you more than myself.
One thing that would really help detectives get traction in this case would be locating Jeff's body.
So if you have any information about the disappearance of Jeffrey Dale Nichols,
the location of his remains, or if you have any insight into the lives and dealings of those
mentioned in this episode back in 2004, you can call the Salt Lake City Police Department at 801-799-3000.
The deck is an audio truck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis. To learn more about the
deck and our advocacy work, visit thedeckpodcast.com. I think Chuck would approve.
Hi everyone, Ashley Flowers here. If you're like me, diving into true crime is about more
than just the details of a case. It is also about giving a voice to the victims and understanding
the lives behind the headlines. And this is what host Kylie Lo does each week on her podcast Dark
Down East. Every Thursday Kylie dives into New England's most gripping mysteries,
uncovering stories in a way you won't hear anywhere else. And she digs through archives,
connects with families and shines a light on the voices that deserve to be heard. From cold cases,
to moments of long-awaited justice, Dark Down East is the perfect blend of investigations and
honoring the stories behind them. You can find Dark Down East now wherever you're listening.
The Deck
