The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Man admits slaying wife, blames her for daughters’ deaths

- By Kathleen Foody

DENVER » The father of two young girls found submerged in oil tanks after being missing for days told authoritie­s his pregnant wife killed the children after learning he wanted a separation, and that he erupted in rage after witnessing the killings and strangled their mother inside the family’s suburban Denver home, according to court documents.

Days after letting police inside his home so they could help find his missing family, Christophe­r Watts told investigat­ors “he would tell the truth.”

Watts first asked to speak with his father then admitted to killing his wife, Shanann. Watts told police in court papers released Monday that he killed her after witnessing her strangling one of the girls on a baby monitor. The other child had already been killed by the woman, he said.

Watts, 33, faces three first-degree murder charges, two counts of murdering a child under 12, one count of unlawful terminatio­n of a pregnancy and three counts of tampering with a deceased human body. He is scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday and is being held without bail.

District Attorney Michael Rourke declined to answer questions about the case Monday but said his office has three prosecutor­s working on it. Rourke also said it was too early to discuss whether he will seek the death penalty.

Police first visited the family’s house on Aug. 13, after a friend asked officers to check on Shanann Watts. She had missed a doctor’s appointmen­t and wasn’t answering calls or text messages hours after returning home after a business trip, the friend reported.

With Christophe­r Watts’ approval, police searched the house and found his wife’s cellphone stuffed inside a couch. Her purse was on a kitchen island and a suitcase was at the bottom of the stairs.

A detective spoke to Christophe­r Watts and learned about his separation plans. Watts first described the conversati­on with Shannan as civil but later told police that “they were both upset and crying” and she planned to go to a friend’s house that day, the court papers said.

When Shanann Watts and the girls did not return home by Tuesday morning, investigat­ors ramped up their efforts with the help of the Colorado Bureau of Investigat­ion and the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion. Christophe­r Watts was interviewe­d by several local television stations, asking for the return of his family and discussing how much he missed spending time with his children.

It wasn’t until Wednesday night that he made his promise to tell police the truth.

According to Watts’ account, the early hours of Aug. 13 began with an intense conversati­on. He said he told his wife that he wanted a separation. Separately in the papers released Monday, investigat­ors said they learned that Watts was “actively involved in an affair with a co-worker,” something he denied in earlier conversati­ons with police.

Watts told police that after discussing the separation he walked downstairs.

When he returned, he told them he spotted a baby monitor on his wife’s nightstand — displaying her “actively strangling” their 3-year-old daughter, Celeste. He said the video feed also showed their other daughter, 4-year-old Bella, “sprawled out on her bed and blue.”

“Chris said he went into a rage and ultimately strangled Shanann to death,” the document said.

Police found surveillan­ce video from a neighbor showing Watts’ truck backing into the driveway at 5:27 a.m. and shortly after driving away from the house in Frederick, a small town on the grassy plains north of Denver where fast-growing subdivisio­ns like the one the Watts family lived in intermingl­e with drilling rigs and oil wells.

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