

Hey weirdos — I'm Nikki, daughter of Stephanie Marie Wasilishin. If you found this show through Morbid, welcome. Thank you for giving space in your day to my mom's story and to a new podcast that's still building its voice. Content note: This episode discusses domestic violence and homicide. The man discussed is presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. What this episode is about This is the chapter where I stop waiting for the system and start pushing it. After the Red Rock News coverage and my first email from Sedona Police (Nov 2020), I filed a public-records request. The case file landed in my inbox mid-Jan 2021—and I couldn't open it for nine months. When I finally did, it was with a student filmmaker filming in my living room while the printer spit the pages out backwards: autopsy first. I learned I'd received 176 pages of what Red Rock once reported was nearly 400; key autopsy pages were missing. That night the flashbacks came, and something in me shifted from waiting to fighting. I started posting on Facebook, then a local ABC reporter reached out. A friend reminded me I knew Sarah Turney from years back; Sarah said, "Start with TikTok." I did. Within weeks my aunt Wendy—who never stopped pushing in the background—found me online. She had pages I didn't (including four autopsy pages). Together, we tried the "proper channels," up to an FBI contact who asked Sedona PD if they'd accept help. They declined. Shout-Out: Sarah Turney & Voices for Justice Sarah Turney has been a mentor and friend since our TGI Friday's days—she's the blueprint for family-led advocacy in true crime and has had my back from day one. Follow her and check out her show: • Sarah on Instagram: @saraheturney Voices for Justice • Voices for Justice (website): voicesforjusticepodcast.com In March 2022 we received a letter from Sedona PD labeling my mom's homicide "inactive," shifting responsibility to prosecutors, citing "old technology," and warning our family about "harassment." I read that letter verbatim in this episode and break down why the language is hostile and not trauma-informed. Then media pressure kicked in. FOX 10's Justin Lum pushed for interviews; suddenly a zip drive appeared with the 911 call and Russell's interviews—the first time my family heard them in 29 years. We filmed in Sedona; my aunt cried in front of the house. Justin's two-part special, "Insufficient" (June 11, 2022), put facts in front of the public.
Hey weirdos — I'm Nikki, daughter of Stephanie Marie Wasilishin. If you found this show through Morbid, welcome. Thank you for giving space in your day to my mom's story and to a new podcast that's still building its voice. Content note: This episode discusses domestic violence and homicide. The man discussed is presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. What this episode is about This is the chapter where I stop waiting for the system and start pushing it. After the Red Rock News...