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    Home » Missouri’s Most Disturbing Criminal Case of 2026 Is Finally Going to Trial
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    Missouri’s Most Disturbing Criminal Case of 2026 Is Finally Going to Trial

    Sierra FosterBy Sierra FosterApril 17, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    On the evening of December 27, 2011, Betsy Faria was stabbed more than fifty-five times at a home on Sumac Drive in Troy, Missouri, a small Lincoln County town an hour northwest of St. Louis. She had been receiving chemotherapy for her terminal breast cancer all day. There was a kitchen knife with a serrated edge in her neck. After calling 911 at 9:40 p.m., her husband Russ was imprisoned for almost four years for her murder before his conviction was completely overturned in a second trial. Pamela Marie Hupp, the woman who allegedly drove Betsy home that night, received $150,000 in life insurance from her death, and used false testimony to help put Russ in jail, is already serving a life sentence for a different murder. For five years, Missouri has been attempting to convict her of killing Betsy. The trial was delayed once more in April 2026.

    Through six Dateline NBC episodes, a podcast that topped the Apple charts for weeks, and a scripted NBC miniseries in 2022 starring Renée Zellweger in a fatsuit as Hupp, the case’s backstory has been told in great detail. The general outlines are familiar by now. The quiet accumulation of delays, venue changes, judicial substitutions, and legal maneuvers that have turned what should be a simple capital murder prosecution into a protracted multi-year ordeal with no trial date in sight is less often discussed.

    The St. Charles County, Missouri trial date of August 3, 2026, which was already the result of years of back and forth, has been canceled. When defense lawyers revealed that Y-STR testing of objects from the crime scene, including the handle of the murder weapon, had revealed the presence of male DNA that does not match Russ Faria, a hearing before Judge Christopher McDonough in late March became tumultuous. McDonough recommended that the trial be postponed until 2028 and chastised the prosecutor’s office for delaying the defense’s access to DNA evidence. Then, McDonough withdrew from the case completely and vacated the August date after prosecutor Mike Wood asked for a new judge. In April 2026, Joseph Rathert was appointed as a new judge by the Missouri Supreme Court. A trial in 2026 is currently, at best, uncertain.

    Pam Hupp / Betsy Faria Case — Key Information
    DefendantPamela Marie Hupp (b. Oct. 10, 1958) — currently incarcerated at Chillicothe Correctional Center, Missouri
    Current ConvictionLife without parole — murder of Louis Gumpenberger (shot Aug. 16, 2016, in O’Fallon, Missouri; Alford plea Aug. 2019)
    New ChargeFirst-degree murder of Betsy Faria (stabbed 55+ times, Troy, Missouri, Dec. 27, 2011)
    Charge FiledJuly 12, 2021 (Lincoln County, Missouri); refiled March 2024 (St. Charles County)
    Wrongful ConvictionRuss Faria (Betsy’s husband) convicted 2013; exonerated Nov. 2015; settled civil lawsuit for $2.05M (2020)
    Motive (alleged)Financial gain — Hupp was named sole beneficiary of Betsy’s $150,000 life insurance policy days before murder
    March 2026 DNA DevelopmentY-STR testing of murder weapon handle found male DNA — does NOT match Russ Faria
    Original Trial DateAugust 3, 2026 — St. Charles, Missouri (vacated April 2026)
    April 2026 DevelopmentJudge Christopher McDonough removed himself; Missouri Supreme Court assigned Judge Joseph Rathert
    Trial Outlook2026 trial now uncertain; possible delay until 2028
    Penalty SoughtDeath penalty (prosecutor Mike Wood filed intent Feb. 2024; cited “depravity of mind”)
    Media Coverage6 Dateline NBC episodes; NBC scripted series “The Thing About Pam” (2022) starring Renée Zellweger
    Missouri's Most Disturbing Criminal Case of 2026 Is Finally Going to Trial
    Missouri’s Most Disturbing Criminal Case of 2026 Is Finally Going to Trial

    The detail that merits the greatest attention is the DNA discovery. The Y-STR test was ordered by Hupp’s defense lawyers, Steven Lewis and Tony Davidson, who discovered male genetic material on the murder weapon that rules out the man who was falsely convicted of using it. That is not the same as clearing Hupp; male DNA on a knife handle could have a variety of explanations. The prosecution will contend that it provides no conclusive evidence against Hupp, while the defense will contend that it raises reasonable doubt. However, this new development adds another layer of complexity to a prosecution that was already carrying a lot of weight in a case already marked by evidence problems: a detective charged with perjury for claiming crime scene photos never developed, a destruction order almost executed at the time of Russ’s acquittal, and the systematic exclusion of evidence implicating Hupp from the original trial.

    When observing this case from the outside, it is truly challenging to determine how to feel. Before being found not guilty, Russ Faria was incarcerated for nearly four years. For years, his wife’s family thought he had murdered her. In 2021, the year Hupp was officially charged, Betsy’s daughters finally apologized to Russ. Leah Askey, the initial prosecutor, and Christina Mennemeyer, the initial trial judge, were both removed from office in 2018, at least in part due to the way the case was handled. Due to his testimony during Russ’s trial, a former detective is accused of perjury. Criminal charges may be brought against former sheriff’s deputies. Here, the system failed miserably over several years and on several levels. The trial for Betsy’s murder is still ongoing, and the woman at the center of it all is currently serving a life sentence at Chillicothe Correctional Center for shooting a disabled man she allegedly lured to her O’Fallon home in order to frame Russ.

    The legal environment surrounding this case is extremely intricate. The prosecution has a strong case for Hupp’s motive, opportunity, and behavior in relation to Betsy’s death, and the charges against her are substantial. The issue is that managing a defendant who is already incarcerated for life while building a death penalty case across multiple venue transfers and evolving DNA evidence following a wrongful conviction that tainted the initial investigation is an exercise in procedural endurance that puts every level of the Missouri court system to the test. There will be new preparation time with a new judge. Before he left the case, McDonough was already thinking about the possibility of an outside jury pool, which would add logistical complexity and possibly delay the trial until 2027 or later.

    In 2026, Missouri will host a number of other noteworthy criminal trials. The trial for the alleged serial killer from Kansas City, Fredrick Scott, is scheduled for August 31. The trial for Randall Fox, who is accused of double murder in Columbia, is scheduled for August 18. Investigative genetic genealogy has recently connected the Scherer killings, a 1998 cold case double murder in southeast Missouri, to Robert Eugene Brashers, a long-dead career criminal whose victim count has now grown to include victims in several states. These cases are progressing. Out of all of them, the Hupp case has garnered the most national attention, but it continues to stall. The daughters of Betsy Faria have been waiting for a decision for fifteen years. They might have to wait a lot longer given the current trajectory.

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    Sierra Foster
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    Born in Kansas City, Sierra Foster writes about politics and serves as Senior Editor at kbsd6.com. She was raised paying attention to this city, not just living in it. Sierra has a strong, deep connection to Kansas City, from the neighborhoods east of Troost to the discussions that take place in the city hall halls. Sierra, who is presently enrolled at the University of Kansas to pursue a degree in Political Science, applies the rigor of academic study to her journalism. She writes about politics in Missouri and Kansas as someone who genuinely cares about what happens to the people in these communities—the policies that impact them, the leaders who represent them, and the civic forces influencing their futures—rather than as an outsider watching from a distance. Her editorial coverage encompasses state-level policy, local government, and the national political currents that permeate bi-state regional life. Whether it's a city council vote or a Senate race, she has a special gift for turning complex policy language into writing that feels urgent, relatable, and worthwhile. Sierra seldom sits still off the page. She claims that playing soccer on a regular basis has sharpened her instincts for political reporting because of the sport's teamwork, strategy, and requirement to read a changing game in real time. She's probably somewhere in Kansas City with her friends when she's not writing or on the pitch, discovering new reasons to adore a city she already knows so well.

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