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00:00I dig all the graves at the Riverside Cemetery in Blue Earth.
00:11I've been digging graves since 1966.
00:18And I still is.
00:20I buried Jane Doe's body back in 1980, a few days after they found her.
00:36That was the first time I have ever buried anybody that did not have a name.
00:42It made me sad because I knew there was somebody out there looking for her
00:52and wondering what happened to her.
00:56She had been buried for 34 years.
01:01And they asked if I'd dig her back up.
01:07Putting people in the ground is one thing, but digging them back up
01:11is a lot different.
01:16That's the thing about the dead.
01:19When you start pulling them back up,
01:22you never know what you're going to find.
01:41It all started out about 45 years ago.
01:42It was a bright, sunny day.
01:46I had just started the day shift at 9 o'clock that morning.
01:52And Jera Fletcher just said, a farmer, Gilbert Shave, called, and we had just started the day shift at 9 o'clock that morning.
02:14And Jera Fletcher just said, a farmer, Gilbert Shave, called, and we had gotten about five inches of rain two days before that.
02:26And a farmer found something floating in a drainage ditch east of town.
02:37Usually that drainage ditch is pretty empty, but at that time it was probably seven or eight feet deep.
02:42And it was clogged up with old corn stalks from the previous fall.
02:50I don't think anybody was really too worried about what we were going to find.
02:54We had no missing persons from our county or anything like that.
02:57So...
02:58Well, when I got there, I was the first one on the scene.
03:04Walked down the grassy area.
03:06And all of a sudden, I saw the body.
03:17You just kind of catch your breath.
03:21And realize it is a body.
03:23The victim was floating on his back amongst all the corn stalks.
03:28It was starting to decompose.
03:31He was kind of swollen.
03:32I couldn't tell right away if he was a man or a woman, even though he was nude.
03:41Once we got out of the water, then you could tell that it was female.
03:45And there was a gray-colored cord around the victim's neck.
03:50The cord around her neck indicated ligature strangulation.
03:56She looked like a younger lady, probably anywhere from 20 to 30 years old.
04:02We noticed that she had no hair, except for a small tuft in the back.
04:08The one thing that was interesting was there was no fingernails at all on either hand.
04:15The reason for no fingernails was that they had been ripped off.
04:22I mean, that's torture.
04:24All you could think of is, what is this poor woman going through?
04:30I just imagine she just probably died of fright, too, you know?
04:38After the body was taken away,
04:41I walked along the drainage ditch,
04:43seeing if I could find any type of clothing or anything of interest.
04:47The rain washed away everything.
04:54A good tire track and dirt would just be completely washed away.
05:00As you can imagine,
05:01any time a murder occurs in a small town,
05:04word spreads like wildfire.
05:07It was all over the newspapers.
05:08It was on the radio.
05:10It's not every day you get a murder in a small town like this,
05:12especially one where it seemed like it wasn't just the elements that erased the scene.
05:17It looked like it was a deliberate attempt
05:18to clean up after a crime.
05:23This was a case where somebody knew what they were doing.
05:26And whoever did do this, they're still out there.
05:29We started calling her Jane Doe because she was unknown.
05:39We had no idea who she was.
05:41We took x-rays of her teeth
05:42and hoped to find a dental match somewhere.
05:46But the only hope we really had
05:48of any type of identification
05:50was one fingerprint,
05:52which indicated we had nothing.
05:55Once you find out a person's name,
05:59then you can go back 24 to 48 hours
06:03and find out where they've been,
06:06you know, who they were with,
06:08what they were doing.
06:09It's something you have to have.
06:13Blue Earth got its name from the Dakota phrase,
06:16which means the river where the Blue Earth is gathered.
06:21Somebody was digging down about 16 feet.
06:24You'll hit Blue Earth,
06:25kind of like a blue clay.
06:28And that's how they named it Blue Earth.
06:31They even used to give away little bottles
06:33at the gas stations for souvenirs
06:36with Blue Earth in it,
06:38a keychain deal.
06:42This area was sacred to the Dakota people.
06:47They would use the Blue Earth
06:49as body paint to ward off evil spirits.
06:52In a small town like Blue Earth,
06:58murders like this don't happen.
07:01It's a friendly town.
07:04Everybody seems to know everybody.
07:06It's just a nice place to live.
07:09I was born in Blue Earth,
07:11and I'll be there all my life,
07:13and I won't be leaving no place.
07:15News travels fast in a small town.
07:20I heard it.
07:22Some of my good friends
07:24pulled Jane Doe out of the dredge ditch.
07:28In 1980, when they discovered the body,
07:39Blue Earth had a population of just 4,500.
07:42It was a very sea of community.
07:45People left their doors unlocked.
07:47The film Friday the 13th
07:49had just come out a few weeks prior,
07:50and everyone around town
07:52was talking about it.
07:55Some dates,
07:56I was certain to wait about them.
07:58Friday the 13th,
08:00figures bad luck
08:01and everything like that.
08:03And I remember seeing that movie.
08:05It was a great movie.
08:06Everyone loves a good horror movie.
08:08But now there was somebody out there
08:10doing real-life horrible things.
08:14We checked around the area
08:16for women in the age group of 20 to 30
08:19in the Blue Earth area.
08:24And we couldn't find out anybody like that.
08:28Nobody had any missing person reports.
08:30We knew they were all accounted for.
08:32So we were sure it wasn't somebody that was local.
08:39We started looking for any missing
08:4125 to 30-year-old females
08:44anywhere in the United States.
08:47We also had dental records
08:49to try to match Jane Doe.
08:52We got several hundred leads
08:54and still came up empty.
09:00I can remember watching the news
09:03that night with my family.
09:06I can remember feeling afraid and scared.
09:09We were within a 5, 10-minute walk of I-90.
09:11We didn't know who the killer was.
09:15It just put fear in everybody's mind.
09:19Nobody knew if the killer was still here,
09:22lurking around town,
09:25looking for who could be next.
09:30About two weeks later,
09:32there were two teenage boys,
09:34aged 13 and 14,
09:36walking along the river
09:37under the I-90 bridge near Blue Earth.
09:39You know how it is when you're that age,
09:47you want to try and scare each other
09:48by going by a creepy bridge
09:50and doing something dangerous.
09:52That's what these kids are probably doing.
09:56But they got more than they bargained for.
09:57This Jane Doe case.
10:16This was the case that our department
10:18just couldn't let go of.
10:20We had no name,
10:23no killer's name.
10:26It was just a big mystery.
10:30It was going to be next to impossible
10:32for us to solve.
10:33And that's when we found out
10:45that a couple of kids
10:47in July of 1980
10:49found some clothing
10:54under a bridge
10:55in the Blue Earth area.
10:57What they found
11:00tucked underneath
11:01a piece of styrofoam
11:03was a golden white striped
11:08sweater
11:09with bloodstains on it.
11:12And right next to it,
11:14someone's ID card.
11:16The ID was a Texas issue ID
11:18for a woman with brown hair
11:21and brown eyes.
11:22And they don't understand
11:25what they found,
11:26but they know
11:27it shouldn't be here.
11:35And that's when detectives
11:36get a call
11:37from one of the boy's fathers.
11:41It was a big deal.
11:44Well, being there was an identification,
11:46you know,
11:46all of a sudden you have a name
11:47and a parent address
11:49and birth date to go by
11:51so you can do some
11:52checking on that
11:53to see if anything
11:55pans out on it.
11:58Maybe it could be connected
11:59to our Jane Doe case.
12:01Maybe we could find out
12:03who she is.
12:05Unfortunately,
12:06the lab determined
12:08that the blood on the garment
12:09was animal blood
12:10and the ID was fake.
12:15So these items
12:16were not helpful.
12:18That, to me,
12:19was very disappointing.
12:21But it did give detectives
12:25a new theory
12:26on potentially
12:28who this person
12:29could be.
12:30Figured possibly
12:32this person
12:33was a hitchhiker
12:33on the interstate
12:35and somebody
12:37had abducted her.
12:39just a couple of weeks
12:49after the body
12:51was discovered.
12:51The state trooper came in
13:01into the sheriff's office
13:04there to use
13:05the cocking machine.
13:07He says,
13:08well,
13:08how are you guys
13:08coming on the Jane Doe case?
13:10and he kind of threw my hands up
13:16and says,
13:17we can't identify her.
13:19We have no real crime scene.
13:21The only evidence we have
13:22is the body itself.
13:24And he says,
13:25we're kind of stuck.
13:26And he laughs
13:29and says,
13:30well,
13:31I'll make it easy for you.
13:33I did it.
13:37And I says,
13:38not funny, Bob.
13:41And he says,
13:42just messing with you.
13:45Then he walked away
13:50into the other room
13:51to use the cocking machine.
13:52He was laughing.
13:56A lot of cops
13:57have a morbid sense
13:58of humor, you know.
14:01But I'm sure
14:02there was a lot
14:03of curiosity.
14:05Everybody felt
14:06pressure from the public
14:07because we couldn't
14:08identify her.
14:10And it's caused
14:11a lot of concern
14:12from the law enforcement
14:13aspect.
14:15At the time,
14:16in 1980,
14:17my kids were still
14:18in high school.
14:19Just,
14:19it affects you
14:20as a parent
14:20to see somebody's
14:22young daughter
14:23is missing somewhere
14:24just hiking down the road.
14:29This is a scary time
14:31for Blue Earth.
14:32A lot of back roads,
14:33a lot of country roads.
14:35One of the things
14:36that happens
14:37in a small town
14:38when you don't have
14:42a suspect,
14:43you don't know
14:43who did it
14:44in a case like this,
14:45is parents get nervous,
14:47they get scared.
14:48You don't know
14:49what steps you have
14:49to take to keep
14:50your family safe.
14:52It was like everybody
14:53was waiting
14:54for something to happen.
14:58But the truth is,
14:59it already happened.
15:00we started looking outside
15:05of our immediate county
15:08to surrounding areas
15:10to see if there's
15:11any type of crime
15:13which could possibly be
15:15connected to ours
15:17in some way.
15:20Backup requested.
15:21and we found something.
15:38Joanne Bonchus was
15:39last seen leaving
15:41the American Legion bar
15:42on October 3rd, 1975
15:44at about 12.30 a.m.
15:45She was supposed
15:47to be going home
15:48where she lived
15:49with her parents
15:50but she never made it.
15:51but she would
15:54have been
15:55looking as
15:55some of us
15:56to be
15:56and
15:58to be
16:01mom
16:05who
16:05might be
16:08and
16:08but
16:09she would
16:09have got
16:10some of us
16:10to give
16:10a
16:16heart
16:17who
16:18could
16:19see what
16:19¡Suscríbete al área!
16:37¡Suscríbete al carro!
16:40¡Suscríbete al Tremont!
16:43¡Suscríbete al vehículo!
16:44¡Suscríbete al canal!
16:46¡Suscríbete al carro!
16:50¡Suscríbete al canal!
16:51And the most chilling detail
16:52were the tire tracks.
16:53It looked like somebody
16:54had pulled her over.
17:04And then they couldn't find her
17:06and all sorts of people
17:08were out searching for her
17:09here in Martin County.
17:11And then all of a sudden
17:13everybody went to eat
17:15and we got a farmer
17:18that finds the body
17:21right where a bunch
17:22of the other people
17:24had just checked the area.
17:26That seemed strange.
17:31Being the fact
17:32that the two victims
17:34are approximately
17:35the same age
17:36and they're both
17:36dumped in a ditch,
17:38it seemed kind of coincidental.
17:41We had our case
17:42and Martin County
17:44had their case.
17:46We're wondering,
17:47is there a serial killer
17:49out there
17:49or is it just coincidences
17:52or what?
17:54And they realized
17:55this was something
17:56far worse
17:57than they ever imagined.
17:58Not just one murder,
17:59but a pattern.
18:00Three years later,
18:11four years later,
18:12we were still no closer
18:13to finding
18:14a killer of Jane Doe.
18:16But then early 1983,
18:19we heard about
18:20a serial killer
18:21that was talking about
18:22murdering several hundred people
18:24one at a time
18:25picking up hitchhikers
18:27and strangling them.
18:27The notorious serial killer
18:31Henry Lee Lucas
18:32confessed to killing
18:34a hitchhiker
18:35on Interstate 90,
18:37the same road
18:38where Jane Doe
18:40was picked up.
18:42We thought
18:42this was our guy.
18:46Everything seemed to match.
18:47He was a trucker
18:48and picking up hitchhikers
18:50all over the United States.
18:52So we were very hopeful.
18:54Henry Lee Lucas
18:55earned the nickname
18:56the confession killer
18:57because he confessed
18:59to killing 600 people.
19:01He would always tell
19:02his victims,
19:03hop in,
19:03where are you headed?
19:05But they never would get
19:06where they were going.
19:07At that time,
19:08he was incarcerated
19:09and nobody had talked
19:10to him yet.
19:11My investigator
19:12was the first one
19:13to interview him.
19:13He was a small guy,
19:18about 5'2".
19:19He told me he had one eye.
19:23He was kind of eerie
19:23sitting there alone.
19:25The Texas Rangers
19:26didn't want to come in there.
19:28They were so tired
19:28of listening to him
19:29on birding
19:30and all these girls.
19:31I was in there
19:32by myself.
19:35I killed by strangulation,
19:37I killed by knife
19:38and I killed by hit and runs,
19:40shootings,
19:41robberies,
19:42hangings.
19:44Every type of crime
19:45I've done it.
19:47He wanted to see
19:48the pictures that I had
19:49of R. James Doe
19:50and he looked at them
19:52very carefully
19:52and he said,
19:55it wasn't me
19:57because I didn't stab her
19:5820 or 30 times.
20:00He talked about
20:01he killed a lady
20:02in Minnesota
20:03but he said
20:06that he sure
20:06that he didn't kill
20:07the one in Bloor.
20:09It wasn't on ours.
20:12He was admitting
20:13to several other murders
20:14and so
20:15he basically had nothing
20:17to lose
20:17by admitting to ours
20:18but he definitely
20:19denied killing Jane Doe.
20:23It turns out
20:24he was very good
20:25about researching cases
20:27and knowing all
20:27the publicly available
20:28information about the cases
20:30but when police
20:33questioned him
20:34about things
20:35that were not
20:35publicly available
20:36his story fell apart.
20:39He was only ever
20:40convicted of killing
20:41three people.
20:42His mother,
20:43his wife
20:44and an elderly woman
20:46that he lived with.
20:48It's like being
20:48a movie star.
20:50You're just playing
20:50the part.
20:52Make out that
20:52you're the worst
20:53serial killer
20:55in the history
20:56of the United States
20:57and that's what I did.
21:00Lucas was somebody
21:01who wanted the world
21:02to believe
21:02he was more dangerous
21:03than he really was.
21:06It was disappointing.
21:07You don't have your killer
21:08and the case goes on.
21:11In a small town
21:12like Blue Earth
21:13everybody's worried.
21:16Until the killer
21:17is captured
21:17nothing's the same anymore
21:19until there's a resolution
21:21and in this case
21:22it took a long time
21:23for that to happen
21:24to find out
21:26who may have done it.
21:29But as of February 1988
21:32eight years have passed
21:33since Jane Doe
21:34was discovered.
21:37And then detectives
21:39got a call
21:39from the Smith County
21:40Sheriff's Office
21:41in Texas.
21:43In February 1988
21:45I got this phone call
21:47and it said
21:47this is J.G. Smith
21:49down in Smith County, Texas
21:50and I've got a fellow here
21:52that I got him
21:53in jail right now
21:54and he's confessing
21:55sexually molesting his kids
21:57and he's talking about
21:58the possibility
21:59that he thinks
22:00he also killed someone
22:01in your district.
22:03So he said
22:03I think you made me
22:04better come down here
22:05and talk to him.
22:07We recognized the name.
22:10Realized it was somebody
22:11that was from our area
22:12and that would be
22:13familiar with the case.
22:15This was a guy
22:16that we all worked with.
22:17You know
22:18he had access
22:19to the front office
22:21where we kept
22:21the copy machine
22:22where he would
22:23use the photocopier
22:24for some of his reports
22:25and that.
22:26Turns out
22:27he was the guy
22:28that asked me
22:28how we were coming
22:29on the case
22:30and he kind of laughed.
22:33He said
22:34well I can make it
22:35easy for you.
22:36I did it.
22:38It's just like
22:39somebody hits you
22:39with a ton of bricks.
22:41Son of a bitch
22:42that told me
22:43he did this.
22:45You know?
22:45His name was
22:47Robert Nelson
22:47a Minnesota
22:49State Patrol officer
22:50from 1970
22:51to 1985.
22:54He was stationed
22:55in this district
22:57which included
22:59the city of Blue Earth
23:00when Jane Dole
23:01was discovered.
23:07He had a bad temper
23:10a trigger temper.
23:12Nelson
23:16from what
23:16I have heard
23:17was not a well-liked
23:18police officer
23:19in this community.
23:20At one point
23:21quit his job
23:22as a police officer
23:23and moved to Texas.
23:26Pastor Bernier
23:27from the church
23:28that Robert Nelson
23:29belonged to in Texas
23:30had come in
23:31with Robert Nelson
23:32and wanted to talk
23:33to the sheriff.
23:35Nelson had been
23:36molesting his children.
23:38Nelson also started
23:39talking about
23:39the killing
23:40in Minnesota.
23:43When I walked
23:44into the room
23:44we just exchanged
23:45greetings like
23:45we'd known each other
23:46for 20 years
23:47which we had.
23:50It felt unbelievable.
23:52Somebody that we know
23:52and somebody
23:53that we'd work with.
23:55Just unbelievable.
23:57He was one of our own.
23:58You know?
23:59You just don't expect it.
24:02He was a little bit nervous.
24:03One thing we did notice
24:04he was a very fussy individual.
24:07Very neat in appearance
24:08and he was wearing
24:09his prison jumpsuit
24:10and he kept picking
24:12little pieces of length
24:13off of his jumpsuit.
24:14Just a nervous tick.
24:17Our first question
24:18was about
24:19Devontia's murder.
24:23She's well known over there.
24:25Family's well known
24:26in Martin County
24:26and they want blood.
24:29There were just so many
24:30similarities between the two
24:31that we considered
24:32Bob Nelson
24:33to be a person of interest,
24:35a very strong interest.
24:37We knew that Robert Nelson
24:39carried an old shotgun
24:40in his car at all times.
24:42We knew that she'd been killed
24:43with an old shotgun
24:44because of the paper wadding
24:45that was embedded in her.
24:48From talking with the deputies
24:50I'd heard that this gal
24:51wasn't the type
24:52to pull over
24:53for just anybody
24:54on the roadway.
24:56People felt like
24:57there was a police officer
24:58that pulled over.
25:00But he said,
25:01no I did not have anything
25:02to do with that
25:03and I'll tell you
25:04I don't want to talk
25:05about that murder.
25:11We went through
25:12several interviews with him
25:13and eventually brought him
25:15back to Minnesota
25:15interviewed him again
25:17on the Jane Doe murder case.
25:18It's July 17th, 1989
25:23and we're in the city
25:25of Blue Earth
25:25and I'm in the company
25:27of Robert Nelson
25:29conducting an interview
25:31with the murder
25:32of Jane Doe.
25:34Do you feel comfortable
25:35with it?
25:35Yes.
25:36I'm ready to proceed.
25:39I sort of feel like
25:40you're talking to the devil
25:41and you don't mind
25:43wondering what
25:43in the hell happened.
25:48When we first started
25:53talking to Robert Nelson
25:54our first question
25:56was about our murder
25:57of Jane Doe in 1980.
26:00July 17th, 1989
26:03and we're in my office
26:04at the sheriff's office
26:06of Jerry Cabe,
26:07a deputy sheriff
26:08and I'm in the company
26:10of Robert Nelson
26:12conducting an interview
26:14with the murder
26:15of Jane Doe.
26:17He knew that
26:17what he had done
26:18was wrong
26:19and he knew
26:20that it was him
26:21that did it
26:21but it wasn't the real him.
26:23Well, he talked about
26:24like two people.
26:26There's me the good guy
26:27and me the bad guy.
26:28It's like a reflection
26:29in a mirror
26:30back and forth
26:31like a split personality.
26:32It's been nine years ago
26:34it's been very painful
26:35and I said
26:36all I want to do
26:37is see if the truth
26:38comes out
26:39even if it's awful
26:40better than
26:41not being known.
26:42He readily admitted
26:46that he admitted
26:47that he had killed
26:48the person
26:49that we had been following
26:50Jane Doe.
26:53Tell me
26:53what happened
26:54in the last part
26:55of me, 1980.
27:02Probably about
27:029.30 at night
27:04it was completely dark.
27:05I was parked
27:06off the freeway interchange
27:07where I could
27:08kind of watch traffic.
27:09You wouldn't notice
27:10the police car there.
27:11I saw the gal
27:12standing there
27:13and she kept
27:15walking down
27:16the freeway ramp.
27:18I'd been sitting
27:19with all the lights off
27:20just the radios on
27:21so I could hear any calls.
27:24Drove up to where
27:25she was walking.
27:28Nelson approached
27:29the young woman
27:31and asked her
27:32where she was going
27:33and she said
27:34she was going nowhere
27:36and he asked her
27:37if she wanted a ride.
27:40We headed west
27:41on Interstate 90
27:42towards Blueberry
27:43and was looking
27:48for a quiet place
27:49you know
27:49a place
27:50out of the way.
27:57And that's when
27:58she began
27:58to indicate
27:59that she wasn't
28:00going to go through
28:01with any sexual advances.
28:05At that point
28:06I handcuffed her
28:07with her hands
28:08behind her back.
28:10By this time
28:10she's very upset
28:12and she was screaming
28:14and carrying on
28:15that she was going
28:15to see me fired
28:16and in jail
28:17and in prison.
28:18Now I was looking
28:19at some serious problem
28:20and she's yelling
28:22and hollering
28:22and I know she's right.
28:28And to try to shut her up
28:29I found a flyer
28:30in the trunk of the car.
28:31And what I did
28:33was yanked out
28:34two or three fingernails
28:36to tell her
28:36I meant her.
28:45All the frustration
28:46and all the anger
28:46and something inside me
28:48snapped.
28:50I grabbed a drawstring
28:52in the bottom
28:52of her jacket.
28:54Was she still
28:54handcuffed, Bev?
28:55Yes.
29:00I stood behind her
29:01at one end
29:03in each hand
29:04and strangled her.
29:07And I hated myself
29:08I hated her
29:09I hated everything
29:10at that moment.
29:14At this time
29:15I think we'll conclude
29:16the tape, Bob
29:17and the things.
29:22When he told them
29:23about pulling
29:24the fingernails
29:25out of her
29:25that wasn't released
29:26to the public
29:27nobody knew
29:28about that
29:28other than
29:29Roger and Jerry.
29:33We had a killer
29:34that's with us
29:36all the time
29:36interacting with us
29:38and here he was
29:40hiding in plain sight
29:41where he just
29:42didn't know it.
29:43Based on Robert
29:44Nelson's confession
29:45he was ultimately
29:46found guilty of
29:47and pled guilty to
29:48sexual assault
29:49and first degree
29:50manslaughter.
29:53Robert Nelson
29:54was sentenced
29:55to 86 months
29:56in prison.
29:57He will serve
29:58that time
29:58in a Texas facility
30:00concurrently
30:01with his Texas
30:01life sentence.
30:04And we always
30:05thought
30:05that if we could
30:07find out
30:08who killed her
30:08that person
30:10would know
30:10who it was
30:11but it wasn't
30:13the case.
30:13We were no closer
30:14to knowing
30:15who she was
30:16than when we
30:17started.
30:19It was still
30:19Jane Doe.
30:21There was no name.
30:23We had gotten
30:26several thousand
30:27leads.
30:28Some of them
30:28looked good
30:28and some of them
30:29were immediately
30:30thrown out.
30:31After many years
30:32we could narrow
30:33it down to nothing.
30:36Just a nameless
30:37victim
30:38and a trail
30:39that has gone cold.
30:43When I first
30:44heard about
30:45the Jane Doe
30:46case
30:47I was at a bar
30:48with my husband
30:52and a friend
30:53of ours
30:53who was a
30:54Bloor City
30:54police officer
30:55and I
30:57asked him
30:58if he had
30:58any cold
30:59cases or
31:00things just
31:01kidding him
31:01and this
31:03one time
31:03finally he went
31:04okay you want
31:05one?
31:06He goes
31:07there's a woman
31:07buried in the
31:08cemetery that's
31:09never been
31:09identified
31:10and I said
31:10what?
31:12And he goes
31:12yeah
31:13she's just
31:14buried under
31:14stone
31:15says
31:15unidentified
31:16woman
31:16found
31:17May 30th
31:171980
31:18so I
31:20immediately
31:20went out
31:21there to
31:21see it
31:22and it
31:32was there
31:32I couldn't
31:34let it go
31:34this woman
31:36deserved
31:36more than
31:37just an
31:37unmarked
31:38grave
31:38she was a
31:39human being
31:39and I
31:40refused to
31:40believe
31:41that they
31:41are
31:41throwaway
31:42so I
31:44started asking
31:45questions
31:46and trying
31:48to find out
31:49any information
31:49I could get
31:50and I
31:51requested
31:52and many
31:53many times
31:53demanded
31:54access to
31:56the records
31:56that they
31:56had on
31:57this Jane
31:57Doe
31:58people just
32:00ignored me
32:01and some
32:02of the
32:02official
32:03agencies
32:03they wouldn't
32:05deal with me
32:05because I
32:06was a
32:06private
32:06citizen
32:06and then
32:11finally
32:12someone that
32:13still worked
32:13there
32:14an old
32:14timer
32:14that said
32:15oh yeah
32:16we do
32:17have the
32:17records
32:18so we
32:21set up a
32:21time
32:21and I
32:22went to
32:22the
32:23courthouse
32:23it was
32:27kind of
32:27after hours
32:28he took me
32:30down into
32:30the basement
32:31and he
32:32said I
32:32got some
32:33stuff to
32:33take care
32:34of for
32:34a little
32:34while
32:35when I
32:36come back
32:37you're
32:37done
32:37and under
32:42the stairs
32:43was a
32:44crate
32:44and I
32:51immediately
32:51just started
32:51paging through
32:52it taking
32:52pictures of
32:53every page
32:53I could
32:54as fast
32:54as I
32:54could
32:55and he
33:05came back
33:06within 15-20
33:07minutes and I
33:08had gotten
33:0899% of it
33:09the moment
33:13when I got
33:13access to the
33:14file I was
33:15just beside
33:16myself because
33:17I was able
33:17to start
33:18seeing what
33:19they had done
33:19what they
33:20hadn't done
33:20and the
33:21sheriff's
33:22department had
33:22worked on that
33:23case hard
33:23they cared
33:24they did
33:24the best
33:25they could
33:25but there
33:27wasn't DNA
33:28there wasn't
33:29databases
33:30you know
33:30but they
33:31did try
33:32diligently
33:32to give
33:34her her
33:34name back
33:35that just
33:35wasn't
33:36the resources
33:37there are
33:37now
33:38it wasn't
33:40too long
33:40and I
33:41realized that
33:41getting her
33:42exhumed
33:42was going
33:43to be the
33:43key to
33:43getting her
33:44name
33:44and so
33:48I had to
33:48convince the
33:49sheriff's
33:49department
33:50to exhume
33:50the body
33:51you know
33:53as a
33:53young child
33:53knowing
33:54about this
33:55case
33:55from six
33:56years old
33:56this case
33:58was lingering
33:59always in the
33:59back of my
34:00mind
34:00every time
34:01I would
34:01drive by
34:02or ride
34:03my bike
34:03by I-90
34:05I'd often
34:05think about
34:06who was
34:07this young
34:07lady
34:08how did
34:08she get
34:09there
34:09and then
34:11May of
34:122006
34:12when I
34:13became
34:13an
34:13investigator
34:14the sheriff
34:14came to
34:15me and
34:15said
34:16I'm going
34:16to sign
34:16the Jane
34:18Doe
34:18case
34:18to
34:18you
34:19so
34:21I was
34:21very excited
34:22I remember
34:22telling my
34:23parents
34:23and they
34:24were excited
34:24for me
34:25too
34:25I had
34:26high hopes
34:27that I
34:28would find
34:28a name
34:28for Jane Doe
34:29Deb and the
34:31previous
34:32investigators
34:32had talked
34:33about
34:33exhuming
34:34Jane Doe
34:34trying to
34:35get new
34:35DNA
34:36new leads
34:36Sheriff
34:38Gormley
34:39and I
34:39we made
34:40the decision
34:40to exhume
34:41her body
34:41generally
34:43you hear
34:44of Friday
34:45the 13th
34:46as a possible
34:46spooky day
34:47you know
34:48it's like
34:48a full moon
34:49but yet
34:50on this
34:50Friday
34:51the 13th
34:51the past
34:53refused
34:53to stay
34:53buried
34:54so on
35:00August 12th
35:012014
35:01the exhumation
35:03was scheduled
35:03and it was
35:05a beautiful
35:06sunny day
35:07actually
35:07they had
35:09closed the
35:10cemetery
35:11but I had
35:11a personal
35:12invite from
35:13the sheriff's
35:14office
35:14it was
35:16kind of
35:16surreal
35:17it was
35:18really quiet
35:19but there
35:20were lots
35:21of people
35:22there
35:22with jackets
35:24on like
35:25from the
35:25Bureau of
35:26Criminal
35:26Apprehension
35:27and the
35:27sheriff's
35:28department
35:28and my
35:30friend Gary
35:31Sunken was
35:31there with
35:32his equipment
35:32and they
35:33were digging
35:34the hole
35:34she had
35:36been buried
35:37for 34
35:38years
35:38and
35:39we're just
35:40trying to
35:42get to the
35:42truth
35:42what happened
35:43to her
35:43and
35:44who she
35:45was
35:45I
35:49didn't
35:49know
35:49what to
35:50expect
35:50I'd never
35:51been in
35:51this
35:52situation
35:52before
35:53they pulled
36:10the cover
36:10off
36:11and a lot
36:12of it
36:12was just
36:12dirt
36:12and debris
36:13we could
36:15see that
36:15she was
36:16in there
36:17you see
36:17a perfect
36:17body
36:18but she
36:19is in
36:19the body
36:19bag
36:20I've dealt
36:23with hundreds
36:23of dead
36:24bodies
36:24in my
36:24career
36:25but I've
36:26never honestly
36:27dealt with a
36:27body that was
36:28this severely
36:29decomposed
36:30a lot
36:31a lot
36:31of it
36:31looked like
36:31dirt
36:32ashes
36:33to ashes
36:34and I
36:36saw her
36:36skull
36:36and they
36:38lifted her
36:39out
36:40and then
36:41put her
36:41in a van
36:42to take
36:43her to
36:43have the
36:44DNA extracted
36:45and have
36:46an autopsy
36:47I didn't know
36:48what I was
36:48gonna think
36:49or feel
36:50but
36:50I don't know
36:53why I'm getting
36:53choked up
36:53now either
36:54I didn't feel
36:57like she had
36:58become my
36:58friend
36:59in some way
37:00like she gave
37:01me a purpose
37:02in my mind
37:10this was
37:11after this
37:11many years
37:12gonna be
37:12the final step
37:13if we do not
37:15get a match
37:16will we ever
37:17find a name
37:17for Jane Doe
37:18when I got
37:25the phone call
37:25Sheriff Cornley
37:26was just
37:26walking by
37:27my office
37:27I yelled
37:28his name
37:28to come
37:28back
37:29the agent
37:30then said
37:31we have
37:31a match
37:31to Jane Doe
37:33both of us
37:35were absolutely
37:35ecstatic
37:36not too long
37:41after the
37:41exhumation
37:42took place
37:42a few months
37:44I check
37:45my messages
37:45and I hear
37:46this woman's
37:47voice
37:47and she says
37:48this is
37:49Marla Boucher
37:50and I'm
37:50looking for
37:51Debra Anderson
37:52and I called
37:55the number
37:55back
37:56I said
37:57hi
37:57this is
37:57Debra Anderson
37:58can I help
37:59you
37:59there was a
38:00voice on the
38:01other end
38:01of the phone
38:02that said
38:02are you the
38:02woman that's
38:03been taking
38:03care of my
38:04sister all
38:04these years
38:05and she said
38:08they were sure
38:09that the DNA
38:10had come back
38:11and it was
38:12her sister
38:12Michelle
38:14and this
38:18is Michelle
38:18Boucher
38:19she was
38:20from
38:20Bay City
38:20Texas
38:21it was
38:23very surreal
38:24to finally
38:25find out
38:26who she
38:26was
38:27I think
38:28I was
38:28kind of
38:29in some
38:29kind of
38:29shock
38:30for the
38:30first
38:31day
38:32we're here
38:34today
38:34to announce
38:34that a
38:35murder
38:35victim
38:35has been
38:36identified
38:36Michelle
38:37Boucher
38:38was 18
38:38years old
38:39when she
38:39disappeared
38:39from her
38:40family's
38:40home
38:40in Texas
38:41her family
38:42had never
38:43stopped
38:43looking for
38:44her
38:44her father
38:44didn't want
38:45to change
38:45his phone
38:45number
38:46his address
38:46in case
38:47she ever
38:48tried to
38:48come back
38:49Michelle
38:51was a
38:52beautiful
38:52young woman
38:53just at the
38:54beginning
38:54of her life
38:55she was
38:57the middle
38:57child
38:58in a family
38:58of five
38:59Michelle
39:00left home
39:00to travel
39:01cross country
39:02with her
39:02friends
39:02she was
39:03calling home
39:04every two
39:04weeks
39:05and checking
39:06in
39:06and then
39:07the call
39:08stopped
39:08and her
39:10family filed
39:11a missing
39:11person report
39:12on May 9th
39:131980
39:14this was the
39:16same day
39:17the film
39:17Friday the 13th
39:18had come out
39:19these horror movies
39:21seem like fun
39:22and people are
39:23fans of them
39:24and everything
39:24when they're
39:24at a movie theater
39:25or whatever
39:26but this was
39:26real life
39:27this was a
39:28real human being
39:29somebody's child
39:30it's a sad ending
39:33because I'm sure
39:34that they always
39:34maintained a little
39:35bit of hope
39:36but at least
39:36now they know
39:37we'd all been
39:40waiting for this
39:40and here it turns
39:41up 35 years
39:42later it took
39:43to identifier
39:44Michelle Bouchard
39:50wasn't from here
39:50but I think
39:52this community
39:53sort of
39:53calls her
39:55one of their own
39:55she's a part
39:56of the lore
39:57of Blue Earth
39:58and Faribault County
39:59and so is
40:00Debbie Anderson
40:00her name
40:02was the key
40:03to her life
40:05to her death
40:06to the man
40:07who took it all
40:08away
40:08one of the things
40:11that was unique
40:12about this situation
40:13is
40:14the film
40:16Friday the 13th
40:17had just come out
40:17on May 9th
40:191980
40:20Michelle's family
40:22reported her missing
40:23on May 9th
40:241980
40:25and on Friday the 13th
40:27the truth
40:27came to the surface
40:28and Michelle
40:30got her name
40:30back
40:31it was just
40:32kind of mind-blowing
40:33Nelson wasn't
40:35just a child abuser
40:37he was a serial predator
40:38and because he had a badge
40:40he had power
40:41over anybody
40:42he would pull over
40:43including
40:43and especially women
40:44he wasn't protecting people
40:46he was hunting them
40:47it's supremely awful
40:51not even just
40:53what he did to Jane Doe
40:54but when you get
40:55into the court documents
40:56you see what he's done
40:58to other people
40:59including voyeurism
41:00exposing himself
41:02in public
41:03harassing people
41:04he would stop
41:05this is
41:07indeed a monster
41:08if I'd have gotten
41:09a couple of
41:10blood on me
41:11you'd have never noticed
41:12it on your trousers
41:12on my own
41:13a lot of times
41:15I'd have blood all over
41:16and I'd never see it
41:17you'll be via canal
41:30you
41:30you
41:30you
41:31you
41:36you
41:40you
41:40you
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