Current:Home > FinanceCalifornia woman says her bloody bedroom was not a crime scene -VisionFunds
California woman says her bloody bedroom was not a crime scene
Chainkeen View
Date:2025-04-06 11:51:19
"I thought truth and justice was at the front of everything. And it certainly has not been in my case," Jane Dorotik told "48 Hours" correspondent Erin Moriarty in "The Troubled Case Against Jane Dorotik," airing Saturday at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
Dorotik reported her husband Bob missing the evening of Sunday, Feb. 13, 2000. She told the San Diego County Sheriff's Department she had last seen him that afternoon, when he said he was going out for a jog. Bob Dorotik's body was found early the next morning on the side of the road several miles from their Valley Center, California, home. He had been bludgeoned in the head and strangled.
"It was obvious to me that it was a homicide," sheriff's detective Rick Empson told Moriarty.
Investigators quickly determined Bob Dorotik wasn't killed where his body was found, because there wasn't enough blood there. When they searched the Dorotiks' home, they found spots of blood all over the bedroom. Jane Dorotik explained that Bob had had a nosebleed recently, and they had dogs who had bled. But authorities dismissed her explanations.
"There was no question in our mind that this assault occurred in the master bedroom," Empson said.
Three days after Bob Dorotik's body was found, Jane Dorotik, 53, was arrested for his murder. She later posted bail, and though she was under a cloud of suspicion, she invited "48 Hours" into her home in 2000.
"It felt like a nightmare, and I kept saying 'when am I gonna wake up?'" she told Moriarty.
When the case went to trial in May 2001, prosecutor Bonnie Howard-Regan described the 20 locations where investigators found blood.
"There was blood on the comforter. There was blood on the pillow sham …on the wall behind the bed … on the ceiling above the bed," she said.
Howard-Regan also told jurors there was a large blood stain on the underside of the mattress. The prosecution theorized that Jane Dorotik hit her husband with an object in the bedroom and strangled him. She then dressed him in his jogging suit, put him in their truck and dumped him along the side of the road where his body was found.
"The evidence will show that all this blood that has been described to you, the observations made in this bedroom, that it was all sent out for DNA analysis, and it all came back Bob Dorotik's blood," Howard-Regan told the jury.
The jury deliberated for four days before finding Jane Dorotik guilty. She was sentenced to 25 years to life.
"I just, I can't see my way clear to a life in prison. I just can't see it," she told Moriarty in an interview in jail.
Dorotik spent years behind bars asking for a new examination of the evidence. She argued authorities focused on her from the beginning of the investigation and failed to follow other leads. But motion after motion was denied.
By 2016, she began working with a team from Loyola Project for the Innocent. They reviewed the bedroom blood evidence the prosecutor told the jury was fully tested and was Bob Dorotik's. According to the appeal, not every single spot in the bedroom believed to be blood, was tested. Instead, representative samples were tested.
The appellate team says that several blood-like stains on items including a pillow sham, the nightstand and a lampshade turned out not to be blood. And some stains on the bedspread, which were described at trial as Bob Dorotik's blood, were never tested at all.
"If you just look at all of the pieces of evidence that Loyola was able to absolutely take apart … and yet we know what was told to the jury in the original conviction… How can that happen?" Jane Dorotik told Moriarty when they spoke again two decades after her conviction.
The state stood by its original investigation, maintaining the bedroom was the murder scene and that the evidence still pointed to Jane Dorotik as the killer. It also claimed the defense arguments were "largely derived from speculation and misstatements of fact."
In April 2020, Jane Dorotik was temporarily released from prison due to COVID health concerns. The San Diego County District Attorney's Office recommended her conviction be overturned due to new evidence in the case, but in October 2020, it made the decision to retry her.
The judge ruled that the new trial could go ahead, but that some key evidence presented in her original trial would not be admissible. In May 2022, just as jury selection was about to begin, the prosecutors dropped the charges.
"We no longer feel that the evidence is sufficient to show proof beyond a reasonable doubt and convince 12 members of the jury," said Deputy District Attorney Christopher Campbell.
At a news conference outside the courthouse, Jane Dorotik expressed her relief.
"It just is overwhelming to realize that now I can determine my own future. It's something I've prayed for and hoped for," she said.
- In:
- 48 Hours
- Murder
- True Crime
- Jane Dorotik
veryGood! (374)
Related
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Multiple injuries in tour bus rollover on upstate New York highway
- WWII-era munitions found under water in survey of Southern California industrial waste dump site
- Rays shortstop Wander Franco faces judge as officials accuse him of having sex with a 14-year-old
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- North Korea fired over 200 artillery shells near disputed sea boundary
- Sunderland apologizes to its fans for rebranding stadium bar in Newcastle colors for FA Cup game
- Global food prices declined from record highs in 2022, the UN says. Except for these two staples
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- 3 years after Jan. 6 Capitol riot, Trump trial takes center stage, and investigators still search for offenders
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Peloton shares jump as it partners with TikTok on fitness content
- Former energy minister quits Britain’s Conservatives over approval of new oil drilling
- UN chief names a new envoy to scope out the chances of reviving Cyprus peace talks
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Florida can import prescription drugs from Canada, US regulators say
- The teacher shot by a 6-year-old still worries, a year later, about the other students in the room
- USA wins gold medal at world junior championship with victory vs. Sweden
Recommendation
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
The Trumpification of the GOP's Jan. 6 pardon push
A group representing TikTok, Meta and X sues Ohio over new law limiting kids’ use of social media
Cher is denied an immediate conservatorship over son’s money, but the issue isn’t done
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
BPA, phthalates widespread in supermarket foods, regardless of packaging, Consumer Report says
Anthony Joshua vs. Francis Ngannou boxing match set for March 9 in Saudi Arabia
Shia LaBeouf converts to Catholicism after being confirmed at New Year’s Eve Mass