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#Last Night Out
#Last Night Out
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00:00Lauren Leslie, a bright, artistic teenager with a trusting nature, is heading off to meet a new
00:09friend, one she's met online. She tells her mom that she's going to meet a friend. The last time
00:18I saw her was about 3 o'clock in the afternoon and she was hanging around with friends and walking
00:24downtown and then I never thought of anything until I got a call. Four hours later an officer
00:37on the remote and notorious Highway 16 spots a truck speeding out of control. The officer
00:45calls for backup. This is an officer who knows that there could be something wrong. There's a
00:52knife in the car that's got blood on it. There's a wrench in the car that's got blood on it. My
00:55buddy and I were out in this logging road. Yeah, we were poaching and that's why there's all this
01:01blood. Is this man involved in the disappearance of 15-year-old Lauren Leslie? You know, if there is
01:09something more to the story, you might as well tell us now. There's nothing. I told you what happened.
01:22On the edge of Canada's Pacific coast, British Columbia, a wilderness of remote beauty where
01:44tiny scattered communities are separated by forests, rivers and distance.
01:51It's just so vast here. We're in the middle of a sea of trees. British Columbia is about
02:021.7 times the size of France. There's so many logging roads in the area and it is so vast. Like, you can go
02:14off the highway on a logging road and connecting logging roads and probably go all the way to
02:20Vancouver without hitting a highway. Like, it's just unbelievable. And you can go down a road for
02:2750 miles and there's nothing. Just think about a remote area, the beautiful Canada western coast area,
02:40all of that coming together where you have the ability to commit an activity, a crime, and maybe
02:48even get away with it. There's everything you want here. Little towns, lots of bush, just about anything
02:57you want. Or sometimes what you don't want. My name is Doug Leslie and I am Lauren Dawn Leslie's father.
03:08Lauren, Doug's daughter, was born in 1995 and spends her childhood five miles from the tiny town
03:23of Vanderhoof, happy, close to nature. We lived on the lake most of the time and kids loved the lake and,
03:33you know, lots of swimming and fishing and stuff. It's a great place to live. She could swim like a fish
03:42fish. And she could see underwater, but she couldn't see above water. So she spent lots of time in the lake.
03:50She had a vision problem. She was legally blind, but you'd really never know it by watching her because
03:59she never let on and never really slowed her down at all. She would help other people, even in school,
04:06doing stuff when she was, had books with great big printing on it so she could read it.
04:12She was always awesome. Very thoughtful. You know, right from a little kid, she would do anything for anybody.
04:22Well, Lauren was special from day one. When she was four, she went to school with a little boy and,
04:31other little kids, and liked this little boy, and especially. After four, they never went to school
04:42together again. But when this boy was nine, he drowned in the lake. And right away, Lauren wanted her dad to
04:51take her to see the mother. And Doug did. And she sat beside the mother and stroked her arm and
05:00talked to her. And when it came to the day of the funeral, she wanted to sit with the parents.
05:05It gives you an idea of the feeling, the feelings she had for other people.
05:13She was kind of a free spirit. And we didn't worry about her
05:17when probably we should have worried about her more.
05:40Growing up in a remote part of Canada, Lauren, like many others, turns to the internet to meet new people.
05:46That's where she connects with Cody Ledger Bokoff, a 20-year-old stranger from a nearby town.
05:55A familiar face locally, he plays junior ice hockey and is seen as confident and sociable.
06:02By 2010, he's living in Prince George, working as a mechanic at a car dealership.
06:08By all appearances, Cody came from a great family, didn't want for much growing up, had everything,
06:17all the comforts of home. Came from a great family.
06:22I didn't know him personally. I didn't know his father or mother personally. But his grandparents,
06:30I knew extremely well and grew up with his grandfather and very fine people. Can't say anything bad about them at all.
06:40One of her friends got her interest in some dating site we didn't know anything about. It was a teenage thing.
06:49And this, so that's where she met him. Lauren is very interested maybe in, you know,
06:56in meeting a boy. She's kind of at that age. That does not seem to be at all
07:01what Cody Lebedjikoff is interested in at all.
07:11You can see this just by the varying agendas of their texts and emails back and forth to each other.
07:21From the very beginning, Cody starts saying things about sex to Lauren. Very, very graphic things about sex.
07:28You know, he's talking in a way, kind of degrading to her. And you can see that this makes Lauren very,
07:36very uncomfortable. And the way she handles that in their communication online is she tries to ignore
07:42it. That's something that she tries to do. And then she tries to kind of say to him, hey,
07:47that's not what I'm looking for. Even though some of the messages make her feel uncomfortable,
07:53Lauren keeps the conversation going. She's trying to figure out, you know, how to have relationships.
08:00And so what she's doing is she's meeting somebody that she thinks is safe
08:04online, which is anything but safe.
08:07Prince George, the regional centre of British Columbia, an hour's drive away from Lauren's home
08:21near Vanderhoof. The two are connected by Highway 16, a road that cuts through dense forest and links
08:30their two isolated worlds. Well, Prince George is quite a large place. People come from different
08:38highways into Prince George. It's a major hub. If you want to find trouble, it's not difficult to
08:47find in Prince George. It could be a bit of a party town. There are certainly escort services in the city.
08:57And we have had lost a lot of young people, particularly with overdosing with the bad drugs,
09:05they call them. Well, it certainly has mushroomed since my day. We had none. We had no drugs or
09:13something a doctor gave you. Alcohol wasn't accessed easily. And no one had the money to buy it anyway,
09:21when we were growing up. So we didn't have those two items to cause us trouble growing up. Now,
09:29it's another story. Drugs are very prevalent.
09:41As evening falls in Vanderhoof, Lauren Leslie sets off to see the man she's met online,
09:5120-year-old Cody Ledger-Bokoff. Will it be the last time that her friends and family hear from her?
09:57She tells her mom she's going to have coffee with a friend, and she goes and she meets this person
10:04at a school on the playground. Well, the last time I saw her was about three o'clock in the afternoon,
10:14and she was hanging around with friends and walking downtown.
10:18I never thought anything of anything until I got a call.
10:36Lauren Leslie has made plans to meet someone, a 20-year-old man she's only ever spoken to online.
10:42He's named Cody Ledger-Bokoff. In a remote corner of British Columbia, he's just another young man,
10:50living in a small town. Ledger-Bokoff was, in some respects, a normal kid. Very athletic,
10:57and well-liked by his peers. But one of the things that kind of stood out about him is,
11:02he loved to play hockey. Of course, hockey is a pretty aggressive sport, but he stood out in terms of
11:10his level of violence on the hockey rink. I was talking to one woman in Fraser Lake,
11:23whose daughter played hockey against Cody, and she said that they wouldn't put the girls on the ice
11:29when he was on because he was too violent. Outwardly stable, a job, a girlfriend, a routine.
11:36The kids are in business with cocaine. Privately, Ledger-Bokoff begins using cocaine.
11:41Cody Ledger-Bokoff seemed to like the party a lot. He was fairly popular with the girls.
11:47He really got into the cocaine.
11:55There's no doubt that Cody Ledger-Bokoff had a cocaine addiction. And we know that crack cocaine
12:04can be a disinhibitor in terms of behavior, as can many drugs.
12:12This was somebody who had a girlfriend, a steady girlfriend, who had no idea that he was abusing
12:19cocaine. This was somebody who was holding down a job. This was somebody whose family had no idea.
12:26So this is not somebody whose life has gone off the rails because of their cocaine use.
12:33But there's something else, something hidden beneath the surface of Cody Ledger-Bokoff's life.
12:39It's so frightening to hear this story.
12:43Here you have someone who's a deer hunter, and he is hunting the deer, but maims them first,
12:50and then goes with his hands to finish the deal of killing them.
12:56I mean, our region is a hunting and fishing region. We all pretty much grow up with either wild game or
13:04fish in our freezers. So the fact that he's a hunter doesn't surprise me. But the fact that he took
13:13pleasure in seeing those animals suffer, that is staggering, actually.
13:21This is somebody who would literally beat a deer to death. Animal cruelty is a serious crime,
13:29a very serious crime. And not only is it serious because of the pain inflicted upon an innocent animal,
13:37animal. But it is a marker. It is a risk factor for violence against humans.
13:47One of his hobbies was going out and winging a deer and then beating it to death with a club.
13:52Well, that's pretty harsh.
13:57Typical young guy in his early 20s by day, you know, holding down a steady job. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by
14:06night, you know, puts on his killing shorts and does his crack cocaine and goes out and finds the victim.
14:17It appears that, you know, Cody was a proverbial ticking time bomb, just waiting to go off.
14:36It's a real problem.
14:46Unbeknownst to her family, 15-year-old Lauren has agreed to meet Ledger-Bokhov at a school
14:51playground in Vanderhoof.
14:54He offers to get her some alcohol, which, you know, she's much too young to be drinking.
15:00But she finally says, OK, I'll have some mudsliders.
15:13It's been hours since anyone has heard from Lauren Leslie.
15:19Twelve miles away, two police officers are about to come across a gruesome discovery
15:24on the infamous Highway 16.
15:26There were two officers, one from the Prince George Detachment, one from the Van der Reef Detachment,
15:33that were meeting on Highway 16 late at night.
15:39If you've ever been on Highway 16, it is amongst one of the darkest highways I've ever been on.
15:46There's no light, very dark.
15:50And the snow, well, it's, there would be probably a foot or so of snow at that time.
15:59Highway 16 in British Columbia has a much more well-known name.
16:07It's often referred to as the Highway of Tears.
16:09And it came to be known by its name in acknowledgement of the number of women who've gone missing and murdered over the years.
16:23There are a tremendous amount of unsolved disappearances off of the Highway of Tears.
16:29Quite frankly, it's not difficult to dump a body up here.
16:38You can walk maybe 20 feet off the road and you're into thick bush in some areas.
16:46Returning from an earlier accident, the two officers happen to be passing along this remote stretch of Highway 16,
17:05a place where no one's usually seen after dark.
17:07The end of November, about 8 or 9 o'clock in the evening, theoretically, there wouldn't be anybody on that highway.
17:20Just ahead of them, you know, 100 yards, 100 feet ahead of them,
17:24this truck pulls out of a isolated logging road at a high rate of speed, kind of fish-tailing down the road.
17:37There is a new cop, only been on his position for about a year, who notices it's pitch-black dark, it's freezing cold,
17:46there's hardly anybody around, and yet here's his truck that is literally peeling out so fast from this logging road
17:53that his truck fishtails, and he kind of takes off.
18:01To his credit, this cop's spidey senses just start going off.
18:06And he thinks, you know, what possible reason would there be?
18:11You know, it's dark, it's cold.
18:15So he just followed him, and then he followed him at 115 kilometers an hour for 10 miles.
18:23That gave him opportunity to stop him.
18:26This isn't any regular traffic stop.
18:33This is an officer who knows that there could be something wrong.
18:40The officer calls for backup.
18:43He stops him, and he finds, hmm, the individual driving the car with a sweatshirt on and shorts,
18:52unusual, with it being so cold at this time of year.
18:59He's shining his light, he looks at his credentials, and he notices that there's this kind of red smudge
19:06on this person, the driver's chin, and it looks like it's blood.
19:12And he becomes a little bit concerned about this.
19:16Meanwhile, his backup person comes and is there with him,
19:20and they are both kind of thinking, this is not right.
19:24There's also a knife in the car that's got blood on it.
19:26The officer seized his wrench with blood on it.
19:31It's just past midnight.
19:52Police have pulled over a speeding truck that came out of the woods near Vanderhoof
19:56in British Columbia, Canada.
19:59Inside, they have found blood, alcohol, and a pipe wrench.
20:04The driver of the truck, 20-year-old Cody Ledger-Bokoff.
20:08The officers follow the tracks back up the logging road.
20:11They find blood just about everywhere.
20:14And, you know, of course, their first thought, I would imagine,
20:17is this must be some animal prop thing.
20:20This must be poaching.
20:21There's some explanation for this.
20:23And it's not good, but we don't know what it is.
20:25They're talking to Cody, but the story he starts telling just doesn't make any sense.
20:32You know, he starts telling them, I think that he killed a bird at first,
20:37and they're not buying this.
20:40There's way too much blood for there to be a bird.
20:43And he then changes his story.
20:46Okay, oh, yeah, I forgot.
20:47I forgot that there also was a deer.
20:49The first response from him is, well, I've been hunting, been poaching deer.
20:57And that's what happened.
20:58Okay, blood on a wrench.
21:01Officers continue to question Cody Ledger-Bokoff.
21:05Why would you shoot something and dump it?
21:10Wow.
21:13Like, now that you're kind of caught, I don't know, it just doesn't seem really that right anymore, does it?
21:20You know, if there is something more to the story, you might as well tell us now because...
21:26There's nothing.
21:27I told you what happened.
21:28Well, it just seems kind of weird.
21:29We shot the deer, we bludgeoned the deer to death, and now we move the deer.
21:36You know, anybody who knows anything about hunting would know that this makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.
21:41And so at this point, law enforcement, they are at full alert.
21:49They go back to this logging road.
21:55And what they found was an absolutely horrific scene.
21:59They discover the body of a young girl who's in the snow.
22:09She has been beaten so badly that her face is unrecognizable.
22:14They have some clue, though, in terms of who she is, because when they were doing the search of the truck,
22:26not only did they find all these pools of blood, they also had found this really adorable monkey backpack.
22:33So when they look inside this backpack, they find a wallet, a polka dot wallet, and in that has got Lauren Leslie's identification card, her medical card.
22:45And so when they find this body, they suspect that it is this young girl who's 15 years old.
22:53I got a call from the cops at, I don't know, it was probably midnight-ish, to see if Lauren was home.
23:07And she was staying with her mother at the time.
23:11I said, what's going on?
23:12And they said, well, if Lauren's home, somebody's using her ID.
23:16So I said, well, I want to know what's going on.
23:19And they couldn't tell me right then.
23:22They were going to get back to me, and they didn't.
23:25So I phoned dispatch, and they told me that they were up on the highway somewhere.
23:29So I went and looked for them and found them.
23:31And that was it.
23:48I went up to the site, and when I got there, the cops were at the end of the road.
23:54And they just told me they were investigating a homicide, and they wanted me in Vanderhoof.
23:58So we went to Vanderhoof, and I had to wait.
24:10Whenever they find a body, they do a lot of forensics.
24:14They just gather as much evidence as they can.
24:17They'll close the scene down for a day or so.
24:20My son, Doug, called me by phone quite early in the morning to tell me what had happened.
24:31And it was devastating to hear that news.
24:35I couldn't imagine what Lauren's last moments were like.
24:40We don't know everything that happens from this point.
24:48What we do know is that this child, who was alive and with her mother several hours before that,
24:55is now dead, lying in a polis snow, with her face essentially unrecognizable.
25:01It is sickening to think of this innocent 15-year-old girl who goes out to meet somebody
25:09that she's very clear she just wants to hang out with.
25:12And she is brutally raped and bludgeoned and essentially just obliterated.
25:19Cody Ledger-Bokoff, the older stranger Lauren Leslie has been messaging, is taken into custody.
25:40The time now is 0015 hours on the 28th of November, 2010.
25:52I'm arresting you for the murder of Lauren Dawn Tolles.
25:58I did not murder anybody.
26:00I don't know why I'm in here.
26:02I told you, you're under arrest for murder.
26:04I did not murder anybody.
26:06I want to call my dad.
26:07You have the right to call a lawyer right now.
26:09Oh, hold on.
26:10I don't want to call my dad.
26:16There was, I don't know how many cops, hundreds of them, that were involved in the case
26:23to find out what went on and what was going on and charged him with murder
26:28because it wasn't poaching, it was murder.
26:35I ended up about 30 feet from Ledger-Bokoff.
26:40He was in the cell in the next couple of rooms over and, you know, I told the cop to let
26:48me in for five minutes and I found out later on and that's all he could do to not let me
26:54in, but it was, you know, to have that 30 feet away from me at that time was pretty rough.
27:04So he has just brutally murdered and sexually assaulted Lauren Leslie.
27:14I think the hardest part of all is anyone that knew him never suspected for a minute that
27:23any of this would have ever gone on.
27:28Faced with the discovery of the body and other evidence, Cody Ledger-Bokoff changes his story.
27:34He now says he was on his way to visit his sick grandfather and simply followed bloodstained
27:40tracks.
27:40When, when, when you, where you started your story for me was you were driving your truck,
27:46right?
27:46Mm-hmm.
27:47And it, and it's a, it's a GMC pickup truck, right?
27:51And you're going home.
27:52So you told me that there was a, when you got there, you said you saw quad trucks.
27:56I've seen, like, marks all over the place and blood and these, these things and, and then
28:10it's just a little bit off those kind of drag marks and.
28:14Okay.
28:14There was that, there was the bag, wrench, knife.
28:20Okay.
28:20So.
28:21So let me see if I get this right now.
28:22So you cover your, your range truck.
28:24You get out.
28:25Where do you go?
28:26And then, I walked up and, see here.
28:30It was dark and her face was dark and light and it was just, like, disgusting and I got
28:46the hell out of there.
28:48As fast as I could.
28:50Okay.
28:50Because I was scared.
28:53I don't need to be mixed up in something like this.
28:56Yeah, that's, that's the story.
29:00Do you know who this person was?
29:01No.
29:02Like, have you ever met, like, do you think you've ever met this person before?
29:06No.
29:07So, you don't recognize?
29:08No.
29:09So what were the things that you grabbed?
29:12I don't know.
29:12I just picked them up through my truck.
29:15Like, will I be able to go home tonight?
29:17No.
29:17Like, because again, you were at the scene of murder.
29:19Where's the dead girl?
29:21So you won't be dead.
29:25Under further questioning, the Djebokov shifts his version of events once more, admitting
29:31for the first time that he did know Lauren.
29:35He claims that meeting with Leslie, that her death is because she brought a knife with
29:44her and so inflicted this harm on herself.
29:46She was having a meltdown and decided to start beating herself with a wrench and stabbing
29:56herself and just kept going at it.
30:00And she, you know, somehow escaped from the truck and she was doing this to herself.
30:05And he decided, well, okay, she's done for.
30:09I'm going to just put her out of her busy with this wrench.
30:12When you look at the premeditated and calculating way that this offender, that this predator goes
30:26online, meets somebody, establishes somewhat of a relationship with her, goes and picks her
30:35up, knowing full well what he's going to do, he's got tools in his car, murders her, and then attempts
30:43to claim that she committed suicide, essentially by beating herself to death with a wrench, and then
30:51slitting her own throat.
30:52It's just, it's, it's, I can't think of many murders that match that level of callousness.
31:01In British Columbia, Cody Lejibokov is under arrest, suspected of murdering 15-year-old
31:20Lauren Leslie on a remote logging road off Highway 16.
31:25He denies the charge, insisting Lauren took her own life.
31:31But as investigators search his home, what they uncover suggests Lauren may not have been
31:36his only victim.
31:39I'm certain that Cody Lejibokov was really counting on nobody finding Lauren Leslie's body.
31:46And it was only after the discovery of Lauren that investigators, were they able to really
31:55piece together that, holy smokes, we have a serial killer.
32:01Uh, amongst us.
32:10The DNA trial leads to other unsolved cases.
32:15A clear pattern is emerging.
32:17What we see from most of the victims is they're involved in sex trade work, and they're seen
32:25as the disenfranchised.
32:27So what we know is that Cody would often contact women who were sex workers.
32:36He also would get them to get crack cocaine for him.
32:41He seemed to have a pretty significant addiction around this time to crack cocaine.
32:45He was found half-buried in a gravel pit.
32:46He was found half-buried in a gravel pit.
32:50He was found half-buried in a gravel pit.
33:00The way her body was found, it was found by a guy who likes to kind of walk around picking
33:09up pot bottles and taking them back to recycling for loose change.
33:16He's one of these guys who hates being inside and just loves walking around.
33:19And he knows where all the bush parties are.
33:38So he was checking out one of the sites for the bush parties, um, in a gravel pit, and,
33:44uh, you know, there, there she was, there he found her.
33:49There was evidence that she had been beaten with a blunt object.
33:58She had been stabbed.
34:00There was evidence that she had been sexually assaulted.
34:02It was just an absolutely horrendous crime scene.
34:19Natasha Montgomery, 23 years old, last seen in Prince George.
34:33Within weeks, she's listed as a missing person.
34:35Natasha Montgomery was a girl from Cornell, which is a small community, probably about an hour
34:42and a half drive south of Prince George.
34:44Uh, it sounds like, uh, you know, came from a good family, um, did a lot of figure skating
34:52as a, as a youngster, um, you know, had a lot of interests.
34:55Um, and it sort of lost her way when she came up to Prince George.
35:02She had also struggled at times, um, you know, in terms of her life and her life circumstances.
35:08She had struggled with, uh, crack cocaine.
35:11That was kind of a, a monkey on her back that she had a really hard time getting rid of.
35:16Um, she, uh, sometimes resorted to sex work as a way to supplement her income.
35:21So she was really somebody who was in a high-risk category.
35:24Quite honestly, every couple of weeks, somebody goes missing, and more often than not, they
35:34sort of resurface, um, but she hadn't resurfaced.
35:37Her remains had never been found.
35:41They were able to get DNA evidence, probably blood samples from her parents, um, and, uh,
35:50they were able to match that with, uh, what they found in, in the apartment.
35:55It looked like he basically started chasing her from his bedroom into the kitchen and, and beat
36:04her to death.
36:05Cynthia Mars is 35, a mother.
36:30She disappears without warning in the autumn of 2010.
36:33Her young child is left behind, and a police fire has opened.
36:39Probably the, the best way to describe her is, is through her sister.
36:45And, uh, the way she describes Cynthia was a very trusting, uh, you know, a, a bit of a hippie.
36:56I know, uh, she was kind of well-liked amongst the street community.
37:01Cynthia seemed to struggle at times with cocaine addiction, and also would engage
37:08in sex work, um, as a way to supplement her income.
37:12Cynthia.
37:14On September the 10th, 2010, Cynthia Moss was murdered, leaving behind one child to now be
37:21without a mom.
37:23Moss is found in a wooded park in Prince George.
37:29They were young girls that, uh, he took advantage of and, and, and killed.
37:36I mean, this guy was a sexual predator, basically.
37:41Most of his victims are mothers who now leave behind children who will never see the smile, the affection
37:51of their mother again.
37:52Doug Leslie has lived a year without his daughter.
38:12Then comes a call from the police.
38:17We got called in when they connected the dots and, uh, found out that he was, in fact, um, being charged
38:27with three more murders.
38:30Four names, Lauren Leslie, Jill Stachenko, Natasha Montgomery, Cynthia Mars, all gone.
38:43And in court, Cody Lejibokov denies killing any of them.
38:59At trial, Lejibokov insists Lauren Leslie died by suicide.
39:04For the other three victims, he blames a trio of unnamed men, men he refuses to identify.
39:11He basically said, uh, well, uh, these three women were in trouble with the local drug dealers
39:18and, uh, you know, they wanted to get them because they owed them money.
39:23Um, uh, and a Mr. X and a Mr. Y and a Mr. Z, uh, said, Cody, you, you gotta help us out.
39:32Um, so I, you know, he basically, he, he said that he was the, he was the one who handed
39:39them the weapons and they, these characters actually did, did these three in and, uh, uh,
39:46disposed of the bodies.
39:48It was, it was, you know, so outrageous and so ridiculous.
39:53He truly seems to have a lack of understanding about normal emotions.
40:00And he also seems to have a limited ability to feel them.
40:04You know, when you hear him talk about the murders, there's just no sense of emotion,
40:10remorse, regret, guilt, or any of the things that we would hope to see.
40:15At just 24, Cody Lejabakov is found guilty of four counts of murder.
40:34Canada's youngest serial killer is sentenced to life.
40:39With the possibility of parole after 25 years.
40:42I think Lejabakov literally compartmentalized his life. He, he almost lived a double life,
40:50I think. You have somebody who is working at a Ford dealership, who's got a relationship,
40:57who people see as very personable, as likable, as funny. And then you have this other side that is,
41:06it's like a different person. It's like the, the dark depths of the soul that you start seeing.
41:13And his ability to, to just compartmentalize is, is, is truly astounding, I think.
41:24I would say he's a predator. He preyed on the weak, he preyed on the, the most vulnerable,
41:29and he took full advantages of their disadvantages. The fact that he, he was walking amongst us,
41:36is terrifying. Cody beat, beat Lauren to death. And Lauren was so young, innocent,
41:45naive, perhaps. That's probably what led her to, you know, falling prey to this, this monster.
41:56I try not to think about that. It is too, too much to think about. Definitely has affected everyone
42:09around. Uh, people that I never knew before, that I've come in contact, know about Lauren. And know,
42:19know about what happened. Um, certainly it's made an impact.
42:23If he was not stopped by the police, if he was not arrested, taken into custody,
42:31would we have the ability to catch this individual? Because he is moving on from
42:37people being involved, women being involved in the sex trade to people who perhaps are not involved in
42:43the sex trade. One of the really impressive things about the story is that Lauren Leslie's family has
43:00said a couple of times that the one thing they've held on to is the fact that their daughter's
43:07murder prevented additional murders. And that has been somewhat comforting to them. And I am 100% sure
43:19that if they had not caught him at this point, he would have continued to murder until he was caught.
43:25It's bittersweet because, I mean, it's terrible to have a child gone, but that she was a catalyst to
43:40stop him. That was the good part.
43:53It's ridiculous.
44:05But,
44:08Transcription by CastingWords
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