Episode 27: Sixty-Five Seconds: When Absence Becomes Evidence (the Nick and Heidi Firkus case)
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In this episode of Justice Seekers, we examine the tragic story of the murder of Heidi Firkus, killed in her St. Paul home in 2010 - and the case against her husband, Nick Firkus, built almost entirely on circumstantial evidence.
At the center is a sixty-five second gap: the time between Heidi’s 911 call reporting a break-in and Nick’s call reporting that she’d been shot. No forced entry. No fleeing suspect. No eyewitness. Just silence - and a story that didn’t match the scene investigators found.
We walk through the morning itself, the long years when the case stayed cold, the financial pressure hidden behind closed doors, and how a quiet re-examination eventually led to a conviction - and a Minnesota Supreme Court decision that reshaped how courts evaluate circumstantial evidence.
This is not flashy true crime.
It’s a case about absence, inference, and how quiet facts can still add up to proof.