Chris Watts, the 33-year-old Colorado man who pleaded guilty to killing his pregnant wife, Shanann, and their two young daughters in November 2018, probably hasn't had it easy since he began serving time for his heinous crimes.
Ever since the story broke, true-crime obsessives around the globe have been fixated on Watts and the tragic deaths of the family he claimed to love: his wife Shanann, 34, was strangled, while daughters Bella, 4, and Celeste, 3, had been smothered. Watts dumped the children's bodies in remote oil tanks where he worked, and he buried his wife's body in a shallow grave nearby.
Since a judge sentenced Watts to life in prison without possibility of parole in November 2018, verified news about Watts has been somewhat scarce, though speculation has been rampant (especially after his mistress, Nichol Kessinger, came forward to tell her story). But what is Watts' life like now? This is what we know.
Chris Watts Was Moved to Wisconsin
On December 3, 2018 Watts was transferred from a Colorado prison to Dodge Correctional Institution in Waupun, Wisconsin. "He has been moved out of Colorado for security concerns due to him being a high-profile offender," Mark Fairbairn, a Colorado Department of Corrections spokesperson, stated at the time. But what does that mean?
Larry Levine, director of Wall Street Prison Consultants— and a former federal inmate himself, who now advises people on how to survive life behind bars— believes Watts was most likely getting threatened at his previous prison, prompting the move to Wisconsin.
"Colorado is a big state, but Watts' crime touched the community on a lot of levels," Levine says. "People who [commit crimes against] children...are the most hated people on the inside. He couldn't just blend in. Everybody knows who he is. He was probably getting death threats."
Inmates can be moved between states under the Interstate Corrections Compact, and the decision to transfer a prisoner out of state is initiated by the state where he or she was first convicted (in Watts' case, Colorado). The originating state also pays the transportation costs associated with moving prisoners like Watts to-and-fro, including bringing them back to their home states for any impending court dates.