EPISODE · May 8, 2026 · 34 MIN
The 17-Year-Old He Tried to Hide Became the Key to Everything _ Police Interrogation True Crime
from FilmRise True Crime · host FilmRise True Crime
"A gunshot echoed in the night. A wife vanished without a trace. Her husband claimed suicide—and a burial at sea. There was only one problem: no body, no weapon, no witnesses. And yet, prosecutors still brought him to trial."In this classic homicide investigation episode, we unravel the 1989 case of Ruby Morris, a 49-year-old Arizona woman who disappeared from her Cave Creek home on June 3, 1989 [citation:4]. Her husband, Earl Morris, initially told police she had been despondent over his affair with her own sister and took her own life [citation:2]. He claimed he then drove her body to San Diego, placed it on their cabin cruiser, and set the boat on fire—sinking both vessel and corpse in the Pacific Ocean [citation:3].Without a body or forensic evidence at the scene, investigators faced an impossible challenge. But they built their case on something rare: Earl Morris's own testimony. Under cross-examination, his story crumbled—contradictions emerged, financial motives surfaced (a $100,000 life insurance policy, which state law would later bar a killer from collecting)[citation:1], and the intimate knowledge only a killer would possess [citation:3].Using legal analysis and courtroom strategy, we examine how prosecutors proved murder without a corpse. After a jury trial in March 1992, Earl Morris was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole [citation:1]. This is the case that proved: a body isn't always necessary when the killer can't stop talking.
What this episode covers
"A gunshot echoed in the night. A wife vanished without a trace. Her husband claimed suicide—and a burial at sea. There was only one problem: no body, no weapon, no witnesses. And yet, prosecutors still brought him to trial."In this classic homicide investigation episode, we unravel the 1989 case of Ruby Morris, a 49-year-old Arizona woman who disappeared from her Cave Creek home on June 3, 1989 [citation:4]. Her husband, Earl Morris, initially told police she had been despondent over his affair with her own sister and took her own life [citation:2]. He claimed he then drove her body to San Diego, placed it on their cabin cruiser, and set the boat on fire—sinking both vessel and corpse in the Pacific Ocean [citation:3].Without a body or forensic evidence at the scene, investigators faced an impossible challenge. But they built their case on something rare: Earl Morris's own testimony. Under cross-examination, his story crumbled—contradictions emerged, financial motives surfaced (a $100,000 life insurance policy, which state law would later bar a killer from collecting)[citation:1], and the intimate knowledge only a killer would possess [citation:3].Using legal analysis and courtroom strategy, we examine how prosecutors proved murder without a corpse. After a jury trial in March 1992, Earl Morris was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole [citation:1]. This is the case that proved: a body isn't always necessary when the killer can't stop talking.
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The 17-Year-Old He Tried to Hide Became the Key to Everything _ Police Interrogation True Crime
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