Killer Chris Watt’s smiling wife was shown in a home video in a Netflix trailer before he murdered the family


A new Netflix documentary trailer shows killer Chris Vatt’s smiling wife talking about their happy family life in home video footage, when he killed her and her two daughters, 4 and 3, and dumped the bodies of little girls into an oil tank.

“I went through the darkest time of my life and then I met Chris and that’s the best thing that’s ever happened to me,” Shannon Watts told the camera in footage never seen in Chilling.

Chris Watts strangled his pregnant wife, 34, while he and his unborn son Niko were murdered in August 2018 on their bed at their home in Frederick, Colorado, when she confronted him about his relationship with a coworker.

He then moved his daughters, aged Bella and Celeste, 3 – with their mom’s corpse in the car – to a remote oil field where they worked and smoked a New York Yankees blanket before squeezing their bodies into the oil tank.

A new American documentary, American Murder: Family Next Door, aired September 30, will investigate serious murders with a clear family life that led to the crimes and the killer’s attempts to persuade his wife to cops fled with him. Children.

A new Netflix documentary trailer shows murderer Chris Watt's smiling wife talking about their happy family life in home video footage, when he killed her and her two daughters, 4 and 3, and stuffed the bodies of little girls into an oil tank.  Chris Watts poses with his wife Shannon and daughters Celeste and Bella before killing

A new Netflix documentary trailer shows killer Chris Vatt’s smiling wife talking about their happy family life in home video footage, when he killed her and her two daughters, 4 and 3, and dumped the bodies of little girls into an oil tank. Chris Watts poses with his wife Shannon and daughters Celeste and Bella before killing them

The trailer for the True-Crime show, directed by streaming online streaming giant Jenny Popwell and Oscar-winning executive producer James Marsh, has dropped.

The show will bring together ‘raw, firsthand footage’ and investigate ‘the disappearance of Shannon Watts and her children, and the horrific events that followed.’

The trailer begins with doorbell footage of the house showing Shannon being strangled to death by her teasing husband the night before she arrived at her home.

Shannon’s friend Nicole calls 911 on footage with the woman saying she is ‘worried about my friend’.

He says to the 911 dispatcher, ‘I left him at his house at two o’clock last night and I haven’t heard him able to catch him this morning.’

‘I went to his house and his car is there. It does not answer phone calls, it does not answer text messages. ‘

The killer finally revealed the length of his distance from his family’s disappearance before the trailer finally confessed to the heinous crimes.

It turns out that Chris sent a text message to his dead wife after reading: ‘Can you please call me?’ At his work place he strangled her and at some point threw her body.

The footage shows how Chris tried to deceive law enforcement that his wife had disappeared and taken the children with him.

‘I went through the darkest time of my life and then I met Chris and that’s the best thing that ever happened to me,’ Shannon Vats told the camera in chilling footage in a Netflix trailer talking about her happy family life.  Her husband killed her

‘I went through the darkest time of my life and then I met Chris and that’s the best thing that ever happened to me,’ Shannon Watts told the camera in chilling footage in a Netflix trailer talking about her happy family life. Her husband killed her

Chris Watts strangled his pregnant wife, 34, to death in August 2018 on a bed at his home in Frederick, Colorado, along with him and his unborn son, Nico.

Chris Watts strangled his pregnant wife, 34, to death in August 2018 on a bed at his home in Frederick, Colorado, along with him and his unborn son, Nico.

The new document will investigate horrific murders, including the apparent family life, which led to the crimes, and the murderer who fled with his children after the killer persuaded his wife to marry the police.

The new document will investigate serious murders, including the apparent family life, which led to the crimes, and the murderer who fled with his children after his wife persuaded his wife to police.

‘Was there a note or something?’ Someone asks him because he and others are looking for a family home.

‘No,’ Chris replies.

Chris says, ‘I don’t know what to do right now,’ Chris says in another clip where he plays the role of the respective husband.

During the police interview, he continued the facade: ‘I think I have caused something like this? Did I tell him he needed to say goodbye? ‘

New Netflix documentary 'American Murder: Family Next Door' airs September 30

New Netflix documentary ‘American Murder: Family Next Door’ airs September 30

The show also gives a glimpse of how a completely happy family life felt, with smiling photos of the young family and candles being blown on birthday cakes with archived footage of the children.

In a home video of the trailer, Chris is the image of a small doll father playing with little Bella and Celeste and their toys.

In another, Shannon tells the camera that she wants to tell her ‘story’ of how her husband was ‘the best thing ever made of me’.

‘Hey guys, my name is Shannon. I just want you to tell me a little bit about my story, ‘he says, smiling at the camera.

Her voice is heard later saying: ‘I have done everything in my heart to make my family life better.’

Footage of the couple’s wedding day also plays on the screen.

However, the show showed that there was trouble below the happy image on the surface.

Chris’s voice is heard saying ‘my mom never thought she was good’, while Shannon jokes that she ‘tortured’ and ‘rejected’ her husband.

Moments from the police interview room show that Chris is being interrogated by officers.

The footage shows the moment the net is closed on the transient killer.

A detective tells him, ‘There is only one person in this room who knows what the truth is.’ ‘In about five minutes, there will be two of us.’

Shannon talks about their happy family life in home video footage before the murder

Shannon talks about their happy family life in video footage of the house before the murder

The footage shows the moment the net is closed on the transient killer.  A detective tells him, 'There's only one person in this room who knows the truth.'  'In about five minutes, two of us will be'

The footage shows the moment the net closes on the transient killer. A detective tells him, ‘There is only one person in this room who knows what the truth is.’ ‘In about five minutes, there will be two of us’

Chris was sentenced to five years in prison and was sent to the Dodge Correctional Institution in Waupan, Wisconsin, in November 2018 after pleading guilty to murder.

After she was jailed, it turned out that she had a two-month affair with a co-worker and that she had made a new life plan with him.

She told the jailhouse confession how she strangled Shannon in about four minutes when she found out about their relationship and said she would never see her children again.

After strangling her, the killer said Bella came into the room and asked what was wrong with her mom.

Chris then pulled Shannon’s lifeless body down the stairs and Celeste also woke up and ran around the house.

He bundled Shannon into his truck and loaded his two girls into the vehicle with his mom’s body.

The killer took the girls to his workplace where he pressed Celeste with a New York Yankees blanket and threw her body into an oil tank while Bella watched.

He then killed Bella in the same way her body was in the tank.

Chris then buried Shannon and his unborn son in a shallow grave.

Chris expressed concern for his family that his wife might have taken their children and left him.

She later confessed and pleaded guilty in November, 2018 to the first count of tampering with a dead human body, one count of illegal termination of pregnancy and three counts of conception.

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