Loading...
Loading...

Steven Corr, North Andover Police Officer, takes the stand in the Kelsey Fitzsimmons trial.
Kelsey Fitzsimmons, a 29-year-old North Andover police officer, stands accused of assault with a dangerous weapon — charged with pointing her service weapon at a fellow officer inside her own home. What prosecutors describe as a calculated attempt to shoot Officer Patrick Noonan, the defense calls a mental health crisis: a woman suffering from severe postpartum depression who turned the gun on herself, not on him.
This is gavel-to-gavel coverage of one of the most polarizing trials in Massachusetts in recent memory. A police officer. A restraining order served by colleagues. A four-month-old baby in the home. And two completely opposite stories about what happened in that upstairs bedroom — with only a failed trigger pull standing between the truth and a tragedy far worse.
Hidden Killers brings you complete trial coverage with expert analysis — no sensationalism, just the facts as they unfold.
Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/
Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/
Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod
X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePod
This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
#KelseyFitzsimmons #KelseyFitzsimmonsTrial #NorthAndoverPolice #MassachusettsTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #CopOnCopShooting #BenchTrial #TrueCrimeCommunity #Justice
This week, on a special episode of WebMD's health-discovered podcast, we're taking a closer
look at a common form of lung cancer that accounts for 85% of all cases.
When I first heard the words, you have lung cancer.
I was in shock.
It's a diagnosis that changes everything.
So what does it really mean to advocate for yourself when you're living with non-small
cell lung cancer?
And to help discover it on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
It's tax season, and by now, I know we're all a bit tired of numbers.
But here's an important one you need to hear, $16 billion.
That's how much money and refunds the IRS flagged for possible identity fraud.
Here's another one.
One in four honest, hardworking, tax-paying Americans has been a victim of identity theft.
But it's not all grim news.
Lifelock monitors millions of data points per second for your personal information and alerts
you to threats you could easily miss on your own.
If your identity is stolen, Lifelock's US-based Restoration Specialist will fix it, backed
by another good number.
The million dollar protection package.
In fact, restoration is guaranteed or your money back.
Don't face identity theft and financial losses alone.
There's strength in numbers with Lifelock identity theft protection for tax season and
beyond.
Visit lifelock.com slash iHeart and save up to 40% your first year.
That's 40% off at lifelock.com slash iHeart.
Terms apply.
Hey, it's Bubba Wallace from 2311 Racing.
You know what it feels like forever?
Sitting on a plane waiting for takeoff.
Good thing, I've got Jumbak Casino.
With daily boost in social casino games on tap, this is a kind of fun that makes time
fly.
Why not turbocharged downtime?
Play now at jumbakacino.com.
Let's jump up.
Sponsored by Jumbakacino, no purchase necessary.
VGW GroupFord, where prohibited by law, 21-plus terms and conditions apply.
You're listening to the trial of Kelsey Fitzsimmons from the Hidden Killer's podcast and true
crime today.
Now, back to the courtroom.
Hi, mate.
Yes, please.
Sir, in the loud live voice, can you please introduce yourself and spell your first
name and your last name?
Good morning, my name is Officer Stephen Korr.
Stephen spelled S-T-E-V-N.
Last name is Korr, C-O-R-R.
And what do you do for a living, sir?
I'll police officer down on what the end of it.
And how long have you been doing that?
About 15 years.
Okay.
And what do your duties and responsibilities now?
On patrol, four to 12 shift, we respond to everything 911 calls, domestic, motor vehicle
accidents, somebody calls the police, we answer.
Okay.
I'm going to turn the attention back to June 30th of last year.
You were working that day?
Correct.
Okay.
At some point in the early evening, did you get a call to go somewhere?
Or did you get a call that you decided to respond to?
There was a call, we had several officers involved in a document service.
Okay.
I was assisting another officer at a time with an arrest.
Okay.
And the document service was restraining order?
Correct.
And I'm afraid to say that was being served on Kelsey to Simmons.
Yes.
Okay.
Did you know where she lived?
I did.
You did?
Yes.
I'm sorry.
I was about to say I didn't hear you answer, but he repeated it.
So you knew where she lived?
I do.
Yes.
Correct.
We're having trouble here in the town, too.
Well, I'm sorry.
Excuse me.
Thank you, sir.
Sir, you said you were on another call.
Correct.
Correct.
Whereabouts was that?
It was down the road on Waverly Road up by the senator.
At some point did you receive information that necessitated your presence at Simmons
residence?
I would, after I had cleared that call with another officer, it saw on the control board
in my cruiser that they were getting out of that at residence, and I started floating
that way prior to receiving radio transmissions.
Okay.
And before you got there, did you receive another transmission?
I did.
Okay.
I believe it was Lieutenant Daily had called off and in the background it was just a woman
screaming and him saying shots fired.
Okay.
And so did you have that way?
I did.
When you got there, was anybody else outside when you got there?
There was another person on a small red car that had pulled up next to me as I had gotten
out.
They spoke with her briefly about somebody running down the street with a child.
Okay.
Had you seen that person running down the street?
I did not.
No.
So what did you do after you stopped?
After I stopped, I grabbed my med bag and I radioed up to Lieutenant Daily.
I said, we're out of your service.
And he answered me on the radio.
I said, upstairs.
I think he said upstairs.
Had you ever been in that residence before?
I have not.
No.
Okay.
So where did you go?
I went in the porch on the left side, went in through the front door.
I could hear a female screaming.
I think I went inside and asked her where are they.
She said, they're upstairs.
I want upstairs in this weird kind of layout of the house where you come in the front door
and the stairs are right behind it.
Okay.
Now you said the woman's screaming.
Was that the woman downstairs was screaming?
Woman downstairs, a living room, family room on the left.
Yes.
Okay.
You went upstairs.
Correct.
When you got upstairs, what did you see initially?
I got upstairs.
It was a landing wave with a left accident and a right accident.
There was two doors.
I could hear a commotion on the right side, so I answered that door away.
Okay.
And who did you see when you entered that door?
I saw Lieutenant Daly.
I saw Officer Noonan and Officer Houston.
What were they doing?
They were performing first aid, running to Miss Fish Simmons.
At some point, Officer Noonan asked me to do something.
He did.
What was that?
He pointed right where his hand had been and he said, secure that firearm.
And I had looked down.
There was a firearm sitting on a white looking bookshelf.
Okay.
Was that near the door?
Correct.
I'm going to show you what's been previously marked as exhibit number 57.
Do you recognize that?
I do.
Yes.
That was where the firearm was located on top of the white looking bookshelf.
I guess it's not a bookshelf.
But what was it?
The room you rented, correct?
Correct.
And this was the door you went in?
Correct.
And is this the area where the gun was?
That's where the gun was.
Yes.
Okay.
And so you didn't know anything about the gun?
I'm whether it was loaded or not, right?
No, I did not.
Okay.
So what did you do?
I had gloves on at the time.
I picked up the firearm.
There was a small black box on the bed.
I saw that was an open box where I could store the firearm because I knew paramedics and
fire department was going to be coming in there.
It's not a huge room.
So I wanted to get it out of the way so it wouldn't be trampled, wouldn't be disrupted
or anything.
I took the firearm.
I looked at the box.
It was nothing in it.
I kind of did one of these motions to make sure there was nothing in it.
Put it down.
I dropped the magazine out of it.
And what does that mean, dropping the magazine?
I hit the release button on the side of the firearm.
It takes out all the bullets that are in the magazine.
Okay.
Bullets stay in the magazine.
The bullets are in the magazine, correct?
And then after that, I racked the slide, had its sideways and I emptied around out of
the chamber into that box.
Okay.
So there were a magazine with a number of bullets in it, correct?
The one round or bullet was in, was racked into the chamber itself, correct?
Correct.
And then did you, that go in the box?
That went inside the box.
And what did you do with the firearm itself?
The firearm I put everything in the box.
Okay.
And then brought it outside of the room.
May I approach your honor?
Yes.
I'm going to show you a picture and ask if you recognize what that is.
Oh, I'm going to take some, this one, this is in the job.
I agree, too.
So it's a try that.
Okay.
All right.
My question was, you just, and you just answered it by your movement was whether you want
to be to look at what was on the screen.
No.
All right.
So you've handed him a photo and you're right, right?
I do.
What is it?
It's the box that I placed the firearm on the ammunition.
Okay.
Can you see the firearm magazine and the round itself?
I can.
Okay.
Okay.
Where is the, what did you do with the box after you placed the items?
Like I said, it was a small room, the landing, it was at the top of the stairs.
I backed up out of that and I put the box in the corner away where I kind of stood over
it.
Make sure nobody messed with it as the fire department came up and down for medically.
Thank you.
I'd rather I'd offer this picture as the next exhibit.
Any objection?
No.
Okay.
It may be admitted.
Exhibit 80.
So Mark.
I may follow.
Please.
Is that in the position where you had placed the box itself on the landing?
Yes.
We said you stood guard over until when?
As they were doing render and aid, obstinate and backed out of the room along with Officer
Houston and I believe Lieutenant Daly, as she was being removed from the room downstairs,
the status be some issues.
I mean, absolutely.
Lieutenant Daly, who was standing next to me, I said, do you want me to go down and make
sure the fire department's all set, put in her in the ambulance, make sure nobody
interferes with that?
And he said, yep, I'll take watch over the firearm and he basically stood over it, made
sure nobody looked after I had left.
Okay.
When you initially went into the room and you saw Miss Fitzimmons on the ground, I'm
assuming?
She was blocked by view.
I could see feet.
Okay.
I assumed that was her.
Once everybody kind of moved out of the way and I walked in, I said, what do you guys need
for help?
They already had a med bag up there, but she was on the backside of the bed.
There was officer Noonin after the fire department left.
Standing next to me in the hallway, the landing area, I want to call it.
Did you do anything with regards to him?
Did you make any observations with him?
I asked him if he was good, especially me making sure he's okay, Drone Lens Russian.
As I came up the top of the stairs, there was a little glass door on the left and it looked
like there was like a pinhole through it.
I thought he might have been shot at, so I asked him, hey, did she get around off on
you?
And he said, I don't know.
You're safe.
Overall, only because it's been admitted and it's a marginal relevance, just to explain
the scene.
Sure.
Nothing else?
I think we're good.
Cross?
Mr. Brito, about cross?
Thank you, sir.
Yes, take your time.
Officer Corps, good afternoon, sir.
Good afternoon.
Now, I'm sure that you memorialized all of these important facts you testified to in a police
report somewhere.
No, we didn't generate a police report at that time, no.
Well, I'm not asking.
We did.
I'm asking if you did.
I did not, no, sir.
Excuse me more more please.
You might go into the...
Oh, sorry.
I need to cut some, make sure that the audio gets picked up.
Everything you testified to was not memorialized by you in a police report, correct?
No, I did not write a police report, no.
Now, also, you weren't interviewed until 30 days after this incident, correct?
You were interviewed by your...
By the state police.
I don't remember the exact time for him.
Isn't it true that you were interviewed on July 30th?
I don't know the exact date, if that's what you say it is, then I assume you're giving
me correct information.
I appreciate that.
You were also working with Officer Newton, correct?
I worked at the music co-worker.
Did you work with him in that time interval?
From when the incident happened in July 30th?
July.
He's on a different shift, but yeah, I do work with him.
And did you speak with him about the case?
I don't recall if we did, I'm sure we had talked at some point about it, if he was
okay.
Did you speak to him about what happened at the scene, to Cesarna?
At the scene we did, absolutely, we were on the same scene.
Okay.
And did you speak with him in the days following?
I did.
I couldn't tell you.
I'm sure we had at some point talked.
And what about prior to your state police interview?
I'm sure we talked at some point.
So you spoke with him at the scene, spoke with him probably shortly after, and spoke with
him prior to the interview as the interview approaches that favor say?
Yes.
Thank you very much.
I need you, man.
Okay.
All right, thank you officer.
You may step down.
Thank you.
Thank you.
More coverage of the trial of Kelsey Fitzsimmons is coming up from the Hidden Killers
podcast and true crime today.
Press subscribe now so you don't miss a moment.
When I first heard the words you have lung cancer, I was in shock.
This week on a special episode of Health Discovered, we're taking a closer look at a common
formal lung cancer that accounts for 85% of all cases.
I'm Janet Freeman-Daily, and I've been living with non-small cell lung cancer since 2011.
Non-small cell lung cancer.
It's a diagnosis that changes everything.
And yet the conversation around it too often stops at the biology and misses what patients
are actually living through every single day.
There's something you used to be able to do that you can't do anymore.
It's easy to become depressed when you're dealing with all those losses.
So mental health plays a really big role.
So what does it really mean to advocate for yourself when you're living with non-small cell lung cancer?
Listen to Health Discovered on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey there, it's Ryan Seacrest for Safeway.
It's stock up savings time, now through April 2nd.
Spring in for store-wide deals and earn four times of points.
Look for in-store tags to earn on eligible items from hunts, nerds, pillsbury,
loweries, briars, quaker, and culture pop.
Then clip the offer in the app for automatic event-long savings.
Stack up those rewards to save even more.
Enjoy savings on top of savings when you shop in store or online for easy, drive up and go, pick up or delivery.
Restrictions apply, see website for full-terms and conditions.
Hey, it's Bubba Wallace from 2311 Racing.
You know what it feels like forever?
Sitting on a plane waiting for take-off.
Good thing, I've got Jamba Casino.
With daily boost in social casino games on tap,
this is a kind of fun that makes time fly.
Why not turbocharge your downtime?
Play now at JambaCasino.com.
Let's Jamba.
Sponsored by Jamba Casino.
No purchase necessary.
VGW GroupFord.
We're prohibited by law.
21 plus terms and conditions apply.
This is Mike Voilo of Lexicon Valley.
And I'm Bob Garfield.
Are you one of those people who sometimes uses words?
Do you communicate or acquire information with, you know, language?
Hey, us too.
So, join us on Lexicon Valley to true over the history, culture, and many mysteries of English.
Plus, some ice cracks.
Find us on one of those apps where people listen to podcasts.
Hey, it's Bubba Wallace from 2311 Racing.
You know what it feels like forever?
Sitting on a plane waiting for take-off.
Good thing, I've got Jamba Casino.
With daily boost in social casino games on tap,
this is a kind of fun that makes time fly.
Why not turbocharge your downtime?
Play now at JambaCasino.com.
Let's Jamba.
Sponsored by JambaCasino.
No purchase necessary, VGW GroupFord.
We're prohibited by law.
21 plus terms and conditions apply.
Every day the world gets a little weirder.
And a lot more awesome.
Cool stuff daily takes a look at everything from mining and space
to the latest in the fight against cancer to how AI is basically changing everything.
It's all the cool stuff you didn't know you needed to know.
Join us for cool stuff daily as we take a quick look at science, tech, and the wait.
What stories that make you sound way smarter at dinner?
Subscribe to cool stuff daily now because the future is happening fast and it's way too fun to miss.
21 plus Sponsored by JambaCasino.
This is Mike Volo of Lexicon Valley.
And I'm Bob Garfield.
Are you one of those people who sometimes uses words?
Do you communicate or acquire information with, you know, language?
Hey, us too.
So join us on Lexicon Valley to true over the history, culture, and many mysteries of English.
Plus some ice cracks.
Join us on one of those apps where people listen to podcasts.
Bubba Wallace here from 2311 Racing.
You know what's slower than a pace car?
Waiting at the car wash.
That's when I fire up JambaCasino.
It turns those slow minutes into fast fun.
With new games every week, you'll never get bored.
Next time you're stuck in the slow lane, speed up with Jamba.
Play now at chumbacasino.com.
Let's Jamba.
Sponsored by JambaCasino.
No purchase necessary.
VGW GroupFord.
We're prohibited by law.
21 plus terms and conditions apply.
Hi, this is Alex Cantrowitz.
I'm the host of Big Technology podcast.
A long time reporter and an on-air contributor to CNBC.
And if you're like me, you're trying to figure out how artificial intelligence is changing the business world and our lives.
So each week on Big Technology, I bring on key actors from companies building AI tech and outsiders trying to influence it.
Asking where this is all going.
They come from places like Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, and plenty more.
So if you want to be smart with your wallet, your career choices,
and meetings with your colleagues and at dinner parties, listen to Big Technology podcast wherever you get your podcasts.
Tyler Reddick here from 2311 Racing.
Victory Lane?
Yeah, it's even better with Jamba by my side.
Race to chumbacasino.com.
Let's Jamba.
No purchase necessary.
H-E-W group.
Boy, we're prohibited by law.
CTNC's 21 plus sponsored by chumbacasino.
Do you love romcoms?
Do you wish you could talk about Christmas movies year round?
Then we have the perfect podcast for you, Holmarke's podcast.
Throughout the year, we cover all things.
Romance, holiday, and Holmarke, including recaps of every Holmarke show,
like when calls the heart and the way home.
You can also get loads of bonus content covering shows like Bridgerton, Sweet Magnolia's,
and just like that.
We are an all-female group of friends who are passionate for these shows and movies
and give our honest opinions as well as gosh over what we love so much.
But that's not all.
Every Monday, there are interviews with all your favorite actors, writers, directors, and more.
Check out Holmarke's podcast on all your podcast providers and on YouTube.
That's Holmarke's podcast wherever you listen to podcasts.
Tyler Reddick here from 2311 Racing.
Another checkered flag for the books.
Time to celebrate with Chamba.
Jump in at chambacasino.com.
Let's Chamba.
No purchase necessary.
BTW Group.
Boy, we're prohibited by law.
CCNC.
21 Plus.
Sponsored by Chamba Casino.
Hi, this is Alex Cantrowitz.
I'm the host of Big Technology podcast.
A longtime reporter and an on-air contributor to CNBC.
And if you're like me, you're trying to figure out how artificial intelligence is changing the business world and our lives.
So each week on Big Technology, I bring on key actors from companies building AI tech
and outsiders trying to influence it.
Asking where this is all going.
They come from places like Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, and plenty more.
So if you want to be smart with your wallet, your career choices,
and meetings with your colleagues and at dinner parties,
listen to Big Technology podcast wherever you get your podcasts.
It's tax season.
And by now, we're all a bit tired of numbers.
But here's an important one you need to hear.
$16 billion.
That's how much money and refunds the IRS flanked for possible identity fraud.
But it's not all grim news.
Lifelock monitors millions of data points per second.
And alerts you to threats you could easily miss on your own.
If your identity is stolen, they'll fix it.
Guaranteed.
Save up to 40% your first year.
Visit lifelock.com slash iHeart.
Terms apply.
Here's the truth.
You could literally be adored by everyone.
And then come home and still get completely ignored by your own cat.
It's classic cat behavior.
But new Shiba premium puree is a lickable treat that changes all that.
Their protein rich made with bone broth and have the smooth creamy texture cats go crazy for.
Especially when it's hand fed.
Yeah, it's more than a treat.
It's a fast pass to favorite human status.
So feed your cat Shiba and go from totally ignored to truly adored in just 12 days,
guaranteed, or your money back.
Learn more at Shiba.com.

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary