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Body Bags with Joseph Scott Morgan

Heroin Homicide of Anjelica “AJ” Hadsell

Body Bags with Joseph Scott Morgan

CrimeOnline and iHeartPodcasts

True Crime

4.81.8K Ratings

🗓️ 28 June 2022

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

College freshman AJ Hadsell returns home for spring break, March 2015. Five weeks later her body is discovered face-down in a ditch, covered by a sheet of plywood. Investigators immediately identify that foul play is involved. Deep bruises are visible on Hadsell's torso and face. Hadsell has been murdered. Detectives turn their attention towards AJ’s stepfather, Wesley Hadsell, as their primary suspect, but why?

AJ Hadsell dies of a heroin overdose, but the family is adamant that AJ did not use drugs. Here is the first connection to the stepfather. Wesley Hadsell has been kicked out of the family home by AJ’s mother due to his drug use, heroin specifically. Then, authorities find suspicious items in his car, including some of AJ’s belongings, as well as duct tape and a shovel.

In this episode of Body Bags, forensics expert Joseph Scott Morgan and Jackie Howard explore and explain the details of AJ’s murder, the difficulties of investigating a body that has been outside and exposed to the elements for weeks, and why AJ’s stepfather, Wesley Hadsell, was the first suspect in this case.

Show Notes:

01:00 - Introducing the case; 18 year old AJ Hadsell, found face-down in a drainage ditch.

05:00 - The murder investigation begins immediately upon finding AJ Hadsell’s body.

06:40 - Why it was obvious that this was a death caused by another person, from the autopsy table.

11:00 - Once a body has excessive decomposition, it can be very difficult to ascertain cause, method, and/or modes of death.

15:30 - The unique and morbid skillset that Medical Death Investigators need to have in order to be successful in their jobs.

16:00 - The mode of death in the case of AJ Hadsell.

21:00 - With three times the lethal amount of Heroin found in her body, AJ Hadsell’s life had a horrific ending.

24:00 - Heroin as a mode of murder and the search for AJ’s killer.

25:30 - Drug testing via hair follicle and how this helped authorities rule out self-administered accidental Heroin overdose.

30:00 - Who had access to AJ Hadsell and could remove her from her home without signs of distress?

31:00 - Wesley Hadsell’s history of violence against women and other evidence used by investigators to charge Wesley with the murder of AJ Hadsell

32:30 - The tragedy in this case continues to intensify as details about the positioning of AJ’s clothing on her body when she was found.

37:30 - Determining assault can be extremely difficult after weeks of decomposition.

38:00 - Wesley Hadsell was found guilty of First-degree Murder and Concealment of a Dead Body in February, 2022. He maintains his innocence. He has been sentenced to Life + 15 years in prison.

Rest in peace, Anjelica “AJ” Hadsell. 1996 - 2015.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

When you're young and you have goals of going to college, first off the first thing you

0:22.5

want to do is just get out of high school, but then the future is so bright because you

0:27.7

think about where you're going to go path because it's unknown, but there's a level of excitement to it.

0:33.2

You go down that path and you kind of enter into a new world that has family at a university.

0:43.0

You're seeking out those things that are going to define you as a person as you continue to grow,

0:52.0

but what you don't expect is that when you come home on your break from college,

1:00.5

that you'll be brutally murdered in your body left to decompose.

1:07.3

The day, we're going to talk about the death of a young lady named AJ, AJ Hatsle.

1:16.9

I'm Joseph Scott Morgan, and this is Body Bags.

1:23.3

Jackie AJ was home from college.

1:32.9

She was Joe Angelica, AJ Hatsle was back home in Norfolk, Virginia for Spring Break March of 2015.

1:40.7

She was a freshman at Longwood University, AJ disappeared on March 2nd, and her body was not found

1:48.1

until five weeks later near the North Carolina border. Let's put off for just a moment, Joe,

1:54.0

discussing what AJ actually died from and talk about how she was found and the condition her

2:00.7

body was going to be in and how that relates to the bruises that they found across her chin and

2:06.9

chest. She was not found until five weeks later. She was partially buried in a drainage ditch

2:13.5

that implies that there would have been water there. Right, Jayar. Here's the problem.

2:19.2

She's out exposed to the elements and one of the biggest problems that you encounter out in the

2:25.6

field as a death investigator. You have to overcome not just what the perpetrator has done and try to

2:33.3

make your way through all of that science, but you're competing with the environment in which

2:38.6

body is found. In this case, you don't have a body that's in a protected space. We break these

2:45.6

things down and interestingly enough, we refer to them very simplistically as indoor scenes versus

...

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