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Filipina Trauma Nurse Secret Affair With Chicago Prosecutor’s Ends In Alleyway Murder

Pay attention to this security camera footage.

Courthouse hallway, Sterling County Courthouse, Chicago, November 14th, 2023.

The camera captures two people pressed against a supply closet door.

A man in an expensive charcoal suit, a woman in hospital scrubs under a winter coat.

They’re kissing desperately, hands gripping each other like drowning people.

8 seconds.

They pull apart, check the hallway, disappear in opposite directions.

This clip will be entered as evidence in a murder trial.

Within 6 months, three people will be dead.

One from a knife in an alley, one from carbon monoxide in a closed garage, one from a killer who should have stayed in prison.

In the next 40 minutes, you’re going to see how a domestic violence case became a triple tragedy.

How an affair between a prosecutor and his witness didn’t just destroy a trial, it destroyed everything.

March 18th, 2024.

12:52 a.m.

Chicago police respond to 911 call.

Meridian Apartments, Southside.

Woman found in alley between buildings.

Stabbed once, chest wound, massive blood loss.

Paramedics transport to Lakeside Medical Center.

She’s alive, barely.

Trauma team works for 34 minutes.

She codes on the table.

Time of death.

1:26 a.m.

Police identify her by hospital ID badge still clipped to her jacket.

Aloan Navaro, 32 years old.

Former trauma nurse.

Former because she’d been fired 3 months earlier.

The reason? Professional misconduct during a murder trial.

The same trial where the defendant was acquitted.

the same defendant who just put a hunting knife in her chest.

But to understand how Aloan Navaro ended up bleeding in that alley, we need to go back 11 months to when she was still a respected trauma nurse to when she met Assistant States attorney Dashiel Whitmore to when everything started falling apart.

April 2023, People versus Gerald Reigns, murder case.

The victim, Miranda Chun, 29 years old, graphic designer, found dead in her apartment October 2022.

Cause of death: blunt force trauma to the head combined with strangulation.

The suspect, her boyfriend Gerald Reigns, 34, construction supervisor.

They’d been fighting.

Neighbors heard screaming, crashing sounds, then silence.

Police found Miranda’s body 6 hours later.

Gerald claimed self-defense.

Said she attacked him with a lamp.

He pushed her.

She fell, hit her head.

The medical examiner said otherwise.

The injuries were too severe, too deliberate.

This was rage, not accident.

The prosecution’s case rested on one key element: pattern of abuse.

2 weeks before her death, Miranda had gone to the emergency room.

Lakeside Medical Center, 2:00 a.m.

October 4th, 2022.

Injuries: fractured cheekbone, bruising around throat consistent with strangulation attempt, defensive wounds on both forearms.

The nurse who treated her documented everything, photographed every bruise, noted Miranda’s statement.

My boyfriend got angry.

He’s never done this before.

It was my fault.

That documentation would prove Gerald had escalated from choking to killing.

That nurse was Aloan Navaro.

Assistant States attorney Dashiel Whitmore, 43 years old, was assigned the case.

14 years as a prosecutor.

Aggressive, meticulous, 87% conviction rate.

He specialized in domestic violence murders.

Grew up watching his own father brutalize his mother.

became a prosecutor to put men like his father in prison.

He was good at it.

Tall, graying at the temples, perpetually exhausted eyes.

Married 16 years to Marissa, high school English teacher.

Their marriage had been dead for half a decade.

They shared a house, separate bedrooms, barely spoke, stayed together out of inertia, not love.

Dashill threw himself into work because home was a tomb.

April 12th, 2023.

Dashiel needs to interview the ER nurse.

Her medical documentation is critical evidence.

He arranges to meet her at Lakeside Medical Center cafeteria.

300 p.

m.

He arrives early, gets coffee, waits.

She walks in at 2:58.

He recognizes her from the name Iloen Navaro, but seeing her is different.

petite, maybe 5 foot three, dark hair pulled back, kind eyes, professional demeanor.

She’s carrying Miranda’s chart in a folder, sits down across from him.

Mr.

Whitmore, I’m Aloan Navaro.

Thank you for meeting me.

I know you’re busy.

Miranda deserves justice.

Whatever I can do.

They spend an hour reviewing the chart.

Aloan’s documentation is extraordinary.

Detailed notes, precise measurements of bruises, photos from multiple angles, exact quotes from Miranda.

This is more than standard nursing documentation.

This is someone who cared.

You’re very thorough.

Dashel says, “Lives depend on it.

If I don’t document everything, abusers walk free.

” Something in how she says it.

Conviction.

Passion.

Dashiel finds himself not just listening to evidence, but listening to her.

The way she explains medical terminology, the compassion in her voice when she talks about Miranda.

The anger when she describes the injuries.

They schedule a second meeting.

Trial prep.

His office, Sterling County Courthouse, April 19th, 6:00 p.m.

evening because she works day shift at the hospital.

She arrives in scrubs and a cardigan.

They review her testimony.

He asks questions a defense attorney would ask.

She answers precisely, calmly.

She’s a natural witness, credible, sympathetic.

After 2 hours, they’re done.

You’ll be great on the stand.

Dashel says, “I’m nervous.

I’ve never testified before.

You’ll do fine.

Just tell the truth like you told me.

” She gathers her things, pauses at the door.

Can I ask you something? Why do you do this? Prosecute these cases because someone has to.

That’s not an answer.

Dashiel considers.

Rarely talks about this.

My father beat my mother for 20 years, put her in the hospital twice.

She never pressed charges, never left him.

I watched her die slowly, broken.

When I became a prosecutor, I swore I’d put men like him away so other women wouldn’t end up like my mother.

Aloan’s expression softens.

I’m sorry.

That’s horrible.

It’s why I care.

These cases aren’t just files to me.

She nods.

Understands.

They share a moment of silence.

Connection.

Then she leaves.

Dashiel sits alone in his office.

Realizes he noticed more than her testimony.

The way she listened.

The empathy in her eyes.

The fact that she asked why he does this work.

Marissa stopped asking him about his work years ago.

He pushes the thought away.

She’s a witness.

Professional boundaries, but the thought doesn’t stay away.

Third meeting, April 26th.

Dashiel suggests coffee shop instead of courthouse.

Easier to talk in a more relaxed setting.

They meet at Riverside Cafe downtown, ostensibly to review testimony again, but the conversation drifts.

They talk about Miranda’s case, then about the justice system, then about their lives.

Dashiel mentions his marriage is complicated.

Eloan mentions she moved from the Philippines at 19, been in Chicago 13 years, never quite found community here.

She sends money to her family in Manila every month.

Lives alone in a small studio in Pilsen.

Works 60our weeks.

Lonely, you have family back home.

Dashiel asks, “My mother, two younger sisters.

I miss them, but opportunities here are better.

I make more as a nurse than I could in Manila.

Send money for my sister’s education.

That’s generous.

It’s duty family obligation.

Still, you’re sacrificing a lot.

” Alone shrugs.

“What about you? You said your marriage is complicated.

” Dashiel hesitates.

shouldn’t talk about this, but something about her makes him want to.

We’re roommates, that’s all.

Share a house.

Haven’t shared a bedroom in 3 years.

Don’t talk beyond logistics.

I don’t know why we stay together.

Inertia, I guess.

That sounds lonely.

It is.

They sit in silence.

Understanding passing between them.

Two people isolated in different ways.

The conversation shifts back to the case.

But something has changed.

They’re not just prosecutor and witness anymore.

They leave the cafe at 8:00 p.

m.

3 hours.

Far longer than necessary for trial prep.

Fourth meeting, May 3rd.

Eloan’s apartment.

She called him.

I found some additional notes from Miranda’s ER visit.

Might be useful.

I have them at home if you want to review.

Dashel knows he should ask her to bring them to the courthouse, but he says, “I can come by.

” When works? Tonight after 7.

He arrives at 7:15.

Small studio apartment in Pilzen.

Neat minimal furniture.

Photos of Philippines on the wall.

She offers tea.

They sit at her small kitchen table.

Review the notes.

They’re helpful but not critical.

Both know this could have waited.

both know why he’s really here.

After the notes, they talk about Miranda, about the trial scheduled to start in June, about justice, violence, patterns of abuse.

The conversation deepens.

Hours pass.

It’s midnight.

Dashiel should leave.

Knows he should leave, but he doesn’t want to.

I should go, he finally says.

Okay.

Eloan says, but neither moves.

He stands.

She walks him to the door.

They’re close.

I contact.

She’s looking up at him.

He’s looking down at her.

Moment suspended.

Thank you for coming, she says softly.

Thank you for the notes.

He leaves.

Sits in his car outside her building for 10 minutes.

Hands on steering wheel.

Knows he’s crossing into dangerous territory.

Knows he should stop.

Knows he won’t.

Drives home to his empty marriage and his separate bedroom.

thinks about kind eyes and conversations that don’t feel like work.

Eloan stands in her apartment.

Door closed, feeling something she hasn’t felt in years.

Connection, possibility, danger.

Neither sleeps well that night.

May 2023.

The trial is delayed.

Defense files motion for continuence.

Witness unavailability.

Judge grants it.

New trial date July.

Dashiel is relieved, tells himself it’s because he needs more prep time.

Really, it’s because he’s not ready to stop meeting with Aloan.

Fifth meeting, May 10th.

Elo<unk>’s apartment again.

Dashiel brings dinner as thanks for all your help with the case.

Chinese takeout.

They eat at her small table.

Talk about everything except the trial, about childhood, about loss, about what they want from life.

The wine makes them honest.

Do you love your wife? Aloan asks.

Shouldn’t ask.

Asks anyway.

Dashiel considers lying.

Doesn’t.

No.

Haven’t for years.

We’re just existing in the same space.

I don’t even know who she is anymore.

Why stay? I ask myself that every day.

Fear of change.

Maybe easier to stay in something dead than face starting over.

That’s sad.

It is.

Pause.

What about you? Anyone in your life? No, I work too much and I never feel like I belong here.

Filipino community expects certain things.

American culture is different.

I’m caught between easier to be alone.

I understand that being alone even when you’re not alone.

I contact understanding the space between them feels charged.

Dashiel Eloan says quietly, voice uncertain.

He leans forward.

She doesn’t pull away.

He kisses her.

She kisses back.

Gentle at first, then desperate.

Months of loneliness and connection and wanting.

They move to her bed.

Clothes discarded.

Urgency and tenderness and need.

Afterwards, lying in darkness, reality crashes in.

This is wrong.

Eloan whispers.

You’re married.

I’m your witness.

I know we can’t do this.

I know.

Pause.

But my marriage is already over.

It’s been over.

I just haven’t made it official.

Dashiel, I’m going to leave her after the trial.

I can’t do it during active prosecution.

It’ll look unprofessional.

Create questions.

But once the verdict comes in, I’m filing for divorce.

I want to be with you.

Really? With you.

That’s what everyone says.

I mean it alone.

You make me feel alive again.

I haven’t felt this in years.

She wants to believe him.

Wants to believe this isn’t just an affair.

That it’s the beginning of something real.

Promise me, she says.

After the trial, you’ll tell her.

I promise.

After the trial, I’ll file papers.

We’ll get through the divorce together.

Then you and I can be together openly.

She believes him because the alternative is admitting she just made a terrible mistake.

They fall asleep tangled together.

Both ignoring the alarm bells.

Both choosing hope over wisdom.

The pattern begins.

Secret meetings.

Harborview in downtown during lunch breaks.

Dashel tells his office he’s meeting with witnesses.

Alone takes extended lunches.

They check in under false names.

Steal 2 hours.

passion and guilt in equal measure.

Evenings he tells Marissa he’s working late.

Goes to Eloan’s apartment instead.

They cook together, watch movies, talk for hours, make love, build something that feels real in the darkness of secrecy.

June arrives.

The trial date approaches.

Then defense files another motion.

Medical expert unavailability.

Judge grants continuence.

New date, August.

I can’t leave her during the trial, Dashiel explains to Alan.

It’ll create questions.

But the second the verdict is in I’m telling her.

I’ll file for divorce.

We’ll stop hiding.

You promise? I promise.

Just a little longer.

Alone nods.

Wants to believe.

Each delay makes it harder.

July August trial date delayed again.

Witness scheduling conflict pushed to September.

After the trial, Dashiel repeats, I swear, September trial, verdict.

By October, I’ll file papers.

November, by Christmas, we’ll be together openly.

Alone is quieter now.

Doubt creeping in, but she’s in too deep.

Loves him.

First time in America, she’s felt truly seen, truly known.

She ignores the doubt.

What neither knows Marissa is watching, she’s noticed changes.

Dashel showering immediately when he gets home.

New cologne.

Distracted.

Always on his phone, smiling at texts.

The signs are obvious.

August 15th.

Marissa hires private investigator.

Vincent Cross, retired police detective.

Professional surveillance.

She doesn’t want confirmation for confrontation.

She wants ammunition.

Vincent gets to work.

Follows Dashiel.

Photos of him entering Harbor View in with a woman exiting 2 hours later.

Photos outside apartment building in Pilzen.

Same woman.

Timestamps.

License plate of her car.

Vincent identifies her.

Aloan Navaro, 32, trauma nurse at Lakeside Medical.

Key witness in Dashil’s current case.

Vincent compiles everything into dossier.

Hands it to Marissa October 8th.

She sits in her car outside her house, looks through photos.

Her husband kissing another woman, entering hotels.

The timestamps go back months.

June, July, August, September, rage, betrayal, humiliation, then clarity.

She knows exactly what to do.

She’s not going to confront him.

She’s going to destroy him.

Meanwhile, September trial finally begins.

People versus Gerald Reigns, Sterling County Courthouse.

Dashiel’s opening statement is confident.

Evidence will show Gerald Reigns murdered Miranda Chun in deliberate act of violence.

Medical records prove pattern of escalating abuse.

He choked her two weeks before her death.

Then he killed her.

Defense attorney Theren Vos counters.

Evidence will show tragic accident.

Miranda attacked Gerald.

He defended himself.

She fell.

Terrible tragedy, but not murder.

Days 1 through 5.

Expert witnesses.

Medical examiner.

Crime scene analysts.

Building prosecution case brick by brick.

Dashiel and Aloan maintain distance at courthouse.

Professional but they steal moments.

Quick conversations in empty hallways.

Text messages.

Testimony tomorrow.

You ready? Nervous but prepared.

See you after November 13th.

Evening.

Trial recesses for the day.

Aloan’s testimony scheduled for tomorrow.

They meet at her apartment.

Final preparation tomorrow.

You testify.

You ready? I’m scared.

What if I mess up? You won’t.

You know this case inside out.

Just tell the truth like you told me.

They rehearse questions and answers.

Then stop pretending it’s about the trial.

They make love.

Desperate clinging.

Tomorrow changes everything.

After tomorrow, we’re almost done.

Dashel whispers.

Closing arguments.

Jury deliberation.

Verdict.

Then I’m free.

We’re free.

Promise.

I promise.

I love you alone.

First time he said it explicitly.

I love you, too.

They fall asleep holding each other.

Don’t notice the world about to explode.

November 14th, 7:30 a.

m.

They arrive at courthouse separately, professional distance.

But at 7:47 a.

m.

near empty supply closet hallway, they see each other.

Can’t help it.

Quick conversation turns to embrace.

Desperate kiss, thinking they’re alone, thinking no one sees.

8 seconds.

Security camera mounted high in corner captures everything.

Courthouse security guard reviews footage later that morning.

Routine sees prosecutor kissing woman in scrubs.

Recognizes Dashiel.

Shocked mentions it to colleague.

Word spreads through courthouse like fire.

Reaches investigator working for defense attorney Voss by noon.

Voss smiles when he hears.

Waits.

Timing is everything.

Meanwhile, October 8th flashback.

Marissa had already contacted Voss.

Met him at coffee shop, handed him folder with PI evidence.

My husband is having affair with your key witness.

She’d said, “Here’s proof.

” Vos examined photos.

Dashiel and Alan Harbor view in her apartment.

Timestamps spanning months.

Why give me this? Because he deserves to lose everything.

His case, his career, his reputation.

This could cause mistrial.

I know.

What do you want in return? Nothing.

Just make him pay.

Both of them.

Voss took the folder.

I’ll wait for the right moment.

Maximum impact.

That moment is now.

November 14th.

9:00 a.

m.

Court in session.

Aloan takes the stand.

Sworn in.

Dashill begins direct examination.

Nurse Navaro.

When Miranda Chun came to Lakeside Medical Emergency Room on October 4th, 2022, what injuries did you document? Fractured cheekbone, bruising around throat consistent with strangulation attempt, defensive wounds on both forearms indicating Vas stands.

Objection, your honor, before this witness proceeds, I have critical credibility issues to address.

New evidence came to light this morning.

Judge Martinez frowns.

Approach.

Sidebar.

Whispered argument.

Voss hands.

Judge folder.

PI photos.

Hotel receipts.

This morning’s courthouse surveillance footage.

8 seconds of prosecutor kissing his witness.

Dashel’s face drains white.

Elo sees from witness stand.

Knows something is catastrophically wrong.

Judge’s expression hardens.

Recess.

Jury dismissed.

Mr.

Whitmore.

Ms.

Navaro.

Both counsel my chambers.

Now the courtroom erupts in whispers.

Jury files out confused.

Eloan steps down from witness stand.

Hands shaking.

Follows them to chambers.

Door closes.

Judge Martinez sits behind desk.

Face like stone.

Voss lays evidence out.

Methodical.

Devastating.

Your honor, the prosecuting attorney and his star witness have been engaged in sexual relationship throughout this investigation and trial preparation.

This morning’s surveillance footage confirms it’s ongoing during active trial.

Judge studies photos.

Courthouse footage.

Alone and Dashel kissing 8 seconds.

Timestamp 7:47 a.

m.

today.

Silence heavy.

Terrible.

Mr.

Whitmore.

Is this accurate? Dashiel opens his mouth.

Nothing comes out.

Judge turns to Aloan.

Nurse Navaro, did you engage in intimate relationship with the prosecutor while serving as witness in this case? Aloan’s eyes fill with tears.

Humiliation.

Public exposure of something private.

Yes, one word.

Everything collapses.

Judge Helena Martinez stares at the evidence spread across her desk.

Private investigator photographs.

Dashiel and Aloan entering Harbor View in June 23rd, 1:14 p.

m.

exiting at 3:42 p.

m.

Another photo outside Alan’s apartment building, July 19th, 8:33 p.

m.

Dashill’s hand on her waist.

Credit card receipts from Harbor View in Dashill’s name.

Dates spanning 4 months.

and the courthouse surveillance footage from this morning.

Timestamp 7:47 a.

m.

8 seconds of them pressed against each other, kissing like the world might end.

The judge’s office is silent except for the hum of the heating system.

Dashiel stands frozen.

Aloan sits in the chair beside him, tears streaming down her face, not bothering to wipe them away.

Theren Voss, defense attorney, stands by the window, arms crossed, expression carefully neutral, but eyes gleaming with satisfaction.

Court reporter sits in the corner, hands poised over stenograph machine, documenting the end of everything.

Mr.

Whitmore, Judge Martinez says, voice cold and precise.

I’ll ask you one time, is this evidence accurate? Have you been engaged in a sexual relationship with your star witness throughout the investigation and preparation of this trial? Dashiel’s mouth opens, closes.

He’s prosecuted hundreds of cases, cross-examined thousands of witnesses, always has words.

Now nothing.

His brain is white noise and panic.

Mr.

Whitmore, answer the question.

Yes, barely audible.

Yes, your honor.

The judge turns to Aloan.

Nurse Navaro, same question.

Have you engaged in an intimate relationship with the prosecuting attorney while serving as a witness in this case? Aloan can’t look at her, stares at her hands.

Yes.

Judge Martinez leans back in her chair, removes her glasses, rubs the bridge of her nose.

23 years on the bench.

Seen corruption, misconduct, incompetence.

This is different.

This is two people who should have known better destroying a murder case because they couldn’t control themselves.

Vos steps forward.

Your honor, this creates insurmountable credibility issues.

Every aspect of nurse Navaro’s testimony is now compromised.

Was she coached during their intimate encounters? Did their personal relationship influence her medical documentation? Did she embellish evidence to help her lover secure a conviction? The defense has no way to cross-examine the pillow talk that shaped this testimony.

Dashiel finds his voice.

That’s absurd.

Her documentation was completed in October 2022.

Months before we ever before you what, Mr.

Whitmore? Vos cuts him off.

Before you violated every ethical standard in your profession, before you compromised the integrity of this entire prosecution, before you turned a murder trial into a romance, your honor, please.

Dashiel starts.

Enough.

Judge Martinez’s voice cracks like a whip.

Mr.

Whitmore, you are removed from this case effective immediately.

I am declaring a mistrial.

The word hangs in the air.

Mistrial.

The case is over.

Gerald Reigns walks.

Miranda Chen’s killer goes free.

Your honor, with all due respect, another prosecutor can take over.

Ms.

Navaro’s testimony is still still what? Still credible.

The judge’s voice drips with contempt.

You’ve poisoned this entire case.

The defense will argue correctly that everything about her testimony is tainted by your relationship.

How can a jury trust medical documentation from a witness who’s sleeping with the prosecutor? How can they believe testimony that was rehearsed in bed? You’ve given Mr.

Voss reasonable doubt on a silver platter.

The evidence speaks for itself.

The evidence is worthless now.

You contaminated it.

Judge Martinez stands.

This court is declaring a mistrial.

The state’s attorney’s office can decide whether to retry with a different prosecutor and different witnesses.

But this trial, this case as it currently exists, is over.

Mr.

Whitmore, get out of my courtroom.

I don’t want to see your face again.

Dashiel stands there, swaying slightly like he’s been punched.

Now, Mr.

Whitmore, he walks out.

Alone follows, eyes down, shoulders shaking.

The hallway outside Chambers is full of reporters.

Courthouse staff, curious spectators.

The moment they emerge, cameras flash.

Questions shouted.

Mr.

Whitmore, is it true you were having an affair with your witness? Nurse Navaro, how long has this been going on? Is the case dismissed? They push through the crowd.

Separate directions.

Last time they’ll see each other in this building.

November 14th, 11:23 a.

m.

Exactly 2 hours after the mistrial declaration.

Legal blog Chicago Justice Watch Posts breaking story.

Prosecutor’s affair with witness causes mistrial in murder case.

The article includes details from courthouse sources.

Names Dashel Whitmore names Aloan Navaro.

Describes the surveillance footage.

11:47 a.

m.

Major news outlets pick it up.

Chicago Tribune.

Sexual relationship between prosecutor nurse derails murder trial.

Sometimes ethics violation freeze accused killer.

WGN runs it as breaking news with courthouse footage of Dashiel and Alone fleeing through crowd.

12:15 p.

m.

Story goes national.

CNN Fox News MSNBC.

Chicago prosecutor’s affair with witness causes mistrial.

By 200 p.

m.

it’s trending on social media.

# Whitmore scandal.

People dig up photos of Dashielloan.

Her nursing license info becomes public.

Her address.

Filipino community forums explode with discussion.

November 14th 3:30 p.

m.

states attorney Kendrick Ross summons Dashiel to his office.

Ross is 61, silverhaired, built his career on integrity.

looks at Dashiel like he’s looking at something disgusting.

He stepped in.

Sit down.

Dashel sits.

Hasn’t changed out of his suit.

Hasn’t eaten.

Hasn’t processed.

You’re suspended.

Effective immediately.

Pending ethics investigation.

You understand what you’ve done.

Sir, I can explain.

There is no explanation that makes this acceptable.

You engaged in sexual relationship with a witness during active prosecution.

You compromised a murder case.

You handed a defense attorney grounds for mistrial.

Gerald Reigns is going to walk free because you couldn’t keep your dick in your pants.

Dashiel flinches.

The Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission is opening investigation.

Disparment proceedings will follow.

You’re finished.

Whitmore.

14 years as prosecutor gone.

Your career is over.

I made a mistake.

A mistake? Ross stands, leans over desk.

A mistake is filing the wrong motion.

This is deliberate, repeated ethical violations.

Every single time you slept with that nurse while she was your witness, you chose your desires over justice.

Over Miranda Chun, who’s dead and deserves better.

Over your oath as prosecutor.

Dashiel has nothing to say.

It’s all true.

Clean out your office.

Security will escort you.

Don’t come back.

November 14th, 4:17 p.

m.

While Dashiel is being escorted from the state’s attorney’s office, box of personal items in his arms, his wife, Marissa, is at her attorney’s office.

I want to file today, she tells her lawyer, Patricia Morgan.

You’re certain? Absolutely.

I want adultery cited explicitly.

I want Aloan Navaro named in the filing.

I want this public.

Patricia nods begins drafting dissolution of marriage petition.

Respondent: Dashel Whitmore.

Grounds: Adultery with Aloan Navaro, Filipino nurse, age 32.

The filing is brutal, detailed, designed for maximum humiliation.

4:53 p.

m.

Filing submitted to Cook County Circuit Court.

Public record within minutes.

5:12 p.

m.

Reporters find it.

Headlines update.

Cheating prosecutor’s wife files for divorce.

Names mistrial mistress.

Aloan’s full name.

Age, profession, ethnicity, all public.

Her life exposed, dissected, judged by millions.

November 15th, 8:00 a.

m.

Alone arrives at Lakeside Medical Center for her shift.

Hasn’t slept.

I swollen from crying.

Tries to enter through staff entrance.

Reporters waiting.

Nurse Navaro, did you know you were destroying a murder case? Did the prosecutor promise to leave his wife? How long were you sleeping with him? She pushes through, gets inside, heads to nursing station.

Colleagues stare, some sympathetic, most judgmental.

Whispers follow her.

8:47 a.

m.

Page to administration office.

Director of nursing Carol Stevens sits behind desk.

expression neutral, professional, aloan, sit down.

I can explain.

There’s nothing to explain.

Your involvement in this trial, your relationship with the prosecutor while serving as witness, it’s all over the news.

The hospital’s reputation is being questioned.

Patient trust is being questioned.

My personal life has nothing to do with my nursing.

Your personal life just caused a mistrial in a murder case.

You’re a witness who compromised your credibility through inappropriate relationship.

That reflects on your professional judgment.

Aloan’s hands shake.

What are you saying? You’re on administrative leave.

Effective immediately.

Pending review of professional conduct standards.

You’re suspending me.

Pending review.

The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation is opening investigation into your nursing license.

Until that’s resolved, you cannot work here.

Carol, please.

I need this job.

You should have thought of that before sleeping with the prosecutor.

Security will escort you out.

Collect your personal items from your locker.

Alone walks through the hospital in a days.

Security guard behind her.

Colleagues watching.

Humiliation thick as smoke.

Gets to locker.

Packs photos.

Spare scrubs.

Personal items.

hands in ID badge.

Outside, reporters still waiting.

Cameras in her face.

She runs to her car, locks doors, sits there shaking.

Her phone rings, unknown number.

She answers without thinking.

Eloan Navaro.

Woman’s voice.

Filipino accent.

Yes, this is Rosario Domingo from Filipino American Nurses Association.

We’ve seen the news.

Aloan’s heart sinks.

I can explain.

The association is disavowing any connection to you.

Your actions have brought shame to Filipino nurses everywhere.

Nakahia, you understand? You’ve dishonored us.

It wasn’t.

You slept with married man, destroyed murder trial, let killer go free.

Our community does not support this behavior.

Do not contact the association again.

Click line dead.

Eloan sits in her car in the hospital parking lot and sobs.

Lost her job.

Losing her license.

Her community turned against her.

Family won’t speak to her.

Everything is gone.

Her phone buzzes.

Text from her mother in Manila.

I raised you better than this.

Do not call me.

You are disgrace to our family.

November 16th through 20th.

The destruction accelerates.

Illinois ARDC formally charges Dashiel with professional misconduct violations engaging in relationship creating conflict of interest compromising case integrity violating attorney ethics rules disparment hearing scheduled for January.

Miranda Chen’s family holds press conference.

Her mother Lisa Chun reads statement through tears.

My daughter was murdered.

The man who killed her is going free because a prosecutor and a nurse cared more about their affair than justice.

I hope they never know peace.

I hope they live with what they’ve done every day.

Filipino community online forums savage alone.

She’s making all of us look bad.

Typical sleep your way to attention.

Naka shameful death threats in her social media messages.

You let a killer walk free for dick.

Hope you die.

screaming like Miranda did.

Aloan changes her phone number, deletes social media, hides in her apartment.

November 17th, Gerald Reigns is released from Cook County Jail.

Mistrial means charges will be refiled, but he’s free pending retrial.

Bail reduced to time served.

He walks out at 2 p.

m.

Defense attorney Theren Voss beside him.

Press conference on courthouse steps.

Voss speaks.

Mr.

Reigns is victim of egregious prosecutorial misconduct.

His constitutional rights were violated.

We expect charges to be dismissed entirely.

But if the state proceeds, we will vigorously defend his innocence.

Gerald stands there.

34 years old, construction worker build, cold eyes, smiles slightly for cameras.

Free man, killer walking free because two people couldn’t stay professional.

November 20th evening.

Alone alone in her apartment.

Hasn’t left in three days.

Groceries delivered.

Curtains drawn.

Phone off.

News vans still parked outside sometimes.

Knock at her door.

She freezes.

Looks through peep hole.

Dashill.

She opens door.

You can’t be here.

I needed to see you.

Make sure you’re okay.

Okay.

I lost my job.

Dashill.

My nursing license is under investigation.

My family downed me.

Death threats.

And you’re asking if I’m okay.

I’m sorry.

God alone.

I’m so sorry.

Your sorry doesn’t fix this.

Doesn’t give me back my career, my reputation, my life.

We can get through this together.

We still have each other.

Alone laughs.

Bitter broken sound.

Together.

There is no together.

There never was.

You lied to me.

I didn’t lie.

You said you’d leave your wife.

You said after the trial we’d be together openly.

You strung me along for 11 months.

I was going to leave her when you never planned to actually be with me.

You loved the secret, the affair, the hotel rooms.

You never intended to make this real.

Dashel stands there.

No defense.

And even if you meant it, you should have protected me.

The second we got involved, you should have recused yourself from the case.

told your boss, made sure I wasn’t exposed like this.

I thought we could keep it private.

You thought about yourself, your career, your case, your reputation.

You didn’t think about what would happen to me when this came out.

That’s not fair.

Fair.

Alone’s voice breaks.

You destroyed my life.

My nursing career, eight years gone.

My family, they won’t speak to me.

My community, I’m outcast.

And for what? for sneaking around, for being your secret.

I loved you.

You loved what I represented.

Escape from your dead marriage.

Someone who made you feel alive, but you never loved me enough to actually choose me openly.

Dashiel reaches for her.

She steps back.

Get out, Aloan.

Please get out.

I never want to see you again.

This is your fault.

All of it.

And I hate you for it.

He leaves.

Aloan locks the door, slides down to floor, cries until she can’t breathe.

Dashel sits in his car outside her building, knows she’s right, knows he destroyed her, knows sorry isn’t enough, drives home to empty house.

Marissa moved out, filed for divorce, took everything, sits in darkness, drinks, thinks about how one choice, one moment of weakness destroyed everything.

Two people, one affair, unlimited consequences.

And in his apartment across the city, Gerald Reigns pours himself whiskey, watches news coverage of the mistrial, and smiles.

Free man, thanks to other people’s mistakes.

December 2023, 6 weeks after the mistrial, Chicago is frozen.

Brutal winter settling in.

Aloan Navaro sits in a cramped waiting room on the west side filling out paperwork.

Application for home health aid position.

Non-licensed work.

Doesn’t require RN certification.

Pays $15 an hour.

She used to make $38 an hour as a trauma nurse.

Used to have respect, purpose, a career she’d built over eight years.

Now she’s applying to help elderly people bathe and take their medications.

The agency manager.

Tired woman in her 50s.

Barely glances at Aloan’s resume.

You’re a registered nurse.

My license is currently suspended.

Pending investigation.

The woman’s eyes sharpen.

Recognition.

Wait.

You’re the nurse from that trial.

The prosecutor thing.

Aloan’s stomach drops.

Yes.

Long pause.

The woman looks at her like she’s looking at something contaminated.

We’ll be in touch.

Alone knows they won’t call.

She tries six more agencies over the next week.

Same response.

Every time they recognize her name, the interview ends.

One manager says it directly.

We can’t hire you.

PR nightmare.

Sorry.

December 18th.

Alone savings account $2,847.

Rent is $1,200 monthly.

Hospital suspended her in mid- November.

Last paycheck covered two weeks.

It’s been 5 weeks since she worked.

Money disappearing fast.

She tries retail.

Submits applications to Target, Walgreens, grocery stores, anything.

Most don’t respond.

One calls her in for interview.

Goes well until background check.

Manager calls back.

Due to recent legal complications, we’re moving forward with other candidates.

legal complications like she’s a criminal.

She documented abuse, testified to save a murder case.

Yes, she had an affair.

Stupid, unprofessional, wrong, but she’s not a criminal.

Didn’t break the law, just broke ethics, broke trust, broke her own life.

December 29th, Eloan finally gets hired.

Home health aid.

Southside agency desperate for workers.

They know about the scandal but don’t care.

Pay is $15 an hour.

Irregular shifts, no benefits.

She takes it, has no choice.

First shift, January 2nd, 2024.

She helps an 81-year-old man with Parkinson’s bathe, dress, eat breakfast.

He’s kind, doesn’t recognize her.

The work is fine.

She’s a nurse, done this before, but it feels like falling.

From trauma nurse saving lives in the ER to helping someone brush their teeth.

The fall is dizzying.

She works 60 hours a week to make what she used to make in 40.

Comes home exhausted to her small apartment.

No friends call.

They’ve all distanced themselves.

Family silent, alone, completely alone.

Meanwhile, Dashiel is falling apart in different ways.

December, his disparment hearing.

Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission panel of three attorneys reviews evidence relationship with witness during active prosecution.

Compromised case integrity violated rule 8.

4 of professional conduct.

Dashiel’s attorney argues, “My client made personal mistake, but his legal work was sound.

The relationship didn’t affect the case’s merits.

” Panel disagrees.

Mr.

Whitmore’s relationship with Ms.

Navaro created appearance of impropriy that undermined public trust in legal system.

The mistrial was direct result of his misconduct.

This violation is severe and warrants disparment.

December 15th decision disparment effective immediately.

Dashel Whitmore is no longer licensed to practice law in Illinois.

14 years as prosecutor gone.

Every case he worked, every conviction he secured.

Tainted by this legacy destroyed, his divorce proceeds brutally.

Marissa’s attorney is merciless.

Since there are no minor children, it’s about assets.

House, savings, retirement accounts.

Marissa gets house.

Dashiel moved to small apartment in October.

Gets majority of savings.

Retirement split but she gets larger share.

Dashel signs everything.

doesn’t fight, knows he deserves it.

January 12th, 2024.

Divorce finalized.

Dissolution of marriage granted.

Marissa keeps his last name.

Been Marissa Whitmore for 16 years, but wants nothing to do with him.

She gives one interview to Chicago Tribune.

I thought exposing the affair would hurt his career.

I didn’t think.

She stops.

Doesn’t finish.

Guilt in her eyes.

She wanted him punished, not destroyed.

Wanted alo and punished, not ruined.

Got both.

And it tastes like ash.

Dashiel tries to find work.

Law firms won’t touch him.

Disbard.

Scandal tainted.

He applies for parallegal work, legal consulting, anything using his legal knowledge.

No one responds.

His name is Poison.

He ends up at insurance company claims adjuster entry level.

pays 42,000 a year.

He was making 95,000 as prosecutor.

He takes it.

Sits in cubicle processing auto accident claims.

Man who sent murderers to prison now filling out paperwork about fender benders.

The fall is complete.

January 28th, 2024.

9:30 p.

m.

Dashiel shows up at Aloan’s apartment.

Drunk.

Hasn’t showered in days.

Lost weight.

Eyes hollow.

She opens door, sees him, tries to close it.

He puts hand out.

Please just talk to me.

I told you to never come back.

I know, but I can’t do this alone.

We’re both destroyed.

We need each other.

Need each other.

You used me, Dashiel.

That’s not true.

I loved you.

I still love you.

You loved the affair, the escape.

You never loved me enough to protect me.

I made mistakes.

mistakes.

Aloan’s voice cracks.

You said you’d leave your wife.

You promised.

11 months of promises.

After the trial, I’ll file for divorce.

We’ll be together.

I believed you.

And you were lying the whole time.

I wasn’t lying.

I meant it.

But the trial kept getting delayed.

You could have recused yourself.

The second we got involved, you should have told your boss, stepped away from the case, protected me.

But you didn’t because you cared more about winning than about what would happen to me.

Dashiel has no defense.

It’s true.

He knew the risks.

Chose his case over her safety.

You destroyed me.

Eloan says, tears streaming.

I’m working as home health aid.

$15 an hour.

I was trauma nurse.

I saved lives.

had a career, respect, purpose.

Now I’m nothing.

My license is suspended.

My family disowned me.

Filipino community treats me like I’m dead.

I get death threats.

People spit at me on the street.

And it’s your fault.

It’s my fault, too.

I lost everything, too.

You chose this.

You’re the prosecutor.

You knew the rules.

You knew what would happen.

I didn’t.

I was just witness who fell in love with man who said he loved me back.

I did love you.

Then why didn’t you protect me? She’s screaming now.

Months of rage pouring out.

Why didn’t you put me first? Why didn’t you choose me over your case? If you loved me, really loved me, you would have.

Dashiel reaches for her.

She shoves him back.

Get out.

I never want to see you again.

You destroyed my life and I hate you for it.

Get out.

He stumbles backward.

Broken.

Leaves.

Eloan slams door.

Collapses.

Sobs until she vomits.

Everything is gone.

Career, family, love, hope, everything.

That’s the last time they speak.

February 2024.

The retrial.

People versus Gerald Reigns.

Second attempt.

State’s attorney’s office assigns new prosecutor.

Carmen Valdez.

Veteran.

careful, smart, but the case is fatally weakened.

Without Aloan’s testimony, defense would destroy her credibility, argue she fabricated evidence for her lover.

Prosecution relies on circumstantial evidence.

Medical examiner testimony, crime scene photos, neighbors who heard fighting, defense attorney Voss is vicious.

First trial was circus of prosecutorial misconduct.

Now they’re trying again with even less evidence.

Reasonable doubt is everywhere.

Jury deliberates 4 days.

February 22nd, 2024.

Verdict: Not guilty.

Gerald Reigns walks free permanently.

Double jeopardy prevents retrial.

He can never be tried for Miranda Chen’s murder again.

He walks out of Sterling County Courthouse at 3:47 p.

m.

Free man.

Smiling, Miranda Chen’s family is destroyed.

Her mother Lisa collapses in courtroom.

Has to be carried out by her son outside facing reporters.

She can barely speak.

My daughter is dead.

He killed her.

Everyone knows he killed her.

But he’s free because prosecutor and nurse cared more about their affair than justice for Miranda.

I hope I hope they never know peace.

The media coverage is brutal.

split between blaming the justice system and blaming Dashiel and Alan.

Comment sections fill with vitrial.

Nurse ruined the case.

Prosecutor thinking with his dick cost a woman justice.

They should both be charged.

Miranda deserves better.

Eloan sees the coverage.

Reads comments.

Each one a knife.

People blame her for Gerald walking free.

And they’re right.

If she’d stayed professional, kept boundaries, refused Dashiel’s advances, or ended it immediately, maybe Miranda would have justice.

Guilt drowns her.

February 18th, 2024.

For days before the verdict, 7:43 p.

m.

Alone finishing her shift, helping elderly woman with dinner.

Her phone rings.

Unknown number.

She usually doesn’t answer unknown numbers anymore.

Too many death threats, but she’s tired, not thinking clearly.

Hello, Eloan Navaro.

Male voice, unfamiliar.

Who is this? You cost me 2 years of my life.

Jail time.

Waiting for trial.

Because of your lies.

Her blood turns to ice.

She knows that voice from the trial.

From watching him on the stand.

Gerald Reigns.

You said I beat Miranda.

Tried to kill her.

sat on that stand and lied.

Made me look like monster.

I documented what I saw.

Jury said I’m innocent twice.

So you lied and you the prosecutor to make your lies more believable.

Coached your testimony in bed.

That’s not I know where you work, what neighborhoods you’re in, where you live now.

Different address than before, but not hard to find.

What you did to me two years of my life I don’t forget the threat is clear even though he hasn’t made specific threat Gerald I click line deadloan stands there phone in shaking hand terror he found her knows where she works knows she moved he’s watching she calls police immediately files report detective listens takes notes did he make specific threat he said he knows knows where I work and live.

Said he
doesn’t forget what I did to him.

But no specific threat of violence.

Isn’t that implied? Unfortunately, implications aren’t enough.

We need specific credible threat to arrest him.

We’ll document this.

Increase patrols in your area.

But without direct threat, we can’t do more.

He’s going to hurt me.

Do you have somewhere else you can stay? Friends, family? Family won’t speak to her.

Friends abandoned her.

But there’s Sarah, former coworker from Lakeside Medical.

Only one who stayed in contact.

Alone calls her.

Can I stay with you for a few days? Gerald Reigns called me.

Threatening.

Sarah hesitates.

Doesn’t want the drama, but hears fear in Aloan’s voice.

Yeah, come over.

Aloan packs bag, clothes, toiletries, essentials.

leaves her apartment in Pilzen.

Takes Red Line to Sarah’s place.

Meridian Apartments, Southside, different neighborhood hiding.

Calls Dashiel from the train.

First contact since she threw him out.

He answers on first ring.

Eloan Gerald Reigns called me.

He’s threatening me.

Said he knows where I work and live.

Did you call police? Yes.

They can’t do anything.

He didn’t make specific threat.

Dashiel, this is your fault if you hadn’t.

Don’t put this on me.

You’re the one who.

She hangs up.

Can’t do this.

Can’t fight with him.

Just needs to hide.

Stay safe.

Wait for this nightmare to end.

But nightmares don’t end just because you want them to.

February 23rd through 27th.

Eloan stays at Sarah’s apartment, works her shifts, comes back, hides, doesn’t go to her own apartment, changes route to work every day, looks over her shoulder constantly.

Gerald Reigns is watching, learning her patterns, waiting.

February 27th, night shift.

Alone finishes at 11:58 p.

m.

Exhausted, takes Red Line home to Sarah’s home, not her own.

Train is nearly empty.

She sits, eyes closed, just wanting this day to end.

12:31 a.

m.

She gets off at her stop.

Three blocks to Meridian Apartments.

Empty streets, cold February night, wind cutting through her coat.

She walks quickly, shoulders hunched, watching shadows.

Doesn’t notice the car following slowly, headlights off.

doesn’t notice Gerald Reigns exiting vehicle one block behind.

Doesn’t notice until it’s too late.

12:34 a.

m.

February 28th, 2024.

Alone cuts through the alley between two buildings.

Shortcut.

She’s done it three times this week.

Dark, narrow passage, dumpsters on both sides.

Security light burned out two weeks ago, but it saves 90 seconds of walking.

90 seconds matters when you’re exhausted.

When every step feels like dragging weights.

When all you want is to collapse into bed and stop thinking about how your life became this.

She’s halfway through when she hears footsteps behind her.

Fast closing distance.

She turns, sees him.

Gerald Reigns, 34 years old, construction worker build, wearing dark jacket, hands in pockets, face illuminated by distant street light, cold eyes, slight smile.

Aloan.

Terror hits her like ice water.

She runs stupid to run into the alley instead of back toward the street, but panic doesn’t think strategically.

She sprints deeper into darkness toward the other end toward Meridian Apartments toward safety that’s 40 ft away, but might as well be miles.

He’s faster, stronger.

Catches her 15 ft from the alley exit.

grabs her shoulder, spins her around, slams her against brick wall, air punches out of her lungs.

“Please,” she gasps.

“You ruined my life,” Gerald says.

Voicecom conversational like they’re discussing weather.

“2 years jail, waiting for trial, lost my job, my apartment, my reputation.

Everyone thought I was murderer because of you, Gerald.

I just documented You lied.

His hand goes to his pocket, pulls out knife, hunting knife, 8-in blade reflects what little light penetrates the alley.

You sat on that stand and lied.

Said I beat Miranda, tried to kill her, made me look like monster.

Aloan’s eyes lock on the knife.

Can’t breathe.

Can’t think.

Paralyzed.

I didn’t lie.

I documented her injuries.

That’s all.

I didn’t.

You documented what your boyfriend told you to document.

Coached you while you him.

Made up evidence together.

No, that’s not.

Jury said I was innocent.

Twice.

First time mistrial because of your affair.

Second time not guilty.

So your testimony lies.

All lies.

The injuries were real.

Maybe she fell.

Maybe she walked into a door.

But you made it sound like I did it.

You and that prosecutor, you framed me.

Aloan tries to move.

He presses her harder against wall.

Knife comes closer.

Tip touching her chest just below her sternum.

Through her coat, through her scrub top, she feels the pressure.

Sharp point.

One push and it goes in.

Gerald, please don’t do this.

Please.

I’m sorry if I Sorry.

He laughs.

Bitter sound.

Sorry.

doesn’t give me back 2 years.

Doesn’t give me back my life.

I know.

You’re right.

I’m sorry.

I’m so sorry.

She’s babbling now.

Words tumbling out.

Please.

I made mistakes.

The affair was wrong.

I shouldn’t have.

You shouldn’t have lied about me.

I didn’t lie.

I swear the documentation was accurate.

Miranda had those injuries.

I just reported.

You reported what would help your lover win his case.

His voice rises, anger breaking through the calm.

You slept with him and let him tell you what to say, and you destroyed me.

No.

The affair started later after I’d already documented.

I don’t believe you.

The knife presses harder.

Eloan feels it pierce fabric.

Feels the point against her skin now.

One more inch and she’s bleeding.

Please, Gerald.

Please.

I have family in the Philippines.

My mother, my sisters, please don’t.

Miranda had family, too.

Mother, brother.

They lost her.

And because of you and that prosecutor, I got blamed.

Two years of my life gone.

I’m sorry.

Not sorry enough.

He stabs fast.

Precise.

The blade goes in below her ribs, angled up between bones into her chest cavity.

Eight inches of steel disappearing into her body.

She feels it.

Blinding pain, shock.

Her mouth opens, but no sound comes.

He pulls the knife out.

Blood follows.

Dark spreading across her scrub top.

Alone stumbles.

Legs give out.

She falls.

Concrete cold against her knees.

Then her side.

Gasping.

Can’t breathe right.

Wet sound in her chest.

Punctured lung.

She knows the injury.

She’s seen it dozens of times in the ER.

Knows what it means.

Gerald stands over her.

Looks down.

No emotion on his face.

Jury said I was innocent.

So this this isn’t murder.

This is justice for what you did to me.

He wipes the blade on his jacket, slides it back into sheath, walks away, calm, unhurried, exits the alley onto the street, turns right, disappears.

Aloan lies in the alley, bleeding, cold, pain everywhere.

She tries to call for help, but her voice is gone.

Tries to reach for her phone in her pocket, but her arm won’t cooperate.

Blood pooling beneath her.

Warm at first, then cold, everything getting cold.

She thinks about her mother in Manila.

Hasn’t spoken to her in 3 months.

Last conversation was her mother screaming at her, calling her disgrace, hanging up.

Never got to say sorry.

Never got to hear forgiveness.

Dies knowing her mother thinks she’s shameful.

She thinks about Dashiel.

How she loved him.

How he promised to leave his wife to be with her to make everything okay.

How it was all lies.

How his selfishness led to this moment.

Bleeding in an alley.

She thinks about Miranda Chin, the woman whose injuries she documented.

The woman whose murder case she helped build.

The woman whose killer just put a knife in her chest.

Sorry, Miranda.

I tried.

I tried to get you justice.

I failed.

Failed you.

Failed myself.

Failed everything.

Her vision blurs.

Edges going dark.

She’s drowning.

Blood in her lungs.

Can’t breathe.

Can’t think.

Fading.

12:47 a.

m.

Robert Martinez, 55, resident of Meridian Apartments, takes trash to dumpster, hears sound, gasping, wet, struggling, breathing.

Walks toward it, sees her woman lying in alley.

Blood, so much blood.

Oh my god.

Oh Jesus.

He pulls out phone, dials 911.

There’s a woman stabbed.

Meridian Apartments alley behind building C.

She’s bleeding bad.

She’s I think she’s dying.

Dispatch, sir, stay on the line.

Ambulance is on the way.

Is she conscious? Robert kneels beside her.

Ma’am, can you hear me? Alohan’s eyes are half open, staring, unfocused.

I don’t know.

She’s not responding.

There’s so much blood.

Is she breathing? Barely sounds.

It sounds wrong like bubbling.

EMS is 2 minutes out.

Stay with her.

Robert takes off his jacket, presses it against her chest wound.

Blood soaks through immediately.

Come on.

Stay with me.

Help is coming.

Just hold on.

Eloan doesn’t respond.

Can’t respond.

Fading.

The world is sounds without meaning.

Pressure on her chest.

voice saying words she can’t process.

Cold.

So cold.

12:52 a.

m.

Ambulance arrives.

Paramedics rush into alley.

Two EMTs, Jennifer Hayes and Marcus Cole.

They see Alan, see the blood move fast.

Jennifer, female, early 30s, single stab wound to chest, breathing shallow, rapid weak pulse.

She cuts away Eloan’s coat and scrub top.

Blood everywhere.

Entry wound below sternum.

Angled up.

Textbook tension.

Pneumathorax.

Collapsed lung.

We need to move now.

Marcus, get the gurnie.

They work efficiently for line.

Oxygen mask.

Pressure bandage.

Load her onto Gurnie.

Rush to ambulance.

Marcus drives.

Jennifer works in back.

Alone’s vitals crashing.

Blood pressure dropping.

Pulse.

Threddy.

Stay with me.

Jennifer says, “Checking the wound, checking vitals, radioing ahead to hospital.

” Lakeside Medical incoming trauma.

Female approximately 32.

Single stab wound to chest.

Likely punctured lung.

BP80 over 40 and dropping.

Pulse 130.

ETA 4 minutes.

Lakeside Medical where Eloan used to work.

Where her former colleagues will try to save her.

12:56 a.

m.

Ambulance screams through empty streets.

Lights, sirens.

Chicago at night, blurring past.

10:02 a.

m.

They arrive at Lakeside Medical Emergency Entrance.

Trauma team waiting.

Dr.

Marcus Chin leads.

He worked with Aloan for 6 years.

Recognizes her the second they will her in.

Oh god, that’s Aloan.

His voice cracks.

Then training takes over.

Trauma Bay 2.

Move.

They transfer her to trauma bay.

Team swarms.

Cutting away remaining clothes.

Assessment.

Massive internal bleeding.

Collapsed right lung.

Hemoththorax.

Blood filling chest cavity.

Aloan.

Dr.

Chun leans over her.

Alohan.

Can you hear me? Stay with me.

Her eyes flutter, barely conscious, drowning in her own blood.

Chest tube now.

Nurse Sarah Pac.

Aloan’s friend, the one she’d been staying with, prepares the tray.

Hands shaking, tears streaming.

But she does it.

Professional.

Dr.

Chun makes incision between ribs.

Inserts tube.

Blood gushes out.

Dark.

Too much.

Pint.

Two pints.

Chest cavity full of it.

Transfusion.

Typo negative.

Give me four units.

They work desperately.

Transfusions.

Medications.

Chest compressions when her heart starts failing.

Defibrillator when she flatlines.

Clear.

Shock.

Nothing.

Again.

Shock.

Nothing.

Dr.

Chun does compressions.

Come on.

Alone.

Come on.

Don’t do this.

Sarah Pac crying openly now while hanging blood bags.

Other nurses silent.

Grim.

They all know her.

Worked with her.

Some judged her for the scandal.

Some defended her.

Doesn’t matter now.

She’s dying in front of them.

1:23 a.

m.

Third flatline.

Dr.

Chun shocks her again.

Nothing.

Compressions.

2 minutes.

Nothing.

He looks at the team, sees it in their faces.

She’s gone.

Too much blood loss.

Too much damage.

1:26 a.

m.

Dr.

Marcus Chun stops compressions, steps back.

Time of death.

1:26 a.

m.

Silence.

Heavy.

Terrible.

Sarah Pac covers her face, sobbing.

She didn’t deserve this.

She made mistakes, but she didn’t deserve this.

Dr.

Chun pulls off his gloves.

Looks at Eloan’s body on the table.

Remembers her laughing in the breakroom.

Remembers her meticulous documentation.

Remembers the scandal, the judgment, remembers she was human, flawed, human.

No, he says quietly.

She didn’t.

They clean her up, cover her with sheet, procedure, protocol, but everyone in that trauma bay is crying.

1:45 a.

m.

Police arrive.

Detectives Raymond Torres and Lisa Vaughn, homicide division.

They interview Robert Martinez first.

He tells them everything.

Woman in alley stabbed, bleeding.

He called 911.

Did you see anyone else? No, just her.

They checked the alley.

Bloodpool where she fell.

Drag marks where Robert knelt beside her.

No weapon, no witnesses, but there are cameras on surrounding buildings.

2:30 a.

m.

Detective Torres pulls surveillance footage.

Building across from alley has camera facing street.

Rewinds to 12:30 a.

m.

Watches.

12:31 a.

m.

on footage.

Woman walking down street.

Small dark hair wearing winter coat turns into Ally.

12:32 a.

m.

Man walking same direction taller heavier build dark jacket follows her into alley.

12:38 a.

m.

Same man exits alley alone.

Calm walks to car parked on street gets in drives away.

Torres pauses zooms.

Gets license plate runs it.

Registered owner Gerald Reigns, 34.

Address in Rogers Park.

Torres looks at Vaughn.

It’s the guy from the mistrial, the domestic violence case.

They pull Gerald’s file.

Acquitted two weeks ago for Miranda Chen’s murder.

Trial collapsed because prosecutor had affair with witness.

The witness, Eloan Navaro, trauma nurse.

He killed the witness.

Van says he killed the witness.

Torres confirms 3:00 a.

m.

They obtain warrant.

Armed entry team Gerald’s apartment in Rogers Park.

They surround building.

SWAT team breaches door at 3:47 a.

m.

Gerald is in bed asleep.

Peaceful police get on the ground.

He complies calm.

Like he expected this.

They cuff him.

Search apartment in his car trunk.

Hunting knife, blood on the blade, field test, human blood in his bedroom, clothes from tonight, dark jacket, spatter on sleeve, blood.

They arrest him.

Reed Miranda writes, “Gerald Reigns, you’re under arrest for the murder of Aloan Navaro.

” He smiles.

Actually smiles.

Self-defense.

She stalked me.

Threatened me.

I defended myself.

Save it for your lawyer.

They take him to Cook County Jail.

Book him.

Murder one.

Premeditated.

No bail.

6:14 a.

m.

Detectives notify next of kin.

Alone has no family in Chicago.

Her emergency contact Sarah Pac.

They tell her officially though she already knows.

They try to contact family in Philippines.

Aloan’s mother, Rosa Navaro.

International call.

Woman answers.

Hello, Mrs.

Navaro.

Rosa Navaro.

Yes, this is Detective Lisa Vaughn, Chicago Police Department.

I’m calling about your daughter, Eloan.

Long pause.

I don’t have daughter.

Not anymore.

Ma’am, I need to inform you that Aloan was murdered last night.

She was stabbed.

I’m very sorry for your loss.

Sound on the other end.

Gasp.

Crying.

No.

No.

This isn’t No.

I’m very sorry, ma’am.

I stopped talking to her after the scandal.

I was ashamed.

I told her.

I told her she was disgrace.

And now, now she’s The woman breaks down completely, wailing, grief, and guilt and horror.

Detective Vaughn waits, gives her time, then we’ll need someone to identify the body.

Are you able to travel to Chicago? I I can’t afford.

We can make arrangements.

I’m very sorry for your loss.

6:47 a.

m.

Detective Torres calls Assistant States Attorney Office, asks for contact information for Dashel Whitmore, gets his number, calls.

Dashel answers on Fifth Ring.

Groggy, hung over.

Hello, Mr.

Whitmore.

This is Detective Raymond Torres, Chicago PD.

I need to inform you that Eloa Navaro was murdered early this morning.

Silence.

Long silence.

Mr.

Whitmore.

What? Voice cracking.

What did you say? Eloa Navaro was killed around 12:35 a.

m.

Stabbed.

We’ve arrested Gerald Reigns.

Sound on the other end.

Crash.

Phone dropping then sobbing.

Broken.

Agonized sobbing.

Torres waits.

Dashel picks up phone.

This is my fault.

Oh god.

This is my fault, sir.

I killed her.

I didn’t I didn’t stab her, but I killed her.

The affair, the mistrial.

It’s because of me.

Gerald walked free because of me.

And now now she’s He can’t finish.

Just cries.

Torres.

Sir, are you in danger of harming yourself? I don’t know.

I don’t I can’t.

Mr.

Whitmore, I need you to stay on the line.

I’m sending officers to your location for a wellness check.

Torres signals to Vaughn.

She radios for patrol units, but Dashiel hangs up.

Phone dead.

7 a.

m.

Officers arrive at Dashiel’s apartment.

Knock.

No answer.

Knock harder.

Manager opens door.

Dashiel is on couch.

Bottle of whiskey, sobbing, but alive for now.

Sir, we need you to come with us.

Make sure you’re safe.

He doesn’t resist.

Goes with them.

Psychiatric evaluation.

They hold him 24 hours, then release.

He’s not actively suicidal, just destroyed.

February 28th through March.

News coverage explodes again.

Nurse from mistrial scandal murdered by acquitted defendant.

Gerald Reigns kills witness who testified against him.

Affair that caused mistrial ends in murder.

The story is national again.

Everyone who judged Alan for the affair now has to face that she’s dead.

Murdered by man who should have been in prison but wasn’t because the affair destroyed the case.

Public opinion fractures.

Some blame her.

Should have stayed professional.

Others she didn’t deserve to die.

Miranda Chen’s family.

Now two women are dead because of him and he walked free once.

Our justice system failed twice.

March 15th.

Eloan’s body is flown to Manila.

Her mother, Rosa, arranges funeral, small, private, family only.

Rosa weeps through entire service.

I didn’t speak to her for 3 months.

She tells her sister.

She called me, texted.

I ignored her.

I was ashamed.

And now she’s gone.

Never told her I forgave her.

Never told her I still loved her.

She died thinking I hated her.

The guilt will destroy Rosa slowly over the next years.

Depression, isolation, wondering if her daughter’s last thoughts included her mother’s rejection.

Aloan is buried in Manila Cemetery.

Small headstone.

Aloan Navaro.

RN beloved daughter 1992 to 2024.

Her truth cost her everything.

April 2024.

People versus Gerald Reigns.

Third time in two years he’s on trial for murder.

First time for Miranda Chun.

Mistrial due to affair.

Second time for Miranda Chun.

Acquitted.

Now murder of Aloan Navaro.

This time the evidence is overwhelming.

Surveillance footage showing Gerald following Aloan into alley.

Footage showing him leaving alone.

Calm.

6 minutes later.

His car on camera.

License plate clear.

Hunting knife found in his trunk.

Blood on blade.

DNA match to Alan.

Blood spatter on his jacket.

DNA match.

Security guard testimony placing Gerald near Meridian Apartments at time of murder.

Robert Martinez testimony finding Iloan bleeding.

Medical examiner testimony on cause of death.

Single stab wound.

8-in blade between ribs into chest cavity.

Punctured right lung.

Massive internal bleeding.

Gerald’s defense attorney still the Voss argues self-defense.

My client was victim of false accusations.

Alone Navaro falsely testified against him.

Cost him two years of his life.

When he encountered her that night, she threatened him.

He defended himself.

Prosecution led by senior states attorney Carmen Valdez destroys this.

Surveillance shows Gerald following Ms.

Navaro pursuing her.

She was walking home from work.

He stalked her, cornered her in alley, stabbed her, then left her to bleed to death.

This wasn’t self-defense.

This was premeditated murder.

Trial lasts 3 weeks.

Media circus.

Every detail dissected.

The affair resurfaces.

Dashel’s name dragged through news again.

Eloan’s mistakes replayed, but this time she’s the victim.

can’t defend herself.

Dead.

April 18th.

Gerald testifies.

Takes the stand in his own defense.

Big mistake.

Voss questions him gently.

Mr.

Reigns, what happened the night of February 28th.

Gerald sits straight, confident.

I was driving home.

Saw Eloan Navaro walking.

I recognized her from the trial, from the lies she told.

I wanted to talk to her.

Ask her why she did it.

What happened when you approached her? She ran.

I followed because I wanted answers.

Caught up to her in the alley.

Asked her why she lied about me.

She got aggressive.

Started screaming.

Threatened me.

Said she’d finish what she started.

Get me locked up for good.

What did you do? I had knife for protection.

Construction sites.

Dangerous neighborhoods.

I carry it.

She came at me.

I defended myself.

I didn’t mean to kill her.

Just stop her.

Carmen Valdez cross-examines.

Destroys him.

Mr.

Reigns, you said you wanted to talk to her, but you followed her into dark alley at 12:30 in the morning.

Correct.

I wanted answers.

You called her 4 days earlier, February 18th.

Unknown number.

Told her you knew where she worked and lived.

Correct.

Gerald hesitates.

I might have.

You might have.

Detective Torres testified he pulled your phone records.

Burner phone purchased February 10th.

Called Ms.

Navaro February 18th.

You told her, quote, “I know where you work.

What you did to me, I don’t forget.

Did you say that? She destroyed my life.

” Answer the question.

Did you say that? Yes.

So, you threatened her.

Then 10 days later you followed her, stalked her, cornered her in alley and stabbed her.

She came at me.

Where was her weapon? What if she attacked you? Where was her weapon? Did she have knife, gun, any weapon at all? She didn’t need Mr.

Reigns.

She was 5’3, 110 lb.

You’re 6 ft, 210 lb.

You’re claiming this small woman, unarmed, attacked you and you needed to stab her in self-defense.

She was threatening with what? Words.

Carmen steps closer.

You murdered Miranda Chen.

Got away with it because of prosecutorial misconduct.

Then you murdered the witness who testified against you.

That’s what happened, isn’t it? No.

I was acquitted for Miranda.

Jury said jury couldn’t convict because the trial was tainted.

But you did kill her, didn’t you? Just like you killed Eloan.

Objection.

Voss jumps up.

She’s testifying.

Withdrawn.

No further questions.

Gerald sits there.

Face red.

Exposed.

May 2nd, 2024.

Closing arguments.

Defense.

Gerald Reigns has been through hell.

False accusations.

Two trials, two years of his life lost when he encountered woman who lied about him, who destroyed his life with her affair and false testimony.

Emotions ran high.

Tragic accident, not murder, prosecution.

This was coldblooded murder.

Gerald Reigns killed Miranda Chin.

Trial ended in mistrial.

He killed Eloan Navaro because she testified against him.

He stalked her, threatened her, hunted her, stabbed her, left her bleeding in alley.

This is premeditated murder.

Hold him accountable.

Jury deliberates 8 hours.

May 3rd, 2024 for 15 p.

m.

Verdict.

Four person stands.

In the case of People versus Gerald Reigns, count one, murder in the first degree.

How do you find? We find the defendant guilty.

Gerald’s face goes white.

Reality hitting.

He’s convicted.

Life in prison.

Count two, armed violence.

How do you find? Guilty.

Judge Martinez.

Mr.

Reigns, you’re remanded to custody.

Pending sentencing.

Sentencing hearing scheduled June 1st.

Gerald is led away in handcuffs.

This time, no walking out free.

This time, prison.

June 1st, 2024.

Sentencing.

Victim impact statements.

First, Sarah Pac, Aloan’s friend, speaks.

Aloan was kind, dedicated nurse.

She made mistakes.

The affair was wrong, but she didn’t deserve to die for it.

Gerald Reigns murdered her because she told the truth about Miranda Chen.

He took her life, destroyed her family.

She died thinking her mother hated her.

Died alone in alley, bleeding, scared.

She deserves justice.

Miranda Chen’s mother, Lisa, speaks.

Gerald killed my daughter, then killed the woman who tried to get justice for her.

Two women dead because of him.

Because of his violence, because our system failed.

I hope he never sees freedom again.

Rosa Navaro, Aloan’s mother, speaks via video from Manila.

My daughter called me after scandal.

I didn’t answer.

I was ashamed.

Told her she disgraced family.

Last thing I said to her was, “She’s not my daughter.

She died believing I hated her.

I didn’t hate her.

I loved her.

I was angry, but I loved her, and I never got to tell her.

” Gerald Reigns took that from me.

Took my daughter, took any chance at reconciliation.

I will never forgive him.

Judge Martinez addresses Gerald.

Mr.

Reigns.

You were acquitted of murdering Miranda Chun due to prosecutorial misconduct, but evidence suggested you killed her.

Then you murdered Eloan Navaro, stalked her, hunted her, stabbed her.

You claim self-defense.

Jury rejected that.

You’re convicted of first-degree murder with aggravating factors.

I’m sentencing you to life in prison without possibility of parole.

Gerald shows no emotion.

Blank stare.

Guards take him away.

Stateville Correctional Center.

Maximum security life.

No parole.

He’ll die in prison.

But Gerald doesn’t care.

In prison, he becomes something else.

Tells his version.

Inmate audiences.

I was innocent.

Framed by prosecutor and his She lied.

I defended myself.

Got convicted anyway.

Some inmates believe him.

Make him symbol.

wrongly accused man who fought back.

He thrives, respected, protected, life sentenced but comfortable while Aloan is dead.

Dashiel is destroyed and Gerald tells his lies.

May 14th, 2024, 10 days after Gerald’s conviction, one month before his sentencing.

Dashel Whitmore, 43 years old, former prosecutor, disbarred, divorced, lives in small apartment in Bridgeport, works as insurance claims adjuster, drinks every night, hasn’t spoken to anyone in weeks.

He thinks about Alan constantly.

Her smile, her laugh, the way she listened, the affair, the lies he told, promises he broke, the mistrial, Gerald walking free, Aloan’s murder, chain of causation, all leading back to him.

May 14th, 700 p.

m.

Dashel sits in his car in apartment building, parking garage, engine running, garage door closed, windows rolled up.

He wrote a note, left it on passenger seat.

Envelope addressed to no one, just words on paper.

I killed her, not with knife, but with my selfishness, my weakness.

I promised to leave my wife.

Promised we’d be together.

Like strung her along 11 months.

When we were exposed, I didn’t protect her.

Should have recused myself when we got involved.

Should have told my boss.

should have put her safety first.

Didn’t chose my case over her.

Chose my career over her.

Caused mistrial.

Gerald walked free.

Gerald killed her.

Chain starts with me.

I destroyed everything.

She worked for everything she was.

Her career, her family, her life.

I’m sorry.

I love you alone.

I’m so sorry.

D.

Carbon monoxide fills the small space.

Colorless, odorless, deadly.

Dashiel closes his eyes, thinks about Alan, apologizes silently, over and over.

Sorry, sorry, sorry.

He loses consciousness at 7:34 p.

m.

Heart stops at 7:51 p.

m.

Neighbor finds him next morning.

Sees car running in closed garage.

Calls police.

They find his body slumped in driver’s seat.

Note on passenger seat.

Medical examiner rules it suicide.

Carbon monoxide poisoning.

News reports.

Disbard prosecutor in mistrial scandal dies by suicide.

Small article.

Page six.

Most people don’t care.

He destroyed a murder case.

Got himself disbarred.

Got a woman killed.

Some comments say he deserved it.

Others at least he felt remorse.

His ex-wife, Marissa, responds to reporters.

I wanted him to lose his career, not his life, not hers.

I gave that defense attorney the evidence to hurt Dashiel.

I didn’t think I didn’t imagine it would lead to this.

Two people dead.

I live with that.

Dashiel is buried at small cemetery outside Chicago.

Cook County Memorial Gardens.

Minimal funeral.

Seven people attend.

former colleagues.

Not Marissa, not his family, just people who felt obligated.

No headstone.

Family couldn’t afford one.

Didn’t care enough to pay.

Just small ground marker.

Flat, simple.

Dashel Whitmore 1981 to 2024.

That’s all.

No beloved anything.

No epitap.

Just name and dates.

Three people dead now.

Miranda Chin, Aloan Navaro, Dashiel Witmore, Gerald Reigns caused two directly, one indirectly, and he’s alive in prison comfortable telling his version.

June 2024, states attorney’s office implements new policies named after the victims.

Whitmore Navaro protocols required immediate recusal for any personal relationship with witnesses, victims, or defendants.

Anonymous ethics reporting system, stricter oversight, mandatory training on boundaries and professional conduct.

Too late for Alan.

Too late for Dashiel, but maybe prevents future tragedies.

December 2024.

True crime podcast.

Chicago Justice Undone covers the case.

Episode affair that killed three.

Interviews throughout.

Marissa Whitmore.

I was angry.

humiliated.

I wanted revenge.

Gave defense attorney evidence of the affair.

Thought Dashiel would lose his career, his reputation.

Thought the mistress would lose hers, too.

Didn’t think about murder trial collapsing.

Didn’t think about Gerald walking free.

Didn’t think he’d kill her.

Didn’t think Dashiel would kill himself.

I wanted them hurt.

Got them killed.

I live with that every single day.

Detective Raymond Torres.

Gerald Reigns killed Miranda Chun.

We all know it.

But mistrial freed him.

He had opportunity to kill again.

Took it.

Murdered Eloan Navaro.

If original trial had proceeded without misconduct, he’d be in prison for Miranda.

Aloan would be alive.

Dashiel would be alive.

Affair destroyed everything.

Dr.

Marcus Chun, Lakeside Medical.

Aloan was excellent nurse, dedicated, compassionate, made terrible mistake with the affair but didn’t deserve death.

Worked on her in ER, couldn’t save her.

Still haunts me.

Lisa Chun, Miranda’s mother.

Two women dead.

My daughter, the nurse who tried to help her.

One man’s violence.

One affairs consequences.

Justice failed twice.

First, when mistrial freed killer.

Second, when that killer struck again, Gerald Reigns should have been in prison.

My daughter would still be dead, but Eloan would be alive.

Dashiel would be alive.

Instead, they’re all gone.

And Gerald sits in prison telling his lies.

The podcast concludes, “Three lives ended.

One affair, one domestic violence case, one violent man given second chance through misconduct.

He used it to kill again.

The moral isn’t clean.

Justice failed.

Love failed.

Everything failed.

And only the guilty survived.

February 2025.

One year after Eloan’s murder, Rosa Navaro visits her daughter’s grave in Manila.

Brings flowers.

Sits beside Headstone.

Speaks to Stone.

I’m sorry, Anic.

I stopped talking to you.

Said terrible things.

You died thinking I hated you.

I didn’t.

I was angry.

ashamed.

But I loved you.

Always loved you.

And I never got to say it.

Never got to forgive you.

Never got to tell you it was okay.

I’m sorry.

I’m so so sorry.

She weeps.

Guilt and grief and loss.

Alone is silent forever.

Stateville Correctional Center.

Gerald Reigns, 35, serves life without parole.

comfortable, respected by some inmates.

Tells his story repeatedly.

Nurse lied.

Prosecutor helped her.

I fought back.

System failed me.

Some believe him.

Make him example.

Wrongly accused man.

He’ll die in prison eventually.

Old age, disease, violence.

But he doesn’t care.

He survived.

Others didn’t.

That’s enough for him.

Three graves, three lives destroyed.

Miranda Chun, murdered by boyfriend.

Justice delayed, denied, then delivered too late.

Eloan Navaro, murdered by acquitted killer, paid for affair with her life.

Dashel Whitmore, suicide from guilt, paid for affair with his life.

And the lesson, there isn’t one simple lesson.

This isn’t morality tale with clean conclusion.

This is tragedy.

Messy, complicated human tragedy.

Aloan made mistakes.

Fair was wrong.

Unprofessional.

Unethical, but she didn’t deserve death.

Dashel made mistakes.

Like manipulated.

Chose his career over protecting her, but he didn’t deserve death either.

Gerald was violent killer.

Murdered two women.

He deserves life in prison.

But he’s the only one still alive.

Justice failed.

Love failed.

Ethics failed.

Everything failed and three people are dead.

The affair didn’t kill them directly, but it started chain of events.

Mistrial, quiddle, freedom, murder, guilt, suicide, all connected, all traceable back to 8 seconds in courthouse hallway, security camera footage, two people kissing, thinking they were alone, thinking they were safe.

They weren’t, and now they’re gone forever.