A chilling crime unfolded in the small rural town of Cardwell, Missouri, where Trevor John Huber, under the influence of methamphetamines, committed the gruesome murder of his mother, Charlotte Wilson. On a December morning in 2018, Huber called 911, requesting police assistance at his home. When officers arrived, they were met with an unsettling sight: Huber stood at the door, completely naked, and appeared both disoriented and possibly under the influence of narcotics, as noted in a probable cause affidavit.
Inside the home, the scene was even more horrifying. Police discovered Wilson’s lifeless body, decapitated, with a bloody knife and hammer left on the kitchen table, indicating the brutal nature of the crime. Huber, who was immediately taken into custody at the scene, later provided a bizarre performance by tearing up and ingesting a written confession of his crime, declaring he had “killed” his mother.
In court, Huber, now 43 years old, was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, as reported by KAIT. The sentence reflects the severity of the act and the profound impact it has had on the community, leaving a permanent scar on the small town of Cardwell. This case serves as a grim reminder of the destructive power of drug abuse and its capability to drive individuals to commit unimaginable acts.

When they arrived, he answered the door naked and appeared “disoriented and possibly impaired by illegal narcotics,” according to a probable cause affidavit.
Police found the horrific scene inside, with Wilson’s body without her head — and a bloody knife and hammer used to kill her left on the kitchen table.
Huber was arrested at the scene.
During an interview with police, he admitted that he “was concerned he killed his mother” — blaming it on a paranoid conspiracy that she was trying to poison him.
He also confessed to using methamphetamines in the days before the killing.
Huber eventually wrote “I killed my mother” on a piece of paper, then tore it up and swallowed it.
He was convicted of first-degree murder after a two-day trial, KAIT reported.
“I want to thank the Dunklin County Sheriff’s Office and the Missouri State Highway Patrol for their professional and diligent work in investigating and solving this homicide and in all the cases they handle,” Dunklin County Prosecuting Attorney Nicholas Jain said in a statement.