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Talking Dateline: The Trouble with Sarah

January 21, 2026 /

This episode discusses the case of Sarah Hartsfield, her husband's death, and the investigation that revealed a pattern of violent relationships. Key topics include the role of women as perpetrators, the investigation led by Detective Skylar Rocks, and the insights from private investigator Lynn Marie Garcy.

Lester Holt and Keith Morrison examine how Sarah Hartsfield's case came to light after a medical staff member alerted authorities in Baytown, Texas. Detective Rocks, new to the force, recognized suspicious behavior during her investigation into Hartsfield's husband's death.

The episode highlights the complexities of Sarah's relationships, including her charm and manipulative behavior, which often led to chaos and violence. The discussions touch on her past actions, including arson attempts and the eventual murder of her husband, Joe.

Garcy shares her experience working on the case and the unusual request Sarah made regarding her husband's ashes after her conviction. The episode also features social media interactions, reflecting on the public's perception of Sarah and the all-female team that pursued justice.

Listeners are encouraged to engage with the Dateline community and share their thoughts on future cases. The episode concludes with a reminder of the upcoming Dateline broadcast.

TLDR

Sarah Hartsfield's case reveals a pattern of manipulation and violence in her relationships, leading to her husband's death and conviction.

Episode

18:50
00:00:01
It's still relatively rare that we see women as perpetrators in cases like this.
00:00:06
You've covered a few. Is this your specialty? Is this something you're able to look and...
00:00:13
It seems like it's becoming one. It seems a little blunt. Hi everyone, I'm Lester Holt and this is Talking Dateline.
00:00:23
I'm joined today by Keith Morrison. And Keith, this is a case I know you have been covering for years
00:00:27
And it brings us back to Baytown, Texas, where the death of Sarah Hartsfield's husband, Joe, ultimately exposed a much darker story.
00:00:37
Multiple marriages, volatile relationships, and allegations of violence that stretch back for decades.
00:00:43
The episode is called The Trouble with Sarah. And, folks, if you haven't listened to the episode, you can find it in the Dateline podcast feed or stream it on Peacock.
00:00:54
So go there and listen to that when you come back. Keith has some extra sound for us from private investigator Lynn Marie Garcy, who describes a surprising request she says that Sarah made after her conviction.
00:01:08
And later, Keith will answer your questions from social media. So, OK, let's start talking Dateline.
00:01:15
Keith, just give us the overview, your view of this story. Well, this was a case that might not ever have seen the light of day.
00:01:25
if a member of the medical staff in the emergency department of the hospital in Baytown, Texas,
00:01:34
saw something that didn't look right and made a phone call to the sheriff's department.
00:01:39
And a deputy went over to the hospital, talked to the people there, and was sufficiently concerned that he placed a call to the duty detective,
00:01:50
who happened to be this young woman named Skylar Rocks, who was brand new to the detective service.
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She went over to the hospital, and after talking to Sarah Hartsfield, immediately smelled a rat.
00:02:03
And she fussed around trying to get information for a while. And when finally it became apparent that she wasn't going to be able to make this a big investigation
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until she got some support, she went to the district attorney. DA happened to be a woman who's pretty aggressive in her treatment of crime.
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And also there was a female prosecutor. So the three of them together said, yeah, this is a case.
00:02:31
We know what we're dealing with here. We've dealt with the word that they used with me was sociopathic female.
00:02:38
So Skylar Rocks went about her investigation. and every rock that she turned over, she uncovered some more very interesting information about Sarah's life.
00:02:50
It's still relatively rare that we see women as perpetrators in cases like this.
00:02:55
You've covered a few, though, Lori Vallow, Pam Hupp, Sarah Hartsfield. Is this your specialty?
00:03:01
Is this something you're able to look and— It seems like it's becoming one. It seems a little blunt.
00:03:07
you know i interviewed laurie vallow uh some time ago some months ago when she was uh in jail
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awaiting trial for one of the murders that she was accused of committee um and she first of all
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she winks at the camera on the way in she sits down she turns on the charm like crazy it's you
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you can see why some people would have you know several husbands and uh and and lots of ability
00:03:35
to attract men and their affections, but also that a woman might look at that same scene and say,
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oh boy, somebody's getting snowed again, because it's a technique that some people are able to use.
00:03:51
Men are good at it too. They're just good at it perhaps in a slightly different way.
00:03:56
You know, I found it fascinating talking to the district attorney in Texas who handled this case.
00:04:02
interesting woman. But she was of the view that it isn't often that you run into a sociopathic
00:04:10
female, as you call it. But she said they're very good, they're very slippery, and they're
00:04:14
very good at persuading men that they're as innocent as the driven snow. But she was convinced
00:04:20
that a lot of them get away with things that we never hear about because they got away with them.
00:04:26
And it takes a woman, she told me over and over again, that it takes a woman to recognize that
00:04:32
sort of behavior. In fact, in this case, it took three women. Yeah it because this idea that Sarah has this somehow this pull over men Can you describe what it was about her that made her so appealing Yeah I asked the men who had had relationships with her and there were lots of them
00:04:51
But those who would talk to us, at least, described somebody who was vivacious, who was the kind of person you would fall in love with immediately.
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They described a beautiful woman. She could charm the birds out of the trees, especially if the birds were male.
00:05:05
Yeah, when investigators look at Sarah's early relationships, they see the same cycle repeating, essentially intense, very intense emotional beginnings, followed by deception and then chaos once a relationship starts to fall apart.
00:05:20
Is that where the story really starts to shape for you, this pattern? Yes, and the pattern is you've described it perfectly.
00:05:27
That's what would happen. She would attract a man. The man would fall for her. they would have in a very intense first few weeks of the relationship and then if they
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wanted to break off the relationship that was no good and so sarah would take some sort of
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retaliatory action attempting apparently to burn down titus's house after he you know became
00:05:51
engaged to another woman or at least was discovered pouring gasoline all over his house
00:05:56
then a boyfriend's house her grandmother's house she was never she was never charged in any of those
00:06:00
cases though, correct? No, she wasn't. When I was watching this, I was reminded of a recent
00:06:05
interview I did for Dateline True Crime Weekly, where I interviewed an arson investigator,
00:06:11
and he talked about how difficult these cases are to prove. Yes. Arson is very difficult to prove.
00:06:17
There are so many different possibilities for the reason it may have happened. And in Sarah's case,
00:06:21
it was always kind of slippery. There was always some kind of reason why you'd suspect it was her,
00:06:26
but not quite enough to charge her with something. Well, let me ask you about David Bragg.
00:06:31
She shoots and kills him, then claims self-defense. At the time, police accepted that explanation.
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They didn't really look any farther into it, did they? There was an investigation.
00:06:41
It wasn't just like a one-hour investigation. They went on, they looked at it, several agencies looked at it,
00:06:48
and came back with the ruling that it appeared to be self-defense. But when this investigation looked into it more carefully,
00:06:56
They could see that the relationship with David Bragg fit that perfect template that you cannot leave me, David Bragg.
00:07:02
You cannot break up this relationship. Only I can. And the way I can break it up tends to be something you wouldn't like.
00:07:09
Then you had David George. Yeah. David George took that long journey down to the place where the ex-husband was living, went up to the door, pushed the doorbell.
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You can see him on a ring camera. he had a bouquet of flowers supposedly for the wife of her ex-husband later on he said he had
00:07:29
no intention of ever shooting anybody there was no charge and that's a that's another case that
00:07:35
wasn't really a part of the central case in this story right exactly however often we'll follow
00:07:42
cases and you know that somebody has behaved badly on a number of occasions and those situations
00:07:48
cannot be brought up in a trial. All the prosecution can do is focus on the specific
00:07:53
charge with which this person is facing. And the details only concerning that particular act,
00:08:00
the illegal act that that person is on trial for. But there's a rule in Texas that you can use past
00:08:06
bad acts in the prosecution of a case. And that is what made all the difference in this case about
00:08:11
Sarah because they could, the prosecutor was able to bring up all of these things in her,
00:08:17
in her past, all these relationships that had become violent. Uh, and the, you know,
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the combination of all of those things made it apparent to anybody who was sitting in that
00:08:26
courtroom that this woman would be found guilty. All right, we'll take a break. When we come back,
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Keith is going to play some extra sound from his interview with the investigator in this case,
00:08:35
And also hearing her describe what Sarah Hartsfield wanted done with Joe's ashes after she was convicted.
00:08:42
We'll be right back. Keith, you know, you described so many instances where Sarah is able to charm or talk or cajole, whatever she would do to get out from these things.
00:08:57
Do you think when it came to the death of Joe that she somehow believes she could work her way out of that one, too?
00:09:04
Well, I suspect that was the case. We can't know what really was in her mind. Among the cases in her past, I suppose the one regarding Joe was easier potentially to solve,
00:09:16
but Detective Rock certainly had to drill down on it and was able to find out that in the many hours before Joe death while he was having a diabetic crisis and his alarm was going off every five minutes
00:09:34
to tell Sarah that her husband was in diabetic shock, she claimed that she was asleep on the couch because she had just recently had surgery
00:09:44
and therefore she just didn't wake up when the alarm went off. But when she was able to get access to Sarah's phone, she discovered at the times that Sarah claimed that she was asleep on the couch, she was actually up, walking around, making calls to other people, doing this, that, and the other.
00:10:03
Certainly, she wasn't asleep. And certainly, she would have heard all of those alarms when they went off and chose to do nothing about it, which kind of formed, I think, the basis for the charges against her.
00:10:14
Let me ask you about the children. Very often in cases like this, children are kind of left with a choice.
00:10:20
You know, which parent are they going to back or support in this? The children were really pivotal ultimately in this case.
00:10:28
They were. And I felt for them so deeply to have to go through life the way they did.
00:10:34
It sounded like a pretty difficult way to grow up. The children that I talked to, though, seemed to be, you know, remarkably well adjusted or at least able to talk about what happened to them.
00:10:45
very clear-headed way. But as we know, Sarah actually appeals to Ashley for her support.
00:10:52
Sure. They had a complicated relationship, those two. I think that Sarah really tried to manipulate
00:10:59
Ashley for years and years, and was obviously trying to do that in their conversations from
00:11:06
the jail. The recordings that we heard, it was an effort to guilt Ashley into doing something
00:11:13
on her mother's behalf. But at that point, Ashley was beyond it. She wasn't going to get involved.
00:11:19
Her mom apparently says, this isn't looking procedural. I think that came up during a voicemail.
00:11:25
How damaging was that particular message? It was part of a pile of things. I think it was an indication that she was aware of the fact that there was a strong case against her,
00:11:40
that she understood what that case was. So, you know, did it point to her guilt?
00:11:47
Perhaps it did. I think the prosecutor was able to use that attitude as part of the case.
00:11:55
It was an interesting trial, a fascinating case to look into. And yes, another one of those cases where there was the woman who did some bad things.
00:12:06
All right. We have an extra clip that didn't make the broadcast. Yes. And the voice is Lynn Marie Garcy, who was the private investigator the defense brought in as an assistant to help with the case, to see how the jury was reacting, to make recommendations about how Sarah should behave in the courtroom.
00:12:26
There was an attempt, I think, by the defense to at least gain a sense of what the jury was thinking so that they could come up with some sort of defense for Sarah.
00:12:38
Oh, there was a story about Joe's ashes. She had a request. Tell me that one, if you don't mind.
00:12:47
Well, I guess it has nothing to do with her case anymore, but she wanted them to be thrown in the trash can after she was convicted.
00:12:58
And the four of us, we have hearts and we have a little bit more integrity than that.
00:13:06
and uh we're not doing that you know and uh so my understanding is is that his sister got the ashes
00:13:14
yeah she just won't throw in the trash can that's pretty ice water in the veins to me
00:13:20
yeah truly it's taking retribution to its ends ice water in the veins i think is a pretty good
00:13:27
description it is it is she was i think frankly horrified by this particular defendant um and um
00:13:34
she said she was relieved by the uh and here's somebody working for the defense but she was
00:13:40
relieved by the fact that sarah was uh convicted uh she said she didn't didn't know what would
00:13:45
happen if sarah got out and she said well i'm not too worried because i have a pew pew
00:13:49
i said what are you talking about a pew pew she carries a gun uh it being texas you carry a what
00:13:56
pew pew sorry yeah I sat up for that one as well a pew pew I think a large part of this story is about accountability What the likelihood we see some of these other investigations bear fruit
00:14:15
Well, a couple of them have been opened, the shooting of David Bragg particularly.
00:14:20
I'm quite interested to see what happens with regard to that one. But jurisdictions in other areas are having a look.
00:14:30
Will they come up with anything at this stage? It's hard to know. A good deal of that evidence may have disappeared.
00:14:36
Some of those people have died. It seems to me somewhat unlikely that there be further charges, but certainly those departments are aware now and have been looking into it.
00:14:48
All right, Keith, we'll stay right where you are. We have some questions in here from social media.
00:14:53
We're going to give you a chance to answer some and to weigh in on some of what the viewers are pointing out.
00:14:58
We'll be right back. Okay, now for some social media questions. Most of them, frankly, are comments, but here's one from NC Trigger85.
00:15:14
She goes, wow, not too many Dateline cases get under my skin as much as this one did.
00:15:21
She is evil incarnate. Whether somebody's evil or not, I don't know. She's bad to the bone, I like to think of it.
00:15:30
But she did have a pretty rough upbringing. And she was eventually sent to a foster care, which was probably the only good family she had over the course of that time.
00:15:39
Here's Geer is Herndon. I carry a pew pew. I like that lady. She's hilarious, he writes.
00:15:47
Yeah, she was hilarious. She was also no nonsense. Very, very brave lady. I loved also her advice when Sarah came into the courtroom with the Bible.
00:15:56
She said, you've got to get rid of it immediately. Are you crazy? They're going to know what a hypocrite you are immediately.
00:16:02
Well, I was going to point that out. She talks about the Bible. She also talks about the fact that immediately her impression was the jury hated this woman.
00:16:11
Yes, absolutely. Which is not a good start to your trial. No, no. Here Beatrice Pembro picked up on, she says, that always baffles me why previous bad actions aren't allowed at trial usually. That's the point.
00:16:26
um and i think i think a lot of us you know will watch a lot of trials and and we kind of want
00:16:32
a case where the jury gets to hear everything about a person you do you do it's i find it
00:16:38
frustrating i was called for jury duty once and expressed that uh frustration to the judge
00:16:44
when i was asked the question whether i could um you know they asked a series of questions about
00:16:49
whether you could serve on a jury and i said yeah but i guess sir but but boy i sure want to know
00:16:54
the whole thing about that person. I get very frustrated when a case happens and you hear about
00:17:00
so many things, even about the specific incident, are not allowed in court. So the jury doesn't get
00:17:07
to hear that stuff. Drives me crazy. And I wasn't allowed on the jury, of course. But it's a good
00:17:13
point. So it's Mike H. 1990 who writes, Sarah is the type of person that makes you stay single and
00:17:19
enjoy every single life forever. Okay, we'll leave him to his opinion on that. And then here,
00:17:27
Candace Smith wants to know, did she kill her 10-year-old brother too? Well, I was sure curious about that. I don't think it's possible. I think that she was with
00:17:37
her foster family when that happened, I think. But it's a little unclear. There's a whole kind
00:17:43
of overlap period where you're not sure where something happened. The incident involving her
00:17:47
brother is is is very strange but it seems unlikely she could have done it yeah um vicky
00:17:57
irby weighs in so proud of these ladies and their team obviously referencing the fact that it was an
00:18:02
all-lady team that really brought this case ultimately to justice and they take pride in
00:18:09
it too by the way they were um yeah yeah clearly they talked up clearly they do well that's it for
00:18:14
talking Dateline this week. Thanks, everyone, for listening. If there's a case you want us to cover
00:18:18
or you have a question for our team, reach out anytime at social at Dateline NBC. You can also
00:18:24
leave us a voicemail. The number is 212-413-5252, or you can send us a voice memo and a DM.
00:18:33
In the meantime, we'll see you Friday for an all-new Dateline on NBC. Thanks, Keith.
00:18:38
Thank you, Lester. It was nice to see you. Thank you.

Badges

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  • 75
    Most intense
  • 70
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  • 70
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  • 65
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Episode Highlights

  • The Trouble with Sarah
    A deep dive into the complex case of Sarah Hartsfield, revealing dark secrets and manipulative behavior.
    “This was a case that might not ever have seen the light of day.”
    @ 01m 15s
    January 21, 2026
  • The Role of Women in Justice
    An all-female team plays a pivotal role in bringing Sarah Hartsfield to justice.
    “It takes a woman to recognize that sort of behavior.”
    @ 04m 32s
    January 21, 2026

Episode Quotes

  • That's pretty ice water in the veins to me.
    Talking Dateline: The Trouble with Sarah
  • It is, it is she was I think frankly horrified by this particular defendant.
    Talking Dateline: The Trouble with Sarah
  • I think a large part of this story is about accountability.
    Talking Dateline: The Trouble with Sarah
  • She is evil incarnate.
    Talking Dateline: The Trouble with Sarah

Key Moments

  • Dark Secrets Revealed00:27
  • Investigative Breakthrough01:58
  • Emotional Manipulation10:59
  • Accountability in Justice14:02
  • Trial Tensions16:11

Tension Over Time

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown